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10/25/06
AP
and Colorado Press Association test the Colorado Open Records
Act
What's a public record? Statewide survey finds wide
variety in what officials are willing to hand over
By JON SARCHE
Associated Press Writer
DENVER (AP) -- Want to know what your local planning commission
has been up to? It's easy and free in many places, but be
prepared to go through the city attorney's office to get meeting
minutes if you happen to live in, say, Sterling.
Curious about how your favorite restaurant did in its last
health inspection? In some Colorado counties, just go online
and it's all laid out free of charge. Elsewhere, be prepared
to fill out a formal request, pay for copies and face a few
questions from health department employees.
How about e-mail messages sent between a school superintendent
and school board members? Be ready for even more suspicion
or even rude treatment. Be patient, too: Many districts send
such requests through their staff attorney who will want to
know what the information will be used for.
Colorado's public records law is fairly simple. With some
exceptions for personnel or proprietary commercial information,
the public is entitled to see any record -- on paper or otherwise
-- made, maintained or kept by any public entity for use in
carrying out its duties or involving the receipt or spending
of public money.
Yet the way Colorado local government agencies handle public
records requests varies sharply, according to a statewide
survey conducted by 23 newspaper members of The Associated
Press and Colorado Press Association over the summer.
The results show that obtaining records can be an intimidating
and disheartening process for members of the public, said
Ed Otte, executive director of the CPA.
"Although this project was organized by the Colorado
Press Association and The Associated Press, the intent was
to show how easy or difficult it is for the public to access
public records," Otte said. "In some situations
where there are obstacles to getting copies of records, or
the fees seem unusually high, that can serve as a deterrent."
The survey included requests for records in 21 counties from
the Western Slope to the eastern Plains. It covered municipal
and county agencies, school districts and special districts.
To request the records over two days in June, newspapers recruited
members of the public, interns and reporters who identified
themselves when asked.
In some places, recruits had no problems. Some agencies put
restaurant inspections, meeting minutes and other information
on the Internet, and others handed over documents without
question.
North Metro Fire Rescue in Adams County, for example, provided
a copy of a financial audit for free. The Gypsum town manager's
office turned over travel expenses, no questions asked and
no fee charged.
But some of the requests were met with resistance and suspicion.
Amy Maestas, who checked for records from Durango city and
La Plata County agencies, said she had expected some resistance.
But she was surprised at the confusion or rudeness demonstrated
by officials when she asked for records concerning a day care
center and for e-mail messages between the Durango School
District 9-R superintendent and board members.
Maestas, who was unemployed at the time she sought records
but now is a copy editor for the Durango Herald, said local
officials referred her to the state government for the day
care center records. The response took three weeks.
"I'm not a parent, but I can certainly understand some
level of frustration that parents would go through trying
to get their child into day care, needing that information
to make such a critical decision," she said. "It
seems like that information should be made readily available
and that the staffs of child care centers should be able to
make that accessible in a timely fashion."
Like many other recruits, she found the most suspicion came
from school district officials.
"If I were a parent trying to take a role in my child's
education, I'd want the leaders to be more forthcoming and
easier to work with," she said.
In Logan County, Marcia Heifner said she was frustrated by
the resistance she found.
"It seemed to me like the city of Sterling, they felt
like they were trying to protect the holy grail or something,"
said Heifner, whose husband is editor of the Journal-Advocate
newspaper in Sterling. "They weren't really jumping at
the chance to be helpful a lot of the time."
Elsewhere, a recruit who asked for e-mail messages between
the Steamboat Springs School District superintendent and school
board members said she was laughed at before she was peppered
with questions: Who are you? Why do you want the messages
and what are you going to use them for? The request was eventually
routed through the district's attorneys.
There was a similar response at the St. Vrain Valley School
District, where the recruit was repeatedly asked why she wanted
the information and what she planned to do with it. She was
then asked to submit a written request that was then presented
to the superintendent and each board member.
