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Archive for the 'Arizona Supreme Court' Tag

Public gains new access to government electronic records

October 29th, 2009, 2:26 pm by Le Templar

Metadata (met-uh day-ta): Data about data. Metadata describes how and when and by whom a particular set of data was collected, and how the data is formatted. Metadata is essential for understanding information stored in data warehouses and has become increasingly important in XML-based Web applications. (www.webopedia.com)

The Arizona Supreme Court has blazed new ground today for government transparency and access to public records in a case about information that’s created as part of electronic records but often is not seen when those records are printed out.

In Lake v. the city of Phoenix, the Supreme Court unanimously ruled that metadata should be treated just like the underlying document and is covered by Arizona’s open records law. This means government agencies won’t be able to withhold key details about an electronic file, such as when it was created, who had access to the record and if there’s any hidden information used by government officials that “disappears” when you click the print button.

The lawsuit is about Phoenix police officer David Lake, who claims he was wrongly demoted by the city. Among the evidence produced in the case are some personnel evaluations that reflect poorly on Lake’s performance. Lake  suspects the evaluations were written after his demotion and were falsely backdated.

Since the evaluations were written on city computers using a standard word-processing program, Lake’s lawyers demanded to see the electronic originals including the metadata that would show when the documents were first created, if they were ever changed, and who might have edited them over time. You can type any date you want at the top of a letter, and you can go back and edit that letter weeks or months later to completely change its message. But only a few computer experts can hack into word-processing programs and change the metadata to hide their tracks.

Phoenix lawyers denied Lake’s request, and argued in court that the open records law only applied to parts of a document typed in by a city official that could be printed off. Since metadata often is automatically created by the software outside of the user’s control, it can’t be considered a public record, the city also argued.

A trial judge and the Arizona Court of Appeals agreed with Phoenix’s position. That’s when several media/freedom of information groups took an interest in the case, including the First Amendment Coalition of Arizona. Full disclosure: I’m on the coalition’s board of directors.

Lake and Phoenix were arguing over several issues in different stages of their appeals, and the First Amendment Coalition worried that the fundamental, open government concern involving metadata wouldn’t receive the proper attention before the Supreme Court. So the coalition’s lawyer, Dan Barr, filed a “friend of the court” brief to explain how metadata works and why that information shouldn’t be viewed differently from other parts of a public document.

Part of that presentation came from Steve Doig, a journalism professor at Arizona State University who previously participated in Pulitzer Prize winning investigations with the Miami Herald. Doig explained in writing for the Supreme Court how there are times when you can’t even make sense of an electronic file (especially if it’s created in a spreadsheet like Excel) unless you have the corresponding metadata.

The Supreme Court agreed with the arguments from Lake and the media groups. The court even recognized that governments can avoid the time-consuming hassle of isolating and printing off metadata by simply turning over the original electronic file (usually referred as its “native format”). That’s what most people seeking public records from computers want these days anyway.

But a lot of Arizona governments refuse to release the electronic version of records, claiming state law doesn’t require them to do so. Typically, governments insist on printouts to discourage public record seekers or to limit what they will get to review.

This Supreme Court decision should provide a new incentive for governments to release complete public records in a manner consistent with 21st century technology.

Lawmakers lose more money, poll supports Brewer, and ‘racinos’

July 24th, 2009, 11:58 am by Le Templar

Here’s a quick look at some interesting news items to wrap up the week:

More budget cutting unravels – The state Supreme Court ruled today the Legislature illegally took $7 million in interest from a special program created by a 2006 initiative to fund early childhood education and health-care programs. Lawmakers knew they couldn’t touch the money raised directly from cigarette taxes assessed as part of 2006 law. But they hoped they could use the bank interest collected on the paid taxes waiting to be spent. The Supreme Court says “no.”

