National & InternationalTop StoriesNPR Topics: World NPR Topics: Nation Art & Culture NPR Topics: Business Metro & StateINTERVIEW: Craig Witherspoon Reacts To "Failing Schools" ListFrom Foster Care to College: Part One Cindy Crawford: Magic City Marketplace Kyle Whitmire: Privacy Perceptions and Pondering Good News Remembering the Stand in the Schoolhouse Door The Forgotten History of the Voting Rights Act John Archibald: Evaluating the Jefferson County's Bankruptcy Deal Spreading the Love on Loving Day Jefferson County Bankruptcy Round-Up Tentative Deal in Jefferson County's Bankruptcy Questions Surround JeffCo Bankruptcy Deal A Political Payoff on the JeffCo Commission? Kyle Whitmire: JeffCo Commissioners Deny Deal WBHM Seeks News Director Montgomery and Life are like High School No Traction for Jefferson County Bills Don Dailey: Capitol Journal Update Carsen Talks "AAA" And More On Capitol Journal Poverty on the Rise in Suburbia Kyle Whitmire: Delay for Alabama Accountability Act? Capitol Journal Update Tanya Ott's final day at WBHM John Archibald News Features Archive |
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"The military has never been buddy-buddy with reporters, imbedding aside. But we have always had a decent relationship." But that relationship has been strained in the past year and a half and not just because of sensitive stories like terrorism and the war with Iraq. On this day, reporter Gina Hannah is having trouble getting the military to comment for a feature article shes writing on local high schoolers whove chosen to enlist. The Army recruiter has refused to comment on the record that fewer kids are coming in to sign up. Adds Haskins, it's going to sound pretty odd to have a story about army recruiting and not have a comment from the army. But, I guess well have to do that. And it will be there fault. Haskins says his reporters have also had a hard time getting information from the hundreds of private engineering companies that do business with the military. Huntsville is the nations second largest research park behind Research Triangle in North Carolina. Remember when they were talking about the 20-thousand pound MOAB the mother of all bombs. AP moved a picture of the MOAB and on the back of it in letters as big as a McDonalds sign it said Dynetics. And Dynetics is a Huntsville company. So we call Dynetics and ask did you guys develop this MOAB? What part did you play in it? The answer was no comment. Believing that local residents would want to know if the large bomb - making news was manufactured in their backyard, the newspaper resorted to running that photo of the MOAB, with the Dynetics name prominently displayed, and a caption that said the Airforce and Dynetics would neither confirm nor deny their involvement. It is our job to reflect what goes on in the local economy. We make space ships and we make weapons. To neither confirm nor deny when there is a picture that is disseminated over the Associated Press wires, its an insult to my intelligence! Dynetics spokeswoman Michelle Reavis says non-disclosure clauses are a common feature of most government and commercial contracts. At Dynetics we havent changed the way we respond to media since 911. For us its just a matter of honoring our contracts with customers. That may be, but journalists across the country say theres a whole lot of information that used to be available to them that now isnt. Under the Patriot Act and the Homeland Security Act, the government has sealed information about immigration proceedings To protect the country from possible attacks, they also removed from government websites details on the safety of chemical and nuclear plants. Nearly half of the states have also new passed legislation that closes meetings or seals records. What troubles some critics the most is a provision in the Homeland Security Act that allows private companies to keep secret - environmental and safety information that they believe could compromise security. Ginger Tomlin, dean of the Birmingham School of Law, worries that people dont know or perhaps even care about the new restrictions on the press. I would ask the general populace, where they get their information. They get all of their information about what the governments doing, what the new proposals are, and what the implications of those are through the media. They either read the newspaper, listen to the radio, or they listen to television. In the WIAT-Channel 42 newsroom in Birmingham, News Director Larry Ragan says he hasnt had any problem getting information out of local officials, even those at the chemical weapons incinerator the army plans to fire up just down the road. I would say the military, particularly over at that base, has stepped up its PR. They mail us or fax us information. Theyve been very helpful. When I asked Ragan whether hed encountered problems getting secret background information about his military neighbors using the Freedom of Information Act problems other journalists have reported since 9-11 he said he couldnt remember ever pursuing that kind of information for a story. Law school dean Ginger Tomlin worries if theres not a groundswell of concern about the growing restrictions on journalists not just from large newspapers and national broadcast outlets, but from journalists in smaller markets and especially from news consumers there may be irrevocable damage to the free press. I really do fear we are going down a slippery slope because I dont see anything stopping it. ~Tanya Ott, June 11, 2003 |








| Huntsville, Ala. -- This is a military town. Its home to the Army's Redstone Arsenal, which along with the Marshall Space Flight Center, employs roughly 10-thousand people. So journalists like Huntsville Times Business Editor Shelley Haskins are used to dealing with a certain amount of red tape.