Filed
Washington State
Court of Appeals
Division Two
June 4, 2019
IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF WASHINGTON
DIVISION II
DONALD HERRICK, No. 50364-6-II
Appellant,
v.
SPECIAL COMMITMENT CENTER, UNPUBLISHED OPINION
Respondent.
WORSWICK, J. — Herrick, a resident at the Special Commitment Center (SCC),1 made
numerous Public Records Act2 (PRA) requests to the SCC. This case involves five such
requests. Herrick sued the SCC arguing that the SCC violated the PRA. The trial court granted
SCC’s motion for summary judgment dismissal.
Herrick appeals, arguing that the SCC (1) imposed unreasonable cost and payment
requirements for requests; (2) should not have combined his two records requests into one new
request; (3) inadequately searched for records, namely New Arrival Profiles (NAPs) and certain
meeting minutes, in response to his requests; and (4) did not timely respond to his requests.
1
The SCC is an entity within the Behavioral Health Administration of the Department of Social
and Health Services. Special Commitment Center, WASH. STATE DEP’T OF SOC. AND HEALTH
SERVS. https://www.dshs.wa.gov/bha/special-commitment-center (last visited May 17, 2019).
2
Chapter 42.56 RCW.
No. 50364-6-II
We hold that the SCC (1) did not violate the PRA as to costs and payment requirements
for requests; (2) did not violate the PRA by combining requests; (3) adequately searched for the
meeting minutes request, but did not show it adequately searched beyond a material doubt as to
the NAPs; and (4) did not violate the timeliness requirements of the PRA. Accordingly, we
affirm in part, reverse in part, and remand for further proceedings.
FACTS
Herrick is a resident at the SCC. At issue in this appeal are Herrick’s five PRA requests
to the SCC: 201407-PRR-677, 201408-PRR-67, 201410-PRR-927, 201408-PRR-720, and
201509-PRR-817.3
At the time of Herrick’s requests, Cheryl Medina was the SCC’s Public Disclosure
Officer tasked with responding to PRA requests, Amy Mosley was an SCC administrative
assistant, and Kyle Ghan was an SCC resident advocate, who spoke with Medina and Mosley
about Herrick’s various record requests.
I. REQUESTS PRR-677, PRR-67, PRR-927, AND PRR-817
On July 22, 2014, the SCC received a PRA request from Herrick enumerated PRR-677.
Herrick requested, “All New Arrival Profiles (NAPs), or the equivalent, from 1990 to the present
[July 2014], for every resident ever processed under 71.09 regardless of petition status or current
residency.” Clerk’s Papers (CP) at 237 (italics omitted). A NAP is a document drafted by SCC
clinicians to give staff an idea of the resident’s criminal and institutional histories, and medical
or behavioral concerns. According to Dr. Carole DeMarco, an SCC psychologist, a NAP is
3
For clarity, we refer to the public records requests by their abbreviated tracking numbers “PRR-
677,” “PRR-67,” “PRR-927,” “PRR-720,” and “PRR-817” respectively.
2
No. 50364-6-II
completed for each new admission to the SCC. Dr. DeMarco explained, “When the NAP is
completed, it is placed in a separate folder with all of the other NAPs. After the resident is
admitted to SCC, a folder is established in the Records Department for that resident, and the
NAP is placed in the resident’s folder.” CP at 131. At the time of Herrick’s requests, the SCC
had processed over 430 residents over the course of its existence.
On August 5, 2014, the SCC received a PRA request from Herrick enumerated PRR-67.
Herrick requested various records pertaining to the Joint Forensics Unit (JFU) of which the SCC
was a participant.
Herrick received initial responses to his requests within five days and was provided time
estimates to locate and copy the requested records. After responsive records were located,
Herrick received billing letters that notified him of the quantity of records as well as the cost to
reproduce them. Herrick was told that his PRR-677 request garnered 449 pages of documents
and would cost $29.95 to put onto a CD, and that his PRR-67 request garnered 251 pages of
documents and would cost $48.41 to create print copies. The letters stated that if Herrick did not
pay the amounts listed within ten business days, the SCC would deem that he no longer wanted
the records and it would close the request as abandoned.4 The SCC did not receive any payment
from Herrick regarding these two requests within the time expressed.
On October 29, 2014, Medina received an e-mail from Richard Podriznik, a paralegal at
the law firm representing Herrick on another matter. Podriznik asked to be invoiced via letter for
PRR-677 and PRR-67. Based on this e-mail, Medina opened a new request for Podriznik,
4
Because the SCC received a substantial number of requests for which it never received
payment, Medina did not begin tasks associated with production, such as redaction, until the fee
was paid.
