Originally published September 15, 2008 at 12:00 AM | Page modified September 15, 2008 at 6:43 PM
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Palin's e-mail secrecy an open secret in Alaska
Moments after Gov. Sarah Palin's first speech as Republican John McCain's running mate, she sat with her kids backstage, thumbing one of...
Anchorage Daily News
ANCHORAGE — Moments after Gov. Sarah Palin's first speech as Republican John McCain's running mate, she sat with her kids backstage, thumbing one of the two BlackBerrys that are always with her. You can see them in photographs from that day on the campaign blog of one of McCain's daughters.
The tech-savvy governor has one of the devices (which allow users to read and send e-mails) for state business and another for personal matters, but those worlds intertwine.
Palin routinely uses a private Yahoo e-mail account to conduct state business. Others in the governor's office sometimes use personal e-mail accounts, too.
The practice raises questions about backdoor secrecy in an administration that vowed during the 2006 campaign to be "open and transparent."
Even before the McCain campaign plucked Palin from Alaska, a controversy was brewing over e-mails in the governor's office. Was the administration trying to get around the public-records law through broad exemptions or private e-mail accounts?
Activists, still fighting to obtain hundreds of e-mails that were withheld from public-records requests earlier this year, say that's what it looks like.
The governor's Yahoo account is "the most nonsensical, inane thing I've ever heard of," said Andree McLeod, who is appealing the administration's decision to withhold e-mails.
Palin, busy with the vice-presidential campaign, did not respond to requests for comment or answer an e-mail sent to her Yahoo account. The Washington Post included Palin's Yahoo e-mail address in a recent story, so she may not be using that one anymore.
Her staff says the governor is open — within reason and within the law.
She is allowed to keep e-mails confidential if they fall into certain categories, such as "deliberative process," said her press secretary, Bill McAllister.
And, he said later, she appropriately uses her personal Yahoo account for political activities.
"I don't hear any public clamor for access to internal communications of the governor's office," McAllister said.
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State lawyers say that the governor's e-mails about public business should be treated like any other public record, even if she's sent them through a private account such as Yahoo.
Some of her aides also routinely use Yahoo, but even messages sent from one private account to another should be public, if they concern public business, said Dave Jones, an assistant attorney general.
"The difficulty is finding out they exist," Jones said.
Long-distance governing
It's a new twist on an old problem: How to keep an eye on the government. And Palin's expected absences from Alaska for the presidential campaign add urgency to the debate. Is she going to be running the state long-distance on her BlackBerry?
Some experts on open government say officials around the country escape scrutiny by either quickly deleting e-mails or using private accounts, as Palin has done.
"Where you've got a governor apparently using a Yahoo account for state business, that's kind of a complete inversion of what ought to be happening in terms of public records," said Charles Davis, executive director of the National Freedom of Information Coalition and a Missouri journalism associate professor.
"E-mail that's public business ought to be done on public accounts that can become public record," he said.
The Bush administration has drawn heat over revelations that more than 80 White House aides, including senior Bush adviser Karl Rove, used private GOP e-mail servers for government business. The controversy surfaced during congressional investigations into White House contacts with convicted lobbyist Jack Abramoff and into the firings of U.S. attorneys.
The Bush administration couldn't provide uncounted numbers of e-mails needed for evidence because they weren't on a government server, according to a 2007 report by the House Committee on Oversight and Government Reform.
In Texas, Gov. Rick Perry's office routinely deletes all e-mail after seven days, Davis said. After controversy about the practice, aides were told to print out and file business-related e-mails, but open government advocates questioned whether that would always happen, according to The Dallas Morning News.
In Missouri, Gov. Matt Blunt has been embroiled in litigation over access to e-mails in his office.
"Clearly, the worry is we're losing our history bit by bit and piece by piece," he said.
E-mails withheld
Just how much of the state's business does Palin conduct through her BlackBerrys? Her chief of staff didn't respond to that question. But she often is glued to her devices.
Her Yahoo e-mails got the attention of political activists Zane Henning, a Wasilla, Alaska, resident and North Slope worker, and McLeod, a former legislative staffer and Republican who has run for state House and mayor.
The state withheld about 1,100 e-mails, citing exemptions for deliberative process, executive privilege, attorney/client privilege, privacy, and personnel.
Administrators were waiting for guidance on confidentiality issues from the state Department of Law, said Kim Garnero, state Division of Finance director.
In an interview with the Anchorage Daily News, Garnero said concerns about an audit were related to IRS tax implications for employees with state cellphones or BlackBerrys that are used at times for personal business.
The state would like employees to buy their own. The state then will pay $75 a month toward a BlackBerry or similar device or $40 toward a cellphone, if needed for the job.
Employees aren't trying to get around public-records law but just don't want to carry two cellphones or BlackBerrys, Annette Kreitzer, commissioner of the state Department of Administration, wrote in an e-mail to the Daily News.
"They want to know what the law is, where the boundaries are, so they can use as few communications devices as possible and still be able to do their jobs and communicate with their families when they are going to be late for dinner," Kreitzer wrote.
Last month, the state Attorney General's Office issued a 13-page opinion about how much personal use of state cellphones, laptops and other devices is appropriate.
The opinion, by assistant Attorney General Julia Bockmon, also addressed personal e-mail and cellphone accounts. Personal communications are not public records, but state business records on personal devices are, she wrote. Personal call records and e-mails could be reviewed by a state official or court to locate any that concern public business, she wrote.
No one in the Palin administration could say if the governor is saving her Yahoo e-mails. If she's emptying her e-mail trash, they are zapped from Yahoo's storage system within days or at the longest, months, Yahoo says.
"If you are asking do we have those e-mails, then the answer is no," said Anand Dubey, director of the state's Enterprise Technology Services. "We don't control Yahoo or Gmail or Hotmail or anything like that."
Dean Dawson, state-records manager, is working on an e-mail-archive system for state employees, who tend to want to hang onto e-mail forever, he said. E-mail records should be kept as long as paper records of the same type — for instance, three years for general correspondence, he said. Top executives such as commissioners and the governor often must keep records longer, under state schedules.
So what about archiving Yahoo e-mails that concern public business?
"That's kind of the gray fuzzy area right now," Dawson said. "I think they would be transferring that data to another medium and then retaining it as a public record."
Copyright © 2008 The Seattle Times Company
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