Overall, requests for the school e-mails raised the most suspicion,
followed by requests for city officials' travel expense reports,
requests for traffic accident reports and restaurant inspections.
Agencies can set reasonable rules for handling their records,
but the bottom line is that as long as a record is readily
available -- generally meaning not in storage or in active
use -- it must be made available for inspection immediately,
said Tom Kelley and Steve Zansberg, two Denver attorneys who
specialize in media law.
Court rulings and a 2001 attorney general's opinion say people
asking for public records don't have to identify themselves.
And they don't have to tell the agency why they want the information,
the attorneys said.
Zansberg said at least one public official has complained
that reporters -- who are supposed to have the same access
as any member of the public -- engage in a "fishing expedition"
by asking for records without explaining why they want it.
"My response is the Open Records Act is a fishing license,"
Zansberg said. When an official asks a question in these cases,
"the appropriate answer either is I'm not going to tell
you, or the reason I want them is because the law says I'm
entitled to them."
Still, nothing in the law specifically prevents record-keepers
from seeking information about who is asking for certain records
or why. Many agencies say it helps them determine exactly
what records will be most helpful to the person requesting
them.
"They certainly can ask the questions, but you're entitled
to refuse to answer, and if they refuse to disclose the records,
I think they're violating your rights," Kelley said.
In Mesa County, a staff member at the health department, when
asked to provide a restaurant inspection report, told the
recruit the agency "did not give this information to
just anyone," according to the survey. The recruit later
learned inspection results can be viewed on the Internet for
free.
Some agencies legitimately ask for more information to help
narrow the request, said Mark Silverstein, legal director
for the American Civil Liberties Union's Colorado chapter.
Others set obstacles that make it difficult to learn about
how decisions are made or money is spent, he said.
"There's a tremendous risk that agencies who have something
to hide will in fact try to hide the info by making it overly
difficult to obtain public records," Silverstein said.
"And just as the copying fees can have a chilling effect
on the ability of members of the public to review public documents,
so too the unnecessary obstacles put in the path of records
requesters can also have a chilling effect.
"Some community groups or some interested members of
the public might just give up," he said.
___
On the Net:
Attorney general's opinion: http://www.ago.state.co.us/agopinions/ago0101.cfm
----
How the FOI project was conducted
By The Associated Press
Over the summer, nearly two dozen newspapers set out to test
how well the Colorado Open Records Act is working in a project
coordinated by members of the Colorado Press Association and
The Associated Press. They recruited residents to ask government
agencies for a wide variety of what should be public records
and recorded the agencies' responses.
Many recruits were local residents, some were newspaper interns
and a few were reporters. Recruits were told not to lie or
misidentify themselves if asked. If asked whether they were
working for a paper, they were told either to say yes or to
say it's their own business or that they were simply asking
for public information.
Most of the recruits requested the records on June 14-15.
Recruits went to various county and municipal agencies to
ask for the county's latest voter-registration roll; meeting
minutes from a city or county planning or zoning commission
from 2004; e-mail exchanges between a school-district superintendent
and school board members from May; travel expense reports
for a city manager or equivalent official for the last six
months of 2005; an accident report from city police for an
accident that occurred in the first week of June; information
about a day care or preschool; county health department reports
on one restaurant for 2004-06; a 2005 financial audit for
a local special district; retirement package for a school
district superintendent; and information on whether a contractor
for a local project was licensed or bonded.
