Uniformed Fire Officers Association v. DeBlasio

CourtDistrict Court, S.D. New York
DecidedJuly 31, 2020
Docket1:20-cv-05441
StatusUnknown

This text of Uniformed Fire Officers Association v. DeBlasio (Uniformed Fire Officers Association v. DeBlasio) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, S.D. New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Uniformed Fire Officers Association v. DeBlasio, (S.D.N.Y. 2020).

Opinion

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THE CITY OF NEW YORK DOMINIQUE F. SAINT -FORT JAMES E. JOHNSON LAW DEPARTMENT Labor & Employment Law Division Corporation Counsel or mpfoyment □□□ Division 100 CHURCH STREET _ □□□ 356-2444 NEW YORK, NY 10007 dosaint@law.nyc.gov

July 30, 2020 BY ECF Hon. Katherine Polk Failla United States District Court Southern District of New York 40 Foley Square New York, NY 10007 Re: Uniformed Fire Officers Association, et al. v. Bill DeBlasio, et al. 20-cv-05441 (KPF) (RWL)

Dear Judge Failla: Defendants write to request that the Court reconsider its Order regarding Document Request No. 5 of Plaintiffs’ First Request for Documents and to provide additional support for Defendants’ arguments regarding Request No. 6. As discussed, below, the Court should deny Plaintiffs’ Request No. 5 as it applies to NYPD and FDNY, and deny Plaintiffs’ Request No. 6 in its entirety. REQUEST NO. 5: All documents and communications relating to the denial, in whole or in part, of a public records request for Disciplinary Records on grounds other than the application of New York Civil Rights Law § 50-a, such as where disclosure of the requested records would constitute an unwarranted invasion of privacy or pose a risk to the safety of any person, such as, for example, those referenced in Hughes Hubbard & Reed LLP y. Civilian Complaint Review Board, 53 Misc. 3d 947, 950 (Sup. Ct., Kings Cnty. 2016), and Luongo v. Records Access Officer, 150 A.D.3d 13, 16 (ist Dep’t 2017), for the period January 1, 2016 to the present. Defendants are prepared to produce records responsive to this request within the parameters set by the Court during the July 28, 2020 conference as to CCRB and DOC. However, Defendants respectfully request that the Court reconsider its Order with respect to NYPD and FDNY, and not require those two agencies to respond to Request No. 5 because it will impose an extraordinary and unwarranted burden on those agencies, one that is clearly disproportionate to the needs of this case, particularly with respect to the discovery that Plaintiffs purportedly need for their preliminary injunction motion.

NYPD receives an astronomical amount of FOIL requests annually. In 2017, NYPD received 18,794 requests, which rose to 20,747 requests in 2018, and 23,490 requests in 2019. All of the FOIL requests received by NYPD are made through a request via a New York City public records online database, called Open Records. The FOIL requests for NYPD are handled by a central FOIL Unit, with two employees, a Records Access Officer and a Police Officer. The FOIL Unit does not track requests by the type of request, and many requests seek multiple types of documents, not just disciplinary records. Additionally, the FOIL Unit does not track requests by whether they were granted or denied, or the reason why they were denied. In order to produce documents responsive to this request, the NYPD Records Access Officer would have to pull and review approximately 20,000 requests in their entirety to determine if the request is for, at least in part, disciplinary records and further review the requests to determine whether the request was for Unsubstantiated or Non-Final allegations. Finally, the Records Access Officer would have to review the denial to determine whether the denial was at least in part based on the release of Unsubstantiated, Non-Final allegations being an unwarranted invasion of privacy or a risk to the safety of any person. This would not only be extremely onerous, but would simply not be possible to accomplish by August 7, or any time shortly thereafter. Finally, the massive burden that it would impose on NYPD, all for the sake of perhaps finding a theoretically relevant needle in a haystack, makes this request disproportionate to Plaintiffs’ needs for their preliminary injunction motion as well as on the merits of the case, should it proceed to further discovery. Defendants further note that before the repeal of Civil Rights Law §50-a, NYPD would deny requests for disciplinary records of members of the service solely on the basis that that they were protected from disclosure by § 50-a. Thus it is likely that even after preforming a review of almost 20,000 requests, the Records Access Officer would not find a substantial number, if any, responsive documents. FDNY received approximately 8,000 FOIL requests during the time frame of this discovery request, June 12, 2019 – June 11, 2020. All of the FOIL requests received by FDNY are tracked through Open Records. The FOIL requests for FDNY are handled by two central offices depending on the overall nature of the request. The Public Records Unit handles FOIL requests related to building violations and tickets issued related to such violations. All other substantive requests, including any requests for disciplinary records, are handled by the Bureau of Legal Affairs FOIL Unit, which, similar to NYPD, has two employees, a Records Access Officer and civilian Public Records Aide. The Bureau of Legal Affairs FOIL Unit does not track requests it receives by the type of request. Additionally, the Bureau of Legal Affairs FOIL Unit does not track requests by whether they were granted or denied, or the reason why they were denied. Again similar to the NYPD, in order to produce documents responsive to this request, the FDNY Records Access Officer would have to pull and review approximately 8,000 requests in their entirety to determine if the request is for, at least in part, disciplinary records and thereafter review the requests to determine whether the request was for Unsubstantiated or Non- Final allegations. The Records Access Officer would have to review the denial to determine whether the denial was at least in part based on the release of Unsubstantiated, Non-Final allegations being an unwarranted invasion of privacy or a risk to the safety of any person. Notably, FDNY rarely receives requests for disciplinary records of firefighters. Responding to this request would not only be extremely onerous, but likely lead to no results. Again in the short time frame for discovery here, it is simply not possible for FDNY to review its records for any documents responsive to this request. Accordingly, Defendants respectfully request that the Court reconsider and modify its decision as to Plaintiffs’ Document Request No. 5, and deny the Request as it applies to NYPD and FDNY as burdensome and disproportionate to the needs of this case. REQUEST NO. 6: All documents and communications concerning or reflecting (a) the release to the public of Unsubstantiated or Non-Final Allegations against employees of the City other than law enforcement officers, or (b) the denial, in whole or in part, of a public records request encompassing Unsubstantiated or Non-Final Allegations against City employees other than law enforcement officers on the ground that disclosure of the requested records would constitute an unwarranted invasion of privacy, or pose a risk to the safety to any person, for the period January 1, 2016 to the present. As we advised the Court during the conference, responding to this request would be extremely burdensome. We have obtained further information as to the nature and scope of that burden, request that the Court reconsider its Order, and upon reconsideration, deny that Request in its entirety. The City has over 30 agencies that respond to FOIL requests, some of which receive thousands of requests per year. In particular, agencies such as the Department of Health and Mental Hygiene, Department of Buildings, Department of Transportation and Department of Environmental Protection, each receive several thousands of requests per year. Even to ascertain the average number of FOIL requests that each of the City’s agencies receive would involve obtaining information from over 30 Records Access Officers.

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Related

Matter of Luongo v. Records Access Officer, Civilian Complaint Review Bd.
2017 NY Slip Op 2523 (Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of New York, 2017)
Hughes Hubbard & Reed LLP v. Civilian Complaint Review Board
53 Misc. 3d 947 (New York Supreme Court, 2016)

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Bluebook (online)
Uniformed Fire Officers Association v. DeBlasio, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/uniformed-fire-officers-association-v-deblasio-nysd-2020.