Georgia General Assembly
Unannotated Code
50-18-72.html
50-18-72.
(a) Public disclosure shall not be required for
records that are:
(1) Specifically required by the
federal government to be kept confidential;
(2)
Medical or veterinary records and similar files, the disclosure of which would
be an invasion of personal privacy;
(3) Except as
otherwise provided by law, records compiled for law enforcement or prosecution
purposes to the extent that production of such records would disclose the
identity of a confidential source, disclose confidential investigative or
prosecution material which would endanger the life or physical safety of any
person or persons, or disclose the existence of a confidential surveillance or
investigation;
(4) Records of law enforcement,
prosecution, or regulatory agencies in any pending investigation or prosecution
of criminal or unlawful activity, other than initial police arrest reports and
initial incident reports; provided, however, that an investigation or
prosecution shall no longer be deemed to be pending when all direct litigation
involving said investigation and prosecution has become final or otherwise
terminated;
(4.1) Individual Georgia Uniform Motor
Vehicle Accident Reports, except upon the submission of a written statement of
need by the requesting party, such statement to be provided to the custodian of
records and to set forth the need for the report pursuant to this Code section;
provided, however, that any person or entity whose name or identifying
information is contained in a Georgia Uniform Motor Vehicle Accident Report
shall be entitled, either personally or through a lawyer or other
representative, to receive a copy of such report; and provided, further, that
Georgia Uniform Motor Vehicle Accident Reports shall not be available in bulk
for inspection or copying by any person absent a written statement showing the
need for each such report pursuant to the requirements of this Code section. For
the purposes of this subsection, the term 'need' means that the natural person
or legal entity who is requesting in person or by representative to inspect or
copy the Georgia Uniform Motor Vehicle Accident Report:
(A) Has a personal, professional, or business
connection with a party to the accident;
(B) Owns or
leases an interest in property allegedly or actually damaged in the accident;
(C) Was allegedly or actually injured by the
accident;
(D) Was a witness to the accident;
(E) Is the actual or alleged insurer of a party to
the accident or of property actually or allegedly damaged by the accident;
(F) Is a prosecutor or a publicly employed law
enforcement officer;
(G) Is alleged to be liable to
another party as a result of the accident;
(H) Is an
attorney stating that he or she needs the requested reports as part of a
criminal case, or an investigation of a potential claim involving contentions
that a roadway, railroad crossing, or intersection is unsafe;
(I) Is gathering information as a representative of a
news media organization; or
(J) Is conducting research
in the public interest for such purposes as accident prevention, prevention of
injuries or damages in accidents, determination of fault in an accident or
accidents, or other similar purposes; provided, however, this subparagraph will
apply only to accident reports on accidents that occurred more than 30 days
prior to the request and which shall have the name, street address, telephone
number, and
driver´s
license number redacted;
(5) Records that consist of
confidential evaluations submitted to, or examinations prepared by, a
governmental agency and prepared in connection with the appointment or hiring of
a public officer or employee; and records consisting of material obtained in
investigations related to the suspension, firing, or investigation of complaints
against public officers or employees until ten days after the same has been
presented to the agency or an officer for action or the investigation is
otherwise concluded or terminated, provided that this paragraph shall not be
interpreted to make such investigatory records privileged;
(6)(A) Real estate appraisals, engineering or
feasibility estimates, or other records made for or by the state or a local
agency relative to the acquisition of real property until such time as the
property has been acquired or the proposed transaction has been terminated or
abandoned; and
(B)
Engineers´
cost estimates and pending, rejected, or deferred bids or proposals until such
time as the final award of the contract is made or the project is terminated or
abandoned. The provisions of this subparagraph shall apply whether the bid or
proposal is received or prepared by the Department of Transportation pursuant to
Article 4 of Chapter 2 of Title 32, by a county pursuant to Article 3 of Chapter
4 of Title 32, by a municipality pursuant to Article 4 of Chapter 4 of Title 32,
or by a governmental entity pursuant to Article 2 of Chapter 91 of Title 36;
(7) Notwithstanding any other provision of this
article, an agency shall not be required to release those portions of records
which would identify persons applying for or under consideration for employment
or appointment as executive head of an agency as that term is defined in
paragraph (1) of subsection (a) of Code Section 50-14-1, or of a unit of the
University System of Georgia; provided, however, that at least 14 calendar days
prior to the meeting at which final action or vote is to be taken on the
position, the agency shall release all documents which came into its possession
with respect to as many as three persons under consideration whom the agency has
