A trial court issued an opinion yesterday which provides helpful guidance on OPRA’s exemption for security. WNBC v. Allendale Bd. of Ed. et al. The court determined that this exemption covers information showing the date, time and duration of security drills that are held monthly by schools.
A statute requires schools to conduct regular drills to practice responding to emergency situations that do not involve fires. To enforce this statute, the New Jersey Department of Education requires school districts to fill out forms containing information about each drill. In the WNBC case, the requestor asked a number of Bergen County districts to provide all of these forms for the past few years. The school districts released the forms, but redacted, under the security exemption, the date, time of day, and duration of each drill. Information on lockdown procedures and the identity and location of participants was also withheld, but the plaintiff did not challenge these redactions.
Judge Contillo agreed with the districts’ argument that public disclosure of date/time/duration information would jeopardize the safety and security of the schools and their occupants. He found that the risk was “very real;” the judge concluded that with the information, “a potential assailant could pinpoint when the drills are most likely to occur, and know how long they tend to last, creating a ‘window of opportunity’ in which to inflict maximum damage with reasonable accuracy.” Accordingly, the judge sustained the redactions as falling within OPRA’s exemption for security information.
The opinion is useful because there are few court cases addressing OPRA’s security exemption. Also, two additional important aspects of this opinion should be noted:
(1) This case provides a model example of how an agency should litigate a security exemption challenge under OPRA. Just three weeks ago, the Appellate Division issued an opinion which rejected a municipality’s security exemption argument because the town did not submit certifications that specifically explained the potential risks of disclosure of the record in question. In contrast, in the WNBC case, the districts produced specific evidence of the dangers of disclosure, including a number of certifications by various record custodians, police chiefs and emergency personnel. The judge found this evidence to be persuasive.
(2) The trial court’s analysis of the security argument is relevant to the various pending OPRA cases seeking disclosure of information about the Governor’s travels (discussed in recent New Jersey Law Reporter posts, here and also here). In both WNBC and the travel cases, the key issue is whether disclosing certain information will reveal patterns that a potential wrongdoer can use to get around security measures and cause harm.
In the WNBC opinion, Judge Contillo recognized the danger posed by revealing the past pattern of drills to a person intent on doing harm. For example, the judge said, knowing when drills tend to be scheduled provides information on when the entire school population is likely to be congregated outside an empty building. The plaintiff argued that this risk could be avoided by scheduling future drills randomly. The judge rejected this position, because the law does not require districts to schedule drills randomly, and consequently a judge has no authority to impose such a mandate upon districts..
In addition, Judge Contillo correctly rejected the related argument–which also comes up in the gubernatorial travel cases–that the security exemption should not apply because someone who wants to cause harm at a school could find ways to do so that do not involve making predictions based on review of past pattern information. The judge astutely observed that this analysis is improper under OPRA: “The inquiry is not whether easier or alternative methods [of inflicting harm] exist, but whether the method at issue–i.e., disclosure of the date/time/duration data–would create a risk to the school community.”