Rhode Island Code of Regulations
Title 650 - Coastal Resources Management Council
Chapter 10 - General Administration
Subchapter 00 - N/A
Part 1 - Management Procedures
Section 650-RICR-10-00-1.15 - Access to Public Records
Universal Citation: 650 RI Code of Rules 10 00 1.15
Current through September 18, 2024
A. Purpose amp; Authority
1. The Coastal Resources Management
Council is a public agency subject to the provisions of the Rhode Island Access
to Public Records Act (APRA), codified at R.I. Gen. Laws §
38-2-1, et seq.,
and these Regulations are being adopted under the authority of that Act. These
Regulations are intended to help the public obtain the information they request
and to guide the Council staff as they comply with requests.
B. Public Records Officer
1. The person holding the position of Office
Manager shall be the Council's Public Records Officer. He or she may be
contacted at 4808 Tower Hill Road, Suite 3, Wakefield, RI 02879, Phone (401)
783-3370, Fax (401) 783-3767.
C. What Records Are Public
1. Public Records and Availability - Under
the APRA, all records the Council keeps are presumed to be public unless they
are deemed non-public by the Act. The Council shall make all records deemed
public by the APRA available to any person that may request them. Such public
records include all applications, transcripts, agendas, minutes, reports,
documents, papers, letters, maps, books, tapes, photographs, films, recordings
and computer stored records made or received pursuant to any law or Regulation,
or in connection with the transaction of any official Council business, that
are not otherwise deemed non-public by the APRA.
2. Non-Public Records - The APRA deems
certain personnel, medical, trade secret, investigatory, law enforcement,
preliminary drafts, notes, impressions, memoranda, working papers, and other
documents non-public and the Council shall not make public any records deemed
non-public by the APRA.
D. How to Make a Request
1. Who to Request Records From - Requests for
public records shall be made to the Public Records Officer.
2. Written Requests Preferred - To help
ensure the public obtains the records and/or information they request, to avoid
confusion that has arisen in the past, and to ensure public record requests are
recognized and handled expeditiously, the Council prefers public records
request be made in writing and it may promulgate a form for such requests. The
public does not have to use any specific form.
3. Requests for Certain Documents - Although
written requests are preferred, consistent with State law and these
Regulations, a written request is not required to access the following
documents:
a. Documents prepared for the
public;
b. Documents readily
available to the public; and
c.
Public information available pursuant to R.I. Gen. Laws §
42-35-2, which is a portion of the
Administrative Procedures Act.
d.
Council and Sub-Committee Agendas
e. Council and Sub-Committee
Minutes
f. Council
Transcripts
g. Council
Decisions
h. Assents
i. Public Hearing Notices
j. Public Hearing Minutes
k. Public Hearing Transcripts
l. Public documents submitted at Council
meetings or Public Hearings
m.
Coastal Program (sometimes referred to as The Red Book)
n. Management Procedures
o. Council Orders
4. Purpose of Request - The Council may ask
the purpose of a request in order to help identify the records requested but it
shall not withhold any public records based on the purpose for which the
records are sought, nor shall the Council require, as a condition of fulfilling
a public records request, that the requestor provide a reason for the
request.
5. Identity of the
Requester - The Council may request the name and contact information for a
person making a request in order to contact them if questions arise regarding
their requests and to notify them when records are available. However, except
as otherwise noted in these Regulations, the Council shall not require a person
to identify themselves nor to provide any contact information.
6. Identifying Records - Requestors searching
for a particular file or set of records are invited to search the Council
website, http://www.crmc.ri.gov, to
identify the appropriate file number for the records they desire.
7. Staff Assistance Identifying Records -
Requestors are encouraged to speak with Council staff to help identify the
records they wish to request.
E. Time for Complying with Requests
1. Time to Comply - The Council shall
endeavor to permit the inspection or copying of public records within ten (10)
business days after receiving a request.
2. Extensions of Time - If the Council does
not permit the inspection or copying of public records within ten (10) business
days, it shall forthwith explain in writing the need for additional time to
comply with the request. Any such explanation must be particularized to the
specific request made. In such case, the Council may have up to an additional
twenty (20) business days to comply with the request if it can demonstrate that
the voluminous nature of the request, the number of requests for records
pending, or the difficulty in searching for and retrieving or copying the
requested records, is such that additional time is necessary to avoid imposing
an undue burden on the Council.
3.
Records in Storage or Use - If a public record requested is in active use or in
storage and, therefore, not available at the time access is requested, the
Council shall so inform the requestor and make an appointment for the person to
examine such records as expeditiously as they may be made available.
4. Records Generally Unavailable - Records
that are the subject of a scheduled Council meeting, hearing or workshop will
generally be in use by the Council and not available for public inspection the
day of the meeting, hearing or workshop.
5. Timing of Requests - The Council shall try
to accommodate walk-in requests for readily available records but at least
twenty-four (24) hours advance notice is strongly preferred because, among
other reasons, the staff person who handles requests may not be
available.
F. Methods of Complying with Requests
1. Inspection During
Normal Business Hours - The Council shall make public records in its
possession, custody or control available for inspection during its normal
business hours at its office in South Kingstown, Rhode Island. [8:30 A.M. to
4:00 P.M., Monday through Friday]
2. Inspecting Records - When inspecting
records, only one (1) file or set of records at a time will be provided in
order to reduce the risk of documents being misplaced.
