Oregon PR Manual Section 1
Transcription
Oregon PR Manual Section 1
l ·ʻR.>*.r·`\ʻ,;·l¤§.lEi0 1 ,·r2·»rZ ʻ .y.ʻ:· .¤· an sw . .» .»·. · . · · V , . )NTENTS-—Continue d l _ Page INTRODUCTION ......................................................B-l ...... ......................................................B-2 The Public Records and Public Meetings Laws were enacted by the Oregon legislature in 1973. These laws tmderscore the stateʼs policy that the public is entitled to know how the publicʼs businessis conductedThus, the written record ofthe conductofthe publicʼs businessis,.with someimportant exceptions, available to any citizen. Similarly, the deliberations anddecisions of public bodiesare, for the most part, opento attendanc by anyinterested e pCl'SO1lS. ` ...... .............I..........................................B -3 . .... ...................................................... B-5 ...... zion .................................................B-6 Start..... of ExecutiveSession..........°......QB-9 lnutes .............................................B-l0 ..... Quorums and Voting ...........C-l rocedure, r T--:.Lʻ..-..... `D .·.1A Aa ..,.,:1s..R useactapma 1 ia llL m he submitted to support a request for ` i 2 ·:· 5 n 2 i a iii ité addressbecauseof adangerto thepersonalsafety of anindividual or afamily member residing with tlieindividual. That rule is includedin appendixI-I of this manual. t . Following each legislative session, the Attomey General reviews and `updatesthis manual for consistencywith legislative changesto the Public Records and Public Meetings Laws, recent appellate court decisions interpreting thesestatutes,and Public Records Ordersapplying the statutes and issued since this 1nanualʼslast publication. This review also includes consideration of comments received from state agencies and local governmentbodies, assistantattorneysgeneral andthe public basedon their experienceusing the manual. The Attorney Generalʼs Uni fonn Rule is amended, as necessary, based on this review. l Statute ..........................................G-l s .... ...................................... ................xxxix .....xxxlv .... . Q _. 1 1 2ʻ . g 1;.il; - `i ;` Ii }l ta tt - r li t lr z I" ? Zl `l é G `t iii xt o Fi g A l r u T ti E tt xl a 5t t` *l5 ~i is tiii xi l- V · — — . tr The 2007 legislature enacted several important amendment to the s Public Records Law. One that is particularly significant for all public bodies is a requirement that a public body promptly respond to written public records requests by aclmowledging receipt of the request and _ providing information aboutthe statusof the public bodyʼs processingof . I therequest. ORS l92.440(2) (Or Laws 2007, ch 467). The public body must also make availablea written procedure for making E public record · 1 directed, and request,identifying the person to whom requestsshould be explaininghow the public body calculatesfees for respondingto requests.A ORS l92.440(7) (Or Laws 2007, cli 467). Theserequirementsareeffective January l, 2008. To assist public bodies in complying with these requirements,we have developed sample templates that are set out in AppendixB ofthe Public Records Law section of this manual. · `" -: rm.] V ʻ U1'11IO1`1TJ:iL11€C1CSGT1D1I1Luc cviuciicc tu uc scioirrittci. W ....1.,:,.,-. .. . -.1-,-,, _ , 1 exemption of ag homeaddress,personaltelephonenumber,or electronicmail ... Generalʼs Formal lregon Attorney zilnfomial Opinions Concerning ` .....F-1 ʻ l The Public Records Law requires the Attorney General to adopt a .........................................C-7, C-8, C-9 .... lregon Appellate Court Decisions tings Law...........................................D-l . nAttorney .Generalʼs Formal tl Opinions ........................................E-1 ` x l ii I ` 't i ls N I ~ ʼ·:ʼ..kr·Y»“i . ʻ .·' fʻ:.ʻi€—"iitZc · ʻ il" ʻ· ` " ·" · " T·"» I. ¢ _ ._ `*ʻ·¤ʻ¢ ·fʻj Vac} .¤(.l,{.itj.,t·,l-Q A -*..,·'· A ` v ʻ ʻ ·z F : - The legislature amendedthe statelaw "catchall" exemptionto limit use of the attomey— privilege to exempt from disclosure factual information developedduring investigationsinto allegationsof wrongdoing client by the public body. ORS l92.50l(9) (Or Laws 2007, ch 513). Under ~ Laws 2007, ch 100).The third, also effective January1, 2008, amendsORS 192.630(5)(a) by respectively replacing "the disabled"with "personswith disabilities" and the "deaf or hard-of-hearing" with "personswho are deaf or hard of hearing." (Or Laws 2007, ch 70). The fourth, effective January1, 2009, makes a clerical changeto ORS l92.660(2)(c) (replacing "[ORS] 441.990(3)" with "ORS 441.990(2))." (Or Laws 2007, ch 602). l circumstancesdescribedin the statute,the public body will be requiredto disclosethefactual information or toprepareand discloseacondensatio of . n 513). These the facts. ORS 192-423, l92.50l(9) (Or Laws 2007, ch requirement apply to recordscreatedon or after June20, 2007. s The legislaturerepealedthe existing exemptionfor the homeaddress, home telephonenumber and electronic mail address of a public safety officer (ORS 192.502(34)),andreplacedit with two new exemptionsthat 1 None of these changes however, altered the fundamentalpremise , underlyingboth thePublic.Record andPublic MeetingsLaws:anydoubtsin interpretingthe legislation shouldbe resolvedin favor of providing thepublic s with information. The authorityto hold private meetings,executive(closed) andemergencysessions,aswell asto claim conhdentiality of records, are exceptionsto thegeneralrule of opennes andmustbe narrowlyinterpreted s ability to operatein secret,they . generally Even whenpublic bodieshavethe arenot requiredto do so. apply to district attomeys, deputy district attorneys and assistant attomeys generalas well as public safety officers, but that also apply to a narrower rangeof records and information. ORS 192.50l(30), (31) (Or Laws 2007, ch 687). Becausethenew exemptionsarein ORS 192.501,they are subject to thepublic interest balancing test. The legislature amendedthe · ei exemption for State Treasurer and Oregon Investment Council Qi information (ORS 192.502(l 3)), dividing the existing exemption inʼf0 iʻ.1 i, -_ This manualis an opinion ofthe Attomey Generalinterpretingthe Public Records and Public Meetings Laws. Its principal purpose is to provide general legal advice to state agencies.As in the case of any Attorney Generalʼs opinion,it is intendedalso to provide substantialassistancto local e governmentsand to the public generally. separat exemption applying to publicly traded investment S; 192.5 02(13)) 192.502(14)).$oQ?? e s and investments in private funds or assets(ORS s — §§;_o_?lQ, It is important to note that this amendmentrenumber the exemption We would appreciatecontinuedcommentsandsuggestionfrom usersof e ORS 192.502that follow new ORS 192.502(14). eh gi s (Or Laws 2007, s t this manual. These observationshave greatly assisted us in revising the s nie legislaturalsoamendeons 192.s02 (nowoss iI la l i ginanual, aswell asproviding perspectiveson corrective legislation. pertaining to library patronrecords to exemptpatron e-mail 3ddI©SS e d (22i Laws 2007,ch 181). Finally, the legislature createdanew exempfitm ¢S land managemenplans required for voluntary stewardship t me underorzs 541.42 (ons 192.501 (or Laws entere I gratefully acknowledgethe substantialassistanceof JoeMcNaught, Qt;»Yft;Alpaugh, Steven Wolf} Serena Hewitt, Robin Stender and Tonie .§;j=l;iCo of the Department of Justice inpreparing this latestrevision. .Amy tell 60 areeffectiveJanuar 1, d 8).Thechange describe 3. in thisparagrap (33)) s d h y Four bills enactedby the 2007 legislature amendthe Public Law. The first, effective January1, 2009, amendsORS 192.690to jf "Health ProfessionalsProgram SupervisoryCouncil establishe d thePublic o'/ʻ/.o15" to the list or governmententitiesexemptfrom .;:.g-_ Law. (Or Laws 2007, ch 796). The second, effective January 1, t· . c_ amends ORS 192.630(3) to prohibit goveming bodies from f.t _. ee 7002 .·.~.e. M. ..+e. +1...,i;..,...:..,.;..,.·,... +1.21.....;...e·`QPYHQ ,...:a...+..+ .vy? I (1T'IETlTHI]()Tl.: .I\?1:§;£ %¥·???::i{jlʻ ʻ . Hariuaw ʻ““·*"·V~¤·1`Y LUUO DbA.LL¤.1UL1\:LL\JA.uv1;.; §;£;yri.; _ rr ITlCB[l1'1gS BI p13CCS [HRT Cl1SCI“l1'lʼ1111&I O1'1UIC 03,815 OI ` s-1r .- ew am ¤$~~: :.·= Y ʻ was? · +;.. 1..,.,...+ ... . . ¢<..-.,....1 —;m·.i?ʼ-Tliii. ~ re4ʻ*·aa¤r· .ʻ·. `7'-"“,,J C er {ifi xii rvuv . -: t:;i ¤3·§3i—,.e· .i ".:e.{= 9 $~ ·ʻ.ʻ·` HAR Mrnri Attomey General DY s E · .L*§:?-=a·` ·ʻ » xiii 1.;,% ar.'.. rrp 1.L£`**· r_\,» ., ·}g1(-§;.r_g»L,;, ,,·. .t_` I ` i: ` _ '` M ·ʼ . ·.>¤E'· ʼ€`.}.ʻZL= ¤ʻ.·· K. mr.- . I PREFACE PUBLIC RECORDS A A- This Manual is organizedin two parts: Part I discussesthe Public V TJ¤¤ 4-ka t Dinhf WHO HHS HIC Iilglll fn Tncnnnf `PIIHHD LU LIISIJCUI. I uuuv `RPPDYAS? Accu: ua a Under ORS 192.420 "every person" has a right to inspect any , ..t-L4. ..-.;......,14.,. nonexemptpublic record of a public body in Oregon.This right extendsto any natural person, any corporation,partnership,firm or association,and Records Law; Part I1 discussesthe Public Meetings Law. Each part is followed by its own set of appendice which include answersto commonly asked questions about the law, s sample forms, summaries of court decisions, 1 Attorney General opinions, and a reprint of the statutes Each part of the manualalso hasa table of casesand a topic index.. l \XlI.A 1 any member or committee of the Legislative Assembly. ORS l92.4l0(2).] The definition of "person" in ORS 192.4l0(2) doesnot mention a "public body," and we have concludedthat a public body may not use the Public Records Law to obtain public records from another public body.2 Similarly, a public official, otherthan a legislator, acting within his or her official capacity may not rely on the Public RecordsLaw to obtain records, , althoughthe individual could do so in his or her individual capacity. [ 1 1 1 i ll. ly I ]'il Generally, the identity, motive and need of the person requesting acces to public records are irrelevant.3 Interested persons,news media s representatives business people seeking access for personal gain, on fishing expeditions, persons seeking to embarrass , busybodies govermnent agencies, and scientific researchers all stand on an equal footing.4 ll 1 =lt li 1 iii? h r It lj tf; +.1. _ :.1-.-4.:;... tl. iii: it ill} 1 3 1rtl 1 1ile all liil `. 1ril]lll .2;,] ;.J_. `·-srs-? ,.~L`4·1,.,` -,“·¤Au nnalrimrr r]i¤r~lrx¤111·r> ITF!} := 1 A legislative committeei also may compel the production of public % ·. 3.; 1,* ze.;¤ ¤ʼ=J.,.2—;. .?:*?; 3 ftdccumentby mean of a legislativesummons ORS171.50 to 171.53 , · -},;*.1.;-: ofs Advice dated June 26, s . 1987, to Wanda 5 Clinton,0. Department of _ r;...n,/--.Qi"— ' i i·iʻiʻ3§*.=7*2Reiienue (OP-6049) at 8 (see App E-5); Public Records Order, October 7, 2002, App F-50). =·i;· »¤* viii *isY*2E-`Y`-ʻ;li? ag., State ex1·elFrolmmayerv. Oregon StateBar, 307 Or 304, 767 P2d '9-_; i¤;—.;·?§, 3:4*- - ; * L_e*893_~»( (lawyer who is subjectof bar disciplinary proceeding may use Public * 1 l`i_fiTi·iSee, it R to gather records) (seeApp C-9); Statev. Spadcr,286 Or 305, 594 _L989) if ʼ.;%; ` J. Q:LJT\J.J1I 7}, IJI/LLLII V. IJLILUL/L v4~, 666 uvv ·P2d ·--· ·1345, i>¤.:B2dʼ815(l9F79)· S'mifh 12 S'rr]·1nnl JJIJL. Dist. JVU. N0. TJ, 45- \.l.1 63 \./1 OI 41.].11,; ADD uu.:) 685. 692, €GQfdSʼLaW lil ti? it y fat 1iii € 2 1 if 1 zf i ..,.1,2-.- gp; .5_.,_'..',~_ sg 2;J·; ·¥ss5i.2€ʼ7ʼ$ ei:55;i=;;=¤ -2; ? il3} [cj . -..,1 However, the identity anu motive or me personseekinguisciosureor a eiʻiʻʻ >·ʼ-. . particular public record may be relevant in determiningwhether a record is ʼ 5*·. `exempt nom disclosure under a conditional exemption. ORS 192.50 .-·;Z ;._:r;" li;-~ :{.*iʻ= »;f . *1.; ilrgonditionally exernptscertainrecordsnom disclosure "unless the1 public _ M22ʻifinterestrequiresdisclosurein the particular instance."As the discussionof t [REE 5.i¤ 1 =:·· L €3.§;§ `t=ʻ -`?“ʻIn <. below demonstratesmany ofthe exemptionslisted in ORS _ ¤ "`:Z.=iw`§;~;.;· -ʼ.} — ,. r,1.-;:ʻ , `!· »*,éi2°l{I. `·,·_"_ _ iii ·... e .. are esa+ .- .-ee --ʻr§1 ·r .szzr agr V~= 1;;:33.5. xiv _ · den 295 Or 773, 670 P2d 1036 (1983) (see App C— —- ;· .111--17·...-.. .. rr- 1... -, -1 nn; rx. nn och DOA A1'1 /1 O£1\ /¤.¤.¤ A1-wt F-1) -' o.· ieʻ*&rs==<.: it 4 Moc/Jwczn v. Ho/112, er al., 226 Ur 2/, 359 1*2o 6). 411 (1961) (see App C— ). -¤£€`·,-eee · — ʻ. - A r let? . be'?-s, ·e· * ʻ· w· . .. e2 - 4§t;,i1%i;ʼ{.j{.._r;tigE:;{t.:fg.I, ilk. l J;·:.:§i3ʼ¤; %i_ʻ.;§:·i>ʻ2`€Q` .··;ʼ.ir7=1i;<..~.:i·*#521211:f?ʻ!`¥.·f?~2.`i`1li=E15.}? ~-ii * <`E»iʻ["vʻY,ʻ¢iv1 5 2 ·. e f . PUBLIC RECORDS PUBLIC RECORDS ; ʻ 192.502call for a balancing of privacy rights, governmentalinterests,and other confidentiality policies, on the one hand, and the public interest in disclosure on the other. In casesrequiring a balancing of interests,the identity of the requester and the use to be made of the record may be -.1-.....+ as Aeieemininethe wei clit of the public interest in disclosure. See I`ClCVZ·:lI1I. 11 LlU|,¤11.1uu1115 urn, vv Orbis. Vx ...... r..,,..----. .5 1 what Ts"The Public Interest in Disclosure," discussed below. VV ual. Lb inn 1. uuuv ..4..-. -... --.. 4.. -, - i I { ` 1· . I" ' 1 Generally, legislative records are public records subjectto inspection. 7 records However, a person may not demand disclosure of legislative through a petition for disclosure to the Attomey General or to the circuit court during the period the legislature is in session and the 15 days immediatelyprecedingthe startofthe session.SeeORS l92.410(5).8 ʻ 2. Private Bodies .!1 ly. gl yl wl V. L } M ,2 A»...,..·•w.m».+ .§¤ ..-,1.- . T nu. nmmrtil UUUIIULLQ OT 'E l'l€I`€Ofl UL RQBHCV ugurivj •.i..u.u vv;) the Oregon SupremeCourt held that if the ostensibly private entity is the "functional equivalent" of a public body, the Public Records Law applies to it. The court found that the following factors, althoughnot exclusive, are relevant in determining whether a private entity is the functional equivalent of a public body: _ ii §, , it Ellld 8IlV OlZl'1Cl »...... .' me ¤nri1vʼsu origin (was it government or was it created LMB \.»uLu._y virgin \··».. -.. created --.... 2, by LJ U 1 " independently?) ;the natureof the function(s) assignedand performedby the entity (are these functions traditionally performed by government or are they commonly performed by a private entity?); ʼ ORS l92.4lO(5) definesthe term "state agency" to mean: :3] W4- {rf rei W} Ei2 1 L Q C ~Vw H W nw 4-:, pl, in ri .., lub; i`·» V=I} L·<. ,; _¢I yl-. 1wp Z" 1..] H* iii EU * L ʻ A .= V'; Wi , » I IQ » g ;;_ · .i '* · En r~ I = ʻ·§! · `E1 i 3. € \§` . ·—= lx nvqnfnri any state oflicer, department,board, commission or court created by the Constitution or statutesof this statebut does not include the Legislative Assembly or its members, committees, oliicers or employeesinsofar as they are exempt under section 9, Article IV ofthe Oregon Constitution. `~| ʻ nm-vmniccirm CUIIHIIISSIUII, public agencyof this state. ʻ ri 17,.,., and commission; every county and city governing body, school district, special district, municipal corporation, and any board, m ¤Z lM: ·`\ 3,* T\,_L1Z- ORS 192.420 broadly extends the coverage ofthe Pubuc Records Law to any public body in this state.For purposes of the records law, ORS 192.4J(l(3) deiinesvth term “public body" asincluding: l every state e officer, agency, department, division, bureau, board wl ` .1. aa mmm+1+ mmnmtions and cooperatives. However,, in a 1994 case,_ corporation., ...... .,.,.,,,.,...-. . W. --, .. r SUCH us rrurrprorrn, 1. Public Bodies \]<; · On its face, the Public Records Law does not apply to private entities B. Who is Subject to thc Public Records Law? lin 3 _ , the scopeof the authority grantedto and exercisedby the entity (does it have the authority to make binding decisions or only to make recornrnendations to a public body?); .1.- ,.-...-,. .,..A1,..... memw emmmmental financial and nonfinancial ' me nature anu rever or any goverrr....,..... .........,.......... 1 support; . §.:ʻ,~_. 5¢l=-nz .»; :ʻ .__r ;.*:?·=¢;·l-;_·ʻ-.;1¤·2;.·;fj··;._:=._=,·._ ·· 1%.:r iii 2Zʻ}ʻ{ʻ..¤_ gt ;' Thus, all state and local governmentinstrumentalities are subject to the Public Records Law, including "public corporations" such as the Oregon, State Bar, the SAIF Corporation, and the Oregon Health and Science ··.— · the scopeof governmentalcontrol over the entity; y.E • i--`j;`iii;- €*" Y-. . <` . *<`Zt'§ ·- _;“_:g ' §;_ j ¥.ʻ _ ·,"_ ʻl̀ ·_:.;f -ʼ=. 1* ʻ ~ 3.. ..ʻ¢.*—,;;_y:_,ʻ; é*|E —.&ʼe1ʻ.- ·· *,1 gw ;_z3 T. · 5*w.;·ʼ. 1 .--{wear " .·r.ʻ" - ·r`-*:~ University.° 5 Jordan v. MVD, 308 Or 433, 443, 781 P2d 1203 (1989) (see App C-l0) Guard Publishing C0. v. Lane CountySchool Dist., 96 Or App 463, 774 P2d §iQ; (1989) (see App C-10), rev ʼd on other grounds 310 Or 32, 791 P2d 854 (seeApp C-10); Turner v. Reed 22 Or App 177, 180n 2, 538 P2_d373 (1975) (s6§g Q App C— 37 Op Atty Gen 126, 128 (1974) (seeApp E—l). { 63); Stateex rel Frohnmayer, 307 Or at 304 (see App C-9); seealso Frohnmdyéfi is v. SAIF, 294 Or 570, 660 P2d 1061 (1983) (examplesof stateofficers,boards aud; 1· i`·ʻ the status of the entityʼs officers and employees (are 1,employees?). 9 - they public j} `.· But see ORS l7l.430(1) (legislativ record designateconfidentiaby ʻ-, — Q{statute Assembly, Emergency Board, — ,· rule or·resolution of Legislative e s d l Legislative : ;?. ,Administration Committee,Legislative Counsel or Joint Committeeon Ways and i> _· iM¤=+ . ʻ :1:f;·.OConstArt IV, § 9 (legislatorsnot subjectto civil processat certain times). `. ¤SD¤ r·. {Marks v. McKenzie High School Fact-Finding Temit, 319 Or 451, 878 P2d commissions listed in ORS 180.220 meant to illustrate, not to limit); but see _ flflilifg`994) (Se App C-.12); Laine v. City of Rockaway Beach, 134 Or App 655, d Public Records Order, February 25, 1992, Loeb (Columbia River Gorge »:»s.· Ron Doa 1·>1onoocx rms Am. r"-1'1\ IʻLlUl1L» Dublin 1\¤uuiu¤ Records ur Order. Januarv 31, ZOO], oo., .r.......... * """" """"““ ""`.ʼ..P . . ʼ . . Z . A [ r L ¤,.1-r;r nr,.....,r,. 1 mm {me Arm -;E€§é FLO lll? e llVV3l 1566 ADD \»ʻi9}Commissiois notapublic bodysubjectto Orego PublicRecordLaw)(seepry;_£i*f··5eʼi:;i»¢a:670 AA ¤>:r¤ -."'Y .·` . Jʻ "IY n n s . _. . . 7 ' 1 ""·¤ ""r*> ,.. - r ,ʻ ,;_ ,·' ·r up · .—.r.L·.ʼ.·.;rʻr;..i-*·*..·,.{',· ·` _y··ʻ*r;»4;ʻ·'....Q··"._r;..;r'—.Y:-,rʻfif.,ʻfl'?·.'...ʼ..'.1"··¤rut---..1ʻ»·"··ʻ=- _..·;..-·:;..ʼ:ZJ,= ·` ~ . ʼ — ` i »_ “ i. tiʻ§E yl ~;;ʻ¤ Q As govemment "privatizes" various governmental functions, as the Legislative Assembly exempts state agencies from the application of various statutesand asgovernmentis directedto perform various functions through contractswith private entities,numerousquasi-public entities are being created.A similar analysis would be usedto determineif a quasipublic entity is a public body. it1 ~ Even if a private entity is not the functional equivalent of a public body, if it contractswith a public body, its records may be obtainedunder ·.li l qt, iii iiL custody of copies of the recordsw In addition, a public body by rule or mntmct mav reouire nrivate bodieswith it deals to make pertinent \/L]11L.l (.l\JL 1.1Lhl -Y L\J\1\»l LL\.I YL; v na-Lx: vvunvu v Ao;.) which r r ---·-. v recordsavailablefor public inspectionu M! gu 1; th *iq; ifi tl. C. What Records Are Covered by the Law? t . . . · Ann 1nn Ann .---1-L L4. ,.1....... 1.1..,-.4-+1.. A ..»V.»“·»·l.-r lnuv nnnlinc fn all it statement in ORS 192.420 make rt clear that tne records raw apprres to an Qt government records of any kind.l2 ORS l92.4l0(4)(a) record" as including: if if iii wt iiiil: lit ull ' ii. .§§ .1ii`ii e iii ʻ1rail} E , ii ··ui 11ti:} lip . ~ I; \ ditar 1:].l. .ʻ {Zi! = i all iii 5 i tpl , I 'l { 1ri ` :_ nl `~i _. if . 1 = ·&;.i; iii ifi % {il, ii-!.ii rr- defines a "public any writing that contains information relating to the conduct of the publicʼs business, including but not limited to court records, mortgages,and deedrecords,prepared,owned,usedor retainedby a public body regardlessof physical form or characteristics. Eli . P . 1 < 5 The definition of "public record" includes "court records," paralleling the expressreferenceto courts in the definition of "state agency." ORS l92.4l0(5). The intended scope of the term "court records" in ORS l92.4l0(4) is not clear from the legislative history of this statute.There is evidencein the legislative history that the legislature intendedthe term to embrace only those records enumerated in ORS 7.0l0(l) and (2) ("The records ofthe circuit and county courts include a register, judgment docket andjury register"; and "The records ofthe SupremeCourtand the Court of Appeals is a register.")I3 However, evidencein the history also suggest s access that the legislature intendedfor the Public RecordsLaw to provide . r rr-, ......4.,...i..1.. ....1-..·.-r€++¤»~l int-A nvizlpnrp it) 111611'l21IG1`l3.l $110111[LSU 1I1LU Uvlucuuc S this question for1future resolution. r in Q iutlirtinl 111cr Juurorar 1ʼ\lTl(iFtE(lll'lO. pr ooooorrré. WC VVV l€E1V€ Luuvv ) 1. Writing ,'IL;,Z., The defmition of "public record" in ORS l92.4l0(4) and the policy uy I PUBLIC RECORDS the Public Records Law from the public body if the public body has Qi i PUBLIC RECORDS 4 lit ` `V 7 ʻ.ʻV ¢ .., 1.- Public records include any "writing" containing information relating to mp of nublicʼs ORS l92.4l0(4). The tenn "writing" LUG mmlunr Laulluuut U1. the uiv yuuiiv u business. uuuunyuu. VA`--... .- v\ ./. . is defined expansivelyby ORS l92.410(6) to mean: handwriting, typewriting, printing, photographing and every meansof recording, including letters, words, picttues, sounds,or symbols, or combination thereof and all papers, maps, files, facsimiles or .0 recordings. .I§j Note also that "writing" includes information stored on computertape, ,; microfiche, photographsfihns, tape or videotapeand virtually any other method of recording infomration. ORS 192.440 expressly recognizes , (2) ._thatpublic recordsmay be in "machine readable or electronicform." _· ., Many public bodies use electronic mail (e-mail) for communications. Hinkle (seeApp F— Public RecordsOrder, September3, 2002, Long (seeApp p F-49); Public Records 46); Order, November 19, 2002, Forrester (see App F-50); _, --j;? is a publi record Eve after individu emessag are Public RecordsOrder, March 29, 2004, Redden (see App F-53). See also 46 Op] ʻ '·iif_1ʻl:} from an individualʼs computer work area, the .-%E:n1 c . n al rnail es message Atty Gen 155 (1989) (Oregon Medical InsurancePool not a "public body" subject;».ʼ 2Qfigenerally continue to exist on computer back-up tapes,whichs are also . j·ʻg§§g1elete ail to Public RecordsLaw) (seeApp E-6). However, we believe our opinion that thejg jg records. As with any public record, a public body must make all _` d"-. Oregon Trade and Marketing Center is not a "public body" subject to the Publicf, ``ʻ : lnonexemnt e-mail f`or and copying regardless of its _ »_`,'_~H.·§tu:.J.\4!\.\.41..|.AAt.l n» vʼ.\.1.n-bx; available uvwxnwvnv Av- inspection .4 RecordsLaw, 46 Op Atty Gen 97 (1988) (seeApp E-6), is no longer correct _ gstorag location. ʼ . » light of Marks. J U l r P e 4ʻri. -? I046 Op Atty Gen 97 (1988) (seeApp E-6). tel l ii. QE..a;_.j__._.. ʻ·-1¤.·-1992, Smith (reports are public? H Cf Public Records Order, December 11, »I FV? " .I·ʼ`.. e`r..-:iʻ1 fir I cmu: 1707, IORO nli Jl 'X77I, S 8 1. l UGC Sen Luau nkn Jurv Service Re.SʻO1.tlʻCe Center V. ·ʻig r-· `\}1 · . .1re,,r gm,. -,-41.-,.+ HAL LMW5 UH uu:] uu: vuai. amour,./lr V., V-.,...,. .. Ezgiii records when contract makes all work products resulting from contract mej ʻ» 199 Or App 106, 111 n 2; 110 P3d 594 (2005), rev ʼd in purl on other property of Departmentof Human Services)(seeApp F-27). ʻ,. ʻʻIground Jury Servic Resourc Centev. De Muniz,340 Or 423,429, 134P3d I2 ORS l92.4l0(4)(b) specifies that writings not related to the conduct of oʼtU · s, (2006 (jury e poolrecord e r consistin of "sourc lists," "mastelists," and"term publicʼs businessand contained on a privately— computer do not constitute ¢_ʻ ar not subje to disclos undthe PubliRecor Law owned "public records." I I » }* ) s g e r e ct ure er c ds ). .r .· '·`i.ʻ1il{{.·_ZZL·, ·ʻ.;br*·.r.·»r.·.);*i;ʻr _ *}?~¥.?i?rl~`.Fʻ e ʻ· I' .· , . "' . _ ʼ , ag,. ·,. ·_» *».·» I' .;~ g, I { »·:ʻr_.,̀L¤“¤.2·.»,»;·*., ¤,:·. . .._. "ʼ·" ʻ ,_·,-Iʼq»_ ·._ i rʼ·:ʻ.̀l,·j __._;_ ` ,ʼ*,,»r_._,__\_ ,·.:5,*.l:ʻr·¤.· ʼ i' V· ` ` /,.1,, ; . `Z. E . . T` ll V .gi Ì 6 n I I PUBLIC RECORDS Ql QI I; il` 1* ~; 71 Ti ·.. i ( .;_ fi it g. The distinction betweendisclosing an existing record and creating a record is especially important in relation to computer— data.We have stored concluded that although computer data and printouts generated for use by the public body are public records, a public body is not obligatedto create new information using its computerprograms or to createa new program to extractthe datain its computerin a manner requestedby the public.I5 ri il; if ti; lr tit 1* ill 1y·"ln:I M li;· ¤E tli} 1 < Iii . V1 iii 21 } Lal gi!. rr xiii: ul Till iii Mi lr r·lr will li.: · ui Mil ʼt·li. [tr", W fill , The Public RecordsLaw doesnot imposeon public bodiesthe duty to create public records.Public bodies.are not required to createa record to disclosethe "reasonjng" behind their actions, or other "knowledge" their staff might have.Nor doesthe Public RecordsLaw requirepublic bodies to explain or to answer questionsor provide legal researchor analysis on abouttheir public records.I4 ` it s in . tt; .1I`.iiI EI Qty} »|Mit 1 e11f' at si 13 1 VI tw`; " * li' PUBLIC RECORDS K tI .. 2. Prepared, Owned, Used or Retained Recordsneednot havebeenpreparedoriginally by the public body to qualify as public records.If recordsprepare outside governmentcontain d of the publicʼs business,” and are "infor1nation relating to the conduct "owned, used or retained" by the public body, the records are within the scope of the Public Records Law. For example, we concluded that a contract giving an agency ownership of everything created by the contractor meant that a record never in the agencyʼs possessio was a ʻ n public recordsubjectto disclosur under the PublicRecord Law.I7 We also concluded that a letter of Collegiate e from the American Assembly s Schools of Business to Portland State University = Sincewe first addresse this issue,we have observedpublic bodies at d every level of government move toward computerization and electronic storage of information. The publicʼs access to this information is increasingly dependenupon its retrieval by public bodies through the use of computert software or programs developedor acquired by the public bodiesat public expenseWe believethat the Public RecordsLaw imposes . bodies to retrieve and make available nonexempt a duty on public computer or electronically stored data and infonnation, when requested through the computer software or programs in use by the public ,body. See ORS 192.440(2).This doesnot mean that public bodies must develop or 7 (PSU) was a public recordbecaus it wasretainedandusedby r>su.ʻ* _ e However, a documentpreparedby a private entity doesnot becomea I public record merely becausea public official reviews the documentin the courseof official businessso long as the official neither uses nor retains the document. For example, we concluded that sample advertising ..I materials,preparedand owned by a private advertising company,did not I become “public records" when the materials were in the temporary _ custodyof a public official for purposesof preliminary review,prior to any _. official decisionto usethe materialsin a public information campaign.I 9 or agency . .?.fʻ All documents in the possession of a public officer {.°· ``I Q employee are not necessarily public records. For instance, correspondence acquirenew or additional software or programsin order to retrieve the ~ b61ZW66 tlʼ16 O1'6gOI1 GOV ElZl'1iC C01'l'1I1'1lSS1 (OGEC)2° and a requestedinformation.1°We merely concludethat when a public body uses public official conceming the officialʼs possible violation of ethical I1 €1ʻI1l1'1CI1l2 S OIl computer software or programs to retrieve information for its own. ,.._ J3¤ .=ii.:·vii (obligationsin ORS chapter244 is not a public record in the hands of the 1·ʻ· purposes,the public body must use that same software or program to ,»» $i:l·¤`-,ʻ . ?} f ʻr~{ retrieve and make available dataor information storedby it in computeror .cf ..I 3,.II Public Records Order, December 11, 1992, Smith (seeApp F-27); but see _ RecordsOrder, March 23, 2005, Har (stateagencyʼsright to accessrecords electronicfonn in respons to a public recordsrequest.To the extentthat--:_-;g;;§ —. `=F by contractor not sufficient by itself to qualify records as "public our prior advicehas e suggeste otherwise,we now clarify our interpretationQ.* Q =-· I_.. (seeAppF-57). . of the Public Records dLaw. , ._"=`L -..·! IS Public RecordsOrder, April 28, 1988, Koberstein (seeApp F-12). See also _> rl_; lmj... -· , Ambulance Co., Inc. v. Multnomah County, 102 Or App 398, 794 P2d 813 =.; 1-Z -. IQ2§i(; (even if documents developed by contractor are public records only 199O) contract gave county perpetual use of them, contract cannot create %..ʻʻ Vbecause I4 Public Records Order, May 26, 2005, Andrade (see App F-57); Public? ~ ?: exemption to public recordslaw) (seeApp C-1 1). RecordsOrder, February 23, 2006, Kane (seeApp F— 6- ._ 2 = I5 Letter of Advice dated June 1, 1987,59). to .lim Kenney, Supervisor, ʻ. Urban— Section,Departmentof Revenue(OP—6l26)(seeApp E— i "'I'J]ʼ APublitl uunnv . I6 n,.,.,.,.1.. nanny 1* Unmao {wp Ann 1-7-4%: Renewal "' 11..1..1;,. lʼLlbl1C KCCOIGS UTCICI, ini., July 1/, onrm LUUU, rurgey (see App i·- 5). n--.....rKCCOIGS rx..,1.... U1'(`lC1', rx..i..r.,... UCIODCI 12 1..1.m..-D1. lam; 7 I ʻ$ orm/1 /.1 ll I4. .lOY`l?ll”lSBl'l ISCC 1.}, LUUW', JUXXUAJQUAA \¤\.¤u Ama AU!) A xy].! l3'-<·<\ 17*.).) 1 .1- l. :;,£ 5.·ʻ: . · Lʻ ;7Public RecordsOrder, August 6, 1987, Larson (seeApp F-9). IL "ʻ U1U5U11 ..,..,\../ ...-..-----., - L, Oreorm J.:C1W¤ Tnwc LUUI, 7.007 vnaynun nhantre uu.1, 865_ guuuvvuvn subsection 40b(1) amends ORS 244.250 L;i? . to change the name of the "Oregon Govemment Standards and Practices r ¥— A"C0mmrssi to the"Orego GovernmeEthicsCommission rg ¥:-i. on"1... n nt· ." > ʼ. e ;.;·¥»"ʼ `V ·;,~,ʻ1··<;;jjʻ `_,,,, ;. B ._ ."lrlI,l;_ i> j .r _1 `= " M .'··. . r I yn I . ʼ I ` ._`. i ʻi '.,,·;..r.» ".ʼwʻ,".ʼ .. . .-...1r,. · ; ,c,.»,_·.'.,.»__.r_r`_,!_—1_,_.,1_.ʻ_.ʻ,—1_l..ʻ,.:H.r14:»'.>." 1·l.,u, _,;,,ʻ,. ,1* · ..ʼ. Y1.} , · .·.··.» · · I g iiit 1-ml-slin PLIUIIU §ʻ ¥ his or her private capacity. 2I Inspect or Obtain Public Records? D. How Can a Person ii ·.L,, · ~ ul ` nffininl U.L1.1\a1¤.|. lxecmrsn Ucvauov the una OGEC x1x.u.4x.» · . » 1 1 I i · 1lʻlV€SʼElQ3.IlO1'1 DCIʼlZ8.l1'1 to 01:11613. in in v voerbweavaa rv. .......r... cv Ilʼ1C ...-S 1 »—,\ 11·r1r_n:--. ..r1.......,.,1, . -...,1,... +1... OregonPublic Records Law, not the federal Freedom of Information Act (FOlA).22 Nevertheless,public bodies should not deny a requestfor their { Q i recordsmerely becaus the requeste calls it a FOIA request Oregon public bodies areenot, however, r bound by FOIA timeframes . or any other ll requestto be in writing. Seepage B— for a sampleform of written records request.If it choosesto require written requests,a state agency should 2 adopt such a requirement in compliance with the state Administrative Procedures Act.23 This assists in identifying the records requested. lt also establishes the reason the public body released the record, if releasing the record results in a legal challenge. · yy gli 1 $1 11 1its lil sill rtl l5i' lvl 1M pl. 1 int L} il·'l` {il WW II ....nAa-A ¤ M milqlql ¤ Fnr in crxnrtfi {N1 The duty to make nonexemptpublic records avarraorelor rrrspccuorr 1 and copying tmder the Public Records Law is on the "custodian" of the public records. The term "custodian" is defined as that public body mandated to create, maintain, care for or control the records. ORS J Z 192.4l0(l)(b). However, the term doesnot include a public body that has custody of a public record as an agentfor anotherpublic body that is the custodian, unless the record is not otherwise available.2I ORS l92.4l0(l)(b). When a public body that is a custodian of public records has received the records from anotherpublic body, it should consult with um Meeimriuc bodv regardirrg the records may be exempt from 1TlC U11£.ll1cLL1.l1):. Uuuy ".-.....--.. ...,., -Ll.1.U \.l.L;&1.uu»·•-anna V .. -J ..iwguruaub a Dc., r Q whether I disclosure. See ORS l92.502(10). Beginning January 1, 2008, a public body must make available to the § public a written procedur for making public recordrequeststhat includes: —; F e or more personsto whom public record requestsmay 1) the name of one 2} publicrecords. SeepageB-3 for a sampl procedure 2ʻ a personwho is a party toe litigation . involving a public body or When I bv legal counsel on ...a matter to which the recordsare Ury sugar vvouauva va. -....----J --5.., c , -1..11 .. _ .V; requirementof that federalact. . s Beginning January 1, 2008, a public body may require the records be sent, with addresses and 2) the amounts of and the manner of ʻ calculatingfees;that the public body chargesfor respondingto requestsfor 9 2. Records Custodian Requests for records of Oregon public bodies must be made under the ig · PUBLICRECORD S 1...,1. aq W-hm l'l()LlV 15 U\.}\AJ Au LUULGDGLLLUU 1.2\é1.n».`n.•v..--•·.. ,relevant.¤mmd 1 .... . the attorney could violate DR 7-104 of the Code of Professional Responsibility by asking questions about the meaning of records or attemptingto elicit admissionswhen the attomey knows that the public t ` 1. Making a Request -— 1 . PUBLIC RECORDS . p 2 {fi 1 ._ ·" ,Lé.;j., ʻ 3. Responding to a Request -..»“1n¤4in vmnrln in u11'il'i1'\ U . the public 11--;.,..,.;...,.. Tr..».."w·¤ 1 'HIHX 1+ Q 1ʻPfTI`IPQT 1R `I'l'lH(lB lll \NllLl11E. Beginning January 1, aooc, rr a requesrrs rrrauc ....g, ..-- ,.-.---body must provide a responseacknowledgingreceipt of the request "as soonas practicable and without unreasonabl delay." The responsemust alsoinclude one of the following: e I · .:: . 1-. S ·`.I I-. · 1ʻ;ʼj. . %·< — » . { =ʻ· 1.1— =" i' I ` `.~?·- r.=: -51;..-: , .jt,z _. _I s ;;;r'.,n.·:.> _ iii; who has filed a tort claim notice under ORS 30.275(5)(a)uses the Public RecordsLaw, insteadof discovery tools, to requestinformation relating to the litigation or notice, the party must notify the attomey for the public body. ORS 192.420(2). An attomeymay requestpublic records directly ,;Q from a tl\.LIJ|.1\J public without consentof public bodvʼs counsel, but i 1.A.\.ll.LL (alL/\I\AJ vvL|»|.a.\Jvs\· vvanuvnnu va. the •-Env I.a•»`/-4-r uu¤»J u legal -·$·-.. -25bodv 5t;};=i_:;'—.} , . • A statementthat the public body does not possess or is not the custodianof, the public record. · , _• . Copies of all requestedpublic records for which the public body doesnot claim an exemptionHom disclosureunder ORS 192.410 . to 192.505. . I iIʼ.A statementthat the public body is the custodianof at least some ;,Qi of the requestedpublic records, an estimateof the time the public I ** ··body requiresbeforethe public records may be inspectedor copies ʻf* V ` 3-. `=i.`?T _j__ ¤ _ —.`_ ?·I·. ;; —····—m··m—m" of the recordswill be provided andan estimateof the fees that the ;~==;.1< I :-. - . ʻ -{Iii2I Public RecordsOrder, June 28, 2001, Zaitz (seeApp F-46). ~iiii.; 62 .. `. i ʻ_ 5 iʻI I requestermust pay as a condition of receiving the public records. 22Statestatutesoutside the Public Records Law may also provide a right to .. *5Q Q.} Zi' . · . i;ʻ? ·* *i·II= requestdisclosureof recordsfrom a particular public body. Oregoniansjbr Sound — ʼ.l;.·1ʻ· A if i-?:}~¥. EconomicPolicy v. SAIF, 187 Or App 621, 69 P3d 742 (2003) (seeApp C— ; '_ ' ' ' Ponsisi.5i0(9),is2.2a 183.35 ` ' ` Ai 21). I ; Eg gs Ti 1I2.eé" ·ʻ.[_iI;;"OregStatBarForm OpinioNo.1996-14 _ ʻiF* .· ;i 24ORS l92.440(7); Or Laws 2007, ch 467, § 1. i ?-V?¤ʼ¤-ifi -Z I ~ Public RecordsOrder, December 17, 1999, Sheketoff (seeApp F— 5, 5.J e al n 4. 25The attorneyfor a stateagencyis the Attorney `General.ORS l92.420(2). *I r .s5··I - .-:35;;;.:2}gr.. I on zi` 43). ·3e&i%—t;;.i¥2—?e. 1 . . ..1 ;;r1£:e?;;_·.;.r , _.; I ·. 3 ; ;.;..; . · :· . .1*.1 ,r. V , , .,-.. ._.,- 1. V, . . — Il'€i.i`lI·l`¢"·iI`°·IʻzlIi._-Kyi" `I . . V ʻ 1q V 1· Mi HI 10 , _ ,· '2L;1I}i.tr_-_,ʼ,·;,ʻY,*_:.,1. -,~ r 3. » · ··,. .,` ,.._1 . I _' .,. )1__ ., .ʻI.1':`·,f.;ʼ1";.·'r.·ʻ]-;*.if,,;.1_'..".:`,,·. _._·,._/_,»__ i,U,. r. _ _ .._ .r·.; . I l —,.ʻ 1l • into account. The public body may consult with its legal counsel to determine 29 whether records are exempt from disclosure and to receive advice on other questions relating to the Public Records Law. See Consultationwith Legal Counsel,below. The public recordscustodianacts reasonablyevenif the custodiandoesnot comply with timelines imposed by the requester,so long asthe custodianprovides accessto the nonexempt body possesse the public record and that the public body will searchsLVL for the record and ---...-make V"., an Yappropriate responseassoon as DUQJUL1 Lnnv nvvvn »• »·...... I1, practicable. ; records within a reasonable period of time. It is not a denial entitling the requesterto petition for releaseof the records if the custodian does not amvide access to the nonexempt records within the timeframe set by the [)_lUVl\-Lu uvuul-vu cv -Ai-» A,.------ A statement that state or federal law prohibits the public body i requ€SlC1ʻ.3O ,. ,.1 -.,. ,1.“·.l,\,l II`OII1 nina 8Cl(l'lOWlC<1g11'lg urln¤+l»1¤·r· record exists or flip Wlleulel A uic inspectionof records expresslyextendsto records malrl.an.--. --.-- ..-.- readableor electronic form." ORS 192.430(l). The law also requires the custodian of records to provide persons inspecting records with paragraphmust include a citation to the stateor federal law relied upon by the public body. -,. D ¤ co. .. ..,....1.. ram. ar Taqmmqeto a mrblic records reduest. l1·;;l 1 O AA {{5 }? ;..! The publ1cD body may request addmonal mformauon or c1ar1iicat101from 1 U me mnuegter for the numosc of CXD€dlt11] the pubhc b0dyʼs rcsponsc to 14 Lllkz L\.1\.1Ll.\.u0L\:L LU; Luv yunyvuv va. -·ʻ»I.·-..-----D ---1. . . E the request. Sec page 1:5- I01ʻ 2 sampw mum ul mupumc iw . *: , 1: 2i—% `}, su} ,l[f:;l % Eil ;iQ n i_! ~J ;j1 Hi; $ gyli . ?.; ug ¥Ii n_ e i iii $j,· M, l?i = M r {if xii AU QM ʻ FW 3m W_ * Xwr {iii Q Z rW m `» }1ʻ M y — vMi ʻ§ M1 ;W ?;¤QUI E uE »w ZE E {I 1se A;] R: *l N g gg; l U1 }; €In u - The custodianʼs duty to provide reasonabl opportunities for .1..,..-+...-iain mmwlg “maintained in machine e that acldrowledging whether the record exists would result in the loss of federal benefits or other sanction. A statement under this iii ;Qi . . . L Q yum-. W--N., . . .