FC: Bush should pick chief privacy officer straightaway, groups say

From: Declan McCullagh (declanat_private)
Date: Mon Apr 16 2001 - 10:00:24 PDT

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    [If these worthy groups and academics were interested only in encouraging 
    the Feds to think more seriously about how agencies should approach 
    privacy, there would be nothing to criticize and everything to applaud. But 
    there is the potential for Bush to pick someone who is more interested in 
    upping regulations of the private sector, something that is not as clearly 
    a good thing. --Declan]
    
    ***********
    
    From: ariat_private
    Subject: Public Interest Groups and Academics Call on Bush Administration 
    to Fill Privacy Position
    Message-Id: <20010416131813.2BEDD4A5B7at_private>
    Date: Mon, 16 Apr 2001 09:18:13 -0400 (EDT)
    
    Public Interest Groups and Academics Call on Bush Administration to Fill
    Privacy Position
    
    In a letter sent today, a diverse group of advocacy organizations and
    academics called on the Director of the Office and Management and budget to
    hire a new Chief Privacy Counselor.
    
    The signers expressed concern that privacy would lose the momentum that it
    had gained at the end of last year.  "We are concerned that without these
    central staff resources dedicated solely to privacy, we will return to a
    time when privacy was an afterthought in government and commercial data
    processing; education of the different agencies took years rather than
    months; and OMB staff knew little about the larger privacy issues effecting
    the country," the letter read.
    
    The signers want the new counselor to oversee the implementation of existing
    privacy law as it applies to the federal government and advise the President
    on privacy policy in the public and private sectors.
    
    "Despite all that we have heard about the importance of privacy recently in
    both the public and private sectors from Congress and in the polls," said
    Center for Democracy and Technology Senior Policy Analyst Ari Schwartz, "we
    are still waiting for the Administration to appoint leadership on the
    issue."
    
    The organizational signers included The Center for Democracy and Technology,
    Consumer Action, the Free Congress Foundation, OMB Watch, Private Citizen,
    and Privacy Foundation along with seven important academic experts Mary J.
    Culnan, Bentley College; Rod Dixon, Rutgers University Law School; Jerry
    Kang, UCLA School of Law; Deirdre K. Mulligan, Boalt Law School, University
    of California, Berkeley ; Joel R. Reidenberg, Fordham University School of
    Law; Paul Schwartz, Brooklyn Law School; and David E. Sorkin, The John
    Marshall Law School, Chicago.
    
    The full letter is available online at:
    http://www.cdt.org/privacy/010412omb.shtml
    
    Contact: Ari Schwartz
    Center for Democracy and Technology
    202-637-9800
    ariat_private
    
    ----------------------------------
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    E-mail questions, comments, or requests to subscribe or unsubscribe
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    -----------------------------------
    Ari Schwartz
    Policy Analyst
    Center for Democracy and Technology
    1634 Eye Street NW, Suite 1100
    Washington, DC 20006
    202 637 9800
    fax 202 637 0968
    ariat_private
    http://www.cdt.org
    -----------------------------------
    
    
    
    
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