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Texas Public Information Act
Texas Government Code, Chapter 552, gives you the right
to access government records; and an officer for public information and the
officers agent may not ask why you want them. All government information is
presumed to be available to the public. Certain exceptions may apply to the
disclosure of the information. Governmental bodies shall
promptly release requested
information that is not confidential by law, either constitutional, statutory,
or by judicial decision, or information for which an exception to disclosure
has not been sought.
Rights of Requestors
You have the right to:
- Prompt access to information that is not confidential or otherwise protected;
- Receive treatment equal to all other requestors, including accommodation in
accordance with the Americans with Disabilities Act (ADA) requirements;
- Receive certain kinds of information without exceptions, like the voting record
of public officials, and other information;
- Receive a written statement of estimated charges, when charges will exceed $40,
in advance of work being started and opportunity to modify the request in response
to the itemized statement;
- Choose whether to inspect the requested information (most often at no charge),
receive copies of the information or both;
- A waiver or reduction of charges if the governmental body determines that access
to the information primarily benefits the general public;
- Receive a copy of the communication from the governmental body asking the Office
of the Attorney General for a ruling on whether the information can be withheld
under one of the accepted exceptions, or if the communication discloses the
requested information, a redacted copy;
- Lodge
a written complaint about overcharges for public information with the
Attorney General Office. Complaints of other possible violations may be filed with
the county or district attorney of the county where the governmental body, other
than a state agency, is located. If the complaint is against the county or
district attorney, the complaint must be filed with the Office of the Attorney
General.
Responsibilities of Governmental Bodies
All governmental bodies responding to information requests
have the responsibility to:
- Establish reasonable procedures for inspecting or copying
public information and inform requestors of these procedures;
- Treat all requestors uniformly and shall give to the requestor
all reasonable comfort and facility, including accommodation in accordance with
ADA requirements;
- Be informed about open records laws and educate employees
on the requirements of those laws;
- Inform requestors of the estimated charges greater than
$40 and any changes in the estimates above 20 percent of the original estimate,
and confirm that the requestor accepts the charges, or has amended the request,
in writing before finalizing the request;
- Inform the requestor if the information cannot be provided
promptly and set a date and time to provide it within a reasonable time;
- Request a ruling from the Office of the Attorney General
regarding any information the governmental body wishes to withhold, and send
a copy of the request for ruling, or a redacted copy, to the requestor;
- Segregate public information from information that may
be withheld and provide that public information promptly;
- Make a good faith attempt to inform third parties when
their proprietary information is being requested from the governmental body;
- Respond in writing to all written communications from the
Office of the Attorney General regarding charges for the information. Respond
to the Office of the Attorney General regarding complaints about violations
of the Act.
Procedures to Obtain Information
Submit a written request by mail,
fax, email or in person according to a governmental body's reasonable procedures.
Include enough description and detail about the information requested
to enable the governmental body to accurately identify and locate the
information requested.
Cooperate with the governmental body's reasonable
efforts to clarify the type or amount of information requested.
A. Information to be released
- You may review it promptly, and if it cannot be produced within 10 working days
the public information officer will notify you in writing of the reasonable
date and time when it will be available.
- Keep all appointments to inspect records and to pick up copies. Failure to
keep appointments may result in losing the opportunity to inspect the information
at the time requested.
Cost of Records
- You must respond to any written estimate of charges within 10 days of the date
the governmental body sent it or the request is considered automatically withdrawn.
- If estimated costs exceed $100.00 (or $50.00 if a governmental body has fewer
than 16 full time employees) the governmental body may require a bond, prepayment
or deposit.
- You may ask the governmental body to determine whether providing the information
primarily benefits the general public, resulting in a waiver or reduction of
charges.
- Make
a timely payment for all mutually agreed charges. A governmental body can demand
payment of overdue balances exceeding $100.00, or obtain a security deposit,
before processing additional requests from you.
B. Information that may be withheld due to an exception
- By the 10th business day after a governmental body receives your written request,
a governmental body must:
- request an
Attorney General opinion and state which exceptions apply;
- notify the
requestor of the referral to the Attorney General; and
- notify third
parties if the request involves their proprietary information.
- Failure to request an Attorney General opinion and notify the requestor within
10 business days will result in a presumption that the information is open unless
there is a compelling reason to withhold it.
- Requestors may send a letter to the Attorney General arguing for release, and
may review arguments made by the governmental body. If the arguments disclose
the requested information, the requestor may obtain a redacted copy.
- The Attorney General must issue a decision no later than the 45th working day
from the day after the attorney general received the request for a decision.
The attorney general may request an additional 10 working day extension.
- Governmental bodies may not ask the Attorney General to "reconsider"
an opinion.
To request information from this governmental body, please contact:
The Office of the Superintendent
You may send your request:
By mail to: Office of the Superintendent, 1111 W. 6th St, Austin,
TX 78703
By e-mail to: openrecords@austinisd.org
By fax to: 512-414-1486
In person at: 1111 W. 6th
Street, Room A250
For complaints regarding failure to release public information
please contact your local County or District Attorney at 512-473-9415 (Travis County Attorney) or
512-473-9400 (Travis County District Attorney):
- You may also contact the Office of the Attorney General, Open Records Hotline, at
512-478-6736 or toll-free at 1-877-673-6839.
- For complaints regarding overcharges, please contact the AG Cost Rules Administrator
at 512-475-2497.
If you need special accommodation pursuant to the Americans
With Disabilities Act (ADA), please contact our ADA coordinator, Adreayn Wilson
at 512-414-1721.
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Contact
Office of the Superintendent
1111 W. 6th St
Austin, TX 78703
Fax: 512.414.1486
openrecords@austinisd.org
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