--1..--.. "reasonabl facilities" for making memorand or abstract from the records. In short, the law directs public e a bodies to takesreasonabl stepsto -ʻ e public records. accommodat members of the public while they inspect However, the public body need not bring the records to the requesterʼs e place of business?] The Americans with Disabilities Act (ADA) prohibits discrimination againstpersonswith disabilities in governmenta activities and requires l publicbodiesto ensur that their coimnunication with individual with 28 4. Proper and ReasonableOpportunity to Inspect .§ .1 .. ʻ¢-W-Annv ORS 192.430requires a custodianof public recordsto provide "proper and reasonabl opportunitiesfor inspectionand examinationof the records in the e oflice of the custodian" during usual businesshours to persons seeking access to public records. See page B— for Helpful Hints for 8 Respondin to Public RecordsRequests g Although as discussedabove . a public body must provide a preliminary ' ll PUBLIC RECORDS i . 1 1C- A .... {fr! ? . . l · PUBLIC RECORDS x 1 111 2 1, gʻ 1: al 1 {lg * nhl; »,;`_ʻ_· A statementthat the public body is the custodianof at least some of the requeste public recordsand that an estimateof the time d for disclosure of the public records will be provided by and fees the public body within a reasonabl time. e body is uncertain whether the public A statementthat the public I 1 1{ 1 ;1 ifi »_: · , r *`· ·* • A 1* P 1,I' ,____j__L,_ ___,̀__ disabilities arease effective as communication with others. Providing s s nonexemp public record under the Oregon Public Record Law is a s 32 governmenta activity covered by the ADA. Thus, when making public t s s l record availabl a public body must provid an opportunit for -"individuals s e, with disabilities to request an ealternative form y (large print, rasnons to a "as soon as practicable and without umeasonabl L\JsJ1J\.lLl•J\i \•\I lo- request Awsimvuv "Q_ . _l3raille audio tape, etc.). The public body must give primary records e e delay," the publicʼs "1·easonalile opportunity to inspect to the choice Y_.; , 33 expresse by the individual, but is not required _ (consideratio the public body a "reasonable" time to actually _ il 2;:;_.: ·`.``¤ʻl.1·m..m·nvirle GCVICCS Sl1CIl D1¤5VUl-MVN 5*“°°"“ "ʻ *"“`“ correspondingly allows €ʼ" __-¥@L\E! yu; ouncu uv v av-- d ..-.--... n' `P" hersnrlal “""ʻ·rʻ ·“*··i~·· ···*·*l HS ¤¤ I-prescription classes or readers for ·_· "n —·`;-.·; , rʻ§y1.UV1.uL.· provide copies of the requeste record or make them available for q..c.a;,ʻ, = . '}-`j·ʻ:;·._ ·· .·_;r=;;§;; AT Z-..· ;-rw ...._; ¢* ·· ·~ · · . .... --1-1--.:11 ,1---....1 -`-cnn 4-kn I gi l—,·.;j_» ·. -.=ʻ` inspection. The amountdof time that s is reasonabl will dependupon me cr? »` gi ` W . ·\· -· a --2+ --= volume of recordsrequestedthe staff available to respondto the records . =. r..= e gl ʻ -ʻi2·ʻʻʻʻ gg. 1-. 1 1· vt -- J- rx..;.... . Dprlrlsm (see Arm F-57i. ·· - · 11......-.1.-.m·O ")(\f\A Records Order. December V, LWʻh 1\¤¤¤¤¤ \¤¤¤ nw * ~ · 1? — requestand the difficulty in determining whether any of the records are . — .ʻ~-.ʻ` =. , J- -·.~~·"Q . “iZʻ?" ʻ.IYY`f"ʻZ-Yʻ.T`“Z km vox152via (1990 (seApp Dublin l **““.M0rse Bros., mc. v. uunu, iu; ur App cu, me l 2.. .., \.,, "/ \"" " if; * 5 ʻʼ._ exemptfrom disclosure. The public b0dyʼs need to consult with another J agencyfrom which it receivedrequeste records may also needto be taken -.3 ·.i d 28ORS l92.440(2l; Or 2007. ch 467, § l. x1;. Laws ;.n.•.u¤ ..ʻ, \J1\IJ l /·l•¥ ' ʼ 'V\!·], =`· e `VG-lla. %IJSYJTRQHTQ,. A ʻ 30?Y A 5 _. i ʼ ~ evi ·.`;;;Z·.r`- ʻ1;f:5· e §`. ʼ · LF @5;S€ ii. as ʻ » 4;%* F- · W5 ·]`-ff. ::2 Yi ? 7 %;Iea.l.l (1 i Public RecordsOrder, April 3, 1989,Harrison (seeApp F-19). `»: V3.342 USC §§ l2l3l—12l32; 28 CFR § 35.160. 2 28 CFR § 35.104. gf?3 e - ;_,"1i`}:j_ni:r,-·_~_ʻ;;·}g;{;3§:,»r'v»._;`·,', .,',* —, ·._ 12 isi.·.! lli`· ~ i wl -. ----.--1 li gr r `ll ZJ;. ·_. ;i.__» _·;r_l ._·¤··,¤ ,,., ··,,r,,l: 4».,·: , r . . - i PUBLIRECG -...4.. 34 rm-,. ....1.1;. 1.,-1- as ahrariaa C rntu mmirior RDS me Stlldy." IHC puDl1C DOC1y is crlullcu uuiimuci nrc - ` rho records and interference the regular duties the public Lllkr 1.\/\J\J1.\A¤ (A·LL\L to bw prevent yavvvnau 1A;vv».•.¤¤; -umv-Y with ·· .·-. -...... -G----.-.-.-,L of il ʼ 1 _ body. We concluded that, subject to these conditions, a requester must be allowed to use his or her own equipment to copy records, and cannot be ihe form that the custodian would compelled to accept records provide. A 1+1. m sn-la 37 AlIl'1OLlgl1 undu financiaor administrati bLll`CiClPubli bodie shoul consul _ with legal counsel if they are uncertain of their obligation to honor the _ e l ve 'lS.35 c s d t -ʻ al: Qui] {jil ! 1j l1. jill; °i'v requesterʼschoice. other U Lllbl x;rf= an ifiai jlZ`? `liiiaf » remiester. See 1 \J\iLl\J¤ LU1 . 1Jvu Waiver OT R€(`lLlCʼClOH Of Fees. d1SCL1SS€d = 5 a: l M ¤iY» ¤ʻjJ1 ` =·< il — 2;,.* 1 ? <,!'il_ li'. jwl_ l iiziiii l [JI` !. {I 1* 1 ,.§,l"¤ .; lg":. % 2lil. { ~"`* * ! · gill` ;}r;l ʻ% M] 3428 CFR iiilfi l i V Y . 5FS3(P1 6u6Ea9 » 7p9D8 ·. p 3) 35.135, 35.160. 35 LU 72 (TPR 8 35.164: JVDMJUH Nelmn v. \u1`1\ 3 JJ·L\l'I', V. 7`hornburgh. Linz: lbuvu én, qv, A ..,..1,1., .,.,, \...., · ·_ __ _ - .. -,-.-/) 1,,.:;%..,: aff"d 732 F2d 146 (3rd Cir 1984), cert den 469 US 1188 (1985). A 36Beginning January 1, 2008, the Public RecordsLaw no longer requires a custodianof a public record to furnish a certyied copy of the record on demand. ORS 192.440(1); Or Laws 2007, ch 467, § l. Public bodies may, however, continue to offer certification as a courtesy to requesters.Certification is not difficult and may be included as a statementon the cover sheetor last sheetof copy. SeepageB-6 for a samplecertification. Copies of electronic records are more readily susceptibleto being after a certified copy has beenprovided by the public body than are hard copies records. In certifying an electronic record, the custodian may statethat the provided in electronic form on a specified date is a true and correct copy of thejpj; I }; i 3.%;].; l ; ill r"). i ph.'i z ljit ʻwi i ~: 1ll W 1':r · "ln b ; ;ʻ,l. r in =%? 1sw > i ii. .Z ` · l ;ʼ.;¤ original, but that the custodian cannot ensure that the electronic record will not be modified after its release from the custody of the custodian. See page B-6 for : i `. , sampl certification e . ` Ql1I'\I'\'\`H'iʻP(i 111'\(`iET` (-ii`lHli'€l` ... . , If the public record is maintained in a machine readableor electronic form, the custodianshall provide a copy of the public record in the form requested if available. lf the public record is not available in the, form requested the custodianshall make the mrlqlie LULULLL reoorri avcurctuuavailable ,ru in the form ru in which the custodian pLlUllL3 urn Luau; nan-I. -.--. maintainsthe public record. see A-1 for discussion of 1J\.»\.» oaoe yuéu rxr; ru; uruvnuuirvu ua copyrighted materials. See also Fees, *-3}*- to use their own equipment to make copies, subject to reasonabl restrictions imposed bv the public body in order to protect the integrity of e {iii ¤i(h1Qh'I1'P copiesof recordsmaintainedin machinereadableor electronic fomi:39 below. A person may request that the public body provide a copy of a .. -.4 . . '§(Q,.'.“ . ,.7* 7. 4* L1, requeste record if the record is susceptibleto copying."ʼ The rights ofthe public, however,are not limited to a right to receive certified copies on d demand. ORS 192.440(l) not only requires the public records custodian to furnish copies on request,but also to furnish "reasonableopportunity to inspect or copy" public records. This duty extends to allowing requesters ..l;l ;*! =ʼZi! lz EE .;g`|,.| ·ʼ· N.Zl inriixrird11¤iʼ¤ for the public record, it is not subject to the copying requirements.ORS l92.440(8). Oregonelection law specifically prohibits the copying of such a signature, exceptby electionsofficials acting in their official capacityfor purposesof administeringelectionlaws andrules. 38 explains a custodianʼs duty to provide ORS l92.440(3) specifically 5. Copying well nn 211 lllulvluuzu s signature suuiriitteu und-1 URS -rlapt-i 1 of registering to vote is subject to inspection as a purpose -· Note that a public body may not charge a person with a disability to cover any additional costs of providing records in an altemative fomi, althoughthe public body may chargea fee for all other "actual costs" that mav be recoveredunder the Public Records Law iust as it would for any lll . g{_ . ,.'_]i<,1__.._· resourcesavailable for use in the funding and operation of the program from which the records are sought in responding to a request for altemative format, and may conclude that compliance with the request would result in a fundamentalalteration of the natureof the program or in ii a · i~ w i ·vl = . {2,;. e · ---- -- pC1`SO1'l3l USC OI L,. · ·,· A was .-ʼ #$7*1 ,.1-;,.. below, for discussion of costs. . 6. Public Body Prerogatives _ A- 1-.-- - -1. .- .... --.·A.»`».o`·|- in ordetoprotecidentifie governmeninterest r t Ruled tal s. a. Protectiv J-. 4... a..1... The Public Records e s Law expressly authorizesa public body to take _. L'-fil fjggreasona measure to preservethe integrity of its recordsandto maintain -` =ʻ `i s efficienc andorder ` ble — y : ·» i`ʻ`1Q3 39 Op Atty Gen 721 (1979) (seeApp E— 3). . ?·”~oR 247.97 YIf- P53949 Op Atty Gen 210 (2000) (seeApp E— Public RecordsOrder, April 22, °.,s 3. .f_—§i2004,? 7); (seeApp F-53). 5 .·ʻ· · ~. Birhanzl ;*>·;A:.==¢·¤· c· ,;. —· ` 4 we .q· » ..-i c "?. · · ·1 a;. ;=¤ʻei;? {-wav 3`€¤·`Eʼ}?£`é? ' . —. ` In The statute implementing the publicʼs right to inspect nonexempt _,records use the term "reasonable"to allow limits on inspection, s ` ʻ · · · A . 11 rm - if nt-. .... .--1-1,.31 1:.-..24.-..,4 public {lllixamination and copying of public records.Those “reasonableʻ' lll1'l1'ES ETB &g "ʻ €?T:`< · "*~ʻ·$3< #2 ¢ ` —$$ ·1.Z"ʻi·¥.}i£¤',..·*.¢.~·ʻ.}§$i·5?,i., ,».·. } 14 I 1*; W 1 .1 };{ji . 3 1. il ill 1, e1`_ irlr L i Q; 1ii ʻ rl! ir,. We ,1,1_ 1*;*. r;·l'1l lis; gi·1` 11. ·`! 1~` `hl ?.`, 1.1. =I :_il·1 1" 1*; % M 1L 2 ;· % 1Fil.·1 rr : 1 ʻ11=- 1 *. Fw: 1=11 1 1 "11 ,ʻ,;ʻl'; . 11· Lwill 1l _ʼ1· ¤1* 2` 11, Killi 1= 11 iv.i .1 .` 1.1 1 E11ii jiivl k11 tri i~ lifl 1 _ .{ lil"|1ʻl 1·*1ʻ 1 1 .1 1 ;',1Il 1 1* 11 ir ` _» _ · . »,;»r,·- ,r;.: -.,.·;.;·, _..r .-·.....,,· 1.·. ; · . _ . ij;'1 1.ʻ;: 1 l il' ,,1, Q r| 1'; 1 { 1 , . . PUBLIC RECORDS The custodian of the records may adopt reasonabl rules necessary for the protection of the records eand to prevent interferencewith the regular dischargeof dutiesof the custodian. PUBLIC RECORDS 15 duties."4 However, a rule or determination that required inspection of records on the premisesof the public body regardlessof the circumstances 3 likely would not be reasonable . b. Fees . ʻ ORS 192.430(2).When public bodiesestablishprotective rules to maintain The Public Records Law expressly authorizes a public body to the integrity of public records or to preventinterferencewith the duties of establishfees "reasonablycalculatedto reimburse the public body for the the records custodian, we recommend they do so with notice and public b0dyʼs actual cost of making public records available." ORS opportunity for public comment.This avoids the appearanc of arbitrary l92.440(4)(a). The statutealso expressly permits a public body to include action. State agenciesshould adopt their protective e rules in compliance [ with the stateAdministrative ProceduresAct.4° A rule designedsolely to 1 _ in its fees "costs for summarizing, compiling or tailoring the public make public accessto records more difficult is not valid. A rule or records, either in organization or media, to meet the personʼs request." ;``g 1 ORS l92.440(4)(a). A public body has authority to chargea fee in excess regulationcarefully designedto prevent destructionof public recordsor to expedite staff identification of requeste records would be lawful. For fi— of $25 only if it first provides a written cost estimateto the requesterand example,we denieda petition forddisclosureof recordswhere the requester receives confirmation that the requesterwants the public body to proceed failed to comply with the Department of Correctionsʼ administrative rule with respondingto the request. ORS 192.440(4)(c). A public body may requiring that requestsbe in writing and "specify the record(s) from which require prepaymentof its estimatedchargesbeforetaking further action on information is requestedif known."4 However, we doubt that a rule flatly fi} a request.44 Of course, if the actual charges are less than the prepayment, requiring a requester to specify individual records would be reasonable , 1 any overpaymentshouldbe reiirnded promptly. , or other given that a requestermay be able to specify the subject matter "Actual cost" may include a charge for the time spentby the public defining common characteristicsof the records being sought but not have bodyʼs staff in locating the requestedrecords, reviewing the records in sufficient information to specifically identify individual records. order to delete exempt material, supervising a personʼs inspection of Again the crucial term is "reasonable."The statutory right to inspect original documents in order to protect the records, copying records, . public records encompasse a right to examine original records, and { certifying documentsastrue copies,or sendingrecordsby special methods inspectionof originals ordinarily shouldbe allowed if requestedBut the {fg, _ suchas expres mail.45_"Actuacost" also may include the cost of time s . right to inspect doesnot include a right to rummagethrough file cabinets, spentbysthe public b0dyʼs l attomeyreviewing,redactin and segregatin file folders or electronic files,42 and a public body may adopt 1 _xrecordat the public b0dyʼs request although the g cost of theg attomeyʼs administrativemeasure to superviseoriginal documentreview. Nor does zétim spent detennining the application of the Public RecordsLaw is not a _.s , the right to examine original records require inspection of an original - .j¢#;ʻ. s e ..,, ;?l;ita1riVV2-1¢- "i`§iZZ6 "`M @1éi`éQ§v2i§BiJ {ii?1§{ §$§i?i6ii°s vvum U . .Vv'V*¤·U;v recordthat contains someinformation that is exempt from disclosure.In ':·=· . . ¤.. ` ʻ "ʼ\ +1 ` such a case, a public body acts reasonablyif it furnishes a copy of the;_Q :lr“ _r.. r.:j]·jé¥`·-*·`-`“` original, with the exempt material blanked out. See ORS 192.505.f .DC\ : ”·1'`; 1. 45 11..1,1:·n -_-..;A-.1-·r--1-. 1n 1nnn 1*.---... Furthermore, a public b0dyʼs rule or determinationunder ORS j 192.430¤w·{QU! ..,1jt-j gh " Public RecordsOrder, July 19, 1982,Baucom (seeApp l*`— J _e .ʼ. __.g`; 1 if Public Records Order, April 7, 1989, Martin (see 5). App F—19);Public that copies will be fumished in lieu of inspection of original documents 2 1 Order Jun 30, 2005, Mills (se App 11-58 p A A I AA A_ j-;·"_f ¤ ? and toi; would be valid if "necessary for the protection of the records ii 1 A 45 But see Lane Transit District v. Lane County, 146 Or App 109, 123, 932 ; , e e ). 1 prevent interference with the regular discharge of [the public bodyʼS]P? ʻr.:r'. 1 - zi `¢ 1 Ziff ji · "· ." 1 -*·\|~J L114 . J` 1; 1 `_ -.. ` 1 {j` ; 1E1, 3 1 i ~ʻ *l 1 I 4* 11*. g·. . 40ORS 183.3l0(9),183.335, 183.355. 41Public RecordsOrder, July 7, 1989,Baker (seeApp F— 42Public RecordsOrder, May 10, 1996,Kelley (seeApp F— 20). 35). /..-... A .... ʻP2d` (1997), rei/d in part on other grounds 327 Or 161, 957 P2d 1217 (1998) _1(publicbody may not charge labor costseven if permitted by Public RecordsLaw €8-l yi -.... rceporru ru requerui undeOmp Teshnnrlihn fn discov rii¤r·nvm·v rnnrrpcf fnr uucurrr rinniimnnf rrnrlpr OR (Tp ll.?) ji" "TJ} $lCfl$). ` 1-rr ery st 19,1993, eirr. rAppF— i ° ..Vff nrg · Record · (see -{· Public OrderMay Smith ··{ L- U s , 28). . · _jʻj "·~ ssra¤? .... 4 3;·-tj 1 -.; JE V. ;;.' . ʼf.""@€&r e.y;d.. - - ` -i .3 ʼ `="$Tʻ£.!=fʻ . (QRR (Dub Ahh . itil, 11 11 11 11) 11 11 1 * 1-1 5.1 El 1 141 M i. 111. 1 11 2 lin" 1 16 1`lt 1ʼl 1 L· 1 ` E1 iff 1. 11 ·1 ll·_, ` 1·, ·1 PUBLICRECORD S PUBLIC RECORDS Public bodiesmay chargefor searchtime even if they fail to locateany records responsive to the request or even if the records located are subsequentl determinedto be exemptfrom disclosure. However, public bodies may not include chargesfor any additional y 47 costsincurred to provide ? . _ .Z mamaI`CCU1U.5 j ʻ an dll an ¢u.LD|.uuu arremarive LU. vv format avrrnuc to ev individuals M.-.. 1--.-.-.-- with . . -.-- vision or hearing agencvʼs fees established turder ORS 192.440(4),52 the Oregon Court of {NDC .UK§ .--.:.1- - - ~ a Anna 1.1tf 1-...12,.,. ..,..,,,4. ,.,,,, ¤1»¤ ·?` . if- 1 , ;iji};1 ; 1` ,-11, 1. ¥'.·. 11 1}: rllli i,,·` *sw ijrl" 1_, 1* il1 ʻ·;'. liiwi =ʼ tri.; 1 iff: Til (5.,1; $1 rl . [1 ,1.1 ,_ 1tl. 1:11 1` 1 . ty 1; Fill; 1 plat 111 1 H] i `;gfii 1 1j1 { ii `L tli. ʻ iiil j NIC` i — 1i ?1·§ 1_l| * 1ti1iʻ will ʻz iifl.i i pr. ;, ),!~ rl 11 available to the public the amountsof and the mannerof calculating fees that the public body chargesfor respondingto requestsfor public records. We recommendthat public bodies establishtheir fees for public record inspectionand copying with notice and opportunity for public commentso that public au is •·-vu-.-AV aware of the J-------justification for the fees. State agencies LIICLL the Lllu yuuxxv V--,.should- adopt their fee schedules in compliance with the state Administrative ProceduresAct.49 *, I 1i 1 ʻ I1ʻ K ..'I . .... .·.-U-1 l£\ hills". 4-. wmiunf nw- ,... Ar 1:-... •·¤r1ur•·h 8.110 (O) 81lOW 3. W81VC1` OI` 1'CC1llCI1OI1 OI ISGS 1*.... .-..i:4.:..--:.... 2...-.. --..- .... -..1.1,. .1,.-..;..1.. ..1.* 1.*,..- .-...J and determinesthat the waiver or reduction of fees is in the public interestbecausemaking the record availableprimarily benefitsthe generalpublic. A public body may wish to consider adopting a fee schedul that e not charge provides some degreeof flexibility in assessin fees,but it may more than its actual cost.5°A per— g chargefor copiesmay include the reasonablycalculated cost ofpage a routine iile search,and in that case no additional charge should be made except where the public body incurs //\ .- -.......---1.. 1-..11....-.... 1.1....4. 4.1.-..,. 1.,... 1..-,..-.. ,..,, ...,..,.,.,,,..,`.,.,.l.1,, (6) AA person who believesthat there has been an unreasonabl denial of a fee waiver or fee reduction may petition ethe Attomey General or the district attomey in the same mamier as a person petitions when inspection of a public record is deniedunder ORS 192.410to 192.505. The Attorney General, the district attorney and the court have the same authority in instanceswhen a fee waiver or reduction is denied asit has when inspectionof a public recordis denied. _r= additionalcostsdueto extraordinar circumstance Whether a per— y or other fees.approachis adopted,public bodies 2 A three— analysis should be used to evaluate fee waiver or pa1t reduction requests. Under this analysis, a public body deterlnines (a) fi .-... J- .....»-1..11.-24»...-1 --.1. ..L1. .... .. -...,.1..... ,-.. -.- .1--..4-1 whether a waiver or reduction is prohibited L-.by In.-, law, /l.\(b) .~.·`l».,`4-1.A.whether+1·.¤ the ʻ·ʻ““l»`li¤ "public must be prepared to demonstrat that their fee schedulesare basedupon an ʻ . page interest" test is met, and (c) whether to grant a fee waiver or reduction. evaluation of their eactual cost in making public record available for inspectionor copying. While , ,. s thereis no provision sin the Public Records (a) Prohibitions on Fee Waivers/Reductions T ...... 4.1..-.4 -..4-L,“·§n¤¤ rs nnvnnn +n 1*1¤1ʻif'1r\1'1 1'l'1R A1'1'(\1`l'1F5V (`iSl'lB`l°Z.l tO review an 51 %`Li8.W 111913.11Il'lOI`1ZCS 3. PBISUI1 LU pctltlull uic nrrurrrey ucrrcr-tr W .-U-. Somepublic bodies cannot waive or reduce the fees for making Y *1· ..- -4. TJ? rigillecord available, even if the provisions of ORS l92.440(5) are met. lf a .-.- Q —.f.b0dyʼs sole funding for a particular program is from statutorily or s 4739 Op Atty Gen 61, 68 (1978) (seeApp E-2). if PliE?ʻ* fi` l- H .¤f'§jʼ. Jl-*1,.-` { rr - igpublic `-·->21 *842 usc §§1213 etSeq sf - Eeggnstitutionalldedicatedfunds, the public body may not provide public *2 ·i if T. ·-at less than its actual costs becauseto do so would be an illegal "ʼ-.. ORS 183.310 183.33 183.35 ""` "II ʻ " ' ----..... .-... ev" pan 11nn1\ /..-.. 1 . ʼ* ; ¥·r·ii··`. if3xi- y 5°Davis(9), v. Walker,5, 108 Or App diversion of those funds. For example, we have advised the Motor 5. 128, 131-33, 814 P2d 547 (1991) (see v C—l2);39 Op Atty Gen721, 725 (1979) (seeApp E-3); and Public Records _,-T, r _ March 9, 1989, Smith (seeApp F-17). whether fees ·~ fj`_ . Likewise, the Attorney General has no authority to dGi 5] See Davis, 108 Or App 128, 131-33 (public body has burden of provingiag j `V - chargedby a stateagencyrepresentthe agencyʼs actualcost of making the records 52 €l'l1.'lll1C "" "' *1 that fees charged were reasonablyrelated to its actual costs;fees charged by police bureau to provide edited copies of bureauʼs records held not reasonably i.-ʻ =ʻ 7¤· :. *5-if 11 """' \'/ ʼIʻrI ""'—"ʼ " ʻ ' G”"' " fIʻ\•'t*I _` ` " 1f\ "` ` '" AAA/L\' " ' ' "' ' ' _-.- r wifi P' 1 calculate to reimbursburea for its actualcostswhenbureauʼ feeschedul not actualcost of providing records) (seeApp dsupportedby estudy determining u s e C—l2). git; ""'7 available. Public RecordsOrder, March 29, 2000, Mayes(seeApp F— 44). _7. -_ig In Dejense of Animals v. OHSZL 199 Or App 160, 182-83, 112 P3d 336 »*ʻ—-5 App C—2l). _ (2005);(see _ ..`° ʻ _ -.: : Q-i Q. 1 /1/ih/C\ IYLAI-ʻ|·U(D} (5) The custodian of any public record may fumish copies without charge or at a substantially reduced fee if the custodian As noted above, begirming January 1, 2008, public bodies must make 241 1 (Y') - --..- urri é provide a processtor petrtiomnglrom unreasonabl denialsor ree waivers or reductions: e (1) Fee Schedules - to review Appeals has held that state courts have jurisdiction reasonablenesof a public b0dyʼs fees. s 53 of Fees (2) Waiver or Reduction impairmentswhen requiredby the Americanswith Disabilities Act.48 {Q1 . lil" 17 i=·Ui3aacoizp L1c s supportedby funds dedicatedby 1s lit;-, {h 1Hi k —. PUBLIC RECORDS Vehicles Division that becauseit is Article IX, section 3a of the Oregon Constitution to specific "highway purposes," the division must charge a fee to cover its actual costs in respondingto public record requests,exceptwhen the cost of chargingfor the records would approachor be greater than the cost of furnishing the information. Public bodies that believe they may be prohibited from providing public records without chargeshould consult their legal counsel. 54 ii; ge |$! -. m `.= H 2 H ʻ _ ¤ =i 2; aix"Hg W ·*,2= a E_ »'·7 I Zfg f.· ué *W E §<:,` 1; glp) a,i` `LE disclosureof a record will benefitthe interestsof the community or society as a whole, ie., "the public." A personal benefit to be derived by the requesteraloneis insufficient to permit a fee waiver. Under federal law, if a requesterseeksinformation relating solely to the requesterin order to aid his or her defenseagainstcriminal prosecution,there is insufficient public benefit to require a fee waiver.6° This conclusion hasbeen adoptedin the Attorney GeneralʼsPublic RecordsOrders.°l ʼ°_ ifi: V ` { V proceedwith the analysisbelow. ʻ H` facts of the casebefore it. Therefore, we continue to look to the federal construction for guidanceas to how Oregon courts may apply the state standard . Application of the public interest test requires analysis of whether t rr ., asa umavar nr mduminn is not legally prohibited, public bodies should LI H LCC WZUVU1 U1 ibuuuuuu in nun. .r¤b»rr_, 1.. ,,-,--- [ tv 1 (b) Public Interest Test I , _ -. ..---:--»` -I-`Ann :4* :4 Under ORS l92.440(5), a public body may reduce or waive tees 1rit , :'.` ié iw é:; kai >t· :”:_ "°l E :*2 ¤<ʻ », §*4 e Zʻ ¤»·ʼ ,€ʻ=Y ·. * M Li *% %:; Q %$ .; 2 E1,.je v cE ?`;|W ,Q 1* _ 2 " KQ · 2'*.I:i 2éM YWi ʼl[ʻ` W" EI`.: ·$ bri} 4 M J] ? ) EIA; A l.;· I g;,s 2;1 i {¤g:~ L`* ¢¢ ~ ʻʼ gi`y § w7i w;a. ~pjpl 5% E 4 L~€ g}e·"i~ é vj4Z . }¥;|€v' ·' W` z I {Qi · E_1 my. r ? E· E; i 1;g{·& I,. `(ʼ 1=" ¤ " E I it 1_ .t 11F 4 , liv2 . gh determinesthat doing so is in "the public interest becausemaking the record available primarily benefits the generalpublic." The OregonCourt of Appeals construedthe public interest requirement for granting a fee Similarly, if a requesterseeksrecords relating to the requester,a mere allegation that the public body has treated the individual oppressively, absent a broader public interest, does not satisfy the public interest standard. On the other hand, investigative reporters with established credentials, seeking records concerning military aviation safety with the 62 intent of reporting on those records, who demonstrate that fee requirement inhibited their ability to obtain government records, satisfied d the s public intereststandard. And a requesterwho intendedto use records 63 lectures and articles on the history of the labor in connection with .M,..,r.....,. ,1a..m.w+m ¤..·¢ IO 1.;.......1 IIIIHSCII, L1CII1U11SLI`klLUU SLIIIIUIUIIL movement, ..,; wnn M no +%.,..,.;., rrnancrai imacat oenern at A», interest. +1. 1 : +.;.A +1,»;aA+ public ize`¥ ; ʻ_ ; waiver or reduction in a 2005 decision.55 It concluded that "[a] matter or action is commonlyunderstoodto be ʻin the public interestʼ when it affects the community or society as a whole, in contrastto a concernor interest of ·,:; a private individual or entity."56 In addition, it stated that "a matter or h_ action ʻprimarily benefits the public,ʼ * * * when its most important or jisignificant utility or advantag accrues to the public."57 Therefore, the {Xi e public interesttest is satisfied "when the fumishing of therecord hasutility —indeed,its greatestutility —to the community or society as a whole."58 _ `§I _r ,`¥ The Court of Appealsʼ analysis aligns with that of federal courtsʼ construction of former 5 USC § 552(a)(4)(A), the fee waiver standard o 2); 55In DefenseofAnimaZs,199Or App at 187-89 (seeApp C-21). 5*Id at 189(se Appc-21). PHD rI. MA Iʻ|(). ʻIʻl·.) 59nan oo-<7nIU. p .lLl}.lIL\I• JJ J1 .1 ..- - - -.1- Z- 2.- ---.13:-I-.-1. --.1. -. .. 41--' ---..---4.-.. J.`-11- 4.- .1...--,..-..1...-;... 60Diamond v. FBI, 548 F Supp 1158(SD NY 1982). l"} 1. Public RecordsOrder, October 14, 2004, Jeans(seeApp F-56). §ʼfj§§t,_»SeeConklinv. UTS.654 F Supp1104(D Colo 1987)(applyingpre-198 .·-. l t.ʻi-iff 1Badhwa v. United , 6 (D DC ʻ State Dept.0f Air Farce 615 F Supp698 —- · · -· M - · 1-7 1- I --_.1.. 5439 Op Atty Gen 61, 64-65 (1978) (see App E— Public Records -_ — 56Id at 188, citing BLAcx<ʼsLAW DICTIONAR 1266 (8**ed 2004) (see Y * <·1 .. . . A,. u·1..-............> r·r··""·.“ \T1~“» Txv1—ʼr T\rr—*r·¤r\1.1/ADV 704 LUʻf, 10VU °ʼ Id at 189, citing WEBsrERsʼ ʻ1ʻH1n New INTL u1c1·1oNA1 (unabridged ed 2002) (seeApp C—2l).p u --L- requested records 1S rnsurtrcrent when the requester rails to demonstrate .ʻ`_ {Eth r `ʻ' * e _t the standardto be met under ORS 'I02.¢ld0butdidriétappl it_t the March 10,2000, Suo/Mayes(seeApp F-44). . ,,, Qyithability to disseminatethe information to the public.65Additionally, if 1 requeste seeks technical information, the public interest standard e modeledon the former federal statute. The Court of Appeals interpreted y 64 However, the public interest in the subject matter covered in the . containein the federaFreedo of Informatio Act befor that sectio was test in ORS d amended in 1986.59 l mThe public interest n e l92.440(5)n W3S (5) 19 7 f r s , _i;j_ 1985), aj"d in part and vacatedin part 829 F2d 182 (DC Cir 1987). pj.;g 548 F Supp 1158. ·;.§\ _` fry,( Diamond ?-_ ʻ»_ iff . 5See Judicial Watch, Inc. v. Rossotti, 326 F3d 1309 (DC Cir 2003) €2fjSQ _.. ·_ʼ: i{i_ __,. ~v . S=. .:=·>¤*T=~ . . =r· n i ·.;, £·¢z.%.»~= sufficient and insufhcient demonstrationsof ability to disseminate fiilifomnation to public). — . `· (cQUtI`3Sf1I ·-ʻʼ A i` · 1g I — .. - ʻ ʻ . A ʻ · ». _ . F. .»~. · · . — """"/' .,.{;_;._,._.,_;,,_...§). · ·r:,"i.·,.»_1.v( qy.r-. _ , . , .... ._ · ·. .,·. . g .1 ' ,r;·' ;.»L ʻʻ :ʻ•[ ".*~ij.ʻ ;ʻ.·i'r*t.i·'.· *· · ' " _ ` ` iii if ~. y. fill} M. 20 PUBLIC RECORDS { 21 Even if a fee waiver is not prohibited by law and the public body determinesthat making the records available is in the public interest, a A public body may still reasonablydeny a fee waiver or reduction if certain factorswarrant a denial. With ORS 192.440being silent as to what factors public interest in disclosure with reasonabl specificity, and have s are relevant to a public b0dyʼs exercise of discretion, we have identified e of sufficient public interestwhen fzI ` such factors to include: any financial hardship on the public body, the permittedfederal agenciesto infer a lack a requeste fails to do so. Public bodiesmay seekadditional information A it extent of time and expenseand interferencewith the businessof the public from r a requester when 67attemptingto clarify the basis for a claim to a fee ? body, the volume of the records requested, the necessity to segregate waiver. In determiningwhether sufficient public interest is demonstrated . exemptfrom nonexemptmaterials, and the extent to which an inspection relevantfactors include: the requesterʼsidentity, the purpose,for which the of the records is insufficient for the public interest or for the particular requesterintends to use the information, the characterof the information, needsof the requesterz . whether the requeste information is aheady in the public domain, and m 192.440(6),a personchallenginga public b0dyʼs denial of Under ORS whether the drequester can demonstrat the ability to disseminate the a fee waiver or reduction follows the sameprocedureas in challengingthe information to the public. The e requesterʼsinability to pay is also a factor, denial of the right to inspect public records. The Attorney General, the but is not alone a sufficient basis for a fee waiver. district attorneyand-the court have the sameauthority in reviewing denials m.-.-¤.. ....m;.. 1....ua mud when evaluating criteria I Il1ʻ11'hQ1ʻRI\I 1'\1IIʼ}Il(Z I')( IIIICS IllL.LbL apr CLUL magnmhlv LDCL¤\J11cLuiy vv nyu ¤·...-....a.·..-D -»-V L)iLl1I1U.LG1_y, yuuuu uuuiuo inout cave --....,.,--.... -_, . . -. of fee waivers as in reviewing denialsofthe right to inspectpublic records. s test. under the public interest Q5?On review, the issue is whether therehas beenan "unreasonable"denial of demands a showing that the requester is able to understand information and disseminateit to thepublic in a meaningfulfOI`1T1 ʼ · · · A:.1-.-;.:1;. ,,,,,.,, M-+¤A .664.1..,. The federal courts have required requester to identity the asserted : 1 e = 13 .~' 11 . 1* tri €` 1.. Zi` 1;; ; * .,.* ·;:» 3.; 21 ;%* i·ʼi Z`:`. ¤il,`.. i~ ', Q1 $,1 W.I i= i ` `1 Z· .,»*` 2· ;' H qi. iyil ,1 ;€ʻ. 1 E `1 t .·,ʼ Q< 2 * — .1. 2 Hill" 1·.;~ i qv j, Nic`. "i`.ʼi.. ʻ ·E .:ʻ 9 i··`1J: :` 1 March 10, 2000, Suo/Mayes (see App F-44); Public Records ·ʻ Qrder, October 31, 2001, Miller (seeApp F— Public RecordsOrder, March 27, . 6 McClellaEcologicSeepaSituati v. Carluc 83 F2d128 (9t Zaitz(seeAppF-47) _. 47); 1987). Rf.}; 6n al ge on ci, 5 2 h if Records Order, July 8, 1991, Marr/Rees (see App F-25); Public . 67National Treasury Employees Union v. Gz·i) 811 F2d 644, 647 (DC ` Order, August l,_ 1991, Larson (see App F-25); Public Records Order, 1987) (applying pre-1986 statute);Judicial Watch, vʻZ jʼin,Inc., 326 F3d 1309 (example 994, Dixon (see App F-30); Public Records Order, September18, 1996, _ ·'.reasonablspecififeewaiverrequest A (seeApp F-35); Public Records Order, June 16, 2004, Meyer (seeApp F—__j y 66Public c RecordsOrder, July ). 8, 1991,Marr/Rees(seeApp F-25). 5*0 ʻ 69In Defense of Animals, 199 Or App at 189-90 (see App C-21). Eln assessin the reasonablene of a stateagencyʼ denialof a fee waiver _ Records Order, May 19, 1993, Smith (see App F-28). See also Lybarger v. · -ʻ+nnr1¤r¤4»ʼ-¤ʻ··`I».,`...-. ZL `I---I -1..--J-. .----;-1-.1 -..--.....1.-.1 ----...1.. ..... .....--I.J....A,J 4.1..·F..».|Y e —- · -· · »-st ·— uwnnx n·:rx1A ...·.¤I¤ g ss Cardwell 438 F Supp 1075, a]j"d 577 F2d 764 (l" Cir 1978) (FOIA vests .» gtequestwnereit nad already provided requested s records, we considered me ract ·· .-..--1-.- drcrrptrnn J; .... rz-,. 11* 4.. A,-....4-. +A Aarpmqap wherheiin charge reduced » ithalihci-&Hencvʼs insistence on pavrnent did not prevent disclosure of the records .»m·.¤iA¤¤·¤hIp [O ru vrrqrbv COIISIGCIHDIC ursurcuurr rrr RUEYICICS agcrrcrcs to UCLCIIIIIIIC actor. ..... c wrrctrrcr ..-....---- .... .-__, .......v·· ʻ .i:—¢·_· ° C`- J°""ʼ " `“`"""“`““ "“ ʼT“ʼ"'““ `“" ""` "“"'““` T“““““"" “ ““ 1 and thereby defeat the underlying purpose of the Public Records Law. p and complete discretion as to amount of reduction). Tu! ° A ~•" 7°IHIn JJUHGIIJC DmameQ]nf Luuui Animals. 199Or App A PP C-21 . ʻI1“"""* at 190 \ʻ(see rʼr I ** ; 1. {`i1~. ··-ʻit { {121 I i "iʻ[» *111 tw =i la n? 5 { ]_;'¤" _i ) I1 * .;1il ~._ ·1;' . } iQrZ..§r}E{`%65f` iiligi %Zrr§?§£.I§i..§ r"""`.1 'I" , e · -gx.-:-_ —afi ;Q_ j a fee waiver or fee reduction. ORS 192.440(6). 11 1 ¤2 i,i,§; _, ''·i F Records Order, — · ;»$ :¤· ʻiitgl J . ¢i*z= {tai 1. Ei _11 ; .1 1 11`? *ʻ. ʻ pt W ..L > s{ 1:--, We have concluded, rmder the facts of several cases, that fee ORS l92.440(5) doesnot require a public body to grant a completetee Q waiver, even if the public interest test is met. Instead,the decision to reductionsof approximately 25 percentwere not umeasonable. We will 68public body, althoughit must waive or reduce fees is discretionarywith the Q review petitions challenging fee waiver denials or 72 reductions on a case-byact reasonably. The Oregon Court of Appeals has said that tiff Q; _casebasis. -ANA A ¤rAndar·d which requires of i,·J I-€a»SOI1aD.I.€I1CSS 15 wm ZLLI Atqtmrive UUJUULIVU Dtcuxuurua vvruvn a`·.1...--.. examination -.--m--.. °9..1.1....- aa _j 73 A s.. ." _.: ·1¤vs}-»··1,.. "the totality of the circumstances presented."7 All requestsfor a = ° on a case-bywaiver or reductionmust be evaluated basis. fi Af »- ts i tj " case t ;§.ji§..r,71 Public Records Order, May 19, 1993, Smith (see App F-28); Public i ZiiE·“? . ; , x... %.1 EMl", $2. (c) Decision on Fee Waiver or Reduction i·1; iid; Z=: * 2`[ PUBLIC RECORDS . that . .· ~. . , ·ʼ:£§;;-. _ · "ʻ.1·—·¤··`— — . . REG ; $ lu $ 2#: 55 11 I1 1 1 }1 11 1 1* 33 iii 22 1 Q .l PUBLICRECORD S c. Consultation with Legal Counsel PUBLIC RECORDS administrative offices of the statecourts. Legislative records are excluded 76ORS 192.001 to 192.190, but there are from the provisions on retention in otherprovisions that apply specifically to legislative records. 76 state agenciesand Under the retention and destruction provisions, We believe that public bodies do not violate the Public RecordsLaw when they briefly postponeaction on a public records disclosure request becaus they first need to consultwith their legal counsel.It is reasonable · for e a public body to obtainlegal advicebefore respondingto an extensive public records disclosure requestwhen compliance will seriously disrupt ʻ the records custodianʼs operations.Similarly, it is reasonablefor a public _ body to consult counsel aboutdisclosure of document that appearto be s requirementsof the Public exempt,in whole or in part, from the disclosure Records Law. When a public body receives a requestfor records that the if public body believesmay be pertinent to a legal claim or litigation against political subdivisions must follow the docrunentretention schedulerules promulgated by the State Archivist under ORS 192.1.0 Even public 5. recordsexemptfrom disclosureare subjectto the retention schedules The only exceptionsto this requirementare correspondenc with. the public not otherwise required to be preserved; duplicates (photocopies) of public e records; or letters, notes and correspondence pertaining to "reservations of accommodation or schedulingof personal visits or appearances ORS s ? 192.170 For more information about document retention schedulesand preservatio of public records,contact the StateArchivist, 800 Summer . nStreet,Salem,OR 97310. the public body, it is also reasonable to consult counsel. 13;; Ijiifll *l1.»— ; .\z; _ 1!`;l ~· ,.·; 1. 1!i :1. €§, 1, 5} E.· W 12 1f; ? 11 ? 1 1 11 % 11 1* 11 11 11 1.1, 4* 1 1: 111 ·i1 11 1 _1ʻ: Vfi 1*,_!;L1i `Y 11 1 iil 1* .. *fi.l;1 6 _1. ~1 We advisepublic bodies to consultwith counselwhenpresente with d physically extensiveor legally complex requestsfor disclosure of public records.We have concludedthat "when a public body does so, it does not Q-. therebyactually or constructively deny the request.Nor doesa public body deny a request merely becaus it fails to comply with a deadline the _ requeste seeks to impose.”7 However, it is unreasonabl to use e _ --.:4.1. --.-..,.-1 -..--..1.. AA A +....44.-1 +A A.-lm. +A H"LlSLI'd.I.C F•·n¤l—¢¤+¤ +I·»¤ s-I LHC iiiili g r--.---1..-..;-.. 4 e ACOI1Sl1lt61ZlOI1 WIUZI COl1l'1S€l 1'Il€1`€ly ZS 3 l8.CI1C IO Cl€lB.y OI [0 iriipééiiéiiprp I pegg.d. Destruction 23 It is a crime to knowingly destroy, conceal, remove or falsely alter a J public record. U{ 6I 1 77 E. What Public Records Are Exempt from Disclosure? ʻ 1. The Nature of the Exemptions ` .· The Public Records Law is nrimarilv a law AAAV 4 uuzxav J.x\J\J\JL\4u LJKAYV LL) 1}LLL.l 1¢»LI.l.l-Y (al- di.vnln. l4LnJk4l·L/JI/IIC 1CLVYʼ L GLIWI LLICLI (Jratheer than a 6 ¤m~p ?? ...i confidentiality law. Exemptions in ORS 192.50 and 192.502are limited .ʻ of Public Records if ʻ · the generalpolicy of the 1 ..1.- ...._. é§*? 2%: ʻessaeintheir nature and scopeof application becaus ORS 192.410to 192.505,the statutesto which we refer in this manual, jjlaw favors public access to govemrnent records. Accordingly, a public . e ilf ·e 22.1 donot gover theretentio anddestructioof publi record Thestatutes that denies a records inspection request 76 has the burden of proving %; regulating of public record information is exempt from disclosure. ORS 192.490 n the custody n andmaintenanc n c records s. by stateagencies e the stateareORS 192.00 to 192.190. andpolitical subdivisions of ʻ' iédgon courts interpret the exemptions of the Public Records (1). Law provisions also confer rulemaking authority 1relating to retention _.tl-narrowly,andthe courts "presume"that the exemptionsdo not apply. destructionon the StateArchivist. For purposesof the record retention Cʻ ;·§ the fact that particular information qualifies for79 exemption destruction laws, "public record" includes correspondencebut excludes§, ,.'