3. Alternate Ways of Inspecting Records - A
requestor may elect to obtain records in any media in which the Council is
reasonably capable of providing them. At the election of the requestor, the
Council shall provide copies of the public records electronically, by
facsimile, or by mail in accordance with the requestor's choice, unless
complying with that preference would be unduly burdensome due to the volume of
records requested or the costs that would be incurred. The requestor shall be
responsible for the actual cost of delivery, if any.
4. Form of Records - The Council shall not be
required to reorganize, consolidate, or compile data or records into any form
it does not already maintain the data or records in at the time the request to
inspect the data or records was made except to the extent that such records are
in an electronic format and the Council would not be unduly burdened in
providing such data.
5. Transcripts
- Requestors who desire a stenographic transcript of the Council proceedings
may contact the stenographer directly. [As of October 2020, Rebecca J. Forte
DBA Irons amp; Associates is the stenographic firm the Council utilizes.
Contact (401) 474-8441.]
6.
Checking-Out Transcripts - Requestors who provide their name, a valid
government issued identification bearing their name and photograph, and their
contact information, may also 'check-out' transcripts, and take them out of the
Council's office, for up to twenty-four (24) hours if the Public Records
Officer determines allowing the transcripts to leave the Council office will
not interfere with the Council's operations nor present more than a de
minimis risk of not being returned.
G. Research and Copying Charges
1. Charges Authorized and Payment Required -
The Council shall assess search, retrieval and copying charges in accordance
with these Regulations. Upon request, the Council shall provide an estimate of
the costs of responding to a request prior to fulfilling it. Upon request, the
Council shall provide a detailed itemization of the costs assessed. The
requestor shall pay the charges prior to inspecting or receiving the documents.
The Council does not accept cash, credit or debit cards. The Council does
accept checks and money orders.
2.
Searching and Retrieval Charges
a. The Council
shall not charge for the first (1st) hour of time spent searching for and
retrieving records.
b. The Council
shall charge fifteen dollars ($15.00) per hour for each additional hour, after
the first (1st) hour, spent searching for and retrieving records.
c. For the purposes of these Regulations,
multiple requests from any person or entity to the Council within a thirty (30)
day time period shall be considered one (1) request.
d. The Council may charge the reasonable
actual cost for retrieving records from storage if it is assessed a retrieval
fee.
3. Copying Charges
a. The Council can currently make copies of
documents up to eleven inches by seventeen inches (11" x 17").
b. The Council shall not charge for the first
(1st) five (5) pages of any copies it makes.
c. The Council shall charge fifteen cents
($0.15) per page for copies it makes in excess of five (5) pages.
d. If a requestor desires copies of documents
larger than eleven inches by seventeen inches (11" x 17"), and the Council can
reasonably do so, the Council will bring the oversized documents to a local
vendor to make copies and the requestor may then pay the vendor for the
copies.
e. Requestors who desire
copies of documents larger than eleven inches by seventeen inches (11" x 17")
contained in pending applications may also request them from the applicant,
engineer or attorney involved. Applicants, engineers and attorneys are
encouraged to make them available at costs.
H. Denial of Access
1. Determining What Records Are Public -
Consistent with these Regulations and the APRA, the Public Records Officer
shall determine which records are public and which are not.
2. Records the Council Does Not Have - The
Council shall inform the requestor if the records requested do not exist or are
not within the Council's custody or control.
3. Non-Public Records and Redaction - If a
record is deemed non-public pursuant to the APRA or these Regulations, any
reasonably segregable portion of it shall be available to the public after the
deletion of the information which is the basis of its designation as
non-public. If an entire record is deemed non-public, the Council shall state
in writing that no portion of the record contains reasonable segregable
information that is public.
4.
Denying Access - If the Public Records Officer determines the requested
records, or any part of the requested records, are not public, she or he shall
inform the requestor of the specific reasons for the determination, in writing,
within ten (10) business days of the request. The writing shall indicate the
procedures for appealing the determination.
5. Appealing Denials - In addition to any
appeal right contained in the APRA, the requestor may appeal the determination
that records are not public to the Council's Chief Administrative Officer. The
Council's Chief Administrative Officer is its Executive Director. Such appeals
should be in writing. [As of September 2020, the Council Executive Director is
Jeffrey M. Willis.] The Executive Director shall review the Public Records
Officer's determination and make a final determination whether or not to allow
public access within ten (10) business days after the submission of the
appeal.
I. Miscellaneous
1. Posting on Web Site amp; Availability to
Public - The Council's Public Educator and Information Coordinator shall cause
a copy of these Regulations to be maintained on the Council web site. [As of
January 1, 2013, that person is Laura Dwyer.] The Council's Office Manager
shall ensure a copy of these Regulations is available to the public at the
Council's office.
2. Disclosures to
Attorney General - The Council's Executive Director shall identify, and then at
least annually identify, in writing to the Rhode Island Attorney General, the
Council's Public Records Officer and the Executive Director shall annually
confirm to the Attorney General that the Public Records Officer has been
provided orientation and training regarding the
APRA.
Disclaimer: These regulations may not be the most recent version. Rhode Island may have more current or accurate information. We make no warranties or guarantees about the accuracy, completeness, or adequacy of the information contained on this site or the information linked to on the state site. Please check official sources.
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