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Jim Haddadin v. Massachusetts Department of Transportation - Office of the General Counsel (SPR 20191393)

Massachusetts Public Records Appeal · Public records appeal decision · Filed 07-11-2019

ClosedFee PetitionDecision

SPR 20191393 is a Massachusetts Public Records Law appeal filed by Jim Haddadin concerning records held by Massachusetts Department of Transportation - Office of the General Counsel, opened 07-11-2019. Type: Fee Petition. Status: Closed. Supervisor of Public Records determination: Public records appeal decision.

Case Details

Case Number
20191393
Case Type
Fee Petition
Case Subtype
Initial
Status
Closed
Requester
Jim Haddadin
Custodian
Massachusetts Department of Transportation - Office of the General Counsel
Date Opened
07-11-2019
Date Closed
07-18-2019

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Extracted Text (searchable & copyable)

The Commonwealth of Massachusetts William Francis Galvin, Secretary of the Commonwealth Public Records Division Rebecca S. Murray Supervisor of Records July 18, 2019 SPR19/1393 William J. Doyle, Esq. Records Access Officer Massachusetts Department of Transportation Office of the General Counsel Ten Park Plaza, Suite 3510 Boston, MA 02116 Dear Attorney Doyle: I have received your petition on behalf of the Massachusetts Department of Transportation (MassDOT) requesting permission for a waiver of statutory limits on fees that may be assessed in responding to a request. G. L. c. 66, § lO(d)(iv); see also 950 C.M.R. 32.06( 4). As required by law, MassDOT furnished a copy of this petition to the requestor. G. L. c. 66, § lO(d)(iv). Jim Haddadin seeks the following records: • all communications, written or electronic, created or received by MassDOT and/or the Massachusetts Registry of Motor Vehicles that pertain to a June 21, 2019 crash in Randolph, New Hampshire, involving a pickup truck and several motorcycles in which seven people were killed; • the online communication provided to the Massachusetts RMV by the Connecticut Department of Motor Vehicles via the American Association of Motor Vehicle Administrators messaging system about a May 11, 2019 incident in East Windsor, Connecticut involving one of the drivers in the aforementioned crash; • all communications, written or electronic, created or received by MassDOT and/or the Massachusetts Registry of Motor Vehicles that pertain to the May 11, 2019 incident in · East Windsor, Connecticut and/or the license status of any parties involve[ d]." Petitions regarding fees The Supervisor of Records (Supervisor) may approve a petition from an agency to charge for time spent segregating or redacting or to charge in excess of $25 per hour, if the Supervisor determines that 1) the request is for a commercial purpose or 2) the fee represents an actual and good faith representation by the agency to comply with the request. G. L. c. 66, § 10( d)(iv). One Ashburton Place, Room 1719, Boston, Massachusetts 02108 • (617) 727-2832• Fax: (617) 727-5914 sec.state.ma.us/pre• pre@sec.state.ma.us

