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Blogs Blocked from Kentucky State Employees

Are you reading this blog from work right now?

Last month we told you about the arraignment of Kentucky Governor Ernie Fletcher.  Accused of hiring political supporters for protected state jobs, Fletcher pleaded not guilty to misdemeanor charges of conspiracy, official misconduct, and political discrimination.

Well, Governor Fletcher has recently reappeared in the news by restricting access to blogs from Kentucky's 34,000 state employees.

Administration officials claim that the move is an effort to curb excessive blog-reading in the workplace, and efficiency experts look favorably on the decision.  In addition to blogs, other categories of websites have been blocked, including humor and sports pages.

But bloggers charge that the censorship is nothing more than a violation of the free speech of those critical of Fletcher's administration.  After Mark Nickolas, owner of the Kentucky-based blog bluegrassreport.org, criticized Fletcher in a New York Times article, 1,000 state employees found that they could no longer access his blog.  A constitutional fight looms ahead:

Central to the constitutional case - which Nickolas says he may challenge in court - is the question of whether blogs enjoy the same First Amendment protections as newspapers, which can be read on state computers. Blogs, too, discuss local policy and politics, and bloggers and state employees say they are protected by the First Amendment.

Undoubtedly, we will continue to hear more in the ongoing debate about the role of blogs in our political landscape.


Tags: Kentucky, In the States, Ernie Fletcher, blogs, censorship (all tags)


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Blowhards Blocking Blogs

After reading the CS Monitor article on this, I realized that I might agree with the Governor's dicision more than I had initially thought.  It seems that not only Blogs were blocked, but also online shopping sites, religion sites and others that according to the article, were overly distracting to employees.  
    I can understand how the blocking of web content of any kind could be deemed as an attack on free speech, but if employees are spending all their time shopping for Urban Outfitters T-Shirts and reading Wonkette.com, then they are not being productive.  

by emorgan on Fri Jul 07, 2006 at 11:05:41 AM EST


productivity in government?

You make a very good point.  The question I have, however, is if all blogs are being blocked.  If both liberal and conservative blogs are being blocked, then their productivity claim may hold water.  However, if the blocking of blogs is selective, then an argument could be made that the Governor's office is just targeting its critics.

If this were the case, though, there probably would have been a big ado about it.

by Kirstin Ellison on Fri Jul 07, 2006 at 11:29:17 AM EST
[ Parent ]


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