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Douglass, Joe v. Springfield, City of - Police Department (SPR 20261082)

Massachusetts Public Records Appeal · Public records appeal decision · Filed 03-25-2026

ClosedAppeal

SPR 20261082 is a Massachusetts Public Records Law appeal filed by Douglass, Joe concerning records held by Springfield, City of - Police Department, opened 03-25-2026. Type: Appeal. Status: Closed.

Case Details

Case Number
20261082
Case Type
Appeal
Status
Closed
Requester
Douglass, Joe
Custodian
Springfield, City of - Police Department
Date Opened
03-25-2026
Date Closed
04-08-2026

PDF Document

Extracted Text (searchable & copyable)

The Commonwealth of Massachusetts William Francis Galvin, Secretary of the Commonwealth Public Records Division Manza Arthur Supervisor of Records April 8, 2026 SPR26/1082 Alesia H. Days, Esq. Deputy City Solicitor City of Springfield 130 Pearl Street Springfield, MA 0103 Dear Attorney Days: I have received the petition of Joe Douglass, of Discrepancy Report, appealing the response of the Springfield Police Department (Department) to a request for public records. See G. L. c. 66, § 10A; see also 950 C.M.R. 32.08(1). On January 23, 2026, Mr. Douglass requested the following records: . . . copies of public records held by the Springfield Police Department relating to sustained misconduct matters reflected in Massachusetts Peace Officer Standards and Training Commission (POST) records for Springfield officers. For each matter listed below, please produce the internal affairs/investigative file and final disposition records, including, where they exist: complaint/intake materials; assignment documents; investigative reports and attachments; interview summaries or transcripts; findings and decision memos; notices of discipline; suspension letters; retraining orders; use-of-force reviews; and any arbitration/ settlement documents that modified discipline. Please also include any “last- chance agreement” or comparable agreement, where applicable. [1] [An identified individual] June 12, 2021; sustained criminal conduct (“Crimes involving [Redacted]” in POST); discipline: suspension 1–5 days. [2] [An identified individual] May 7, 2015, and Feb. 13, 2019; sustained criminal conduct (“Crimes involving [Redacted]” in POST); discipline: suspension 30+ days for each matter. Also March 13, 2018; sustained use of excessive, non-deadly force; discipline: retraining. [3] [An identified individual] May 7, 2015, and Feb. 13, 2019; sustained criminal conduct (“Crimes involving [Redacted]” in POST); discipline: suspension 30+ days for each matter. [4] [An identified individual] May 7, 2015, and Feb. 13, 2019; sustained other 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

Alesia H. Days, Esq. SPR26/1082 Page 2 April 8, 2026 criminal conduct (as reflected in POST); discipline: suspension 1–5 days for each matter. [5] [An identified individual] Nov. 19, 2020; sustained conduct unbecoming; discipline: suspension 30+ days and last-chance agreement. [6] [An identified individual] July 24, 2023; sustained conduct unbecoming/ policy violation; discipline: suspension 30+ days (noted in POST as a 60 working-day suspension). [7] [An identified individual] July 31, 2021; sustained alcohol or drug abuse; discipline: suspension 30+ days. Also Sept. 1, 2021; sustained motor vehicle accident/unsafe operation/damage; discipline: suspension 30+ days (and any associated retraining and last-chance agreement reflected in department records). [8] [An identified individual] Jan. 12, 2017; sustained alcohol or drug abuse; discipline: suspension 30+ days and last-chance agreement. [9] [An identified individual] Sept. 21, 2018; sustained use of excessive, non- deadly force; discipline: retraining. [10] [An identified individual] June 3, 2011; officer-involved shooting classified in POST as sustained use-of-force; discipline: retraining. [11] [An identified individual] April 26, 1997 and June 6, 1999; sustained use of excessive, nondeadly force; discipline: written reprimand (1997) and retraining (1999). [12] [An identified individual] Jan. 28, 2012; sustained use of excessive, non- deadly force; discipline: suspension 6–29 days. [13] [An identified individual] Oct. 19, 2001; Dec. 16, 2002; March 26, 2014; Feb. 4, 2015; Nov. 12, 2017; sustained matters and disciplines as reflected in POST (including alcohol or drug abuse, improper firearm usage or storage, and conduct unbecoming). [14] [An identified individual] March 13, 2018; Oct. 31, 2018; April 19, 2019 (two sustained matters on that date); sustained conduct unbecoming matters and discipline as reflected in POST. [15] [An identified individual] Nov. 10, 1997, and Oct. 29, 2008; sustained conduct unbecoming matters and discipline as reflected in POST. Previous Appeal This request was the subject of a previous appeal. See SPR26/0427 Determination of the Supervisor of Records (February 20, 2026). In my February 20th determination, I learned that the Department sent a further response to Mr. Douglass on February 17, 2026. Unsatisfied with the response, Mr. Douglass petitioned this office and this appeal, SPR26/1082, was opened as a result. Fee Estimates – Municipalities A municipality 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, § 10(d). The fees must reflect the actual cost of complying with a particular request. Id. A maximum fee of five cents