Participating news organizations are:
-- The Aspen Times
-- Aurora Sentinel
-- Daily Camera, Boulder
-- The Gazette, Colorado Springs
-- Cortez Journal
-- Craig Daily Press
-- The Denver Post
-- Douglas County News-Press
-- Durango Herald
-- Eagle Valley Enterprise
-- Evergreen Canyon Courier
-- Coloradoan, Fort Collins
-- Glenwood Post Independent
-- The Daily Sentinel, Grand Junction
-- Greeley Tribune
-- Leadville Herald Democrat
-- Longmont Daily Times-Call
-- Loveland Daily Reporter-Herald
-- Northglenn-Thornton Sentinel
-- The Pueblo Chieftain
-- Rocky Mountain News
-- Steamboat Pilot & Today
-- Journal-Advocate, Sterling
----
A primer on Colorado public records law
By The Associated Press
Some questions and answers about Colorado's Open Records Act:
Q: What government records are the public entitled to inspect
under the Open Records Act?
A: With a few specific exceptions, all records made, kept
or maintained by government agencies at any level, from the
state to counties to municipalities to special districts.
Federal agencies are covered by the U.S. Freedom of Information
Act. Among exceptions to the state law are proprietary commercial
information, personnel files, information from law enforcement
investigations, research projects conducted by state institutions,
real estate appraisals for property being acquired for public
use and certain tax records. Other state and federal laws
list other exceptions, such as certain medical records held
by the state Department of Public Health and Environment and
some records held by the Department of Human Services.
Q: How should people ask for government records?
A: A little homework is necessary to find which agency holds
the records, and who within that agency -- the custodian of
records -- can make arrangements for inspection. Unless an
agency rule requires it, requests do not have to be made in
writing.
Q: How are agencies required to respond to open-records requests?
A: If the requested records are not immediately available,
the agency has three working days to make it available. If
the request is large enough that the agency cannot respond
within three days, the agency must notify the requester, and
gets an additional seven working days to make the records
available.
Q: How much can agencies charge for copies?
A: State law requires that any copying fees be "reasonable,"
and no more than $1.25 per page unless the actual cost exceeds
that amount. The cost for copies of certain records, such
as tape recordings or photographs, may be higher. In no case
can government agencies profit from copy fees. An agency can
choose whether to allow requesters to make their own copies
of original documents.
Q: What if the agency refuses to allow inspection of records
you believe should be public?
A: You can ask for a written statement explaining the decision.
You can ask the agency to reconsider or ask a court to review
the decision. If the court determines the agency was wrong
to deny access, it must award costs and attorney fees to the
applicant. If the court determines the request for records
was "frivolous, groundless or vexatious," the agency
must be awarded costs and attorney fees. A willful and knowing
violation of the Open Records act is a crime punishable by
up to 90 days in jail and a fine of up to $100.
Q: What happens if a public record holds some information
open to the public and some that is an exception to the Open
Records Act?
A: Government agencies generally are not required to redact,
or black out, confidential portions of a record, and can legally
deny access to the entire record. But records custodians can
choose to make redactions, based on the difficulty involved,
the amount of confidential information in a document and the
risk of accidentally disclosing confidential information.
Q: Am I required to identify myself and why I want the information?
A: No. Under rulings from the state Supreme Court and Court
of Appeals, people do not have to answer such questions, and
an agency cannot refuse to allow access to a public record
based on a person's refusal to answer such questions.
Q: What information is available about government employees?
A: Government employees' personnel files are confidential,
but under the law, those files do not include performance
ratings, salaries, expense allowances or benefits.
Q: How are criminal justice records treated differently from
other government records?
A: The custodian, usually a chief of police or sheriff, has
more discretion than a civilian-agency custodian in deciding
whether to allow access based on perceived harm to the public
interest. As with civilian records, decisions denying access
to criminal justice records can be challenged in court.
___
Source:
Attorney general's opinion:
http://www.ago.state.co.us/agopinions/ago0101.cfm
----
FOI project -- a case study of restaurant inspections
By JON SARCHE
Associated Press Writer
DENVER (AP) -- Getting a hold of a restaurant health inspection
report varies widely around Colorado, according to an open
records project this summer conducted by member newspapers
of The Associated Press and Colorado Press Association.