3
No. 50364-6-II
enumerated PRR-927. PRR-927 incorporated PRR-677 and PRR-67. The SCC sent Podriznik a
letter describing the records responsive to his request and the amount due within 10 business
days. Although the SCC did not receive payment within the time expressed, it eventually
received Podriznik’s payment. On December 9, Medina e-mailed Podriznik to confirm her
receipt of payment and state that the records being requested would require a lot of redactions
that would take “a while.” CP at 260. Podriznik responded, “No worries, Cheryl—it’s the
holidays, and we all need to chill.” CP at 260.
A week later, Podriznik e-mailed Medina to ask if she had sent the invoices for the
disclosure requests. Podriznik stated that he thought she had sent them, but he could not find
them. Medina confirmed that she had sent Podriznik a bill. Podriznik stated, “I even remember
doing [an] expenditure request, but I have no record of [doing] it . . . I will go ahead and do a
new one just in case.”5 CP at 268.
About a month later, Herrick sent a letter to the SCC inquiring about the status of “his”
PRR-927 request, explaining that PRR-927 was “consolidated previously from []PRR-677 and
[]PRR-67.” CP at 275. In a letter to Herrick, Medina responded that PRR-927 consolidated
PRR-677 and PRR-67 at Podriznik’s request and explained that once payment was received, she
would begin redacting the documents, and would send them to Podriznik upon completion.
In February 2015, Podriznik and Medina confirmed that payment had been received for
the request, and Medina mailed Podriznik the disc with content related to PRR-67, the JFU
requests. Medina continued to work on the NAP redactions. In May, Medina sent Herrick a
5
It appears the SCC, based on this e-mail, cancelled Podriznik’s payment it had already received
and waited for a new payment.
4
No. 50364-6-II
letter explaining that documents responsive to PRR-67 were sent to Podriznik, and that
documents pertaining to PRR-677 were still being redacted. On June 10, Medina mailed a CD
containing the NAPs to Podriznik, along with a letter stating that she completed the redactions
and considered PRR-927 closed.6
Medina provided a declaration regarding her search processes for the NAPs. Medina
stated:
With respect to request number 201410-PRR-927 (and the original 201407-PRR-
677), I produced all of the New Arrival Profiles (NAPs) to Mr. Podriznik that were
responsive to the original PRR-677 request. I know that I produced all of the
responsive NAPs because there is a folder on the SCC intranet that contains a copy
of all the NAPs, and I produced all of the NAPs that in that folder had been created
as of the date of Mr. Herrick’s request (July 14, 2014). There was also a list that I
checked to verify that I had them all; when I checked the list, I found two NAPs
were missing from the folder. I sought out and found those two missing NAPs,
eventually obtaining them from Dr. Carole DeMarco.
CP at 226.
Herrick compiled a chart comparing an SCC resident list against the NAPs provided from
PRR-927. The chart illustrated that the SCC did not provide Herrick with NAPs for more than
80 (out of 436) residents. The chart also illustrated that the SCC provided Herrick with over 70
duplicative NAPs.
Herrick submitted a supplemental request, PRR-817, that updated his request for the
NAPs. This request sought NAPs from July 1, 2014 to September 22, 2015, the date of PRR-
817. Herrick received a five day letter and was eventually notified of responsive records and the
6
The record on appeal does not contain the records produced for PRR- 677, PRR-67, or PRR-
927.
5
No. 50364-6-II
cost of copies. Although Herrick failed to tender payment within ten business days, when the
SCC received the belated payment, it sent the records and considered the request closed.
II. REQUEST PRR-720
On August 25, 2014, the SCC received Herrick’s PRA request for several additional
records, including copies of “all unit sign up [sic] sheets and the unit meeting minutes for Alder
unit from Dec. 2012 to [August 22, 2014].” CP at 144. This PRA request was assigned PRR-
720. Medina sent Herrick an initial response to his requests within five days and provided time
estimates to locate the requested records. Medina then sent a letter regarding a small number of
responsive documents to Herrick’s requests in PRR-720, and Herrick paid for and was sent these
responsive documents. However, Medina sent a letter stating the search did not uncover any
Alder meeting minutes. Herrick replied that he believed records of the Alder meeting minutes
existed.
In a declaration regarding the search for the Alder meeting minutes, Medina states:
When I initially received the request, with respect to the meeting minutes and
signup sheets, I first looked in the place where they were supposed to be kept. There
is a folder on the SCC Intranet for this purpose in which all meeting minutes are to
be kept. This folder holds the minutes from all the meetings that occur at the SCC
and contains a number of subfolders specific to the various types of meetings. With
respect to the community meetings that Mr. Herrick had inquired about, there is a
subfolder labeled “Community TCF” and within that there is another subfolder for
each of the three Program Areas. Because Alder unit is on Program Area One, I
looked in the subfolder labeled “PA-1.” When I looked in it, I found this folder did
not contain any minutes or signup sheets that were responsive to PRR-720. I looked
in other folders that I thought might contain them, but did not find any records
responsive to Mr. Herrick’s request.