. disclosuredoesnot necessarilymeanthat a public body is prohibited °ʻL1ʻ.,';ij_i"ʻMor , [§ii@· _ `disclosing extra copie of a documen preserve only for convenienc the information. In most cases, a public body has eover, l92.005(5)(d). The State Court Administrator is authorized to in s t d e. ' minimurretentioschedul for all record of thestat court and n n es s e s 74Public RecordsOrder, May 9, 1989,Hribernick (seeApp F-20). See Bros. Inc., 103 Or App 622 ("PublicRecord Law clearlycontemplat that and to-act ontlie ,agencieshave the opportunity to reviewsthe requestedrecordses requesbefor the AttomeyGeneraor the courtscanreviewthe matter." (se t e l ) e ~ lj.·.. if ifi: .:2.15;;;, ; ,:451-g;4,;_ — . g.=r¤..·>;;r;e;;\1¤. _ —wie -S;-is.·=~-is?-..--f idfflliroa8.12ons7.017.12 ·ʻ·i;,i_;;-; 171.4 rp171.43 s· 1·;ji 5; 0, 0. - I”-7~·o 162.30 10 0. 78 »Tm.;J,...,. ono rx- -. noo »-mn wvs 1 A- 7--- A ...- /1 1\l , . < rzs .»..1oraan, 5. 308 Ur at 438 (see App C—l0). ,79ORS l92.490(1); Coos County v. Ore. Dept. of Fish and Wildl@, 86 Or 1 °io1zs 6A-;.-H. 1LO rem NAA.-.\ . . A ..» 4 - ·!=¥PP__l0Z 739 P2d 47 (1987) (see App C-8); Morrison v. School District No. ,;-48 53-OrApp 148, 152, 631 P2d 784 (1981) (see App C— $,~1'/3, , 4). . . , A · V ʼ 1~ ` ~ —> . — 1` ri'! 1 1 '1 !ʻ1 11 1;1 24 PUBLICRECORD S PUBLIC RECORDS .·1 ¢ aj L1 ,. 25 public body should consult its lawyer before disclosing these types of information. 1" · 1;: ;'1 *. 1. 13 tit`: 11 discretionto disclose a recordthat qualifies for exemptionfrom disclosure 111 114 There are only a few instancesin which a public body is barred from disclosing information that is exempt from inspection under the Public Records Law. ORS 192.445prohibits a public body from disclosing a home address,personaltelephonenumber or electronic mail addressif the . requirementsof that section are met. ORS 192.447prohibits a public body from disclosing an employeeʼs identification badge or card without that employeeʼswritten consentif the badge or card meets the criteria of the section.6lAlso, the "catch— exemptionin ORS l92.502(9) incorporates Q al1" the Public Records Law, that prohibit the public Oregon statutes, outside : release of certain types of infomiation. For example, ORS l92.502(9) ii incorporates ORS 314.835, which prohibits and criminally punishesthe disclosure of income tax return information to other than certain public our rli¤r~ln¤uw:• nlwninn ,;;;;. ? 1 `Dulqlin ruollc Dann:-1-lc Records T 1..aw, urscrustue clanulrl snuuru lap ue ·I·` ravoreu, if1 tlnprn there Ibic C1Q DIIUIUC, officials. Similarly, the federal law exemption in ORS 192.502(8) ffl ¤un1·»=~rl incorporatesfederal laws that bar public disseminationof particular types —,, _ even when a record may be withheld nom disclosure. 1. Q of records, such as studentrecord information prohibited from disclosure When a public body discloses less than all of the infonnation .. .- A...J.I A.- A AJ-` `*YZ . ...- -.-4 1-....-;.rt deterrnrnes ,1-4.-.---;..-1.1.-.. ---- ----under 20 USC § 1232g. Finally, because outright release of trade secret .;;;.1_ requested because that one or more -----..1.. records, -.or portions or <1 information exempt rmder ORS 192.501(2),financial transfer information . records, are exempt rrpm disclosure, the public body should inform the exempt under ORS l92.501(27), Social Security numbers exempt under i; requestethat therearerecordsthat are not being disclosed.In addition,the ORS 192.50l(28) and ORS 192.502(3), personal privacy information r .0 public body should state the reason for nondisclosure. Communicating exempt under ORS 192.502(2), information in patemity or support the requeste places the requeste on 63 notice that additional records judgments or orders exempt under ORS l92.502(33), or public safety_ anr give therequesr the opportunto petitio theAttorne officer information exempt under ORS 192.502(34) could result in claims . ¤*i_$..,.j;.— d or sDistrict Attomey ter for review ity of the decision n to deny disclosure. y of liability for damage or claims for declaratory or injunctive reliefQ8 the basi for nondisclo als assi the Attom Generor 1Qeneral s 2 ·`1`f§:`1_ Attorney m assessin whether the requirement for exemption 1` . underthe Public Records Law.6°In short, no public body validly may say, in every case,"This record is exemptfrom disclosureunder ORS 192.50 or 192.502,and thereforewe may not discloseit." 1 11; WA ir 1 1:::}., . §1i 1 1,ʻ1 Qi 11] 111l ʻifi~1 I .,ʻ:l 11 .i1 *1 .1* *-11 . # Lf 1 L} 1 ..*1. N;. 111 1. if 5 E lfzlfi r 1* es ; Q. Q1=-1. 11 1;.11 "1 1 1 I_ I1`! 1111 * Z. ;. 1 _ "1.l1ʻ 1. 11 11 1 injk-lilp1i 1: 11 -1. 11 1 1131 1 .1 ' `. 11 1;. 11+ A11 1:i 111 1,1 11 11 {11 11* ; 1;`1 1!l 1 11 ;11 11 ; 21 ylgl H 111 · 11 `§`1 1., klll ( 11 "| , L*1 1` 11 111`1 '."`1 ¤— -`1 =ʻ 1*11. Hil . {lf; 1 1. .111 1:} ] 1H ;. `1· "1. Z ` 1 1 8 - ʼ .," i Nevertheless,the guiding principle is: Exemptions do not prohibit disclosure; they merely exempt the public body nom the Public Record Lawʼs mandateto disclose public records. Records custodianspresented with a records disclosure request first should ask themselves whether disclosure is prohibited by ORS 192.445,ORS 192.447,or by a state or federal law outside the Public Records Law. If not, the next question should be; Is there any good reasonnot to disclose the requestedrecord? Only if the answeris yes, is it necessar to inquire whether the Public Records Law allows nondisclosure. y And even at this stage of analysis, custodian should remember that most of the exemptions in the Public s Records Law are not stated in absolute terms. As explained below, most exemptionsare conditional and disclosure is favored. The applicability of most exemptionsdepend on a case~by— balancingof competingpublic s in favor of case interests,weighted disclosure. In view of the purposesof the s _.- "" sure o sts ey al .1S1Z1'lCl g s ;§· Fri? What Are Conditional and Unconditional Exemptions from ·._ j _.r. . "Disclosure? —¥é> 66See Guard Publishing Co., 310 Or at 37-38 ("lf the public body is satisfied? that a claimed exemptionfrom disclosureis justified, it may, but is not required to}; -.-.*==` ~x -1 1· .1 .. ··. . · withhold disclosure of the information”) (see App C-10), Portland Adventist;.·. =?3E£€l·1.?·* `.1_i:· jg 1ʻ j1igʻ;i.;f \*ʼ 1—~ =·A 1 of ~ the exemptionsdescribedin ORS 192.50 areconditional; they ·-11j=]ʻ_.§ ·`. * . 7 . Medical Center v. Shejield, 303 Or 197, 199 n 2, 735 P2d 371 (1987) _ ʻ; C:i1* "unless the publii: 1 certai typesof informationom disclosur e n 56n ·`All ;-exempt ʻf' jF.i;·exemptio from the Public Record Act mean that the custodia of ¥” €iZ._ · from disclosure does noi? ninformation is not obliged to sdisclose it. Exemption s n necessarilymean thatthe custodianis required not to discloseit.") (seeApp C-8);; Tiiiiiif? ` in - . .. lid ~n_-1.1·. 11 A 1 A . · 1, AAA.-. h . Public RecordsOrder, October 16, 2007, Davis (see App F-61) (a public 6l ln ORS 192.447 "public body" has the meaning given the term in which exemptio appliesto eachdocumenthat it intend to 174.109, not ORS l92.4l0(3). withhol from disclosu n t s 62AFSCl1M`v. DAS, 150 Or App 87, P2d 102 (1997) (seeApp C—l6). 1 `_- pag .rʼ;':ʻFZ€ʻ_ _ . TJTI ʼ 1 945 Y \ e ~ ·;Y¤YJ;¤: " dA-2Y1.·ggzii— re). .;.5 ;2 ir -- . ·~ʻ. = - =-... ; ce: .5 w I 1 `” ʻ-ʼ` 'rirj;.1 A.1;;*.,, Y ~ 1 .l_1Cʻj1;_. ` , 26 {gl PUBLIC RECORDS interestrequires disclosure in the particular instance."The applicability of severalof the exemptionsdescribedin ORS 192.502is conditionedon the extent to which recognized governmental and private interests in confidentiality outweigh thepublic interestin disclosure.In otherwords: [T]he policy [underlying the conditional exemption statutes] is that disclosure decisions should be based on balancing those public interests that favor disclosure of govemrnental records against those public interests that vfavor governmental I""""·"" ʻ1 PUBLIC RECORDS 3. What Is "The Public Interest in Discl0sure"? Q` . To properly balance public and private interests in confidentiality againstthe public interest in disclosure,a public body must know what the tenn "pub1ic interest in disclosure" means.The term is not defined in the Public Records Law. However, the Oregon Court of Appeals has stated that "the Public Records Law expresses the legislatureʼs view that members of the public are entitled to information that will facilitate their understandin of how public businessis conducted."8 Similarly, the Court of g Appeals previously characterize the8 public interest in disclosure as "the right of the citizensd to monitor what elected and appointed officials are doing on the job."8° This might include, for example, the right to inspect records of alleged misuse and theft of public property by public employeesor to inspectrecordsthat bear directly on the integrity of a high ranking police officer to enforce the law evenhandedly. Moreover, the term "public" meansthat the "focus is on9° the effect of the disclosure in general not disclosureto a particular person at a particular tirne."9 For , example, we concluded that a labor organizationʼs interest was1private and did not representthe public interest when the interestof the organizationʼs membershi in obtaining disciplinary documentscould be remediedunder p state collective bargaininglaws.92 Qt "ʻ*"·*·ʻ * i,iʻ confidentiality, with the presumption always being in favor of disclosure.64 The conditional 1 .· . ..1.-..-4;*-..- ..AA..2..A exemptions, theretore, require Anklin puouc lnnriinn fn oooies to ii ii conduct a careful balancing of confidentiality interests against public Z] disclosureinterests.In contrast,no suchbalancing is required with regard to information covered by the remaining, so— "unconditional” iiii called the balance of these" exemptions,becausethe legislature alreadyhas struck competing interests and has concluded that confidentiality interests outweigh public disclosureinterestsas a matter of law. In determiningwhethera conditional exemptionapplies,public bodies should be aware that the identity of the requester and the circmnstances surrounding the request are irrelevant to the question whether the information Ets within the categoryofthe exemption. The circumstances of a particular requestbecomerelevant only 85 if the requeste infomation comesunder an exemptionthat requires a balancingdof interests. In that is context, the requesterʼspurposein seeking disclosure 1nay 8° be relevant to Q determiningwhetherthe public interestrequiresdisclosure. 87 ·j _ *Q °_; l Accordingly, we advise public bodies to measure confidentiality _ʻ·*.»_ interests againstthe public interest in learning not only how the public ". ,`'',-irbodie generally are conducting their business but also how they are ` s G`°i__i5`jtadminist particular programs In analyzing the public interest in ,= J;-,. public bodies should examinethe statutory usesof the records }_erirrg . _5 2Z`disc1osur -,j-;,Qj? If none of those uses is involved in the request it is unlikely that =l _. is any overriding public interest in disclosure. And, if disclosure _i§§at,jisLsu e, _ , _i, 93 _ e. i_. · `Qfʻ;f;"$j"§Y 120 (1989). ` —·.`i PubZishing Co., 96 Or App at 468-69 (seeApp C-9). 78*1{P2d 3 84Turner, 22 Or App at 177, 187 (emphasisadded) (App C-3). Z 85 Guard Publishing C0., 96 Or App 463 (see App C-9), 310 Or at 32 (see? App C-10); see also Morrison v. School Disirict No. 48, 53 Or App at 153 (initialj; determination whether information is of "personal nature” does not dependupon; who requeststhe information or circumstance existing at time of request) (see; i s AppC4) 86Jordan, 308 Or at 442-43 (see App C-10); see also Guard Publishing C02} 96 Or App at 469 (otherwise nonpersonalinfonnation cannot becomepersonalby *i;§E;: reason of the context of particular public records request,such as existenceofgh. strike) (seeApp C-9). 87In D¢nse of Animals, 199 Or App at 176 (see App C-21), citing Jofddflii 93 Or App 651, 655 n 2, 307 Or App 651, 763 P2d 420 (1988), afd 308 Or 433; t rv.-sft ·—2¤ ʻ·ʻz:- ..ʼ_;t`.·;Jensen v. Schyfinan 24 Or App ll,. 17, 544 P2d 1048(1976)(Se App , e ``. `i`iʼ? Publishingv. PortlandSchoolDist. No. IJ] 144Or App 180, 591 (1996), inodyied 152 Or App 135, 952 P2d 66 (1998), af 'd on other ` 9,LQ1·ego1 ,`7925-` - ¥P2d Jgmunds 1ia11329 Or 393, 987 P2d 480 (1999) (see App C—l7); City of Portland v. — nf;T 91Morrison, 53 Or App at 156 (seeApp C— ._¤i f · ʻ 92Public RecordsOrder, July 3, 1995, Garrettson (seeApp 13-33). 4). ·ʻ»»=. moi A{»1 piéibiYtʼ¤éb nflqi"' i '''`" {5§k>.`< %`r§Q§'}n§i 93Jordan, 308 Or at 443 (seeApp C-10), >%§ * -·=¤~ @:=sa»—:a··-stri? w.¤§JJ;¤ ' is-. 1-rf? 27 `-·, » *·=;,.2;.;_r.. .i . j... » · ·~ .... . ll;Zlfj i_ ye·,:,t ail _. qi-l", lil) lll tell} ʻ .J. *1 £·· llil`? 1t itil ?W qw tiyll l~i;gj f ;¤ i,:`ll :j;"_i:~ l`l* _,.;vQl ; Ya f ji:. gi i~`,· 3 (.| 1* 5 Nj ii·*l r.· { _¤ `et ,,i, it .i.t· gl xv ua ii ` ; L ·_.: }: , . i ¢§;t;lZ Q · illiilr ¤,l`gl ; t ph ` ill ; l.·,lʼ i at ¤. lʻ· I ʻ¤ {ʼS — , tl Qtz Q ;,`_I, ¤: —{-Li;' ·i ,l ailm). €ʻ.ʻ: E is i· Ti lla t tti éW E xhaj ll i $.,; TB? 28 PUBLIC RECORDS would prejudice or preventthe carrying out of the public b0dyʼs functions, that would always be relevant. ( 1»u1l·\lir* registration records remains in effect until the individual must update the individualʼs voter registration, at which time the individual may apply for anotherexemption.A requestfor nondisclosureof this information in other public records remains in effect for five years from the date the public body receives the request,unless the public body receives a request for termination. Similarly, an individual may make another request for nondisclosureat the end of the five— period.% year which merely permit a public body to Unlike most other exemptions, { _ iʻ 29 refuse to disclose records, ORS 192.445prohibits a public body from disclosing records if the requirement of this section have been met. However, ORS l92.445(4) spermits a public body to disclose an exempt home address, personal telephone number or electronic mail address if the public body is responding to a court order or a request from a law enforcement agency, or if the individual has consented to the disclosure. ORS 192.445(1) prohibits disclosure of certain information from public records.This provision states: n E A I l a. The Personal Safety Exemption fn PUBLIC RECORDS ~ Although a requesteris not legally bound to reveal the reasonsfor requestingpublic records,providing that information aids in the evaluation of the public interest. For example,when a requester did not state the reasonfor the request,the lack of inf`ormationpreventedour office from finding that the public interest,by clear and convincing evidence,required disclosureof the namesand addresse of some employeesof the Oregon nmarmqpnr nf Human uvrvrvvu Services the requester .had threatened to JJUIJI I-l2A U1 v;. Liuuxuu ;. ..-- .s- - - - who IIBIIHILIIIUIIL un-, er----1---.-, harass. AA \JAL\· 4u•».A 9 4. The Catalogue »·-.· of Exemptions » a~Anu¤¤+ . i Under ORS 192.445,the Attomey General must adopt uniform rules prescribingthe proceduresfor an individual to submit a requestto a public body that a home address,personaltelephonenumber or electronic mail ·t addres not be disclosed, the evidence an individual must provide to it`· sestablishthat disclosure of the information would constitute a dangerto ʻ`i personalsafety, and the procedure for an individual to notify the public - body that disclosure would s no longer constitute a danger,Theserules are l Q. ?i.· found iu OAR 137-004-080 and are reprinted in Appendix H. These 0 effective without further rulemaking by state agencies - hunifonn rules are l'·_landmustbe followedby all publicbodieswithoutmodification lʼ\(\fi\I An individual may subrnrt a written request to a puonc oouy not to disclose a specified public record indicating the home address,personaltelephonenumber or electronic mail addressof the individual. A public body maynot disclosethe specified public record if the individual demonstrate to the satisfaction of the s public body that the personal safety of the individual or the personalsafety of a family member residing with the individual is in danger if the home address personal telephone number or , electronic mail addressremains availablefor public inspection. {Uniform Rule l37—004— requires that . documentar evidenc a requestfor0800 nondisclosurebasedon a danger Q y to personal e safety. Seealso discussionbelow of ORS 192.50l(20), requiring the countyi `§Z}YP`_ijji} evidenceneedsto establishto the satisfaction of thepublic clerk to keep an electorʼs residence addressexempt from disclosure oniffbody that disclosure of a home address personaltelephonenumber or °ll3ocumentary similar grounds.The exemptionin ORS 192.44 doesnot apply to county} , rfielectrio mailaddre woul constitut a dang to theperson safet of 5 propertyandlien records. membe residing nic individualor ssof a family d e er with _ thealindividual. y OAR °5 Under ORS 192.445(3) a request for nondisclosure of home iYl{3—75QQ4—0800 The rule r also lists specific documents that are (Emphasisadded.) ʻ_ personaltelephonenumber or electronic mail addressinformation in votetg (2)(c)(A). OAR 137—OO4—0800(2)(c) When a state agency, CB)-(L).ofthe uniform rule, conclude that disclosur the requirement s s e 94Public RecordsOrder, May 31, 1990,I-Ieilman/Boles(seeApp F-21). ʻ {ri $96SeealsoORS 192.50l(3l),conditionallyexemptin from disclosureupon 95But see ORS l92.50l(32), conditionally exempting hom disclosure,upon homeaddresandhometelephon numbe of a public g , safetyofficer, .the of safetv officer, district attorney, deputy district ICLILIUSL, LnU name uaun. ur a u public yuuuv octree] VIM. ""7 ""“"""' ""ʻ"··*,1; lʻ=d1StI1Ct1attorney, deputy district attorney or an assistant attorney general COlllE! e r real 'property. Pauper · . "Q"”“ ʼ_“Y s "'-ʼ ""`"' `"""ʻ attomev or an assistant attomey general contained in county tim Voterregrstrati véxu .+7* .-ʻ -i assessment or taxation records. is5 _i;._';; £ ~a,rc... A “—ʻ:·r ~ ʼ- on 1record LL l»LL1\J1L \J\J\J1 UD.s l1lBCl ¥ PUBLIC RECORDS lt, also prohibits disclosureof a duplicateof the photographappearingon the badge or card. of a home address,personaltelephonenumber or electronic mail addressis prohibited under ORS 192.445, the Attorney Genera1ʼ office will not s substituteits judgment for the agencyʼs when responding to a requestto review the agencyʼsdecision underORS l92.450(1). 97 public body to notify the OAR 137-004—0l00 requires the rl,. ;l= lrlri itil! ,!.J]ʻ. tgt l`, - ` l=,ʻ.. ***1 i`l` ;;l-. init icl , liable for ORS 192.445 provides that a public body may not be mv.imma ,.s....».;.... i M Amminn an pvpmnrimn " trom disclosure ot s ironic ` ° " JT--1 -~-··· AFA-.an rnorviouar J.».,1i"lAu gl'8l'lI1I1g 0I`(5) (1C11y111 uu circrrrprruri rr urn crrecroottro or cm r.-..- . ---... . 2l1.ag wl arlzirncc dL1LllCb5, : Cur l{W narsnhnl 1J¤1¤uua1 g ʼ[El€Tll“lOl' l€ nuruyrrurru 1'lll1'l'l1')Cl' rrcrrrru-A Ol` `O1'lC or €1€C1l ----------- lllB.l1 releasingthat information if an exemptionis granted. b. The Exemption (I wil ie ,l1 l -I1· '_ El, ji= Public Employee Photo ID Badge 1 {2) *A* t"·“ʼ*“ʼ public Vrl bodv ******1 may ·····.z not ·-—·· disclose the identification tailg i M_l. glll €Q gté `l ll qllll ¤`llll} ly qtli yl g`.r·l Z , ._ Tr g y·{ · -, i %il·· ,l.l1'1 (ll ifr a l JL - rotate par, any c. The "Conditi0nal" Exemptions of ORS 192.501 ._ i_ Qg ..- badge or A...-4-A A Eachof the conditionalexemptionslisted in ORS 192.50 exemptsa 1 interest requires specific type of record or information "unless the public disclosurein the particular instance."Thus, for eachof theseexemptions, t {ii"?-1 . · '* · ʻ ••-* 1 .• 1* . I' /\11Ì1 1\f' [O1 .L-. PQUILLI U\J\.uL»¤ Liiuor. vv u_y¤ u1.11.n_y uuruuvunb ¤~¤» on vn. » -_, -*,_ nnhlin bodies must u-1 alwavs aonlv ua balancing test 2 Y"-CHSG-bV·CElS basis. _ 1€ (1) Public Records Pertaining to Litigation ;x .iif_ ·. ORS 192.501(1)conditionally exempts: it -• — 1 r~ 1 1·. Records of apublic 1 I J-- .. -..r_:,-:..- _ n.- 1:4.2,..-4;-.- LA "J. ink +1. D body pertamrng to litigation to wnicn me body is a party if the complaint has been filed, or if the ; 1 icornplai ha not bee filed, if the publi body show that suc (b) The badge or card was preparedsolely ror rntemai use uy :· -;$`.·{~-, sp;-.· ;;_·._ T -'`glitigation iss reasonably doeshnot ·_ the nuhlic bodv to identifv emplovees of the publrc body. . nt n likely to occur. c This exemption s LMB lJuU1J.\.¢ uvu] uv ;uv.u.ua.J ..»xur.-J --.. ----L. . ».l· ` 1 i_ apply to litigation which has been concluded, and nothing in this .— (3) The public body may not disclose a duplicate of the -il Jif--}';·tʼ=l$Qi—Yq} shall limit any right or opportunity granted by _ — photographusedon the badgeor card. ¤ʻ~ —Qsi.ibsection or.depositionstatutesto a party to litigation or potential j `·a§ gm-=.»;.; ·· l ~ " Unlessan employe consent in writing, this provisionprohibits ;;ʼ ti i- ».i - lillsatipplli;."i public body fiome disclosing s the employeeʼs identification badgeor card }.g 'ʻ.`r·rpurpose of this exemptionis to place govemrnentabodies on an 1 it contains a photograph of the employee and was prepared solely Q¤i`_ʻ l during court litigation. i-{?_t with private parties before and .-..-.---..`;l --1-1.. -I-`A.· . ii liv l~ll! ;__, , i, nʻ,l. lT ʻ ' stil, ; 4lʻ=i` i_.“, [i;E I-.+¤»·n¤l •· una law 1*194 internal use by the public body to identify its employees The provision . — _ [ sW gl`:V ;,]. E 7all i fil? { jQ. _. ʻ{ rrrc ureguri shouldconsultwith its legal counsel. (a) The badge or card contains the photograph of the employee;and st -llt Ja }; university, state or with a political subdivision of another state, or any intergovermnentalentity formed by a public body with an agency of the federalgovernment. esa loRtʼ%l An entity of 174.109 DCU rm \J1\.O Q vm I I"Iʻ..LULJ\.1j . 111.1 uuu.u._y uncertain uuvvxnunu un. its neu status uewewu under cu.-.-A ORS VL-.- ibody without the wrdtten card of an employee of the consentof the employeeif: ,C I Iʻ1C2lll.I1 zulu rburciruc intergovernmental entity formed by a public body with another cam and (1) As used in this section, "public body" has the meaning given that term in ORS 174.109. §rʼl fi; ·" S ʻ§el ?ti 1 :2 nil r all E ? UIʻ€gO1l . states: > ll > OR 192.4 prohibidisclosuofapubli employidentificati undue nr mrd without the emploveeʼs written consent. This provision UGUBU ucuu vvxnuuun. vxrryrvj V- ..- ..--..S U1 47 ts urv re c ee on — _r €.flʻ 'ni_,ill ;ʼwl; l l i Fir M elite} address, This prohibition applies to a "public body" as defined in ORS 174.109 which differs slightly fiom the definition of "public body" that , applies to the remainderof the Public RecordsLaw. SeeORS l92.4l0(3). For example, the following entities are statutorily. excluded from the definition of "public body"Uin ORS 174.109,so tlie prohibition in ORS 192.44 doesnot apply to them: _ 7 fx.,-a.r.·m4 T.T¤¤l+l¤ mul Qnipnnp Tlnivnrcihr the (liʻH¤rWl gf$|l'R Rm`. mw V (3) individual requesting nondisclosureof its decision.A public body may ask nm amiavaam rd euhmit additional infonnation to assist it in making its [HB IHUIVIUUZII LU §LlUL11.1L auuiuurrur rrrrvrrnwcxunx ..., -....,-..-7, r decision. »";t -·iitilg l§ ' I ]fi i_ 31 - 97niimae neenrdq Order November 19. 1999. Birhanzl (seeADDF¢l3)· I'Ll[)llU 1\UUU1Ub \Jlu¤l, lxuvvllluur IJ, I;//, urrrlulr. .l \AU.1 l \1 Axvv ʻ 2ʻ=rthe Attornev General recommendsthat public bodies invoke `fliherefore. g F {bij; €VBH."ii`OOli11 g' LLIU l 1.l4L\JL1.1l\J)ʼ \J \l.l1\J1 (Ll L \l\J\.lA.1.LLL1\lL.\\.|u uAA~•· 4 ¤this .exemption onlv on the advice of legal counsel. — .—:;·% l~;;`. ' i.ʻ` . greg; rwe se ;.~. . ʻi·ʻ » .·¤ .` .I ir _ ... :~ . i.». V V . .~. . ¤.___ .· — ʻ· ʻ ʻu:.·'·.-`.··ʻY':"ʻf»,?Ll"I.$ ; l=Z `iY§ %` —it`l ʻlJ:' E.l i. €,· ,lim · . . V . 32 PUBLIC RECORDS PUBLIC RECORDS `.ʻ.'r `: lu Ill li vc 7. l rll il . - x . 2. i ~ in.`i<; `. ʻ·, riI l·~ J , l·:ʻ* l ,!` ʼl. _. sw Z1- i hil. · . iii te I .! r ll A.r· 1; .,d' r . .=Q vi V l n it it r "Ii l.`l Tite l in =· lift ,·,. Ererr _` · < il ʻlE · .~ l = »§T ***· lH + `lli· ll r. r- :zʻ l" 1 `l`i l~`!il`, l~ `nl if ill} . r _·. in i {T aj I hi .·wl' hr jp`; t a .-LW F lv 1 lg; . 21 .· V ` 'llllw =' r`· 'l, . ,, 3. 1i ily ʻ i k [ rzg rI e i l lk, - ` i l The Court of Appeals has construedthis exemptionvery narrowly, in order "to further the statutory policy that govemrnentrecords be open to the public." The court held that the litigation exemption applies only to records "compi1ed or acquired by the public body for use in ongoing litigation or * * * litigation [that] is reasonably likely to occur." In the courtʼs view, the exemptionapplies only to records developedor compiled by the public body for use in the litigation and not records collectedin the ordinary course of business,even if those records subsequentl become relevantto litigation.°8 y The litigation exemption in ORS 192.50l(1) does not apply to litigation that hasbeen concluded.Litigation hasnot been concludeduntil thereis a final judgment and all appealrights havebeenexhausted . this exemption We note that records that may not be exempt under T iii could be exempt under ORS 192.502(9), which incorporates limitations on discovery of client information made confidential and privileged under ʻ A ORS 40.225.We alsonote that a public body or officer that is a defendant in a tort action under ORS 30.260 to 30.300, or in an action under ORS 294.100 for unlawful expenditureof public funds, may not enter into a Public bodiesneed to investigateand preparein advancefor expected ·l· litigation. Consequently,we think it appropriate to interpret the phrase .iʻ 1 — "reasonably likely" to mean "more likely than not," rather than jjjall i "irnminent." One indication that litigation is reasonablylikely to occur is ( that a personhas Bled a notice of tort claim againstthe public body. Notes `E_ or reports prepared in responseto such a notice would fall within the S exemption. 99 The legislative history makes clear that the litigation exemption does ji not apply to administrative proceedings,such as conteste casehearings. The fact that any administrativeproceedingmay lead d to litigation doesnot lr ·ʻ _." justify claiming this exemption. If, however, the public body objectively Ei can show · that court litigation is "reasonab1 likely to occur," the —. exemption may be claimed for information gatheredfor that litigation, .-Y Aéaly — regardlessof whether an administrativeproceedingalsomay be involved. settlement _ r 'riiiriiiRecords m; 17 IL, 1900 1 77U, Ri§Cl10l`f`fR€B ulculluil (anu of the compromise iieunluiidn ¤ ·nnl·¤lir~ l-xrxrlv Y ·< weK note WCL- that LL-; when --.1--.. a .. party .......».. to i.. litigation 1;+:,...4;,,,. involving a puonc oouy m ʻ Lastly, uses the Public Records Law, instead of discovery tools, to request information relating to the litigation, the party must senda written request to both the public body and its attorney.ORS l92.420(2). This rule also annlies when requester A;-»·¤ has ..-..v`. filed ..a ---,notice tort claim under ORS Cl if}!./L1\JD V 1.15111 the \·J.L\r Avs1u•vvvv» --- of - I , Y . . — 30.275(5)(a).(Seediscussionabove,p. 32). (2) Trade Secrets ORS l92.501(2) conditionally exempts: . — ʻʻ- _, . *-1; __ * .-"'·.TZ · 1ADD ny}: n I.,/. rʻ·=`= ʻ .». V . ' ·.-' {”EE %§ai?;i*i?¥R·ee·eTddmedee Aemisi in ._E;¥iii{1—{·1x¤uUIL15 UIUCI. ALIEUSL IO. mon LUUʼ+JZYV . rooo. Madrid (see App F-23); Publ1ʻ?e=.»_ Order, June s * ·'·ʻ1¤ U, IZJV, IVLLLUAAU \¤uv 4 ʻlʼkʼ .52; a _ . ` — ', : j `igi _ i 11 }`iQwithheld from disclosur tmderthis provisionmustmeet all of theʻfollowing criteria: iiliikecord e s— . l383_(l98l) (seeApp C-5). gg Public Records Order, January 12, 1990, Bischoff (see App 1*-21); Publlpj, ne,-mae \}1U.G1, Order- Jullb InnesU, LJJU, 1990. ivauurru Madrid (aww (see 4App F-23); Public Records OrH6I,i 1\C\}UlUb arr A »-.//, A »V---— ---V ZYC {ig? October 1, 2003, Franzen (see App 1*-52). lmrrrmrv Jmruury that requires the terms _.,;r jg · ·2` kg! 98Lane CountySchool District v. Parks, 55 Or App 416, 419-20, 637 firrlnr uluel, of that action ¢=r =.·. wcornpilatio of information which is not patented which is known to certain individuals within an organization and which is n , ¤:ʻ¤ .l I-ionly Zgus in a business it conducts, having actual or potential _._,gcomme value, and which gives its user anopportunity to ed isi?] ' ..r,ʻ;_= ;s_g- · V. . ʻi ··-· ..I irobtain a businessadvantag over competitorswho do not know or rcial li `· az;. ʼ¤ʻ:i;,`2·::»i ..`. ~ifʻ ʻ susertl.] e negateany need for an individual to use the Public Records Law to accessto records for purposesof pursuing private litigation.1°°An interest.} in private litigation does not qualify as a public interest requiring} 100 1ʼI.1Dl1U `Dukliie lusuulus D¤»·ru·H¤ or compromise settlement or cornprornise to be confidential, unless the court makes widen tindinos that specific privacv interests of a private individual wllttmr rrrrulrr5¤ elicit oyvvlirlv y......-_, ---------.. outweigh the publicʼs interest in the terms of the settlement or ..·..`A J.-. +1·.Je section, may T1'6.Ci€ secrets. "`1`lI3.GC SCCICIS," BS USCG 11 IIIIS =·»l*I Qincludebut arenot limited to, any f`ormula,plan, pattern,process, 1 - =, stool, mechanism, compound, procedure, production data, or ¤:r·-· at ʻ~·ʻʻrl~ ʻ _ The litigation records exemptionis conditional. The public body determinewhetherthe "public interestrequiresdisclosurein the particular instance."Generally, the availability of ordinary tools of discovery would? disclosure w] 33 = *-2%:3 = ¥= -·»» mion 1%. .=Z . s 093}. — ʼ .i " °=;$?r:bR¢ neraieir (SCC rene lʻ\UU Ann I`FAQ -.J·ʼ}· DUUUIL ;i.rj· lik all eLygl ligl }|,,ll· lZ ·`:Z PUBLIC RECORDS 1 {~`.» i;~., l" Tl i ~ ll} illicit · the information must not be patented ; • it must be known only to certain individuals within an organization and used in a business the organization conducts; l . r·;."lil lr-.», · it must be information that has actual or potential commercial value; and ` ¤,. ip"}; Ìl '· .· . iii;) . itil. . l i'ʻ- #..; ,1 . i.;,,`: l;- r ill`. 1 Q lol. r.y. ·ʼ.·l_ l n;y ¥1·j lI¤;:~ tl; —lll. l1l`l ll dill: fillet ll.L ~z, li _,: illl filll ll `jlli l~;.ll. lg lr;li ·i:l L; i'~w §;.~. l¤ ' .,j `·ʻr 1 i*"ʻis wu ilal: `ll <l· ? it llz rl..li lr— .is =ʻ:=:ll· rl-ls. €lll· »l ʻ-;Y ?,,_r, _ l lgi- J All L lgiléyiil ;r il;-ill .., :l;lE llilil ` .`2ʻ*§ ·..,·,l,,,l.ʻ , ;Y;» . l l =l§l ll;;.lll~ ~r =l.Q ' l.;l: - ʻl'l. ;· ʻ·e tʻ»slr iri'_-`| »i {`l`l llt l ; lil ,.;:. Z ? ~.' ; `;i` l ~lil. QI r ` f* QT * 'i 34 [ifi E; ʻ irll. inner cive its an 111\.l¤I. Exvu .u.¤ users uqvrq uu opportunity vyyvx......-,..J to .... PUBLIC RECORDS clear.l°7ORS 192.50l(2) authorizes,but doesnot require, a public body to refuse to disclose a trade secret, unless the public interest requires otherwise in a particular case. On the other hand, the Uniform Trade SecretsAct prohibits "misappr0priation" of a trade secret, and provides civil sanctionsfor such misappropriation.l°8We believe that by retaining the conditional exemption for trade secrets,and at the sametime enacting . 5 * obtain a advantage -- ..-... .. business . over competitorswho do not know or useit. the Uniform Trade Secrets Act, the legislature has, in effect, called for heightened uv.:-····n.·_; scrutiny we of -~..-·---..--.. contentions that interest requires the L1UL5u•·vuvu ...-. r the WeIpublic disclosure of records asserted to be trade secrets. lf a public bodyʼs disclosure of a trade secret would constitute "misappropriation" under the Uniform Trade Secrets Act, disclosure A _ We have concluded that fee schedule and price lists provided in ·f·`n1· n=vA11ʼ\1'\i'if\1'\ QQ ` · a request V VVV P--~—--·1 -—~ e.·i+...-ir, lor exemption as scan ·--.+ responseto for -proposal meet +1..s the crrrerra trade secrets.l WeL have—» also concludedthat lightning strike data made Z}. — available °3 to the Oregon Department of Forestry under a license with a :_ :l private corporationmet the criteria.]04More recently, we have concluded g; that an insurerʼs projections of trend, target loss ratios, and accidental deathrates,submittedto the InsuranceDivision aspart of the insurerʼs rate Bling, were exemptastradesecrets.l °5 A Mll)6 Amfiieee “r-nrle LIZILIC SCUIUL rclum Lucu. rr- . rr..:1r...··r—..., c¤,.,...,.l¤¤m·pt" lu in 1·m·rr• that The Umtorm Irade Secrets Actm oermes 1.. ¤ Law. Its Public Records may be broader than the definition in the definition, ORS 646.46l(4), states: — .1.. .1:.r- .. .1....--;..... 35 would be prohibited underthat act and the records would be exemptunder the "catch-all" exemption of ORS 192.502(9). However, the Uniform Trade SecretsAct also provides irmnunity from a claim or action for misappropriation in caseswhere the information is released under an order issued under the Public Records Law or on the advice of an attorney authorized to advise the public body. ORS 646.473(3). A public body iiʻʻi Q} should not release any trade secret information without a determination that the public interest requires disclosure, and without first consulting . with an attorneyauthorize to give it legal advice. dthat anticipatereceiving sometradesecretinformationin Public bodies ,....-.4 "Trade secret" means information, rncludmg a drawing, cost data,customerlist, formula, pattern, compilation, program, device, method,techniqueor processthat: qrespons to a requestfor proposalor other bidding requestshould specify »,if e their solicitation documentsthat any trade secretinformation must be Lispecifically identified. However,the Public RecordsLaw doesnot require V, , (a) Derives independen economicvalue, actual or potential, fiom not being generally known to the public or to other persons t ii.;;i.;; secreto be specificall labeledto be exemptfrom disclosurunder who can obtain economicvalue from its disclosureor use; and ·-Yl RS*192.501 and {ʻ,>ji;_;ia-_? t y the Uniform Trade SecretsAct doesenot requiresuch i. (2),as an indispensabl stepto preserv protectionof trade secrets.l (b) Is the subject of efforts that are reasonabl under the . ttrade ,ʻ·jihéiblélin —·, tulip innmie undo nnlv ensurethe nronoser that the e ` UULL_y ninv tuwr. it In will u in protect ru----circumstancesto maintain its secrecy. lʻgir_|_JLlU1J.\.} e Iucty \Ju1._y ¤0¤Lu.v eLuv yiuyvuvr °9 tl =int`orénon to the extentpermittedbv the Public RecordsLaw. . n l . 1, _I_..-4.--...1..L Edit ra ·.ʻ _.l l.` The relationsh betwee the treatme of trad secret unde .·;la iati`. i; * ` rg · (3) Criminal Investigatory Material 192.501(2) ip and under n the Uniform nt Trade Secrets e Act s is not r entirely; `shi _l _..-lL_=" ..-. 192.50 (3) conditionally exempts: ` · —;·.3lF·Z `l" V ?l·- iLi.=> ·` I-ʻ= ·' ʻ-~ U'? 1 * A-ʼf2};§ ·ff ··¥ f_ §'£` · ""' l. YVl.1\J \J(·I·.Ll \}l.l\Jul·LLl. vvvaavaaaav v v•·;v•~ AAV--. --.. .'»>{§*?;7} " {rf? L"··»*` l·*' W i,,§_§;_:,,;:.-..M °· A ` IMSRQ =l r;§§,Q!£<lʻ.le°.· *—'°° W .l'uUu.v Dntilie 1.\G\.»u1u¤ Reenrds uruvr Order. uvuvirruul December 7. 1989. »»·».······ Baldwin \—·" (see ·*.rr App F~2l); i I/VJ, r H vii, y “ iiwe .. .4, llrdnr n..q-.. 1lir....,1. A '/lllILL Grxn/1, '7/.21T7 ,.J+.-. HWTO /.~.·,·` TOTITIPIS FAH-ine rnlqfpri fn §5\iEl;('Sfli: Ale,. Dukiin Dnnru-rkI\/lnrrrh Ll. TCIHLUU LU bdlv Ul. LUSO 31ʼl1D11C KBCOILLS Urucr, rvrzucu ·+, 4uu—r, 1..¤r»L rpm rurrrrm 1.........u W .....T surplus stateproperty) (seeApp F-52). 10 Public RecordsOrder, September4, 1998,Spatz(seeApp F -42). -w" W5 11..1.1:,. *0,.....-AA“.·m¤+ S '7(VY7 {cpe FUJI-I Ann 1" F-BO], ""' \r\.»Am— ITTIEI`. m HIIQUSL O. I.r , T<'£1-¤r— BJLSUU (BGG Ul\.» ,lKECOTHS \G\.»U1u¤ x}1uu1, ugunn u, LUU 1.vv *».n¤vn 4 [Ll|·'\1hI1(E ME»?{é`kZr§2»E 92d' {{J6£éL1%SiuA \}.l\LJ \Iʼ Iʼ\}•I'ʼ\}1 LU \Iʼ\'.l`r h ? 4kL.L!.\.lL1l.1(·\·LL\JLL . _ LLAV . Ulxuvaxu iplllillfi RECOTGR * ʻ»"~ʼU*-* *\*·'*-ʼVU-*° yvnannnvvvu ()T'(iBT'. V*““*7 imterseet_O}*§l1bh;3-d£ég `rʻʻ T rdn (i)I`dg— ul, ·¤..nv ... SCl')liBl'I1bC1° '··"·ʻl—ʼ“·ʻ**ʼV"* ·-..,-..· 4.'> --v---..- *ʼ**ʼ: ._- Spatz *·*r""··· Unifor Trade ml {Secrets I _ (dlscusslcn \""*" ʼʻʼʼ 5; . 1;: V; . , * 2 » .~—: ;·-<~ ¤;c 71 QMS 5* ··-;·< · ·-F2*=., · ʻ· _ Of I Act) (seApp e ,._ ». %ʻF”ʻ»646.4 an 646.46 .— m9rPublic Records \JL\.1L¢.lʼ Order. March I0. 2000. SUO/Maves (See ADD F~44),11. DLULLV ,L\LlU\}1\JD LV.l.(1.l\J11 LV, LVVV, L}\A\u;v;u.J vu \¤v v 4 ʻI"K"" "/` V , #eRs 63 d 5. ,·:; . ;· wwe? , ·»g,;..t, ;>·~- ·<;- _t~ ~ —ʻ3 —. — ; LU 1ʻ,: Q 7»~ 36 ʼ- ,' F? 1};* 1* ~., 91 1}., ~1 1·,·1}` 11 ,*1 H], ,~·1 `-'1 _,1 * E`V1 = 1E , J., il2 1 1,·,. 11 2,: ` 1] 1 • information compiled in investigationsnot connectedwith pendingor contemplatedprosecutionwill remain secret only if the public body establishe thai disclosurewould: J s — deprive a personof a right to a fair trial; ; —- disclose the identity of a confidential source or confidential ʼ " ll'lI`Ol'lIl&llOl'l ·' " 'ATYJ 1 · ,,1 ' 1 ='Q§ 1`1Y l ,{-.' [H1 11_`, 1=ʻ r ,Z $$1· 11 °'a:;·ʻ; 4 i1ʼ·r @, ,r $1}, 11. ”'1 Yi ,,. 1*5} ,,;, ` -11 1' .-1,111 r_11: 1` 11{Q1 A' `] 1 `,,,1 _xi., ,,1 1 . ·`i1 · · I 1'1 ; Z1*1 ] } \ ; ʻL M 1};: ʻ~I ii; `` E Z:" 1 or physical safety of law GI1I`OlʻC€11'lCl1l . ..4. ,`-. +1- A Uvl'1ClCl` 3.1 €XC€plZlOI'l to tl'1€ CXCHIPIIOII, 3 “1`CCO1“C OI 21 EIITCST Ol' UIC -1.4. ..1.* .. -.,.2.-M,-Jʼ in +1-¤n+¤»-I H;-Fpnrnnflxr +11421 hfl'\P1ʻ fʻTl1ʼ\'1l1"l2l `l1'\\lRRl'lO`2l`Ol`V 1 l 11 investigator, Z report or a crime" is treated oirrerenuy 1man other crrrrrrnar records and ordinarily is not exempt from disclosure. The statute clarifies this exceptionby settingout a nonexclusivelist of examplesof information contained in arrest records and crime reports. Such records must be · disclosedunlessthereis a clear needto delay disclosurein the courseof a Ts·.2 specific investigation, or unless another statute restricts or prohibits resistance,pursuit and weaponsused; and IM 1i _`, disclosur (g) Such information as may be necessaryto enlist public _ til`-?1-. ʻ·. e. This "arrest records" exception does not apply to juvenile records. assistanc in apprehendin fugitives from justice[.] _ gZ:.;,i_ZAlt ORS l92.50l(3) doesnot by its own termsdistinguishbetween _ e g _ 'ʻ,Qʻ.'ʻʼIhougl1 'Qgjrivenil and adult records, the juvenile code authorizes"custody,” rather Unlike the litigation exemption in ORS l92.50l(l), the crinrinalf · 1e investigation exemption does not expire when litigation is completedorg abandonedIf law enforcementofficials have closed an investigation 1"Se PublicRecord Order,August15,2001,Padgett/ (recordsexemp . decided not to prosecute, however, the governmental interest ini}ii e defendantʼs sappealof conviction) (seeApp F-47). Eller t maintaining confidentiality of investigation recordswill be din1i11ished,~ - -f}*k, Records Order, November 13, 2001, Forgey (see App F-47). ln The Court of Appeals has outlined its interpretationof the exemption for? l·l?.