|
VIRGINIA FREEDOM OF INFORMATION ACT. RECORDS. NO ACTUAL VIOLATION
OF ACT BUT VIOLATION OF SPIRIT OF ACT IN WITHHOLDING RECORDS IF
AVAILABLE AND NO DISRUPTION OF GOVERNMENT WOULD HAVE RESULTED.
June 25, 1982
The Honorable W. Ward Teel
Member, House of Delegates
81-82 440
This is in reply to your recent letter in which you request an
opinion whether a denial by a public office of a request for
information under the Virginia Freedom of Information Act,
§§2.1-340 through 2.1-346.1 of the Code of Virginia (1950),
as amended, (the "Act") was proper.
Your letter provides the following facts. The Montgomry County
School Board recently completed a study concerning possible school
consolidation and a board committee distributed copies of the report
to all school board members in private. The findings were to be held
in private until they were announced to the public. Four days prior
to the announcement, a representative of a Virginia newspaper
requested a copy of the report, The school board denied this request,
stating that the Act gives it fourteen days in which to respond to
the request. Consequently, the release of the report was effectively
blocked until the board made it public four days later.
Section 2.1-342 provides, in pertinent part, that
"[e]xcept as otherwise specifically provided by law, all
official records shall be open to inspection and copying by any
citizens of this Commonwealth. Access to such records shall not be
denied. to representatives of newspapers...with circulation in this
Commonwealth...s" I am unaware of any provision of law which would
exempt the report in question from the mandatory disclosure
provisions of the Act. Additionally, this Office has held that a
report to a public body is an official record subject to the Act when
it comes into the possession of the public body. See Report of the
Attorney General (1978-1979) at 317. Therefore, the Act requires that
this report shall be made available for inspection and copying by the
newspaper representative who requested it.
Section 2.1-342 of the Act also sets forth the procedure to follow
in responding to requests for inspection. It provides that "[any
public body covered under the provisions of this chapter shall make
an initial response to citizens requesting records open to inspection
within fourteen calendar days from the receipt of the request by the
public body...." I further note that §2.1-340.1 provides that
the Act "shall be liberally construed to promote an increased
awareness by all persons of governmental activities.... That
construction is required because, as §2.1-340.1 further states,
"the affairs of government are not intended to be conducted in an
atmosphere of secrecy since at all times the public is to be the
beneficiary of any action taken at any level of government..,"
Bearing in mind the liberal construction to be accorded the Act, I
am of the opinion that the fourteen-day response provision of
§2.1-342(a) is a recognition by the General Assembly that some
reasonable time may be required to permit government employees to
perform any necessary clerical duties which may be required to gather
the records and make them available for inspection in a public place
without substantially disrupting their other governmental duties.
Certainly, the purpose of the provision is not to give government a
fourteen-day grace period within which it may withhold official
records to which the public is entitled and within which it may
control the dissemination at a time which is more convenient to the
government.
The foregoing conclusion is supported by an oral opinion in an
unreported chancery case decided by the Circuit Court of the City of
Richmond on November 16, 1978, styled Miller v. Virginia State
Board of Elections, No. G-28O6-1 In that case, involving a
refusal by the State Board of Elections to release copies of election
returns to the unsuccessful candidate, the court required a release
prior to the expiration of the fourteen days on the ground that time
was of the essence and the delay would defeat the purpose of the
disclosure.
Based upon the facts contained in your letter, I am unable to
conclude that the school board violated the Act when it failed to
make available an official record within a period shorter than the
fourteen days specified in §2.1-342(a). If, however, the board
had the record readily available and could have disseminated it
immediately without causing any disruption to the routine operation
of government, then the school board's use of the fourteen-day period
as a basis for failure to release such a record pursuant to a request
does not comply with the spirit of the Act. Depending upon the
factual circumstances regarding interest in--and need for--the
document in question, a court might well conclude that the failure to
make the report available would constitute a violation of the
Act.
|