Right, so what about the second option, paying for someone to handle the data?
Comment on NSA Claims It Can’t Watch a Tape It Recorded in the 1980s
chiliedogg@lemmy.world 7 months agoThe issue there is redaction. A form may have sensitive information that we’re not legally allowed to release, so we have to redact information. I’m not talking about classified info, but things like driver’s license numbers or or medical information.
It’s often stuff we tell people not to give us, but when they do it still requires redaction from a PIR. It’s one of the primary reasons they’re such a pain in the ass - we have to manually review every page for 30 different kinds of protected info.
We can’t let a third-party just sift through that data, because we don’t have the right to share that information with them.
sugar_in_your_tea@sh.itjust.works 7 months ago
lickmygiggle@lemmy.world 7 months ago
With a total staff of 11 I’m guessing there’s not a huge budget for outside contractors to do the work.
If it came down to it the remedy is to challenge it in court. An impartial judge should be able to look at the argument from the local government and determine if their argument is legitimate or not.
sugar_in_your_tea@sh.itjust.works 7 months ago
I’m not talking about the city budget, I’m saying the person requesting documents could pay for the labor needed to get the documents.
chiliedogg@lemmy.world 7 months ago
A third party can’t view the un-redacted documents because the city can’t share them.
limelight79@lemm.ee 7 months ago
Can I bitch about that redaction for a bit? Someone hit our car while it was parked on federal property. There were cameras, and the security people figured out who did it (and called them, and they denied it). When we finally got the police report, all of the information for identifying the guilty party had been redacted, along with the officer’s name and any other useful information. For a literal fender bender. Shitty driver got away with it. The police report was completely useless. I can only imagine my insurance company was like, “We waited 3 weeks for THIS?” They might as well have sent over a blank page.
I get the idea behind redacting stuff in general, but that one just pissed me off.
chiliedogg@lemmy.world 7 months ago
It’s frustrating for me too, but state law requires us to redact certain things on a PIR even when we think it’s stupid.
I have to redact homeowner information even though it’s available through the appraisal district. That means I have to manually check for homeowner names on every page of every document, even though another agency has it labeled on the map. It adds hours and accomplishes nothing.
But it’s state law, so I have to follow it.