=_ _``. {addition to informatio relate to law enforcemepersonn safet thatmaybe €l`li·Public the legislature haselrestrictedy the disclosure of criminal investigatoryinformation asfollows: m - ~ exempt under n ORS l92.50l(3), d nt »eertainr.,inf`onnation about law enforcement and public safety employees. ORS · information compiled in investigations connecte with pending _ -and 181.854. See also ORS l92.502(34) (home address, telephone contemplate prosecutions ordinarily dwill remain confidentiall `· electronmailaddre exem atreque ofpubli safetofficer) d y l92.50l(31) (conditional exemption for home addressand home telephone 1,f1 EF L ʼ1, b [1 11 1? b a ·;~ 1`1 411 1*1 5. 11 ig (e) The of °**" the *** investigating and arresting and *“" “ʻidentitv “ʼ“""ʻJ "*· ʻ "“":>*"·~·¤ "···* **—··· rn U agency U the length of the investigation; (i) The circumstances of arrest, including time, place, »ʻ- 11 , 1* ; t.,Lʻ-,,,---4.I,`.. \"/ 1,V1 1? `| *;'-· . ·L*: ,,,1 SOUICCQ -....,, (d) The identity of and biographical information concermng both complaining party and victim; , Q1 .,“, persormelm 135.290; . ;:"1 IZ' 1- , 1{ N1 1`, 1 1 S, 1. `l' — endanger the life (c) The conditions of release pursuant to ORS 135.230 to 1 -....L`2.l-.,.4J,.1 OHl`V DY UIC COIlI1(1€l'1UEll -— disclose investigative techniques and procedures; or 9 (b) The offense with which the arrested person is charged; 11-, ,; 143 {1ii* 1,, -ML-L-.1.L- lllI`1llSllB(.l `, ··1, · ,*1 1 11 i — constitutean unwarrantedinvasion of privacy; (a) The arrestedpersonʼs name, age, residence,employment, marital status and similar biographical information; K1 I 1 37 because disclosure likely would interfere with law enforcement proceedings ;l 12 Investigatory information compiled for criminal law purposes. The record of an arrest or the report of a crime shall be disclosed unless and only for so long as there is a clear need to delay disclosure in the course of a specific investigation, including the need to protect the complaining party or the victim. Nothing in this subsectionshall limit any iight constitutionally guaranteedor grantedby statute,to disclosureor discovery in criminal cases.For , purposesof this subsection,the record of an arrest or the report of a crime includes,but is not limited to: 31-. i.I .' PUBLI RECORD C S PUBLIC RECORDS . ` ` ʻ ʻ " ' ¥ 4 1 ' , 4, ,,,,ʻL I I - ic H0See Public RecordsOrder, July 3, 1995, Gairettson (records exemptwhen district attomev has reserved possible prosecution) (see App F—3l). "1"I' /' In Jensen. 24 Or App at l 1, 16 (see App C-4). `Y I ' / _,_6 4 2 __”. ?·_-ki i=i5ʼ* ' si--. ʻ. i ' ʻ»~ —»x··ʻ¤·»ʼ =- "A — ʼ » ss pt st c y ; .,ʻor public safety officer contained in voter registration records); ORS ,» (condition exemptiofor nameof publicsafet officercontainein .l— ·` · real property assessment or taxation records). al n y d dll Seeded. ORS 4l9B.035 ( child abusereports). .,.., `. .: - , z 38 PUBLIC RECORDS than "arrest," of juveniles for criminal law violations.]'5 We therefore believe that under ORS l92.50l(3), the record of an _"arrest"does not include the record of "custody" of a juvenile. Such "custody" records compiled by law enforcementagenciesfor criminal law purposeswould therefore fall within the ORS l92.50l(3) exemption.We note, however, that thejuvenile coderequires disclosure of information that parallels the arrest record information described in ORS l92.50l(3). It also permits disclosureof additional information from juvenile court records.]16 i PUBLIC RECORDS ( The exemption for criminal. investigatory information should be distinguished from the laws governing disclosure of criminal offender information. ORS 181.560establishesa procedurefor obtaining specified E .- 1 eg 39 criminal offenderinformation from the Departmentof StatePolice. ORS 181.534makes criminal offender information obtained by public bodies rm. 1mrmnses. ror ,4-,4-, rrorr-orrrrrrrrarjusrrce purposes,eg, og., ernplovrnent. c...p.s,...s..., confidential. ss.... ..-....,-. Public , -. —,·ap-.4pet rrprim bodies affected by ORS 181.534 are identified in Appendix G. (4) Tests and Examination Material ORS 192.50 (4) conditionally exempts: ,¤,¥l tn qrln-ri11i¤1·r¤1· ""ʻ 1 · ·' A 4444.!.-~1---... -+1--.. ,1-+Test questions, scoringkeys, -...,1 and otner datasuused to aorrrrrrrsre A public record need not have originated as part of a criminal investigationto comewithin the exemption. In a public records order, we _ concluded that the scope of the exemption for criminal investigatory a licensing examination, employment, academic r or other examination or testing procedurebefore the examination is given and if the examination is to be rrsed again. Records establishing proceduresfor and instructing persons administering, grading or evaluatingan examinationor testingprocedureare included in this information extends to prevent disclosure of records not originally created, but later gathered,for criminal law enforcementpurposes."7In reaching our conclusion,we notedthat the United StatesSupremeCourt construed the nearly identical provision in the federal Freedom of Information Act exempting "records or information compiled for law enforcement .-.......`..~.¤> `Flpnqrrcp tldp Qtnhe mul ff-'t(lFtT2l LIIC ¤Lcu.G auu ruuurcu purposes" 4-A to Avi-AAA extend +A to mini-, sucn i·m··ni-rlc records.118 DGKRLLISU disclosure exem tions are com arable we believe that Oregon courts 11 ° would reach the same conclusion. 9 ..,,-,.,1:.- L1,- ..--,.4.-.1-. -431-... exemption,to the extentthat disclosurewould createa risk thatthe result might be affected[.] " ' ' -ʼ ' · r .r 4.1,, 1,-;.--..1; .-J? The obvious purposeof this exemption is to protect the integrity or i .i_·`_ examinations administered by various public bodies for licensing,m 3`i· employmentand other purposes.Information usedto administer the test is enforcementagency or official. lf; as part of a criminal investigation, a r_ confidential until the test has been given. Examination information 7 law enforcement agency has collected or gathered records from another ``»ʻ”ʻ Y remainsconfidential if the test will be reused} We have concludedthat public body, that public body (or any other public body that is also a. ,·._j i.arecords of the oral answers to test questions must be released if the `` 22 "custodian" of the samerecords) may apply the exemptionin reliance on _ d no indirec reve th question Likewi acomple t f-?{r...i-? _ the law enforcement agencyʼs representatio that public disclosure of ·,`,~i,~'; sheet is not exempt if disclosure would not compromise the eʻ 1 answer o t tly al e sm se, ted n recordswould interferewith the pending criminal prosecution.l2 p *.·__ 1answer of the exarnination} However,we also have concluded that the Also, the exemption is not limited to records m the custody or a raw ° ` _ _l "5 ons 4l9C.O80419C. and419C. sff ʻʻ H6 ORS 419A.255(5), (6); see also ORS 419C.239(2) (certain information? , 09l 094. rj_ VʼQ _`_s 24 .- _ if __ RecordsOrder, July 8, 2004, Meyer (seeApp F-55); Public RecordsOrder, `· _February27, 2007, Zaitz (seeApp F-60). ;-;j}.j §j`;·1 It- ` i° Licensing examinations,test questions and related material may also be containedin "formal accountability" agreementsnot confidential and not exerript" from disclosure). The remainder of the juvenile court records are generallyi, ; _; éprotectedby the U.S. Copyright Act (17 USC §§ 101-810) or qualify as trade confidential under ORS 4l9A.255(l)—(2) and, therefore, exempt from dlSCl0Sl1I __gsecrets1bytheUnifor TradSecreAct(OR 646.4 to646.47or 6j;ʻj under ORS l92.502(9), which is discussedbelow. -Y;4ct>ndrtronally exemptfrom H7Public RecordsOrder, December23, 1991,Mayes (seeApp F-25); Publiiiyj —protected mdisclosure e under ts ORS 1921 S.501(2). 61 5) lz?-Public Records Order, January 12, 2001, Varenhorst (see App F-46); RecordsOrder, October 10, 1996, Reed (seeApp F-36). HY_ Order, February28, 2002, Perry (seeApp F-48). "8.i¤1rrr Doe JLEK/l Avencv v. John xlDoe Corp., 493 US 146, ll0 S Ct 471, 107.,1} JUIHL JJUD l-v_)' I.' uurnu uu gurte., r I I _. 1.2 Public Records Order, January24, 1989, Wilson/Parsons(seeApp F-17). Ed2d 462 (1989). i2l_YPubRecord Order,November19, 1999 Jacobs/ (seeApp F3 "” Jense 24Or App ii (se App C— 2002, Crornbie (see App -F-5(l);° 12 n, Public Records Order, e December 4). 18, 0 -— lic =t€e5 . . H) zi-gi i- ʻ ' V-ʻ;-af- _ . r_ fw?-,.:·ʻ . 3 1" _ʻ:·:gg2j;=;g s QI·iiQ . ʻ . » ʻ = · » .r ; , > ` Birhanzl . 1.,. ~., 1_ _, ! §.lj i1.j_ t1Z ,_¥ ;·. =..l ;=, `je l 40 · 1; ? 1;* 1*; 1.* f".i1 '1. 11 scoring sheetfor a practical examinationthat lists the items on which a licensing applicant is being evaluatedis the equivalent of written test questionsand exemptwhen disclosure would jeopardize the integrity of subsequenexaminations. t Although primarily applicableto licensing or academicexaminations, l·-"ʻ»g ` this exemptionwill apply to any "examination" for which test questions, scoring keys or other data will be used again to grade or evaluate applicants.Thus, we concludedthat when authorizationof tax credits in a competitive funding cycle is basedon an evaluation of written questions that elicit information about a projectʼs qualifications, the scoring sheets and evaluation materials are exempt because disclosure would identify l H" }J1\.4\.:1D\:1-y nraniselv l.,é {°:`l1 ? . #1 A 1.~:_i 11 1. E "`.1 jpl ~ i I1 ʻ..& ·? ”,·1.. E.= 11ʻ • ʻ 1 . i iiiilr 1 1 Lʻ_.` Q §·:_ tl-111 r1:.·1 -1 I1 ;1».,.llʻ1 .11 ·. l· 1·»§ ,_ ~ iz 15 1(j ~· ;1.,11] if _.' ʻ :.i'112* ʻjl; }.11. ;_·|`Illgi jg.).., 1:, ei1· 1 l1 =. 1.,i~ @. 11-1. +1*: 1` =; Q/ ?. g1z1 ~ʻ111 +1. 1.·1,. , ilif." -;zʻ.1 ¤1; % 11*1 i;..'1 1*11 {i. "1 l iii”· .i 1l .> V =ʻ _` I, i i- li. =·i' 4 pl , @,1.11 1.1,. ʻ 1. -'i'l1 · 1 ',ʻ.{1 1 11l' ., é'F g.. §§1 {_`_§G; PUBLIC RECORDS PUBLIC RECORDS YVLACLL the LLLU applicant uyyxnvuann xruvuvu uv state uorr-,r.»· to ov obtain vv.-.-. » maximum -...-...--....--.--what needed to a 5 (5) BusinessRecords Required to be Submitted 41 connection with an application for a license or permit, even if the information is a required part of the application,unless the amount of the license or permit fee is basedon the production levels. The exemptionis 1 , ,:. 1I limited to information fumished to allow the governmental agency "to determinefeesor assessmentpayableor to establishproductionquotas." s Estate Appraisal Information (6) Real ORS 192.501(6) conditionally exempts: _ .,.2-.. 4.,. I1.- Information relating to the appraisalof real estateprior to its acquisition[.] - · ·. . 1- r 1- . ,1,r,Z., 1.-.£ʻ.,-......-4.L-.- This exemption permits public bodies to obtain information in .rerr.-,, M..,,....;.... 41.. .,..1,...-+ʻ seen serene their-the mrhlic bodv rnav confidence coricerrrrng tne varrre or rear esrerrerrrar rrrc psorrc css, rss,. . SC0I€. 125 purchas or condemn.] A parallel provision exists under the Public eMeetings Law, 26 which exempts from open meetings requirements "deliberationswith personsdesignate by the govemingbody to negotiate j real property transactions."ORS l92.660(2)(e). Even after the real estateis d acquired theeexemption may continue to apply to the appraisal.if the Q?} .`j e ,information and analysis in the record is relevant to later appraisals of ORS 192.50l(5) conditionally exempts: ,1,--- hrformation consisting of production records,sale or purchase records or catch records, or similar businessrecords of a private concern or enterprise, required by law to be submitted to or izillil situated properties that the public body may acquire.127 inspectedby a governmentalbody to allow it to determinefees or J.-`·l .` F similarly U-li ʼ.ʻ (7) Employee Representation Cards assessment payable or to establish production quotas, and the ->:-. 1* ; T ʼ "· l T ' [ -7 1 · .. Zi-. `lji ·· amounts of such fees or assessment payable or paid, to the extent s ORS l92.50l(7) conditionally exempts: that such information s is in a form which would permit 5% J . — The names and signatures of employees who sign . rf -;=. . identification of the individual concern or enterprise. This —ʻ -,.+l4m»i·—,¤1-inn r— m- rmfitinnn fm` the TNTTUOSB Of 1`SGL1CSil1'1 · 21LlL[1Ul'lZ.ZtLlUll Uctlup ur ycutruuo rur r.rrr.» yorrpuoo or ..-`1e..-..-..-D exemption does not include records submitted by long term care m»r1¤ E ·» .representatio or decertification elections[.] facilities as defined in ORS 442.015to the statefor purposesof `ʻl· ¤.·ʻj. ʻ... `·`1ʼ- — .n reimbursementof expense or determining fees f`or patient care. rillhis exemption does not extend to records showing the rrurnbe of ʼ `..' .=ʼ .·a-Ras; -, ,=. . ·` E . °ʻ 1~ ʻ., -··;ʻ·= ,,.,--.1,....-1.. --..,1Nothing in this subsection shall limit the use which can be made s .-. ijperson who 1,--... have..:...--.1 signedsucn cards-.· or +to -I-rs-1,-li¤+¤ cnecrdrs A-F or nlinilnln errgror rmrrrwlnveés errrproccs *?_ .? Z= ʻ* Sgrrit vpnin prm relethat do not disclose how individual C1TlDlOY of`such infomation for regulatory purposesor its adrnissibility in . .. ... =ʻ.·` 6 Y1 ru buuu.- ·"_ ~ ¤.t¤uuuu.¤ tuur. uu uue urpvrvov no ,, ... e ~,ʻ-<Wr11U—.VULG s rs y ʻ·-"Lf§ ”.J ;..· I. ? — ' €ʻ . `= any enforcemenproceeding[.] ʻ "€·~.ap h mtinrm €€S —`_ E .--`-1*f 2 ¥1i£€T.ʻ.ʻ·L t This exemption applies only to business records required to ʻ-"§ ` -· . =ʻ·" 2"i submittedto a govemmentalbody for usein settingfees or assessments ¢. .` and to the amount of the fees for establishing production this information would permit identification of the;I assessments, if business. It is intende to protec informatio that would determinationof a particular businessʼsproduction levels. This exemption d t n does not cover businessrecords that a person or businessmay submit Ein j 8 .- -..4. . .-..-12... * .= ORS35.346 require an offer to purchas propert pr·elrrrrrn to a ., (2) s accompanby any e writteyappraiary actio to be upo whic the _` relie in establishi the amou of compensa n ied n sal noffere h lf the ,1, -Ia-na-: 4-A n isles tha $20,00theconden ma insteaprovida writte Rec, Orr Ma6,19 Bise(sApF- Letof , -·? . _ .-F" ii7~' 3.1:: _iV- ri .e%iF*= 5 ·7. =· ..1*e- ,L.- ng nt tion d. gexplanatd of thevaluatio s n 0, mer y d e n ionEim`PublicRecord n. OrderDecembe2, 1994Parks(se AppF-31). s H5Public Records Order, March 17, 1997, Chastain (see App F— 38). L LL ʻ dat Febru26198toWenGreen ER BoaAge(O `Publ ords,der hoffee · ed ary 7,rch dy 81, wald, B prd 1); ntter P— s' -.%;,5.1 `. . . ~ ;s:eʻ any5·-ʻ¥:ʻ$» »1 ʼ » . · · ic , l"~ʻ,1 ifi 1 1\ʻ1." 1?. ii,T1I. ~.§ `·l,r:,`,i ,i.;1.l! 1` 111 1i '1,;., QY; 42 \zl.VA·l Asléaavu (8) Civil Rights \\JI v v».»-•=-·-·-·-Investigation Ann ----.---7. Material ORS 192.50l(8) conditionally exempts: Investigatory information relating to any complaint nfiled Han -1.. M.-er. · »—·—·-· r·nn nan nn: ...-4.:1 under ORS 659A.820 or rr-ns 659A.825, until ..... such tune as tne 1 1*1 1ʻ·- issuedunder ORS 659A.850[.] ... .F;j 1,51 I— .., 1 1 Q1. 11 . 1 Y \, . y1%. l` gir,,";, 1 1i ,:1i j,*gf i- I 1_ ., 1 11 1+ ·11, E1i 11 1.,.};. .=. .»l 11 p 1,} ʻ; =. 2i ll.·1. l.- _ ·. r:2F“'i'. . 12. 11+ ll_, 1.112 ·. 1 lr. lil; 1 , lZi~i1 11 1:1 11 ʻi§llr1 : 1 11 .1 1..,11 LlQ`;r [GL 1 i=' 1%, ii 1" v` 1 1`11 5115 Servicesunder ORS 697.732[.] -+1-u- mmnlerint is under ORS 659A.835, or Lu resolved A.vuvAvv~n »•--¤•¤»-. ·.·-.-.., --,--.---7 L., a final order is \J\.l1|.11Jl(&A1.l\· e.ʻ_ emplovment practices or other civil rights violations. ORS 659A.835 and 659A.850 relate to investigations and hearing procedures for such -.--r;-A above. pIʻ2lCL1Ut Avpm,-time Uzxmlly Liurrp diemrssed ursotrsoou erou vo. Accordingly. r ro....--¤._, Eif (11) Archaeological Site Information .-1 unlawful employment practices complaints are pending.129 -.- ʼ 1 ORS 192.50l(9) conditionally exempts: -Je--. A- Information concerningthe location of archaeologicalsites or objects as thoseterms are defined in ORS 358.905,except if the governingbody of an Indian tribe requeststhe infonnation andthe needfor the information is relatedto that Indian tribeʼs cultural or religious activities. This exemption doesnot include infonnation relating to a site that is all or part of an existing, coirnnonly known and publicized tourist facility or attraction[.] · (9) Unfair Labor Practice Complaints ...1. J ORS 192.501(11) conditionally exempts: pyempripn Aymnd and addresses of against whom C}ʻ.G1Ll1)L.lU11 GALG1.1u tn Lu names uuuiuo ctrru uuurvuuvo V- employers yr--psu] ..-.. ..D..- -- may includeinformationin a complaintm This provision of the Public Records Law does not exempt the , ,..,, 1-;.,4. xr-A--41-complaint itself or infonnation containedin the complaint. Nor does tne ..,1-Z,-1. , this ..---.. exemption -.-,-T ,, , , . $ complaints. .`-...- 152; *1 filed under ORS 243.676 and 663.180[.] _ . ORS 358.905(1) dehnes the terms "archaeological site" and 1 .-. * tfarchaeologic object." The statute following these definitional ORS 243.676relatesto processingcomplaints by public employeesor »ii { 1.I provisions concernprotection of archaeological sites and objects. _1 al s employers of unfair labor practices listed in ORS 243.672(l) and (2), and (12) Personnel Discipline Actions complaintsof refusal to comply with any provision of a final andbinding _ I i¢ilʻ1,ʻ;r· l -ʼ i1, _ʻlj;~·,,. --·., = arbitration award,which is an unfair labor practice under ORS 243.752(1).5 ..ʻ. . °`ORS192.501(12)conditionally exempts: .,-;..,-,..,a--1-1..-. ORS 663.180relatesto unfair labor practice investigationsand complaintsdocuments -3 ~ before the Employment Relations Board. However, the complaint itselfii E-¤€§?r .¥. " "·?° _ - A personnel discipline action, or materials or Yi i*·ʻt., 2Y=.ʻ .. ¤ ʻgsupportingthat action[.] ¤;,_. investigatory infonnation relating to any cornplarnt or charge 1 — -. e -3-DER". wouldnotbeexempfromdisclosure.l (10) Agency Investigation Records t Debt Collection 3° * : ·, .$ - 17 ..,. .. . .... _ 1`,rr.}._ʻ;. ¤s.·j Only completeddisciplinary actionswhen a sanction rs imposed, and n i -` `ʼ . - 1 1 4, -1, -r L..,-,- -.4. 4.1.-4. .--..·|·Z-·.¤`I¤-v ·:•¤v•·v\r\!1n/1 A-inn;-nl·i1n¤1·u /31I\ʻ' Qhfihh .ʼ, -.ʻ· aterialsor documentsthat supportthat particular drscrprmary acrrorr,rarr . ʼ scopofthisexemptionTheexemptidoenotappllwhe arflemploye of a public body resigns during an employer investigation or e .132 on s y n . of disciplina action The policy tmderlyin this narrowl e ..:-. ..-......4;-.. as <·-.-r-Arr 1 me mrhlip remnlove from ridicule for '.·Zʼ£.ʻ5§$1l,*¥i'4l-J:'1T;'F. .tCf)TlSITl]E(l EYHT`I'l'l'T[lDTl `IS 4ULCULI vv www VAULLIIJLLUA LD Ll) \·\J . DIV 1JLvuvvvL JI IJ.16 vnqv UUUUU Ir•»·.·-..- D1.I.1}J.LU_y --...1...-J L .u.vn1 ry g y 4;.4.......1 e J ..1 7I ORS l92.50l(10) conditionally exempts: . 6087) (seeApp E— D-karen- 907 (lr 500 505 590 687 P2d 779 (198605 LII JYU, JJ.}, .177, uu! 11.u L7! 129Pace Consultants 5). v. IKUUCFL.)`, ét (seeApp C—6)7 7 "° 1.1 . . ʼ fi`? 1 iJ`.f iii j'vQ __· _; `. 1':ʻ1' __ = . ORS 659A.820 and 659A.825 relate to complaints filed with the unlawfiil r·-..4.-;....;-.. -+ʻ Rmeerr nf Industries alleging kxommlsslull U1 +1,,IUC .DLl1Cd.U U1 T.¤l·»m .L1CLU\.}L and cuiu srruuuurruu r..errrvbrr.-U -.·----.-·......- 1rf; 11*. 11, _1 ·;...; ʻ1. " “ "" ”" ' · · ' ·` ·' - ---1 --1-`.-.--...-...1.1...J.l-er ORS 697.732 relates to investigations and enforcement py tne T\i»-A, Director .·\ . . .r ,.r:~r~r-..-,..,--L -....1 D..-J.-.--.·. Q-e-ui-qa ¤·F`l¤u1¤ r·n1·rr—n1·n·irro· of the Departmentof Consumerand BusmessServices or laws oorroerrrrrr debt consolidating agencies The language used in this exemptiong "records,reportsand. otherinformation"—— broaderthan the "information relating to any complaint" language usedin the civil rights and unfair labor is .. " 1}. 1 211, \jj.11 fi11 €`l 1. 11 1. 1Y 1_ 11 1* ; ir" {rx E_ 11. l·r~,,r,;, r. Qʻ .2"ʼ1 43 Records,reportsand otherinformation received or compiled by the Director of the Department of Consumer and Business 4 f} ~`sli 15 ,1· 51 Y. § . —.» =1 PUBLIC RECORDS PUBLIC RECORDS .. 1 ʻ- all V.? E $2 ,_ .:-Sk §i`:ʻ%-1 -'i` . — _#. '1·r·>»ff ,_ Cf. Pace Consultants, . , , - ` 297 --- Or .-590 - --(see .....-App T`- C-6). r .-rm e1ʼ fftcrzy _ ef1>er·r1eprtreesosOr 118,77 r>2 137 , 5 ri 1 .- . .: e1r». . 1 ~° · · L? "·,;·e1t r§>s1. $"=:=fʻ~=· ·, . . j· ʼ * ¤3 .. ·. · ._ .., " " /1 rrnnx 1--- A. -.- f`* (\\ (wss) rse Appo-ar. e 4*-*%* , · 44 E having been disciplined but does not shield the governmentfrom public 1* .¤<ʻ pl. . i*P l-11 1 Iiii-? `! V 1 . l1* l =·. Q I r .*1 j...,21 1 ..lg; {11 I- 1, -ʻ `. 1Q E1 l.*"i .- "·,· f_, 1l= -. il `1 ~· li-i-,,,`l Il. fi1 ._-,a Q_ 5 ., 1 ¥l1= 2. i"f`]1 1 1l-11 1 12r 1 11 2 it .sr ʻ1' 1 1°Z I(,1` fyi 1 r 1, ·". Ep . illllil 111, 1 1:1; ʻ¤ . Q1 £i?. ʼ1 11' E l;-W 11., .F1 ,1}-1. *-§ʻ1- 111"-. 1 »1Zʼ 1 .` 1 13 \.-11-1`Il ʻI `r; 1 lll,, ji.;-ʼ.N,i.,1, 1 45 confirming tho polico captainʼs intogrity and ability to onforco tho law ovonhandodly, and that tho information sought boro matorially on his tho intogrity and on tho risk that its compromiso could affoct efforts to obtain knowledge about its processes."m I li 1 PUBLI RECORD C S PUBLIC RECORDS {fl Consistent with this policy, there aro situations when tho public z interest in disclosure outweighs tho public interest in confidentiality, . despitethe imposition of a disciplinary sanction.For example,tho public fi interesttypically favors disclosuro if tho conduct potentially constitutesa criminal offense or if tho records relate to alleged misuse and thoft of public property by public omployoos.] Other factors to consider in {if; weighing tho public interest in34disclosureagainsttho omployooʼsinterestin confidentiality include tho omployooʼs position, tho basis for tho Y disciplinary action, and tho extent to which tho information has already Y2 beenmadopublic. administrationof his dutios.] 37 Neither ORS l92.50l(12) nor the relevantcourt decisionsspecify how thostatute applies when a person seeks rocords in a file in a pending personnel disciplinary rnattor. We boliovo, however, that in those circumstance a public body may postponeaction on tho requestuntil tho personnel matter is finally rosolvod, in ordor to dotorrninowlrethor thoso s rocordareoxernpt} s That practice 38 would be Consistenwith ORS 192.430,which requires a custodianof public rocordstto fumish a roasonabl opporumity to inspect or copy public rocords and irnpliodly providos the custodiana roasonablo o We concluded that disclosure of a disciplinary action and related time to rospond to a rocords roquost.]39Undor the circumstances discussed, materials was required when tho employeewas a law enforcementofficer ii Y o . . it would bo ontiroly roasonablofor a public body to delay respondingto a who provided instruction to persons seeking to bocorno certified as public rocords request until it ·had tho facts—— resolution of the personnel o' safetyporsormoland tho incident for which tho employeewas disciplined disciplinary 1nattor— to thodotorrnino whether tho rocords are ʻ was already woll publicized and was antithotical to tho minimum fitness `ij exempt.We believe that the roasonablotime to respondto a requestfor nocossary standard tho officor was expectedto teach and to model. However, tho .ʻ. j this typo of record begins when the personnelmatter is finally resolvod.M° public interest did not require disclosuro of tho omployooʼs ontiro s = j Moreover, a contrary reading of ORS 192.501(12) effectively would disciplinary history.l35If violation of tho criminal laws is not involvod and if oviscorato tho exemption by compolling tho disclosureof rocords that later ,` tho conductof tho public officials hasnot boonpublicizod, tho fact that tho .i5; could bo exempt from disclosure. officials aro high-lovol administratorswill not, by itsolf, roquiro disclosuro ʻ of thofacts supportingthoir tonninations}36 A We rocornmondthat a public body consult with its logal counsol for YY.`;Qf·`El_in respondin to a requestfor rocordspotentiallyexemptunderthe In a caso involving rocords portaining to an invostigation and ... figporsomiegdiscipline exemption. .Q"ʻ-: — disciplinary action againsta polico captainwho allogodly had ongago in _ .Z;, . ; ri" l _ (131 Information about Threatened or Endangered soxual conduct through an oscort sorvico that might sorvo as da Bout fog {E; _ r'. jr;advice ¤ ;_`_:; Y7 2€*=ʼ=irg " 2 "-1. ¤-T`; prostitution, tho Court of Appoals hold that tho public intorost roquirod u Species ʼ?=` ··f·3._ ʻ p disclosuro.Tho court roasono that tho public has a logitimato intorost in-ʻ· 192.50 l (l 3) conditionally exempts: °ʻ —. ~ d ..¤IJ,·¤_ · ;';j.;ʻ;_ Information developedpursuantto ORS 496.004,496.172 and Aʻ..:* %:1121;- _ ʻ··=; --»= ~- ,498.026 or`ORS 496.192 and 564.100, regarding the habitat, '” Id at 124it 5. ”ʻ?·2*k»;.r *i¤{Y··%ʻér C `·._; · .!¤@ ·e ·. :r - ·..;r ` =· ..`.jg· · 13 Oregonian Publishing v. Portland School Dist., 144 Or App 180, 187, ii? P2d 4591 (1996), modyied 152 Or App 135, 952 P2d 66 (1998), ajfd on othgtj 7 7 grounds 329 Or 393, 987 P2d 480 (1999) (sooApp C-17); Public RecordsOrdér; at Novombor 26, 1990,Noaly/Hogan (sooApp F-23); Public RocordsOrdor, January, K-ʼ·c 27, 1992,Moody (sooApp F-26). . - `1ʻ.ʻ_ʻ" Cityof Portlanal163OrApp 550(seeAppC-19) --. ( -.r . . ._ ` _f=:; ·SaB seePublicRecord Order,Novombor9, . 2000,Simpso (agenc with . _wana.-A¤.“,¤ we nm amarmm.amt MA rpmwlq rn mrrv mit its own statutorv dutv) ul wasnot nre employer s n om. .,...rr.. y orJ anu rraurecords ro carry our rrs —$ Ann .F-45). ¤ - .~ . (soe pm Seedrscussron,page 9 above. 13 Public Rocords Ordor. Octobor ll. 1996. Fostor/Bonnott (soo App F-36): QQ.;:»w -:~¤· ~ke; 5B6 Public Rocords Ordor, April 29, 199:3, Haas, · .-:·¤m·,·..~ self si is—»r— ʻ ;§¤;r;£ri!»·r»-._. . .ʻ r 04-;,.. a .;·;=;:;r·gq:1.§E.; r 34;;; <5:25,:%;af··J° ¤>Rocords Ordor, July 3, 1995, Garrottson (soo App F-33). (sAoov sewo·ʻr?:¤ · · ”L§§§{i nitric £3%5Q ] Public Records Order, April 3, 1995, Larson (see App F-32). » ao; 1. ʻ an. e is - - "<eé%ir*ʻ·ʼ· rrr., » _ . — Vʼ ..=2;~@2ge;s r ··; — ·· ~·. -ʼ . r ;·;_;;_r e;r.;=¤ _ _ ʼ e _j_L~;V,_ ·s . -` · o ʻ·· ." .. tigirl 46 iTt 3 lr. _ r` l`1 I . 1ʻ. . ; d species[.] li if ; l L;` U· 1 * tv l : lyI 11·?ʻ` E Ul ...,...l ti `ll l,»[ . lM:*"l;· ʼ · z:ʻ=ʻ."l {rr l5 T; ·· N, lyrt .;;:1;; 1; . Vla d J ·g.l. ll "··ʻl Jrll. ., l.=3 € *`Z ilj 1: . ." . rgp;.;l il¥i:`il-il plg~ ji>~· tilrl i`¤,l.'lʻ p. t1liT 1 iw. p1*. 3 ʻlj.»f §,*;> 11 ·` if `ll ;t:ll. ja}M 1 — Wl `.rg ʻ= Fill ¤»5¤ lt·-Wl ? *I=` rij:. :.1,_ -»l`e,l" 5 .lll. .; "ilit7 .·,.g .;:` Z.» %., - iiw ill ." · r-/.4 ann ..-1-4.- 4.... ,1l. l g {Q E ,»; rgb<j iii iil.,i. ~§: i : In creating this exemption, the legislature likely intendedto prevent disclosure of information regarding threatene or endangere speciesto d in a mannerdadverseto the survival personswho might use the information of the species.While the motive of the requesterand the circumstances surrounding the request are irrelevant in determining whether the information sought falls within the exemption,the rnotivo ofthe requester may be relevant to whether the public interest requires disclosurem A requesterʼsbenevolentintention and promise not to disclosethe records to anyoneelse,however, do not necessarilymean that the public body must disclose the record, because the body may have little basis to evaluate the reouesterʼs intentions»¤·»4•» and A4`. no A----V--meansto the requesterʼspromise}42 1\4\1bl \J\)L\J1 U 1.11b\JL1¤1vAAv 7* enforce .. used in ongoing research and additional scientific publications were anticipated,the exemptionprovided in ORS l92.50l(l4) no longer applied becaus the results ofthe researchhad beenat leastpartially publishedand e _ _ copyrighted. _ (151""ʻ"1"*“ʼ* Computer fPrograms for the Use of Public Bodies \*·ʼl ·*ʼa¤· ······· ···· ···· · ~· o— r 1 -2 315 ʼ ' . 1 . ORS 192.50l(l5) conditionally exempts: Computer programs developed or purchasedby or for any . rt .. - 1. - ,1-. . 1 (14) Faculty Research ...- ORS 192.50l("14)conditionally exempts: --.-- An .. .....-.,1 1 ' in .1 ʻ +1-rin 1 ---L€--r-¤rl·r¤¤n+rnm GQ-.---...4.,%. *"r~n1·r11·xr1T¤1ʻ 4.-.. --.-4..... System, .-....,1 and ...·... any anu Irlzullpulatlull ann.-..»{¤4·¤A aSSOC1ateG ul uata Ann11n»1¤1-rfqfinn rrurrr qhri uocurrlelltatlull allu sucrr QHIITRP source ..;r '"· ii? material that explain how to operate the computer program. €§Computprogram" doesnot include: er {px The rwioiml {lam imelrrdino but not limited to numbers. " LIIG Ullgllldl u¤.L¤., u.1\.»1uu1.u5 uut. nun. nriutvu ru rrcrrrruvro, _. Q,r:, .` ff ·ʻ .. rtext, voice, graphicsand images; ·.fr ..A ` $.·p?ʻ·_ . p (b) Analyses,compilations and othermanipulatedforlns ofthe dataproducedby use of the program; or E ? — " ʼ§=.i. {`.f§_Z*`_=ig " ,-2i;i ."E=.·. . ." . ei. _(c) The mathematical and statistical formulas which would be i_lip _' if the manipulat forms of the origina dat wer to be ·l?:" ¢."it.4;.:¥.?· · r gproduce manually[.] . 1_se ed l a e % d i¥k=s :tt=lZ?*ie·€ d ifi.?·f3C· ZZ; `` -·.ʻ _ { ·.·_'.'L;.. . sk ¤li 23;* Ls; M3Letter of Advice dated March 29, 1988, to W.T. Lemnian, Executive Vice" , Chancellor (OP—62l7) (see App E-5); Public Records Order, July 7, 1989,. McCleery (seeApp F-20). 2 M4 OP— .-.. computer "This exemption is designedprimarily to protect public institutions from ʻpiracy"ʼ of researchideas and data collected?by facultyjf members}43 It also authorizes faculty to withhold data to assure T accuracy and to avoid the potential detriment to the public interest of?ig; ,'1*%, releasing misleading or inaccurate data prior to final public release. ·_.-wklilz Even if preliminary results have been published, the exemption 14'1€iwillf i . Arm F—5l). .»—lʼ1ʼ* gl6217 ....,. tO p1°OV1Cl€ SIOI3.g€, retrieval - .j;`,;".·. Z=f ·$`li Ql` z:*F"·:i%.. .g=_ ¢ ··ʻʻ educational¢ʻ rf? g· ʻ.·-̀ . "“ ouarapubzzrhzca.,96 OrApp463(sp Appc-9). 142Public (seeApp F-29). ng RecordsOrder, June 22, 1993,Lear/I-Iyman p ---.... 1- .....A..;,1A ..4,..·....¤ .-..+.;.......1 an.} mmqimrlqtim-r n·F data f`r·nm numb . _ ·. :4... permit the functioning of a computer system in asrnarmerdesigned ·.·. .e A .L`--. pLlbllC body for 1llS0W11 USC. AS USCG11 [ms SuDS€Ct10n, uurrrputei 1 program" means a series of instructions or statement which .?”.ʻ.:··.lzʻ·.-'. 4 _fbi;} T —1 ;_i·2;.t r.·- Writings prepared by or under the direction of faculty of ·ʻ. . Hsu.. .... -,.1.. ..,.441 public educational institutions, in comiectron with research, untrr publicly released,copyrightedor patented[.] 47 At en least one circuit courtehas rejected this interpretationand held that 5 theexemption"tonninatesandno longerappliesto writings prepare by or underthe direction of faculty or public educationalinstitutions d at the time when such writings are publicly released, copyrighted or patented, regardlessof ongoing or plannedfuture researchusing such wr·itings.”l46 The court ordered disclosure of videotapesrecording behavior of rhesus monkeys that formed part of the basis of a published scientific research paper.The court concludedthat even though the videotapeswere being 4.1-- r ORS 496.004, 496.172, 498.026, 496.192 and 564.100 relate to the definition, identification and managemen of threatene and endangere animal and plant species. These activities dgenerally fall dwithin the t jurisdiction ofthe StateFish and Wildlife Commission for animals, and the StateDepartmentof Agriculture for plants. RECORDS - continueto apply to the underlying dataif further researc andpublication h will beundertak usingthesam data."' d . . ʻ? location or population of any threatene species or endangere " lu . PUBLIC PUBLIC RECORDS ʻ·?s·?=e .6** —ʻ 1`55`PLll)RecordsOrder, June 19, 1995, S eede seeA F-32 . P pp l1CJn Defens of Animalsv. Orego HealthScience UniversityNo. 95C- . ·. .146 . . at 4; Public Records Order, September 25, 2003, Bridges (SG?.153 ʻSt. rse·r ;;,;;. Z\§· -ʼ-·—;.· ·. 4; : rig; - .1-ru—· (Order x" (ulum .»...·... -·a:·;a··§?as *~ — ` -. ·.. ggzs _ .· " le I ·· . =F·r · . e . . p · and Tiirimmpnt duu .luuul11UllL ni·"I\/inrinn U1 1v121uuu n (`lfv pty. "'J ' (-iir pu. ""' Cf pr., s AHUIISI rxuguot ***2 - ··——·¤—»—e 2.27. . , ra/U}. , 48 F liʼ , 1 l .t. l;`~ liilel t·Q 1ln;.1} ¢i l rw E* " l: 1U m.`.` X ` 2* 1 Zép y. I . all .. 1, I .`r ` l twt' PUBLIC RECORDS complaint itselfmg However, ORS 654.062(4)provides for confidentiality ofthe identity of the employeemaking a complaint of employer safety or healthviolations. (18) Public Safety Plans Specific operationalplans in connection with an anticipated threat to individual or public safety for deployment and use of personneland equipment,prepared or used by a public body, if public disclosure of the plans would endangeran individualʼs life or physical safety or jeopardize a law enforcement activity[.] W (16) Agricultural 2 l. -, Producer Indebtedness Mediation Data This exemption applies to operational plans ofpublrc " E.l ?" ·l l li — il $ ls .» l2 } l. l. ` r`;l visit:. 1 » ,;l'r til l l·?ʻi~l, =. all ! ·:r£ wl` yll W nl:. ?pʻy} ill il ljll 1._Ll! . ~I ll. ʻC 1 = ~ʻ, _j li ·ill.Y` gl Iii-iʻlʻ:~i:i 1""ll*~ʻ; `;.lj : jr rl. 2 iii i Kil 1 l ; ·`nl 1 lp __ él r;. 4, . ORS 192.501(l7) conditionally exempts: nl. no-na. P Investigatory information relating to any complaint or charge filed under ORS chapter 654, until a final administrativ determinationis made or, if a citation is issued,untile an employer receivesnotice of any citation[.] arr ·; l ~I .· .?it `llilfu- — il? 1,: [l1·l ʼ €1'lfOI`CCll1€l1l Pn- fnnfinnl S Ldutluul nlnnc prune fn nnrrv Lu marry milf uu:. bodies, such as a “Q1'i1ʼ10” Still; (W1P:lʻ2il(111R uporatrurro, ) · W . rz 7.1; ` (19) Telecommunications Utility Audits je Q._ .,.. .ʻ wr.-r.. .·.. . ip ·'.¤ *3;-.;.·>ʻ¤; gy .g ` that would be discoverablein a contestedcaseproceeding thatis not subjectto a protectiveorderof; and . » .i. . ., · .-~-. J si l M9Pace Consultants 297 Or 590 (seeApp —.. ··1;$§·,·ég.g§€;Q;·_i;;.:/. y · [Ze? gw p1€l1IS.150 ORS 192.50 (19) conditionally exempts: ...-I-..a1,..... 1 Audits or audit reports required of a telecommrmrcatrons _ (a) ·.. -.. carrier. As used in this paragraph, "audit or audit repolt" means airy extemal or internal auiditlor audit report perfaining to a ... . E. .·. ..ʼ*— ` telecornrnunication carrier, as defined in ORS 133.721, or pertainingto a corporationhaving an affiliated interest,as defined .- . s `·ʻ% 11S . ,;.3. t ORSU759.390 with a telecommunication carrier that is vii ;.i l J. 1.* E ·jlijfiʻi~rinto; to make the operation of the entity more efficient, s "Qiaccura or complia with applicab rules procedures or nded s ʻ:r.i",f°· thatntmay include self-criticism and te le , that has been filed .ʻ . ii the telecommunication carrieror affiliate under compulsionof .·. .ji€standards, I }%_il; il`. · s "Audit or auditreport"doesnot meanan auditof a cost £=i - _ Y gstat law. I- i ':.;•· EICUVIJEISS, C8.LlSCd by d1SC1OSl1l'C OfSCCl1I`lty ;\ 5;;; *** Public Records 19. 1997. Long (see App F— I LIUILU 1.\\A..\JA u¤ Order. x/1 uv; j September us 8 40). etg¤l1LJ_y C— 6). 27, "J ʼ-'7_T"7 2006, Laws (see App F-5 9). . li°.Public , Records Order, January F. ·.z;.r.a4·· ;,1§g5i;;;f..ʻ "' TO ru and groups during high— court cases, profile order after natural demonstrations or visits by dignitaries, or to maintailr disastersThe exemptionpemrits considerationofthe endangerme of the life safety of anv individual, as as ieopardizing of . or *~U~* ʻ-ʼ* phvsical ,[·ʼ**J “""ʼ“ t"ʻ*Tʻi".l "ʻ """J ʻ*"" 'i""*"> '“' well " *" "* the 'i·* nt Jr 'r for rrrwru Y law '—·:. ·:€§@iaʻ-ʻ-':·Z-<l M7Public RecordsOrder, December23, 1988, Eastlund (seeApp F—l6). qrypnr~v°c· — .2.;. ·r "ʼ`.*.r `` " · ORS chapter654 govems safety and health in placesof employment} This exemption covers investigatory information relating to complaintsl and chargesof violations of laws governing workplace safety and healthg A "c0mplaint" or "chargo" includes any report or notice to the Oregoni i OccupationalSafety and Health Division from any persondescribingori alleging a possible violation of the Oregon SafeEmployment Actlig xy,. ri; with, for instance, ORS 192.501(8),the exemption does not cover ··li tal .'l·,l if lil. 5·i : . if 1·l·` Tl-l CIIIUILJCUIGUL protect individuals (17) Unsafe Workplace Investigation Materials L,llti !`1 .I»,l' [3W 4:;.* » · :`. ;i`i.;.»` . =*ʻl;ʻ Jllli ·l=~t sli,= ii r£ .:ll=:. itrtl; {'.l 1.-.... r m·r-Fn1·r~¤wrp1»rt `TT. . I ORS 36.256 authorizesmediation services for agricultural producers E _ʻ in dangerof foreclosure on agricultural property and for their creditors. All _ "memoranda,work productsand othermaterials containedin the casefiles > Yi iii . ` of a mediator or mediation service" under this program are also r»i¤`5;}l . 1 Mmaapnlaa ORS 26.262. and would be exornpt from disclosure under LJU1LL1uG11u¤.1, vnu .1u.1..ue., arr`,. V. V.,.r.. V., ... ...---r- ---... . lORS l92.502(9) discussedbelow. :..—i.i·i . l · `M * C 49 ORS 192.50l(18) conditionally exempts: Data and information provided by participants to mediation under ORS 36.256[.] i i` Stir rlj i ? I ·Q 3` .i ORS 192.50l(l6) conditionally exempts: tl Ei PUBLIC RECORDS The legislatureaddedthis provision to prevent personsfrom obtaining nom public bodies computer programs that they otherwise would have to purchaseor develop themselves We have concludedthat the exemption includesinformation that . would permit computeraccessm The exclusions hom the definition of computer program specified in subsection (a)—(c) are to ensurepublic accessto information that is stored s on, producedor used by a computer during a public bodyʼs normal use that would be public records subject to disclosure if stored, produced or used in hard ` l jʻr ʻ x ·.;,__,-.~ . . . * *r· V : —.·;.ʻ ·,.ir' - .̀,ʻ .ʻ* .:¢ . . .» ' ·.'ʻ> ʼ *_ j.-*"".`"._ 50 It-rr. 1... · "]ʻ l PUBLICRECORD S V ° lilil • .· l ʻ.·. 1` I., Y · A · · ·· . ..- ....:1;..:,.,. ...;+1.. dz l ʻ2i· th l _ʼ· 1....;.....66 ifthis DLLSIIICSS aavanmce uuvaumgu rr euro information rrrr..rrrr......-. l' . .; 1_ rs -.. a .. trade -- -... . secret. ORS l92.50l(20) conditionally exempts: ll Ji" ʻ 1 K —,,.. 1. (al *Personal and *···rʻ······· corporate financial \ʻ*/ **""**** ʻ··*ʻ·· information, including tax returns; A .,¢J..ʻl,.- (XD Q Nil 1... ;. Z vʻ_ ,32 1Qi .r~ _ ? ORS 247.965 requires the county clerk to keep the electorʼs residence address exempt from disclosure if requested by an elector who demonstrate to the satisfaction of the county clerk that the electorʼs personal safety or that of any family member residing with the elector is in s V . .. ,. . ri.,_. .u ; ,.= 1, ** p danger if the address remains available for public inspection. Seefi discussion above of ORS 192.445, requiring a public body to keep an individualʼs home addresspersonaltelephonenumber,or electronic addressexemptfrom , disclosure on similar grounds.ORS 247.967 Xi . *i"` Til ? ,':Z__.h`1 1él disclosu oftheexempaddre in certai circumstanc ¤..