ARLINGTON, Va. -- Jonathan Anderson, former Editor-in-Chief of the UWM
Post at the University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee, is the 2009 winner of the
"College Press Freedom Award" for his tireless advocacy in pressing
for greater access to public records from the university and its student
government association.
The annual College Press Freedom Award is sponsored by the Student Press
Law Center and by the Associated Collegiate Press to honor an individual or
group that has demonstrated courage in advancing free-press rights for college
journalists. The award will be presented Oct. 31 at the National College
Journalism Convention in Austin, Texas, organized by the ACP and by College
Media Advisers.
"Jonathan Anderson and the Post have been relentless in advocating
for their university, and for all Wisconsin colleges, to honor their disclosure
obligations so that the taxpayers can understand how their government agencies
are being run," said Frank D. LoMonte, Executive Director of the Student
Press Law Center.
In April 2009, Anderson and the Post, joined by the staff of the UWM
television news program Panthervision, submitted a 147-page memorandum to the
Wisconsin Attorney General outlining the legal reasons that student governments
statewide should be open to the public like all other government agencies. The
Post had been refused access to records about the activities of UWM student
government, including records documenting the use of state travel money by
student officials.
"This award is a clear indication that the college press have an
important and unique role to play in the ever-increasing challenge to shine
light on government. Every day, at campuses all across the nation, student
journalists are filing public records requests with their university
administrations, student governments and elected officials -- fighting for
the public's right to know, and, in the words of former Supreme Court
Justice Hugo Black, 'revealing the workings of government,'"
said Anderson, 22, a native of Hobart, Wis., who now serves as the Post's
special projects editor.
LoMonte said the award is especially timely because Anderson's battle
with UWM helped bring to light fundamental flaws in the way educational
institutions and the U.S. Department of Education interpret federal student
privacy laws to block access to newsworthy information. The Family Educational
Rights and Privacy Act ("FERPA") requires that schools and colleges
keep grades and other personal student information confidential, but LoMonte
said colleges widely misapply -- or intentionally abuse -- the law to
withhold public records that contain no private student information.
LoMonte said the University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee has been among the worst
abusers of FERPA to deny legitimate open-records requests for information in
which there is no valid privacy interest, including requests by the UWM Post
for:
The names of school administrators who sit on disciplinary committees
enforcing UWM student conduct rules.
Transcripts and recordings of meetings
of a university committee on student activity fees, which meets in public and on
which students serve as voting members.
"This award recognizes that the University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee
does an excellent job of teaching journalism, but a disgracefully bad job in
complying with its obligations under the open records act," LoMonte said.
"Anyone who is considering attending the University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee
should ask why this college works so hard to conceal information that other
public institutions would readily disclose."
Since 1974, the Student Press Law Center has been devoted to educating
high school and college journalists about the rights and responsibilities
embodied in the First Amendment, and supporting the student news media in
covering important issues free from censorship. The Center provides free
information and educational materials for student journalists and their teachers
on a wide variety of legal topics on its website at www.splc.org.
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