This page provides general information—not legal advice or an exhaustive overview—about the APRA as it applies to most State of Alaska executive branch public agencies. It does not cover the APRA as it applies to public agencies in the State of Alaska’s judicial or legislative branches or to public agencies of municipalities.
Requests are processed and responded to under AS 40.25.110 or AS 40.25.115.
The APRA regulations, which cover request and response requirements, including deadlines, are 2 AAC 96.100 – 2 AAC 96.900 (http://www.akleg.gov/basis/aac.asp#2.96)
Public records are records, “regardless of format or physical characteristics, that are developed or received by a public agency, or by a private contractor for a public agency, and that are preserved [or appropriate to preserve] for their informational value or as evidence of the organization or operation of the public agency.” AS 40.25.220(3).
Not all state records are public records subject to the APRA, and not all records on state systems are public records subject to the APRA. “State agency records preserved or appropriate for preservation under the Records Management Act are public records subject to review under the Public Records Act. But not every record a state employee creates, and certainly not every state employee email, is necessarily appropriate for preservation under the Records Management Act.” McLeod v. Parnell, 286 P.3d 509, 515 (Alaska 2012).
Communications and other personal records of state employees that do not relate to state business are not public records. For example, a request for a state employee’s purely personal emails that may exist in the State of Alaska’s email system will be denied as the request falls outside the scope of the APRA because the request does not seek public records.
Records that are not preserved or appropriate to preserve are not public records. These can include auto-saved and superseded records (such as drafts), deleted records that have not yet been purged, and records beyond their retention age as specified in a state records retention schedule.
Some statutes exempt state records from the ambit of the APRA. For example, AS 39.25.080(a) exempts from the APRA’s ambit the state personnel records of most state employees, except for a few specifically identified pieces of information such as name, title, employment dates, and compensation. Agencies will not identify records that are statutorily exempt from the APRA.
If searching for and copying records under AS 40.25.110 will exceed five person-hours in a calendar month, agencies charge the hourly rate (based on the salary and benefit costs) of the most cost-effective individual who can do the work. If searching for and copying the records exceeds 5 person-hours, the requester must pay for the total time to undertake these tasks: the first 5 hours are not excluded from the calculation of the recoverable costs.
Agencies charge for all the person-hours required to provide electronic services and products under AS 40.25.115: agencies charge the hourly rate (based on the salary and benefit costs) of the most cost-effective individual who can do the work.
Agencies may charge for, among other things, photocopies, storage media and postage used to provide records, and retrieving records from and returning them to off-site storage locations. Agencies may pass on any costs a contractor charges.
An agency may require a requester pay any estimated recoverable cost before conducting any work. (An exception exists under 2 AAC 96.360(c) for news organizations seeking records under AS 40.25.110.) The requester must pay all recoverable costs before the agency provides any records.
Agencies do not charge the cost to review records for protected information.
A requester is eligible for fee relief if the requester establishes that “the records are likely to contribute significantly to the public’s understanding of the operations or activities of the state government.” 2 AAC 96.370; 2 AAC 96.470. To meet this requirement, requesters must, among other things, describe the following:
Merely conclusory statements that the request is in the public interest and that the records concern agency operations or activities are not enough. The following statements are, for example, insufficient to establish a basis for fee relief:
Requesters must also certify the following:
The APRA applies to all state and local government agencies in the State of Alaska. The federal Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) does not apply.
The executive branch, except for the Alaska Railroad Corporation, is subject to regulations implemented by the Department of Administration at 2 AAC 96.100 – 2 AAC 96.470. The Alaska Industrial Development and Export Authority has additional APRA regulations, and the University of Alaska has its own regulations. The legislative and judicial branches and some local governments also have their own APRA rules.
The APRA does not require agencies to conduct research or analyze records. Nor does the APRA require agencies to answer questions or create records that are responsive to the request.
Agencies produce a record “in the form in which it is maintained or disseminated by the public agency.” 2 AAC 96.355(a). Agencies disseminate electronic copies of records in PDF format.
Before submitting a request, requesters should consider what the subject is that they are interested in and be as specific as possible in the request. Given that agencies have limited staff available to process and respond to public records requests on top of their other responsibilities, a clear and targeted request is more likely to result in getting requested records faster. Requesters can submit follow-up requests based on the records they receive. If a requester submits an unclear or broad request, the agency is likely to respond with a request for more information to better identify the specific records sought, speed the response, and reduce the burden of responding. Also, responding will take longer if the agency needs to work with the requester to determine what specific records are sought and, if a requester wants electronic services and products, whether to grant the request. For example, a request for “the current contract with company XYZ and any amendments” is straightforward. Whereas, a request generally for “all contract documents regarding company XYZ” will prompt a request for additional information, such as the following:
If a request contains multiple subparts, the agency may ask the requester to prioritize the subparts so that the agency can focus on the priority subpart first, and, after receiving the agency’s response, the requester can determine if they want to request the agency respond to the next highest priority subpart.
Whether the request falls under AS 40.25.110 or AS 40.25.115, the agency will design the search it determines is most likely to identify the requested records.
As agencies do not charge for review costs—even though the time to review records for protected information is, by far, the greatest time burden on agencies in responding to public records requests—requesting specific records instead of making broad requests will result in substantial cost savings to the State of Alaska, as well as in getting the requested records faster. This is because before disclosing any “public record,” an agency must review the record to redact or withhold information covered by one of the APRA’s specific exceptions to disclosure in AS 40.25.120(a), most notably AS 40.25.120(a)(4), which protects
Reviewing records to determine whether and, if so, to what extent they contain protected information often involves a time-consuming process that might involve consulting with subject matter experts and interested parties.
The Department of Law is one public agency under the APRA. All requests for Department of Law records—records of the Office of the Attorney General or the Administrative Services, Civil, or Criminal Divisions—should be sent to law.recordsrequest@alaska.gov or 1031 West 4th Avenue, Suite 200, Anchorage, AK 99501.
The Department of Law does not enforce the APRA. If a requester believes an agency, such as a municipality, violated the APRA, they might want to contact a private attorney.
The Department of Law represents and advises the executive branch, not the public. Accordingly, most Department of Law records are protected from disclosure under, for example, the attorney-client privilege, the attorney work-product doctrine, and/or the deliberative process privilege. If a requester seeks records from the Department of Law that constitute legal advice to an executive branch agency, they will receive redacted records and/or a log of withheld records.
Many Criminal Division records are exempt from the APRA’s ambit under AS 12.62.160 because they constitute “criminal justice information.” AS 12.62.900. The Department cannot confirm or deny the existence of such records.
Consumer complaints and related consumer protection records, including records of investigations, are also exempt from the APRA’s ambit under AS 45.50.521(b). The Department will not confirm or deny the existence of such records.
Similarly, except as provided in AS 39.52.335, before the initiation of formal proceedings—if any—under AS 39.52.350, Executive Branch Ethics Act complaints and related records are exempt from the APRA’s ambit under AS 39.52.340.
The Attorney General and Department of Law staff may not provide legal advice to private citizens or organizations. Please contact an attorney if you need legal advice.
The Alaska Lawyer Referral Service or your local bar association may be able to assist you in locating a lawyer.
1031 West 4th Avenue, Suite 200
Anchorage, AK 99501-1994
Phone: 907-269-5100 • Fax: 907-276-3697
Relay Alaska 1-800-770-8973