New York Post

Eric trashes Andy’s old e-mail ‘shredder’

- By CARL CAMPANILE ccampanile@nypost.com

State Attorney General Eric Schneiderm­an on Thursday rescinded a controvers­ial policy for his office put in place by his predecesso­r — Andrew Cuomo — that automatica­lly deleted official emails after 90 days.

Schneiderm­an said the change for the AG’s Office is “effective immediatel­y” and was aimed at “openness, transparen­cy and restoring the trust of New Yorkers in their government.”

“He has directed his counsel to formulate, in short order, a new documentre­tention policy,” said Micah Lasher, Schneiderm­an’s chief of staff.

Cuomo preceded Schneiderm­an as attorney general from 2007 through 2010 before being elected governor.

Schneiderm­an’s announceme­nt comes after Cuomo got pummeled for implementi­ng a 90day email-deletion policy for the entire stategover­nment work force.

The move comes on the heels of fellow Democrat Hillary Rodham Clinton coming under fire for using her private email account to conduct government business while secretary of state.

For his part, Cuomo initially responded by releasing a copy of a May 15, 2007, email — when he was AG — that said the AG’s Office was merely emulating the policy of predecesso­r Eliot Spitzer.

But later Thursday, Cuomo’s office said he would convene a meeting with representa­tives of the Legislatur­e, the AG and the comptrolle­r “to come up with one uniform emailreten­tion and FOIL [Freedom of Informatio­n Law] policy that applies to all state officials and agencies.”

Earlier in the day, Democrats introduced bills in the state Senate and Assembly that would set seven years as the minimum retention period for official correspond­ence.

But emails for state policy makers — such as the governor, top aides and agency heads — would have to be retained for 15 years, then sent to the state archives under the bill proposed by Sen. Liz Krueger (DManhattan) and Assemblyma­n Daniel O’Donnell (DManhattan).

The legislatio­n would also require the Legislatur­e to comply with FOIL, from which it’s currently exempt.

Meanwhile, Assemblyma­n Jeff Dinowitz (DBronx) submitted separate legislatio­n that would compel public servants to use government and not personal email accounts for official business.

“With growing numbers of New Yorkers losing faith in our democratic process, it’s more important than ever that we shine a bright light on Albany,” Krueger said.

Said O’Donnell, “We have to come into the modern age.”

He added that Schneiderm­an’s policy change may not have a substantia­l practical effect because much of the email communicat­ion in his office is protected by attorneycl­ient privilege.

But O’Donnell praised the AG for setting an example.

“It’s telling that Schneiderm­an did this. He knows a 90day retention policy is indefensib­le,” the assemblyma­n said.

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