
|
| about this site |
who we are |
site map |
reading tips |
teaching tips |
student tips |
build vocab |
|
|
|
Group wants probe of Education emails
NANCY ZUCKERBROD
Citizens for Responsibility and Ethics (Crew) executive director Melanie Sloan said the apparent use of such accounts is making it difficult for the group to obtain documents it is seeking under the Freedom of Information Act. Sloan said the group's lawyer, Dan Roth, had two separate conversations recently with Education Department officials in which he was told that some information he was seeking regarding a reading program might be unavailable because it was not stored in email accounts accessible to the government. Department officials told Roth that agency employees often use private email accounts rather than their government-issued accounts to do official business, Sloan said. If department employees are using private accounts to send official emails, and those aren't being tracked or saved, that could be a violation of the Federal Records Act, she said. The law requires agencies to preserve records of official business. Education Department Katherine McLane disputed Crew's claim. "Mr Roth's portrayal of the conversation is simply wrong," McLane said. "At no time was it suggested to Mr Roth that department officials use private email accounts for official business." McLane said department officials receive training on the proper use of email and the preservation of federal records, and she said many web-based email accounts can't be accessed from Education Department's computers. Crew was seeking information about the Reading First program, an early reading program that has been the subject of federal investigations into conflicts of interest. Crew has filed a suit to get the Education Department to release certain records involving Reading First. Catherine Grant, a spokeswoman for Education Department Inspector General John Higgins, would say only that Crew's request had been received. The allegations come amid a congressional investigation into whether presidential adviser Karl Rove and other top White House officials conducted official business through Republican National Committee email accounts intended for political work, and then deleted them in violation of a law governing how White House records are handled. AP
|© The Post Publishing Public Co., Ltd. All rights reserved 2007 | Last modified: May 25, 2007 |