FOIA Procedures and Guidelines
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Statement of Principles
Oakland Community College’s Board of Trustee’s has established the following written
procedures and guidelines to implement the FOIA and has also authorized that a written
public summary be created, in a manner to be easily understood by the general public,
specifying procedures and guidelines along with instructions on how to submit written
requests to the College; explanations regarding how to understand written responses;
deposit requirements; fee calculations; and avenues for challenge and appeal.
Section 1: General Policies
Pursuant to MCL 15.236, the OCC Board of Trustees charges and delegates to the Chancellor
the authority to designate a FOIA Coordinator to act on his or her behalf to accept
and process FOIA requests for College public records and to approve denials.
If a request for a public record is received by fax or email, the request is deemed to have been received on the following business day. If a request is sent by email and delivered to a College spam or junk-mail folder, the request is not deemed received until one day after the FOIA Coordinator first becomes aware of the request. The FOIA Coordinator shall note in the FOIA log both the date the request was delivered to the spam or junk mail folder and the date the FOIA Coordinator became aware of the request. The FOIA Coordinator shall review College spam and junk-mail folders on a regular basis.
The FOIA Coordinator may, in his or her discretion, implement administrative rules, consistent with State law and these Procedures and Guidelines to administer the acceptance and processing of FOIA requests.
The College is not obligated to create a new public record or make a compilation or summary of information which does not already exist. Neither the FOIA Coordinator nor other College staff are obligated to provide answers to questions contained in requests for public records or regarding the content of the records themselves.
The FOIA Coordinator shall keep a copy of all written requests for public records received by the College on file for a period of at least one (1) year.
The College will make this document and the Written Public Summary publicly available without charge by providing free copies both in the College's response to a written request and upon request by visitors. If it does not, the College cannot require deposits or charge fees otherwise permitted under the FOIA until it is in compliance.
This document and the College’s Written Public Summary will be maintained on the College’s FOIA website. A link to those documents will be provided in lieu of providing paper copies of those documents.
Section 2: Requesting a Public Record
No specific form to submit a request for a public record is required.
Requests to inspect or obtain copies of public records prepared, owned, used, possessed or retained by the College may be submitted in form of writing (letter, fax, email, etc.), or by verbal request.
If a person makes a verbal, non-written request for information believed to be available on the College’s website, where practicable and to the best ability of the employee receiving the request, shall be informed of the pertinent website address.
A request must sufficiently describe a public record so as to enable College personnel to identify and find the requested public record.
A request from a person, other than an individual who qualifies as indigent under MCL 15.234(2)(a), must include the requesting person's complete name, physical address, and contact information, and, if the request is made by a person other than an individual, the complete name, physical address, and contact information of the person's agent who is an individual. An address must be written in compliance with United States Postal Service addressing standards:
FULL NAME OF INDIVIDUAL (and company name, if applicable)
STREET ADDRESS, SUITE #
CITY, STATE, ZIP CODE
Contact information must include a valid telephone number or electronic mail address.
Written requests for public records may be submitted in person or by mail to any College campus. Requests may also be submitted electronically by fax and email. Upon their receipt, requests for public records shall be promptly forwarded to the FOIA Coordinator for processing.
A person may request that public records be provided on non-paper physical media, emailed or other otherwise provided to him or her in digital form in lieu of paper copies. The College will comply with the request only if it possesses the necessary technological capability to provide records in the requested non-paper physical media format.
A person may subscribe to future issues of public records that are created, issued
or disseminated by the College on a regular basis. A subscription is valid for up
to six (6) months and may be renewed by the subscriber
A person serving a sentence of imprisonment in a local, state or federal correctional
facility is not entitled to submit a request for a public record. The FOIA Coordinator
will deny all such requests.
Section 3: Processing a Request
Unless otherwise agreed to in writing by the person making the request, the College
will issue a response within five (5) business days of receipt of a FOIA request.
If a request is received by fax, email or other electronic transmission, the request
is deemed to have been received on the following business day.
