Washington, D.C.
OFFICE OF THE UNITED STATES ATTORNEY SOUTHERN DISTRICT OF TEXAS HOUSTON, TEXAS Respondent |
Case No. DA-CA-90591 |
and EMPLOYEES, LOCAL 3966 Charging Party |
Charles M. de Chateauvieux, Esquire Tiffany A. Foreman, Esquire For the General Counsel
Carol L. Catherman, Esquire For the Respondent
Jeanell Nero-Walker, President AFGE, Local 3966 For the Charging Party
Before: JESSE ETELSON Administrative Law Judge
The Regional Director for the Dallas Regional Office of the
Federal Labor Relations Authority (the Authority) issued an unfair
labor practice complaint alleging that the Respondent violated
sections 7116(a)(1), (5) and (8) of the Federal Service
Labor-Management Relations Statute (the Statute), by refusing to
furnish the Charging Party (the Union), the exclusive
representative of an appropriate bargaining unit of Respondent's
employees, with certain information as required by section
7114(b)(4) of the Statute. The complaint alleges that the Union
requested: (1) copies of all data used to rate Debt Collection
Agent and Union President Jeanell Nero-Walker for the performance
evaluation period of April 1, 1998 to March 31, 1999, including any
historical data to which the current data was compared to reduce
Nero-Walker's rating from "Substantially Exceeds Expectations" to
"Meets Expectations; (2) sanitized copies of performance appraisal
records for each Debt Collection Agent assigned to the Financial
Litigation Unit; and (3) all data that was used to rate each Debt
Collection in performance elements 1, 2, 5, and 6.
The complaint contains specific allegations to the effect that
the requested information conformed to the criteria set forth in
section 7114(b)(4), which criteria, if met, oblige an agency to
furnish information to an exclusive representative on request. The
complaint's final allegations of fact are that, on June 10, 1999,
Respondent denied the Union's request for information and that,
since June 10, 1999, Respondent has refused to furnish the
information.
Respondent's answer denies, in part, the allegation describing
the information the Union requested, asserting that the request for
historical data was limited to data for performance elements 2 and
5, and denies that the Union requested sanitized copies of
performance appraisal records. The answer admits that the Union
requested unsanitized copies but asserts that the Union's request
stated that release of sanitized copies would be acceptable if the
production of unsanitized copies was deemed a violation of the
Privacy Act. The answer denies, "as stated," the allegations that
Respondent denied the Union's request and that it refused to
furnish the information. The answer asserts that Respondent
informed the Union that "all third-party materials requested had to
be reviewed under the Freedom of Information Act (FOIA)\Privacy Act
before they could be released" and that the information was
forwarded to the Department of Justice, Freedom of Information
office, for review and determination of what information, if any,
was releasable under FOIA and the Privacy Act.
The case came on for hearing on May 10, 2000, in Houston,
Texas. At that time the parties entered into stipulations of fact
which, together with the formal documents (G.C. Exh. 1(a)-(k)) and
Jt. Exhs. 1-12), were to constitute the entire record in the case
unless it was subsequently decided, after due consideration of the
positions of the parties, that certain additional documents
supplementing Joint Exhibit 9, were relevant to the disposition of
the merits of the case. The stipulations of fact were transcribed
as the substantive part of the transcript of the hearing. Counsel
for the General Counsel and the Respondent filed post-hearing
briefs.
The following findings of fact represent my restatement
(paraphrasing and summarizing where appropriate) and organization
of the stipulated facts, and the facts established by the exhibits,
that are material to the disposition of the allegations of the
complaint.
On June 3, 1999, the Union, by President Jeanell Nero-Walker,
submitted to Respondent a "Request Filed Under 5 U.S.C. 7114(b)(4)"
for information "for an investigation concerning the Performance
Appraisal Record for the period from April 1, 1998 through March
31, 1999 of Debt Collection Agent Jeanell Nero-Walker." The items
requested were:
1. Request(s) for Performance Element 1 - Case Openings
A copy of any and all data, of any kind and nature whatsoever,
that was used to rate Jeanell Nero-Walker.
