Com., Office of the Governor v. P. Engelkemier

148 A.3d 522, 2016 Pa. Commw. LEXIS 436, 2016 WL 5956262
CourtCommonwealth Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedOctober 14, 2016
Docket13 C.D. 2016
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 148 A.3d 522 (Com., Office of the Governor v. P. Engelkemier) 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
Com., Office of the Governor v. P. Engelkemier, 148 A.3d 522, 2016 Pa. Commw. LEXIS 436, 2016 WL 5956262 (Pa. Ct. App. 2016).

Opinion

OPINION BY

JUDGE BROBSON

Petitioner Commonwealth of Pennsylvania, Office of the Governor (the Office) petitions for review from a December 7, 2015 final determination of the Pennsylvania Office of Open Records (OOR) under the Right-to-Know Law (RTKL). 1 The OOR’s decision granted in part and denied in part the appeal of Paul Engelkemier (Requester) from the Office’s determination that his request for electronic mail (email) communications sent or received by Katie McGinty, then-Chief of Staff to Governor Tom Wolf (McGinty). For the reasons set forth below, we affirm the OOR’s final determination.

I. BACKGROUND

The relevant background of this somewhat convoluted matter is as follows. On July 7, 2015, Requester submitted an initial request for public records under the RTKL to the Office, seeking “[a]ll emails sent or received by Chief of Staff Katie McGinty from January 20, 2015 to present. Copy of Chief of Staff Katie McGinty’s schedule from January 20; 2015 to present” (Initial Request). (Reproduced Record (R.R.) at 10a.) On July 14, 2015, the Office invoked a 30-day extension pursuant to Section 902 of the RTKL, 65 P.S. § 67.902, and notified Requester that it anticipated providing a final response to the Initial Request on or before August 13, 2015: (R.R. 13a.)

Requester sent a follow-up request on July 22, 2015, seeking the same types of records as his Initial Request but for a date range from July 7, 2015 (the date of his Initial Request) through July 22, 2015, which was the last full day of McGinty’s employment as Governor Wolfs Chief of Staff (Follow-Up Request). (R.R. 11a.) The Office assigned the Follow-Up Request, whether considered a second request or a supplemental request, a separate internal tracking number and issued its final response to the Follow-Up Request by letter dated October 2,2015. (R.R. 53a-59a.)

The Office next corresponded with Requester about the Initial Request in a July 31, 2015 email. With respect to the calendar, the Office indicated that it would be able to provide Requester “with redacted copies of former Chief McGinty’s calendar by the due date of August 31, 2015.” As for the emails, however, the Office sought clarification:

[T]he agency recently received the results of the IT forensic search which (as you can imagine) includes thousands upon thousands of pages of records which are still be [sic] counted. While this fact alone is not sufficient to deny *525 your request, the Commonwealth Court of Pennsylvania (“Court”) recently opined that as a matter of law (and absent a subject matter) such a request may be deemed overly broad and lacks the specificity required under Pennsylvania’s Right-to-Rnow Law. In fact, the Court stated that this type of request was akin to and mirrored that of a “fishing expedition.”
In an effort to be responsive to your request, however, please provide a subjects) matter(s) so that the agency may begin to review these records in a more systematic fashion. In addition, and depending on the direction you provide, the agency would respectfully request an additional extension of time in which to provide a final response to this portion of your request, and that we agree to a Rolling Production Schedule so that records are reviewed, redacted and released in priority fashion according to your specific needs.

(R.R. 17a (emphasis in original).) Apparently having not received a response to this email, the Office sent another email to Requester on August 7, 2015, seeking a response to its prior email and again requesting an extension of time. (R.R. 29a-31a.) Requester responded by email on August 11, 2015, attaching a list of “subject matter keywords” totaling 109 different terms. The list included mostly name's of individuals, some of whom are readily identifiable as public figures or public employees; organization names; and topics, such as “2015-2016 Budget,” “Senate Republicans,” “White House,” “Cape Cod,” “Massachusetts,” “Pension Reform,” “Liquor Privatization,” “Veto,” “School Funding,” “Marijuana,” “Senate Bill 1,” House Bill 1192,” “Gift Ban,” “Expenses,” “Reimbursement,” and “Editorial Board.” (R.R. 32a-37a.)

Within hours of receiving Requester’s response, the Office again indicated that it would provide a final response to the portion of the Initial Request seeking copies of McGinty’s calendar by August 13, 2016. (R.R. 39a.) With respect to the emails, the Office indicated that its. forensic search returned “a total of 1,466 electric communications totaling 8,035 pages.” The Office further indicated that it was in the process of organizing the records by calendar month. It planned to convert the recovered records into a PDF file and print the same “for review.” The Office further explained:

While the agency appreciates your attempt to clarify the subject(s) to be searched within each record, your qualification(s) are still very broad. In addition, it will take some time for the agency to search each communication that mentions or represents communications to/from over 35 employees, 50 names of individuals, six organizations, and 20 different but generic subject matters.
.. .In order to make a good faith attempt to search the electronic communications with the general parameters that you provided, however, the agency respectfully requests an additional extension of time until September 30, 2015, i.e., a little more than 45 days but which includes the Labor Day holiday.

Before agreeing to the requested extension, Requester inquired about the rolling production schedule first proposed by the Office in its July 31, 2015 email. The Office responded:

Once all duplicates are pulled and records are organized by month, I will scan and create one pdf file for each month. This format will help to do electronic searches using the key words that you provided. I hope to have this process completed by the week of August 24th. We can then agree to a rolling production schedule where all records for one *526 month (based on your order of preference) can be reviewed for exemption, redaction, and/or release at a time, i.e., every two weeks.

(R.R. 38a.) Requester accepted the proposed schedule, including the extension of time to September 30, 2015, to respond to the Initial Request for emails.

According to Requester, the Office provided its final response to the calendar request on August 14, 2015. Believing that the Office did not comply fully with the RTKL with respect' to the production of the McGinty calendar, Requester filed an appeal with OOR on August 24, 2015 (OOR Appeal No. 2015-1672), challenging the Office’s compliance with the RTKL with respect to the calendar production. The OOR’s disposition of that appeal was the subject of a separate appeal before this Court, which the Court discontinued by order dated October 5, 2016, upon praecipe by the Office. 2

On October 22, 2015, Requester filed the underlying appeal with the OOR, challenging the Office’s partial denial of his request for the McGinty emails. (R.R. la-242a.) He contended that the Office only provided 71 pages of documents allegedly responsive to his request for emails.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
148 A.3d 522, 2016 Pa. Commw. LEXIS 436, 2016 WL 5956262, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/com-office-of-the-governor-v-p-engelkemier-pacommwct-2016.