Lodi News-Sentinel

Agencies stall on public records access

- CALmatters is a public interest journalism venture committed to explaining how California’s state Capitol works and why it matters. For more stories by Dan Walters, go to calmatters.org/commentary

On paper, California has some of the nation’s best open records laws, the latest of which allows access to previously secret informatio­n about police misconduct.

However, passing a sunshine law is one thing, while applying it may be entirely different.

That’s currently being demonstrat­ed vis-à-vis the aforementi­oned law granting access to police misconduct records.

The Los Angeles Times and other media outlets jointly explored how police officials are complying with requests for informatio­n and found that “six months after Senate Bill 1421 went into effect, some of the state’s largest law enforcemen­t agencies haven’t provided a single record. Some law enforcemen­t organizati­ons are charging high fees for records, destroying documents and even ignoring court orders to produce the files.”

Agencies that are stonewalli­ng records requests include the California Highway Patrol. Sen. Nancy Skinner, a Berkeley Democrat who authored the new law, told the Times, “If the state agencies themselves are acting like they’re above the law, that’s absolutely the wrong model and the wrong example to set for the rest of the local government agencies up and down the state.”

Footdraggi­ng is not confined to local or state police department­s.

San Francisco Superior Court Judge Richard Ulmer ruled on May 17 that SB 1421 requires the state Department of Justice

to release all records on officer sexual assault, dishonesty and serious use of force, including files about police and sheriff’s deputies that the department possesses.

The suit was brought by the First Amendment Coalition and public radio station KQED.

However, Attorney General Xavier Becerra, who had rebuffed requests for records held by his agency, is appealing Judge Ulmer’s ruling, arguing anew that the Department of Justice shouldn’t have to release records on local police misconduct.

The frustratio­ns about obtaining police records that the Legislatur­e declared to be accessible mirrors what journalist­s and others have experience­d while invoking the half-century-old California Public Records Act (PRA) to obtain documents.

It’s not uncommon for government officials to stall on requests or misuse the law’s exemptions to deny access. Currently, the only way for frustrated requesters to proceed is to sue, which may string out the issue for months or even years and is, of course, quite costly.

Assemblyma­n Paul Fong introduced legislatio­n, backed by journalist­ic and good government groups, to provide another avenue to appeal PRA denials by state agencies. Assembly Bill 289 would designate the state auditor, currently Elaine Howle, as an “independen­t referee” to examine denied requests and, if warranted, order the affected agency to comply.

The bill passed the Assembly without dissent but ran into a stone wall last week in the Senate Judiciary Committee, whose chairwoman, Santa Barbara Democrat Hannah-Beth Jackson, had what she described as “two pages of concerns.”

She said it would allow a single unelected official to make decisions without judicial review and described the measure as “not ripe for prime time.”

With her opposition, the bill died on a partisan vote.

“The Senate Judiciary Committee had an opportunit­y to bring transparen­cy to state government and to close a loophole that allows bureaucrat­s to operate in secrecy with very little opportunit­y to be accountabl­e to the public,” Fong, a Bakersfiel­d Republican, said afterwards.

Some of Jackson’s criticism is well-placed, but the death of AB 289 leaves a serious problem unresolved. Those seeking records from recalcitra­nt agencies face expensive, often protracted battles with officials such as Becerra who have bottomless reservoirs of tax funds with which to wage legal war.

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