2. Request(s) for Performance Element
2 - Judgment Liens
A copy of any and all data, of any kind and nature whatsoever,
that was used to rate Jeanell Nero-Walker.
A copy of any and all historical data, of any kind and nature
whatsoever, to which the current data was
compared to reduce the rating of Jeanell Nero-Walker from "Substantially Exceeds Expectations" to
"Meets Expectations."
3. Request(s) for Performance Element
5 - Case Closings
A copy of any and all data, of any kind and nature whatsoever,
that was used to rate Jeanell Nero-Walker.
4. Request(s) for Performance Element
6 - Prepares Legal Correspondence and Legal
Documents
A copy of any and all data, of any kind and nature whatsoever,
that was used to rate Jeanell Nero-Walker.
5. Request(s) for Performance Element
7 - Supports and Assists with Administrative Policies
and
Training of Staff
A copy of any and all data, of any kind and nature whatsoever,
that was used to rate Jeanell Nero-Walker.
A copy of any and all historical data, of any kind and nature
whatsoever, to which the current data was
compared to reduce the rating of Jeanell Nero-Walker from "Substantially Exceeds Expectations" to
"Meets Expectations."
6. Additional Request(s)
An unsanitized copy of the Performance Appraisal Record for
April 1, 1998 through March 31, 1999 of
each Debt Collection Agent assigned to the Financial Litigation Unit. The Union will accept a sanitized
copy, if and only if the production of an unsanitized copy is determined to be a violation of the Privacy Act.
Any and all data, of any kind and nature whatsoever, that was
used to rate each Debt Collection Agent
assigned to the Financial Litigation Unit in Performance Element 1 (Case Openings), Performance Element
2 (Judgment Liens), Performance Element 5 (Case Closings), Performance Element 6 (Prepares Legal
Correspondence and Legal Documents), and Performance Element 7 (Supports and Assists with
Administrative Policies and Training of Staff).
An unsanitized copy of the Performance Appraisal Record for
April 1, 1998 through March 31, 1999 of
the secretary assigned to the Financial Litigation Unit with respect to any Critical Performance Element in
her Performance Appraisal Record which is comparable to any Critical Performance Element in Jeanell
Nero-Walker's Performance Appraisal Record. The Union will accept a sanitized copy, if and only if the
production of an unsanitized copy is determined to be a violation of the Privacy Act.
Any and all data, of any kind and nature whatsoever, that was
used to rate the secretary assigned to the
Financial Litigation Unit with respect to any Critical Performance Element in her Performance Appraisal
Record which is comparable to Critical Performance Elements 1, 2, 5, 6, and 7 in Jeanell Nero-Walker's
Performance Appraisal Record.
Following the list of items requested, the June 3 request
provided the following statement of "Particularized Need(s),"
followed by the closing paragraphs set forth below:
Particularized Need(s):
This information will be used to determine if Jeanell Nero-Walker received improper ratings which
prevented her from meeting the standards of productivity that would have made her eligible for awards
under the regulations of the Department of Justice. In addition, the information will be reviewed to
determine if the data reflects improper deviation or disparity in the application of the agency's regulations
concerning the evaluation of performance.
It is requested that all the information sought be furnished to
me within seven (7) days of your receipt of this
correspondence.
If this request for information is denied, in whole or in part,
please inform me in writing of the name, title,
and position of each official who denied the request. Also, in writing, please describe each piece of
information that was denied and cite the specific statute, regulation, or contract upon which the denial of
each piece of information was based.
On June 10, 1999, Personnel Specialist William (Bill) Smith
responded to Union President Nero-Walker by e-mail. His response
stated that:
AFGE is requesting government documents which are covered under
the Privacy Act (PA) and
Freedom of Information Act (FOIA). As a result, the request was forwarded to the FOIA/PA
contact for the district. Once the FOIA and PA concerns have been addressed, then a
determination will be made on the particularized need and/or relevancy of the request.