Alesia H. Days, Esq. SPR26/1082 Page 3 April 8, 2026 ($.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). Municipalities may not assess a fee for the first (two) 2 hours of employee time to search for, compile, segregate, redact or reproduce the record or records requested unless the municipality has 20,000 people or less. G. L. c. 66, § 10(d)(iii). Where appropriate, municipalities 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. However, municipalities may charge more than $25 per hour if such rate is approved by the Supervisor of Records under a petition under G. L. c. 66, § 10(d)(iv). 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)(iii); 950 C.M.R. 32.06(4). Current Appeal In his February 20, 2026 appeal, Mr. Douglass states, The City’s submission confirms the Good Faith Estimate is driven almost entirely by “review and redaction” time calculated using a blanket minutes-per-page formula, not by actual search/retrieval work. The City states there are 4,927 pages, applies a “standard time” of 3 minutes per page, and calculates 246.35 hours for “Law Department review,” plus 4 hours for IIU staff to “scan and load,” for a total of 250.35 hours (248.35 billed after the two free hours), at $25/hour for a total of $6,208.75. The Department’s February 20th Response In its February 17, 2026 response, the Department provided a fee estimate of $6,208.75. In support of the fee estimate, the Department stated, The total number of pages for the GFE was 4927. We have established a Standard time for review IIU [Internal Investigation Unit] records at 3 minutes/page … As shown on the attached ledger, the total charge for our time was 246.35 hours. The IIU staff advised us their time for scanning and loading the records in our portal was 4 hours. A total of 250.35 hours would be expended filling this request. The requestor was charged 248.35 hours after 1st deducting the 2 free hours, per state law … The requestor was charged a flat, fixed rate of $25/hour resulting in a fee of $6,208.75. The Department further stated, “[i]n order to prepare the food faith estimate (GFE), we opened each zip file to review all of the records contained therein. For each relevant document/report, the total number of pages to be reviewed was

Alesia H. Days, Esq. SPR26/1082 Page 4 April 8, 2026 recorded. Then the page count for every file was added to come up with the total number of pages to be reviewed by this office. Although the Department has estimated that the process of reviewing and preparing responsive documents for production will take 248.35 hours, it is unclear how the Department requires this amount of time to produce responsive records. The Department must advise how much time it is allocating to search and how much time it is allocating to segregate and and/or redact the records. Further, the Department must clarify why it needs 3 minutes per page to review the responsive documents. Additionally, if the Department intends to redact, the Department must state the applicable statutes. Pursuant to the Public Records Law, a fee may 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). The Department must clarify. For the reasons discussed above, I find the Department must revise its fee estimate or provide further explanation of how the fee estimate of $6,208.75 is consistent with G. L. c. 66, § 10(d). This office encourages Mr. Douglass and the Department to communicate to facilitate providing records more efficiently and affordably. Mr. Douglass may consider narrowing the scope of his request to enable the Department to provide the records more efficiently and affordably. The Department must use its superior knowledge of the records to suggest any potential reasonable modifications to the request. See G. L. c. 66, § 10(b)(vii) (a municipality shall suggest a reasonable modification of the scope of the request or offer to assist the requestor to modify the scope of the request if doing so would enable the municipality to produce the records sought more efficiently and affordably). Conclusion Accordingly, the Department is ordered to provide Mr. Douglass with a response to the request, provided in a manner consistent with this order, the Public Records Law and its Regulations within ten business days. A copy of any such response must be provided to this office. It is preferable to send an electronic copy of the response to this office at pre@sec.state.ma.us. Mr. Douglass may appeal the substantive nature of the Department’s response within ninety (90) days. See 950 C.M.R. 32.08(1).

Alesia H. Days, Esq. SPR26/1082 Page 5 April 8, 2026 Sincerely, Manza Arthur Supervisor of Records cc: Joe Douglass