Center for Investigative Reporting d/b/a Reveal v. PA Dept. of Health (OOR)

CourtCommonwealth Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedJune 5, 2024
Docket227 C.D. 2023
StatusUnpublished

This text of Center for Investigative Reporting d/b/a Reveal v. PA Dept. of Health (OOR) (Center for Investigative Reporting d/b/a Reveal v. PA Dept. of Health (OOR)) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Commonwealth Court of Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Center for Investigative Reporting d/b/a Reveal v. PA Dept. of Health (OOR), (Pa. Ct. App. 2024).

Opinion

IN THE COMMONWEALTH COURT OF PENNSYLVANIA

Center for Investigative Reporting : d/b/a Reveal, : Petitioner : : v. : No. 227 C.D. 2023 : Pennsylvania Department of Health : (Office of Open Records), : Respondent : Argued: May 7, 2024

BEFORE: HONORABLE ANNE E. COVEY, Judge HONORABLE ELLEN CEISLER, Judge HONORABLE MATTHEW S. WOLF, Judge

OPINION NOT REPORTED

MEMORANDUM OPINION BY JUDGE WOLF FILED: June 5, 2024

The Center for Investigative Reporting d/b/a Reveal (Requester) petitions for review from a Final Determination of the Office of Open Records (OOR) dated February 6, 2023 that denied its appeal from the Pennsylvania Department of Health’s (Department) partial denial of its request under the Right- to-Know Law (RTKL).1 We affirm. BACKGROUND On August 4, 2022, Requester filed a request (Request) with the Department seeking records related to cases of reported neonatal abstinence syndrome (NAS) for years 2020 and 2021. Specifically, Requester sought:

1 Act of February 14, 2008, P.L. 6, 65 P.S. §§ 67.101-67.3104. Aggregate data held by the Bureau of Epidemiology regarding cases of [NAS] reported to the Bureau of Epidemiology in the years 2020 and 2021, including:

a) Data indicating the number of reported NAS cases, on an aggregate statewide basis;

b) Data for cases referred to ChildLine, the substance(s) to which infants were exposed, on an aggregate statewide basis;

c) Data indicating the number of Plans of Safe Care initiated, the substance(s) to which infants were exposed on an aggregate statewide basis; and

e)[2] Data indicating to whom infants were discharged, the substance(s) to which infants were exposed, on an aggregate statewide basis. Reproduced Record (R.R.) 001a. Requester clarified that it is “not requesting any confidential or protected health information [] and/or personally-identifiable information. . . .” Id. By letter mailed September 12, 2022, the Department granted the Request in part, by providing a weblink to the “Neonatal Abstinence Syndrome: 2020 Report” issued August 2022 by the Bureau of Family Health and Bureau of Epidemiology (2020 NAS Report), and providing pinpoint cites in response to the itemized Requests listed at letters “a” through “e.”3 Id. at 003a. The Department

2 It appears Requester mistakenly omitted the letter “d” in the Request. 3 The Department stated:

Request “a” is addressed on page 22. Data limitations are described on page 8 of the report and in the narrative sections on pages 13 and 20, as related to items “b,” “c,” and “e” of the request. Requests “b,” “c,” and “e” are addressed on page 34, but is not stratified to include the substances the infant was exposed to. Information on substances an infant was exposed to can be found on page 29 of the report.

Reproduced Record (R.R.) 003a.

2 otherwise denied the Request, certifying that it “has conducted a search and [has] been advised that no additional responsive records exist within the Department’s custody, possession, or control concerning your RTKL request. The Department is not required to create new records in response to an RTKL request.” Id. Requester appealed the Department’s September 12, 2022 letter to the OOR, arguing that (1) the Department failed to prove that a reasonable search was done and that records responsive to Requests “b,” “c,” and “e” do not exist; (2) the Department unjustifiably refused to provide the requested data from existing records; and (3) that redacting the requested data from existing case reports would not constitute the “creation of a new record” under the RTKL. Id. at 005a-015a. Specifically, Requester maintained that the narrative section of the 2020 NAS Report belies the Department’s claim that it exhausted its search for responsive records. It submitted that the narrative section explains that “hospitals submitted case reports for newborns meeting NAS criteria to the [Department’s] internet case management system (iCMS), a web-based software application . . . used to track and manage newborn screening results.” R.R. 011a. Requester further argued that “[t]he fact that each individual report is submitted to an online case management system indicates that there are records pertaining to [Requester’s] [R]equests ‘b,’ ‘c,’ and ‘[e]’ for aggregate data outside of the [2020 NAS Report].” Id. Requester asserted that “the responsive records to [Requester’s] requests are the reporting forms themselves submitted individually and stored collectively on the Department’s electronic case management system.” Id. at 013a. Acknowledging that the individual report forms will contain sensitive information, Requester averred that RTKL and associated case law require agencies to redact exempt information while

3 disclosing non-exempt information, and such redactions, even if voluminous, would not amount to the creation of a new record. Id. In response to Requester’s appeal, the Department submitted the attestations of (1) Tara Trego, Director of the Department’s Bureau of Family Health (Trego Attestation), and (2) Danica Hoppes, Legal Administrative Officer and Open Records Officer for the Department (Hoppes Attestation) to the OOR. On February 6, 2023, the OOR denied Requester’s appeal. Requester’s Brief, Exhibit A (Final Determination). The OOR concluded that through the submission of the Trego and Hoppes Attestations, the Department carried its burden of proof that it conducted a good faith search and that no additional records responsive to Requests “b,” “c,” and “e” exist. Final Determination at 4-7. In so concluding, the OOR relied on the Hoppes Attestation, which provided, in relevant part:

1. On August 5, 2022[,] [Hoppes] received this [R]equest. That same day reviewed it, logged it, and circulated the entire [R]equest to Department personnel who [Hoppes] believed most likely to possess responsive records.

2. This initially included personnel from the Bureau of Epidemiology as well as members of the office Legal Counsel.

3. [Hoppes] attached a copy of the [R]equest, and included the following in the email: [. . .]

4. The week after the email was circulated, a recipient from the [Bureau] raised points for discussion and also suggested that the email be forwarded to Department personnel within the Bureau of Family Health since the NAS reporting had been transitioned to that Bureau.

4 5. Several individuals from the Bureau of Family Health then joined in on the discussion regarding interpretation of the [R]equest and potentially responsive records.

6. Once a consensus was reached about the scope of the [R]equest and the potentially responsive records in the Department’s possession, [Hoppes] was advised by the Deputy Secretary for Health Promotion and Disease Prevention within the Bureau of Family Health that the 2021 data was not finalized.

7. [Hoppes] reviewed responses to the above-described email as well as the records provided in response to this email.

8. [Hoppes] was advised that the 2020 NAS Annual Report of the Bureaus of Family Health and Epidemiology (Annual Report) contained the only responsive records in the Department’s possession.

9. It was further explained that the data contained in the Annual Report was “not stratified to include to [sic] substances the infant was exposed to.”

10. There was no indication that any additional records existed and none of the recipients of the email suggested additional custodians of records beyond those discussed above.

11. Accordingly, based on the inter-bureau discussions and information provided to [Hoppes], [Hoppes] concluded that the Annual Report was the only responsive record in the possession of the Department.

12. [Hoppes] included a link to the Annual Report in the Department’s final response to the RTKL request, which [Hoppes] sent to the [R]equester on September 12, 2022.

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Bluebook (online)
Center for Investigative Reporting d/b/a Reveal v. PA Dept. of Health (OOR), Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/center-for-investigative-reporting-dba-reveal-v-pa-dept-of-health-oor-pacommwct-2024.