Also on June 10, John Fonville, FOIA/PA contact for the
district, forwarded the Union's information request to the FOIA/PA
Unit of the Executive Office for United States Attorneys for
further processing (Tr. 14).
The Union's request for information was referred to the FOIA/PA
office because that office has the expertise to determine what
documents are releasable under the Privacy Act and to ensure that
Privacy Act concerns were not breached, and that release of the
requested information would not constitute an unwarranted invasion
of personal privacy (Tr. 13).
When Nero-Walker continued to inquire about the status of the
Union's information request, Smith updated her and reiterated the
information previously communicated about the forwarding of the
request, as noted in Joint Exhibits 4 and 8 (Tr. 14).
Neither Nero-Walker or the Union ever submitted a FOIA request
for the information the Union requested in its June 3, 1999,
information request (Tr. 14).
On October 13, 1999, the Union received from the FOIA/PA Unit
of the Executive Office for United States Attorneys, U.S.
Department of Justice, the following letter addressed to
Nero-Walker as the "Requester," along with a group of documents
which, the agency states, is responsive to the Union's June 3,
1999, information request:
Dear Requestor:
Your request for records under the Freedom of Information Act
has been processed. This letter constitutes
a reply from the Executive Office for United States Attorneys, the official recordkeeper for all records
located in this office and the various United States Attorney's Offices.
To provide you the greatest degree of access authorized by the
Freedom of Information Act and/or
Privacy Act, we have considered your request in light of the provisions of both laws. If applicable,
excisions have been made to protect information exempt from disclosure and, the exemptions have been
cited at the bottom of each page. The exemptions cited for withholding information from the requested
records are marked below. An enclosure to this letter explains the exemptions in more detail.
This letter is a [x] partial [ ] full denial.
Section 552
Section 55a
[ ](b)(1) [ ](b)(5) [x]
(b)(7)(C) [ ] (j)(2)
[x](b)(2) [x](b)(6) [ ] (b)(7)(D) [ ] (k)(2)
[ ](b)(3) __ [ ](b)(7)(A) [ ] (b)(7)(E) [ ] (k)(5)
[ ](b)(4) [ ](b)(7)(B) [ ] (b)(7)(F) _________
[ ] A review of the material revealed documents which:
[ ] originated with another Government component. These
document(s) were referred to the component(s) listed on the next
page for review and direct response to you.
[ ] are public records which may be obtained from the
Clerk of the Court or from this office, upon specific request,
subject to copying fees.
[ ] See additional information below.
[x] The processing of your request has resulted in a
fee for copying and/or search of costs. Please submit $83 , payable to the Treasury of the United States, in
the form of a certified check or money order, within thirty days.
Mail it to the Freedom of Information Act Unit, 600 E Street, N.W.,
Room 7100, Washington, DC 20530.
This is the final action this office will take on this
matter.
You may appeal my decision to withhold records in this matter
by writing within 30 days, to:
Office of Information and Privacy
United States Department of Justice
Flag Building, Suite 570
Washington, DC 20530
Both the envelope and the letter of appeal must be clearly
marked "Freedom of Information Act/Privacy Act Appeal."
After the appeal has been decided, you may have judicial review
by filing a complaint in the United States District Court for the
judicial district in which you reside or have your principal place
of business; the judicial district in which the requested records
are located; or in the District of Columbia.
