Variably Sunny: SCOTUS Allows Local FOIA Restrictions 86
v3rgEz writes "The Supreme Court ruled Monday morning that states have the right to restrict public records access to locals, meaning one more hurdle to would-be muckrakers everywhere. Even in-state requesters are harmed: It means one more bureaucratic hurdle and another excuse for agencies to respond in paper rather than electronically. MuckRock has helped file requests in all 50 states — important for projects like the Drone Census — and we're looking for more volunteers to help ensure transparency from sea to shining sea. States impacted: Alabama; Arkansas; Delaware; Georgia; New Hampshire; New Jersey; Tennessee; and Virginia. If you live in one of the above, fill out a simple form and we can help ensure that sunshine isn't restricted depending on where you live."
simple workaround (Score:1)
The obvious workaround is hire a citizen to make the request for you.
This is so obvious, I'm not sure why they think limiting it to citizens is reasonable.
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Another problem with this is that it disallows anonymous requests.
You could be made to prove you're a citizen and in so doing reveal your identity.
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Well if a person has to pay to get info they will not be snooping into any and all they can for one, or they have to have a lot of money to spend. It will stop sites like Spokeo.com from exploiting anything they can. At least I hope it would. It creates jobs.
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It's meant to be an impediment. Being reasonable has nothing to do with it.
One area the UK got right (Score:3)
While it took much longer for the UK to get a freedom of information act., it does seem much more powerful than that available in the US.
There's no cost for most inquiries (where the cost to the government body to respond is less than £600. It covers the bulk of public bodies. Anyone, anywhere on the world can use it. Replies are expected within 20 business days.
Combined with the Data Protection Act, and it seems UK citizens have far greater rights and protections when it comes to personal and public data than who live in the United States.
That's not to say the UK FOIA is perfect, far from it. Exceptions are too wide, and some government bodies can be obstructive. Still it has delivered useful information that would likely not have been discovered otherwise.
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Yeah! Just imagine if Stephen Hawking had been British! He'd have never survived!
lol. [huffingtonpost.com]
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No one is ever denied care for lack of insurance in the emergency room.
That's why that's where all the people without insurance go, emergency or not.
Re:One area the UK got right (Score:5, Insightful)
That's simply not true. The ER does have to provide emergency care to stabilize a patient. If, however, you have cancer you can't just go to the ER for treatment. If you need an organ transplant to live you won't get one in the United States without some form of insurance/state coverage to pay for the operation and the ongoing costs. As your liver fails, you will be able to go to the ER to try and help reduce the toxins in your bloodstream or stem excessive bleeding. But once your life is no longer in danger and you are considered stabilized, you can be dischaged - even though the doctos know your only hope for survival is a transplant.
If you are older and break a bone, the ER will treat you and set the bone in a cast whether or not you have insurance. They won't however cover the cost of physiotherapy to help you walk again afterwards.
There are many who visit horpital emergency rooms and are denied the care they need to function or indeed to live.The largest for-profit network of hospitals, HCA, now demand up-front payment from ER patients if their condition is deemed to be not a true emergency.
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http://www.komonews.com/news/local/98319189.html [komonews.com]
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Regular doctor visits, yes. It's illegal to deny someone in an emergency room insurance or not. Has been for years.
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There's no cost for most inquiries (where the cost to the government body to respond is less than £600. It covers the bulk of public bodies. Anyone, anywhere on the world can use it. Replies are expected within 20 business days.
Are you sure you'e not comparing it to Sunshine laws? What you're describing sounds like the already existing set of laws that demand most government bodies operate transparently and have openly available records (often requiring they be available online for instant viewing for free, in more recent updates). The FOIA allows citizens to request sealed and classified information: it is reviewed against a set of very limited criteria, and if it doesn't fit any, it is released. If only portions fit, those p
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it is still the crown's power
In case the crown ever gets uppity, here are two predecessors to mention: Charles I and James II.
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The basis of UK law is divine right monarchism with limitations thrown on. The basis of US law is a written constitution that carefully circumscribes the powers of government. Even though both countries have common law systems, their fundamental structures are radically different.
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One person (Score:5, Interesting)
If with all the Internet at your disposal you can't find one single person in the state willing to submit the FOIA request and pass you back the results, it's a good sign you're wasting everybody's time and *shouldn't* have access to the information you seek.
