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2004-179

- Final Decision
- Findings and Recommendations of the Executive Director

Final Decision

Howard Avin
   Complainant
      v.
Borough of Waldwick
   Custodian of Record

Complaint No. 2004-179

At its March 10, 2005 public meeting, the Government Records Council (“Council”) considered the March 3, 2005 Findings and Recommendations of the Executive Director and all related documentation submitted by the parties. The Council voted unanimously to adopt the entirety of said findings and recommendations with the provision that the Council’s decision is based on the specific facts in this case.  The Council, therefore, finds that the requested records should not be disclosed based on the specific facts in this case.

This is the final administrative determination in this matter. Any further review should be pursued in the Appellate Division of the Superior Court of New Jersey within forty-five (45) days. Information about the appeals process can be obtained from the Appellate Division Clerk’s Office, Hughes Justice Complex, 25 W. Market St., PO Box 006, Trenton, NJ 08625-0006.

Final Decision Rendered by the
Government Records Council
On The 10th Day of March, 2005

Vincent P. Maltese, Chairman
Government Records Council

I attest the foregoing is a true and accurate record of the Government Records Council.

Diane Schonyers
Government Records Council

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Findings and Recommendations of the Executive Director

Howard Avin                                        GRC Complaint No. 2004-179
Complainant 
            v.
Borough of Waldwick
Custodian of Records

Records Requested:

  1. List of all homeowners who took out a fire alarm and/or burglar alarm permit in the last 3 years. Request Made: October 5, 2004

Response Made: October 13, 2004
Custodian: Paula Jaegge – Borough Clerk
GRC Complaint filed: October 26, 2004

Background

October 5, 2004
Written Open Public Records Act (OPRA) Request. Complainant seeks a list of all homeowners who applied for a fire alarm or burglar alarm permit in the last 3 years.

October 14, 2004
Denial letter from the Custodian’s counsel forwarded from Custodian to Complainant. The Custodian’s counsel states that the requested records are not disclosable according to N.J.S.A. 47:1A-1.1. Specifically, “emergency or security information or procedures for any building or facility which, if disclosed, would jeopardize security of the building or facility or persons therein; security and surveillance techniques which, if disclosed, would create a risk to the safety of persons, property, electronic data or software…”

October 26, 2004
Complainant’s Denial of Access Complaint. Complainant filed a Denial of Access complaint alleging a denial of access to government records.

November 4, 2004
Offer of Mediation to both parties.

November 5, 2004
Custodian’s signed agreement to mediate.

November 24, 2004
Custodian’s Statement of Information. The Custodian asserts that the records requested are confidential and their release is in violation of an individual homeowner’s reasonable expectation of privacy. The legal brief prepared by the Custodian’s counsel and submitted by the Custodian asserts the records requested are confidential and not within the definition of a government record under the exemption for emergency or security information, N.J.S.A. 47:1A-1.1 and “dissemination thereof would be contrary to the individual’s interest in being safe within one’s home. Release of this information would pose a security risk for both those residents who have applied for alarm systems and those who have not by giving an individual enough information to determine which houses are secure. This information is provided to the police and fire department for the sole purpose of providing emergency response.

Additionally the Statement of Information indicates that the release of the requested records presents an “undue invasion into a person’s right to privacy.” The Custodian’s counsel cites Doe v. Poritz 142 N.J. 1 (1995) calling for application of the seven-factor test in balancing an individual’s right to privacy and the public’s interest in disclosure.  The inclusion of the address with a burglar/fire alarm request implicates “more than a de minimis intrusion into a person’s privacy, but one that could clearly affect that individuals health, safety and welfare.”

The Custodian’s counsel goes on to affirm that ­Doe recognizes a stronger interest in privacy when the home address is placed in the context of particular documents, in this case burglar and fire alarm permits. Doe specifically states, “We note in particular that the issue is not whether plaintiff has a privacy interest in his address, but whether the inclusion of a plaintiff’s address along with other information, implicates any privacy interest… for example the inclusion of the address can invite unsolicited contact or intrusion based on the additional revealed information.”

Aside from the security concerns there is also a concern about the potential for unsolicited contact by commercial entities that could result from the release of the requested information. The request made on behalf of Safetycare would open residents to unsolicited contact by this commercial entity and, “once the information is disseminated, who is to prevent an individual from reselling or redistributing this information to other commercial entities who presumably would further attempt to commercially exploit these unsuspecting citizens.”

February 17, 2005
E-mail to Complainant from the Government Records Council (GRC). Request for clarification on what is being requested; names or names and addresses.

February 17, 2005
E-mail to the Government Records Council from the Complainant. The Complainant indicates the request if for “names and addresses of the homeowners who applied for a fire alarm or burglar alarm permit in the last 3 years.”        

Analysis

Whether the Custodian appropriately denied access to records pursuant to N.J.S.A. 47:1A-1 et. seq.

