Ubits November / December 2015
James and the giant requests
FOR THE RECORD
Dec. 31 Incentive Goal Forms Due
Thanks to Al Martinez of Customer Solutions for taking the great cover photo.
In this issue
Public Disclosure Requests 101 As a public entity, TPU must provide records when the public asks. Recently, that included employee ID badges with photos and workrelated text messages on personal phones. Although those two items might feel more personal than record-like, Washington’s Public Records Act says they’re fair game.
Why, you ask?
What is the person requesting those items looking for? TPU’s Public Disclosure Officer James Kauffman doesn’t know, nor can he ask. The essence of public disclosure law is that it’s not an employee’s place to decide what the public should and shouldn’t know — so most information must be shared regardless of why it’s requested. There are exemptions outlined in the law’s 65 sections, and it’s only in those details and court decisions that government agencies have reason to redact parts of or deny a
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Q & A with Chris Robinson
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request. Personal contact information, financial account numbers, Social Security numbers and attorney-client privileged information are common redactions.
How does it work?
Within five days of receiving a request, TPU has to acknowledge and respond with either the information requested, a denial, an estimate on how long it will take to gather the items or ask clarifying questions. Straightforward requests that could be fulfilled quickly used to be the norm, but things have changed. “The scope of requests has exploded,” James said. “We’ve gone from simple requests that ask for an employee’s emails, to requests asking for any and all documents that an employee has created for time periods as great as a year. That means collecting and combing through emails,
Community Connection
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A day in the life