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True. It makes much more sense to err on the side of not wasting the government's time than on the side of government transparency.
Re:One person (Score:5, Insightful)
It's not the government's time. As a citizen of Virginia, it's my time. *I* paid for it.
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And in case it wasn't clear, I don't want some dope from California wasting my Virginia tax dollars on some paranoid quest to find out what Virginia knows about alien abductions. If you can't at least find a like-minded Virginian to sign his name to the request, something is seriously wrong with the request.
Re: One person (Score:2)
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Check your civics boss. According to the 14th Amendment, "All persons born or naturalized in the United States, and subject to the jurisdiction thereof, are citizens of the United States and of the State wherein they reside."
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Virginia considers you not merely to be a citizen of the country and of the state but also a citizen of your locality within the state.
Section 5. County, city, and town governing bodies.
Whenever the governing body of any such unit shall fail to perform the duties so prescribed in the manner herein directed, a suit shall lie on behalf of any citizen thereof to compel performance by the governing body.
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The overwhelming majority of classified documents are classified because they were derived in part from some other document that was classified and were written by a government contractor who is not authorized to declassify any portion the prior document marked classified.
Even if that weren't true, it has no bearing on a state government's response to FOIA requests. Classification is purely a Federal government thing where Federal FOIA rules apply.
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9th amendment (Score:2)
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As long as there's a postage stamp sized piece of land somewhere in the country where you can exercise your rights, they have not been infringed.
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What makes gun owners different is that there are millions of them who consider the Second Amendment to be the basis of all other freedoms and who will accordingly campaign, donate, and vote against anyone, regardless of their party and regardless of anything else they do, who appears to threaten gun rights. That's why the NRA is powerful. It doesn't hurt their cause that
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Re:9th amendment (Score:5, Insightful)
The constitution restricts nothing. It grants powers to the government. Anything not explicitly granted is prohibited.
Re:9th amendment (Score:4, Insightful)
The constitution restricts nothing. It grants powers to the government. Anything not explicitly granted is prohibited.
"Congress shall make no law," "shall not be infringed," "excessive bail shall not be required," etc, sure sound like restrictions to me.
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The bill of rights is a group of amendments which further clarify that we are endowed inalienable natural rights by our creator (be that creator YHWH, FSM, zeus, or random chance)
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"Congress shall make no law," "shall not be infringed," "excessive bail shall not be required," etc, sure sound like restrictions to me.
Congratulations on demonstrating why the founding fathers didn't want to create the Bill of Rights in the first place.
Those aren't restrictions - they're clarifications. The government never had those powers in the first place, because they were never granted to them. All the Bill of Rights does is spell it out in plain language that these are things that the government cannot do.
(Which it does anyway: see gun control, health care laws, obscenity laws, and most recently, the refusal to allow the Boston mara
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I agree with you 100%, and am also disheartened by the lack of attention paid to the 9th and 10th amendments. I was merely being pedantic.
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replying to remove incorrect mod!
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Don't interrupt a good rant with facts and logic.
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The non-enumerated (and most of the enumerated) rights are generally seen as restrictions on what the State may no, rather than mandates of what the state must do. People have more or less the same rights as before. But it seems a State only has an obligation to act when one of its residents or citizens makes the request.
Re:9th amendment (Score:5, Informative)
How does the ninth amendment even apply, in any way? The FOIA isn't in the constitution at all. Anyways, the SCOTUS found a long (long) time ago that the 9th amendment only applies to the federal government and isn't enforceable against the states, so even if it was in some way relevant, it still wouldn't apply, as this is a state-level FOIAs that the ruling was on.
10th amendment (Score:5, Informative)
The powers not delegated to the United States by the Constitution, nor prohibited by it to the States, are reserved to the States respectively, or to the people.
It seems that State held information is a State matter and not a federal one.
It is interesting that people look upon the US as a monolithic country when it was formed more as a confederation of independent States. The states guard their sovereignty very strongly. The SCOTUS appears to see FOI requests from different states the same as FOI requests from different countries and, as it is the way the US is set up, it should. If a State does not want to respond to FOI requests from different States or countries there is no Federal power that requires them to.
