PCCD Right To Know Policy
Pursuant to Section 504 of the Right-to-Know Law, 65 P.S. §67.101 et seq. (RTKL), the Pennsylvania Commission on Crime and Delinquency (PCCD) sets forth the following policies, process and procedures, regarding responses by PCCD to requests made pursuant to the RTKL, in addition to complying with the policies set forth in Management Directive 205.36, Right-To-Know Law Compliance.
In addition, to facilitate access to documents of public interest and reduce the need for RTKL requests, PCCD makes many documents public. DGS publishes many solicitations, awards and contracts on its website. DGS and PCCD upload contracts to the Department of Treasury website, pursuant to the requirements of Chapter 17 of the RTKL, 65 P.S. §§ 67.1701-1702.
Requests
A written request to PCCD under the RTKL must:
- Be addressed to the Agency Open Records Officer ("AORO"):
- Identify a name and address to which PCCD should address its response;
- Indicate that the request is being made pursuant to the RTKL;
- Be submitted in person, by email or by fax;
- Be sufficiently specific to enable PCCD to ascertain which records are being requested; and
- Be from a person that is a legal resident of the United States.
While verbal requests may be fulfilled by PCCD, the requester cannot pursue the relief and remedies provided under the RTKL unless the request is in writing. RTKL requests may be submitted using the following form from the Office of Open Records.
The regular business hours of the RTKL Office are 8:30 a.m. to 5:00 p.m., Monday through Friday. Any RTKL request received by the RTKL Office after the close of regular business hours shall be deemed to have been received by that office on the following business day.
RTKL requests received by PCCD will be considered "public record" information by PCCD and such requests may be made available for public access through its website.
The AORO may respond by providing a requester with access to inspect a record electronically or as otherwise maintained by the PCCD, either:
- By providing access in the offices of PCCD, if agreed to by the requester;
- By sending a copy to the requester; or
- By notifying the requester that the record is available through publicly accessible electronic means and, if the requester writes to PCCD within 30 days that the requester is unable or unwilling to access the information electronically, by then providing the records in paper format, upon payment for the same.
Each of these options is a "response" for purposes of the RTKL, as is PCCD's written notice to the requester granting, denying or partially granting and partially denying access to a record. PCCD may send written responses to requesters by United States mail, by hand (in person or by delivery service), by facsimile, or by email.
Unless a longer period of time is needed and communicated to the requester by an "interim response" (as discussed in the Interim Responses section below), the RTKL requires that PCCD respond to an RTKL request within five business days. For purposes of determining the end of the five business day period, the day that a RTKL request is received is not counted. The first day of the five business day period is the PCCD's next business day.
PCCD must provide a final response to a RTKL request within five business days, unless one or more specific conditions are satisfied and the AORO gives the requester written notice that additional time will be required. That notice is referred to as an "interim response."
The AORO may send an interim response if any of the following apply:
- The RTKL request requires redaction of a public record;
- The RTKL request requires retrieval of a record from a remote location;
- A response within the five business day period cannot be accomplished due to bona fide staffing limitations, which limitations must be specified in the interim response;
- A legal review is necessary to determine whether the record requested is subject to access under the Act;
- The requester has not complied with PCCD's policies regarding access to public records;
- The requester has not complied with a demand for prepayment of fees, which are required to fulfill the RTKL request and which are estimated to exceed $100;
- Further, if prepayment of fees is required by PCCD, the time period for response shall be tolled from the time the demand for payment is made until such time as payment is actually received; or
- The extent or nature of the request precludes a response within the required time period.
An interim response must:
- Be sent to the requester on or before the last day of the five business day period;
- State that the request is being reviewed and the reason for the review;
- Give an estimate of applicable fees owed when the record becomes available; and
- State a reasonable date that a response is expected to be provided. This date must not be more than 30 calendar days from the end of the five business day period.
If the date of an expected response is in excess of 30 days following the five days allowed for in Section 901, the request will be deemed denied unless the requester has agreed in writing to the date specified in the notice.
PCCD will send an interim response when the estimated fee for responding to the request is in excess of $100. Once the estimated payment is received, PCCD will proceed to:
- Make a final determination as to what records, if any, are public records under the RTKL,
- Begin search and retrieval of those records,
- Perform any required redaction, and
- Advise the requester, within 30 days, as to a date by when any responsive public records will be produced.
Failure to make an estimated payment by the date required by PCCD in its interim response will result in the request being deemed withdrawn.
There are three possible final responses. Either the request is:
- Granted;
- Denied; or
- Granted in part and denied in part.
The failure to make a timely response is deemed to be a denial.
If a written request is denied in whole or in part, PCCD will issue a final written response that will include an explanation of the procedure for the requester to appeal, if the requester chooses to do so. The written denial will also set forth the specific reasons for the denial, including a citation of supporting legal authority. If the denial is the result of a determination that the record requested is exempt from disclosure, the specific reasons for PCCD's determination shall be included.
Non-production of records due to the fact that a good faith search by PCCD does not produce any responsive records is not a denial of access.
When a request is denied or deemed denied, whether in whole or in part, the requester may file an appeal with the Office of Open Records, where it will be assigned to an Appeals Officer.