-..,........ G4-¤+¤ in 1»¤r11·1i1·l¤ri fh Qlihhi OBEHIHE hn 2ʻIʼ\l T NTHLC S IU UUIIGU n LU Guvpn uvu uva...r....¤ re l'*1*1-t ONP es. iuT'111SS LHC NP(!\"A1ʻ •)UU1GI.¤.1_y ur. utuevss Iio r.»..1..rrrr.... ..., ..... il; .`l E . l `. E 1 tr :, lil" 1 3 1i.ʻ. up 1· ..=}, ` "_ 1, y. 12 ; pr »;z2..iʻ~ I1; PULDUMQ1 247.969.SeeOAR 165-005-013 0. , v I. DPTE public interest cooperatives as exempt from disclosure unless theY disclosurein the particular instance. I5] See ORS 759.060 which permits the PUC, ·{.».{·`¤.»wr¤Hnn .· .r:-.1llIO1'[Ij121t10I1 ---1--;.+..A ¤11hrr\1fI'Rl1 suulnrueu 1..., HV uy 1¤~r1 IOCZI rocar ¤v.—l»r¤r»mr¤ CXCIIEIIIHC ......rr..rrb.. fn halRnm11ʼ\11'lll111Ci1lZ10I1S LGlDuU111rrrulrluu»rv.w ......----. ·r¤ em-mifkz J..,........,..-.·.+C.-.“ · incorporation, »....·•.».¤.-.~1».i.». partnership &gIʻeC1l'l€l'llS 3.lʼ1Cl { J `=*ʻi _3 -'.-. ;__r____L ____________]____,___ ___, 4,. L,. IO DC (L) Housing assistancepaymentrequests[.] --.----..:-.. exemption -.-..1:-.. applies .to -...4.-:.. certam -,.-..-.1records -..1....:4-MA submitted +.4 1.-.,...1 1»r.·..r¤ir»rr·. to local housing prauthofitie and urban renewal agencies by individuals or businesse s s Vhapplyin for or receiving certain funding to develop, rehabilitate, or §`ijYotheiy finance affordable, govemmenthousing or urban g Zilrtehevv nroieots. lt was nrrmosed to encourage Da1ʻtiClʻ¤aʼtlO bV y.ise VVLD PL subsidized UJ UULD. LL V HD P1 \J1.l\JD\r\l LU VLLUU bu (AEV you Lavayunnvah uJ _; -·`*;:ʻ ·J,_,y no 2»;,;:: ʻ=. ..· ·.. .;-7-cr .-..>·r11 {%l§l11S rr; ¢ ; 12-·.:· ʻ.°Y··—. if r ʼ. ..-: 3*-5=.e·. ;· ,·; pg.; ».,.,;;=... ʻ¢§<;- LL al H in- publicly contractoV financi institutio and other slow incom housin an urba renew transacti rs, al ns s - This is somewhatsimilar to the exemptionin ORS l92.502(23) for e g d n al ons. obtained by the Oregon Housing and Community Services ` •~r1l¤ TN = .,—·*; :°—} ¤-;, r }P:}`·ʻ Z` =? ._,p.r_, i·iRi.;.. p._: r. QQZ;._11', , 9;;: 1-... and t (g) Project pro forma statements; \/' o"1··..;.. ; _ statement s -....1. .1..;... /1\ ' . ..4.--..:.7.CT--4.2-.---.1 (h) TxProject cost certifications and cost data; ·; 1 I· I (i) Audits; `ifli} .... ,...4-,1 _,u_ (j) Project tenant correspondence requested - plp _Mconfidential; Q_,j (k) Tenantfiles relatingto certification; and Q— i . . ».-sei';we t=2 1 1 \{ ?1 . .·.1 1l e mmonal safetv” of or a family member is in danger. annum. va. the »...r.» elector v...·-...... ..- ,j lip·Ti ʻ.' I·.;` l%lʻ l1 ~._ ,l~ 1ʻ1 .;_ʻ il*..`" %li.; pt', ~ʻJl;. .E·xi .` ¤ʻl,ʻ ltr @. . ., 2 or operatingagreements L ; _ (f) Commitmenletters; e when .·-··- ..1-ʻ (e) Articles The residence address of an elector rr authorized unuer uno 247.965 and subject to ORS 247.967[.] .. _1_! 1*1 l _at Agency (b) Credit reports; (C Project appraisals; )(d)Market studies and analyses; .. a . ....1....- Renewal The following records, commtmications and information submittedto a housing authority as defined in ORS 456.005,or to an urban renewal agency as defined irl ORS 457.010, by applicantsfor and recipientsof loans, grantsandtax credits: +1-... ~ .-.1.,....;..,.,1 and Urban ORS 192.50l(21) conditionally exempts: (20) Residence Address of Elector 1 51 Records This provision was proposedby telecommunicationsutrlrtres with me .g concurrence of the Public Utility Commission (PUC) to protect the . affiliatesʼ financial statement andauditsthat becomepublic records when _,,. s the telecommunication carrier provides them to the PUC.]5]Releaseof , A- ]n]j()[]' :..e..-.w..:.... mm. arm hmvida ¤2 vvkiuyr-¤~»~v»~ Competitorva of -~an -affiliate [[16 []B[lOIl Illkly Zl15U PIUV-l¤¤ ·-»-— — A with an unfair 2--ʻ s l.~.· — :[:i PUBLI RECORD C S. (21) Housing Authority (b) Financial statementsAs usedin this paragraph,"financial . a financial statement of a nonregulated statement" means corporation having an affiliated interest, as defined in ORS 759.390,with a telecommunication carrier, as defined in ORS I 133.72l[.] s . {1. il. . ; *.rl'. .1.1- g ʼ`ʻʼ . 3 lllllllltili ····-· Unli ORl92.502howe thi exem is reduiring consideration ofthe public mterest ln disclosure. ke S (23), ver, s ption -- " --- ·- _) I`6qu1IeS·a. eee ..... . V . ʼ·°·* aaa.; ..... V5 ·.· V`. e·—--. e. .· . ʻ.ʻV ʼ;..· . .1 » . VV..~ . V __,.,1..A...·.·¤ --Z -1 ""ʻ .· ---,--. [C,. ." ' ..· .. . · ,_ WL;- ' J;__1____,__ .· - “`1 ]ʼ§·f 1 1ʻli 1.. ixlr: ' 52 I PUBLIC RECORDS PUBLIC RECORDS JL aV sj};·1 i¥? = Zʻ .. °l ¤* (22) Interference with Property or Services mm ro? ʼi01(22) conditionally exempts: \].[\D 1 7L•JV1\hLr] vun.¤.».a•..v....-..J -...----I xii il ·. . 1* I;( ;.l E i nQ N} 1 Records or information that, if disclosed, would allow person to: •1 1· .- -.. -...1.--.. .·A•·. Ay-}; a V (b) Identify those areas of structural or operational \“'} *""ʻ***·.r owe vulnerability that would permit unlawful disruption to, or interference with, services; or (c) Disrupt, interfere with or gain unauthorized access to ....,-.,~.¤.·»ir-rn fl1DdS OI` to lI'lIOI`l1'l2lllOl"l p1`OC€SSll]g, nnwwn111*ri02fi(\T\ OT CUlllllluulx.¢u.rurl ur I ei?_l .· ..1 V.·. . , . s. y (24) OHSU and OUS Donation Records I telecommunication systems, including the information contained in the systems,that areused or operatedby a public body[.] 53 This provision is also intended,in part, to protect the delivery of the stateʼs public services by exempting from disclosure information that would reveal the security measurestaken or recorrnnende to be taken to protectpublic employees,buildings and infomration processingsystems.It d exempts not only actual or recommended security measures but also weaknesse or potential weaknesse in those measures. The exemption salso applies to records sconceming individuals, property and systems beyondthose connecte to a public body. Finally, the measurespecifically exemptsfrom ddisclosure information that would reveal security measures ofthe OregonStateLottery. °.-l 1 S y. (a) Gain unauthorized accessto buildings or other property; public ~ ORS l92.501(24) conditionally exempts: V; V Personal information held by or under the direction of ii i _.·Q_ .,.-.-11.. ,... +1..,. V , officials or the Oregon Health and Science University or the In part, this provision is intendedto protect the delivery or the statees . { ifuI.iI sV Oregon University System about a person who has or who is public services.It exemptsfrom disclosureinformation that would allow.a IQ~ ,interested in donating money or property to the university, the ʻ * .1 = "`i1: V11 cir .` ir, ¤;" + 2 5; g.Iii 1 r· ffl pg ;dl pt p li lll.i`Q Z i _. {1 .;. ? Q.p§j, . tt 3 ; _1;;i . lgl1..· t=gy! . ;·l·`1`Z llll11r~.: *.: 1> _ pl,. will ;arptW Q {li ʼ lil? ; T i'ii 3 · Jt1 fi . r'- 5. . 2? ʻ · · ·ʻ i V .-.4. -.l.ʻ..1-- ..4...4.. person to gain unauthorized access to buildings, public funds - .ʻI . ,II systemor a stateinstitution of higher education,if the information I. information processingsystems,or to identify areas of vuhrerability that .V is relatedtothe family ofthe person,personalassetsofthe person would permit unlawful disruption to or interferencewith public servicesI _ ʻ or is incidental irrfonnation not related to the donation[.] {or. -, a public bodyʼs information pr·ocessinsystem A public body also ; j This exemption was amended by Oregon Laws 2005, chapter 203, use the exemption to protect of property and services · g the security s. ajsectionl and 2 to apply to OHSU records as well asthose of OUS and its generally; its application is not limited to records pertaining to property; ' ʻi·......1.1L..4·I,..,..·. 'TʻL.». ,...»..-....·.+§»..». ....,.1-».,.+,. -L`..,...... .11....I.-..-.....,. .-.·...4»Z,...1,... J...·L`»....·....·.4·I,..-. —-—owned, ——-- used ~-- or M provided Mmsaalr 1.., prpdorrc mrrsripbodv. s institutions. l he exernptro protectsfrom disclosurparticularrhrolmatro and· services oy a ood,. gggg ·4 AA in or are , n natureabout individuals e who either have made n (23) Security Measures . in makinga donationof moneyor propertyto OHSU,OUS or a §that_iis.»personal ORS 192.501 conditionally exemptsfrom disclosure: _ stat institutio of higheeducatio To qualifyfor exemptio (23) must be held bv or underthe direction of OHSU or OUS Recordor infonnatiothatwouldreveaorotherwisidentify/ggifthoiinfonnation l,??"4§Zʻ=,j·§T;” ""T"""'"' e n r n. n, =,` é ···· ~1 security ..zRy* =013Ss measures n or weaknesse orl potential e weaknesse {fi 52 : g-. i( , s to protect:1ʻr- .2 .. security measures, takensor recommended to be taken %;*9 ·· : OUS Donation Records .- , (25) ¢# ·v %¤;£ *55 .;?£&§m ;.· L. 1 nn ii}ʻS · r A 1 rn I-x 1 -. • 11 . ;, Ax ILM Ap11.J.u1 amravar > v 1uu¤u, ʻʻ-ʻ l92.50l(25) conditionally exempts: ¢. $§mm,- ʻ`ʼ ·-ORS zeel ` ·ʻ``ilr- · -home address, professional address and telephone number , éé"_ /7Ehe agree ,;§1·¤`§ʼ - =ʻ -_: . . . CO1'I11'1'1U. _L4:_; Jig ?§j§y1;;pOfʻza_perSon who has or who 1. 1nte1ʻcst 1n donating money or Information processing, r 1.-2........ rw. ¤A1·11-¤1112n=aa Vi , -ʻ *-ʼ ' 4.-1 .........;,...+;.-1.. ¤u¤+¤1-me innliirlino The 11iC8.tiOI1 11Tl'01'1'I1BT, ·+;1·A im 4.1... rx.....`-.- rr...:-.......:i.-S ed ¤--..i.-..r 1 telec0mm1m1C3I1011 SySL¤1115, 111¤·1¤¤* ***° ****° **** ““"“ "'"' ·_é _gr; to the Uregcm Umverslry ;5ysteml__| 4-; £,sL&&§5¥iE¤I§z§mH§3Z¥ 1OIl ¢.=...•-., ' "* .zprovrsro -· . . . . . . ¤E» mthe SYtems·, or L ¢§e;%>;&· ucl protects specific information about l11dlV1dLl who W} rrralror otherproperty; (b)Buildings `' 4 (dlS Those operaʼt10H of '¤h€ OWSOU State 0 ghave "Y “l"I . I' rr_1r;--ii -a.,i,, MZ:,.m1..¤ under ¤¤m1rih1 NF SW ouuluui. §11h1 '[O SUJGV BHG SVk11LldL1u1 uuuvn S cuv SCG UIILV U1 WULL:11 ev Vee" OUUULLLJ un xxrhin}1 vv A 461 .l80(6)[.] """\ʻ/1. R . 1 r(·3C'[ +am1 1 ʼ· .,; _ . V .—;-=»;·z;€..! 3 ,;$5¤r;$§ . { iz`. ·--K . Q 1s. "j F i1. . ` t2·4 _ʻ 'v;:_i·_._ TJ -&:;·re ·¤¥¢i2·f-I V § ·!=a#qRl·: · ·§=ʻ.·:· ;—_ .<T\`_, i, a ` %:—:r.:¤e,#~§;¤<2%ʼ : _·- »~>;~. ,. 1·, gl; F§ . » 1 1·` .V {.@ ti;. . ;;-;-€=**""` . ' ' n made or are interested in making a donation EliSof money or to OUS. "' v `4».»· xiiiiiéQQQQIi§§Y{9i§6i? é QQHZQ5i€§£2£».ZLQQA I EQLQEQA I ) \ ····**"**ʻ"—'Q ` " _ʻit : ` PUBLIC RECORDS i'i?,` it"ng io t{ . trli {_ t L Qui 54 PUBLIC RECORDS not be held by or under the direction of OUS officials to qualify for exemntio (26) Commodity n. ʻ \/!\\JL1..|.rl\»A\J•.•• Commission Filers { i, `{ .;12 il; pir ¢n 3·a · S Z ?] li gi ; n ʻ {g r iii Li li ZʻilC i »l lil .*fl; Ll pl Fl_? Iii Yiif r?:? aj w ig *4 h .-¤z V »· ;ifi g= n n ? e ,* of .,` 4E1 Q .l. 5* `; 7,i 55 This exemption applies to Social Security numbers of parties to judicial proceedingsfor marital annulment,dissolution or separationunder Ahh 1lʻ\"'1 f\OL' _.. 1f\"l AOC ORS 107.085 or 1U'/. (29) 4255. Student Electronic Mail Addresses . ORS l92.50l(26) conditionally exempts: ·~·i g ;`·_Fi sV`{ ~ N ` ifii 2 ORS l92.50l(29) conditionally exempts: 7 Records of the name and addressor a person wno nies a ¤·H·.¤nH¤ q cfqfp Ti,-1,.,,+..,m;-.....: .,, mv Wim IHS ClGCI1`0I11G·II1k111 ztuurcss ui 7, zi .stuucut wiiu uttcsiius zi State report with or pays an assessmento a commodity commission 1 1,1-..... 741.,1.; . institution UL of L11bA;vA higher vuwvwunvnn education Lnuuvu listed Au in ORS 352.002 or Oregon 1LL¤\·L\·\A~L\JL1 established under ORSt 576.05l to 576.455, the Oregon Beef 7 ..1+ I-Iealth and Science University[.] ·E`;;; 1. 7.. i Council created under ORS 577.210 or the Oregon Vlrheat * ` This exemption applies to electronic mail addresse of students Commission created under ORS 578.030[.] .. . .1;.-rr-:----...:4.., -Lʻ r\..-,.-.. {\..,.....`.. 047,7.+., Tlmhrnv-¤i+u Dn1+ln1¤H Q+c¤1·¤ -4* `ʼʻ "? s ` " ʻ ·ʻ 7 7--..--1 .`AA.·,..7....,,,, , . attending University or Oregon, Oregon State unrversny, romana State This provision exemptsfrom disclosure the names and addresse or 7·AUniversity, Oregon Institute of Technology, Western Oregon University, s .., i.` smwliern Oregon University. Eastem Oregon University. or Oregon l— personsfiling reports with or paying assessmentto certain agricultural 7_L]`]L,l,LLL\.41.,lL \/LV&\.IA1 \/LAL VVAUAMJ, Llmuuvxxn xrxvcvu x.»n.»A 1 vA~··J 7 v· other commodity commissions. The s laws conceming reporting tofei · Y Iealth sand Science University. commodity commissions include ORS 576.335 and 576.345.The lawsiY;` Q (30) OHSU Medical Researcher Records §fT if concemingpayment of assessmentinclude ORS 576.325.The legislaturej_i -..1...»,..,.. .7.m; mmqnwg mmmoditv commission laws in Oregon-§iif s . ,i 7. ``i· ORS 192.501(30) conditionally exempts: suosranuany revised Oregon s coim.rc.n., -c.-.ir ..... -4..u.. 2003, chapter ¤M1 604. 2{7f 7, Laws rm . 1. ...- -;.1..--.---;-.--:----1 -.1.1..-..,. -..1, l`gV The name, homeaddressprofessional addres or location or a ʻ · ·· 1 - .1.1..--,. ,._,{.ʻ A “°,,¤,“,` vni·\t\ 'EiRR €§2Z é?i=il 1; 2 ` A,-`4·;»`.». . (27) Financial Transfer Records ( ORS l92.50l(27) conditionally exempts: A “11l·Jin - lxnrlv Information provided to, obtained by or used oy a puonc oouy — 4-vc I , in, or that providessgoods or services for, person that is engaged ~ gmedical research at Oregon Health and Science University that is 7 i - conductedusing animals other than rodents.This subsectiondoes 7 I not apply to OregonHealth and ScienceUniversity pressreleases, 7iwebsites or otherpublicationscirculated to the generalpublic[.] to authorize,originate, receive or authenticat a transfer of funds,vi t ._ V e card number, payment cardgq:1 ; including but not limited to a credit enwiYé ii =Eiʻ:r:. gI Ai_*:_*_l exemption protects specific identifying information about expirationdate, password financial institution accountnumber ; 3%5· mQliindiyidual who engagein medical researchusing animals at OHSU, or `·Th€ andfinancial institution routing number[.] ii}? E. agi.E }*€<?: , =-· arent.?, ʻ %· 1.*E ʼ:Z,__ s goods or service for that researc lt was amende by This exemptionis intendedto protect againstunauthorized · $Z= Qʻ1"? Laws 2005. chapter to excentOHSU D1'€ ʻ " ʻ ʻ · f` ' -D-. .... -4.1-.. 4.1..-.+ .-. ¢.11`l·•lin lnnritr HAQQAQRRR in ¥i§§fho,`i_·pr s 455., section 1.h. d releases, and fraudulent use of, information that a puonc eddy possesses in ro.,,....-,,_ , ,,...,é_, _____ ww, _____ 7 · ` -ʻ f 72,5F* ' . 7 “"ʻ '°"' _"""“"“ *> W ʻ······r· ---—·· --·—7 7-7-, Oregon SS ovide —— tofun transfeA publibodma transffundtoorreceiv · is __ ,_an othergeneracirculat publicatio Th {exempti sfdfuud Ho msmb rs. c bfytb pub y erssWe sssbtb publi e suuues, execute such transfers, the public body may have records contarnrngéé irsg§§,§e s m that srs s abb ¥naS.;extended informatio coul allow perso toll acceser fundc ʻg.7with,OHSU 200ennp 4,nedurati dUnd r Oreg lly Law ed ns. 45 secti e on through Januaryl, 2010. 7 er- pcrsom on stestify5, ' tert . 5, .d on “ .on ,, privat or publi accoun This provisio protect that information ,, b h _ _ mg as 0 cms Of bmssms and ndisclosur d n s s _ I e ml avror by annnal rights activist who had no definite e c t.——-— ·—»¤--.1 1n una nvm s e _ ' s -`IPE¥~€;' -n? `i _ · . "ʻ“ M puun ·¤ · ..-7--€ 7- 1»¤Z&:Y!· ..·-*-ʻ.T"' f0rOHSU Region Primat ResearcCentertheOrego l'·`“' 3's Orego '"°"ʻ "'°"""`.ʻY ``ʻ`"" "T""" i U SOCTEII 5€Cl.1l`1TZy N \1I`IlD€I'S “ʻ lll Iku°“ʻuuurzu > of Appealsheld that the publicmterestdid not requireCl1SClOSU ¤1¤'t ¢0F n al e its conclusion h , the1'€.l52 n ORS l92.501(28) conditionally exempts: U ij, %§Ke1evant e. to the courtʼs holding was that requesterʼs ʻ m G· 1G mM B I D F I C R.} m ; Q4-snicl 5OC`I?l.I I.)\J\.r16I71 Qnrnrifv BCLZUIILV L)\.»L4\.AA; I.] h111ʼY\lʻiRT'§ ULUILUULD 29 ¤·¤ T)T()Vld€d I~U—V"“*“·"*ʻ witthnonporganiseediscl ofna of h e roit zationkingosur me e s 5 . ll] .7. 1 . 4 ee · ʼ : "ZQL ~ .77 {7+; rcreiéi n .·.f·7ʼ·c= ·- ·. re ʼ; .—e..;i'2&·· ;:·r.;¤;,>;·.-· - *5-tv .=1j;§¥%?¤:€ES? :e¤eees7%=·e>-:3;% . * , t*§&=%ʻ$;i·é <ng§¤'e?·v · 1 I 7 Defrerm nf,41vmmlc .|.zQ]L;lh)6 . 4 1 pr *·» ` V ʻ· : 77 5 7 U] IZIILLIILLLL), 100 Or Arm nt M/'L1}. 'I 7 (see: \b\.»b Arm C-21). 177 \J1 l”\|J|.) GL 178-70 1 IU“ʻ E ..ʻ .a {`-n2;1 » ¤ l` — . [ r. i it i *. lr-7 Slzliii3 PUBLI RECORD C S in 1 \ --.-,114; .`.·t¤l`l¤ ` disclosure; (b) Applies only to records that may be made immediately available to the public upon request in person, by telephone or using the Intemet; (c) Applies until the public safety officer or attorney requests termination of the exemption; ¤v¤1·nn+¤· If requestedby a public safety officer as defined in ORS ¤; ·. if `,f 7` ; E Q ` u¥ tre; 9, § ni; ʼ7 5 wi ¤ lrtl:'·) 181.610, by a district attomey or deputy district attorney OI by all assistantattorney generaldesignate by the Attorney General,the home addressand home dtelephone number of the public safety . 4Er officer or attomey containedin the voter registration records for the public safetyofficer or attorney[.] s This provision exemptsfrom disclosurethe home addresseandhome; s attorneys,deputy,} telephonenumbers of public safety officers and district district attorneys and assistant attorneys general designate by thed records. ORS5 L AAttorney General as contained in voter registration l8l.6lO(l6) defines"pub1icsafety officer" to include corrections oliicersg 7 youth correction officers, emergency medical dispatchers, parole and probation officers, police officers, certified reserve officers, telecommunicator and fire service professionals. l1' contrastwith ORS sl92.445(3), a public safetyofficer or attomeyʼs request 1 for 1'101'1..-..,1 updating safety or attomeyisi dlSClOSllI'Q`r lleed me not he ue renewed l¤u»vv- upon ·~·l-~·~· e the ---7 public l-— · officer _ ·1~·· —· — ~·e7 voterregistrationrecord. Y? ih (32)PublicSafet OfficerandAttorneyName efe-....i.. D-..1 1>.Assessment or in ITrUPU1ly lʻLB¤U¤¤|nvAn• y Kem m1n1·e1r s ud all:ll` gl all?11 Tqil; ` 7l _ `t V tgt12 `. it. iii % Z . .W ? u Jan it` {lt ."l = lit__ 7`. — 57 of`ficer or attomey in a request for exemption fiom purposein seekingdisclosure—ensuringʻ the proper treatment of animalsat ' ·ʻ 7 77 --17* .-....e·L.“·.l.·... ineireeii — wais not dependen on knowing the names of pamcular t employees ny . (31)'Public Safety Officer and Attorney Voter Registration Records tn I-n1 r w It l PUBLIC RECORDS ORS l92.50l(3 1) conditionally exernpts. ii77 |·71 I .4* lll lv; 56 Records ll S (d) Does not apply to disclosur of record among public bodies as defined in e ORS 174.109 s for governmental purposesand :-1-:1:4... 1:-.. - ---..-4.. :4* 4.1-- .,....--,. -r .1 , ;.7.ʼ`.3 — ` (e) May not result m liability for a county ir tne name or a public safety officer or attomev is disclosed after a request I""°""`*"' """"""'J "*"""" "“` TTTT`TT"TJ T" _TT"T"`TTTT TTTTTT TT TT T.lT T T for exemption from disclosure is made under this subsection[.] . This provision exempts from disclosure the name of public safety rigeneral designate by the Attorney General,as containedin real property ( ·assessmen d and tax rolls. ORS l8l.6l0(l6) defines"public safety officer" .tots rincludei corrections officers, youth correction officers, emergency 1* 1 ʼ 1 ri' I 4 Ì.'4 .4 ' .4.4.- . --.- -.-J ---]-.4-.-.4. ,-LL--.---..¤ officers, district attorneys, deputy district attorneys and assistant attorneys '· 'gmedic dispatchersparole andprobation officers, police officers, certified al , officers, telecornrnunicator and fire service professionals. HB 2. amende s ORS ._ ,., slllolloos VR., l92.502(34) .,...,,.,,.\_,., and .......moved ....,,,.. the ...,, provision p., .._,.,-. to -., ORS _,-,, d ;50l, _., subjecting the provisionto the public interesttest. The amende ` -:. . . . d now applie to count realpropert andlien record but Taxati0n§. »i§¤?e§§€.; only thoserecordsthat may be madermrnediatelyavailableto the irlT i]TT7T TT" rnnimnt TTTTT TT TTT TTT " T T TTTy T01* T TTTTTT.TT T" s T.TT`` s l t$rli=111l*il1nʻ71·1rmr1 1r1 PCL hersnnBULL, ylov felenlwnne ;*"iaff -,f*,ʻQT ;i¥L§`q 'f;}}ʻ§i_ʻ§!4§LULLU 'LILJULL LULILICDL LLL Uy LULUPLLUUU UL `hv U] 11911*10 the l11l'&Tl'lBli. 9l1t1oludes { TT 7,7:7 ORS l92.50l(32) conditionally exempts: If requestedby a public safety officer as defined in 181.610, by a district attorney or deputy district attorney or by·;ʼan' £{ . l;_;. assistantattorneygeneraldesignate by the Attomey General, ` ` "` " ' · "¤———·-- -44-·—··~»¤· nn1»1+¤i1·1¤ri in `T er of 9.ttO1ʻI1yThi Corltalueu lu f!0llT`ItV odds-M dScm ¤the7 HamofT the Publi Safel recor Exempti I g , *1 TT LIDLLL5 T LLLV LLL LVL LLV L- (33) Land Management Plans 92.50l(33) conditionally exempts: 7-1..-.4...... . .-.47-...-..A .11.1.. -.-4 -1--; `·>: ..--.----.-managem plan --..--;..-.1 require c-.. for ..voluntar stewards 1··--.1 ·i? ~ 7 agreement enteredinto under 77,;= ent s dORS 541.423. y hip · aEi.ʻFʻ s _ exempti ·· _ _ tovolunta stewards , agreelneenter appli Land ' e r ..casscssrncnt y Or cfaxa IOH ds ct U LGPIUEG U flLU lculuuwl cullll?tilt. l. ' .7>__—E_€€ il'lGlT\XI&F:1ʼ1 2 l lnrrrlnxxrrwpr nr rnnrncenfsitixin nf` ip l211rlr1\Jv1ʻ1R1ʻ 21ʼ1(l QTZTB b .Iproperty S on: on es ry hip nts ed {..\ Avwsliq nnlv tn tldp1*191(Y lillé Dl1bl1 Safely Omccr ] ·;;:;·v_ruwtvv»ull · .&1'12Tl`1'1'¤.lluUW Am·1m1lh1n1 Ha Qhxf `Rnnv nf`Wrx1·p lnv 1x1lʻ17l.c “iʻl1P G lwl (21) AppllGS Oflly tu tllc .. Fowner 7 C of-. the -..--... 7mm 11·¤ b.-.,.-....1.%.. - LILGLLVG . 1-V.--..-A . Mmliesl-lla J- .2u1r*l1 . n 1TlR 1i¤r1f·r1f·` n p -rl ¤t1·v D1`OD€U)ʼ 1¤ʼ.;§?i ?.|ai~lʻ?i?1xrzne»e .7-1+* 4...--4 ......1 1-.sm1ln+m·o other will selr—regulate to meet and exceed applrcaole regulatory attorney and any llU1 u.¤ 77 by . p;s.j£Y2% 7 and * iE§£lH1FGmei1ts achieve conservation- restoration and improvement of connection with a specific property identified V 7- , k, 7-----.., ..,. real · lldlrle or ello F.-or-V 7::*-295,- ..---7-, "“" —~ I"` "r ʻ$¤ʻ·*I”ʼ£{1·ʻ4·e. _ ,_ ·· 7 7 _ ,i¥;F&;ʻss§'=tt%e¥y7n1-ulrcrlt ul A Y.: 7 7 ʼ . T 235 _ V . ·-e··· ` ,77. .r V . ·7 Pc f 77ʻ7 . 77ʻ7=i.1.7 —·*12.<-=-lv sr.- sc E·=i;f.=gs!5;£=§¥#€é: ;=:l2:·ʻ*ʻ·;¤},:S—£t37¤'lʻ;; L?s· E13 .*¢;<.'·2·;`E~» ·. e7 *71 ʻ 7 73 hire #5-if , 7· = ʻ " · lʼlL;LllLulC . Ul LUG btuw Dudlu Ul Fulcsu U wllloll tllc · "¤§5Eiʻ:"ʻf7ʻ77ilʼ7!;ʻ§r . 7Zi ·Zi l -;¤· ;· ;7ʼ — .. 7 . 7 · 1. I Z l YV;`1 A7·ʻ 58 7 ei E 7 N-.; 1ʻ. 7 yl; , 1 1 t * . {: "l i17* if ** j`.* 17 * 1 Q 11 li -·5; 3 ..** *`. 1; — `. in it .=i at It 7 rustic PUBLIC RECORDS Rncoaps __ = 7§ · d. The`Exemptions of ORS 192.502 ( ORS 192.502provides: The following public records are exempt under ORS 192.410to l92.505[.] from disclosure a superior or associate. The test of whether there are grounds for asserting the exemption is whether disclosure would inhibit the employee so as to jnterfere with the free flow of information and ideasthat the agencyneeds if ʻ`. 7; ` for its efficient operation, as distinguished from mere embarrassment of T .;.;_ ʻ.T the employeeor agency. W. "111·1l¤¤¤ H10 hiilwlin Ij " "" ` · · ' 41--.-....1J4·2, Note that ORS 192.502doesnot contain the condition, Vunles ure pdolle { `ʻ·ʻ _·ʻ.ʻ l interestrequires disclosurein the particular instance,"which appliesto all V s ·Vʻ exemptionsin ORS 192.501 However, the exemptionsin paragraphs(1)-7 Q7· [rx -1: nnc 1 (Y) RN') pnmtqin lancriisioéé Ol? COl'ldlllO1'l 1'l'12ll(ll'1H l]l'1CH1 Sl1blCClZ (6) of URS 194.5114contalll language ol oolldltrol. .-s .....g -.-V . a weighing of the public interestin disclosure. —ʻ T lf the comrnunrcatro contains factual material together with the then the agency is under a duty to segregate _,sedvisor recommendation n if_ʼ 7. v7- factual s.material and make it availablefor inspection.ORS 192.505. the V T The burden is on the agencyto justify application of this exemption. T Ti TTT exemption does not apply unless the agency can show that in the } _ gparticular instance the public interest in encouraging Hank 7 T` (11 Internal Advisory Communications [1) 1.11nu; anu; 4. nu 1 -1.1-.- J . _p-7ʻ.Fcommunicationclearly outweighsthe public interestin disclosure.For the ORS 192.502(1)exempts: 7{exemptio to apply, the agencyneednot show the extentto which, in the f? 7JTT * 7,snparticular instance,frank communication helped to actually advancethe Communications within a public body or between.. public 7' -4.1--TY *ʼ*“T*““ʻ“ʻ ʻʻʻ““ “""ʼ 15m` ` ʻ“"“ʼ“” i isorʻ i§j*T 9 7ʼ ;work7of bodies of an advisory nature to the extent that they cover other _.j-, the agency. than purely factual materials and are preliminary to any final 7, ?i T-·*V`·ʻ (a) Types of Records agencydeterminationof policy or action.This exemptionshall not T 7 take the view that preliminary ..T_:_ ·»Q.\,lV1tJ\JLJ LV`/\/#4-*41-*~**4——·—•v~v»~»~) ;. ;lj .. if.·;· rl. €? 17 iZ* il̀.;:.lt dl 17 1,, ...g 1*11_l *:. Vg ? l 1* ʻ ·ʻ} * ʻ ¤* *. 7.* -7 7* 71 lll ?1 ng F1, ,* 2. 1 ""ʼ ' ʻ J ·--ʻ|--1-77-.7-7 A4? 17.11`|»s`l1 lanziinu officials and employeesor puorrc oddles r*lRQ1ʻlV clearly n public interestin disclosure. ULIL V ULBLLD h1'It\NBlQ`l'lS agencies or -—-v -C-——J »- -7-7 - 77 J _} `J ` This is improper.The needfor furthercheckingof datais This exemption, substantially narrowed by the - .. .1 -....,1,,-QTY application, isT designed to encourag frankness and candor; ~ 1 ·$:t unicétionWitpii O betwee gevemmellt ag ·-- scrL;; ..1:21iet e ¢*§l§ʻ*3·2¤i1`nIn1<1x1 n 1. n al €ncjgg_ --.- .-.. ;-.. mc*" 71 1.1 without reticence, 1Dhlb1lZ1QD,_=Q§ ʻ=—SlbYY "' * T" 1..aa..;e.. ()l')lIllU1l§. UL Feelines LUDJ.LL1;;¤ vv ON rsuvut. rv.·.vv-..··, -. \l1.lLLLLv4.Au, vat. ..*1 CXpI'CSS1OI1 OI " ———— e §§. '§*` WnBsrERʼs Tnrrtp concealment." (2002)at 903. erroneously d fornondisclo Suca d documd vali grou is apubli Therefoarequesisentitletose thedocum an toobtai sure. ent dfO1` SXEl1'1'll.')lG.. cn re,d rnnimstndter d examhfinheh 21'mllCS.l54 ent 1.11·1ri unless annfhef conditions s often recommendations containing nothing that justifies ,will bewithhel untilaftertheyarerevieweor acte upon univ v l;hCiT V 7uq.· lcqucsqulllgseetrlutrrcrbeeelletppllo bln,E1.o1......g 1·1 1turl,) iytidn lel. ..7, " _ . __, about it bbfbfb hs msmbbfs any dela indisclosu y 7 re. 7 1 ' _ 1, , Tbbbwb their C0P1€ but this S» adoptioof thePubli RecordLaw,theOrego Suprem __, L, ,__,,_m+;.,,,,,1;gc1Ogu1;€fif { fheldftliat data collectedby a stateagencyin the cours of carrying s n e Undethisexempti apublirecorrsexeln non.dlso.os....7-,2,.. __ p_ n _c 1 ¢§i§t} }. e meetsall of the following criteria: {,_,_,,. ,_. .. l.*`_*. r -7on, c d 1.7.7 pt7. rseeoeennhlic hodiesgi _ 7_ mnt;- - .... — _ij._. ° lt iS 3 CO1'I11'1'1l11'11C3.lZW1'[l'11Il 3.pl.lDl1C DO(.1y U1 Uctwccrl yuorlo 1,.... 1.1;, 1.7 7 n HECHCV i;_ —T . (seeApp F-46) *.- 'RecordOrderFebruar1,2001,Zaitz tv] :4 ;- nr-101'l -- -,1..:7.7..-.1 .·.7.41..·1.. 1»d»¤li1·mi1·1·; tm 211v final 1l Pubhc · rt is of an advisory natureprellnllnal y to any .7.....ago,. . r 11·v `* Reeewle {17717 s77..7777.. 07 1006 Denis/11/me (seeAnn F736). .7. 1. ·s rs T rxcuulub U1 Ll177U. .LJ¤vl¤1 vv lllto . (aw. npp l s , LLUL. yDUULUIIIUGL ..ʻ ʼ “$T£s€ ¢&¤e* -. 77 ;r*Ei·°? T ʻ 7uurlo 2· .;-:¤.~ʻr»\sn¢¤ ¤t-es- -» · 77 .. .... 4:-.- - ....1-1:,. ʼ 1 ir other than purely factual materials; and ll. eevers L•U\'u1¤ Unuvn ururr yultv ' $ 7 ¢ 7. 1 -··—·v·· Citw i.bfun r rtao,rm e ateotrI .,.. nnress me nuhlic bodv shows that in the particular instance I..lLI.1Gbb LLLU Puuluw uvuj t.1nnV11.. .--..., --- .--. L. 74111 the public interest in encouragingfrank communicationbetweenif apply 1· ; 7; .,,;: .7=:~ E:ʻ .q —— l'* 11._.=. 59 • in the particular instance, the public interest in encouraging frank ..r . fish and wildlife habitat or water quality." ORS 541.423(l). The land communication clearly outweighsthe public interest in disclosure. _ ....,...,77..m. and inventory of marlagelrredt nlen plan inehrdes rdordoos a .. comprehensive eo.-p-, ....... . . description , 5-ll3 prescription for the Q:·1T·` The central thrust of this exemption is to protect the confidentiality of 1 · 7.e+ the subject property, its features and uses, and a ,7 1- -.-J ...-L-1-J1-I4.-.1 ·. ʻ·l ° frank and unrnhlblted ..71..;-advice -..4 and ,.17.1-s1s.·111·t4»I1`··.1·1 observationsrsa -1·s11Ll11-t public ¤1·vu·sln1r¤¤ employeen·iu¤¤ gives +A to protection of resources. ZL ;1 ʻ ʻ -- } X } - 5* ; .. —;e . ar TZTʻ = .·"'?Vs$S>~·>-A7.;-¤·.ʻ 7 7 .. rir ~*·ʻ-*T=&2t—·fsʻ.t7-5·>* ··=·;?e;>w!*~— · _ ¥*ʼ” 2; ʼ 77 - · ʼ `. = .....7 1.7-7 \"TT T `LTLT ' -Ii:-!{¤Q'·_-·l*»€i·:§ʼ-yi Q , 60 T **-2 17* 7 l-it ` V 77; ʻ, . . .. 7. 7 . . . , , PUBLIC RECORDS T out a study were subject to inspection before the study was completed. The T7 fact that a record is "preliminary" is not itself groundsfor nondisclosure} r_.T T . . . ʻ 55working We alsohaveconclude that preliminaryor incomplete drafts } 7 - PUBLIC RECORDS when information did not result from frank communications, the public intere testweighe in favorof disclosurThecourtals note thateve had material resulted from frank communications, st the nonfactual d e. o d n the "presumption favoring disclosure outweighs any evidence to, the - contrary."* 57 7 7 In the second case, the records in dispute were individual are public_recordsdsubject to disclosure andthat they should bejudged by the same standards as a completed "advisory communication." An employee or official may prepare a half dozen drafts before submitting a Q V-_ 7 questionnaire responses to a survey sent by the Department of Irish and final version, and often may submit preliminary "discussion drafts." We V Wildlife to biologists, to solicit their ratings ofthe effectiveness of the know from experiencethat disclosure of an incompleteor discussiondraft, i - Forest Practices Act. The case dealt solely with balancing · u the ifpublic V V in any casein which thereis significant media or public curiosity aboutthe j irfterests, because it was tmdisputed that lZl'1€ 1`€SpO1”lS WSIB result, may have serious adverse effects upon the ability of the person to g e Qj- 1 communication within a public body, at least in part €S advisory, and completethe work. If disclosurewould lead to interferencewith the work p 1,7ʻ_, contained s fi-., otherthan purely factual material. of the agency, this is a factor to be weighed into the "public interest" .fʻ*¥ .7. . 7-... . . ... Tje 7e s c After examining the responses at issue, the court ordered disclosure equation.] The fact that the public (or news lnedia) is "interested" in the ·*ʻ— Ti _V ʼ zʻ -?based011its assessmentofthe public interest, stating: sense of being curious about the matter or issue is of only minimal- :EQ 5° T e re n uctcrrrurrutrull dererminenen or et where the interest" ..lies under fp thisf ICICVHUUU LU :1 wrroro tl-.7 "public r-...--.. --------. Any "chilling effect" that disclosure may have on future eleo7.n7~e or any otherconditional exemption. ``_communications within the agency, becaus of potential e is not sufficient, in (b) Balancing Disclosure and Nondisclosure -',._embarrassmento the agencyor its employees .1 - -1-.:--.-;;¤ vii; Iʻ ʻ` and of itself to overcome the prestunption favoring disclosure. t , · Three OregonCourt of Appealsopinionsrelate to the intemal advisory. ʻ. r. iSee,eg., Turner v. Reed, [22 Or App 177]. To hold otherwise ,p;-;— communications exemption and demonstrat the weight given to r. would effectively exempt from disclosure all interagency presumption in favor of disclosure. r,ʻ_;_ e The court first applied the public communications that are advisory in nature and cover other than interestbalancing test in a casein which a hospital subject to the Public;. t»ʻi-.; ,1purely factual matters. RecordsLaw brought a declaratoryjudgment action to determinewhether; e.—e a certain record was exempt from disclosure.The record in disputewas — court also held that summaries of intemal advisory communications, __;_§,_._._,-j_-,- D 1 Z.in I ʻ:_* l lZ* <§ '1`* l.*:V lfʻ:5`i l" E j`.* 1 wa 'li ·. · r. lll' f.l' l .Tʻ·=:l i l7:j ¥'.... T 5T ¤l. 7t hi;.* ` z f _.ʻ” , lla if :],.` &. T tg-~* .i1Tl li fl *f l¤.~€ {Tl]jg JlʻT§*` llI·lʻ,:;:] ·'4=l lz Ml;. .·`llj | Tl`TT ``i]* . 1* 5 in `~ * *ʻ."·;tt` l;* 17 dil 1E l`ttl l; iq ,}.1 *7 1 *1`-E -* %7 _-rj. ifji . til Ef 1 l E 1! TP . 61 ,_--.--.--..-.. 4.- - -.-_-.--... --.-4- 1--. 4.1-- T\- . -. .L...- 4 portio of a consultanstud of operatinroomprocedur and levels basetʼs in parton interview n y gwith hospit staff es Thehospit advis communic exempti amo other .-r· ,onth intern d s al . . al. . therepor communicati eThe alcourtfoun ory ations on, s. _¤ʻ*ʻ _ that _ _ was_a . ng wrthm _ ..Z body of an advisory nature preliminary to a final agency action,and d t on . . . . g . — rr? containedboth factual and nonfactualinformation. ln applying the . . . _ . -.-·-intere balancmtest, the coun foun no evidenc thatthe nonfac r - .Y.. -7 V — 4. _ Ae '7”'n ....-ams-;h0·} .. .r .,ʻ g ʻ din ` - " {&€,:.·¢·:, \T-i:?` .A- €ʻ<p2£ ' . ~ ==i 1ʼ .1 1 _ ;._ll1'1a traffic stopwerenot exempfrom disclosur The .. thatnon oft therequeste.recordcontaine _ rrmi»r, .. 1'lg 2 Onthe con1usio *:<.»,·· ʻL1—.s.»x ""' e ` ed s d Bay Am, Healjh Dimicl v_Gum", 73 Or App 294, 301, 698 P2d 977 C-7 - »· ' nm, 0] 4,-,T.;A, _ Wildlife, 86 ()r App 168, 173, 739 »=k>0 *U0w1ty v. nnUre. Dept. Fish and _ _ 0·S' '"2'\"i"-“"!!$¥4`37ʻ%; ʻ · 7 V I \"_°` `Yr V V/' *1* iʻ~?r;$52 . . . . _ 112 P3d ʻ0fP0rtland v. Olʻ€2OIʼllCll Publzshmg C0., 200 Orʻ App 120, %* " ʻ.t'rʻ *·'V: 7 ʼ V" ʻ "`!·'j·ʼ v 4..J], r· ¤szm~Am,G¤n176l(l978)=f§ iil2§ʻ47ʻ(l987)e?(S€6A¤nC—81. ' '““ Macbwan, Zio Ur at 2/ (see App p,-i), no up Atty UW . Ni vi z— = Appʻ5° E-2) public Remrds Order. June 25. 1981. Wendelbo (seeApp F— · ILIUIL L\\A.,u1u¤ vn uvn, .• cur 2). 1 - e ar.;y% fOcuSd on H b I · · , . .9 1l1an_ .r r e on 16 a ancmgofthe public s interestsandprimarily based L,.-- ·/`·,m..rry,....-..... 'I 1 -.(T`I7'-1. td . e., theRC d th . · . . ,· s. rs C I S €mS cannoSausf the publ mteresm de F·»ʻ.Gi·`t- recen s tl , €1V€Sʼ t y t _ 1h · w th y .6 gow cli thai Portlan mhce Burea licords of a policeofficerwhokilled a d· Y-LS`r,g e investigatianddisciplin , g=,>is.;;...-01V · _ 15 d u information "franl<dcommunications within the st g resultedHom , J ʻr». . . .e . · Because the only public mterest "in nondisclosure consideredWas · · · · *1 -. · T"; interest m candorwithin the hospital and candor would not be fl ra .4. . . . ʻ€a;=;· “ rk ..·_}.= "p:ʻii%<sa=¤¤=$%?- ~· e—5E €:>.. - téeAuuiciz e sw. - · · » .. ` ` ʻ .1 . A A itiiiii ʻiʻi - ti.? 62 ` l. ju ;». ʻ.,Q l ni i; [Er .` ii ·.. if l?· F . I tl:` ʻ °¤·` ··x! € 'zrl ,_.li' W} , , ~,; 3,F; 1Lʻ ¤&Q ,,l i 1*_.; Bw i tlti? w —:;,. =; `:. {gill ls..rEl ʻ!ʻ ·~i if * ll ~· 1ti- ¤ !_' _lʻ fi `· ii` S- lll .rʻ ` Sir. · ʻ exemplifies how the contents of particular records and the situation '`. surrounding a particular investigation may fail to demonstrat that the outweighsthe -— public interestin encouragin frank commtmicationsclearly e _ publi interesin disclosur g _ʻ c With t regarde. to anotheraspectof public employment,we concluded __ _ _, ordersra Departmeof RevenuappealTheproposeorderin this AA - Athe ·- ublic · ·· -bod· ma .---. .--1.- -a tentativerecommendatio by the hearingsofficer on a _. evidence so that make an -.-.-..,..-..;.,» a ro nate Amueersreralmririé aee.,..,,;Fii2Ei$if@=?? of Revenue policy . . . . 162 . . . . . e.. ng d ent in nt en . change.dAs such, it satisfied all ... team €ʻ»:S1lZl12l.lZ10] , -,» disciplina action Howeverin relatio to disciplinar mvestigatronsg, f11I1Cll1dCd and factual situations rm ortant to noterythat ʼ in most instances,ʼrag ;t.ʻ~ r,. -··:=r,·»· p,riw·,¢}e, ry A»-other . ,. ʼ it . is.1-1;n - . ;.-r-..--i -1,.ta.....;...,+;.-M laqeprl mlélv pl1bllC body ii i.64.ll$11l·»lin C31'lI10't 11ʼ13.kC 3. pl1bl1C 11'llZ Cl6I UU-WU ¤¤1¤¤,y €1'€Sll €1`1T1l1'1BT10H of the requested records. Instead, the public body also·.ʻ=- . . . truorre the nature .é:$Q·n· :§·; ; .: .»J_..A-- -,..-i-..r -4- +1.. ....,.-meta?team-Ae163 Oregonian Publzshmgg 5;%é!:g COI1SldCIʼ U18 COHTCIII OI UIC p2l1`L1ULuu1 icuuiue. ur e5w........ 1. ww. Q· ¤g=;rg;§§;.·;;.;;assessment— ` uponrairalysis lm Oregonian Publishing C0.,200 Or App at 125-27 (seeApp C-23). IGIPublic Records Order, March 30, 1989, Howser (see App F-18).- - M Publi Recor Orde Jun 26,{199Scheminske/ AA (se App A /-A-r~£= A Public Order, October Fenrich (see App 1*-40). ` —-2 Records c,,- ds r,-.1 . Y. e17, 1997, Fraser e .m -. 1as 8, Aia.Am to ma oas {90011 (see 163 “'·ʼ .· 63 ' “ ʻ in ` disclosure " `"MA may ······ often ·“··· be the puerre mihlic m.e.e.,.; interégffijii interest be ~—*—¤·=i outweigiieu l-sv uy ure ¤b·=r·l encouragi a frankandunmhibiteassessm of the i1 rtl fait W in g 3 prnsrrc Racoraps anonymou whistle blowers, personal criticism, or supervisory personnel s judgments that were other than "clinical and detached." The court also _ that the public interestin frank andcandid communicationsbetweenprior stressedthe public interest in disclosure, given the "highly inflammatory ij;} I r public employers and a prospective public _employe about a former and widely reported" nature of the underlying incident. The court found o- employeeʼs work outweighed the public interest in ensuring that the r that the value of transparencyto public confidence that a "thorough and _. prospectivepublic employer made an unbiased,fair and informed hiring unbiased" investigation had been rmdertakenwas not "outweighed by the · A Tdecisionwhen it decidednot to offer the former employeeemployment.l6 speculation that transparency will quell candor at some future date."]6° Q `..,Becausethe intemal advisory exemptiondoesnot apply to4 purely factual These cases indicate that to justify an exemption under ORS if .tʼl ._lmaterial, we detennined that the public interest in maintaining the 192.502(1), there must be a strong showing of a "chil1ing effect? For 5 . Q.l. . °( confidentiality of the referencesextendedonly to the forthright, subjective example, we concluded in a public records order regarding a pending.; ? ~Q evaluationsprovided by the former public employers, and did not extend disciplinary proceeding against an attomey, that the public interest ʻ`., the purely factual information found in the record at issue. allowing the Oregon State Bar to exchange frank comments andg i we concluded with respect to another request for the — recommendations concerning proposed disciplinary action would i be; $ubsequently, e· `Zreference relied upon to deny employment that in the particular instance seriously undermined if the accusedattorney could obtain accessto theo i`ii -: thepublic interestin ensuringfrank communicationcould be protectedby s ii _candid analysis of the charges,strategies and recommendationson the ,_ redactingthe source— information, but disclosing the substanc disposition of the charges during the pendency of the disciplinary , ofthe references.] identifying e proceedings. 