Here is a quote from the decision;
The state FOIA essentially represents a mechanism by which those who ultimately hold sovereign power (i.e., the citizens of the Commonwealth) may obtain an accounting from the public officials to whom they delegate the exercise of that power.
Laws don't apply to the state! (Score:1)
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The people of Virgina can access their information that way. Most of the rest these out-of-state people wanted they got through other means. One guy wanted his own records related to his kids...and got it. Another wanted info already on the Internet by Virginia, and ruling he had to spend a few minutes surfing to get it rather than the cumbersome FOIA process was hardly "burdensome".
Also, there is no constitutional right to records -- it has never been considered so historically, and is something elected
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Which law do you see as being broken by the Virginia? People who reside in Virginia can get the information. It is just people out of Virginia who can not file FOI requests.
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Mistagged - Better Conclusion would be.... (Score:3, Informative)
FTFA.....
Summing up what the court had to say:
1. The government of a state works for the citizens of that state - who pay their salary. Not for non-state residents.
2. Information that is freely available online or at a clerk's office does not need to be provided through a FOIA request.
3. You do not have the right to treat the government of another state like a slave.
This (might be) a good thing. (Score:5, Informative)
I admit, I haven't read the full thing, but as soon as I made it 1/2 a page in, I had to respond ...
First off, this doesn't seem to be about the federal FOIA, it's about a state's act. And the limit here is that states don't have to respond to people who aren't citizens of their states. The 2006 Lee v. Minner decision (458 F.3d 194) found that Delaware wasn't allowed to have such a clause in their FOIA, so this isn't even going to affect all states.
That being said, I'm an elected municipal official in Maryland (which falls under the Lee vs. Minner ruling, as I understand it) ... and it's possible that we'd get sued under the equivalent Maryland law, as someone recently tried to demand from us *EVERY* *LAST* business transaction that we made for the last 7 years. (I can't remember the exact wording; it's possible that we claim that the report requested was a 'new record' and thus something that didn't exist) Mind you, we have 8 employees, 3 of whom are police officers, and 3 of whom are public works. So that'd mean that we'd have to tie up our accountant or town clerk for weeks to go through all of the records, properly sanitize everything to keep from leaking restricted information (like PII, as we're so small that we have a single system that also handles payroll), which would mean that we couldn't actually serve our citizens in the process.
Why did the person want this it? Because they were starting a website to charge businesses for access to this information.
If a person has a legitimate need for the information, they should be able to get a citizen of the state to file the request on their behalf. How much time has been wasted in Hawaii by responding to birth certificate requests over the last few years?
(note; I have a full time job and don't participate in the day-to-day operations of our town; I have no idea how the request ended up playing out (or if it's finished playing out yet); I believe it was sent to our attorney to deal with)
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The 2006 Lee v. Minner decision (458 F.3d 194) found that Delaware wasn't allowed to have such a clause in their FOIA, so this isn't even going to affect all states.
Lee v. Minner is a ruling from the 3rd Circuit Court of Appeals. The SCOTUS is a higher court and therefore its opinion would supersede the lower court's opinion.
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http://sunshinereview.org/index.php/Maryland_FOIA_procedures [sunshinereview.org]
The Maryland law allows departments to charge a reasonable fee which includes both the cost of duplication as well as any staff time in excess of 2 hours involved in the search, compilation, or reproduction of materials. Waivers are permitted considering the person requesting the documents financial status and the public interest in the release of the information.
Make a reasoned guess at how many hours it'd take someone to compile and sanitize the records,
multiply by the hourly wage of a temp, then add in a fudge factor because stuff always take longer,
then add in another fudge factor because everything the temp does will need to be reviewed.
You send that dollar number to the FOIA requester and ask if they still want the documents.
Why did the person want this it? Because they were starting a website to charge businesses for access to this information.
Good for him, but without a compelling public interest, there's no reason he
Related Wire Report (Score:2, Funny)
just in case you didn't notice (Score:2, Informative)
It was a UNANIMOUS decision. Whatever you may think of Sarah Palin's politics, she was forced to step down as the governor of Alaska because of the cost of out-of-state FOIA requests to such a small state. If this has a cost so prohibitive that the corporations without any employees in a state can actually undermine the will of the voters of the state, then stopping such a practice is a Good Thing(TM).