Certain records are defined as exempt from access for security reasons. In particular OPRA states:

A government record shall not include the following information which is deemed to be confidential for the purposes of P.L.1963, c.73 (C.47:1A-1 et seq.) as amended and supplemented:

  • emergency or security information or procedures for any buildings or facility which, if disclosed, would jeopardize security of the building or facility or persons therein;
  • security measures and surveillance techniques which, if disclosed, would create a risk to the safety of persons, property, electronic data or software. N.J.S.A. 47:1A-1.1

The Statement of Information provided by the Custodian’s counsel cites the above-mentioned reasons for choosing not to disclose the records requested. The Complainant is requesting information related to fire and burglar alarms, which could potentially affect the security of the buildings to which they apply. The Complainant was notified that emergency and security information is not subject to disclosure pursuant to OPRA. As the request is for information that could affect the safety and privacy of the citizens that have applied for such permits it is necessary to employ the balancing test set forth by the Supreme Court. 

In Merino v. Ho-Ho-Kus, GRC Complaint 2003-121 the Council addressed the citizen’s reasonable expectation of privacy pursuant to N.J.S.A. 47:1A-1 finding that the Appellate Division has held that the GRC must enforce OPRA's declaration, in N.J.S.A. 47:1A-1, that "a public agency has a responsibility and an obligation to safeguard from public access a citizen's personal information with which it has been entrusted when disclosure thereof would violate the citizen's reasonable expectation of privacy."  Serrano v. South Brunswick Twp., 358 N.J. Super. 352, 368-69 (App. Div. 2003).  See also National Archives and Records Administration v. Favish,U.S.(United States Supreme Court, March 30, 2004) (personal privacy interests are protected under FOIA).  The New Jersey Supreme Court has indicated that, as a general matter, the public disclosure of an individual's home address "does implicate privacy interests."  Doe v. Poritz, 142 N.J. 1, 82 (1995).[1] The Court specifically noted that such privacy interests are affected where disclosure of a person's address results in unsolicited contact.  The Court quoted with approval a federal court decision which indicated that significant privacy concerns are raised where disclosure of the address "can invite unsolicited contact or intrusion based on the additional revealed information."  Ibid. citing Aronson v. Internal Revenue Service, 767 F.Supp. 378, 389 n. 14 (D. Mass. 1991).  The Supreme Court concluded that the privacy interest in a home address must be balanced against the interest in disclosure.  It stated that the following factors should be considered:

  1. The type of record requested;
  2. The information it does or might contain;
  3. The potential for harm in any subsequent nonconsensual disclosure;
  4. The injury from disclosure to the relationship in which the record was generated;
  5. The adequacy of safeguards to prevent unauthorized disclosure;
  6. The degree of need for access;
  7. Whether there is an express statutory mandate, articulated public policy or other recognized public interest militating toward access [id. at 87-88].  

Accordingly, the foregoing criteria was applied in exercising its discretion as to whether the privacy interests of the individuals named in the summonses are outweighed by any factors militating in favor of disclosure of the addresses.

Additionally, the Council also applied the above balancing factors in the Richard Wilcox v. Township of West Caldwell, GRC Complaint 2004-28 in determining that the name and address information was properly withheld.

Therefore, the above factors were considered here with the following conclusions:

  1. Type of record request:  List of all homeowners who applied for a fire/burglar alarm in the past 3 years.
  2. The information it contains:  Names and addresses of residents who applied for a burglar alarm or fire alarm permit
  3. The potential for harm in any subsequent nonconsensual disclosure:  jeopardizing the security of those who have applied for such permits, possible unsolicited contact
  4. The injury from disclosure to the relationship in which the record was generated:  residents may no longer trust the agency with this information for fear that their privacy would not be protected
  5. The adequacy of safeguards to prevent unauthorized disclosure:  None. There is nothing to prevent redistribution of this information.
  6. The degree of need for access:  Do not know
  7. Whether there is an express statutory mandate, articulated public policy or other recognized public interest militating toward access [id. at 87-88]:  OPRA

The release of the requested name and address information has the potential for harm to both those citizens who have applied for a burglar or fire alarm in the past three years as well as those who have not. Permitting access to such records allows any recipient of the record to ascertain which homes are and are not secured with these devices. Furthermore, since the complainant seeks the records on behalf of the company Safetycare, it is likely that release of the names and home addresses will result in unsolicited contact between the Complainant and the individuals whose names and home addresses are being requested.

Balancing the severity of the security concerns of the residents of the town against the public’s right to access under OPRA, the Custodian should not allow public access to the homeowners names and addresses.

Conclusions and Recommendations

The Executive Director respectfully recommends that the Council find that the requested records should not be disclosed.

Prepared By: 

Approved By:
Paul F. Dice
Executive Director
Government Records Council

March 3, 2005


 

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