determined to be the best qualified for the position and from among whom the
agency intends to fill the position. Prior to the release of these documents, an
agency may allow such a person to decline being considered further for the
position rather than have documents pertaining to the person released. In that
event, the agency shall release the documents of the next most qualified person
under consideration who does not decline the position. If an agency has
conducted its hiring or appointment process open to the public, it shall not be
required to delay 14 days to take final action on the position. The agency shall
not be required to release such records with respect to other applicants or
persons under consideration, except at the request of any such person. Upon
request, the hiring agency shall furnish the number of applicants and the
composition of the list by such factors as race and sex. The agency shall not be
allowed to avoid the provisions of this paragraph by the employment of a private
person or agency to assist with the search or application process;
(8) Related to the provision of staff services to
individual members of the General Assembly by the Legislative and Congressional
Reapportionment Office, the Senate Research Office, or the House Research
Office, provided that this exception shall not have any application with respect
to records related to the provision of staff services to any committee or
subcommittee or to any records which are or have been previously publicly
disclosed by or pursuant to the direction of an individual member of the General
Assembly;
(9) Records that are of historical research
value which are given or sold to public archival institutions, public libraries,
or libraries of a unit of the Board of Regents of the University System of
Georgia when the owner or donor of such records wishes to place restrictions on
access to the records. No restriction on access, however, may extend more than
75 years from the date of donation or sale. This exemption shall not apply to
any records prepared in the course of the operation of state or local
governments of the State of Georgia;
(10) Records
that contain information from the Department of Natural Resources inventory and
register relating to the location and character of a historic property or of
historic properties as those terms are defined in Code Sections 12-3-50.1 and
12-3-50.2 if the Department of Natural Resources through its Division of
Historic Preservation determines that disclosure will create a substantial risk
of harm, theft, or destruction to the property or properties or the area or
place where the property or properties are located;
(10.1) Records of farm water use by individual farms
as determined by water-measuring devices installed pursuant to Code Section
12-5-31 or 12-5-105; provided, however, that compilations of such records for
the 52 large watershed basins as identified by the eight-digit United States
Geologic Survey hydrologic code or an aquifer that do not reveal farm water use
by individual farms shall be subject to disclosure under this article;
(11) Records that contain site specific information
regarding the occurrence of rare species of plants or animals or the location of
sensitive natural habitats on public or private property if the Department of
Natural Resources determines that disclosure will create a substantial risk of
harm, theft, or destruction to the species or habitats or the area or place
where the species or habitats are located; provided, however, that the owner or
owners of private property upon which rare species of plants or animals occur or
upon which sensitive natural habitats are located shall be entitled to such
information pursuant to this article;
(11.1) An
individual´s
social security number and insurance or medical information in personnel
records, which may be redacted from such records;
(11.2) Records that would reveal the names, home
addresses, telephone numbers, security codes, or any other data or information
developed, collected, or received by counties or municipalities in connection
with the installation, servicing, maintaining, operating, selling, or leasing of
burglar alarm systems, fire alarm systems, or other electronic security systems;
provided, however, that initial police reports and initial incident reports
shall remain subject to disclosure pursuant to paragraph (4) of this subsection;
(11.3)(A) An
individual´s
social security number,
mother´s
birth name, credit card information, debit card information, bank account
information, financial data or information, and insurance or medical information
in all records, and if technically feasible at reasonable cost, day and month of
birth, which shall be redacted prior to disclosure of any record requested
pursuant to this article; provided, however, that such information shall not be
redacted from such records if the person or entity requesting such records
requests such information in a writing signed under oath by such person or a
person legally authorized to represent such entity which states that such person
or entity is gathering information as a representative of a news media
organization for use in connection with news gathering and reporting; and
provided, further, that such access shall be limited to social security numbers
and day and month of birth; and provided, further, that this news media
organization exception for access to social security numbers and day and month
of birth and the other protected information set forth in this subparagraph
shall not apply to teachers and employees of a public school.