Sincerely,
/s/
Suzanne Little
Assistant Director
FOIA/PA Unit
Enclosures
On an unidentified date after sending Nero-Walker the letter
set forth above, FOIA/PA Unit Assistant Director sent Nero-Walker
another letter in which she notified Nero-Walker that the $83.00
processing fee had been waived.(1)
The parties stipulated, finally, that "personnel records are
contained in an official system of records under the Privacy Act"
(Tr. 15-16)(2)
A. Issues and Positions of the Parties
The ultimate issue, as framed by the pleadings, is whether the
Respondent violated the Statute by refusing to furnish the
requested data. If I understand the General Counsel's theory of the
case, as gleaned from the opening statement at the hearing and from
the brief, the refusal to furnish consisted of: (1) Respondent's
treatment of the request as a FOIA request instead of a request
under the Statute; and (2) Respondent's failure to provide the
documents that it treated as FOIA documents for over four months
after they were requested.
The General Counsel does not appear to be contending that the
documents provided to the Union in October 1999 omitted data that
was required to be furnished under section 7114(b)(4) of the
Statute. With this understanding, neither party introduced, or
sought to characterize the contents of, the documents that were
provided. Rather, Joint Exhibit 9, the covering letter accompanying
these documents, indicates only that the request for records was
being denied in part, to the extent that information in those
records was exempt from disclosure pursuant to 5 U.S.C. §§
552(b)(2), (6) and (7).(3) An
attachment to the letter contains the text of each of these
subsections of § 552(b), but the letter does not further explain
how it was determined that these exemptions were applicable to the
withheld information. I have, therefore, no basis on which to
review such determination and to decide whether the contents of the
data supplied comply with the requirements of section 7114(b)(4).
The Respondent notes in its brief that the adequacy of its response
to the Union's request is not before me. To the extent that the
adequacy of the response relates to the contents of the information
furnished, I find the Respondent's belief to be well founded.
The Respondent, for its part, does not dispute any of the
elements that subject the requested data to disclosure under
section 7114(b)(4), except for the issue of its having to determine
whether furnishing of any of the data was prohibited by law, in
this case the Privacy Act. Since the data request raised the
question of such prohibition, Respondent argues, it was appropriate
to refer the matter to the office that makes such determinations
for the Respondent, and to inform the Union that it was making that
referral. Therefore, it is argued, Respondent never "refused" to
furnish the data.
B. Referral of the Request to the FOIA/PA Unit Did Not Constitute a Refusal to Comply With
Section 7114(b)(4) of the Statute
Whenever a record sought by a union under section 7114(b)(4)
contains information that might be prohibited from disclosure by
the Privacy Act because its disclosure might "constitute a clearly
unwarranted invasion of personal privacy[,]" the determination as
to whether disclosure is prohibited is made by balancing the
privacy interests that would be jeopardized and the public interest
that would be served by such disclosure. U.S. Department of
Transportation, Federal Aviation Administration, New York Tracon,
Westbury, New York, 50 FLRA 338, 342 (1995).
In balancing these factors, the criteria used for FOIA requests are
applicable in "all cases involving the FOIA, including those that
have their genesis in a request pursuant to section 7114(b)(4) of
the Statute." Id. at 344. Stated otherwise, "every
requestor [including unions] must be treated the same for purposes
of determining whether disclosure of requested information is
consistent with the FOIA." U.S. Department of the Air Force,
375th Mission Support Squadron, Scott Air Force Base,
Illinois, 51 FLRA 599, 608 (1995)(375th
Squadron). See also National Treasury Employees Union and
U.S. Department of the Treasury, U.S. Customs Service, Washington,
DC, 55 FLRA 1174, 1181 (1999).
Here, the Union specifically raised a Privacy Act issue. Its
request stated that the Union would accept sanitized copies of
those records "if and only if the production of an unsanitized copy
[of certain requested performance appraisal records] is determined
to be a violation of the Privacy Act." By its explicit terms,
therefore, the request did not permit the Respondent to respond
simply by furnishing the appraisal records in sanitized form. It
required a determination as to whether the Privacy Act prohibited
furnishing them in unsanitized form.(4) By referring the determination to the
FOIA/PA Unit, Respondent, consistent with 375th
Squadron, treated the Union the same way it would have treated
any other requestor.
