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United StatesHealthOverlooked from the right10 days ago

RFK Jr. claims his calendar is publicly available. We’ve been trying to get it for a year

Health Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. claimed his calendar is 'publicly available' in response to criticism about transparency. However, STAT News has attempted to obtain his calendar through Freedom of Information Act requests and direct inquiries for over a year without success. The article highlights discrepancies between Kennedy's public commitments to transparency and the actual availability of information, noting legal challenges, reduced staffing for FOIA requests, and allegations of journalist blacklisting within the Department of Health and Human Services.

WASHINGTON — Health secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. on Wednesday pointed to his “publicly available calendar” as an example of his commitment to transparency and to beat back unfavorable reporting.

But no such calendar, detailing who Kennedy meets with or how he spends his time, has been released by the administration. STAT has been asking the Department of Health and Human Services for Kennedy’s calendar for more than a year, via Freedom of Information Act requests and emails to the press office.

Kennedy came into office advocating for “radical transparency” and promising to open up government. His department has instead faced lawsuits over failures to release information, cut staffers who handle FOIA requests, and drawn anger from lawmakers, who can’t get responses to their queries, either. He’s even acknowledged that HHS blacklists certain journalists because leaders disagree with their work.

Since last year, STAT reporters have requested the calendars of Kennedy and his principal deputy chief of staff, Stefanie Spear, multiple times. That has included a request last February for a calendar from Kennedy’s first two weeks on the job and then a request last June for Spear’s calendars since she started in her role. Spear, whose personal office is attached to Kennedy’s, is known to attend nearly every meeting with the secretary.

The HHS press office did not respond to questions about the public calendar Kennedy described, the number of staffers currently in FOIA offices across the agency, the response times to requests compared to earlier administrations, or which outlets were being restricted by the administration.

None of STAT’s FOIA requests have been completed, and some haven’t been acknowledged — despite HHS policy requiring a response with tracking and contact information within 10 days of submitting a request. That includes three STAT inquiries from September 2025. The web page previously used to track requests has been taken down.

STAT has been denied expedited processing for some of its requests and has appealed. As of March, one of STAT’s appeals had more than 600 others ahead of it in the queue, the agency told attorneys representing STAT.

In April 2025, Kennedy promised to speed up the department’s ability to manage FOIA requests.

“We’re restoring all the FOIA offices, and we’re going to make it much easier for people to get the information. We’re going to post as much as we can,” he told reporters at a press conference. He also empathized with concerns about the time it takes to get a response.

“I spent a lot of years litigating under FOIA, and I experienced the frustration of going year after year and being stonewalled by the agency … we all understand how important it is to have clear communication,” he said.

More than a year later, HHS FOIA officials tell STAT that the office is still in the midst of a “significant transition.” A new FOIA portal Kennedy promised has yet to come online, though officials say it will be available “soon.”

In the meantime, the office said at least one FOIA — the request for Spear’s calendars that we submitted last June — will take another 180 days, amid a backlog of 12,000 requests and “limited resources.”

It’s not just journalists or citizens filing FOIA requests who have faced barriers. Democratic lawmakers have repeatedly voiced frustration that Kennedy and his team are unresponsive to requests — even after the secretary agrees during hearings to release information. (A spokesperson for the Senate Finance Committee’s minority leadership said Thursday they haven’t heard back on multiple requests to HHS.)

Some Republican lawmakers who got promises from Kennedy to follow up on issues did not respond to questions about whether he had followed through.

At the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services, a division of HHS that oversees trillions of federal health care dollars, opacity has been the rule of the day since before the Trump administration. But the situation has worsened in recent years , and it has become almost impossible to speak with CMS officials, as STAT’s Bob Herman recently documented. (CMS previously told STAT: “No reporter is entitled to interviews, press calls, or access to internal staff. CMS will continue to engage through established channels that ensure accuracy, consistency, and transparent communication.”)

Additional inquiries sent to CMS by STAT regarding Administrator Mehmet Oz’s anti-fraud crackdown have gone unanswered. CMS did not respond when reached for comment.

In May 2025, the Center for Biological Diversity sued HHS for failing to release Kennedy’s public calendars. The group also asked for information on the development of the updated dietary guidelines. The case hasn’t moved forward in the District of Columbia courts.

FOIA requests have long been drawn-out processes, no matter the administration. But some accountability advocates were hopeful that one of Kennedy’s core promises — to restore “radical trans…

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Source document: STAT News

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STAT NewsIndependentLeft10 days ago
RFK Jr. claims his calendar is publicly available. We’ve been trying to get it for a year

Health Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. claimed his calendar is 'publicly available' in response to criticism about transparency. However, STAT News has attempted to obtain his calendar through Freedom of Information Act requests and direct inquiries for over a year without success. The article highlights discrepancies between Kennedy's public commitments to transparency and the actual availability of information, noting legal challenges, reduced staffing for FOIA requests, and allegations of journalist blacklisting within the Department of Health and Human Services.

Bias read (Left): The article frames the issue as a failure of transparency and accountability under the current administration, highlighting criticisms of the department's handling of FOIA requests, staffing cuts, and alleged journalist blacklisting. It emphasizes the contrast between Kennedy's stated commitment to‘

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