The Ukiah Daily Journal

Could Public Records Act be made more useful?

- Dan Walters has been a journalist for more than 60 years, spending all but a few of those years working for California newspapers.

California's Public Records Act, signed by then-gov. Ronald Reagan in 1968, gives the public the legal right to examine government­al documents, with a few specified exceptions.

The state's voters bolstered the PRA in 2004 by passing a constituti­onal amendment placed on the ballot by the Legislatur­e.

Having a law on the books, even one with constituti­onal backing, is one thing; making state and local officials comply with it can often be difficult as journalist­s, the law's most active users, can attest.

While some agencies and local government­s comply readily with PRA requests, others use a variety of techniques to avoid compliance. They will string out responses, demand more specificit­y on what is being sought, try to charge exorbitant fees for copying documents and sometimes just stonewall, forcing those seeking informatio­n to file lawsuits.

A recent judicial ruling in Los Angeles demonstrat­es the difficulty that sometimes occurs when an agency doesn't want to release informatio­n that could be embarrassi­ng.

Consumer Watchdog, an organizati­on that often intervenes in regulatory issues, has been fighting a running battle with Insurance Commission­er Ricardo Lara from virtually the first moment Lara took office four years ago.

In 2020, the organizati­on sued Lara's office seeking communicat­ions pertaining to news media reports that Lara or his underlings had met with lobbyists for a company seeking permission to change ownership. It alleged that the Department of Insurance had not adequately responded to a PRA request.

The suit demanded records pertaining to “any individual­s employed by or representi­ng” Allied Underwrite­rs, a worker's compensati­on insurer. At one point, Consumer Watchdog submitted a sworn declaratio­n by former Assemblyma­n Rusty Areias that he had informed the insurance department that he had been hired by Allied. Areias' lobbying firm later sued Allied, alleging that it had reneged on promised lobbying fees.

The department responded that it was unreasonab­le to ask for records of a broad nature and insisted that it had released all of the records it could identify as pertinent.

The case eventually wound up before Los Angeles Superior Court Judge Mitchell Beckloff, who issued a ruling last month almost fully favoring Lara.

“The court's ruling will likely embolden government officials to shield government records from the public view and raises serious questions about the state's Public Records Act that may need to be addressed by the Legislatur­e or at the ballot box,” said Jerry Flanagan, Consumer Watchdog's litigation direrctor. “Access to informatio­n concerning the conduct of the people's business is a fundamenta­l right of every person in this state and is a critical weapon in the fight against government corruption.”

There's more than a little irony attached to the organizati­on's self-portrayal as an advocate of transparen­cy. Through decades of intervenin­g in regulatory cases, both at the Department of Insurance and the Public Utilities Commission, Consumer Watchdog has steadfastl­y refused to reveal the identities of its supporters.

One cannot discern whether Consumer Watchdog or Lara holds the moral high ground in their running feud. However, the case underscore­s how unwieldy the Public Records Act can be when an agency chooses to fight, rather than comply with, PRA requests.

Government­al entities have an unlimited ability to fight legal battles with their platoons of taxpayer-financed attorneys while those seeking informatio­n must hire their own legal talent.

It raises a question: Is there a better way to handle disputes over PRA requests?

Assemblyma­n Vince Fong, a Bakersfiel­d Republican, believes there is. He has introduced legislatio­n that would create an ombudsman within the state auditor's office to settle such disagreeme­nts without involving judges. It's a concept that could make the PRA a user-friendlier law.

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