Senator Greenleaf's Remarks on Government
Reform (excerpted from a recent televised interview)
Democracy is based on transparency, and the
most important thing we can do is to ensure that the public
has access to information on their government.
An informed electorate is the basis for
democracy, and if we in government don't provide for access
to government information, either through neglect—or with
intent—that is wrong and it is bad for our system of
government. An informed public can give their elected
officials intelligent feedback and input. If we are not
getting that feedback, then we won't have a representative
democracy.
In the mid-1990s, I proposed television
coverage of the legislative process. As a result, PCN was
spawned to cover legislative sessions. Now they cover
everything—Turnpike Commission meetings, the PUC—just about
every facet of government. This is helpful even to us
(legislators) because we can't be everywhere, yet through
this coverage we have the ability to know more.
At about the same time that I proposed
television coverage of legislative sessions, I was also
pushing for internet access to government. This sounds
normal now, but 10 to 15 years ago, this was a new concept.
I thought it would be great if the public could go to
government sites and find information and download forms, go
to the Department of State website, for instance, and see
election results, check on professional licenses, and see
what functions the department serves. Now this is in place
and it seems it was always there, but I initiated this idea
with the thought that it would provide direct access to
government information, and it has.
I was also the sponsor of open records
reform. Pennsylvania was known to have a very weak open
records law, but the records of government are the people's
records, not an agency's records. I wanted our state law to
reflect that, and, after some time, a better open records
law was passed in Pennsylvania and now government documents
are easier to obtain.
The next step is reform of the legislative
process. This process must be deliberative, informative and
transparent. We must change rules and change laws so that
legislators have as much information as possible to do their
job and so that the public gets as much information as
possible to participate in the system and judge how the
process is working.