The College will respond to a request in one of the following ways:
When a request is granted:
If the request is granted, or granted in part, the FOIA Coordinator will require that
payment be made in full for the allowable fees associated with responding to the request
before the public record is made available.
The FOIA Coordinator shall provide a detailed itemization of the allowable costs incurred to process the request to the person making the request.
If the cost of processing a FOIA request is $50.00 or less, the requester will be notified of the amount due and where the documents can be obtained.
If OCC has made a good faith calculation that the total fee for processing the request will exceed $50.00, OCC will require that you provide a deposit in the amount of 50% of the total estimated fee. Payment may be made by check, money order or credit card as detailed on the response form. Deposits are non-refundable.
In making the request for a good-faith deposit, the FOIA Coordinator shall provide
the requester with a detailed itemization of the allowable costs estimated to be
incurred by the College to process the request and also provide a best effort estimate
of a time frame it will take the College to provide the records to the requester.
The best efforts estimate shall be nonbinding on the College, but will be made in
good faith and will strive to be reasonably accurate, given the nature of the request
in the particular instance, so as to provide the requested records in a manner based
on the public policy expressed by Section 1 of the FOIA. If a deposit that is required
under subsection (8) or (11) is not received by the public body within 45 days from
receipt by the requesting person of the notice that a deposit is required, and if
the requesting person has not filed an appeal of the deposit amount pursuant to section
10a, the request shall be considered abandoned by the requesting person and the public
body is no longer required to fulfill the request.
When a request is denied or denied in part:
If the request is denied or denied in part, the FOIA Coordinator will issue a Notice
of
Denial which shall provide in the applicable circumstance:
If a request does not sufficiently describe a public record, the FOIA Coordinator
may, in lieu of issuing a Notice of Denial indicating that the request is deficient,
seek clarification or amendment of the request by the person making the request. Any
clarification or amendment will be considered a new request subject to the
timelines described in this Section.
Requests to inspect public records:
The College shall provide reasonable facilities and opportunities for persons to examine
and inspect public records during normal business hours. The FOIA Coordinator is authorized
to promulgate rules regulating the manner in which records may be viewed so as to
protect College records from loss, alteration, mutilation or destruction and to prevent
excessive interference with normal College operations.
Upon receiving a written or verbal request to inspect College records, the College shall furnish the requesting person with a reasonable opportunity and reasonable facilities for inspection and examination of its public records.
A person shall be allowed to inspect public records during usual business hours, not less than four hours per day. The public does not have unlimited access to College offices or facilities, and a person may be required to inspect records at a specified counter or table, and in view of College personnel.
College officials, appointees, staff or consultants/contractors assisting with inspection of public records shall inform any person inspecting records that only pencils, and no pens or ink, may be used to take notes. In coordination with the official responsible for the records, the FOIA Coordinator shall determine on a case-by-case basis when the College will provide copies of original records, to allow for blacking out exempt information, to protect old or delicate original records, or because the original record is a digital file or database not available for public inspection.
The FOIA Coordinator is responsible for identifying if records or information requested
by the public is stored in digital files or e-mail, even if the public does not
specifically request a digital file or e-mail.
A person cannot remove books, records or files from the place the College has provided for the inspection.
No documents shall be removed from the office of the custodian of those documents without permission of that custodian, except by court order, subpoena or for audit purposes. The official shall be given a receipt listing the records being removed. Documents may be removed from the office of the custodian of those documents with permission of that custodian to accommodate public inspection of those documents. In coordination with the official responsible for the records, the FOIA coordinator will determine on a case-by-case basis when the College will provide copies of original records, to allow for blacking out exempt information, to protect old or delicate original records, or because the original record is a digital file or database not available for public inspection.
Requests for certified copies:
The FOIA Coordinator shall, upon written request, furnish a certified copy of a public
record at no additional cost to the person requesting the public record.
