The purpose of these regulations is to provide
for the regulation of the examination of public records in compliance
with and subject to the provisions of the Freedom of Information Law
(Public Officers Law Article 6) and to ensure the efficient operation
of governmental offices.
As used in this chapter, the following terms
shall have the meanings indicated:
AGENCY
Any municipal board, bureau, commission, council, department,
public authority, public corporation, division, office or other governmental
entity performing a governmental or propriety function for the City
of Ithaca.
FACTUAL TABULATION
A collection of statements of objective information logically
arranged and reflecting objective reality, actual existence or an
actual occurrence.
RECORD OR RECORDS
Any information kept, held, filed, produced or reproduced
by, with or for the City of Ithaca in any physical form whatsoever,
including but not limited to reports, statements, examinations, memoranda,
opinions, folders, files, books, manuals, pamphlets, forms, papers,
designs, drawings, maps, photos, letters, microfilms, computer tapes
or discs, rules, regulations or codes, tape recordings of official
meetings and documents.
STATISTICAL TABULATION
A collection or orderly presentation of numerical data logically
arranged in columns and rows or graphically.
The records access officer or his or her designee
shall, within five business days of the receipt of a written request
for a record reasonably described, make such record available to the
person requesting it, deny such request in writing or furnish a written
acknowledgment of the receipt of such request and a statement of the
approximate date, which shall be reasonable under the circumstances,
when such request will be granted or denied. If an agency determines
to grant a request in whole or in part, and if circumstances prevent
disclosure to the person requesting a record or records within 20
business days from the date of the acknowledgment of receipt of the
request, the City shall state, in writing, both the reason for the
inability to grant the request within 20 business days and a date
certain within a reasonable period, depending on the circumstances,
when the request will be granted in whole or in part. Upon receipt
of payment of or offer to pay the fee prescribed therefor, the records
access officer shall provide a copy of such record and certify to
the correctness of such copy, if so requested, or, as the case may
be, shall certify that he/she does not have possession of such record
or that such record cannot be found after diligent search. Nothing
in this chapter shall be construed to require any entity to prepare
any record not possessed or maintained by the City except those records
required to be maintained by law.
[Amended 11-3-2021 by Ord. No. 2021-09]
Any person denied access to a record may, within
30 days, appeal such denial, in writing, to the City Manager, who
shall, within 10 business days of the receipt of such appeal, fully
explain, in writing, to the person requesting the record the reasons
for further denial or provide access to the record sought. In addition,
the records access officer shall forward to the New York State Committee
on Open Government a copy of such appeal and the determination thereon.
If the City Manager affirms or modifies the denial, he/she shall communicate
his/her reasons, in writing, to the person making the appeal and inform
such person of his/her right to appeal such affirmation or modification
pursuant to Article 78 of the Civil Practice Law and Rules.
Notwithstanding the provisions of §
256-1, the City may deny public access to records or portions thereof that:
A. Are specifically exempted from disclosure by state
or federal statute; or
B. Are trade secrets or are submitted to the City by
a commercial enterprise or derived from information obtained from
a commercial enterprise and which, if disclosed, would cause substantial
injury to the competitive position of the subject enterprise; or
C. If disclosed, would constitute an unwarranted invasion of personal privacy pursuant to the standards set forth in §
256-4B of this chapter; or
D. Are compiled for law enforcement purposes and if disclosed
would either jeopardize a pending criminal investigation, identify
a confidential source, or reveal investigative techniques or procedures
which are not routine techniques or procedures; or
E. If disclosed could endanger the life or safety of
any person; or
F. If disclosed would impair present or imminent contract
awards or collective bargaining negotiations; or
G. Are inter-agency or intra-agency materials which are
not statistical or factual tabulations of data; instructions to staff;
final agency policy or determinations; or external audits, including
but not limited to audits performed by the State Comptroller and the
federal government; or
H. Are examination questions or answers which are requested
prior to the final administration of such questions; or
I. If disclosed, could jeopardize the City's capacity
to guarantee the security of its information technology assets, such
assets encompassing both electronic information systems and infrastructures;
or
J. Are photographs, microphotographs, videotape or other
recorded images prepared under authority of § 1111-a of
the Vehicle and Traffic Law.
Nothing in this chapter shall require the disclosure
of the home address of an officer or employee, former officer or employee,
or of a retiree of the public employees; retirement system; nor shall
anything in this chapter require the disclosure of the name or home
address of a beneficiary of a public employees' retirement system
or of an applicant for appointment to public employment; provided,
however, that nothing in this section shall limit or abridge the right
of an employee organization, certified or recognized for any collective
negotiating unit or an employer pursuant to Article 14 of the Civil
Service Law, to obtain the name or home address of any officer, employee
or retiree of such employer, if such name or home address is otherwise
available under this chapter.