Daily Local News (West Chester, PA)

Agencies field few open records requests

- The Associated Press

Most state government agencies receive few or no requests for records under Pennsylvan­ia’s public access law and only a fraction of them are appealed, according to a report on the law’s costs for taxpayers.

A drastic revision of Pennsylvan­ia Right-to-Know Law was enacted a decade ago, leading to expanded access and a new set of procedures for handling requests, denials and appeals.

The Legislativ­e Budget and Finance Committee report was ordered after some government­al bodies raised complaints about the cost of complying with the law

and the amount of time it can distract public employees from other duties.

Auditors said about 40 percent of the 588 anonymous requests they made for agency budgets were ignored or turned down, even though it’s indisputab­ly a public record.

Findings in the report:

COSTS

• More than half the agencies surveyed spent less than $500 annually dealing with open records requests. A majority received 10 or fewer requests in 2016, although 6 percent had to answer more than 100. Combined, state and local agencies received an estimated 109,000 requests under the law over the course of the year.

• About 4 percent of agencies accounted for 80 percent of the appeals. More than 94 percent reported no appeals.

• The study’s authors said the total cost for state and local agencies to field requests in 2016 was in the range of $5.7 million to $9.7 million.

WHAT’S A BURDEN?

“The issue of burdensome requests appears to be highly dependent on what the agency perceives to be burdensome,” the study said. “This suggests that the issue is more directly related to concerns about the type of request being made or who is making the request.”

Almost one-third of requests that the agencies themselves considered “overly burdensome” were fulfilled in less than three hours and another third in three to eight hours.

About 7 percent of all requests were made by inmates, with more than half of those being made to the Correction­s Department. Almost all inmate requests were fulfilled within three hours.

Examples of burdensome requests cited in the study included a township — with no full-time employees, no website and no municipal building — that was hit with a 31-paragraph request for informatio­n about litigation and roadways over a 10-year period. It produced 3,727 pages and billed the requester $969.

A request for a vast trove of informatio­n about a school constructi­on project required 30 boxes of documents, a hard drive with data and a legal review — after which the requester never came to examine the records.

COMMERCIAL REQUESTS

The study recommende­d the law be amended to let the Office of Open Records establish an hourly fee for requests made for commercial entities or requests that are exceedingl­y time-consuming. It said the working press or researcher­s could be exempted, and there could be a method of waiving fees when that would be in the public’s best interest.

The survey found that 26 percent of all requests are coming from outside the state, and about 71 percent of those are made for commercial purposes.

LAWYERS’ ROLE

The study found that some government officials refer every Right-to-Know Law request reviewed by a lawyer, a policy that may add needlessly to the cost of providing public records.

INADEQUATE WEBSITES

More than half of 588 randomly selected agencies did not post any informatio­n about open-records requests on their website, as required by the Right-toKnow Law. The study recommende­d the Legislatur­e amend the law to require better training for agency open-records officers and to expand the amount of informatio­n about requests that must be easily found on government websites.

The study said public charter schools were most likely to fail to post the required contact informatio­n, followed by townships and boroughs. State agencies were deemed the most compliant with the website requiremen­ts.

 ?? DIGITAL FIRST MEDIA FILE PHOTO ?? Erik Arneson is exective director of the Pennsylvan­ia Office of Open Records.
DIGITAL FIRST MEDIA FILE PHOTO Erik Arneson is exective director of the Pennsylvan­ia Office of Open Records.

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