Some of the state's larger counties post the reports online
for anyone to read any time they want. Yet the survey of 21
counties found that even in some of those more populous areas
people who asked for reports in person ran into obstacles
ranging from copying fees to suspicious employees.
An assistant city attorney in Aspen told one project recruit
he couldn't release a report without a more specific purpose
than "personal project." Recruits in other counties
were asked who they were and why they wanted the reports --
despite court rulings and state guidelines forbidding such
questions as a condition of releasing the information.
When a recruit in Douglas County was asked why she wanted
the report, she asked if that mattered. The agency official
told her it didn't, but the agency likes to track such information.
The state Open Records Act sets a baseline for which records
must be made available to members of the public, but agencies
can impose their own rules, too. The differences can create
a confusing patchwork even for people familiar with the law.
"You can ask for the same document from a number of different
agencies, and some will give it to you and some will not,"
said Mark Silverstein, legal director for the American Civil
Liberties Union's Colorado chapter. "My experience is
there has been a tremendous variance from public entity to
public entity in how requests are processed, how they are
dealt with and whether public officials are friendly or unfriendly."
Some agencies believe they are simply custodians of records
that belong to the public and try to make access easy, said
Steve Zansberg, a Denver attorney who specializes in media
law.
"Then we've encountered and continue to encounter a good
number of records custodians who have a very different view
and use every means possible to erect barriers to discourage
public access," he said.
In Routt County, three people in the health department repeatedly
asked the recruit who she was and why she wanted the information.
They asked her several times if she was a lawyer, the recruit
reported.
Ultimately, one of the employees went through the report with
the recruit, explaining all the codes and offering to answer
further questions by phone.
Some smaller counties rely on the state health department
to conduct restaurant inspections. Residents can obtain those
reports by filling out an open-records request and e-mailing,
faxing or mailing it to the agency's Denver headquarters.
Other counties simply lack the resources to put reports online.
Lake County officials said online posting was too expensive,
though reports are available at county offices in Leadville.
La Plata County found an unusual solution: For about six months,
the San Juan Basin Health Department has published summaries
detailing only critical violations -- problems that could
cause disease -- in the Durango Herald, county food program
manager Jackie Caudill said.
"The public seems to enjoy it," she said. "It's
always the talk of the town, at least for a day or two."
----
Copies of public records in Colorado can carry big
tab
(Fort Collins) Coloradoan
By KEVIN DARST
FORT COLLINS, Colo. (AP) -- For 38 years, Coloradans have
had to pay up to $1.25 per page to get copies of public records,
the highest allowable rate set by state law in the United
States.
Open government advocates say it might be time for Colorado
to review a law passed in 1968, before high-speed copiers
became commonplace.
"It costs 7 cents (a page) at Kinko's. Not 75 cents,
not 50 cents, not $1.25. Seven cents," said Jenny Flanagan,
executive director at Colorado Common Cause, a government
watchdog group.
A database of state open records laws maintained by the Reporters
Committee for Freedom of the Press indicates that most state
laws require governments to pass along "reasonable"
fees to recover actual costs from those seeking copies of
government records. Some states allow agencies to charge customers
for staff time to search and copy documents.
Several specify in statutes the maximum allowable charges
for duplications, with Colorado's top rate of $1.25 a full
25 percent higher than any other state.
New Mexico limits per-page charges to $1, the closest to Colorado,
but unlike Colorado does not allow charges for staff time.
Missouri caps copy charges at 10 cents a page but allows agencies
to charge for staff time.
Texas has what its officials believe to be the nation's best
system. The state in 1995 overhauled public records rules
to create a uniform fee schedule that assured customers they
would pay the same fee for 10 copies in Texarkana as they
do in El Paso.
"We've always aimed for consistency and uniformity,"
said Tom Kelly, a spokesman for the Texas attorney general's
office, which enforces the state's open records laws and can
require governments to repay citizens for overcharges.