Section 4: Fee Deposits
If the fee estimate is expected to exceed $50.00 based on a good-faith calculation,
the requester will be asked to provide a deposit not exceeding one-half of the total
estimated fee. Deposits are non-refundable.
If a request for public records is from a person who has not paid the College in full for copies of public records made in fulfillment of a previously granted written request, the FOIA Coordinator will require a deposit of 100% of the estimated processing fee before beginning to search for a public record for any subsequent written request by that person when all of the following conditions exist:
The FOIA Coordinator will not require an increased estimated fee deposit if any of the following apply:
The College will treat multiple concurrent FOIA requests on the same topic(s) and/or regarding the same record keeper(s) and from the same person as one FOIA request for purposes of determining whether the fee is below $50.00.
Section 5: Calculation of Fees
A fee may be charged for the labor cost of copying/duplication. OCC will use the most
economical method for making copies of public records, including using double-sided
printing, if cost-saving and available.
A fee will not be charged for the labor cost of search, examination, review and the deletion and separation of exempt from nonexempt information unless failure to charge a fee would result in unreasonably high costs to the College because of the nature of the request in the particular instance, and the College specifically identifies the nature of the unreasonably high costs.
Costs for the search, examination review, and deletion and separation of exempt from non-exempt information are “unreasonably high” when they are excessive and beyond the normal or usual amount for those services (Attorney General Opinion 7083 of 2001) compared to the costs of the College’s usual FOIA requests, not compared to the College’s operating budget. (Bloch v. Davison Community Schools, Michigan Court of Appeals, Unpublished, April 26, 2011)
The following factors shall be used to determine an unreasonably high cost to the College:
The Michigan FOIA statute permits the College to charge for the following costs associated with processing a request:
Labor costs will be calculated based on the following requirements:
The cost to provide records on non-paper physical media when so requested will be based on the following requirements:
The cost to provide paper copies of records will be based on the following requirements:
The cost to mail records to a requester will be based on the following requirements:
If the FOIA Coordinator does not respond to a written request in a timely manner, the College must:
Section 6: Waiver of Fees
The cost of the search for and copying of a public record may be waived or reduced
if in the sole judgment of the FOIA Coordinator a waiver or reduced fee is in the
public interest because it can be considered as primarily benefiting the general public.
Section 7: Discounted Fees
Indigence
The FOIA Coordinator will discount the first $20.00 of the processing fee for a request
if the person requesting a public record submits an affidavit stating that they are:
An individual is not eligible to receive the waiver if:
Nonprofit organization advocating for developmentally disabled or mentally ill individuals
The FOIA Coordinator will discount the first $20.00 of the processing fee for a request
from:
A nonprofit organization formally designated by the state to carry out activities under subtitle C of the Federal Developmental Disabilities Assistance and Bill of Rights Act of 2000, Public Law 106-402, and the Protection and Advocacy for Individuals with Mental Illness Act, Public Law 99-319, or their successors, if the request meets all of the following requirements:
Section 8: Appeal of a Denial of a Public Record
When a requester believes that all or a portion of a public record has not been disclosed
or has been improperly exempted from disclosure, he or she may file an appeal of the
denial with the Chancellor at pmproven@oaklandcc.edu.
The appeal must be in writing, specifically state the word "appeal" and identify the reason or reasons the requester is seeking a reversal of the denial.
Within ten (10) business days of receiving the appeal, the Chancellor will respond
in
writing by:
If the Chancellor fails to respond to a written appeal, or if the Chancellor upholds all or a portion of the disclosure denial that is the subject of the written appeal, the requesting person may seek judicial review of the nondisclosure by commencing a civil action in Circuit Court.
Whether or not a requester submitted an appeal of a denial to the Chancellor, he or she may file a civil action Oakland County Circuit Court within 180 days after the College's final determination to deny the request.
If a court that determines a public record is not exempt from disclosure, it shall order the College to cease withholding or to produce all or a portion of a public record wrongfully withheld, regardless of the location of the public record. Failure to comply with an order of the court may be punished as contempt of court.
