Court records show that the Reporters Committee for Freedom of the Press has filed with the U.S. Supreme Court a friend-of-the court brief, Online News Association (ONA) joined with 52 other media organizations to argue for overturning the law.j ONA 's brief, arguies that a Virginia law restricting Freedom of Information Act requests to state residents is unconstitutional. According to ONA the law includes a narrow exemption for media organizations that circulate or broadcast in the state — with no mention of digital media.
This challenge to Virginia’s FOIA law was filed by McBurney v. Young. The brief reportedly asks the justices to reverse a Fourth Circuit decision upholding the law’s limits on access to public records. In the brief, RCFP argued that the law harms “the media’s ability to report on regionally and nationally significant stories and provide the public with complete and comprehensive information about the country as a whole.”
Reporters Committee Executive Director Bruce D. Brown said “In an age when digital communications transcend state boundaries, news media and the public have a common interest in information that provides regional and national comparisons on issues such as health care and public education,” Brown said, “The very limited exception for print and broadcast publications serving the state is wholly inadequate and leaves out all forms of digital media. The bottom line is that laws that stymie any access to public information cannot stand.”
Citizenship references similar to Virginia’s exist in public records statutes in Alabama, Arkansas, New Hampshire, New Jersey and Tennessee. “If this Court fails to void VFOIA’s citizenship provision, it would be in effect allowing states to continue practices of preventing all out-of-state media from obtaining public records, effectively shutting out companies and persons who cannot be considered citizens of those states,” RCFP argued in the brief. “Affirmance could also embolden other states to adopt similarly restrictive legislation, further inhibiting the national press corps’ ability to report on matters of public importance at the local and regional level.”
Find more information and updates on the work of ONA’s Legal Affairs Committee here.















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