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Equal Justice Works Conference and Career Fair, Washington, DC

Sunday, October 7, 2007

Coleen MelodyAt this year's Equal Justice Works Conference, I was struck most by a workshop entitled, "Advancing Justice and Promoting Government Accountability Through Community Lawyering, the Law, and Grassroots Organizing."

The Executive Director of Illinois' Citizen Advocacy Center presented her experience as a lawyer promoting grassroots organizing around local government accountability. Part of that work involves teaching community members to use tools like the Freedom of Information Act and the Open Public Meetings Act to gain access to information about what local government officials are doing in their community. Frequently, those people are stigmatized and labeled as undesirable community members because they sought accountability and made some noise.

The Center sends out hundreds of anonymous Freedom of Information Act requests every year in order to test the response. A full 40% go unanswered. Often, Center attorneys have to call the government body in question, identify themselves as lawyers, and threaten a lawsuit before the information is released. This struck me, because if lawyers with years of experience using the FOIA tool are frequently stymied in getting information, imagine the challenge for a citizen with limited time and energy who seeks the information in her free time! The lessons the Citizen Advocacy Center has learned reminded me that even when good tools exist as pathways to open government and true accountability, resistance to their implementation is just around the corner. Hearing about the Center's work to make sure that FOIA and Open Meetings could be used by any citizen who wants to employ them was one of the highlights of my Equal Justice Works experience.

- Colleen Melody, 2L and Gates Scholar