Under the Texas rules, copies of most public records cost
10 cents a page. Agencies can charge staff time if the number
of pages is more than 50.
The law has "a lot of wiggle room" that could allow
record keepers to make documents expensive, but it has worked
well so far, said Chip Babcock, a First Amendment attorney
in Texas.
"It gives you predictability, something you can point
to," Babcock said. "It doesn't allow a clerk in
a rural county who doesn't like the press just to jack somebody
around."
----
Open records requests often prompt suspicion
By JON SARCHE
Associated Press Writer
DENVER (AP) -- Ask a city official for minutes from the latest
zoning commission meeting and you're likely to get a copy
immediately with no questions asked. Ask a county clerk for
voter registration rolls and you should have it within hours.
But go to a school district headquarters and ask for the superintendent's
retirement package or e-mail messages between the superintendent
and school board members and you're likely to be questioned
about your identity, why you want the information and what
you plan to do with it.
They're all public records and supposed to be available for
the asking to anyone, but a survey by Associated Press and
Colorado Press Association newspapers around Colorado found
that requests for public records raise suspicions in some
agencies -- most often in school districts.
District officials said they question people who ask for records
to help determine exactly what they are looking for. But they
also say their suspicions are well-founded and they have a
legal duty to protect children.
"When you are working with people's children, people
can get really mean and nasty, so in many ways when someone
is asking for information, we want to know what for so we
can help them resolve their problems," said Deborah Uroda,
spokeswoman for the Durango 9-R district. "We've had
experiences in this district where people try to go around
people to try to embarrass people. We just want an open and
honest dialogue."
Nancy Herbert, spokeswoman for the Saint Vrain Valley School
District in Longmont, said she asks people seeking records
for identification and contact information, and the reason
for the requests.
"I'm simply trying to help the person narrow down what
information I can get to them in a streamlined fashion, or
even so I can tell them what they need to ask for to get what
they need," Herbert said.
Overall, the project survey found that requests for superintendent-board
member e-mails raised the most suspicion. Requests for city
officials' travel expense reports, for traffic accident reports,
for restaurant inspections and for information on a day care
or preschool also were met with demands for identification
or the reason for the request.
Both Uroda and Herbert said they couldn't deny a records request
to somebody who refused to answer their questions, but said
that person likely would be asked to fill out a formal open-records
request form.
At the Academy School District 20 in Colorado Springs, requests
for public records routinely go through the district's attorneys
to ensure that no confidential information about children
is released, spokeswoman Nanette Anderson said.
"Some requests are for documents that aren't public,"
she said. "I think people are just trying to err on the
side of protecting the students."
Other agencies routinely ask for the name and contact information
of people seeking all kinds of records, ranging from restaurant
inspections and voter registration rolls to city officials'
travel expense reports. Many also ask for the reason behind
the request and what will be done with the information.
Nothing in the state Open Records Act prohibits government
officials from asking such questions. But people generally
can't be denied the information they're seeking just because
they don't want to answer, said Tom Kelley, a Denver attorney
who specializes in media law.
----
Voter rolls costly -- except for candidates
By KATE MARTIN
(Loveland) Daily Reporter-Herald
LOVELAND, Colo. (AP) -- Certified candidates and political
parties can get a list of all Larimer County registered voters
for free. Everyone else has to pay.
The Reporter-Herald newspaper recently asked the Larimer County
Clerk and Recorder's office for an updated voter registration
roll. The newspaper staff member was asked for whom she was
getting the document, and then the clerk spoke with her supervisor.
The clerk said she needed a written request and that it would
take "a few days" to process.
The information, recorded onto a CD, would cost $500.
Asked about the incident, county Clerk and Recorder Scott
Doyle said his office is not required to know the names of
people obtaining records. Doyle also said there's nothing
in the law that prevents him from selling election records;
his office basis the cost on a survey of other counties.
He said the policy of giving a list for free to political
parties is a policy that was crafted before he was clerk.