This appeal must be filed within 15 business days of the denial or deemed denial. The appeal must state the grounds upon which the requester asserts that the record is public, and should address any grounds stated by PCCD for delaying or denying the request.
The appeal shall be sent to the OOR at the address set forth below and simultaneously to PCCD’s AORO, in the same manner as the appeal is sent to the OOR (email, fax, mail or hand delivery) with:
- PCCD's response,
- The RTKL request, and
- The appeal form that is available on the OOR website.
A person other than PCCD or the requester, with a direct interest in the record that is subject to an appeal, has 15 days following actual knowledge of the appeal, but no later than the date the Appeals Officer issues an order, to file a written request to provide information or to appear before the Appeals Officer in support of the requester's or PCCD's position in the appeal. The Appeals Officer may, but does not need to, grant the request.
For further information on appeals, it is suggested that the requester review the Web site of the Office of Open Records.
PCCD will not deny access to a public record based upon the fact that portions of the record are not public records and, as a result, not subject to disclosure. PCCD will redact the portions of a public record that are not public records and produce the portions that are public records.
PCCD may provide a requester with access to inspect a record electronically or as otherwise maintained by PCCD, either:
- By providing access in the offices of PCCD, if agreed to by the requester,
- By sending a copy to the requester, or
- By notifying the requester that the record is available through publicly accessible electronic means and, if the requester writes to PCCD within 30 days that the requester is unable or unwilling to access the information electronically, by then providing the records in paper format, upon payment for the same.
PCCD has the discretion to determine the building(s) and room(s) that will be used to provide a requester with access to PCCD's public records. The selection of buildings and rooms for access to PCCD's public records is a matter within the discretion of the AORO.
PCCD will provide a public record to a requester in the medium requested if the record exists in that medium. Otherwise, the public record must be provided in the medium in which it exists. If a public record only exists in one medium, PCCD is not required to convert that public record to another medium, except that if the public record is only available in an electronic form, PCCD must print it out on paper if the requester so requests.
PCCD is not required to create a public record that does not already exist, nor is it required to compile, maintain, format, or organize a public record in a manner in which PCCD does not currently do.
Duplication of Public Records
PCCD may either make copies itself or, at its discretion, allow the requester to bring the necessary equipment to make its own copies. PCCD may make its duplication equipment available to a requester, but require that the requester operate the equipment, assign PCCD staff to make the duplications, or contract for duplication services and require the requester to pay the applicable rate.
Applicable fees to be charged by PCCD under the RTKL are as follows:
Fees Determined by the Office of Open Records
Under the RTKL, the Office of Open Records has the authority to establish two fees for Commonwealth agencies: Duplication, 65 P.S. §67.1307(b); and Enhanced Electronic Access (PCCD may establish user fees, subject to approval by the Office of Open Records), 65 P.S. §67.1307 (e).
The fees for duplication are established by the Office of Open Records.
Unless otherwise directed by the statute, PCCD will charge a maximum of $.25 per page for duplication, although on-site publication may be at a reduced rate of $.15 per page at the discretion of PCCD.
Pursuant to PCCD's policy, PCCD may waive duplication fees for 50 pages or less. Duplication charges are to be paid for any duplication in excess of 50 pages.
Specialized Fees
- PCCD will charge $1 per copy for certified copies, when requested by the requester.
- PCCD will charge the actual cost for postage, facsimile/microfiche or other media, as well as for specialized documents. Except that postage fees will be waived for postage that costs under $1.
- Special rules apply to fees for transcripts of administrative proceedings:
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- Prior to an adjudication becoming "final, binding and non-appealable," transcripts may be requested through an agency; however, the stenographer or court reporter is permitted to charge the regular fee for this service.
- Following an adjudication becoming "final, binding and non-appealable," a request for the transcript shall be treated like any other request for a record and the usual duplication fee of up to $.25 per page will be charged.
Reasonable and Necessarily Incurred Costs
As expressly provided by 65 P.S. §67.1307(g), PCCD has the authority to charge requesters reasonable fees for necessarily incurred costs. PCCD will determine and charge such fees on a case-by-case basis.
General
No charge shall be made for agency or legal review of the record to see whether the requested records are public records that are subject to production.
If the estimated fees that are required to fulfill the RTKL request exceed $100, the requester must pay the estimated amount in advance, either by certified check or by ordinary check, which must first have cleared to be considered received by PCCD. The demand for prepayment will specify a reasonable period of time in which the requester must make such prepayment. Failure to make an estimated payment by the date required by PCCD in its interim response will result in the request being deemed withdrawn.
All applicable fees must be paid in order to receive access to the record requested, 65 P.S. §67.901. Any requester who has unpaid amounts outstanding to PCCD or to any agency under the Governor's jurisdiction, in relation to RTKL requests where production was made by any such agency, will not be granted access to records under other RTKL requests until such prior amounts due have been paid in full.
When an estimated fee was not required to be paid because the estimate was $100 or less, but actual fees are over $100 or where the fee was under $100, an agency has the discretion to produce the records and invoice for the amount due or to require payment prior to production.