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But the commission came to no consensus on whether private-sector journalists should get public subsidies, an idea that would test the historical tradition of journalists' independence from government. ABC News President David Westin, who was not on the commission, said he hoped the report would not be misinterpreted as a call for government to replace local reporting done by newspapers as newspapers retrench. There are already new businesses emerging to try and fill that role, he said. Powell noted the same, saying people should be less concerned about the format in which information is provided and more concerned that people are available to provide it. "It's difficult enough when I get the call from somebody in government complaining about the way we reported something," Westin said. "But if the person himself who is getting the call is either directly or indirectly employed by government, that could be dangerous." The commission urged that the government operate with as much transparency as it can in coming years, offering low-cost access to public records and making social data readily available. It endorsed efforts to provide communities with information in as many forms possible, including mobile phones. Each community should also have an Internet hub
-- a Web site that provides links to many forms of local information, it said. "This is an extraordinarily propitious moment," Ibarguen said. "We didn't have this when we started out two years ago. This is an opportunity."
[Associated
Press;
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