(B) This paragraph shall have no application to:
(i) The disclosure of information contained in the
records or papers of any court or derived therefrom including without limitation
records maintained pursuant to Article 9 of Title 11;
(ii) The disclosure of information to a court,
prosecutor, or publicly employed law enforcement officer, or authorized agent
thereof, seeking records in an official capacity;
(iii) The disclosure of information to a public
employee of this state, its political subdivisions, or the United States who is
obtaining such information for administrative purposes, in which case, subject
to applicable laws of the United States, further access to such information
shall continue to be subject to the provisions of this paragraph;
(iv) The disclosure of information as authorized by
the order of a court of competent jurisdiction upon good cause shown to have
access to any or all of such information upon such conditions as may be set
forth in such order;
(v) The disclosure of
information to the individual in respect of whom such information is maintained,
with the authorization thereof, or to an authorized agent thereof; provided,
however, that the agency maintaining such information shall require proper
identification of such individual or such
individual´s
agent, or proof of authorization, as determined by such agency;
(vi) The disclosure of the day and month of birth and
mother´s
birth name of a deceased individual;
(vii) The
disclosure by an agency of credit or payment information in connection with a
request by a consumer reporting agency as that term is defined under the federal
Fair Credit Reporting Act (15 U.S.C. Section 1681, et seq.);
(viii) The disclosure by an agency of information in
its records in connection with the
agency´s
discharging or fulfilling of its duties and responsibilities, including, but not
limited to, the collection of debts owed to the agency or individuals or
entities whom the agency assists in the collection of debts owed to the
individual or entity; or
(ix) The disclosure of
information necessary to comply with legal or regulatory requirements or for
legitimate law enforcement purposes.
(C) Records and
information disseminated pursuant to this paragraph may be used only by the
authorized recipient and only for the authorized purpose. Any person who obtains
records or information pursuant to the provisions of this paragraph and
knowingly and willfully discloses, distributes, or sells such records or
information to an unauthorized recipient or for an unauthorized purpose shall be
guilty of a misdemeanor of a high and aggravated nature and upon conviction
thereof shall be punished as provided in Code Section 17-10-4. Any person
injured thereby shall have a cause of action for invasion of privacy. Any
prosecution pursuant to this paragraph shall be in accordance with the procedure
in subsection (b) of Code Section 50-18-74.
(D) In
the event that the custodian of public records protected by this paragraph has
good faith reason to believe that a pending request for such records has been
made fraudulently, under false pretenses, or by means of false swearing, such
custodian shall apply to the superior court of the county in which such records
are maintained for a protective order limiting or prohibiting access to such
records.
(E) This paragraph shall supplement and
shall not supplant, overrule, replace, or otherwise modify or supersede any
provision of statute, regulation, or law of the federal government or of this
state as now or hereafter amended or enacted requiring, restricting, or
prohibiting access to the information identified in subparagraph (A) of this
paragraph and shall constitute only a regulation of the methods of such access
where not otherwise provided for, restricted, or prohibited;
(12) Public records containing information that would
disclose or might lead to the disclosure of any component in the process used to
execute or adopt an electronic signature, if such disclosure would or might
cause the electronic signature to cease being under the sole control of the
person using it. For purposes of this paragraph, the term 'electronic signature'
has the same meaning as that term is defined in Code Section 10-12-3;
(13) Records that would reveal the home address or
telephone number, social security number, or insurance or medical information of
employees of the Department of Revenue, law enforcement officers, judges,
scientists employed by the Division of Forensic Sciences of the Georgia Bureau
of Investigation, correctional employees, and prosecutors or identification of
immediate family members or dependents thereof;
(13.1)
Records that reveal the home address, the home telephone number, or the social
security number of or insurance or medical information about teachers and
employees of a public school. For the purposes of this paragraph, the term
'public school' means any school which is conducted within this state and which
is under the authority and supervision of a duly elected county or independent
board of education;
(13.2) Records that are kept by
the probate court pertaining to guardianships and conservatorships except as
provided in Code Section 29-9-18;
(14) Acquired by an
agency for the purpose of establishing or implementing, or assisting in the
establishment or implementation of, a carpooling or ridesharing program, to the
extent such records would reveal the name, home address, employment address,
home telephone number, employment telephone number, or hours of employment of
any individual or would otherwise identify any individual who is participating