If a person asserting the right to inspect, copy, or receive a copy of all or a portion of a public record prevails in such an action, the court shall award reasonable attorneys’ fees, costs, and disbursements. If the person or College prevails in part, the court may, in its discretion, award all or an appropriate portion of reasonable attorneys' fees, costs, and disbursements.
If the court determines that the College has arbitrarily and capriciously violated this act by refusal or delay in disclosing or providing copies of a public record, the court shall order the College to pay a civil fine of $1,000.00, which shall be deposited into the general fund of the state treasury. The court shall award, in addition to any actual or compensatory damages, punitive damages in the amount of $1,000.00 to the person seeking the right to inspect or receive a copy of a public record. The damages shall not be assessed against an individual, but shall be assessed against the next succeeding public body that is not an individual and that kept or maintained the public record as part of its public function.
Section 9: Appeal of an Excessive FOIA Processing Fee
“Fee” means the total fee or any component of the total fee calculated under section
4 of the FOIA, including any deposit.
If a requester believes that the fee charged by the College to process a FOIA request exceeds the amount permitted by state law or under this policy, he or she must first appeal to the Chancellor by submitting a written appeal for a fee reduction to the FOIA Coordinator.
The appeal must be in writing, specifically state the word "appeal" and identify how the required fee exceeds the amount permitted.
Within 10 business days after receiving the appeal, the Chancellor will respond in writing by:
Where the Chancellor reduces or upholds the fee, the determination must include a
certification from the Chancellor that the statements in the determination are
accurate and that the reduced fee amount complies with its publicly available procedures
and guidelines and Section 4 of the FOIA.
Within 45 days after receiving notice of the Chancellor’s determination of an appeal, the requesting person may commence a civil action in Oakland County Circuit Court for a fee reduction.
If a civil action is commenced against the College for an excess fee, the College is not obligated to complete the processing of the written request for the public record at issue until the court resolves the fee dispute.
An action shall not be filed in circuit court unless one of the following applies:
If a court determines that the College required a fee that exceeds the amount permitted under its publicly available procedures and guidelines or Section 4 of the FOIA, the court shall reduce the fee to a permissible amount. Failure to comply with an order of the court may be punished as contempt of court.
If the requesting person prevails in court by receiving a reduction of 50% or more of the total fee, the court may, in its discretion, award all or an appropriate portion of reasonable attorneys' fees, costs, and disbursements. The award shall be assessed against the public body liable for damages.
If the court determines that the College has arbitrarily and capriciously violated the FOIA by charging an excessive fee, the court shall order the College to pay a civil fine of $500.00, which shall be deposited in the general fund of the state treasury. The court may also award, in addition to any actual or compensatory damages, punitive damages in the amount of $500.00 to the person seeking the fee reduction. The fine and any damages shall not be assessed against an individual, but shall be assessed against the next succeeding public body that is not an individual and that kept or maintained the public record as part of its public function.
Section 10: Conflict with Prior FOIA Policies and Procedures
Effective Date To the extent that these Procedures and Guidelines conflict with previous
FOIA policies
promulgated by the College, these Procedures and Guidelines are controlling. To the
extent that any administrative rule promulgated by the FOIA Coordinator subsequent
to the adoption of this resolution is found to be in conflict with any previous policy
promulgated by the College, the administrative rule promulgated by the FOIA Coordinator
is controlling.
To the extent that any provision of these Procedures and Guidelines or any administrative rule promulgated by the FOIA Coordinator pertaining to the release of public records is found to be in conflict with any State statute, the applicable statute shall control. The FOIA Coordinator is authorized to modify this policy and all previous policies adopted by the College, and to adopt such administrative rules as he or she may deem necessary, to facilitate the legal review and processing of requests for public records made pursuant to Michigan's FOIA statute, provided that such modifications and rules are consistent with State law.
The FOIA Coordinator shall advise the College of any changes to these Policies and Guidelines.
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