1. DEPARTMENT OF THE CORPORATION COUNSEL
CITY AND COUNTY OF HONOLULU
530 SOUTH KING STREET, ROOM 110 • HONOLULU, HAWAII 96813
PHONE: (808) 768-5193 • FAX (808) 768-5105 • INTERNET: www.honoIuu.gov
KIRK W. CALOWOLL CARRIE KS. OKINAGA
ACTING MAYOR CORPORATION COUNSEL
KATHLEEN A KELLY
FIRST DEPUTY CO0RATION COUNSEL
September 7, 2010
Cathy L. Takase, Director
Office of Information Practices
State of Hawaii
No. I Capitol District Building
250 South Hotel Street, Suite 107
Honolulu, Hawaii 96813
Dear Ms. Takase:
Re: Request for Names, Titles and Salaries for all City Employees
The City and County of Honolulu (‘City’) has received a request pursuant
to Hawaii Revised Statutes (“HRS”) Chapter 92F for information regarding
Thames, titles and salaries of all temporary and permanent employees of the City
and County of Honolulu”. Attached for your reference is a copy of that request.
The City understands that similar requests were made of the State of Hawaii and
that the State and its various entities have provided the requested information.
While the City agrees strongly, too, that the public has a right to know how its
money is being spent, we would appreciate guidance from your office as to the
propriety of such a response. The City has received comments from its
employes regarding their concerns about the disclosure of what they believe to
be inherently private information. In addition, the City is aware that at least one
exclusive employee representative (“union”) has been looking into the legal
ramifications of disclosing this information. The City requests that your office
provide guidance and information with regards to the City’s obligation to respond
to this request.
HRS § 92F-12(a)(14) requires disclosure of government records
containing “name, compensation
,
1 job title.” However, the section also
- .
states, ‘provided that this paragraph shall not require the creation of a roster of
employees,” and HRS § 92F14(b)(6) clearly states that an individual has a
significant privacy interest in his/her “income”. Given these seemingly relevant
1
“Compensation” is different from “salary’; Civil Beat is requesting each employee’s salary or
salary range.
2. Cathy L. Takase, Director
Office of lnforrbation Practices
September 7, 2010
Page 2
but conflicting provisions, we would like guidance from your office as to whether
or not a balancing of interests would be appropriate, j public’s right to know as
weighed against the individual employees privacy interests and the
government’s ability to carry out its functions, such that the City could disclose
just the job title and salary information for each employee.
At the outset, please note that the only “public interest” cited by the
requestor, Civil Beat, is that the “information will be used in reports published in
the Civil Beat, an online news service based in Honolulu that is available to
members of the public at www.civilbeat.com.” Civil Beat charges membership
fees for unrestricted access to all of its posted information, so while Civil Beat
may cite public interest as its motivation, clearly private interest is also part of its
motivation. attached cached page from Civil Beat site dated August 16,
2010 (‘We’ll also include an example of a sortable database to show you what
we’re offering our full members. (We have a special Election offer right now,
half-off for the first three months.) Members will be able to sort the data by any
field. So, for example, if they want to soft the salaries from highest to lowest,
they’ll be able to do that.”). We have never before received a request like this
from anyone, media, City Council, or otherwise, requesting personal information
for each one of our employees, by name, for general public viewing. Where the
public or the media has been interested in particular employees perhaps
because of some alleged wrongdoing, we have disclosed relevant information.
Where the public is interested in how much a particular department or the City
spends on salaries in general on a certain function, we have provided that
information, as well. This request is a first. Your guidance would be helpful
going forward as well, because our employee roster is changing constantly
because of hires and departures, and we anticipate possible future requests like
the Civil Beat request
Given the above concerns, the City requests that your office provide
guidance and information with regards to the following matters:
1. HRS § 92F-12(a)(14) states that we are not required to create a
roster of employees. The information responsive to the Civil Beat request does
not exist in one location and or one report. Civil Beat’s request is really a request
for creation of a roster of all City temporary and permanent employees, since we
do not believe Civil Beat is requesting review of the actual personnel records of
3. Cathy L. Takase, Director
Office of Information Practices
September 7, 2010
Page 3
each and every employee. What authority then requires the City to create or
2
provide such a roster?
2. HRS § 92F-14(b)(6) provides that individuals have significant
privacy interests in “information describing an individual’s finances, income,
assets, liabilities, net worth, bank balances, financial history or activities, or
creditworthiness”. And I—IRS § 92F-13(1) states that government records need
not be disclosed if disclosure “would constitute a clearly unwarranted invasion of
personal privacy.” Is disclosure of every employee’s name, job title and salary
(again, HRS requires disclosure of “compensation” and “salary ranges,” not
individual salaries) required even though individuals have expressed to us that
they believe said disclosure violates their privacy interests?
Your office has previously opined that government employees who chose
to become a member of the ERS (employees’ retirement system) have a
significant privacy interest in the disclosure of their names. DIP Ltr. 91-7. You
opined that disclosure should be the number of employees rather than a list of
names, as there is no significant privacy interest in the number of government
employees within ERS.