in, or who has expressed an interest in participating in, any such program. As
used in this paragraph, the term 'carpooling or ridesharing program' means and
includes, but is not limited to, the formation of carpools, vanpools, or
buspools, the provision of transit routes, rideshare research, and the
development of other demand management strategies such as variable working hours
and telecommuting;
(15)(A) Records, the disclosure of
which would compromise security against sabotage or criminal or terrorist acts
and the nondisclosure of which is necessary for the protection of life, safety,
or public property, which shall be limited to the following:
(i) Security plans and vulnerability assessments for
any public utility, technology infrastructure, building, facility, function, or
activity in effect at the time of the request for disclosure or pertaining to a
plan or assessment in effect at such time;
(ii) Any
plan for protection against terrorist or other attacks, which plan depends for
its effectiveness in whole or in part upon a lack of general public knowledge of
its details;
(iii) Any document relating to the
existence, nature, location, or function of security devices designed to protect
against terrorist or other attacks, which devices depend for their effectiveness
in whole or in part upon a lack of general public knowledge;
and
(iv) Any plan, blueprint, or other material which
if made public could compromise security against sabotage, criminal, or
terroristic acts.
(B) In the event of litigation
challenging nondisclosure pursuant to this paragraph by an agency of a document
covered by this paragraph, the court may review the documents in question in
camera and may condition, in writing, any disclosure upon such measures as the
court may find to be necessary to protect against endangerment of life, safety,
or public property.
(C) As used in divisions (i) and
(iv) of subparagraph (A) of this paragraph, the term 'activity' means deployment
or surveillance strategies, actions mandated by changes in the federal threat
level, motorcades, contingency plans, proposed or alternative motorcade routes,
executive and dignitary protection, planned responses to criminal or terrorist
actions, after-action reports still in use, proposed or actual plans and
responses to bioterrorism, and proposed or actual plans and responses to
requesting and receiving the National Pharmacy Stockpile;
(16) Unless the request is made by the accused in a
criminal case or by his or her attorney, public records of an emergency '911'
system, as defined in paragraph (3) of Code Section 46-5-122, containing
information which would reveal the name, address, or telephone number of a
person placing a call to a public safety answering point, which information may
be redacted from such records if necessary to prevent the disclosure of the
identity of a confidential source, to prevent disclosure of material which would
endanger the life or physical safety of any person or persons, or to prevent the
disclosure of the existence of a confidential surveillance or investigation;
or
(17) Records of athletic or recreational programs,
available through the state or a political subdivision of the state, that
include information identifying a child or children 12 years of age or under by
name, address, telephone number, or emergency contact, unless such identifying
information has been redacted.
(b) This article shall
not be applicable to:
(1) Any trade secrets obtained
from a person or business entity which are of a privileged or confidential
nature and required by law to be submitted to a government agency or to data,
records, or information of a proprietary nature, produced or collected by or for
faculty or staff of state institutions of higher learning, or other governmental
agencies, in the conduct of or as a result of, study or research on commercial,
scientific, technical, or scholarly issues, whether sponsored by the institution
alone or in conjunction with a governmental body or private concern, where such
data, records, or information has not been publicly released, published,
copyrighted, or patented;
(2) Any data, records, or
information developed, collected, or received by or on behalf of faculty, staff,
employees, or students of an institution of higher education or any public or
private entity supporting or participating in the activities of an institution
of higher education in the conduct of, or as a result of, study or research on
medical, scientific, technical, scholarly, or artistic issues, whether sponsored
by the institution alone or in conjunction with a governmental body or private
entity until such information is published, patented, otherwise publicly
disseminated, or released to an agency whereupon the request must be made to the
agency. This subsection applies to, but is not limited to, information provided
by participants in research, research notes and data, discoveries, research
projects, methodologies, protocols, and creative works;
or
(3) Unless otherwise provided by law, contract,
bid, or proposal, records consisting of questions, scoring keys, and other
materials, constituting a test that derives value from being unknown to the test
taker prior to administration, which is to be administered by the State Board of
Education, the Office of Student Achievement, or a local school system, if
reasonable measures are taken by the owner of the test to protect security and
confidentiality; provided, however, that the State Board of Education may
establish procedures whereby a person may view, but not copy, such records if
viewing will not, in the judgment of the board, affect the result of
administration of such test.
