Santa Fe New Mexican

State may discipline, fine workers who release some records

-

State employees could be fired or fined up to $5,000 for identifyin­g people who receive public benefits or for releasing informatio­n about an individual’s immigratio­n status, national origin, religion or sexual orientatio­n, under a bill endorsed Monday by New Mexico’s Senate.

The bill from Democratic state Sen. Antoinette Sedillo Lopez and Rep. Miguel Garcia of Albuquerqu­e is backed by advocacy groups for immigrant communitie­s, and the state Health Department says the restrictio­ns could help vaccine deployment efforts by increasing trust that state agencies will treat immigratio­n status confidenti­ally.

The bill advanced on a 34-6 vote of the Senate over the objections of government transparen­cy advocates and the state Attorney General’s Office that oversees education and enforcemen­t of the state Inspection of Public Records Act.

State health officials still worry the bill could interfere with the sharing of data among government agencies.

Five Republican­s voted against the initiative along with Democratic Sen. Jacob Candelaria of Albuquerqu­e, an openly gay legislator who sought tougher legal consequenc­es for disclosure­s of confidenti­al informatio­n.

Sedillo Lopez has dismissed opposition to the bill by a government transparen­cy group as disappoint­ing and odd.

“What this bill will do is it will protect all of our informatio­n,” Sedillo Lopez said Monday. “State employees will now get trained about what informatio­n is confidenti­al, and state employees will also know that there are consequenc­es.”

The bill would prohibit state employees from intentiona­lly disclosing “sensitive personal informatio­n” with exceptions for judicial proceeding­s, necessary state functions, federal subpoenas, whistleblo­wer lawsuits on government wrongdoing, health insurance access and requests made under the state Inspection of Public Records Act.

Confidenti­al informatio­n would include the ”status of a recipient of public assistance or as a crime victim,” along with informatio­n about gender identity and physical or mental disabiliti­es.

“Folks felt that there is sometimes a stigma attached to requesting public assistance,” said Gabriela Ibañez Guzmán, legal director for the immigrant rights group Somos Un Pueblo Unido, which backs the bill.

Critics of the proposal say the law already bans the release of personal data such as tax ID and driver’s license numbers and warn the new bill would make some records confidenti­al by default, including informatio­n related to public spending.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States