65 Q'`_-ln the contextof rulemaking,we concludedthat the exemptionapplied 16] With regard to disciplinary investigations, we concluded that riieie_“ Atogspeculatio by agencyemployeesabout the implications or impact of . candidgevaluationand recornrnendation of supervisorsand investigatorsʻ. n orders. With respectto a proposedhearing order, however, we sare the types of communications s protectedby this exemption.The publici that the exemptiondid not apply to the proposedopinion and 166 Liz ry iijti ; "` ifi ;{ ʻ material that, if disclosed, would have a "seriously chilling eff`ect" on the contents of the future investigations. For example, in rrdescribing ,::,...r,.-....,, “m“1A unt reveal requested records, the court stated that disclosure wouiu not reveal Y = [ l· PUBLIC RECORDS C— 20). rrr , , u ,. I{l-una A-Luge v. f\.-,...,.... lh··0Un11 ,_,. .,C,v' L/l'€xUll 04,.1,. .\`T/UE ' "-T ututc DAV l7') H/Il'. you , iI IL H. (lr \Jl Vi Ahh 11UU r *lʼrʼ LLNI ʻfJL» W-: IV 17 ·~ 1lʼ,3L\ Ju 730 Juv z \LUV1} \,.·vv-, \'·""" ` Ami-. ' `· Q,;t-rei.? .. QE! ·» · ,,.,,...,1 _, ,_,, ,,, 15. 1997. BUlʼI'/F1'€ShO\lI` (see App F'37); ,, ,_,_,__, ________ __, _ l _ [_ _ 2000, Schneiderman (subjective . . tppAp F-44 Records Order, July 17, 1997, Wilker (see App F-39) (relying é p of>.publi interediscussin Gra v. Salem- Scho 131 Ap55c 91P2 93edrede32yOr26Keizer 91P284ol (199 st V Per-rxrrlc 91`g p 6,(-irrler2 Arrmrd d 8,I) v n VlCl<Sl`S 3 (see 5, ADD 8 d 6 SEG6)also A pr1l·xl.1r — _A¥·¤¤ twwius 9., rp], v .......1., (W- ,staff 1,,,, opinions and Records Order,uruei, JuneAugust 4, 2004, Meyer (agency ¤¤r 5:. ,**5:):*,.- ]a11l131'V Urdu, r·$¢?_r,P ¤blic .·*ʻ?v#1·ʻa.: ·- · A ¤. . Order. Record; Records. Order, February 9, . . uof person investigating background of applicant for public imendatiohs _·,;§j:§EZ_,¤·,*§g;&§:g;kv¥pJA.u.L.L.L\JA1LICI·L1\JL1D -.A·$>Z< = ¤ sA e A » ~*=2—`F · . ¤ 3*% -£r3p*··#$F?i ee.,-1ʻ£g.s¥3$ _,. + Rennrrln p ~'ʻ z on \JL1 proposed |J.l\}|J\JD\.»LI `1""1""`"'""' rule 1Lll\.r amendmCnl1Sl (LlLl\.1ll\.1AAI.\:AALu] nf" r (SCE ADD 1:-53) \uvv A ʻJ"Iʻ ʻ "/ʻ 64 Q PUBLIC RECORDS — ` of the elements of the exemption, except one. The public interest in nondisclosure in this case was insubstantial becausethe Department of Revenuealreadvhad revealedrecordsthat discussedthe proposedorder in somedetail.] 67 publicʼs interest in encouraging frank inter-agency The communication in order to advance the Public Utility Commissionʼs ) tQ _ ;Zʻ.; i .ʼ rustic Rncoaps ~ l ` div'? · » _vv?. Lf T . ii `ʻ`. 65 public interest by clear and convincing evidence requires disclosure in the particular instance.The party seekingdisclosure shall have the burden of showing that public disclosurewould not constitutean unreasonabl invasion of privacy. "¤"l-— --——----—·-- e -·!-` M-I·— »-—-··----4-J····in 4-.- ·.·-.~4»·»»4· 4-Ln .·.··i·m¤u NF I.-.Ai¤€A“ pl.l.I`pOS€ OI lil'1lS GXEHIPUOH IS YOPTOICCI [HC pI`1V3Cy OI 11'1G1V1 — W. l11' .“..·¤¤¤¤»-.nl·`1¤ ,B.,`. from 1I'C&SO11€tDle inueelnm ¤ 11TlVaS1OIl. 17 T+ it rn-!-`|¤n+¤ relleeus 21nnlinv pulley 0 +l-m+ tual 1·¤¤1· peisurls ¤rw1¤ xxrnrlrincr (1l.lEl1.S wuiiuiig ¤l¤ fn? i-ui _ʼ` A§ or dealing with the government should not be subject to indiscriminate Hm v-¤n·ul¤+rx1~v 1·ni¤¤ir\1ʼ1 nleqrlv nrrhveiuherl flre .§ (BUU) ability IO 3CCOH1pl1Sl1 1tS regulatory rrrlssrurr clearly uurwergrieu me ʻ public interest in disclosure of records preparedby the PUC staff for an , { disclosureof personalinformationmerely becaus of that association.We administrativeproceeding.In this proceeding,PUC staff was challengingpr Q2 1Q emphasiz that the exemptionprotectsonlyethe privacy of the personabout e iiiQ whom the record contains irrfomration. Unlike the intenial advisory utilityʼs proposed undertaking. This challenge would have been L ,ii. e ommunications exemption, ORS 192.502(l), the personal privacy significantly undermined if the utility could obtain wholesale accessto the _ Ai_is not intended for the benefit of the public body. To illustrate, PUC staffs candid comments, evaluations and strategies while the though files containing personal information generally are exempt pexemption conteste caseproceedingwas pending.Therefore, we deniedthe petition _,oi _ʻ Lieven , _jr f from public inspection, there is no ground under this section of the law to {Z d except asto "purely factual material" containedinthe records sought.l°8 · ,if·,·A .A l. A `Av. · -., :.--1;-.;-1..-1 .... N- 4,, 1-:.. M. 1...-.. mm. 1·.¤r·+im¤¤ IIIUWCVCIV, POI LIUIIE NF Ul i }_} 1 = Aiédeny an individual access to nrs or ner own GI,. nre. 171 T.Tm¤¤vm· We concluded that a record describing the advantage ande inspection under other ti}the file may be exempt from the individualʼs disadvantageof various program optionsfor a public body s to dealwith its ··if Ai pexemptions. s budget deficit, including possible budget cuts, was exempt ii*ofn · . M-,. .M mm. ,... --,, -__-___, _,. ,,,___, _; ORS l92.502(2) does not exempt all information in a personal or disclosure. Because managers would be reluctant to engage in A_ ii {medical file. Information in such a file that is not personal, or the discussions of potentially unpopular decisions, the publicʼs interest sdisclosur of which would not be an unreasonabl invasion of privacy is allowing a frank exchangeconcerning budget options and potential cuts ... i I not exempt. Information in other types of files that is personal, and the e e would be substantiallv undermined if the record were disclosedbefore the]. V \JLLl\.| UU OUUDUAI LLLQLAJ uAAuwLAAAA;;vu an univ Avvvam ·. ~.--.. ʻ .¤2;.-.-1;;-..-.-,. Nl? ...1..i..L. ...,...1,1 Ln me ...»..»-¤¤¤.·w.¤l»\l¤ invasion of privacy, is V i` WHICH WOLIIO. DC 31 UIIIBHSOHZIDIC j disclosure or difficult program decisionswere made. 1 (2) Personal Privacy169 Exemption ; (a) Personal Information - -—-l92.502(2) rrr r Y \ʼ I exempts: z;;·i,_>.>; · ,t· `.. . · “ ” . . “ I ,7 ORS l /131* Tf1\ ..1.-JIL4-.. 4n nn. .¤·-nvslinln vu-•4;,`»·. —» InfonnatrofapersonnatursucasbutnotlirnrtetothatA, kepton in a personal medica or file, if public disclosurA jI al e. . similar p, .. . h . of. rivacy . d unless . -,, ..,5 . would constitute an unreasonable invasion the.. , l -ʼ P ʼ e. · . A-.i=; Ap `A lmPubliRecor OrderFebrua24,1989Weill(se AppF-17)See _ Public RecordsOrder, October 2, 1990,Katz/Estevez(disclosureof draft c ds , ry , e . PUC and ODOE on costsof early shutdown of Trojan not exempt when - . . - . . .. . ·.. . .· 1-..=;.·< . report containing essentially the same material already public, AA ... . x .,ʻ;-?¥.·.' .. that someinformationin draftreportdidnot gamerconsensuwithin agency AppuE;23)T.ʻviʻ-.ʼr- N WN- nr in nv mr Umm sVmv wwW )V V Bee(seAppF— ;Q? ʻ we "“ rubricRecorOrderoerdb 21,1988 16 PublicRecordOrderAugust671997Pams (SCApp F_40) . ds , er , r e 14). l: Gxémfit ,?Pp¥ ti) ,? in n mn:-nnmnl r\1• mfonimti Pclioml ʻ°rl1??l}gon mc u B 9€S m 9m"iaU9c1,Sq Y ating*9 aon Palllcu91199$91 $99 razpers s“ home address age, weight, and residentiatelephonhnumber — "t*"*—7ʻ“" "T"" “"_"ʻ= T¤ʻ* " "1="ʻ* i" not OIi =fathainform S Iliscontai C inav % recofd1 "would ml onTT" ““““ , l e . .. ct t ation A A. .. .·.T · ll ~ _·ʻ-.__i. A p~*_1f— =**a·».;, ʻfr=m$-"“:ll·l0 121..1-..- ono A., -r ,1,1 1 1-..-. ned A-. ... I" 1I'\\ ·{<??*d502U1`at 441($99APPUʻW)~ $66 ¤H,`Sfivahti 5 v. Juras,13Or App 519,511P2d421 (1973)(decide under (spAppC-2) s d 41 OpAtty Gen435(1981 (publiclibrarycirculatio recordexemp p persona - ) privacv 16..1. ---- ,1-s¤...1-1..1. #1~..Ai r..,.. ..r.. ¤.=`ORS Sl92.502 exemption App Library I-Inhlm 9 1 Reenrrln ( lrrler I11Iv 1 IllA mm MMU IHCICHT lh01'[1OT1S D1 Dlkilllllllz uu\.ul11vun~ £%'@s¥.·?¤}9@§ʻs¤Aaz*3**""ʻ "*ʼ*ʻ*··ʼ*ʼ“\*ʻ/> l"ʼ*”"“"" I'**'“"J ""ʻ****r*·`*··/ \··ʻ" · rrr s E— · rr ʻ"ʼ h _Ammme n (see t l',\U1l\L 1.\G\4U1u¤ kllubl, July) lu, LUUL, 1 uvlxul , u1uluu.u¤ ul Syluinuraab »v·.-·~»-·—_,,_,, sare covered now bv a specific exemption. ORS 192.502(22). . =`€**i$.¥ A 1;— . ,-. +;,....disclosure) 1......;.-..1 nt F49). 3·=7 (2). l ) 3). ·ʻ— resulted from "brainstorming" efforts exempt from (seeApp ,,$A.i;-' ~. ·A , l p Z·Zʻ_·;`.r ` .·;A:~ tn. lm. I ,. .1AlA .-L ¥Z { `1'* . · 1* s lf . [ 62 _ 1 Q` . li . .. .. r • .- -1: .. ..-...--....1 .,...+..1-;. H-` it- ntlaerrxrice whlllll WULLLLA Fit Lu. (b) Unreasonable Invasion of Privacy ...i ji Q, .1 1 . `.l* .st 2 Ei _,_l ,· i 1 $ C ; 1} v I,_ ' '2·,,`,,I, 1. ·tLʻ* lit. ;t¤A li;- -1 `l 11. rf': A A iY; . ilihll 1l·ʻ _tif. fill-1 :..ln H L1·`t € Art: lr?1 _l rl,. “.rʻ“ '-A tl°|9f uxul. ., 11 ,i·'. the agency to lead to such an invasion of privacy. Thus, in this case,the agencycould reasonablyanticipatethat, shouldit release the sought— information to Jordan, that person would after andunreasonablyinvadethe privacy of Citizen. immediately "unreasonable invasion of privacy" in "their common meaning as a generic .fig; A description."m Whether disclosure will constitute an unreasonabl* e court will 3 invasion of privacy irlvolves an objective test, in which the examine the facts presentedin each instance. The mere fact that "the_i ; (c) Balancing Disclosure and Nondisclosure ' ʻ " ʻ 7* 1 ' ,1-`- -..-- An agency must determine that disclosure of personal information lgii i *·wouldbe an unreasonabl invasion of privacy before this exemptionwill e disclosure would constitute an unreasonabl invasion of zapply Even if information would not be shared with strangers is not enough to avoid`} 1; ii, A iiA jprivacy, however, the public body also must detemiine whether the public . e disclosure."l7 An invasion of privacy will be unreasonabl where "arr j Aiirinterest by clear and convincing evidence requires disclosure in the · 5 ordinary reasonabl personwould deem [it] highlyeoffensive."l-I6 .., ..instancem Only when there is no oveniding public interest in The eSupreme Court concluded that the "unreasonabl invasion i · Vijparticular disclosure may the public body lawfully withhold the infonnation. privacy" test was satisfied when releaseof a citizenʼs home addressto the e _A f l\/loreover, the information is not exempt absent an individualized requesterwould allow the requester"to harry [the citizen] incessantlylto'. justification for exemptionm Thus, ORS l92.502(2) requires a public the extent that an ordinary reasonabl person would deem [it] highly 3 tbody to consider the merits of each request for nondisclosure on a case-bye analysis, it appearsthat the exemption j offensive."m Under the courtʼs casiebasis; a blanket policy of nondisclosure of public records does not not limited only to circumstancesin which the public bodyʼs disclosure] with the Public Records Law. For example,the Oregon Supreme itself would unreasonablyinvade a personʼs privacy. Concurring in the 5Cou conclude thata publi bodyviolate thePubli RecordLawwhe lnaioritv opinion, Justice Gillette explained an aspect of the majoritjlisé . .. .. .A1-.1a.». . . .. .·.1·e·Hmino ,- · . disclose ,1;-1--..1-""'·"""`”·ʼ ""ʻ“"“ʼ 'TT-76 7 7 ʻ ` 1 -.:·41·roli.·~v o·F tn the .-...-,.I18lʼI1€S ....,1 8110 A,-lA.·¤¤¤¤¤ HCIUICSSG n·F ul . 7. ...a + .ha .bttim bt d ulcuuxvr. yursvy _,A·1Li1.1.§Lu1¤. itl A1A1..ʻ.· 1m+ 36-T`-~>I?GDlBG€f11€lʼl'l lZ€3.Cl1€I`S -. ,, ;.;:·=1gyt..rr..y..·ʻa. .;.1 _,1A#1,1.: ff ? ·—ii;.` " YL: ,e sr.¤.l3·.2l.»;·. 1r...r. feel `?”ʼ5.;5r?: [ʻ ·.· . -%ʻA1*AʻG r$"ʼZʼ.ʻ¢-%..7·é; ·. ~= 1 1w e information, or the acts of thoseT_ the agencyʼsact of releasingthe , ·`..l— .-;::5,, slr »—i~3,<*.. §i A > .·=terAr=¢A#ʻ `5*A·*.:=.¤.? .- =A· . —,f$·—ʻ —ʻ*.=ʻ. . . A . . 1 178 decisionleft unstatedʻ : [A] disclosure "constitutes"an unreasonabl invasion of privacy I. -··;T'$§?.i$£%lʻ%··t1t.:11ʻ 1ʻ?lT"1`IʻlHN .2 `DIHTIKBL UUIIUV cva UL .l.G.l.\1bLl1E. s».........».¤ d I-U .... LUDVAVDV .......--,-- c NAV **“***"“ s n S dll1'l1'lQQ 8 SlZ1“ll(C.l82 1A_.-ʼ...a.:,;?' %" *9% ·'A:l A..= Af;A,éj¥; —ʻ1j·. .·l,_1.*.,*r_·__1_l_,-.· 1, · %. .ʻ =ʻ~ .*. ..11,a1<. =·»ʼ*A~A ʻ¥%il} T_ . . -4.2 ,.... .-UP . · -,---4.2;§$ Ca"i"sl&=r . *7 ·""““"· :,.., ms {seeApp C-101 (citing Morrison v. School , __ (record _ _ pertainin 12 ""° op F ar 441}T"ʻ.ff*ʼ *1-T LIC" ʻ```“°.7'".L§.TX-`6} {1 ..-tl9.m. 1>, im or Am 550 l¤V€$l1g OI A.·; 3 53 1....Or App 148, N0. 48, 154-55,631 P2d784, rev {·r den291 Ur 895 (lyol .ʻAA _..,,,,j,. ,,,,,,,_,,,,, ,____ served as a front for {*.ʻ“.`I`Y* 1A,.r 1.·.·1,..., ,,,_,U, ,,,,,, _,_,,,_,_,_, s g. 0 ¤ʼ¤1¤¤ AppC-4). ·· may have ~ —AUJ ,1 use of escortservice _, that ____ __ U4Id at442. =j AppC-19) -. ._ 17 Jvfuurt, 1,..,1,. ans seenp],. App C-10). Juo mr ul sr at 441 -r-rr ((eee V re,. See Dee also ...4... Id. ..--· at - 444 A—A .'-i?.Jordan, _ ·--.,-..-lll-. rel *` =l * w1l1 not 1) nnnnllrrlnnl |"A11. ..-..-...1 URTIETHI ,uunllu (1&§1T`€ ·1,. H) 1... DC. ral ICL a1.»16 HIUIIU wlll llur be us.,- sufficient. ¤r.lL.r.~.....-5 .. ()()IlULLlT1ll.\LI 1 }£,G11G1a.l cu uu rear. ulvrrv .. ----... VV*“ʼ°“"”bl \ ʻ* D"“""ʻ _"" A — ʼJ 1....;.. pʼ = App C-10). ._, . '"Id 3144 I77 2. *781,1 ..444 rmiieop lll. Zil ʼ+'+ʻ|· IUIUULLC, _ A . ,,,. ,,8.1. 1 _v 308_Or._at443 (seeApp C-10). _ "·GW'”dPublʼShl”E CO· 310 Or 32=394*0 (SeeApp C 10) . 1d..Se alsoPublic » Record Order,April 5, 2002,Meadowbrook/ natur not exempwhen perso to whom eA Ao.a highlyperson s Myton DSITHITIS DYOVILIBSal f AcsAppF-48l ee . }.\¤.,v , _ ʻ Jié§%rZ€?F $€§T-\*hzl<:"€e§l=|l|E[\:J1tLlk1.LlUI1 I J., committing) uulluull lily,) (e1TlʻDl'l&S1S (urrlyllewro lll rl Olʻl21I1E1l). r1€f;»$E .ʻ· rtli1l puidrraacorzp 6 c to whom s the information is released,arereasonablyanticipatedby 7 l · nnlv nercnnql " ·ʻ 'A »»A~ --». ,4- .L`..-... AJ.·.,.1.`¤...-A Not all personalʻ 'information is exempt from disclosure; only personal information that "wou1dconstitutean unreasonabl invasion of privacy" if _ The Court of Appeals has stated that disclosure of personal publicly disclosedcomesunder this exemption. e M ~···4*··~ a ·· puolrc ····l·—ʻi·· orncral ·~*ʼfi··i¤lʼ¤s oslellslory ¤¤f¤¤¤il·~lv plrvare private eerlaae. ormdrlct ace. does yi information regarding The exemption is not limited only to those cases in which disclosure _ [ T not constitute an unreasonable invasion of privacy where the cond.uct 1-..-1.,... Lllltsutly ,1;.spam on ul;. the yveerulu possible .9.,...,,.v compromise public officialʼs uG¤.l¤ ull ---. .,,.. of .,- ..a ,,-.,,,. . Q ʻ1f - ][]VO1VCLl would give rise to a tort action for invasion of privacy. The Oregon fi-, A 1 M1-1., SupremeCourt concludedthat the legislature intendedto use the words *`}f] . Aintegrity in the contextof his public employmentm “ l` 1-, ʼ=· ii- ii'l ? PUBLIC RECORDS prevent it from being ot a personal nature lr ll otllelwlse classification."m ji.-·.'lij I;. 1* - 66 . ~` { . A 1 ,. A _ : mt _mr~.gg;;:r·—— _·§'@ §;;4:{g,=g·_ . ·--»-, r¤%$,@ . €;.=i>~,,_r . it*»?`¢·£·,;;j— ;;? ʻ ʻ·" =5i?i a wz~ .·ʼ` .ʻ .· . V ~' ·.», ʻ * .,' _v·v ?rF;; _ —.7 ; 1;j;_> ¤s2g§g;»» V ~· . 1\. LU e ULIUILU UUu_y tan.u1 uvnug n Lulu ..u...~ .. 68 PUBLIC RECORDS } (d) Application of Exemption We have issued opinions and public records orders applying ORS if`ʻ poeticRscoiu _ and prevent ns many qualified individuals overriding public interestin disclosure.l8° - 69 applying, there was no hom . ,.. ...“ʻL.1£, ·` knrlv rv? can V I ` ' ʻ ʻ Y ` 7 7 T - - .... L_.i gt - As for telephone numbers disclosur by a public oooy or an .- ` individualʼs telephonenumber generally would not be highly offensive so .`; , e information and other records. We believe these decisions illustrate the Il,. `asto come within this exemption.We concludedthat a public body could properapplicationofthe personalprivacy exemption. »_Y not refuseto disclosethe telephonenumbersof htmting and fishing license The names,home addresse and telephonenumbersof licenseesand =T holdersbecaus the decisionnot to disclosewas basedon a blanketpolicy s in a public bodyʼs records are "personal" other persons contained `. of nondisclosure.lS7 e On another occasion we concluded that the trial court 1 Ars rrvʻ1Iʼ1\ 4-- ......... “..mm¤1 Hmnnial infonnation. PULVSUIIUL .|.U..lC\·L1U1GL LL;a.u;n.xwu`.».u, personal medical 1.,v-..-..-,7 _ information. Whether a public body may withhold that information . administratofs blanket denialof accessto juror information forms was not ,iM,..,¤. ;.. mfr mm wherhm disclosure would constitutean invasion of GBDGHGS., H1 DUH., Ll|)U11 W11L·uiui uiuuiuueuv .. -...-.. ----*,7, Q justified underthe personalprivacyexemption."; privacy that an ordinary reasonable person would deem highly 8 `i§iI 5; i A personʼs addressis also information of a personal nature,but it is offensive.' } generally not exempt because reasonabl persons routinely provide their -Qi erallv-, disclosure of a name itself would not constitute 83 Gen LIUUUAGLLLJ uxuvnuuux V vV. -- .r7,, , e {¥iZ_iI ie addressefor a variety of purposes—— are imprinted on checks,placed unreasonabl invasion of privacy}84 Nevertheless,in a letter of advice we g i_ on s outgoing letters and found they in telephone directories, land records and Qilʻ. e concluded that an Oregon State System of Higher Education Presidential.p c_i...,ifivoter registration records.l8° Again, while a blanket policy of Search Committee and its members may withhold the identities of j ʻiil would not comply with the Public Records Law, situations t · individuals who are candidate for president.] The fact that a personis af», Tt yrnayexist in which disclosureof addressewould be highly offensive and —iénondisclosure s presidentis85 candidatefor university personalinformation. In the particular i'e not in the public interest. For example, prior to the adoption of ORS s context, disclosure of that information may constitute an unreasonable 5 _ifir92.502 which exemptspublic employeesʼ addresseswe concluded invasion of privacy, becausethe revelation could seriously threatenthe in(3), that_th addresse of employeesof a particular state agencywere exempt , personʼs current employment relationship and professional standingji. e s ··from disclosure becaus the public body knew of facts from which it Becausedisclosurecould interfere unduly with the work of the committees reasonabl anticipate that disclosur of the information could lead to e or d physicaharmof e the emp1oyees.] l l92.502(2) expressly 9° exempts from disclosure personal lliiiiifoiination in a medic file, if the otherstatutor criteri aremet.We *83whip now rr ·i-= . rrr,- (16111 i---;-i OI -r—,r,,...r,..i IUI cw an an anrnmqmien iii in at a pw particular i`*U'- mm '-“ʻ“· ORS "“ʻ·ʼ l92.502(3l *ʼ“""ʼ“\"/ “""' specifically "*"""""ZI"T“. exempts ""LT ʻ. .. addresses . .· J, telephoiiei. ,,,r ¥r-..-;-.?&@»§1€ sm acar1r:vʼs 3 ICGUBSI ~~~··~·· y uiruiiiiauuii a , bodiesʼ employees numbers, t, an agencyal s corn-., -r - --1---. C Social Securitynumbersand datesof birth of public %@iiitzié-'-.;ii1·il»ik=lld 31 information plainly is y and volunteer containe in the public bodiesʼ personn records ¥ l92.502(l2) exempt numbe and s d employe andretire addres telephon el . nonfinanciasmembershi and employe financial records e— records s, e mw r maintained ~e T . .·»»L em we ...1.;.* the Public Employees Retirement System. In addition, URS zsu.111, wnicn l p e ¤-.- medical files.]91 Personal ._ J86.»;<i;,,1m pcciqc pcccrds Ordcc August 12, 1988, Dean (names of . ccc c,_,, , ,,,,,,_ , _________D__ __? _ _ >,, _, , \_W,___ , _ l¤° inte the Publis Rccolds Lew by ORS 192-502(9),Pfohlblls dlsclosllfliéi °I'P0l`atCd ef nern en eddress en teleplre drive lieens drive applicantsto Oregon State Systemof Higher Education for chancellor ms), Publi Recor Orde Merc 20,200 Ree (nam an identificatio card number in motor vehicle record of the Departme',. es d with es,certain exceptions. d ne, r e, r Transportation, ”E**'`-'i n s s nt , driving identifying informatio for individuals who contacte DMV about a c ds r, h 3, k es d ability) n (App F-51). d ʻ“ Se Publi Reeerd Order April ld, 1995 Maye (name ef~ PubrierneeeiOrderSeptemb9, 1996cereeen/ (ee AppFsmninvee involve in not exempfrom disclosur (see OfdCrʼApril2ʼ (SGQA F_24) Cll1plU_yUG¤ ulvuivvu nu Whitehea vv ¤n¤.~»»»·—.· cas ~·.~nvʻ ' c·· · ··-· ~· · Yl99LAdams/ ¤· .L:.,.x1..,,,. A-.-.f*1f\\ WWT l . _ Jordan 308 Or at447 (Linde, J., dissenting (seeApp L»·lU)· e s s , , s s ae , er , Bums e ss). F— e d d e . rt- M ,.. ... e) , .. M- m...-..;.s1ic%é{. eisilselfiesrsztt;“l? p smarts mmm Mew 21 \Nil1ian1SOn 1990. Heilman/Boles (seePP ADD P22), ) 10§2S in W T lamman. - ʻ FUUUU 1\¤¤Ull-ls Ul¤¤l» 1V1¤. Jl: *""= **""f““""“""“ ʻ"§ YT" " I of Advice dated October I3, 32). *85Letter 1.1\.al.LvA U1. 1 1.uv suv u~·•·v··» ~ rm>-624xi (see Aon E-6). \k}.l ʼ\JI4ʼIʼU] `uvv ; nrr A lyoo, 2 Lu vv .L . ,L1\11LLl1AL4LA, x.».;.....- -, °·pius1;c ,. - Fei $$2- ;. 519] ilwlin .1Ul1,U i . :KlP1 nnaxrrlc '1\UUU1L.l§ (.\i·rlP1ʻl \JlL.lCl.. wavy; , Anlill 11|JLu A ·-j"·" Y a 'l .1., 1101, n l'l8YI`lSOI'l nnuninvvii (SEG ADD \..-~ A `i2{`.*ʻl», y,g;·.»$;; . I 1 .y ( _ `_ _____ __ .,1 . ! Q PUBLIC RECORDS · fiif constitute an umeasonabl 70 PUBLrrsconp "information of a personalnature," public disclosureIC of whichsordinarily ll 2fe , Al l-.>{ l* H iT Er r. Ewi ln; E}"ʻ {tx` 5, All g -J}! `ʻ`E iii~.. ʼ} ·§gl", ? { ,g,ll_ j}`·i _ .r;..ʻ,lly = fil'} ʻ l:_ʻ ;`ji, A {dll Zfir kill ]F;¤",l1,l its dll §,l , As for invasion of privacy, the report [of investigation of a city police department]deals primarily, if not exclusively, with the conductof public servants* * * in the performanceof their public duties.As the line of casesoriginating with New York Times C0. v. Sullivan, 376 US 254 * * * (1964) makes clear, any privacy rights that public officials have as to the performance of their public duties must generally be subordinated to the right of the citizens to monitor what electedand appointedofficials are doing on the job. Even thmmh information ¤.·Vnrvv...,...O concernin H.how a 1,-.--,, public officer or _ Luuuéu xunuxrniuerunr .. -r. carries out his or her duties g would not be confidential under the _ .LkVDu pill tllzii lyiw 1l it "ll rtl; ·* i i12 sl ;» gig ”: . ¤ _i at n Elg . . .:1;' °.e, d disclosureof a job-related e performance95 .. We also ordered evaluationof l_ Athe managerof a local office of the Employment Department.Again, Ww e R.: s·.gllcompare the competing public interests and concluded that the public Q.e e d interest in knowing how a branchmanageris performing his management E— .s" functions outweighed the public interest in candid evaluations. We illexempted from disclosurethoseitems that did not describethe managerʼs perfonnance,but relatedto his personalaspirationalgoals.]9° = cl`{`ʻ,YZʻ·We appliedthe sameanalysis to public employeesalary information. eto an employeeʼs gross pay, we concluded that the employee l , *Y“ respect __i_;?V£3wrl_Wr_ fWitli `”" *""ʼl"""ʻ° "" °"* "··r··.¤ r Y · ·.· i · V . ? -; _,- notrhave a reasonabl expectationthat such information would not be _ fisiibjectito public did e scrutiny becauseof the publicʼs interest in knowing the e r_/r Tʼ} a public employee is compensate for his or her services. Earnountʻr»tl d iflovfever, the amountof voluntary payroll deductionsfrom an employeeʼs ·Y.Tir:;r-.-.:L·.4;;1».....,-..,e..~»·r+ ·F•·¤1- rli¤r•ln·¤11rA unrlaf tlʻ1lS BX€l'Iʼl`DIlOI1. The public iat exempt irorn uiscrostne nnner nns -,....., ---- I----vi ORSl92.501 personn disciplinexemptiodiscuss abov el ordereconceming n - the-release edof -Childrelyg e.· e .1 In(12) a public records . ..-..:-................ 1*\¤1ʻ1'!'\1ʼ1'\ʼ\Q1"If!R U1V1S101'l S11pC1V1s0Is perruririmruc Mml·.m+€m·i¤ SVR lll2T'I NTIS- evaruanone, um WC we Antpnmined (-LCLUIIILIJIGU neternrnn-.. . .r1- ye.;-. .rr`i:n.·:=sril:tr.-··nʻ;-- ·-r`-r 1---.- l€E1I1I'I18IC 1-...:4.:...-4·A that HBVBV 8 LUG-I»_ *lih'B;fZdE§@£iZ%iiiʻ#i? -!~\=lV·e:.€§&§Feiʼ.éilCl.$»'ii#$-;·ZLl=»l ʻ-UVM 110" “ *"[5*"“·“"""' Ti'? ""` V V- i" io-: .. ¥\\JVD {*.FIiCl0`E:Sʻ¢l"IOlf information was of a "personal nature" and that disclosure s ,1 an -- _ lME ; it;}:Q;. ʻi"ʻii*ʻ lit ` Jl pil ¤ʻrr_ »; privacy exemption, if that information forms the basis for action againstthe employee,it may be exempt from disclosureunder 1-\· ---.- --_.;----> T\i·.i¤i · · nn ` ¤un¤1ru1¤n1·¤ʼ . r. lʻ l 71 invasion of privacy because of the highly _sensitive nature e of the material. However,,ORS l92.502(2) also requires constitutesan unreasonabl invasion of privacy. In the particular instance, { an evaluationof the public interestin disclosure.We first noted that social thepublic interest e did not require disclosure. service supervisors are responsible for administering, coordinating and Information concemin the mannerin which any public officer or providing a variety of social servicesto children and their families and the employeecarriesgout the duties of the office or employmentgenerally will position involves a greatdeal of responsibility regarding every aspectof a not comewithin this exemption. For example,the Court of Appealshas childʼs life. Thus, the public has a substantialinterest in knowing how held that records containing allegations of misuse and theft of public Q 192 these individuals as a class are performing their public duties. We also property by public employees,a matter of significant public interest,were R} considered the public employeeʼs role in the agencyʼs hierarchy, not exempt from disclosure becaus the information was not personal in Qi ,·I concludingthat there may be greaterpublic interestin the disclosure of the nature and disclosure would e not constitute an unreasonable invasion of fj, ]; [E ʻ_ ,_ evaluation of a top manager of an agency than in the disclosure of the privacy} Q .Vrevaluationof a line worker. Although the public also has an interest in a In 0a UCLDU casethat nrimarilv w¤“.uy.,...~.-.. addresse --..the criminal investigatory ,rʻR ·V_candid evaluation process and that interest would be furthered by 93 111. Lhxu-L rnnnxnunnnj - ....nn-. W _ material _ = :P”YE xi ` ·i.»e·ʻ d . nondisclosur we conclude that the overallbalanc favoreddisclosure.] exemption,l°4the Court of Appeals stated; . §;.i·" { Z { . woulda i r tsnsnends-inet— Y . .-- ʻʻ-A.̀'·· · r>eyelieel<ʻ. · e ei , 1 I txt; m 41 Op Atty Gen 437 (1981) (seeApp E-3). .A ʻʻe i?-· " ""n" ` ` ʼ ` " ʼ _... 19 Oregonian Publishing v. Portland School Dist. No. JJ, 144 Or . . 1 nnox ...dʼ*,1 ». - - . -A . .-,.-... -.,. . ,, 1 . V one ·7= .= ·»*—l· ¤ 188, 3925 P2d 591 (1996), modyfied 152 Or App 135, 952 P2d 66 (1998), . grounds. . .-. A ren (1999) /1mm r.,-. my nlm Other. OI- ...... 393, ce-. 987 mr Pzd 4gjU (553 Am n ;,—]wxI); SCC ʻ•l» .i.. Portland, 163 Or App at 556-57 (disclosureof records involving off-duty {197 .. . . me.c..1.i;.»()lllLZ1U.l nr=a»; urrrvrur . ¤1*e of his public employment) (seeApp C-19). +ʻL..·e+ Lnne-¤ Tl'12T DBZTS LLLCLI, UUCI ID in--n-. Hirnnflxr (IITCUIJV \.l |L\.:\:l,A] JCIIJUIL, ,.,.., -- ----n-i- nn U1] n!\¤¤1hlP UU§§lUl¤ vu yvuununu Arr · ur ··· "ʻ rxpp "I'1"""7·· uc --.....-...-.;c- (ʻr\T'Y11'\Tʻ(\1ʼT11§& UU1u|J1U11r1o\.» vunnxr-v,----- i r, r I OT 1')lll`lIlC ur -.,- I-puuriv ------ imemiiv in contei in ʻ·"”·"' "?§% "ʼ" mr €@n·n 5 ni 1ll|.Urʻd11|·Y nn. 'Do".1 5 * w..._.... r.; · -.. 2 -e . 195 ?D“1·.ʻl.¤. J Qjj;ʼr§.c:- """`“" 'D¤¤»“·»-le * reaeer l¤».£4%§ 72 tooo nwen/ ...1* GlT1DlOV€€ "*“I" (seeApp F-27). 1...,.c.s+1+ i“+`m·mminn r Fm- '{'7 retirees 11' 3 l`OI`lTlZlI 1 theinformation to individual retirees) (seeApp F— "ʻ*" “ʻ*"**““““ʼ 7 ._ 50). £=ʻ·"""ʼ "`?z§Fqr;I.:i s>, ee 7::97i.. 1 rg . g*%;:g.;· . ee —" ʼZ·$;?·kʼ!·.[Fʻ rn 7 ·F%..·—.·.7:~s_{iiz_$·¢· —·. ʻ . 7. ·. . . — — ~ es} ,.ʼʻ <e2;e··. . . ·»"$m$ja,¤ Tulv in 1\UUW1.U.5 lrnnurihc l1hW “2 l·"ʻ“ʼ**"' 1'Tl-ll')llC 11 MUVV 1-..-... 1 yumlc Records,Uruer, Jury Lo, uva, uwenn . .,.,, - - . ,. Fraser ras-. (..--(see Order. App ʻ PubliciRecords L www-· sv-vl¤¤ vluvle Mav ¤»— 25. ·--·¤ 1994, ·· ~ -, Mattson/Laine 7 , _ _ 13-31) ——»-7 Public Records Order,_1March 27, 1992, Leighty/Ralston (See. App 1*-26). Public -Records Order, November 15, 7— ʻ “"""" """`“““" """" "` 77rrrr ' 2002, . Y Jones/Voykto (orderingt . ii?-:§%§siEit?liie*»-ʼ1e§¤»-..- APDDDQ in V-—<€ §Z`5l·· no ne; 7 ¤.;Se.>me.e f`\i»·A¤•· i»4·¤e·¤ IHICICSL "“"" " ¤4·- ...-...— . . » that dO€$ UO 72 it PUBLnsconp ....—-iii IC s record information, exempt under ORS l92.502(8), (9); such as student PUBLIC RECORDS _ In responseto a public records petition requestingdocumentatio of n leave without _, the date, hours and type of leave (i.e., sick leave, vacation, »; ;, pay, etc.) for correctional facility security staff, we noted that disclosureof ʻ? _. r the requestedleave information would not constitute an "unreasonable" ig7 invasion ofthe individualʼs privacy and, therefore,the information would Y ; not be exempt from disclosure under ORS 192.502(2). Generally, an Yie{ .§ ;ʻ·.`. individualʼs coworkers are well aware of the general reason that an l.l . h ' s •l * 1Q . employee is off from work and the length of time that he or she is gone. This is not the type of information that an ordinary reasonabl person ,}.1 Q _» would deemhighly offensive to disclosem e personal medical information, exempt under ORS l92.502(2); personal financial informationgz the addressor telephonenumberof an employee, m exempt under ORS 192.502(3); information submitted in confidence, exempt under ORS 192.502(4); and other personal information. In respondingto a requestfor such records, a public body sometimes must review documents line by line in order to segregat the exempt from --c.,-..m..·. rrrrurrrirnerurr anrmmerim mmeuant to ORS 192.505. See `”""""""'" discussion below 1n!\f'lRYETl'lTll. llllUllllk1l.lUll L}L11bU¤lU· LU \J*"-ʼ *"ʻ"""" """' T [ruirczxmiiyr t,.,.-.,-.-.----,e I1We and Nonexempt Material. concerning Segregatio of Exempt their n encourag public bodies that receive such a request to contact assigne counselfor advice. e mx Pnmip Social Security Numbers, d `J} 1 uIJU.\.» Ftmnlovee 1;unl.uv_y vv Addresses. lrnuun wavy-, -.-,---... - - . Birth Dates and Telephone Numbers We applied the personal privacy exemption to a petition seeking information in a state universityʼs cellular telephonebill about a phone used by a university athletic coach. The bill contained information about_`Fi- `' li;l ʻ . .. work— and personal calls. After conducting a line—by— analysis i1·~=..;.; ORS 192.502(3)exempts: -1 0-.. .... 241. related of the records, we denied the petition with regard line to information for Public body employeeor volunteer addressesSocial Security individual phone calls that would reveal the coachʼs whereaboutsduring; , numbers contained in 1 numbers, dates of birth and telephone .. ` LCM r.. . · nonwork hours, regardless of whether a particular call was or was not?V. 7ésiF·D is 1 *173 l `. ` persormel records maintained by the public body that is the work— Because the whereabout of an employee on vacation or employeror the recipient of volunteerservices.This exemption: V ei?.-i T'» personal weekends or other nonwork times related. leave days, holidays, s . i .··-.ʻ . i (a) Does not apply to the addresses dates of birth and "personal," we concluded that an ordinary reasonable person would I telephone numbers of employees,or volunteers who are elected disclosure highly offensive. Moreover, disclosure would reveal nothing, officials, exceptthat a judge or district attorneysubjectto election about the individualʼs performance as a public ernployee} We also seekto exempt the judgeʼs or district attorneyʼs addressor deniedthe petition as it relatedto additional information 99 aboutpersonal, tj telephone number, or both, under the terms of ORS 192.445; opposedto work— calls, to the extentthat disclosurewould reveal A the time and duration of the call, the phone number of the other ..-.3 , -_ related, (b) Does not apply to employeesor volunteers to the extent I . .* mtr:. tv _,j..Q;.ʼthe party seeking disclosure shows by clear and convincing the call, the destinationlocation of the call, or whetherit was a conferencei»i .. .·”r:L;rt=; ' 7 ·. ..r;.e_-;ir»j` · _·.» call or forwardedto anothernumber. The information was “personalff } -,'`·evidencethat the public interestrequires disclosure in a particular arfr r5 wi r- ;,tliat r — r-.a,,·· f=l sg-ern ...*.ʻ _-l would reveal nothing meaningful about performanceof public »` duties, `finstanc .~=xi -.,~n:n ..r.. ·J .'r. 2-_ ,4 ~..e{ ~ tes — ·-=ʻ: -* Eitzir el. disclosurewould be an unreasonablinvasion of privacy. _}cr··1!·; at 1ʻe; ...(c) Does not apply to a substituteteacheras defined in ORS r ·¤·=7·..— ·e.ʻs·= e arise concerninga public bodyʼs duty to disclosel .· _·,=»ʼl·?'·i1 .s t- -*5Questionsfrequently = -.ʻʻ2 i..,.:_3_42when requestedby a professionaleducationassociationof if . Q* . *.E;gl€iule ¤*··~§gi.< , information in applications for employmentor licensing.2°°Such which the substitute teacher may be a member; and ;¤8ll5 *· . > .- f ʻ_` .5;;.5 EM.- —· mav include several different types of potentially exempt information; 1 -.¢.:x rw--....9. 1'RHRXIE ...:.1;.....:. mel-Ji.pmnlnxzpr nf GUY anv rliltv 1111Cl “""J “"""""' """"" """""'“" "JF" "" 1""""'"`""'·' '``` ""fi , IIAPQ 1'\(\T 2n TIIIDIIU UIIIUIUVUI. U1. \-U·U·.Y ʻ·***ʻ·““ €1' €ll;,r;·&v I ..ʻT-w`:.l:rlʻ\ ni? _ _T ` V _ . :=—y,.;!<·t'· ie _~ - .·»~ —` .·"ʼ€§T·!J,Z&+ ____;_ > . . . denied . as 4-'·· ʻ·; 19 See Pubhc RecordsOrder, May 5, 1994, Wright (petition i .· 8 becauseagencyagreedto releaserequestedrecords) (seeApp F -30). 7 r7 i?? - Recor OrdeAugu 31,200 Canza (se AppF— r —' Adi 4. ·> *""Vʼ 2°° Publicds Recordsr,Order.st March 1988. _Publ1c 5, Board no of eNaturopathic 58). '=_*`7*See - "I""""` (seeApp F-1 1). 7 W" · rr;-e V. ” ..r-W WQL1. UUGS =..·. ʼ ) ..—j·ORS. if g `` —-» 14::-. i1':.¢:*.se·<·nm>§-. e . ·.r:;; a yuuuv Snell (personal Public Records Order, January 2, 1985, ] 7 submitted with application for racing license) (see App F-7). .· .!—1ʼ rx 1 1* vs Lu.) D Ll |J.L11l LLULJ e;;§,,rf.,§E§q,,c ʼ ·-. ·.ʻJ.ʻ`. .. ~.243.65O - ·?ʼ.·ʻ_.... _ ; __.. · ʻ ., ʼ7 -20— . ·· -. 11.uL rwnuvv to 243.782. _ —. 7 .. ~ 1 f\ 1 - - VV ALl L Q. p plvl utnvnx -~·*· "flrrrrr 'I'----..-,. Av; .. A nv; *1 i 1 HOC financial ` 74 _ is rustic rscorvs • The ps public body must show that it has obliged itself in goodfaith not PUBLIC RECORDS This provision exemptsfrom disclosurethe addressesSocial Security to disclosethe information. numbers, birth dates and telephone numbers of , public employeesand • Disclosure of the information must causeharm to the public interest. volunteers, except for (1) the addresses dates of birth and telephone numbers of elected officials,, (2) situations where the requester The first condition is whether the information- was submitted in -..t:.t.....·. totem oiihlio bodiesreceive information that reasonablycould demonstrate by clear and convincing evidence that the public interest il It ``'-_ COIIIIGGILUG. lvrmiy yuurro uuuwe “.·~.~.. Y ..--.,---...----W, _ s s requires disclosure in a particular instance, and (3) substitute teachers t be consideredconfidential,without any specific requestfor confidentiality. when the requestis madeby a professionaleducationassociationof which ʻE j Yi Perhap the circumstances are such that an implied request for the substituteteacher may be a member. The purpose of the substitute .· — confidentiality can be asserted Nevertheless,it is very difficult to justify s teacherprovision is to enablethe Oregon SubstituteTeacherAssociation .l "i nondisclosureunder the . tenns of ORS l92.502(4) in such a case. The to obtainthe information neededto notify potential participantsabout its _.`l e i epublicbody mustbe ableto presentevidenc that therewas a conditionor annual conference. The exemption is not intended to exempt public. eunderstanding at the time the information was provided that the s'i e employershom complying with their duty to provide information under . ii, infonnation would be held in contidence.2°2 Thus, public bodies should statecollective bargaininglaws. . .i _ if ,i_V.-specifically discuss with the person submitting the information whether it We do not interpret the exception in ORS 192.502(3)(a) to be `{ exclusiveto judges or district attorneyssubjectto election.We believe that any elected official may seek to exempt his or her address or telephonei- ; number from disclosure under ORS 192.445 (personal safetyv exemption). uvui uruvnuunuv errne-yn V,.--, -, .... . .., \.'l ' 1lu111Uv1 l (4) Confidential ' ) Submissions ORS 192.502(4)exempts: - -1-. 1-- ..-.,1 ...-..-·L`ZJ.....-en ; '.Qiisbeing submittedin confidenc and, if so, documentthat in the tile. A { if jpublic body shoulde inquire about the pers0nʼs intention as to — ycontidentiaiit before receiving substantiv information from the person sg;.l yOtherwise,it may be difficult forethe public body to establishwhether . the Qinfonnatio Wassubmittedin c0n“jdence. This exemptionclearly does 7.- nnot apply if the public body 2°3 requeststhat information be submitted in ._ Q confiden merel to avoi embarrassmto itself, h.-s+ Information submitted to a public body rn confidence and not ce y accesdto theent _ v t We denied responseof a workersʼcompensatio survey otherwise required by law to be submitted, where such questionnair becaus we concluded that the record fell within the »ʻ·` s s n information should reasonably be considered confidential, the .,-g exemption for contidential infonnatien. We inferred n-em the facts (i.e., e, e s _· public body has obliged itself in good faith not to disclose the ise `_i t,jfbelʻlʻassL1rance of confidentiality,useof closedenvelope and the fact that l» information, and when the public interest would suffer by the iafdepaltmentkept the information segregate s and confidential)that the disclosur . 7if_ was submittedin con;tidence. By contrast we granted a *ʻ“""ʼ*mbwSlealihaDoTrrnnoaint t pr .s V or st B 2 O 2 s P 1 ( ( A “°ʼ¤lboitoasSllte,epfanclofller 1 e. The Pugpos Qfthis cxelliptionds to éncoumgc· Volumary Subniissigjgofi rn Avon ` `lif? TEICEVPUVIL ll1U11Llh|.1U11 LU r»v¤;v ULLULLU Uvuxvc, vvaur ev»¤».»A....... LULVVGLLD 1lLl.\.IJ.LJ..lUl·\»1\.l1.J. vv wv`».·.., .....--uuuav Var if iiʼ c ʻ ii? jigxi-iilrt-QQ`:1" -ʻ ... . - . . 4 1 -.i , L1, _ :.,.Lʻ....--..4.Z..... .... um -.·..·.Aitik»1~3,i;i$§r ʻtf.iiʼ.1Tʻ · The informant must have ¤»»vAn..»··.. submitted information on me 1 the .I.11\.¢ L.LLLU|.1uuuL uxuun nuvv ......-.......... -.,-,n . ' "l"l·1¤ inf-`nrmntinn LHC lllluuuuuuu itaelf 1L¤G1r kept confidential. rrmsf ruum. . O3 11,,-1-...e1 $110]. i 110A ., 1 HH OT F l'l21lL1l'€ that l`€2lSOI13.blY up ur et rretpetre www , """““""" . P 1 oo ʻ V V, j. -·: rst?. eee, . r;¤ee·· ·· ·· ,.1.-1.-.1 1.-.