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VIRGINIA FREEDOM OF INFORMATION ACT. DIVISION OF TOURISM MAY NOT
PROTECT CONFIDENTIAL PRIVATE TRAVEL DATA FROM PUBLIC DISCLOSURE IN
FILES OR BY CONTRACTING WITH UNIVERSITY, BUT MAY DO SO BY CONTRACTING
WITH PRlVATE SUPPLIERS.
January 9, 1984
The Honorable Fred W. Walker, Director
Department of Conservation Economic Development
83-84 439
You have asked whether the Virginia Division of Tourism (the
"Division") of the Department of Conservation and Economic
Development may lawfully collect from Virginia travel attractions and
maintain in confidence certain proprietary information. You also
asked whether the Division could assure such confidentiality by
contracting to have the material received and handled by a university
or by a private supplier.
It is my understanding that various private travel attractions and
facilities around the Commonwealth are willing to provide sensitive
business data such as sales information to the Division for use in
compilation of consolidated reports. The latter are published by the
Division in statistical form which protects the individual sources.
These publications are of significant benefit and use to the Division
in its work of promoting tourism in the Commonwealth. Industry
sources, however, do not want confidential data in the files of the
Division to be available to their competitors or to the public under
the Virginia Freedom of Information Act, §§ 2.1-340 et
seq., of the Code of Virginia (the "Act").
The Act requires all "official records" to be made available to
citizens of the Commonwealth or to the media upon appropriate
request. See § 2.1-342. "Official records" include any written
materials in the possession of a public body, officer or employee in
the transaction of public business. Section 2.1-341(b). There is no
general exemption for proprietary or confidential business
information, although § 2.1-342(b) sets out eighteen categories
of records excluded from the general disclosure requirement. None of
these exclusions applies to the situation you have described. Absent
specific statutory authorization, it is my opinion that the material
in question cannot be lawfully retained in confidence by the Division
itself in the event of a request for disclosure.
The same reasoning would apply with respect to information
furnished to a State university. State institutions of higher
education are considered public bodies under § 2.1-341. By
definition, "public body" includes all governmental bodies, as well
as organizations, corporations or agencies in the Commonwealth,
supported wholly or principally by public funds. The only exclusion
even remotely relevant is § 2.1-342(b)(16) which covers:
"Data, records or information of a proprietary nature,
other than financial or administrative, produced or collected by
or for faculty or staff of state institutions of higher learning
in the conduct of or as a result of study or research on medical,
scientific, technical or scholarly issues, whether sponsored by
the institution alone or in conjunction with a governmental body
or a private concern, where such data, records or information have
not been publicly released, published, copyrighted or patented."
I have previously concluded that to avoid frustrating the purpose
of the Act, the latter should be liberally construed to promote
public awareness of governmental activities. Exemptions should be
narrowly construed. See 1982-1983 Va. AG
708. I am, therefore, of the opinion that the exclusion stated
above is designed to protect academic research and would not cover
compilation of travel statistics by a university under contract to
the Division.
With respect to the last portion of your question, I am unaware of
any prohibition which would prevent the Division from contracting
with a private entity to perform the work in question. I note,
however, that if the private entity is supported wholly or
principally by public funds, it may be regarded as a public body for
purposes of the Act (see § 2.1-341); hence, its records would be
subject to the Act. Assuming, however, that the private entity is not
subject to the Act, then its records would not be subject to
mandatory disclosure under the Act. Of course, if a report is
submitted to the Division, then that report would become a part of
the Division's records subject to disclosure under the Act.
As I indicated above, any agency action should avoid frustrating
the purpose of the Act. While there may well be valid reasons for the
Division's contracting with a private consultant to perform the work,
it should not contract with a private party simply to avoid having to
comply with the Act.
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