3
In addition, in interpreting the federal Freedom of Information Act (“FOIA”),
the courts have found that government employees have privacy interests,
particularly in salary information. ri NationalAssociation of Retired Federal
Employees v. Homer, 879 F.2d 873 (D.C. Cir. 1989), the Court of Appeals went
beyond the mere determination as to whether disclosure would violate a
significant privacy interest under exemption 6 of the Freedom of Information Act,
5 U.S.C. § 552(b)(6) (“FOIA”). Rather, the Court determined that the analysis
must go further and determine whether such disclosure would “invite
unwarranted intrusion”. Id. at 878. Thus, the Court ruled that disclosure of a list
of names and addresses of persons on a government annuity payroll would be a
clear and unwarranted invasion of privacy. Moreover; in Painting lndustiy of
Ha wall Market Recovery v. United States Department of the Air Force, 26 F.3d
1479 (gth Cir. 1994), the Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals determined that the
2
To conform Civil Beat’s request with HRS 92F which pertains to government records, its request
is actually a request for review of thousands of personnel files, with non-requested information
redacted. This production/redaction effort would be onerous for the City, as it would be for Civil
Beat staff to review same.
Please also see QIP Ltr. 91-18 where your office opined that State Hawaii Public Employer’s
Health Fund may disclose a confidential list of its members to the State Department of Budget
and Finance under HRS § 92F-1 9, but further disclosure would not be permitted.
4. Cathy L. Takase, Director
Office of Information Practices
September 7, 2010
Page 4
disclosure of job classifications and pay rates was sufficient under FOIA. The
Court balanced interests and found that the employees’ privacy interest was not
outweighed by the marginal additional usefulness that names and addresses
would serve in uncovering government activities.
The basic question here is whether the disclosures required by HRS §
92F-12(a)(14) for public employees are subject to a balancing test, and the
above-cited MRS language, your prior opinion and the aforementioned case
suggest that balancing is not just possible, but advisable. Again, on its attached
92F request, Civil Beat did not state a specific purpose for this information, other
than publication of this information on its website which again, charges fees for
members hi p.
By contrast, not only do individual City employees believe that their
personal privacy is being infringed upon, but the City believes that such a
pubJication may frustrate legitimate government functions, as described in HRS §
92F-13, where the morale of City employees may be impacted when they
compare their salaries to other employees. No business the size of the City
would publish on the internet all of its employees’ names, job titles, and salaries,
as it may lead to raiding by competitors, morale problems, and ultimately,
employees leaving the company. At a time when furloughs and smaller
paychecks are resulting in increased workload and increased stress, all of these
concerns are magnified. As the head of Corporation Counsel whose deputies’
exact salaries would need to be disclosed (as opposed to salary ranges), I am
concerned about retention of our attorneys in this environment.
While the obvious response is that public taxpayer dollars are at stake,
and that the public is entitled to know this information, we would respectfully ask
you to consider whether the public (as opposed to a private enterprise like Civil
Beat seeking to generate revenue) needs to know every name, job title and
salary information of every City employee, as opposed to what we believe to be a
sufficient response, providing just job title and salary information, without listing
names and without creating an employee name roster. Please let us know if you
believe that this would be an appropriate response to the Civil Beat request.
3. HRS § 92F-12(a)(14) also states that the City is not required to
disclose personnel “information regarding present or former employees involved
in an undercover capacity in a law enforcement agency.” There are many law
enforcement employees who are not currently performing undercover activities,
but may be involved in undercover activities in the future. The disclosure of the
5. Cathy L. Takase, Director
Office of Information Practices
September 7, 2010
Page 5
names of these individuals as employees of the City’s law enforcement agencies
would clearly have an impact on the health and safety of these individuals.
In addition, our law enforcement clients believe that the disclosure of the
identity of certain law enforcement personnel (Police Officers, Prosecutors,
Prosecutor’s Investigators, Liquor Commission Investigators) may endanger the
health and safety of these individuals. See. e.g.. Exemption 7 of FOIA, 5 U.S.C.
§ 552(b)(7). Disclosure of name, job title and salary information regarding these
individuals may also make them more vulnerable to harassment, bribery and/or
threats. The Prosecutor’s Office, HPD, and the Liquor Commission would like a
ruling from OIP specifically on their ability to withhold names of their employees.
Again, for these law enforcement employees who may in the future be
involved in undercover activities and whose leadership believes publication of
names may result in safety concerns, we will also provide only their job titles and
salary ranges. Please confirm that OIP believes this is a sufficient response on
behalf of law enforcement employees.
To meet the initial deadline for response to Civil Beat, we will be providing
Civil Beat with the job title and salary information for each employee. Before we
create an employee roster with this added personal information, however, we
believe it would be prudent to await your response to this letter, so we would
greatly appreciate your prompt attention to this matter.
If you have any questions, please contact me at 768-5100.
Very truly yours,
CARRIE K. S. OKINAGA
Corporation Counsel
CKSO/DWHP:ey
Attachments
cc: Civil Beat