C. Respondent's Furnishing of the Data Was Not Shown
to Have Been Untimely
An agency's obligation under section 7114(b)(4) of the Statute
to furnish information includes the duty to furnish it in a timely
manner in order to effectuate the purposes and policies of the
Statute. U.S. Department of Justice, Office of Justice
Programs, 45 FLRA 1022, 1026 (1992). The timeliness of an
agency's compliance depends on the circumstances. Bureau of
Prisons, Lewisburg Penitentiary, Lewisburg, Pennsylvania, 11
FLRA 639, 642 (1983).
Here, the Respondent responded to the Union promptly,
indicating that its data request was being forwarded for
determination of the applicability of FOIA and the Privacy Act. For
the reasons set forth above, this response was not, in itself,
improper. Moreover, the Respondent did not ignore, but continued to
respond to, the Union's further inquiries about the status of the
request.
The General Counsel contends that the delay of over four months
in providing the documents subject to FOIA/PA review constituted a
failure to comply with the Statute's timeliness requirement,
arguing that Respondent's treatment of the Union's request as a
FOIA request delayed the production of the documents. However, I
read the Authority's statement in 375th
Squadron that every requestor must be treated the same to mean
that, at least absent special circumstances, an agency may properly
handle a union's request for information that requires a FOIA
determination in the same order of priority that it handles FOIA
requests from others. While the delay of a little over four months
might seem excessive to any requestor, including the Union, there
is no evidence that the FOIA determination made here was pursued
with any less diligence than was the practice with respect to FOIA
requests from other requestors.(5)
In a different case, where predictable harm to a union's
ability to perform its duties as exclusive representative would
result from such a delay, it might be argued that its request was
entitled to priority handling. At least, the relative urgency of a
union's need may be a proper factor to consider in determining
whether an agency's compliance was timely. See, for example,
Department of Defense Dependents Schools, Washington, DC and
Department of Defense Dependents Schools, Germany Region, 19
FLRA 790, 791 (1985), remanded as to other matters sub nom.
North Germany Area Council, Overseas Education Association v.
FLRA, 805 F.2d 1044 (D.C. Cir. 1986), decision on
remand, 28 FLRA 202 (1987). Here, however, nothing in the
Union's request or in its subsequent inquiries gave the Respondent
reasonable cause to request that the FOIA/PA Unit give this matter
any special or expedited consideration. In these circumstances, the
General Counsel has not shown that the Respondent acted in a
dilatory manner or that it was untimely in the performance of its
obligation under section 7114(b)(4).
For all of the above reasons, I recommend that the Authority
issue the following Order:
The complaint in Case No. DA-CA-90591, is dismissed.
Issued, Washington, DC, July 31, 2000.
___________________________
JESSE ETELSON Administrative Law Judge
1. The General Counsel states in its brief that this waiver was offered on May 10, 2000, the date of the hearing. Although that date appears in the top margin of a faxed copy of the letter informing Nero-Walker of the waiver, I am unable to determine whether the faxed copy was the original notification of the waiver or a later retransmittal of the undated letter.
2. I have included this stipulation among my findings of fact although it addresses what is more analogous to a legal question than a factual question. In any case, it is a proposition to which the parties have agreed for the purposes of this case.
3. It appears that an "x" had been typed in the space provided to indicate that the partial denial was based also on 5 U.S.C. § 552a(j)(2), but this "x" was inked over with what I take to be the intention of deleting it.
4. Respondent argues that the Union's additional request for all data "of any kind and nature whatsoever," that was used in rating the debt collection agents whose performance appraisal records the Union requested also required Privacy Act analysis as to the necessity of redacting any protected information. This seems eminently reasonable.
5. While, pursuant to FOIA, at 5 U.S.C. § 552(a)(6)(A), an agency is normally required to determine within 20 business days whether to comply with a request, it is common knowledge that agencies often, and with impunity, exceed that time limit. Nor does the General Counsel argue that the 20-day period be adopted as the Authority's standard for timeliness.