Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

Your Right to Know: Don’t charge records requesters for redactions

- Your Turn

You’ve already paid for them. They’re yours. But if you want to see the public records that show what your government is doing, some state lawmakers want you to pay again — this time, for redactions.

That’s right. They want you to pay more to get less.

Currently, the state’s Open Records Law allows public officials to charge only for the “actual, necessary, and direct cost” of copying, mailing and in some cases locating public records. Senate Bill 789, which the Wisconsin Senate recently passed, barely more than a month after it was introduced, would allow law enforcemen­t and correction­s agencies to add another fee, for the cost of redacting audio and video.

At a Jan. 3 hearing, proponents of the bill complained about the increasing number of requests and the complex and time-consuming process of redacting body camera and dash camera recordings. State Sen. Jesse James, R-Altoona, the bill’s lead Senate sponsor, testified it takes an average of an hour and a half to review and redact each hour of video. This, he said, can take up “valuable agency time, especially for department­s that are already understaffed.”

James, a former cop and chief of police, said he knows “firsthand how our law enforcemen­t department­s and agencies can be scrutinize­d, especially in the last few years. They face open records requests constantly, and while they are happy to fulfill them to keep our government open and transparen­t, they would appreciate an opportunit­y to be properly compensate­d” for the time it takes.

Others also argued the bill, now awaiting action in the state Assembly, is a way to help law enforcemen­t “recoup” their time and resources.

But such reasoning runs counter to the spirit and letter of the Open Records Law, which holds that providing people with public records is “an integral part of the routine duties of officers and employees whose responsibi­lity it is to provide such informatio­n.”

Get that? “Routine.” Fulfilling records requests is already supposed to be part of what these public officials are paid to do, not something extra for which they should be paid again. Imagine police sending a crime victim a bill for the time detectives spend ruling out suspects. After all, these investigat­ions are time-consuming and complex. And why should everyone else have to foot the bill for an investigat­ion into a crime that only affected one person?

It is disingenuo­us to claim this fee is recuperati­on of resources because your tax dollars are already supposed to have purchased the work of making public records public. Allowing charges for redactions might even incentiviz­e some records custodians to take more time processing requests.

Worse, imposing what can easily run to hundreds and even thousands of dollars of redaction costs will make obtaining certain records unaffordable to some requesters, including media outlets that obtain videos as a vital check on law enforcemen­t and correction­s workers.

The bill has drawn opposition from the American Civil Liberties Union of

Wisconsin, which has this to say: “Lack of transparen­cy and police accountabi­lity creates further distrust in law enforcemen­t, making community engagement with law enforcemen­t more fraught and less effective. Ultimately, proposals like SB-789 could allow law enforcemen­t to shirk their obligation to be publicly accountabl­e, and further erode the belief that police protect communitie­s rather than only their own.”

Transparen­cy serves a public good. And the law says there is a presumptio­n these records are public, regardless of who requests them or why they’re making the request.

Charging individual requesters instead of reallocati­ng resources and taking a closer look at budget priorities sends a dangerous message. The public deserves a system that treats an essential function of government as, well, part of the job.

Your Right to Know is a monthly column distribute­d by the Wisconsin Freedom of Informatio­n Council ( wisfoic.org ), a nonprofit, nonpartisa­n group dedicated to open government. Amanda St. Hilaire is the news content manager at FOX6 in Milwaukee.

 ?? Amanda St. Hilaire Guest columnist ??
Amanda St. Hilaire Guest columnist

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