Grassroots
Lobbying Kit
Guest Editorial: Why
Public Notices are Needed
By Rick Morain, Publisher
Co-chair, Iowa Newspaper Association Government Relations
Committee
Public
notices—items that inform citizens of government-related
activities—have contributed to the fabric of newspaper content since the
17th Century. Surveys over the past several decades repeatedly indicate that
community residents overwhelmingly read their local newspaper, and that they
also believe that public notices should be published in those newspapers.
Public
notices in newspapers appear in a forum independent of government. They can be
stored in a secure and publicly available format, accessible by all segments of
society. Their publication is immediately verifiable, and the circulation data
of the newspapers that publish them is required by the U.S. Postal Service.
A
2006 survey of Iowans, conducted by an Oklahoma research firm, found, to begin
with, that one in every three adult Iowans do not have access to the Internet. That
figure is lower in rural Iowa. In addition, only 8.8 percent of Iowans said they would be very likely
to read public notices on the Internet. Over 60 percent would Ònot at all be
likelyÓ to do so. In fact, over half surveyed said they never look at local
government websites.
Think
about it: would you be more likely to read public notices in this newspaper, or
by surfing the Internet? Where would you be more likely to run across minutes
of city, county or school board meetings, or notices of upcoming public
hearings, or probate notices?
Newspapers
charge governments for public notices. The rate, in nearly all cases, is less
than the rate paid by other advertisers. ThatÕs because the newspaper industry
considers publication of public notices part of its ÒcontractÓ with readers.
Citizens look to their local newspaper to publish information of general
interest, and surveys show that public notices certainly fall into that
category.
The
Internet can supplement the dissemination of news about government activities,
but it should not replace newspapers as the basic conduit of such information.
The newspaper continues to be what is has been since the time of Benjamin
Franklin: the place where people look for whatÕs going on in their local
government.