The Northwest Public Affairs Network is a Washington nonprofit corporation.


© 2024 Northwest News Network
Regional Journalism
Dispatches from public radio's correspondent at the Oregon Legislature. This is a venue for political and policy coverage of the state government in Salem and its impact on the people of Oregon.

Oregon Audit: State Agencies Struggle With Complex Public Records Requests

M.O. Stevens
/
Wikimedia Commons - bit.ly/225LXJl

State agencies in Oregon struggle to fulfill complex requests for public information. That's one conclusion of an audit released Tuesday by the Oregon Secretary of State's office.

The audit comes about nine months after Governor John Kitzhaber resigned amid an ethics investigation. In the final months of his administration, the governor's office was accused of dragging its feet on records requests filed as journalists looked into a possible influence peddling scandal.

New governor Kate Brown asked for an audit on how state agencies handle records requests. The audit found that the majority are quickly fulfilled. But some complex requests run into obstacles that can take months to resolve. And auditors said there's no standard across state government for how much an agency can charge for staff time or copying fees.

Auditors said this inconsistency can foster suspicion and distrust among the public.

The audit recommends the state establish standard rates for the work involved in tracking down public records. It also suggests the legislature create an ombudsman to mediate records disputes between the public and government officials. And it recommends that state agencies proactively post more information online, so that some records requests aren't needed in the first place.

Governor Brown is scheduled to address a legislative panel Wednesday afternoon to discuss the audit, which looked at public records practices at nine state agencies. The governor's office was not one of them.