He expanded it to candidates when he took office.
"I think it's a reasonable thing to do based on moving
forward with democracy," he said. "Others who want
it are probably interested in it for a mailing list and want
it use it for profit."
Doyle said his office charges $500 for the full list of the
county's more than 149,000 registered voters; a partial list
could cost less, he said. A list of absentee voters can also
be had for $100 with weekly updates on who has and has not
voted their ballot.
Updating the information is a challenge, Doyle said.
"For the number of voters we have and the amount of work
it takes, that's the (price) we put on it," Doyle said.
In nearby Boulder County, a list of more than 207,000 voters
costs $50. A voter history file can be bought for another
$50, said Patty Stahl, administrative supervisor for elections.
Boulder County also has computer stations at the office, where
people can browse voter rolls and voter history files for
free, Stahl said.
Political parties receive one copy of each file for free per
election. Unaffiliated or third party candidates must purchase
copies, she said.
In Weld County, a file of some 98,000 voters costs about $148,
said Rudy Santos, the county elections manager. For fewer
voter records, the cost is a $50 setup fee plus 1 cent per
every 10 records.
"We give it to the political parties for free, and it's
up to the candidates to go to the political parties to retrieve
the information," Santos said.
He said the department also gives free copies to unaffiliated
and third-party candidates "to be fair."
The Larimer County officials keeps a list of the people, towns,
organizations or businesses who received copies of the county's
voter rolls (59 in the last year). Doyle said he was surprised
the office kept a list of who bought the voter rolls. The
names were recorded off of checks the groups send in for payment.
Doyle said he thinks some insurance companies buy the voter
rolls for mailing lists. The rolls contain information about
a voter's address, phone number, year of birth, the districts
in which the voter is eligible to vote and which elections
a voter participated in.
Major political parties and all candidates receive monthly
updated registration lists at no cost.
"Some people call and say 'that's a ridiculous amount
of money.' Some people call and say 'Oh my gosh, that's a
giveaway, that's free,'" he said.
----
Which FOI project questions raised the most suspicion
By The Associated Press
Highlights from the open records survey showing how often
agency officials asked for the recruit's name or the reason
behind the request (cases in which agency officials did not
respond to requests were not figured into the percentages
listed):
-- E-MAIL MESSAGES BETWEEN A SCHOOL DISTRICT SUPERINTENDENT
AND SCHOOL BOARD MEMBERS: Recruits were asked their names
65 percent of the time and asked why they wanted the information
39 percent of the time.
-- TRAVEL EXPENSE REPORTS FOR A CITY MANAGER OR MAYOR: Recruits
were asked their names 54 percent of the time and asked why
they wanted the information 17 percent of the time.
-- TRAFFIC ACCIDENT REPORT: Recruits were asked their names
53 percent of the time and asked why they wanted the information
26 percent of the time.
-- RESTAURANT INSPECTION REPORT: Recruits were asked their
names 45 percent of the time and asked why they wanted the
information 32 percent of the time.
-- LICENSING AND INSPECTION INFORMATION FOR A PRESCHOOL OR
DAY CARE CENTER: Recruits were asked their names 55 percent
of the time, but none was asked why wanted the information
was being sought.
-- FINANCIAL AUDIT FOR A SPECIAL DISTRICT: Recruits were asked
their names 39 percent of the time and asked why they wanted
the information 35 percent of the time.
-- RETIREMENT PACKAGE FOR A SCHOOL DISTRICT SUPERINTENDENT:
Recruits were asked their names 38 percent of the time and
asked why they wanted the information 33 percent of the time.
-- VOTER REGISTRATION ROLLS: Recruits were asked their names
17 percent of the time and asked why they wanted the information
22 percent of the time.
-- LOCAL PLANNING OR ZONING COMMISSION MEETING MINUTES: Recruits
were asked their names 13 percent of the time and asked why
they wanted the information 13 percent of the time.
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