These limitations shall
not be interpreted by any court of law to include or otherwise exempt from
inspection the records of any athletic association or other nonprofit entity
promoting intercollegiate athletics.
(c)(1) All
public records of hospital authorities shall be subject to this article except
for those otherwise excepted by this article or any other provision of law.
(2) All state officers and employees shall have a
privilege to refuse to disclose the identity or personally identifiable
information of any person participating in research on commercial, scientific,
technical, medical, scholarly, or artistic issues conducted by the Department of
Human Resources or a state institution of higher education whether sponsored by
the institution alone or in conjunction with a governmental body or private
entity. Personally identifiable information shall mean any information which if
disclosed might reasonably reveal the identity of such person including but not
limited to the
person´s
name, address, and social security number. The identity of such informant shall
not be admissible in evidence in any court of the state unless the court finds
that the identity of the informant already has been disclosed otherwise.
(d) This article shall not be applicable to any
application submitted to or any permanent records maintained by a judge of the
probate court pursuant to Code Section 16-11-129, relating to licenses to carry
pistols or revolvers, or pursuant to any other requirement for maintaining
records relative to the possession of firearms. This subsection shall not
preclude law enforcement agencies from obtaining records relating to licensing
and possession of firearms as provided by law.
(e)
This article shall not be construed to repeal:
(1)
The attorney-client privilege recognized by state law to the extent that a
record pertains to the requesting or giving of legal advice or the disclosure of
facts concerning or pertaining to pending or potential litigation, settlement,
claims, administrative proceedings, or other judicial actions brought or to be
brought by or against the agency or any officer or employee; provided, however,
attorney-client information may be obtained in a proceeding under Code Section
50-18-73 to prove justification or lack thereof in refusing disclosure of
documents under this Code section provided the judge of the court in which said
proceeding is pending shall first determine by an in camera examination that
such disclosure would be relevant on that issue;
(2)
The confidentiality of attorney work product; or
(3)
State laws making certain tax matters confidential.
(f)(1) As used in this article, the term:
(A) 'Computer program' means a set of instructions,
statements, or related data that, in actual or modified form, is capable of
causing a computer or computer system to perform specified functions.
(B) 'Computer software' means one or more computer
programs, existing in any form, or any associated operational procedures,
manuals, or other documentation.
(2) This article
shall not be applicable to any computer program or computer software used or
maintained in the course of operation of a public office or agency.
(g) This Code section shall be interpreted narrowly
so as to exclude from disclosure only that portion of a public record to which
an exclusion is directly applicable. It shall be the duty of the agency having
custody of a record to provide all other portions of a record for public
inspection or copying.
(h) Within the three business
days applicable to response to a request for access to records under this
article, the public officer or agency having control of such record or records,
if access to such record or records is denied in whole or in part, shall specify
in writing the specific legal authority exempting such record or records from
disclosure, by Code section, subsection, and paragraph. No addition to or
amendment of such designation shall be permitted thereafter or in any proceeding
to enforce the terms of this article; provided, however, that such designation
may be amended or supplemented one time within five days of discovery of an
error in such designation or within five days of the institution of an action to
enforce this article, whichever is sooner; provided, further, that the right to
amend or supplement based upon discovery of an error may be exercised on only
one occasion. In the event that such designation includes provisions not
relevant to the subject matter of the request, costs and reasonable
attorney´s
fees may be awarded pursuant to Code Section 50-18-73.