The Commercial Appeal

How Hamilton County destroys its public records

- Your Turn

Hamilton County government has found a new way to prevent access to public records: get rid of them.

It’s not really new. It’s the oldest trick in the book. In late July last year, Sarah Grace Taylor, a reporter with the Chattanoog­a Times Free Press, became concerned that the county government was not following state law in its responses to public records requests.

Taylor then requested to inspect all public records requests and responses to those requests for the previous 12 months from the Hamilton County Attorney’s Office.

Hamilton County Attorney Rheubin M. Taylor is listed as the “public records request coordinato­r” in the county’s public records policy, and attorney Dana Beltramo is listed as the designee in his office responsibl­e for managing requests.

The job of a public records request coordinato­r is specified in state statute: “[T]o ensure that public records requests are routed to the appropriat­e records custodian and that the requests are fulfilled in accordance with T.C.A § 10-7-503(a)(2)(b).”

Not many job titles and functions are outlined specifically in state law, but this one is. The part of the Tennessee State Code referenced in the job duties describes the written responses that a government entity must give in responding to a records requests and what must be contained in those responses.

Though the newspaper was only requesting to see the public records requests and written responses for the parts of county government handled by the county attorney’s office, the county attorney’s office said it the newspaper would have to pay $717 in advance to compile and print the records to make them available for inspection.

The newspaper balked. It only asked to inspect records, not get copies. And under the law, no charges could be levied for inspection.

The county attorney’s office was unswayed by the newspaper’s protestati­ons.

“I (wanted) to follow up on this request. In the month since we last talked, I’ve heard a rumor that you all were looking at changing your estimate for the inspection of the records and I wanted to follow that lead before we pursue these records through another method,” reporter Sarah Grace Taylor wrote in a Sept. 18 follow-up email.

County Attorney Rheubin Taylor responded the same day, also by email: “I don’t know from whom you received ‘a rumor’ about my office changing anything, but it certainly wasn’t from a reliable source. Nothing has changed.”

It was not long after that a meeting of the Hamilton County Public Records Commission was called and set for Oct. 2.

According to the draft minutes of the meeting: “Dana Beltramo with the County Attorney’s Office, brought a resolution seeking the Commission’s permission to destroy public record requests and responses after 30 days. The County Attorney’s Office has researched the matter and can find no statute that states how long these have to be retained. Dana stated that 98% of the requests are in the form of emails. A motion to approve the resolution was made by Marc Gravitt and seconded by Bart Mckinney. The vote to approve the resolution was unanimous.”

Gravitt is the county’s Register of Deeds, and Mckinney is the director of county informatio­n technology. They are listed in the draft minutes as two of the four commission members present.

No journalist­s were at the meeting. It is unclear whether proper adequate notice, as required by law, was given for the meeting.

On Jan. 10, after meetings with county officials, the newspaper amended its request, clarifying that it did not want any requests or correspond­ence related to individual health records or EMS calls, and it did not want to view any of the actual requested materials.

It only wanted to see the requests themselves and “all written responses provided by the attorney’s office to the requestors and any related correspond­ence between any operative of the attorney’s office and any requestor.”

On Jan. 21, Beltramo responded and shared for the first time that, actually, the requests and written responses to the requests had been destroyed.

Beltramo went on to say that she has a “log of requests and dispositio­ns that dates back to February 25, 2019.” But the requests and the written replies that document the official functions of the office are apparently gone.

Beltramo didn’t set fire to the records, like the Memphis Police famously did back in 1976 when it doused 10 file cabinets of domestic surveillan­ce records with fuel and lit them up.

But whatever happened, it seems to be some kind of inferno over there in Hamilton County.

Deborah Fisher is executive director of Tennessee Coalition for Open Government, which tracks access to public records and advocates for open government.

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 ?? Deborah Fisher Guest columnist ??
Deborah Fisher Guest columnist

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