William J. Doyle, Esq. SPR19/1393 Page 2 July 18, 2019 In rendering such a decision, the Supervisor is required to consider the following: a) the public interest served by limiting the cost of public access to the records; b) the financial ability of the requestor to pay the additional or increased fees; and c) any other relevant extenuating circumstances. G. L. c. 66, § lO(d)(iv). The statute sets out a two-prong test for determining whether the Supervisor may approve an agency's petition to allow the agency to charge for time spent segregating or redacting records or to charge in excess of $25 an hour for the provision of public records. The first prong is whether the request for records was made for a commercial purpose. G. L. c. 66, § lO(d)(iv). It is my determination that the request is not for a commercial purpose. The second prong of the test · is whether the fee represents an actual and good faith representation by the agency to comply with the request. The Supervisor must consider 1) if the fee is necessary such that the request could not have been prudently completed without the redaction or segregation or fee in excess of $25 per hour; 2) the amount of the fee is reasonable; and 3) the fee is not designed to limit, deter or prevent access to requested public records. Id. Fee Estimates An agency may assess a reasonable fee for the production of a public record except those records that are freely available for public inspection. G. L. c. 66, § lO(d). The fees must reflect the actual cost of complying with a particular request. Id. A maximum fee of five cents ($.05) per page may be assessed for a black and white single or double-sided photocopy of a public record. G. L. C. 66, § 10( d)(i). Agencies may not assess a fee for the first four hours of employee time to search for, compile, segregate, redact or reproduce the record or records requested. G. L. c. 66, § 10( d)(ii). Where appropriate, agencies may include as part of the fee an hourly rate equal to or less than the hourly rate attributed to the lowest paid employee who has the necessary skill required to search for, compile, segregate, redact or reproduce a record requested, but the fee shall not be more than $25 per hour. Id. A fee shall not be assessed for time spent segregating or redacting records unless such segregation or redaction is required by law or approved by the Supervisor of Records under a petition under G. L. c. 66, § 10( d)(iv). See G. L. c. 66, § 10(d )(ii); 950 C.M.R. 32.06(4). Current Petition In its petition MassDOT requests "the Supervisor's permission to charge the requester for time spent segregating and redacting records that are responsive to the request." MassDOT indicates that " ... due to the substance of the request, we believe that many, if not all, of the responsive records will require redaction .... " under Exemptions (a) and (c) of the Public Records Law. You explain that" ... the Driver's Privacy Protection Act (18 U.S. Code§ 2721) states, in part, ' [a] State department of motor vehicles, and any officer, employee, or contractor thereof,

William J. Doyle, Esq. SPR19/1393 Page 3 July 18, 2019 shall not knowingly disclose or otherwise make available to any person or entity ... personal information, as defined in 18 U.S.C. 2725(3), about any individual obtained by the department in connection with a motor vehicle record ... "' MassDOT fmiher explains that "[p]ersonal information includes information that identifies an individual, including an individual's photograph, social security number, driver identification number, name, address (but not the 5- digit zip code), telephone number, and medical or disability information." MassDOT also notes that "[t]he Massachusetts Public Records Law allows redaction under Exemption (c) for records likely to contain 'personnel and medical files or information; also any other materials or data relating to a specifically-named individual, the disclosure of which may constitute an unwarranted invasion of personal privacy."' MassDOT concludes by explaining that charging a fee is necessary because the " ... request cannot be prudently completed without redacting information under these applicable exemptions. The fee is reasonable as it relates to a specific redaction, and the fee is not designed to limit, deter or prevent access to public records; rather, it is meant to protect MassDOT from inadvertently revealing confidential personal information. Releasing the requested records without redaction would impede MassDOT's obligations under Federal law, as well as jeopardize the privacy of the Commonwealth's residents and visitors." In light of the explanation in its petition, I find that MassDOT has met its burden to explain how, given the nature of the responsive records, the request could not prudently be completed without redaction or segregation. See G. L. c. 66, § 10(d )(iv). Conclusion Accordingly, it is my determination that given the nature of the requested records and the explanation in its petition, MassDOT is permitted to charge for time spent segregating and redacting the requested records. When preparing a fee estimate for the provision of the requested records MassDOT is advised to provide a detailed explanation to the requestor detailing why this amount of time is necessary. See G. L. c. 66, § lO(d)(iv) (requiring the amount of the fee must be reasonable). MassDOT must also provide the hourly rate being used and explain why it is that of the lowest paid employee with the necessary skill. MassDOT shall provide a response to Mr. Haddadin within five business days of receipt of this determination. See 950 C.M.R. 32.06(4)(h)(4). Mr. Haddadin may appeal the MassDOT's fee estimate within ninety days. See 950 C.M.R. 32.08(1). Please note the requestor has the right to seek judicial review of this decision by commencing a civil action in the appropriate superior court. See G. L. c. 66, § 10(d)(iv)(4), lOA(c).

William J. Doyle, Esq. SPR19/1393 Page 4 July 18, 2019 Sincerely, Rebecca S. Murray Supervisor of Records cc: Jim Haddadin