Poll: Voters value open records far more than legislators' privacy

Poll: Voters value open records far more than legislators' privacy


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PROVO — Utah voters place far more weight on the public's right to access information about government business than on legislators' right to privacy, according to poll results released Tuesday by BYU professors.

Poll results

% ranking 1st Average ranking
The public's right to access information about government business78%1.35
A citizen's right to privacy when communicating with legislators15%2.28
The administrative cost of conducting open records searches6%2.88
The legislator's right to privacy2%3.5
<a href="http://utahdatapoints.com/" target=_blank>Utah Data Points</a>

The poll, conducted this month by BYU's Center for the Study of Elections and Democracy, asked 658 voters to rank by importance four policy goals associated with efforts to reform the state's open-records law, the Government Records Access and Management Act.

The public's right to know about government business was ranked highest by 78 percent of those polled. Only 2 percent valued legislators' right to privacy the most. In between came a citizen's right to privacy when corresponding with legislators (15 percent) and concerns over the cost of processing records requests (6 percent).

Lawmakers most often cited the latter two in their push to quickly pass HB477, the controversial bill scaling back GRAMA, at the tail end of this year's legislative session.

"When you talk about what voters want to accomplish with this kind of legislation, the primary value in their mind is the protection of public access," said BYU politics professor Kelly Patterson.


For public officials who argue that privacy and cost are the most important values, Utah voters disagree.

–Kelly Patterson, BYU politics professor


After public protests and under pressure from Gov. Gary Herbert, the Legislature repealed the bill and sent the issue to a working group to draft new changes in time for an interim session. That group will meet Wednesday for the third time.

Patterson said legislators always face tradeoffs when they consider complex legislation. The principle that government records should be open inevitably conflicts with privacy, he said, forcing lawmakers and the public to prioritize their values.

"For public officials who argue that privacy and cost are the most important values, Utah voters disagree," Patterson wrote in a blog post.

Email:pkoepp@ksl.com

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Paul Koepp

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