+1..,, t~A. -, 1 ··ʻ PubhcRecords Order, Decemberll, 1992, Smith (seeApp F-27). TechnologyCorp. v. OR168 Or App 293, 7 P3d 564 (2000) - Hood [- ,1m _ __ , . F 1M OSHA, that it would be kept confidential. · The informant must not have been required by law information. · ~~i~·~·*~·· ~ ··~-— eby the agency. Although the representativ of the agency —— — e-ee participantsin the inquiry that their response would be kept e s the representati conclud that they would hav . ·Z''··E` -;_i ve ed e · _ _tithe There are no less than five conditions that must be met for _ ¢——the exemptionto apply: theinformationwill be kept confidential. ' d· 2°4 of an investigation , for the releaseof all records conducted by· me ` . . . · ·20K§ 11 1· A 1 A 1, """~Pr1hlic Records Order. L LILUJU L\kJbU1Li¤ \JLL\UL, 1 · ~·~ =1;a, . e.eaa7r7s221sp ~.ʼ ~ ¤1p1:; ¢¤: . ·~:,i»»p3> ¤e=';·... ·e_J — ·f were 1—1-._r-..1.... 1n 1oQs2 ua1·1¤p11{¤¤e Arm F-l3l. Seotember lz, 1366, rrauseu rece App 1 V luvy ..e A. »1 L' . ? 1. 1 7F 1 ¥ E1 76 LICRECOR participatedevenwithout such an assuranceFor that reason,we could not DS lt . E 1. I' ll. 1111 r§_PUB. . 11. 1j 1 .. the likelihood that disclosure would discourage other informants from =·3 Y providing information in confidencein the future. determinethat the informationhad.beensubmittedin confidence. _ _. Information submitted by manufacturersof video terminal equrpment 2°5is "n0t otherwise » Z 1. The second condition is whether the informant in confidence to the Oregon StateLottery and consisting of bank account requiredby law" to provide the information. lf the informant is required to {_, numbers,tax returns and other personal information is of the type that submit the information pursuant to a governmentalenactmen such as a 1ʻj ·. statute or rule, this exemption will not apply. However, an informant _ {fz would reasonably be considered confidential. The Oregon Court of t whoselegal obligation to submit information arises solely underthe terms _ A Appealsfound that the public interest would suffer by disclosure of such of a contract with a publicbody is not "required by law" to submit the R information, "because it could discourage video lottery terminal distributorsfrom applying for contracts* * * therebyreducing competition infonnation, but by the terms of the contract, unless the informant is l q? for video lottery terminals." Sincethe lottery obligateditself in good faith requiredby law to sign a contractwith thoseterms.2° .21,, not to disclose the information, the records were exempt from disclosure ° i, Thethird condition is whetherthe information itself shouldreasonably,·il_ji ʼ »undeons l92.5O2(4). be considered confidential. This condition would generally be met if §._ i~1 2°8caseinterpreting the ORS l92;502(4) exemption,the Court 1r* ln another `i disclosure of the information is restricted by statute or contract or is , q-er Appeals concluded that disclosing employment reference forms exempt from disclosure under other exemptions of the Public Recordsee` ; reigarding a candidatefor a teachingposition in a school district would not Law. If the information is publicly available, obtainableor observable,-it.,} 'i`i . jʻ'· g`1ig§, Qharm the public interest in maintaining the confidentiality of employment cannot reasonably be considered confidential. _1s Jprovided that source— irrfomration was deleted from e The fourth condition is whether the public body obliged itself in Zthe documents A school district refused to disclose employment references, identifying oʻ`i faith not to disclose the information. This is the other side of the `Qreferenc to the unsuccessful candidate on the basis that the public . ʻIes condition. The public body need not have given a written commitment,sei éinteres required it to maintain the confidentiality of employment long as there was a clear statementor understandingthat the public body Y _;·q references, and that disclosing the references would "chill" or deter t would not disclose the information. A statemen that the public ',', ʻʻ _` sourcesfrom submitting candidemploymentevaluationsin the future. The 2°7 t A_ court. found that disclosure of the reference forms after deleting will not disclosethe infomration unlessrequired by law is sufficient. L? The final condition is whether disclosure of the information would ʻ] information that revealed or tended to reveal the sourceʼs identity would - 1 l, 1 ll ' *` . r 1* 1 1 1 ,· * I 1 K Z 1 1 1. K 1 1 ʻ ' I ·— I ` 1 2 1 1 E ` I1 JW {' E 2 ʼL * F 1` 2 -11 E 1-;. E LI :i»_ ` 1 "r. 1. 'A lll? ·11 lr-1r ith1lM -:1 rt 3 1,1: 1it1: jr1111 1 {-1 1r* . ,1 , 1[ 1.:* 511 1·1 1* 1fil 1 ~ ,v1 111 wi ·` ll ”·'1 ~ : 1~ʻ `31 1*, ily T 1 fill %, 11 1_ 11 ~ `1.l·l ~i 2,11 [11 11 1ʻ iii. 11. ~1 1`1 `it ,·i J ʻ -_ 1*ʻ 1~ . Q 1` gl. i* Eiʻ I|.ʻ `, 11 . 1 L ʻ1 1 · tsl 1 1 iii; =f'$.. =~ʼ Q . • 1.. -1 | D . ,1F,,',1_, 4.-,..--j.--`l -.....:.1 -... Av. 4- ji-gseryeth public interestbecauseit "would reducethe potential for basing e fihirirfg_,decisi on secretunrebuttabl allegation or irmuendo."2 harm the public interest.Even if all the other conditions are met, if the public interest would not suffer by disclosure, the exemption does apply. This condition requires considerationnot only of the impact of ons , e of the reference s °9 at issue did not i-i t;§·-.,1¢,»- the substanc response jpéidentif the sources, the court was not faced Because e s with a situation where _1.. -1 of the sourcemformatron was a practrcal y _;ʻ rdentrfymg that Situation when tm RPPHC for _.-We considered '" KECOTDR \rx1.A..)T'(`lET. xrm1.1~11-1.s l\I(`lVBTT1l')ST' IJ. I.I, 10292 1706. REU l§UG AUU 1"1.JI.-sJ5G;vuw\{ʻ·M.£§fl1?Er`?l§Z!tI.'ttZT'·ʻ.`W1£LLU.LUVll1G.|.1.L W1L.|..l ¤1rʻJ.Gl..I.UY Lvbluvmuvu u1 uuvn.5ru1.4u» avr`, 1;..1.1.1:---..,1. 1* use {eee F-1<\ ..Q'm-.nl¤n-1:e~r. eA1.w1t1· ¤ state acsmcv remiested a background reportRRY CO1'1ʼta11111' II·'I1hI1(! UUIIU .l\.GL»U1Ub \.I1\.1U1., J.ʻ<\JV\.¢L1LUv.\ .1/UU, Axuv \¤vv 4Arm xl.:14 rr nu]--¤v·;.$i»-rrr r%`,,,_A1_,eVJrL**,LL, ,, u,U_ C1 M, bL¤.LG U,,,,,, ,,,,¤,,,._,,,J -,1--1 .. 1 report, we 1· 7 e1l··.·em1·1l1-1v1»m=r11t 1 1,Q, After reviewing the Jense 24 Or App at 11, 18 (distinguishi promis not to disclos referenc rrrfersubmissio of irrfomtatio in confidence (see App C-4). ʻ A ;·Z . t·ʻ n, ng e e e merrerr m-4.. Y..u...... n 2°°PublinRecor Order ) Marc 3, 1997Poo—saʼ-key/ (se _f; · 1'JC (W1Ann 1')A 1QA..'1< F-37) i V i _ “Y“1Technolog v. Oregon6'tat Lottery, loo ur App 124, re-1— . _ -~ ʻ _ · . . . ds Records , grdey, h April 5,, 2002,Willeford 20 c See Public M€Hd0Wbf00k/Mytone P2d L88 (1995) (see App C-14), see _ tremier y e also Publ1c.Records Order, March ¤.», 4, — . . .1 OSC · zoarrerrecuru zruuressrrr .1.--. - -.... ._ _ . .. - Om ,1-1-. 7s1·1·7.rm—m1¤ aaameeipe rrrrarrorar Hmneial emma stems or of pmtre. names .....rN......r responding to Request 3 Rli 7 °aPil°“mg letter to Pubhcb°dY Fm Semems PurpS . si-; rr --1,.1c·. -1.1,..1..,......1e. Am r:-<or .. g OI S11I'D1\1$[316 DYUPUHYI WCC 1 APP e, P1. F .1i ..--1,1 .... - Z- -..1:1.:-;-.-r rl --.-. .... r ---A..,1 4:...., ,11:-,.i,........x {me A1-mʼF;z15R§z? ?E§€§§—?§.§fék¤!s m sale Y "JL}. .209 n1 U1" A . . rr-, I-rr1r¤.1e I. . - rr .-- rw 1 Ax Confidential,) was ll'lSl1tl1ClCl1l tO exempt record Ill Ol'1'l I` . -iʼ °m9Y m disclosure) KSG Lʼ»QUdllllcatlons ···- (frm;. l'%O Or Ama1......1..1}$$6. ··*-· 566 (see ADD (Q-14). ʻ¤--t re 2:=;,g.;.r ··· · ʻIʼ1" "at ʼ S***7 disclosuontheparticulainfonnanprovidintheinformatiobut re r t g n D11l·J{r~ D¤nnrH¤ r'LlDlC IKCUDIUS (xrrinr \J1uC1. T\`[nv¤hnl·10r 1ʻlUVC1l1UC1 $ 0. 2 _— ~` F1 1 >1.11ii ”l:; 1: 1 ~_5 3 . - ofifiél. .!.UU·r. AY\!iPY'Q{\1'1 rurumaurr {QRR npp Ahh 1¤¤¤ r· 'JU}. G ip -- Ke-, . r Tifggg, -.. ʻ ptr ...;+1*1é kl! ;¤?i=.:ar~, 1 ʼ $·?$i*se.<:1 ¢“ `r · 'itlfgjyi. éʻ£··a *ʼ. · -`YZ/7 ·1; 3 V—. c r` i - = . gi 7 U-ye L.)7 ·~» \J1 V- l'\|J|J A CLL JJU, JUU \¤\¢\» \"""1'l '--_ W 1 Ly}! \J T '"""`@7' } A · 78 PUBLIC RECORDS PUBLIC RECORDS 79 determined is the only information for which nondisclosure can be concludedthat the response of the applicantʼs former private employers , _.`I justified. We denied a petition for the release of "actual quotations made were exempt from sdisclosure becaus the identities of the sourcescould _ E.ʻ·, f``.1 by * * * employees when interviewed" for a study conducted by the not be adequatelyprotected by e deleting the name or other identifying V· _ Department of Insurance and Finance. Although only the names of anrmmatinn. Thusthe interest in obtaining candid and complete ,ʻ', 1uLU1.1u¤1uuu. s umu, 1....11. public r...v.-..---- i_ 3 1, ,iSS employee were submitted in confidence, revelation of their recorded employment referencesrequired the public body to keep its promise of even in an unattributedfonn, unreasonablywould have risked -, _j;jQ Q comments, s confidentiality to the sources.2l Q disclosure of the participantsʼ identities given the familiarity of the f .i-. _°i l uwvhwmi V. * * In the case of° an advisory cornrnittee charged with making ·.· s employees with each otherzm . rvf-`l1»1¤111·¤hrʻP Qflfi l:l112TlC€ 'FOT TCfOl"ITI 1-2:...... L,. 4.1... T\A.».,1·+v1»1¤1»1+ recommendation to the Department or insuranceand r-rrrarreelor rororul _. For similar reasons, we denied a petition for the release of ofthe Oregon Workersʼ CompensationLaw, we determinedthat the public _ʻ F- — s f· `. ʻ employment references provided by private employers to a public interest would suffer by the disclosure of the committeeʼs minutes and lei· 215 Altl-1:111:1-I1 Hap f`r1rnm¤r ` ʻr li i ' V J' 7 -.-.---1j,.....L .L`A.. -.1. ...1,.....»..w.+ ii _ rggmployer regarding all appllitailt I01ʼ emp10ym€1'1I."” Altuottgrl ure rurrrrer working documents.The final report of the committee had been made ;Q Z — .;e1nploye did not object to disclosure of their names, they had requested public. The committee was composedof representative of employers and_ ii ; confidentiality for the particular statements they made. We determined that rs workers who had been assured confidentiality by the department. Because 1 s QQ the contents of their statements were exempt from disclosure because the public interest in encouraging parties with competing interests to work T QijʻQ;i1 _i1·; revealing the substance of the statements would necessarily reveal who togethertowards reaching compromise on these important public issues, _,Vifliad madethe particular statementsThe former employers had referred to outweighed any public interest in disclosure of the working documents, we} . ·. . specific events and decisions in evaluating the applicantʼs work and concludedthat the exemptionappliedfn - . 1thereforedeleting only the employersʼ nameswould not permit disclosure If confidentiality has been requeste and assuredand the information zi 1while still preservin the confidentialityrequesteby the citizens. is of a nature that generally should d be kept confidential,the good faith or g d violation, in a report madeto a 1 ; I, . elfthe information received is of a law bad faith of the person in submitting the information is relevant ztoli -: law enforcemenofficer or to a legislative committeeor staff member,the determining the public interest in disclosure of the personʼs identitygflfof the informant may be exempt from disclosure under ORS t Disclosure of the identity of a personacting in good faith is contrary to the l;92L¤502 dud ORS 40.275, Rule 510 of the Oregon Evidence Code, public interest,but the public interestwill require disclosurewhen a person1 to the government privilege not to disclose the identity of an (9), provides false information for vindictive reasonsm * `~.11·11·n1m·1¤1· nvnh IʻiL.-)UL\“I·I ¤-s1rrs:ss;».4.-;-.;---.. --.-`.- 1T :.c Tha 1.1..- 1"R(11l11'E1"|'IE11TR ..,.,...;..,,1-..¤...4.. DT me (IKM ADC 100 <{Y>/A\ LU1 Fm· 11.l.J.U1.J.1.1cu.rur.1 i11f`m·n·1atinn s If a communicatio submitte in fʻV°“ 1* um *¤~1¤¤¤¤¤¤ . . .and. accepte .. 1. confidenc . ---ru--n-1 1rea-.;-1-1resub confidenc arenot met. vi U-»- -»~--~1-J ~· ·· — — som infonnatio thatreasonab should be consider , n d e 1 contrdent1al.an<r;e{; ¤=¤ — —-mrtte_drn ii e Corrections and ParoleJBoard Records (5) the publi interes would suffer by disclosur and the e n ly d ed 1r,gr@rsr;_,rr_yii —~_· l92.502(5) exempts: contain information for which e,there is no reasonabl c t . confidentiality, then that other information is not s e exempt and _.?.or record of the Departmen of Corrections separate and disclosed. ORS 192.505 Sometime the name of_iricluding the StateBoard of Parole and Post— Supervision, - rilnf`o1ʻr*r1atio s t , 1..:-..... ;..r.1r.11·. asm 11-11 the identitv -.... - T .1 sp..· ʻ>*-r=$Qʻ;,;ʻiʻ:;E d s i11Fe1~ma — ico-the extent that disclosure would interfere with the rehabilitation 1IʼlIO1`1'1'l3I1I, ELIIG 1I1IUHI1U.l. uurrr . wurorr ur-..» rrrrurrrrurrt s -1...;..., Prison Z}: · ·ti- * ʻ _n M....r 1 +1m1 1el1 ntʼs .-ʼ 1U11 1 fof<_a_§1pin custodyof the departmentor substantiallyprejudice ..I -, `ʻ-orprevent the carrying out of the functions of the departmentif ,·ʻ te: =1ʼ¢t1s ` it 2- erson --.-- fm Public RecordsOrder, January 15, 1997, Burr/Freshour (seeApp F—37) %¤ 2“ Public RecordsOrder. Julv -,1. ----,.-...1991,Juul (see App F-24). ruuuvrrxvvv-uu V----,.....-J \. rr I i1. r..5·i;&;§ xtc? —21Hoo TechnoloCor — . - --- . . -- ,. . s , v. OR— 16 OrApp2937 P3 OSHA, 8 , d , ' Petterson i ” (se e Publ-11,.---,1Recordr\..-1,..OYd July Rhoic ($9 AP Fai)T............ 14.11989 C 1 0(Y7 `D»1»-»-IIZ`1·¤¤I¤n11r (cpp Ahh UIGCI`. JBHUKYV 13. 199 I , DUIT/lʻ1`€SI1OUf (SCC App ic s €1`. n 9 P ·“. ʼ.¢§ §@-1»"?·$-!§€ʼe-'*Eli31=?.-""·ʻ-ʼ-D11ʻL11i.-. 7I*UDl1C-KBCOIGS ʻir5e2i.$i¤ ·ʻ iare .-1 - - , .;· ». -,1.. .. W1 1 :;,1 2 d0-19) gy p. (SeApp m Id.; Publi Record Order April l2, 1990 Bower/ e c 1 -.4.1.... a eww xy; · _ pr.,.1.-.. -;.,P igig. -,.. e. g » _, = 11 " rr -_11)·ll I-4-% .1* l._, l `1ʻ l'- r ' 80 l` i., " i¤if; t 216 outweighthe public interest in disclosure. conidentiality clearly must ,1 ' !· .3 I 1 1 ", I. : {1 . l-. 1 1 11 1; jirk 13·`i i,ʻ `i 1. fl · 31aer 11 mrstndv.uror would substantiallyI...prejudice preventcarrying 1_ʻ PCLDUU lu bubtvuj, vvvuxu ¤»·.v.»»·..-..-...J ._, 7.-,,, r or r _ _ _ out gf j g` ¤m1 1 _j·' departmen or board functions. ln either case, the public interest -. 1*1 1} y. . yl ORS l92.502(6) exempts: recordsareexemptif disclosurewould interferewith the rehabilitationof a l' pi di 13 s1 tls »;1' re 1ʻ, Q. 2 -1 "·l [11 1;,1 1l r1— lp ,15 =;~` ,ʻ.1r ¤-11, l,·:_"~,? *.4 it -`l_ 1 1;;, 1 H1 ·:,r 1il1 iii~ `1 fr" -_1 1 . rt . 1 1;, 111 ·`1 * 1 it,. 1`·l lll _i"11|! *1;-1 ,1_1 1 1-; .1*,1, *1 _1ʻ 1. -1* iirf t;ʼ” 1·1 11 °1i-1i — .'·_ . £;=·`,*1 lgr 11 ¤~ `. 1 1i-1_ kv L `1 ». ilʻ grit 11 it ¥;5 lr _ 1` lzf; J1 ) _1 i. 1 Tis Records, reports and other information received or compiled by the Director of the Department of Consumer and Business Services in the administration of ORS chapters723 and 725 not otherwise required by law to be made public, to the extent that the interests of lending institutions, their officers, employees and customers in preserving the confidentiality of such information outweighsthe public interestin disclosure. If disclosure would threaten or impair the depa1tme1; ability to 1tʼs preserve internal order and discipline in its correctional facilities, ` A1—»-1 1 . »·1¤»» .1,,, rr Ring;. .r.. 1..-r11-....r.... *7*1: ....1...+,m maintain facility security against escape or unauthorized entry, or to ʻiif. — ORS chapter 723 relates to credit unions. Chapter "/25 relates to protect the publicʼs safety, or if disclosure would interfere with the jgeip1 e_ l aconsumerfinance. rehabilitation of a personin the departmentʼscustody,thepublic interestin f» j _, _rg (7) Presentence and Probation Reports confidentiality will, in most circumstances, clearly outweigh the publicat?i'"' g _,=; ,.,_ ORS l92.502(7) exempts: interest in disclosurem We have concluded that both the medicali ... npmm LS llluuc mam; LU rm urm·H1pA with the mmr 1mAe1 ORS 127.077 screening criteria used by the departmen in determining whether »,ie?DV I\UPUl rucu wu.11 Lum uuuu urrus.4 urn.; ro I .¤ I I or ur · inmate \z£lL1 can be out oft .,.....-.. state ...--.. and the departmentʼs policy andii_ 1Llll1ClL\4 U\.» transferred Lxunxunvnnuu Vue VA ,-... r I `:ii F M.-- M., .. ,. , i r of ______ ,,.,_, procedures on the management of hunger strikes are exemptbecausORS .137.077 governs the disclosure of presentenc reports. llrose to manage _· _,_, e disclosure would jeopardize the departmentʼs ability Vreports are not public records. Under that statute, e presentence reports may _. ii` control its prison populationeffectively.2]8 2b disclosed only to: (l) the sentencing court; (2) other judges who rrr ,;1j 81 (6) Lending Institution Records The test for applying this exemption is statedrn the alternative: ine l ;l ,;itj ·.. PUBLICRECORD . 3. §: q. S the public interest in confidentiality clearly outweighs the public interestin disclosure. i. 1 ' - ! PUBLICRECORD S -.1-- 3,. .,.. Department and board records pertaining to a person who is or hasc.ʻ _`;, e participate in a sentencingcouncil discussion of the defendant (3) the e ,, Department of Corrections, the Board of Parole and; other persons or agencieshaving a legitimate professional interest in information likely to another provision of the Public Records Law for a period of 25 years ` `Tbecontainein the report; (4) appellateor review courts or courts hearing terminatioof suc custod or supervisi to theextenthatdisclosuréiofff Ygiostrelief cases;(5) the district attorney, the defendant or d iigcotrris the with convictionfor the defendant and (6) the victirnm ORS ,137.077 also n recordwould h interfer y on therehabilitati t of thepersonyr public interest in confidentiality clearly outweighsthe public rnterestgmgg .1 .; _ . . _ el beenin the custody or underthe lawful supervision of a stateagency,i_ ·” court or a unit of local government, are exempt from disclosure di O l9 T i a ex t t le 1.; ( 0I; COm O14>Wmad1Oapmea. aagrsncirc m dl R 9 9 hl nd S f n u rrr*t1tr n en n ecr ums sc R 2. hi s n ce o h gi irmclg ;< g 1;§igt cdS chate°1° y er dciefietanc Su —.·;rces21 dp es. loS49sspti eslgsthg i§§Cr s b ʻ e ʻ on 2. 5 ʻ , ʻ p . . . . V ° iinoie l yeais old unless expressly excepted by — 137.530 relates to rnvestrgatrvereports made by parole and 192.496Seediscussionbelow of RecordsMore than25 YearsOld. ʻ -·.. =ORS Uettieem at the Aireetim ef the \.¢U\»IL\» emm unxu and the statement of the ,,:.}§£ ]'$§]§$&°;§rfi§1i·EPL`UUCLLLULI LLLUULD G-L LLLU U UUULLULI U L LAAU uav uvuuvaxavaau TT""“Tʻ “""ʻ“ "ʻ "" ""'""" " "" "'"' ``"`7 " . 1 .,.,·;;é__ ·ʻ = ·`- ` ~ . ;5 , §g%tgrrctrm¤;ta1<en pursuant to a presentence report. r .?T&=.»;.. . ··.ʻ.:~ʼ ,_,:.·.* -·. ~( . ._ Q .· y .2:. . ·.:4s·*:it Argh ./ʻ=n·ʻ< ʻ· :fv=' %¤?.¢·1°:`j ·ki¥iʻ J*·£5"7ʼ <V ¢r? ;· 5 _ · -. =. ʼ ·=.<.; ef? ·»€§;§ Q, Li · ·rt€-?@:s Y· . i2l9 · ' ' ¤--.."`v ʼ?`?: ?ʼ. SQ? `Hʼ11r1f v pnm1»m1· Imc F n P2d 201 (1995) 135 ur Or rxyy Arm 144, 17.5. RQ LLMILLU V. Put"!/ʼ1c/U .uʼ1.> pu., 1.1.1 z.·v¤ M Turner, 22 Or App 177 (see App C-3). ; .. ..*Veee;}. A.E-... reieas ;·; · -¤¤¤ ¤1— . . . uyu . ron . . c R ofI information fromʻ, presentence report through trial testimony not Zn Public Records Order, January 26, 1993, Patten (see App F-28). A I. 4e s xéeélwrrmtted under-statute) ( see Ann C-14). 1\\aV\l1\.l¤ UULIU 2*8IPuhlie Records \JLuv17 Order. unxnuuxj Januarv kx. 26.ʼ> -¤/JV 1996.5 V-·-.,, Gutbezahl (see App F-34). arnnazb .— . 5:.. .. . . —. Jeri ·· e · ——J; -· 22£¤· ·$;is§·;.%=ʻi·fq?mi%>%*¢€ ¤$-gets sew - ··— ʻ # · - tz. n _ 82 g 1l'> · r1 1*;: 1' PUBLIC RECORDS .__ ʻ ;.:1Z P·. .. . ». l~· ORS 192.502(8)exempts: r11¤r·ln¤111·r¤ ji . : ʻ r .. » l i », ; ' ` li S' ' 1 . 4 j. .`· ; lg ʻ `l:ʻ *·:if.;] . it tr. 1, . 5 f;. Q $1 ~ʼ·ʻ *. ¤;· $ ~*1 9r Hi “:·ʼ A L· $7 w 5: ·.¥ʻ.¤· ..`.·[ . &, rrr ?. it `Y 1 t1»_j i· ";i`< ri ~1 .ʻ,ng; *1.s. 1 g · 1· }. 11 ii.@ *: {W ,y>tl ., 2=!; 11 i~it JEm Yi;til · .· W si W r e 11 Qp` ` E (uf » 1'U· % le i? . W ni" wl1iCl1 % .. , _E,§·ʼ 4 rw ifjr · 51;;:; .,v itat~ `··:. Ell Y ill a ltliwT* iii .' "<·.Yʻ ;"y{i., A · CIILUIUILIE. ¤11+`m-nina on .1 r-. -1---1 the LLID federal 1.\.•uv1.¤u ---1:.... 1A¤.·· I-.-!-` DOl1CV——lOSS penny] ¤.»..».· OI ed prohibif" Other Oregon gryiiii (9)Exemptions "-'°"` I "" .4 ·F¤ri¤1·¤l ICuCIui on Statutes ʻF111·1rl¤.-.iQ iuiius-—r¤ H (\1'\lV mr-- --.-.c:;-.-r:-1:r.. -.--1.--1.:-- -1.* ....-. .. .... A ..,....-..,.A 1.... ..... f\..M. THC COIlT1Cl€1Clil3.l1lZy pI°OlZ€CUOH OI 8Hy 1'CCOIG COVCICCI Dy 3.1 U1`CgOI'1 -4.-4 -.4... -.1+.:Aa A!-` 4-LA D.11~1§¤ D¤»A1·A¤ T mu ir- i1»mn1·1»1n1·¤+¤r1 11·1+r 1+11:1 Dul-xlir— statl1I6 OUISIGG OI IHC 1ʼuD11C RGCOIUS Law is muurpureucu mtu uic ruurrc 1 ` uuiy 1.-..-. _ .iiʼ, `i» _ ORS l92.502(9)(a) exempts: ., . ..-.-.....-4.J.... .....1 {TDC 1(V1 CIV)/O\ 4·`l·»¤ ·(-`bilnwnl lun: ¤v¤1-•n1»x+irx14 exemption 19z.nuz recrer exemption 11elaws, d aand yURSfor pt r tne h unedite Sraw(9), we denie reque disclosur of an copy of the , (zs), ar . 1 StateUniversity security office daily log, which records arrests d st e d j Establishing reporoncampTh univer disclo th informat for certai exempmateriai.e.,studentname andpersonall ts us. e sity Thised e wa ionexem whic informati ninformati t l, wa delete sʼ s y 192.496 whic on, h exemp s d. "[s] s recor on requir s by pt stat to be exemp (4), h from ts drsclosure tudentStat ds andfedera ed lawboth e release of information directly related to a student. e ..AA.·..¤¤ l r. 227 {1 M =.am¢. ʻ §.d;§.aS.t. ,1....:-,t,r:..,.i,.......,. ." . ..0...... .,... 22 See 42 USC §§ l320d to 1320d-8 9- P-L 104-191 §264(c) .ctGI11eC1 1...-1;t....0--- ..--..1....--. .... ...-....%.1.... Act M srrqnm Insurance Portability and Accounraornry orHdryyo), as -13can C. .1rare . ara. 16 1-- an ...._. C11sClOSuOI me names anu auciresses or ourrgors iii 1 .. 4* 1.... 1 ¤¤ +`.·.AH.m11 1ʻe Record Order,Septemb 2, 1988Smith(seeApp F—l ·¤ 3). s er , 22 Public RecordsOrder, May 2, 1989,Redding/Facaros (seeApp 0 F-19).} d 1Public.Record Order, March 28, 1989, Clark/Chapman (see App F— 1. 1m Public RecordsOrder, January21, 2003, Kubat (seeApp F—5l). ii ;**ORS..35l.070(4)(e); 20 USC § °'—" 1232;;; Public Records Order, January 20, »:;r1§j:i · `A 7 T _ ' V ' ;'\ `/\'/7 _' " " * O _ID) »- -____v m See 20 USC § 1232g (relating to student records). e I f . ..r.A;r¤¥.;-A s 18). -: ' .. ·ʼ:.`iʻ»>. . .;*55% { M g12§Q,·FNeedham/Edgrngton ( see Ann F-16). F;. . 22 IʻuUuL; 1>..r1r izemrrlg Order. ucywiriom September 20. 1999. Michael (seeApp F-43). 0 z :*23 Lxcuuiun uiuer, 3 . . ·4 a.— . raw ʼ>.~e¤”% $? ~` . I "'1` $3s* . zi? “ -:€e*r¤th·2ʼ&zir$¢-mii. - .-.;_ 2£.. 2|·- a .· I ;-·. Zr"s" iS information the disclosure of which is prohibited or restricted or otherwise made confidential or privileged under Oregonlaw. ffr·exempoutsiofth PubRecoLa Arep toth Boaof — tions de e lic rds w. ort e rd , (pl ʼ*ij;` . _;_ j_*·§r 83 -I '- Records Law by ORS 192.502(9)(a). Such a record is exempt, The many federal laws and regulationsthat prohibit or limit disclosure { fl_ —nonditionally exempt or partially exempt from disclosure to the extent of particular records (e.g., public assistanc and unemployment insurance { i_ privilege _ `Pprovided in the incorporate statute.While the attorney— records, certain studentrecords and e records containing "protected health d client Yrecognize by ORS 40.225 is also incorporated by this statute, its information"22°)in the possessio of public bodies of this statearebeyond,1 oiʼ davailability asanexemptionto disclosur is narrowedsomewhaby special the scopeof this manual. n Individual public bodies should be familiar with ;..c. .. I irules set out in ORS 192.502(9)(b), discussed below. tSee Appendix G for the laws and regulations applicable to any federal program with which" ii` e Qji _ `*"ʻ" jr V _ exempting informationiifrom public they are involved. To claim this exemption,public bodiesmust be abletoj ie'. ʻ Va partial list of Oregon point to a specyic federal law or regulation thatprohibits disclosure. For.; _ . disclosure example,we concluded that the Oregon Department of Agriculture isi? (a) Personal Information . subject to the samerestrictions on disclosure of federal Food and Dnigie$Y?? r Af .-.111-.1% 1-www-A A»·A¤1-¤ i1111¤h-qtpe ¤m1·1p nf thece ctcahrtnrv ·ʻ ,.......-.. OI pLlDl1C ICCOH1 OIUCIS luusttutcs r».j. AA SL1IʻV€y Suiric: ui trrcsc statutory Administration (FDA) records as the FDA would be. The federal`€i"l » regulationsprohibit disclosure of FDA law enforcementrecords,irrcludirig}; . Nursing concerning a possible violation of the statutesregulating the FDA investigation reports and internal memorandazzl Also, we; ʻE1 nursing profession, ORS 678.010 to 678.410, is confidential and not determinedthat regulations promulgated by the federal Social Security; :` to public disclosure under ORS 678.l26(1).225 ORS 179.505 Administration (SSA) control the disclosure of SSA disability program. prohibits disclosure of medical and psychiatric records except upon recordsin the possessio of the OregonDepartmentof Human Services}? of specifieconditionsuc asORSl795505(3)(a) which We concluded n that a federal law or regulation which expresse a d uponwritten s, consent h ofthe patient."" —(e) prohibitory policy, such as the Buckley Amendmentsto the Freedomi.,idisclosure ʻ InformatiAct, ISto bedeem 3Pmhlbm WG lf thc . Somcasea recorma beexemundebot OR l92.502 g tQ·ʼ % `rʻ-`ti .*1 .f:' t ZE `=f·` .. _.r - ~ 1rI. ·'I t ·. l 1€. J..:' ' ʻ " —J— --- 1·.L`».......·.4.i.`.. Any public records or information 4-1»1 me disclosure or winch rs ¤ prohibitedby federallaw or regulations. · S j V. l (8) Federal Law Exemption PUBLIRnconn C Public s records or ¤a =ʻ1£`·*·1 » .ʻ RL . ʼ· *"ʻ ʻ ʻ ¢· ` , 1 .v ~. Poeti rrecort c os the Oregon Child Support Program basedon 26 USC §§ 6lO3(a)(2), (l)(6) PUBLIC RECORDS 85 Z ., P 84 l i1 `if statutegrants specified persons special accessto certain records, unless ami r1·.\ and ORS 314.83 an 418.13 Thos federa and stat _` otherwise provided those records remain "public records" subject to other dllkl \}J)\"r}, anu waxy ..{,. ..---.-compatible provisions of the Public Records Law, including the `' Q. prohibitions are incorporated into (A\ 5 d "the 5. Public eRecords l Law by ORS e »_ exemptionsfrom disclosure. ` `· ; l92.502 and(9).*2 ., - ORS 40.225 to 40.295, the "privileges" section of the Oregon provide for the confidentiali of Y The Public Contracting Code (8) 8 Evidence Code, includes the lawyer-client privilegegil psychotherapistan·¤1¤r*Xl IQQTIPQ `l'\(Ti"l(YE OF ..,.1.. A ..1 .....-.-1........s _ g ʻ 1_ ..I patient,physrcrarr-patientand nurse— proposals until after the contractingagency issuesnoticety er ..1..,....., ......... prrvrleges,“ʻ“ school employeea contract.229 See ORS 279B.060(5) and OAR 137-047-0450(2) for goods gg iiii 0 ʻ student privilege, clinical social worker— husband— clergypatrent and services contracts; 279C.410(1) and OAR 137-049-0330(3) for public gi . ¤ client,officer andwife, penitent,sterrographer— public identity of informant improvement contracts. Under ORS 279B.060(5)(b), after providing ... 1.These privileges are incorporated by ORS l92.502(9)(a) into employer, notice, the contracting agency may continue to keep confidential those*1 `' . . qihe unconditional exemptionsunder the Public Records Law, though the privileges. parts of a proposal which qualify for exemptionunder any provision of;* i( lattorney— privilege is subject to special treatment under ORS ORS 192.50 or 192.502.However,oncethe contractingagencyprovidesf .ʻ.Y' ,_ . i192.502(9) discussedbelow. client notice1of intent to award a contractto which ORS 279C.410applies, _. _e _(b), privilege and the may continue to keep confidential only those parts of a proposal r·l_1YQ-» We concludedthat both the psychotherapist— s . . physician-patient privilege protected the medical records of patients at }.; _, patient qualify underthe "trade secret" or "information submittedin confidencdjf · Unless those privileges are waived by a exemptions in ORS l92.50l(3) and 192.502(4), respectively. -°-iDammasch State Hospital. ripersonal representative they remain in effect after a patientʼs death. 233 279C.410(3).Notice of intent to awardis further describedin the , However. ORS 192.49 requires the agency to release\·•n-AJ airy uvwvxn such >vvv•· records I L I VVVUVUL, \/L\\J A/1-4· I/J l \ J\·1\·|-Ll \ l U \»»\.A Ul -b\lAL\-lj l·\l Avxvvvvv GeneralʼsModel Public ContractRules at OAR 137-047-061 and \J that are more than 25 years old.234 5 0 l37—049— ~ 1 li I ` EI"1 2- a. J _ l e. 1 { 5 1 5 L gi. 1 l n ri · ·`,'... . ~ 1· °»` ,`. a : ` st 3j = is Q . 11 u J .1 l r ' 1 l`. if it̀i E i li 5` Q . ,. _»r|`.`·l¤`ill lp irl, ry . :_ —» 31. _;j1 1ʻ'i~=1r·ʻ; .;.r`(i 1 1_. .!· ʼ~`.. rtl iv #` 2i~1. ¥i` it112 Qi1qit ?1..`·" 1 =·`ji . ~1l.`i iti 1: ·~.if ,;iʻQ' 1* ·'.= 1 ·."i lst; "ʻi"ʻi fr., 1 Ig .ii, ici": gy iE.· V· — l _ The "public officer privilege" in ORS 40.270provides as follows: _ and the time set for bid opening. See ORS 279B.055(5)(a) rg`, _ A public officer shall not be examinedas to public record 279C.365(2)(a)and (3). Once bids have been opened they are to ;i*- detenninedto be exempt Hom disclosure under ORS 192.50 s , bidderhas for publicinspectionexceptto the extentthat the 4; . i" ·········· - · ——— r - —---- --- ..... .-- -.-. . . . 1. YYdesignate, parts of the bid as trade secrets,which may then be exempg i ii. -_}j? — » —d _ 2·5O5· from disclosurunde OR 192.501 or asinformatio '_it is not possibl to nullify an exemptio from the disclosu —— publicebody in confidence, which may be exempt under ORS by calling a public officer tontestify about exemptrecords or r S (2), n `i e re SeeORS279B.055(5) subpoena. The court, of course, may require testimony or productioir if " (c). The Public RecordsLaw is distinguishable from statutesthat ihe Yeoordele not in f¤<=¢¢ to exemptionBids 0395. I . 1 ri;. i = ʻ i- " e :"" p8,I'tlC\ll&I' are confidential, but only prior to the close of the Invitation to toʻʻ** rc SpCCl3,l ·*··ʼ··i*·l BCCSSS ¤~ʻ·¤¤¤ to oovernmerrt PCISOIIS LU guvci uiricrit sPublic Records Order, ¤1if1¢d April 22, 1988, Joondeph (entity with rermrds.230 Even recur ue. ... . .... .. 228Public RecordsOrder, November 18, 1988,,Dierking (seeApp 22 Public Contractin Codeconsiststofthe statute in ORS 9 g s eSe¤ is and279C Thedefinitioof “G0H€f statutor right to certai type of menta healt facilityrecord hasno under Publicn Records (see App y s Law than l anyhmember of public) s ,_.. :. ..;.PLibli Recor OrderJuly6,1982Zaitz(se AppF-5) Y- § §§§§ater.;rights r-, -; Public Records Order, February 7, 1994, Smith (see App F-29); Public 279A.010 . . n 307 Or at ¤ot1¤S B0 Segbgtat ex.rel F rohnmayer, 304 (seeApp °Y” C-9) (Public e Lawdisclosu distinguish fromrightto acce througdiscove e .-,. order rrriv22.wss. Goffred(PublicRecordLawdrsele Se "“ʻ”“ʼ "*?ʻY*ʼN`? “"ʼ *f““ʼ ““"Y`ss Y JJ;] re ʻ“""ʼ“ʻ°Hum able h Q-.-.,;.. ry "VITHI TCUUIUD 1 Aictinnrrichnhla 1'iQʼl'liZ Hlld Dl`OC€C1LlI€ i£IOV€1`1'1l1'lg &CC€SSsIO ` -€·`?ʼ »r-{erin " ··ʻ:S§ey¤ʼ 1>..r.rr.n...-....1. L1lSLll1E.Lllb11l1U1D uunn n;E,u1. cure 1.,. eeee e 1 . *-;F§ii* r£¥s:5.{.... .'-.we ~e;$;r=2· egiei V1\.L\1 Lvvvnvv I \ za · - _c % al . ` if . lr¥i·..zʻ 1 z ` ,3 . , its 1. 1_ 2 ';:e~ --—.··;_-·ʻe=§ . ..<===r »I ,».··r·,+$?;: £" ʼ4¤e§éʻ · ·.:·.-. ʻne—:~ʼ ésirst ·<<3s=e$gga§r . —,_..e?&?~:a@?S===;r%* . .35ʼ;* VV "' e¢ ·"<¥-S .. ʻ e :~ Reoof Olde Febmm7.199 Sm1fh(seeAi ·\4/, ee-e..·, 1 $1 HI . it ie5`”"` ““" ʻ "ʻi"# " M ʻ " ʻ "ʻʻe Ve e s , 5, 1996,Wr1ght(see , order.ds Febfuary AppeF-34). . _ ORS et 15- (beeeu ORS 192.49 operate ʻ1rewvithste that exermrin morerhr 25vearscldl. dS ?. an.-r y mr annierr. 4,reerrrri ¤i>_F-28)6n se 5 s ¤dmgʼf» g m nuuu u1\.\.».\11|JL1\J11 UUDD 11UL apply "I"1"`J LU IUUUAUD "ʼ "'*···—· l11U1\.r ·—~~—· — l.A.l¤.|L /-.4 jvbuo vnu}. eg 1... PUBLIC RECORDS 87 .1 i E In the usual case,if a recordis not exemptfrom disclosure,it must be (b) Attorney-Client Privilege — ? = madeavailable for the requesterʼsinspection. But ORS 192.42 provides another option with regard to the information covered 3 by new ORS Recordswhich areprotectedby attomey— privilege, ORS 40.225, f_ I 192.502(9)(b). When a public record is subject to disclosure under that : client underthe Public RecordsLaw. are also ordinarily exemptfrom disclosure provision, the public body may elect instead to "prepare and release a For example,we have concludedthat specified records in an Oregon State · Bar disciplinary proceeding were covered under the attorney-client Iʻ.-V ; Qʻ_ll condensation from the record of the significant facts."239 The statute privilege and, therefore, were exempt from disclosure under ORS ʻ _- provides no further guidance regarding the contents or format of the I { Vʻ l92.502(9). We reached the same conclusion concerning a request for A V ."condensation." But if the public body prepares and releases a . V condensation in lieu of disclosing the record, the requester may memoranda sent by the Public Utility Commission staff to its legal I 235 V nevertheles petition for review of the denial of the opportunity to inspect . V counsel,and vice versa, containing confidential communicationsmade for . s receive a copy of the underlying records in accordance with the the purposeof facilitating counselʼs rendition of professional services to E __ or staff in a pending conteste case. Communications betweenan agencyʼs- l j liproceduredescribe in sectio G of this manual. In sucha review,the representative and d representative 236 of its legal counselmay also fall _, withini Qi- essreviewing body d shall, "in naddition to reviewing the records to which access l= »i " i..... , mmmre rhose records to to ». `WQS LICIIIGLL, eulllyaie trrwoe ieeuiuo ce the cue condensatio ee--ee-.ee--e--- determine ---the attomey-client privilege. s s facts ~i 1....rp n no »whethe the condensatio adequately describes the significant Or Laws 2007,237 ch 513, § 5 amends ORS l92.502(9) by adding a newfi A in the _ rcontained V n records."24 paragraph (b) describing a specific set of circumstances in which thee nl 1out ° * 1 n I · * *ʻ · 1 J- .--11-.1...... ..,.r. -.1----. -1;,.,.. ...;..: Release of" a factual condensation does not -..,.:-.,waive +1.-. the ..4+,--·.».m, attorney—cnerrt attomey-client privilege Ame uoes mr ao. exempt exe...p. a u document W,- ....-- from disclosure. . _ exempt from 1....p · V·privilege. Nor is the privilege waived with regardto "a communication Under that paragraph, privileged information is not P ʼ _ 24l ordered to be disclosed under ORS 192.410 to 192.505."242 (Emphasis disclosureif all ofthe following criteria arepresent: 1 padded The statutesdo not expressly addressthe status of the privilege • It is factual information that is -" with regard to the records themselvesif they are disclosed voluntarily ). o not otherwise exemptfrom disclosure ·. ·i,Qéijhase on the public bodyʼs assessmenof the application of new ORS Vd t For that reason, we recommend operating rmder the O 7lOt COl'I1pll€d in p] fOI` lllZlg3,i1OI1, 2lI`Dll]`3I1OI1 O1`iEII1 [€pE1l`3.lZlO1'Ilikely to be initiated or actually; g thatreleasof therecordthatis notcompelleby a public administrative proceeding .:. - =·... -s.-..+A of within 1111 nfprl .. ]I]1|,j _a,|,U\_L l]_2@_QU,[[_ ..-. QIQGI meqriorre L)L),|_],¤L].LL,LI..Ub a Q. "voIr1r1mr VULbLL\tGl_y disclosnre" \-1-l¤V1U¤\·i~1V VL the ʻ·•*ʻ·' materials *·“ʻ*"""*""*' "ʻi' 'ʻ'` e s d [§ . .. .. . -,---.. --. ·i» * -ʻʻ· ?ri·zʻ~i—.éas mm 2to osz {mar sr it am therefore operate as a waiver +1 ¤ FIT11T1$-Y1.-. (l eI IRD *I·U.LOU -v\\JDL/ -. .. . . . .1. - J;.--4.2,..... A-F r-wr n+{-nvnnw toi·.. l-2 · ʻ."`FI*I7\FE`TY1FH.' J1 I I anu I..ut.».\u.l.u;v vpvxuvvu vw •·· ·····=~ \_;\Jl.LLkJLI·\i\J VJ V* ""' ""` I ' • (`1mTmilCdl)V 0I' ""' Eliil'1€ Cl1I'CC'[I OI 6,1 KHOI'llt¢yI _p;;;. ._j.{yn¤..rrrcq,irrir5 ui. ere.- — o (eye ..,- - l .... d s ʻ`eV. ʻ. n.,;....,.....;.... . O1'I on behalf 1 of a public body re....ee A . .-..1 at an investigation ʻ HS Pull U1 du Lllvuauéuuvii un ee-...,..,- -- 1- 86 ll I i* [ : 1 . l Z . it E. qi 1 l 1. ; ·ʻr 1*-. 5 Q »ʻ2 .. i .. j;_ 0tv . T A Q, Vt 21 2 ?.] .in.·ʻ;-* % itz rgéf· ¤}.' vt if wil El . ci l *§·g. ?. ·' .l wi PUBLIC RECORDS ...1.-il-e·n4-;n11 1*0 ·ri 1 l?·`ʻ. e iijg -,~_ -· »1&.i.l:,` T.i lily. =a`= Ig · , .ʻ .t` gt? ¢ 5ti`; 1` ¥`i`~; lll; ` _ ~, iii lr.;»V 11 %}* it': .<ʻ . rii& ·. it i di }.' · .n eiirf ʻ Vl In respons to “information of possible wrongdoing public · e body" and dl-ʻ 2.;.l& 11 »ʻ.. ,;~ ¥.< 1*: . V • -.-1-- .-1,1-., ,.r .1... ....;.,: liar °ʻmade or authorized . l cli? ° ° 72 - `·i!_;_.., gi ,-gf',fit _.,.; `L1; *9. tid; :§gér.,·=3*. L` "i`fiiirr.=` §_ j,,- · a '1`h holder or tne pnvrregerra ........ .,. ....-..----- . 1...-.1 estatement characterizing or s partially disclosing the 1IlfOIʼl`Il8I 38 10II.ʼ (10) Transferred Records .5 __ "pq `:.,§ri` =;"ʼ€ ʼ. 15v. ʻ·`EV --fi·ʻʼ.ʻ . ; e_vʻ· .e > . ; · ʼ·-if? described in this section, 2̀_,_¥1*¤ 1ʻeG0f 01' 1HIOfH1¤ .1;uu.LAL¤J..L\4\1 U] \».L1. tJuLu;.nv vvuj mashe mlbui.·m bod m1¤1¤ V` ¤11G xw ¤Sme ¤0H w ` · · compa Drawin or `§ g in publ1c officer 01 € them t0c any other d * v a11v mg, * -ʻ "£CGG1V1I " ?"” ʻ·: ` 1g ʻ i ié " "ʻ °% ʻ OR”2·ʻ*23 _»ORS; we 192.42 S “ʼ· _» $~; 192.423 M M-,..` -40.225(7). 3(1). §·224z»,mr - 225Public RecordsOrder, March 30, 1989,Howser (seeApp F—l8). 22 Public Records Order, October 21, 1988, Best (see App F—l4). ¤.-r.1;,¤.>.·-Mrk Or-der September 5. 2000. Riley (see App 12-45) - e "" Iʼ\l)'I1C KCCUH15 uu KJAUCI., uupterlruer 623 1 LIUIIU L\vvu1 ve vv- 23 rms 102.50 9ʻl 7 L}.l\O L7/...1v4·\;}\u]. 8 % (b). - __1]QRShl92.502 exempts: (lO) ..,.,--..,1.. ,... :...&ʻ.·..·m..4- ·. :?#E•¤"% i* "“?:Y§¥? ʼ E`·:: (2). {1&§é'1$ 3{i§ . ) e. § ? g T} % " ? 2 *? ; fix ¢. X rf; { ·` “ :·»ʻ .r ¤, 1 , 2 ·`'ʻ » `· .s( ~'.j*, { ʼvj` { ʻW {E * Q ;"":I\. ` K [im $` ;iM i ?) l El Fi?;_»: *j *: ·VE, _ʼ °`" 1. g ` °ʻT:: Z* ld;`°`;,·$¤I ¥ · ini" wg" .1· 'W ti; szs z M" lr} ʻJ u sr — @ L `` iis ~ iii? ` : ;@2 Qg `1 ·" 2. .; {3}%* év! s }5»Z;§ . = `; l nl-A . 1-oratjthe al memberʼs direction. that has received records from another public body should discuss with the "furnishing" public body any exemptions that might apply to the 1 (13) Records Relating to Treasury or OIC Publicly Traded 1-pmwk 243Under ORS l92.502(lO), the records are exempt ICUUIUD. wxauvn waxy x,...... .,..\-/7 when . W V p pj-ay'; - rr U . Investments. handsof the "furnishing" public body, thoserecords remain exempt _ §:%u.r·Em{···. .,1= T . . r tg., _-· ;.ii`? _· J-, 1»;ij»é;;··» l92.502(l3) provides: Luv J.\.»u¤uu.¤ av; vva¤.-..v......, 1 1 1 J1 or -c L1.reasons for _, .:ʻP€·` .,·ʼ[*.Y .Z?::? ,,'». hands tne <¢......-:..;...,.== "recervrngt hukltn puonc 1-mrlv cody it-` rr the —?; 5 ¤`s1~—;_ʻ=· 5ʻ 1 MT e i.{:fF”*· ʻ LQiijff`,Ti_`R of or submittedto the State Treasurer, the Oregon remainapplicable. > ima .*· = ··.*¥.