This becomes the latest setback for the Legislature in a series of lawsuits that have challenged various efforts to reduce a multi-billion dollar budget deficit. The courts have said the Legislature can’t force cities to pay back state funds; it can’t take funds paid by farmers and ranchers for specialized research and marketing; and it might not be able to cut programs that serve the disabled. Other challenges still waiting resolution include the removal of funding from Science Foundation of Arizona and the Arizona Industrial Commission. One would wonder if the Legislature has any budgeting authority left, except the courts did rule in favor of the state’s right to reduce wages and layoff employees.

The sales tax question — Many political activists have wondered if Gov. Jan Brewer or anyone else has a clear sense of what the general public wants for potential budget solutions. A new poll released Thursday by the state Realtors’ association suggests that Brewer is on the right track to support a temporary sales tax hike while opposing the Democrats’ proposal to lower the sales tax rate but expand the list of goods and services that are covered (which would ultimately bring in more tax revenue). The survey seems to be reliable (trustworthy polling outfit, statewide and randomly selected participants, tightly worded questions). The only fallacy I noticed is that the poll underrepresented independent voters (only 22 percent of the total questioned vs. 30 percent of all voter registrations). But the huge margins on the two main questions (two-thirds favoring a temporary sales tax increase but opposing a broader tax base with a lower rate) imply that one disparity didn’t affect the results.

But I’m not sure the poll results actually help Brewer’s cause with the Legislature. Democrats want permanent tax reform, not a temporary solution. And some Republicans have been reluctantly coming around to sending Brewer’s proposal to the ballot under the assumption that it would get defeated. Those Republicans might vote against Brewer now on philosophical grounds if there’s a good chance that voters would support the sales tax hike.

The push for ‘racinos’ — At the beginning of the week, the state’s horse and dog tracks launched a publicity campaign to convince lawmakers to allow slot machines and other forms of banned gambling at racetracks, as a alternative way to balance the budget (More taxes would be collected on gaming revenues). The effort includes an online ad appearing at several political news sites featuring the words, “Mine that bird” and “Mine that budget jockey.”

I have no idea what that’s supposed to mean. I didn’t make any connection to the ‘racino’ campaign,  not even with the annoyingly loud sound at the start of the ad that’s apparently a combination of coins dropping and the starting bell of a horse race. But maybe the wording served its purpose, as after seeing it the ad a couple of times I clicked on it to see where the link sent me. I traveled here, a Facebook page called the Race for Revenues where the tracks are making their case with testimonials and fact sheets.

State budget countdown: The branches are separate and co-equal

June 23rd, 2009, 10:00 am by Le Templar

Many observers expect the Arizona Supreme Court to listen politely this morning to arguments between lawyers for Gov. Jan Brewer and legislative leaders, and then refuse to get involved in their budget fight. I’m not so sure. The governor’s legal counsel, Joe Kanefield, has filed a couple of  strong briefs explaining why Brewer is convinced Senate President Bob Burns is violating the state constitution by not sending her the budget bills given final approval on June 4.

The state constitution says “when” bills are passed by both chambers of the Legislature on roll call votes, such bills “shall” be presented to the governor. But the constitution provides no deadline for that to happen. Burns and House Speaker Kirk Adams are arguing they get to decide “when” occurs, and that could be as late as when the Legislature adjourns the session.

The fallacy in that argument is the Legislature could, in theory, never adjourn, and therefore legislative leaders could refuse forever to send the governor an adopted bill. That would render specific language in the state constitution meaningless, which the Supreme Court rightly refuses to do.

Burns and Adams appear to be in the weaker legal position. But they are depending on the five justices to view this as a political spat between the governor and the Legislature, not a constitutional crisis that requires court intervention.

The Supreme Court has taken that stance before on some disputes between the legislative and executive branches, especially on time-sensitive matters. As the fiscal year ends in just seven days (presumably the Legislature will send Brewer the budget bills at some point before then), the court could stand aside and let the politics play out.

We should know rather quickly, in a day or two, as the Supreme Court has a habit of immediately issuing instructions in these types of cases, followed several months later with a formal opinion that explains the court’s reasoning.

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