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educational records

By: Lindsay S. Romeo, Esq.
Editor: Sanmathi (Sanu) Dev, Esq.

On June 5, 2024, Governor Phil Murphy signed legislation (S-2930) which amends New Jersey’s Open Public Records Act, commonly known as OPRA. N.J.S.A. 47:1A-1 et seq. OPRA permits requests to government entities to gain access to public records. The changes to OPRA will take effect on September 3, 2024. While the bill made changes to many aspects of OPRA, several amendments will directly impact public school districts.

One notable change to OPRA is an expanded definition of “personal identifying information.” The amendment now protects birth dates, email addresses, and home addresses. Custodians should carefully analyze documents prior to production to ensure any identifying information has been redacted.

In addition, when an agency assesses a special service fee, now the presumption is that the fees or charges presented by the custodian are reasonable. If a requestor objects to the fees or charges, the requestor carries the burden of demonstrating that the fees or charges are unreasonable.

If a requestor demands records that are over 24 months old, the custodian need not provide immediate access. OPRA also entitles custodians to reasonable extensions to any response deadlines so long as they notify the requestor within seven business days.

OPRA also tightened requirements for requestors that seek email, text message, and social media correspondence. The requestor must now specify individuals by name or job title, specify the subject matter, and specify a reasonable time period for the custodian to conduct the search. This provision prevents requestors from making overly broad and burdensome demands.

OPRA now requires agencies to make records publicly available, in their unabridged form, on the agency’s website. When a requestor demands records that are available on their website, the agency is required to direct the requestor to their website. The agency must provide the requestor with instructions to obtain the requested records from their website.

Finally, OPRA strikes down on requestors that harass public agencies or seek records with the intent to substantially interrupt the performance of government function. The Court may issue protective orders limiting the number and scope of requests the requestor may make.

By: Angela Reading, Law Clerk

Editor: Sanmathi (Sanu) Dev, Esq.

On September 29, 2022, the New Jersey Appellate Division in L.R. o/b/o J.R. v. Cherry Hill Board of Education issued a published decision affirming a ruling by the Superior Court of New Jersey, which held that a district could redact all parent and student information, including initials, when providing settlement agreements in response to an Open Public Records Act (“OPRA”) request.

In this case, the plaintiff, the mother of a student with a disability, made an OPRA request to the defendant Cherry Hill Board of Education (“Board”) for all settlement agreements in which the Board was named as a defendant and a student and/or their parent was named as a plaintiff. The Board provided the records sought but redacted all parent and student information, including initials. The plaintiff sued, asserting that the Board violated OPRA and improperly withheld information by redacting all personally identifiable information (“PII”).

In January 2015, the trial court granted the Board’s cross-motion for summary judgment, finding the initials were exempt from disclosure under the Family Educational Records and Privacy Act (“FERPA”) and the New Jersey Pupil Records Act (“NJPRA”). The plaintiff appealed and the matter was stayed pending the resolution of L.R. I and L.R. II. Following L.R. II, a special master adjudicated the Board’s motion to dismiss for failure to state a claim and recommended the court grant the motion. Plaintiff appealed the recommendation, and the trial judge affirmed, adopting the master’s findings of fact and conclusions of law.

The discrete issue raised on appeal was whether the Board should have redacted the PII altogether as opposed to leaving the initials intact. The plaintiff asserted the trial court erred by relying on the 2015 summary judgment decision and misunderstood the holdings of L.R. I and L.R. II.

The Appellate Division upheld the trial court’s decision, finding that using students’ initials is insufficient to protect identity as required by FERPA and NJPRA. The Court further held that just because the information may ordinarily be available to and accessible by the public — as legal submissions filed with the court — that does not “ipso facto mean that no legitimate privacy interest predominates.”

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