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Government Resources

Thanks to the fact that we live in a society based on democratic principals, we have at our disposal an immense volume of information in the form of government records. Many of them go back as far as the birth of our nation and beyond. Depending on the state you are in they could go back 300 years or more. In Washington, we have records as far back at the mid 1800’s, well before we became a state in 1889.

The Washington Coalition for Open Government (COG) was formed from several political groups in June 1971 to push for public disclosure legislation. The state legislature had debated laws on campaign disclosures repeatedly beginning in 1963 and passed an open meetings law in the 1971 session, but avoided addressing public records. The coalition drafted a “package” of “right-to-know” legislation in an initiative that was filed in March.

That was the idea in 1972, when a citizen’s Coalition for Open Government in Washington State successfully worked for the passage of Initiative 276, which passed with a whopping 72 percent favorable vote. It was a major stepping stone to laws that provide open meetings, access to public records, and public disclosure of campaign finances, lobbying, and financial affairs of elected officials.

Despite that big majority in 1972, ongoing citizen vigilance has been essential to resist the forces that work against openness and transparency. Often with good intentions, governments tend toward closure and withholding information that legitimately should be public. For example, the original open records law listed only 10 narrow exceptions to the general rule that all government records must be open to the public. Since then, more than 300 exemptions have been added by the Legislature, with more introduced every legislative session.

Now known as the Public Records Act, the law was based on the premise that tax payers foot the bill for the creation and storage of immense volumes of information and therefore own it and, with limited exceptions, should have access to it.

RCW 42.56.030
Construction.
The people of this state do not yield their sovereignty to the agencies that serve them. The people, in delegating authority, do not give their public servants the right to decide what is good for the people to know and what is not good for them to know. The people insist on remaining informed so that they may maintain control over the instruments that they have created. This chapter shall be liberally construed and its exemptions narrowly construed to promote this public policy and to assure that the public interest will be fully protected. In the event of conflict between the provisions of this chapter and any other act, the provisions of this chapter shall govern.
2007 c 197 § 2;2005 c 274 § 283;1992 c 139 § 2. Formerly RCW 42.17.251.]

From the skip tracer’s point of view , the PRA opened up resources which, when combined with other information sources, allows for the identification and tracing of most people in the state and through out the nation. The following lessons will describe in detail how to access a variety of public documents.

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