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Reporters Urge Press Secretaries to Help End Officials' Off-the-Record Public Speeches

http://www.sunshineingovernment.org/index.php?cat=218  

 

 Arlington, Va. (Aug. 19, 2009) – Representatives of more than 6,800 Washington-area reporters and several major national media organizations are urging press secretaries within Congress and the Obama administration to help end the practice of public officials attempting to speak only "off the record" when they are addressing large audiences.

Many Congressional staff members and mid-level administration officials, regardless of party affiliations, have been increasingly wary of speaking on the record in recent years and, as a result, begin their public speeches by telling the audience that their remarks are all "off the record."

Reporters and editors, fed up with the trend toward more off-the-record comments, have decided to draw a line with public speeches and are issuing a letter to more than 600 press secretaries on Aug. 19 in an effort to engage them to find a more sensible way of doing business.

"In today's age of Twitter and blogs, an 'off-the-record' speech will be publicized – just not by reporters. It doesn't make sense anymore and the practice should stop," said Rick Blum, who helped organize the letter as coordinator of the Sunshine in Government Initiative.

The letter was signed by the governing boards of all three press galleries of Congress-- the Daily gallery, Radio-Television, and Periodicals-- and ranged from large national publications such as the New York Times and U.S. News and World Report to specialized business news publishers BNA and Tax Analysts. Major media groups, including the American Society of News Editors, the Association of Alternative Newsweeklies, the Newspaper Association of America, the Radio-Television News Directors Association, the Reporters Committee for Freedom of the Press and the Society of Professional Journalists also signed on to the letter.

“On-the-record should be standard practice for officials speaking at large public gatherings,” said Toby McIntosh, a coordinator of the effort and Director of Editorial Quality Review for specialty publisher BNA. “The frequency of off-the-record remarks at public events, such as conferences, frustrates reporters and impedes the flow of information to the public,” he said. “We’re hoping to open a dialogue to address this problem.”
 

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Press Contact:
Rick Blum
(703) 807-2100
bna@bna.com

Toby McIntosh
(703) 341-5815
bna@bna.com

BNA is the leading independent publisher of specialized news and information for professionals in law, tax, business, and government. The company’s print and electronic products address the full range of legislative, regulatory, and economic developments affecting business, and are widely respected for comprehensive and objective reporting and analysis. Based in the Washington, D.C., metropolitan area for 80 years, BNA has 1800 employees worldwide and is the oldest wholly employee-owned company in the United States. Visit BNA at http://www.bna.com.