Governments delay access to public records during pandemic

FILE - In this June 30, 2020, photo, a man passes a clothing shop with open signs in the window in Calexico, Calif. A year after the first coronavirus shutdowns, many U.S. states and cities are still struggling with a silent side effect: Public records have become harder to get. As states prepared to reopen their economies following coronavirus shutdowns last spring, The Associated Press asked governors across the U.S. for records that could shed light on how businesses and health officials influenced their decisions. (AP Photo/Gregory Bull, File)

Gov. David Ige speaks at a news conference Oct. 15, 2020, at the Daniel K. Inouye International Airport in Honolulu. Many U.S. states and cities are still struggling with a silent COVID-19 side effect: Public records have become harder to get. Ige took the most sweeping action when he suspended the state’s entire open-records law in March 2020, but eased the suspension under pressure from open-government advocates. (AP Photo/Marco Garcia, File)

As states prepared to reopen their economies following coronavirus shutdowns last spring, The Associated Press asked governors across the U.S. for records that could shed light on how businesses and health officials influenced their decisions.