¤:—[- Investment ,.ecords Council or the agents of the treasurer or council 244 (11) Security for Transportatio Programs Radioactive Material ` ' E·- :?ʼ· n relating to active or proposedpublicly traded investmentsunder {QR -chapt 293,includin but not limitedto record regardin nr limririntinn nf the sihV FOI' U1 u\.]_u1uau.uu S: i··er g g €SlZ1ʻ\'lSI'1ʼtS népurposof this subsectio . ir _ The exemption doesnot apply to: es n: ORS l92.502(l 1) exempts: Records of the Energy Facility Siting Council concerningtheir review or approval of security programspursuantto ORS 469.530, ¤.-Q· ʻ:,.E iiixf? 1;;, 5.;; -.e 5-;- , M W=ʻ·' ;gfin yy e“A l ·`*: 2.*. ¢ ix ;ws This provision is a part of legislation setting out the duties of the Energy Facilities Siting Council (EFSC), the stateagencythat permits the siting of energy facilities. EFSC and the director of the Office of Energy must review and approve security measure related to nuclear power ʼ ' ʻ * 7 ---..1..-.11.1.. A- ..1. <-:ʻ I E T s plants, and the transportation of radioactive material pursuant to ORS Stat andlocalpublicbodie regularl exchangrecord with eac t other in connectionwith their mutual functions and duties.If a public body e 469.530. There is also anexernption from the Public Meetings Law for e s y e s h that has received records from another public body gets a request for those E5---_-`deliberations of EFSC on these matters. ORS l92.660(2)(ni). ORS records, it must first determine whether it is the records custodian for _j; :i`~°\_ -Cl92.502 exempts from disclosure records concerning review or ppprovalof programsrelating to the security of the generation storageor purposesofthe Public RecordsLaw. A public body is not the custodianof °? t .; s(32) the recordsif it has custody of the recordsmerely as an agentfor anotherfi lil izonveyanc of "hazardoussubstances, as defined in, ORS 453.005(7)(a), (d), which may include public body that is the custodian.ORS l92.4lO(l)(b). When a public bodyg Q ge " radioactive material. Seepages90-9l. is not the custodian of records,it has no duty to permit inspection y oI.gʼY . (12) PERS Nontinancial Information about Members copying of the records, unlessthe records are not otherwise available,and} €ʼ]@j Q ORS l92.502(l2) exempts: may merely refer the requesterto the public body that is custodianof the Q lr S records. Id lt is possible that both the public body fumishing the recordsifyfif _` . Employee and retiree address, telephone number and other .1 - ....1 ..... .:*;.--.--:,.1 ..,.,\,`..A,. and the public body receiving the records are custodians because r`l . i 1'10l'lflIl3.I1Cl3.i l1'l€11'1bBlʻSi'lip l`BCOI`dS 3.1'1 CII1piO}/'BC IIHEIHCIZI 1`6COl'ClS maintainedby the Public Employees d Retirement System pursuant bodieshave the records for their own programmatic purposes.ln that i1'` _E the receiving public body has all duties of a records custodianunder the to ORS chapters238 and238A. . ~ · 1 1 1 · r~ .· . 1- - -.- -:1--.-; ---.:-.. Public RecordsLaw. ° . '.j:j"' *4- · type ofA financial and personal information 1 consideredprivate ;. Before disclosing the records for which it is a custodian,a public .-, f Epndiiperson to PERSmembers and should only be released to the member S —M #i? isi : ; `~ʻʻʻ·: % ¥f"i·ʻ lip Y %i Q . iig RECORDS connectionwith performance of the duties of the recipient, if the considerationsoriginally giving rise to the confidential or exempt A natureof thepublic records or information remain applicable. 4-I 4lL E9 1We w ?,;·{· ?? ? PUBLIC '*"ʻj ' . .- . r Vt-lnL=`pvnlmnca NNLLL r\?,1ti§.]_t.t.J.§1L1U11, U1S.Uu¤1.1.5¤ QJ anniiieitinn — : " U1 U.J.\J 11.LV \a¤\·L1.L\.u.1L¤· ;. va. 1. --1-1-. ..-1-1.--1 4... _. qZ_¤j The information in investment records solely related to A fggthewarn paid directly into an investmentby, or retumedfrom _ʻ·;._(A). .ount 1j _ʻ {VL u 24 See Pubhc 1 Records Order December 9 2004 Redden (State g;E¤?n~»1;·iHV;1 1 .. ·. 1 . ʼ . ʼ ʼ . . . estm t ·3 1 1.. 1.. consulte with currengovernorʼ staff regardin requesfor disclosur of _,ʻ ʻ· _ G dlmctly t°> thc trcasurcr Or Counclb O . . The identitv 1 1 1 1 1 . .1 ., . -- U mr . · · of the entrtv 1 to which e 1 the amount was paid . . 1..¤.~ (B) 001111561 dS tO1`8 fOI'l1ʼ1Cl` gOV€1`1101"S Eldl1'li1'1iSil'3.'tlO1'l) (SBC I'-) / . . t k \—<y H ~n·-· Luurrtrcj VI ur, ,,,.4.} ,,`, ,, ______, ____ ______ ____ d vu I`€COI' s g t e pp mm I-Iuvolprnsxri n 1 A {SBB r Arm 1 F I4]. ʼ§$$·?.`?rié§.\$ʻr§i¥&£<>**·******.7 v.- -.. .. ....·d1I`BG'[iV·Ol" l:t'mT1 Whmh 21110111 WBS TCCC1VCdYd11'€Cʼ[iV. .1 . .· n .1- rx-.1.... 1.1-..-...1.,... Q 1052Si I-\UU -1"ʻ1~E¥9J V1 ·¤—1\WMM-»-u H13 Luv ¢-uuvuuh vvuu xvvvu .1. __ _, _ ”'“ Public Records Order, November as woo, r-iarcleroau (sc. .1,,. 1- _ ..-. T __ _ *11-1 ..__ _—~::1a;. 11 . ;-4-;:;;;, · 1 . ·` AAAA 1 r . .... 1-..-1. ....4 KA" yhmn {cnn Ahh 11..1..1;. D..NwA¤ hmmAm-il J.G 7007. Meadowbrook and NIVIOH \"Kscc APP *7. Plh l hh KECOTGS KJIUUI. t\UL1l iu vuuv 11 1 ,vi 1rUU11\.z .l\\4\.»U1u¤ \J.1uv4, 4 Lyn;. ..7 LUUL., ...¤ 1.·1. 1 .,;a;:z§·é ·=g.~.=1. . . .1 ,1·· — .15;; 1,; §¢~i- Mr V F1·F1.2"€§ ʻ .” ·.ʼ .1 ʻ ʼ ·“ . ,,;,,-, ,...,,._..,........-...1.- Oo 7V PUBLIC RECORDS , `[ , T r (14) Records Relating to Treasury or OIC Investment in Private Fund or Asset (b) An investmentin a publicly tradedinvestmentis no longer active when acquisition, exchange or liquidation of the investment hasbeen concluded. i§f This exemption makes confidential records provided to the · Treasurer or Oregon Investment Council (OIC) by private businesse or_{ ; 2? individuals related to proposed or active acquisition, sexchange ori €* liquidation of publicly traded investments. The exemption does not·`apply to records related to concluded 245 transactions. After a transactionisi; 1* concluded, the public agency may not deny inspection or copying of . ia 1 11..,1m regardless nf anv promises made during IUUUIUS, icgcuuruna ur url] yrurr...,.... ---...--.-.-.U the course of the? _ t1: ʼ§}_; l tliii Y State 1,_; } As transaction,unlessanotherexemptionapplies. 77.1 ʻ .ʻ I . .— _ l ..: - ` ORS l92.502(14) provides: (a) Records of or submitted to the State Treasurer, the Oregon Investment Council, the Oregon Growth Account Board or the agents of the treasurer, council or board relating to actual or proposed investmentsunder ORS chapter 293 or 348 in a privately placed investment fund or a private assetincluding but not limited to records regarding the solicitation, acquisition, deployment, exchange or liquidation of the investmentsincluding but not limited to: (A) Due diligence materials that are proprietary to an investment j all pubiié 1 applied to which s1 ii? enacted SB 64, fj transactionsm publicly o Until January 1, 2008, ORS l92.502(l3) investments. The 2007 Legislative Assembly divided the exemption, creating one applying to traded investments, ORS l92.50l(l3), and one applying to transactions W-:m+.»iv Mappa ammsrmemrFunds or private assets, ORS l92.50l(l4)¤ PIIVULUIY PIGMCU u1V\.»¤t.uiuur. Lurruu ur I-1.......-....,---7 -. . \ zlrhil fund, to an asset ownership or toV their respective investment " "" “""" ' ' "" ʻ*ʼ'* 1V tn 4 *"ʼ“"7 vehicles. (B) Financial statements of an investment fund, an asset ownership or their respectiveinvestmentvehicles. - ..-1- L .- (C) Meeting materials of an investment fund, an assetownership zr~·\ 1 1 .· . ' 1 P ʻ r 1 Iʻ .1 - . (discussed below). Or Laws 2007, ch 152. The 2007 legislation ·.ʻ{ i.p \""""""""" " "ʻ "1ʼ or their respective investmentvehicles. limiting availability of the exemptions to sitiiationsgiliyi $ 1,- e _.i removed language A (D) Records containing information regarding the portfolio 1 `iʻ_ where "disclosure of such records reasonably may be expected substantially limit the ability of the Oregon Investment Councilfito -- ..-..-r;..r- :-.1 1..1.1: rw pmwlndp snob transactions effectively competeor negotiateror, soncu or concludesdcd dadsacdous1 1.;+ Theseexemptionsareintendedto place the stateon an equal. footing .' , {positions in which an investment fund, an asset ownership or their _ . J respective investmentvehicles invest. ” V _ private investors in making investments,by maintaining the 1 (E) Capital call and distribution notices of an investment fund, \“/ ""ʻ°Iʻ*"""* """ "““ʻ "ʻ“""""""""ʻ ““"'** ʻ"` r"` ""ʻ ʻ**r"ʼ"ʼ } ? I Ijqkaassetownership or their respective investmentvehicles. n__ . ) Investmenagreementand relateddocuments of ir1f`orrnatioconcerninginvestmentsthat still are under nprovisionalsoprotect the publicʼsright to know how publiciimds The t exemption s underthis subsection . doesnot apply to: `_.r.;gQ·:,The invested by expressly stating that information regarding s :ʻZ.·l·; -i:`.`i.· ʼ*\ """¥ 1 1 1 1 J 111---.--ʻI -.2.-1.------. -.L` ---1. .-.;-.-4.-1-, . -1...-.AA 1`.' investmentransaction is not subjectto the exemption.ORS r-(A) The name, addressand vintage year or eachprivately placed (b) addresse the administration of public funds. The exemption also does Q ·, investmen fund. h` t s ami`, LU m 1LlLU.I.I..Ll6I·u.Un. im°m·¤- 1v,·;,u;uu..».& regardingthe amoimt --of .an investment, the retiiriil sHUULV env »ux.v...-..1 t ij· (B) The "" `"` "'TV ʼ - ʻ· #3 ` I Y dollar amount of made privatelv ʻ .LLl\J \;L\I.LLl•lJ L&LJ.L\J\•\-LAK\JL the DALY commitment \J\JLL11J.J.J.l».I.J.1\JA1l» A1.1.\·\•~»•\J to vv each vvsnvgq 14;.;. ' "" ""J urlni nh tha itʻtVBSi1' I1S1ʼ1t` · F .~ il%~"€.i: WIUUJ.1 Luv urvvunssvsac ,.1 *6:05;; of entity with the hientity nation =-¤r=-6 <\. .'="i »L· 3.1 l1ʻlVCStII.\CI11 O1' §<ʼ1ʻ$l1° fund sinceinceptionof the fund. » ~ liplacedinvestment saéagt ·m}EigS·i@? placed. h. ~C 1 ern * =$ r * -2rz ·l F The dollar amoun of cas contributio mad to each 1 ¢,ʼ;EFwfi`-1 if =ʻ» ... **1Qrgprcivatplacedinvestmentftmd since inception ofthe fund. $ · faiifi `=?é ? _' —ʼ ` t h ns ʻ e . $23; ¥? ¢ ely (D) The dollar amount, on a fiscal year— basis, of cash % 1ʻ ·. asa;-..d1st11butions received b the State Treasurerend the Ore on Investment as — ~. y ʼ g agents of tho ,....1+..mm-sin ;. § %;Ft%—§Counci·l.1tbe Oregon Growth Account Board or the CIlS[()IL[G1b1@\Z¥s§é§%§1*$i§3»:?iz?#·1*1**-ʼ-v—•·u1wu.,~.ti.r¤ uruguii x.uuvv ur nvuuurrc uuuru ur tris. ctgvrrco VI env 1 .~..i,;;tʼr ʻ;é5,*a.· ʼ)Ai .1. . Ann 1An cr: /..-t-42...- +A 1 1,.1..1. .. .1mam`.-Ae -.L` nt .--2-...+nrivntn 1;. . usuorsab cv -v...-- - -- -.yu UH!. RTN DCE SRP \J1.\|.J ()RS 111;..4.;.: 192.555 \.r(1`Cl3.I]1'l2 IO 10811-TBCOIUS Ul prlvutu vu¤¤1v»g¤··g·;§ gE_»;¥§L§€@1 .1-, ._· fmancial institutions provided to State Treasurer in cormection - ʼ 1~·1? $5ee; ! ·:e:T=. ;.. ¢es12.;r ` { ¥<=<a1ʻ.· investmentin suchloans). ʻ·. _ ·· _ . -1 — 1*- . :1ee..m;;..·1;g1..,. a1;2a(s12¤11., ;¤1_1,.· .ʼ . . 1 .:e · ¤s — 2. · 1e@2Eij —1 irésgfezis-·· · - Q1.;} ·;` _ ¤·2 »¢=.v;_e.;€ `. ' 1. -1sr? .:¢1é·.·2 @@31 gee; _.. ;¢». Q _. · . · 1 -:ʼ`.;1i*;sʻ»=sc2¤-:2...: ʻ 1 . 1 1 L1 1· — 1 ` _ ,__¤___ ____ _ __ _______ ___ _ _ni rr nr __, _ _ _ -:·.·. . `l.ʼ.·f*`J=E··?#r 1 - M 1 ` i ʼ · ” r `"'` ` ` i .1 1-. or treasurer, council or board from each privately ii}.? PUIE P~E.j.C9RDS..._-L-_.__._.' 93 reportsthat must be submittedunder ORS 293.761and 293.766.Release ii`_i C placed investment of the information in thesemonthly reports would give other investment manager information regarding investmentsand liquidations that would s prevent the OregonInvestmentCouncil hom gettingthe bestreturn for the -pi (E) The dollar amount, on a fiscal year-end basis, of the assets in a privately placed investment fund remaining value of ...-....1.-.1 1... me state Treasurer. the Oregon g 8.UC1”ibl1'[21bl IO 311 11'1VCSlZ1Tl Dy Luc ptdtc . . A .-;1 .1-m.1,..1.m. r`L»— C Investment Council,€1'1tthe Oregon urowtd mmh rrcdsdw., Account ..-Board agents ofthe treasurer, council or board. (F) The net internal rate of return of each privately investmentfund since inception of the fund. ` ` ` " ʻ ---U_,__ OI` the; V Accddd. ......1... ` r4—L- 1-1.---,1 Coun { ·'Q... Public Employees Retirement Fund and the Industrial Accident Fund. The , `·,` tame period in the exemption reflected Treasurvʼs practice prior to the ru Luv x.»At.»rrryt.ruu rusrvvcvu srvcmcrr] _ LIIIIG yuriuu _ ` enactmenof this exemption. t· (16) Abandoned Property Reports placedC1 . A 1} 5 Q ma»...a.·.+1¥Fr4 ʻ ORS l92.502(l6) exempts: " . A . · 1 . D-1 1 1 .1 1 11 Reports of unclaimed property filed by the holders ot such propertyto the extentpermitted by ORS 98.352. (G) The investment multiple of each privately placed 1nvesunente_1 1 _ I fund since inception of the fund. N 1;{-E-1, p ORS 98.352(4) providesthat reports of unclaimed property are exempt (H) The dollar amount of the total managemen fees and cost,s;`;; I 1 from public review for 12 monthsfrom the time the property is reportable t to each privately placed?} E;,; paid on an annual fiscal year-end basis =; and for 24 months after the property has beenremitted to the Division of investmefund. j lp 1 State Lands (DSL). Thus, information concerning unclaimed property (I) The dollar amount of cash profit received from each nt remitted to DSL by a holder is exempt from public disclosure for two place investme fundonafiscalyear- basis I 3years after the date the property is receivedby DSL. ORS 98.352(4) also dAs noted nt in the discussion of ORSend . 1;exemp all lists of records or property held by a goverimient or public l92.502(l3), the 2007 Legislative pursuant to ORS 98.336 until 24 months after the property is ·(authority t Assembly enacted this exemption -making confidential records provided . /-4 . $ /r\Tf1\ 1..... the State Treasurer OT Oregon Investment Council1 (Ulu) Dy to DSL. This exempts a governmentagencyʼs list of uncashe buSiH€SSOTindividuals related to ProposedO actin] investments during the period when the agencyholds the list as welldas when €S Y ORSchapte293 O 348 in s PdVste1Y_P1 mvestsne fund hold the list. The intent is to shiel suc informatio from r asset Tinformationmdfe seeddetdde m private This desed06SBOI ;..e........;. and efeXemPd9¤ to which the mrts exemption - theexempti i$ doenotappl d totheidentit ¤P'den 1.. General an 11..lJ.U1.1.uau.uu 1“T(“ HIHru(ʻ¥` u1¤..u ullu va. UL ..1..-.----..-..-,.-lululeuhevsl .bv nhnvll wmv v--____I H s ° 7 1 5=s..`§BF§iI22%i$iL-5U¤W·LLULD slD\a\JV\.d. 246 hunters d for h aattempt n "bount (person commissio unclaimed nronertv) while who, the agencv to findhelp the y " s n, s ULLULQLLLLVU |JJ.\J|JuL L] ) vv Luau Luv ubvxnvj yr-¤..•.·;....I» ~». · investment ftmds participation the funds. ʻ_· (17) Economic Development Information ly, onor to the1;-.....1.-.-.. ssize ofthey stateʼs y Fund d mand .1es1.--...-,. nerwement Industrrdlg , j {V;-( ·i1 `Yiz + .111. rubuc ¤1mpI0y€€S IXELII. C1n¤uL x unu »..s.. ......-7---. I Zʼ2?s“»ʻ° :f"te·· ;,¤v a jORSi:l—92.502 exempts: ʻ 1... V Accident Fund Monthly Reports I · (l7) ra .( followin record communicatio an informatio *fs%§if-2 T §5*;§iQ 1r1E££;G. We. is-1 $t'1;·D: ORS 192.502(15)exempts: rsubmitted the Oregon gto s, Economic ns and Community d Development n · "' ” ʻ*·">·'-1. :,·gi§·F*$ʻ 1 ·§=_§*1 "iiiaf ;*t'51é1e§1=§i" "" "ʻ°““ "ʻTʻ_" r i , · under Q,ʻ·E ʻ ”%§;fi-.f(COmm1SS1OH, the Economic and Community Development The monthly reports prepared and submitted Employees *§*"."`TTfiT 1 3 .rr:-.;ʻ ʻ··Iʻ T 1 the State Department of Agriculture, 1 the Oregon 293.761 and 293.766 concerning the Public · ` Account Board, the Port of Portland or other ports, as Retiremen Fund and the Industrial Accident Fund may be ( uniformly treatedas exemptfrom disclosure for a period of up to ( in..OR 777.005,by applicant for investmenfunds,loans t 90 daysafter the end of the calendarquarter. . ( _. .S s t * This provision was submitted by the Treastny after the expressed ʻ I {Et: _ ' ʼ V - ʻ ʻ s ··~· *ʻ·-* ʼ· ·-·~···· OPS ld') <0'7/13) did not cover the-mOI1'f1i!1; §j ¤--,--.r--1LI 9. todo rd;.i1.. rm. ..1.1 rx-m _,* Lv ¤”. IKBCOTGRUD . I IITIET I IFECEITIDET (SCC 1AUD I" JJ}, \uvv Ayr 4 J.\.\Jv\.l1. \J1 LLDL , 1-l\4\:\1111U\J1 1lʻ1ʻ}ʻi. A|\IICI1()| \1\¢l1\.I1 COHCCIH 1ZI12\'£]0I"IʼH UKD l 7.4...)UL(l-3) uru riot oo · "ʻ “" 'S 1 1e;;=r · ewes-; *e1ʼ$'·F·1-l$¤§&1¥€—ʻ1¥= ·ʻ· ʻZBLLUIIU 2`·`“"·ʼ ·1- é sister agggé ~ o · ~ 1.,1.,t. 1..,4-. 1 s ee. ?. 1 €7” it-151 ; 1as . ,. .:.-.1 .1 ;- L 4 igwkm ;:·:— sv ., ex,. xii,. ,,_ - "?·» · 1T" if 1 3.-* ' PM-<zF=¤2*;1.aE1. `. '.¤ʻ.i$7f£”-Ii _ 1.ʻ 1:V ;.- . — 1 ·1 . y . . ¤ 1 z ..ʻ. ?”ʻ? 94 I.£ SI__ PUBLIC RECORDS -'(c) The actual,or estimated,amountofthe delinquency. i= M ..1.-da.- ieeluding. but not limited to, those described in ORS OI SCIQVLUGB ulbtuuuié, uu. nv-. ...1--.--.1 .- , .1 ee 285A.224: tj (a) Personalfinancial statements . of applicants. (b) Financial statement i i. (.ʼ. 1 ` § =,i= (c) Customerslists. I 1 · j. 1 1 1 _ i I I I I "ʻ I ·{ tj 'i·`I S E ¥: mf: Q_Z, _ 5 _i ( . °iredging gg, rr.-t wi ifI} IY:. _ 1_ e w r . `I llIʻl (I;i il`;·ʻ;*riit rtl §,I1i4¤ :`t,.u ! : .ʼ ·:~_ 1 ·;<t 1 · Tll-1-l it Qu iIZI*.:ʻ. titty,lʻi ·1l·[ @`i`."2l-r w mg; iZ;* ʻʻ.¤ ʻ `? . w 52rg- *5 iI§ʻ : 1 -.= y'E· 'in si? * 1 ti.? `(ll ·3 rl:ltr;] ` V .1 . i " ' K V V Departmentof Revenueunder the state taxing provisions. Also, under ,`i`_·. ORS 320.330 and 320.340, the pre—existing confidentiality provisions of Q I · s i S? — ` ʻ `~ ORS314.835apply to statetransientlodging tax reports and returns. With limited exceptions,ORS 314.835makes the disclosure of such reports and ¤ ʼ Y ·r returnsby Department of Revenuestaff; or by others to whom disclosure ·ʻ I ;; I i`— 'r,r` Q l ffl! ,Er 125;; i gis permitted, unlawful. By its terms and under rules of statutory construction,the 2003 legislation effectively limits the applicability of ORS l92.502(l8) to recordspertaining to the payment of transientlodging ʻʻʻ, rf {axes assesse by local govemments. Statetransient lodging tax reports .·land returns d 248 ORS l92.502(9). are exemptunder (it) Marketing strategyinformation that relates to applicantʼs_j --.-- to .- address ,.,¤,¤--..specnrc .......;+:.markets and app..c..... pmnlicantʼs strategyregarding plan rdarketsand U.,.--.-gy .` "D"ʻ """<D ( et 1 specific competitors. ʼ Ti}:- A e ORS l92.502(l8) exempts: tax.247Section 8a ofthe 2003 legislation, codified at ORS 320.340, exempts from disclosure public records of moneys received by the ,7; (18) Transient Lodging Tax Records ii 1.} ,.. L *I}?. .i' 5.·l· Yi'. 1` .'l ORS l92.502(l 8) appliesto records required to be submittedto or inspectedby a "govemmentalbody" in relation to determiningthe amount - LL"!`'y of transient lodging tax due, and requires disclosure of specified 1=l`iinformationwhenpaymentor delivery of taxes otherwisedueis delinquent by over 60 days. Until 2003, only local governmentsimposed taxes on -» ,·`ʼl..transient lodging. The 2003 Oregon legislature enacted a state transient (e) Production, sales and cost data. ~l 95 2 LC; litigation to (d) Information of an applicant pertaining to Qu Gin:] nr if: ·· · 1 ·r-.1 .-. -... 1-i.-411-..,1.,D, which the applicantis a party if the cornplarnthas beenmed, or ld the complaint has not been filed, if the applicant showsthat such litigation is reasonablylikely to occur; this exemptiondoes not apply to litigation which has been concluded, and nothing in this paragraphshall limit any right or opporuinity grantedby discovery or depositionstatutesto a party to litigation or potentiallitigation. E ? I -. I. g; -t I =- ..?és JV r* ». ;Records,reportsor returnssubmittedby private concemsor; — 3-.: enterprisesrequired by law to be submittedto or inspectedby at — i` > governmentalbody to allow it to determine the amount of anyi ' (19) Information for Obtaining Court-Appointed Counsel ··i.-AiZfmc too <rY>/10\ exernpts. ¤vpm¤+¤· ruooariy) URS [ All infomation suppliedby a personunder ORS 151.485for the purposeof requesting appointedcounsel,and all information ;V 3"· , ·zc iz : .T=—iii%? i€t* _·:L—.,r = jsupplie to the courtfrom whatevesourc for the purpos of transientlodging tax payableandthe amountsof suchtax payablei ¢Z1 ·*Ea? gat: ie Meriifyin the financial eligibility of aeperson pursuant or paid, to the extent that such information is in a form which? r e to- ORS 5 , tent? T*·== Vd * 2-2- . -iʻi?. · - :-~!"»—`:. would permit identification of the individual concemor enterprisee—wss-. .9 Etegcéli;, .Q —-r<.a=",¤ - g — %ʻur.:=*;ʻ -glbe mad;-. :;.-ʻ;;=.s:x;·5:t '¤·. r-.·:..¤ 1;5ʻ1.»48 Defens Service Commissi administe an indigen Nothing in this subsectionshall limit the use which can - =p§§,=·. 5.- ··. QTVI7he .~r i w ;$,,; r _jt%§r_,Z . r 5. of such infomation for regulatory purposesor its admissibility if in certain ¤i·~Public eunder which s defendant on rs types of cases t may any enforcementproceedings The public body shall notify .iliditiialv-rforennirrt-annninted leoal counsel. ORS l92.502( 19} exempts from s {Q7 $.;:5,}: ._ ""f*T·T?·' ."T" ' ' "' ' "1'.l' '“"' " "¤"" ' ' "“ʻ "` ' “ ʼ ` ʻ? `f;:.€L 2f3» " "=`* ~ ·` · · • · taxpayer of the . delinquency immediately by certified court t tsdlosurre . """ all ““"““"'°""`""` information ""`!"i'""` sunnlied to the Commission or to _,,}r§;" r·— ~ M-:.*;·»· ~ However, in the event that the payment or delivery of transient * ʻ· . lodging taxesotherwise due to a public body is delinquentby ever; 60 days, the public body shall disclose, upon the requestof gay; _g»;.; · .®r.La.ws2003, ch 818, §§ 2-9. ¤L.~¥·»i. Q ink? "ʼ r:;·T.J`Y"M - . ,1 — . Koenne v. Lampe 19 Or App444 453 10 P3 65 (200 Q person,the following infomation: -. l\J1.'*'\l\J\A·L L"Gl-IJ }J\J1.I.l\¤\J\.l l.\JF.(»\·1 \/\}\»lLA|)\lL• \/J.\I.I A / l-¤•./ \.lhr\ A. r / v1xv».4,•1.: as . mozjstatut c/ce potentiall rt, conflict 8 give effect , to , both 8 if dpossible 3 5)ORS (a) The identity of the individual concern or enterprisethat statu prevail over existin statu whic — generalllater— ,ucnilqucut mm 60 dav in the pavrne or deliver ofthe taxes e es LAJLLB yLWU bLd.LLlLC§ , 1ld.l1LlU111ULlb1_Y , withONE uvui uu uuye rrr trio pct, 11,.-r-- ..- ,--7. _, rtm*i¤1·1·11r= ntahitpc hnrmrininuclv hv frentinc l2lʼ&tʻ-Rfmftfftfl 21 ` ' lr It L1LLC tum U_y I.l\.»d.L11lE 16\.L\J1ʻ\4LALL\.r\.\.»\.1 \J11v y, w¤+¤»An»I enacted g te h uuS 1..1;mm sLU1 which nttaxes y li ʻ V1V. ʻ V,g;§§ rm Tim Fm the are asa} :-.r .¤!—Z·2·'!lH(J1ʻ§(l¤i*1\r¤lxr .“,A-.`+I A..” te +A lk,.-......·\ s gi%gg— 11ʼ1IC1 SXCGDI IDI I IIC m»1·i DUI IUU Wuhan Luv Luzxvu wav deliI1¤uCH uvaaar ' I0 IOlʼ1TlCI' A » ~ .. ;·~ .· `~§ ¤A '£. m+ . .iq1uLlVC1y 'l(1B(1 IOIY · = ~., a ¤¤a t . \U] \"/ .L11\.: ""` Ipvnx"uu Lua V · 1** .·52~ ʻ" ,` fi ·. r.·»1*é.` »_ . na; .. asia ;a.z·.·;#2;2§§·,@j·? ggjs iqggjdm 1;z;.ʻ.§L . _ ._._gg.i;.;· _: g·zw E `. .2€=i£.i,ʼ=`”. .· A · # ».ʻ 5 .L . . .< ;*=§iʼ==r.;e2¢3,:é1z:;=z?etra—>:ʻ*. _ ; , inw Tile}; 96 - PUBLICRECORD S rn, ORS 192.502(21) exempts: 1 , 1 xii t i E"il t Vi t> ʻle ; -.-4. ir. 1r Ztji r lit ° .·.,} ·_ A;. Wi r {Z;-'·t`* Y*__t -i 1"`i ri r`;i`,ʻ“ t-` . ;=;hi Cl? w 'lrat ti, eii!. .M :1 =mi 1 2 gir r.t1'ii % l 1 `rg ʻ§j yd -igjpr, rr 1; ”j 'r ét 1 Iaj? Tr “~ml,.·,1 ...yk ri ta? _ ·· ·i1n+}·x1»·1n-sr-¤ 1H.t0HT1zu. +1n1»1 T1-J- ff (c) Vtfhen the disclosure is made in such a manner that the competitors. 25°this interpretation, ”Under -11.. tj -f}1.L..m· :.-2-..--LZILR; Tu;rms .-,.1.....+;.... exemptionum was Magma clearer.in to m-event p.c.c... neonle 1,...,,..-hom 11-. using ..--1:, mformat1on: -----.1 %ia§..r ,. yl ma . 4.1..- L1- - `I,...Z-1..4.I,-.. n4.-a- h- 4.1...4. ,...--.-....11... ..-..- -. .. -..1 YGITIOVCCI -1-11 11r T1: -1. -.1 ri 11.1 1-I.: 11 Education1 - .1 -1 4.ʻI-J,- I-,.1..-...-..1-1..-LI-... LL.- ..,---.-1. `I--I.] LL..A. LI-- -..0.--- .--L` .-,...LZ A. .1-.. the court held that the names or particular in public records of the Departmentof Consumer11 and Business (DCBS) to discriminate unlawfully againstpersonspreviously thejob who have filed a workersʼ compensatio claim. The four exceptio permittinworker n compensaticlaimrecord lanihn. +¤¤+¤A 25] _ Wing Y€Sl€ ¤· (22) OHSU Candidates for University President `ʼ r_y3ORl92.502(22) exempts: _ _ S ʻi p Records of Oregon Health and ScienceUniversity regarding _ʻcandidate for the position of presidentof the university. disclose withsʼ rulesof the ns in accordanc g onDCBSdirectorwhen s necessary 1sThis provision was also part of the legislation removing OHSU process claims, necessaryfor governmental agenciesto d e when P the - disclosed -- - information · ~ ·- cannot ---1.--.11 ..--A to ... IG¤¤°¥·3T$i€%5§l? ir--;. am.-raamwhen beused from the authoritv of the StateBoard of Higher Education and itf§§§?%2enerallv ..-.. WOHQ ..,--1,-.a mlm quhmnr ur of et a omni., claim. or or when 3 W01`l< the umversrtv as a nuhlrc corporation. 9.Ily Wuu ia 1Sthe Luc auujcm. ..-1..-.... .. ....... OT -. h1$=ʻ_ _ ·1?$?lEs _ ,,_W _,:%·.ri €T CI represent reque revie oftheworkerʼclai recor In OI legislativ "claim to includ ative history sts weinterpre w srecordsm d. both . %§Frri1GSʼtabl1sh1ng _ _i %___:w w____ einformation , about at worker and a" worl<erʼeclaim and . `tf" ʻ`ʻ`··"*·· about ··ʻ·*“·* a·*claim, ·ʻ··ir··· sucn suchas e¤the names of the claimant.the information tne nalnes are .,.a........., ...- --. s or . ʼ-7 a7· and the insurer.249 _-ji ; " jfs · — ʻ ` , - ` 249 11..1-1:ʻ"ʼ YIJ11hI1D LIUIU 1),.,.-.-A. KHCOTIIS 1\.G\.»U1u¤ If\.-Any HTIET. \.}1u¤r, Iulv .lLllV . un] 1 O IOOR 7. 4 , 1770.. I / l V, Qnl*1mT1ih§l<€ D\»11U1llIll¤ru.. -ly----- (SBB 1ADD (suv ʻ "· l92.502(23)exempts: 'I`h¤ »·¤n.·“··.-In _ Tʼ.“L` ʻ ZY mtzat 174. ._ V 7~ =~ .7 ·. ·- 5.f % ¢>er.. Visi ! 5:; '*ʼ*%VV=;=, a:¢·rA§s. — V· — V ` 77. ·. aresg A-I-`.-I `IJI.-W-.•·" i··.,J“Ai“n· 1 Defense 0fAnzmaZs. 199 Or Aon at 173 (see Ann C-21). In cr 7V ʻ (23) Library Records · —7 .1IlS 1'€COI'C1 OI B. 11D1'6tI'y' 1I1Cll1Gl1ʼ1gZ S , ` W =? r~· ;ʼ¥ will _1 1;;,1 }`Q1r rr M AC -2 jzpharmaceuticcompanieswith which OHSU had contractedto test their al experimental drugs were exempt from disclosure, as were the names of the (d) When a worker or the workerʼs representative requests review of the workerʼs claim record. - .--.4- WBS p&1'[ OI lZl'l€ lCg1Sl3.lZ1OI1 '[l'13.I gCl'lGI'3.lly commercial manner—where the records or information ordinarily would not be provided to either OHSUʼs or its businesspartnersʼ Aaspimp infmmmion cannotbe used to identify any worker who . TJ ·ʼ LUSU1U5U\.l 1.I.LLU11.L1cu.1\.1.u uuiiiirui. UV .,..3.-... ..-. -.. 'V '`' a is the subjectof a claim. .1.. ....... -11211 ---ir-. [R]ecords or information pertaining to activities of OHSU that are ·. 5pryr..§iO; commercial in nature —including medical and scientific research r activities if conducted for comrrrercial purposes or in a rlnfinc ` r~ .11 11 1 from the 11 {L . 1Sincreasedoperating flexibility in order to best ensureits success, } t granted while retaining principles of public accountability and fundamentalpublic Ail;.. `_ E policy. The Oregon Court of Appeals has interpreted this exemption as ir `· » ei ,.§é.ié§..rryiig.. I 0 “ ʻ ʻ , ._ agenciesof this stateor the United Statesto carry out tnerr uuues, 3> 1 L.- é ._.ʻ Ol-ISU authority of the State Board of 1-lrgner and ._ ., establishedthe university as a public corporation. The corporation was gOV€IHHICHt3I .11+ Flnnir .-..;...2-1...- 'l'l'11S pI`OVlSlO1'l -1rwr (a) When necessaryfor insurers, self— employers and A ` ` ` ʻ ʻ ʻ —·—- ——~»—-l~»··.··ʼ COIIIPCIISEILIUII third party claim administrators to process workers ¤A1»vw\¤n¤¤|·inn insured claims. fimctions or powers. Sensitive business records or Enancial or commercial ----1 (7-1----TT--Itim 4.. n·I·`Hn¤ {\v·¤n·r\1·• I-Inclfh and Qr»1¤1·u··¤ I Inn ,.... 01 Luc Urcguu mcaltu anu ¤u1t:I1cc: L.JI11vc: Luut 1S ¤;r., 10I1 1ʻs1Ly not customarily providedto businesscompetitors. * `. * r .-·L` Workersʼ compensationclaim records of the Department or Consumer and BusinessServices,exceptin accordancewith rules adopted by the Director of the Department of Consumer and BusinessServices,in any of the following circumstances: (b) When necessary for the director, other % ii]? . r 1 ORS 192.502(20)exempts: t _ir 1 ·` i _Q 97 (21) OHSU Sensitive Business Records r ) ] L 1 . I Q PUBLIC RECORDS persomrelto request counsel or to verify indigency under this program, ....--1. may Much 1: or .r...t tnat ;..4·.m..¤ rnronnanon aq is atm also mntidential ccriirac..ti ... and ...... disclosure ...-----"W. violate +;m1 stateor federallaw. (20) Workersʼ Compensation Claim Records E_. j Nl .. ʻ :@=ʻ:·—2 · ea»-Wag. ,___ʼ#V,. ʼ ʻ ʼ·ʻ·¤ as . T“ :;.1 > 98 g . JU Puerto nacomns PUBLIC RECORDS 1 1 gf ? ' V11 lil*; (a) Circulation records, showing use of specific library material by a namedperson; 99 (h) Project cost certifications and cost data. {rl Audits. <r telephonenumberof the patron;and 75> (c) The electronic mail addressof a patron. (L) Housing assistanc payments. ʻʻʻ1 e The exemption for library circulation records was moved from ORS ʻ P _ 192.50 and the provisions for patron namesand addresse was addedinrjii 1 I rthe Housing and Community Services Department regarding rr-1 rama name (D) uw uuuic nf a lihrarv ur ¤ rrorary -»—·¢-···¤•·· patron 1....1--. ¤-¤+l1¤1- 1x1·ii'Iʻ\ linr t0EGIl1e1ʻ wml ....¤- ..... i'Iʻ\R QIIIITERR tile auuress OY or Proj ect tenant correspondence. I 1g. _ p_ (K) _g *5tjj 1 `I'Tʻl-3.-. hm .I.l11D T1 -..-. -.- -1 :.- L'-.1.-- -4.: -.. -.1- ---4. - 4.-.- --4. lʼ€I 80118.11Iʼ1IO1`1'Jf13.IlO3,b0I1I 8 ICDZIIII. I`1 .-...`.,J,-J A.hrnvicinrw IJLUVLBIUIL -.,-....-+revpwihtc CAUILIPLB ·C..-...Trnrh LIUIIJ A§....1A.......` r11cr*InQ11rr¤ UIDUIUDLIIU ..-.4... 2.certain UCILCIIII -AAA-Arr-r*nrrt¤ LCLJUILLD rxlwfninprl UULCIIILUU Inv Uy individuals V applying for governmenbsubsidize housing or businesse applying for 1995. We had previously concluded that thes disclosure of library j 1 d affordable, government— s housing and to circulation records would ordinarily be an unreasonabl invasion ofif {funding to develop of such housing. The purpose of the privacy and exempt under former ORS l92.500(2)(c), the PersonalPrivacy;-I Y1 rrnaintain their ongoing operationsubsidized e TITT.1 exemption. However, we determined that disclosure of names and}? ` igprovisio is to protect from public disclosure the detailed personal and addresse of library patrons may not be an unreasonabl invasion of Y nbusiness information that applicants and businesses must submit to the 252 privacy. The exemptionnow clearly permits libraries to shield directory s e — L.Qairarrrspirrrrarlririatheisubsidhousi pr-sg.information (i.e., addresse or telephonenumbers linked with names)7 -I (25) Forestland giirr Geographic iiedInformationngSystem ar. ahem their narrons 2007 legislature amende the exemption to{7g§Q I__5 §rQi§ rrlér s The KIUULIL Lllbu Puuunru. .1.rrV r-vv . --¤-.,-.... - . _ it J 1 . J iiiI ORS_l92.502(25)exempts: . d `. to patronemail addresses Or Laws 2007, ch 181. `a§ *JV V fl" Raster geographicinformation system(GIS) digital databases (24). Housing and Community Services Department .~ , _. provided by private forestland owners or their representatives _ Records ·7;*;.; _·`7 voluntarily and in confidence to the State Forestry , Department, ORS 192.502(24) exempts: rl ʻ7ʻ Ll. · - that is not otherwiserequiredby law to be submitted. E ʻ' ¤ The following records, corrnnunications and irrforinationf c` The State Forestry Department, working with a variety of interests, has Q t-I'-.-,-,Q! .. -.,-.--......1-,.;.-2-..1..+..l-....,...11...1 /`1-.-.~...·....`I..£n T.·.~(·`,“·.».»`r-.4-IA.-r obtainedby the Housing and Community ServicesDepartrrrent jg 3 CO111p1' Cl'l€IlS1VC GEIIEIDBSC CEll1C(1- LJ€Og1' 3pl11C . 1I1IO1'l'l'1&t1011 ,.---.1 . . . .. . . .. . ,. . .. . ---M-rr-.. mm. rhs Aamahheavq monitoring or administration of connection wrrn tne ueparrrrrerrr s rrrorrrrorrrrg sr ..........----..- _ (GIS) which displays information about forestland conditions. Hnancialassistanc or of housingor other developments exemption addresse the concern of private landowners regarding ·s e : {-x n-...-nar aaa eomomre financial statements rmt ·=rrʻ*ʻ ¤.>~a¤;t¤;;·**%¤ _voluntary disclosure to the Department of Forestry of accurate and (B.) I"€1'SOI1H. uuu uuryuruw 1 ¢7¤ - rg; rnfonnatr “ 77 1 land 3 *3for it purpos it 7 it ofthe 3 “ · g§.g.é.,ri$ abou their GIS. 1 information, including tax returns. lʻ· _ %@,;g§leta11e t Sale or Purchaseesof Electric ʻ.-g.--,-on (26) Public d . RS -192.02(26) exempts: (b) Credit reports. (c) Project appraisals. 1 &-· ¤·•·n`I•\ 1 v\ A operatingagreements . (f) Commitment letters. (g) Proj ect pro forma statements. 'ʻi., ʻ- . . - - . . ed c y ed . . ʼ *:5;; . -. 7 2;;; . ¤Fʼg;~; ¤·>·*¤ J · isthe direct relat atransac inOR ty istodirectl tyrelatedescri or ifng informatio toes, abid,propos ly edor purchas bedor electricit n sal y tion al S forthe ofd electricit ,261.348, 7 · ʻy 7 " · · 2522 Any x-nerr Gen w435 (1981) (seeADD E6)ʻI·1 Oo Ul.! ru.;] "`1'1"_'/' 11 . 5 ___ʻQfSe busines commerci or financi informatio to or develop by a publi bod engag in the nsitiveof providi s, al al servic n if the electrici or electrici 1 (d) Market studiesand analyses .·.·-·Y-..--..: agreements \\/} LLDLULVU va. Ip3I`lZl'1€1'SIl1p (B) 1ATIICICS Of nsevver lI1CO1`DO1`8IlOl1, ur r- al-aq .. Power -4 .:;:4 . E E ~ aa·a»;;..-; rrp · c 7 V- · ·~--: ·; ¤ir=· V . ee -eee¤:%~#~@2?e¢.=~·r:Z.xref — V 5.Y: g nrc:. 7. > Vr = ' —€·&ii?% aaai? ~ · ·?%:i§· ¤ʻ;1 `1···f—::a"E¢é\ @r;ʼ_.::_ and disclosu wouldycaus a e of ethe informatio y for the public disadvantag body or its re n e retail ···* ʻ ' ʻ _ _=jrg·§.GOIl'lp€llJ[lV€ =mr? ~ ;»®sr" . 3 tri =&“=· V» a¤ — e 100 ( PUBLIC RECORDS {* PUBLIC RECORDS 101 e_-. _ ·. dates of birth, driver license numbers, telephone numbers, electronic mail addresseor Social Security numbersof customers who receive water, sewer or storm drain services nom a public s body as defined in ORS 174.109. The utility or district may releasepersonally identifiable information abouta customer,anda expiration of their contracts with the Bonneville Power 3Administration, jj; _`;.public body providing water, sewer or storm drain services may ,.·1 cormnunity— utilities are able to purchase their energy on e releasethe name, date of birth, driver license number, telephone competitive open market basis. This exemption is designed to protect _ _D owned number, electronic mail addressor Social Security rrurnber of a information the disclosureof which would adverselyaffect the public sale itI 1Q customer,if the customerconsentsin writing or electronically, if or purchase of electric power by public bodies engage in providing}. 7 the disclosure is necessaryfor the utility, district or other public -i--rr;-;r-, we Aaaerham111uDL mner \./ruunv createra a uurrrvl.zvu»r competitive disadvantag to either; ii BICCIII-ICII.y. IIIU LIISUIUBLLLC v · d·-—-· · ····*"¤ ʼ ʼ W" body to render services to the customer, if the disclosure is V ` ——eurOT no e to LIIG }J\.lU11b Uuuy ---- ..-- --,the n11I·1Ii(! IWHIIV IIS rvuarr TCl3ll uoruevrrrvrv CLISIOITIGIS --ICIC IIIC GXCIIIDIZIOII 1; " L requiredpursuantto a court order or if the disclosure is otherwise 1 I (27) Klamath Cogeneration Project _V3 requiredby federal or statelaw. The utility, district or other public .ʻ. . V: body may charge as appropriatefor the costs of providing such ORS l92.502(27) exempts: ` information. The utility, district or other public body may make . Sensitive business, commercial or financial information customer records available to third party credit agencies on a furnished to or developedby the City of Klamath Falls, acting . regular basis in connection with the establishmen and solely in connection with the ownership and operation of the .i_V managemenof customeraccountsor in the event such accounts t Klamath Cogeneration Project, if the information is directly _ i i_ i;ʻ.° taredelinquent. related to a transactiondescribedin ORS 225.085 and disclosure ` _ =OR l92.502(28) exempts Hom disclosure "personally identifiable of the infonnation would causea competitive disadvantag for the about customersof municipal electric utilities and peopleʼs _information" S e doesnot apply to Klamath CogenerationProject. This subsection 1,districts. It was amended by Oregon Laws 2005, chapter 659, cost—of— studies used in the development or review of 11 1S--111.. -...4-. ....1.-.-1-ele". 7 .....arr} 1 rrr qlen evemnr certain recm-rlc n·Fm1l·1lir lwnrliec as defined in futility service gGI1CI`&l8ppllC3bl IHICSClʻ1€(1l.l I, LUktlS Uxclllpt ucltulu 1cuulu ur puullo uuurco,no ucrllreu rrr electricity customers. This subsectiondoes not apply to cost-ofservice studies used in the developmen or review of generally applicablerate schedules t . the . As a result of the federal Energy Policy Act of 199225 and r itYiQ ii ly € 1GS. . This provisio was adde to the Publi RecordLaw to address .7 n d s Sa ¤¤ thaeeme th cexelee le OR discuss abov OR 225.08 grant the City of Klamat authori toentetintocertai transacti involvinvariou aspec me e ed ¤<=e e. S ed 5 s tlee hS provisio ofrelectricitnorfuelons in relatio togtheownershi and ty sprotec tsoperatioo r rh tzlame Ctoeene Prote Thi exempti LIIU 1.\1i:u11¤u.l \Ju5v1n.»ruuvrr r ru_jvvr.. rrrrr............r --..-1.---. . n mS n y n p pertaining these transactions a rh tomrion ct. when s the on disclosure ts would competitivedisadvantag for theProject. e(28) Public Utility Customer Information ·fim·r — U that provid water S 174.10 sewe or storm drai service 9, , resa.rrca .......s n s. ac.....e darofbirt erepr. electroni mail address and Socia Securit number of whoT€C eewic me €X A PublllbOd 7.s.the esSpecifi c esh, l a y ..·., s s.... grt?tcwdmgwater, sewecr etcmr drai ee Servicee municip €lV€ ed €mP1 electri ? utility. -YOf `f§§;eljgI··e utility distric ma disclo exem info;Lmd my r n s, al c circumstanc whe the custom· consen in writing or _._pecp1eʼ pursuant t to aycourt se pt mation cy _.· as otherwise es: n order; er ts required by state or _-,V;§r § s iʻ or if disclosuisnecessatoprovid servictothecustom ʻadditio anv thes. ry publi bodie _ reof e . mavedisclos theer.exem · _j§<1§IdlZ5law; ʻe%·€·;“:f;l eesrr . . avemr-.+¤· ʻ7__ ·=ʻ eels 7%e ii*eaʻ¢t`.. ·ln. ¤ tc credit CXUIIIULB. 3*¥fʻr?»2“c= l ʻ·ʼ*“¥*l**·*ʻ·i\-VJ-}NU V1V\·U·\» vnvuxy ··¤· ·ʻ·· "* ʻ··**··' E"S;.?Ej T ' ʼ1 * ` I ; i 1 · 1 1re 11.1- ;.- .:-.1... -.r: -...1..-.1+ e11e+r·.1-1·r nf' -7 ¤- Hi V §iu5tOD3GI1B.CCOl1IlIS. Personall identifiable information about customer or a_,, _ ·` 1 ¤1·¤ or the names.? 1.....11-;-- 111-..;..r; -.. .1-M.11111Aaeeic ·ʼ . 1'I1l1I11ClP3l CISCIIIC 1111111lO1` 3. p€Op1t5 S utlllty ulSLl s lor ur uri., rrcrrrry. . y . Fir ; e> ·r - ¢=ʼ*··"· =.ʻ 1 1;r., rs>s 114, r Cy noo I IKN UA1) mo <N7lʼ)Q\ Iʻ·I/. WI!/.I /.I\I .L74..Ju1.\1·u) .- %er3¤1%1 · 253 no rrori LIZ USL) 1: 1n*m1 Q 1-“}LUl. 7 ..V ;V V 7 .i.- = 7 7 ertr eaeér-1* 7. 7 . V . . <:e¤e·¤ ·ʻ * .ʻ ea ·» — e agencies GRVIIUIVO *1:**** in c U1 the establishment |»|·1VsVOHJULLDIULLVLLL e811 Cl I'I'l3.1'l8.gC111 Dt of Cl'll