CP at 226-27. Medina then contacted Mosley and Ghan to assist in finding the requested
records. In her declaration, Mosley states:
6
No. 50364-6-II
When I originally received the email from Ms. Medina, I looked through all of the
meeting minutes on the SCC Intranet, in my office, and in the physical file cabinets
in both Program Area One and Program Area Two due to the fact that Resident
Herrick had been transferred between the two Program Areas. I spent over a month
looking everywhere I could think of for minutes or sign-up sheets that I could not
locate on the SCC Intranet. I searched for records in the places likely to contain
those records and followed obvious leads as they arose. At all times, I conducted
my search and instruction to others to search for responsive records in good faith
with due diligence.
. . . I was able to find a few copies of responsive minutes, but not many. What I did
locate was copied or emailed to the Records Department. I was not surprised that
the documents in question were difficult to find, because both Program Area One
and Program Area Two experienced a high rate of administrative staff turnover
during that period. There were sometimes months between a vacancy and a new
hire. If there was not an assigned Program Area Manager to conduct the community
meetings, Residential and Security staff would either run the meetings or they
would be canceled.
CP at 134. The SCC produced four pages of meeting minutes responsive to PRR-720.
In a later discovery request in other litigation, Herrick again requested Alder meeting
minutes, this time suggesting a location for the documents. The SCC then found four new
documents that would have been responsive to the PRR-720 request, along with other documents
outside the request, and provided these documents to Herrick.
Herrick brought a complaint alleging various PRA violations regarding the five requests.
Following discovery in this case, the SCC moved for summary judgment dismissal. The trial
court granted the SCC’s motion, dismissing all of Herrick’s claims. Herrick appeals.
ANALYSIS
Herrick argues that summary judgment dismissal was improper because the SCC violated
the PRA by (1) imposing unreasonable costs and payment requirements for his requests, (2)
combining PRR-677 and PRR-67 into PRR-927, (3) inadequately searching for records in
7
No. 50364-6-II
response to his NAPs and Alder meeting minutes requests, and (4) failing to timely respond to
his requests.7
We hold that the SCC (1) did not violate the PRA as to costs and payment requirements
for the requests; (2) did not violate the PRA when combining the requests; (3) adequately
searched for the Alder meeting minutes request, but has not shown beyond a material doubt that
it adequately searched for the NAP requests; and (4) did not violate the timeliness requirements
of the PRA.8
A. Legal Principles
We review a trial court’s order granting summary judgment de novo. Greenhalgh v.
Dep’t of Corr., 160 Wn. App. 706, 714, 248 P.3d 150 (2011). Summary judgment is appropriate
where, viewing the evidence in the light most favorable to the nonmoving party, there is no
genuine issue of material fact and the moving party is entitled to judgment as a matter of law.
CR 56(c); Greenhalgh, 160 Wn. App. at 714. In reviewing whether summary judgment was
proper, we view all facts and reasonable inferences in a light most favorable to the nonmoving
party. Greenhalgh, 160 Wn. App. at 714. Mere allegations, argumentative assertions, or
conclusive statements do not raise issues of material fact sufficient to preclude a grant of
summary judgment. Greenhalgh, 160 Wn. App. at 714.
7
The State argues that because two issues, unreasonable costs and the updated NAPs request,
PRR-817, were not pleaded in the complaint, we cannot consider them. However, both issues
were before the trial court during motions in support of and in opposition to summary judgment.
As such, we address Herrick’s unreasonable costs and PRR-817 arguments. RAP 9.12.
8
To the extent the trial court ruled that Herrick did not state a claim under the PRA for any of his
claims in his complaint, we hold that the trial court erred. The procedural posture of this case is
not a CR 12(b)(6) motion, but rather a motion for summary judgment dismissal.
8
No. 50364-6-II
The PRA is a strongly worded mandate for the broad disclosure of public records.
Resident Action Council v. Seattle Hous. Auth., 177 Wn.2d 417, 431, 327 P.3d 600 (2013). Its
purpose is to increase governmental transparency and accountability by making public records
accessible to Washington’s citizens. John Doe A v. Wash. State Patrol, 185 Wn.2d 363, 371,
374 P.3d 63 (2016). The PRA must be liberally construed to promote the public interest. Soter
v. Cowles Publ’g Co., 162 Wn.2d 716, 731, 174 P.3d 60 (2007); RCW 42.56.030. We review
agency actions under the PRA de novo. John Doe A, 185 Wn.2d at 371; RCW 42.56.550(3).
B. Costs and Payment Requirements
Herrick argues that the SCC’s cost and time of payment requirements are “demonstrably
unreasonable” under the PRA. We disagree.
Regarding Herrick’s payment deadline argument, the PRA requires agencies to adopt and
enforce reasonable rules. RCW 42.56.100. The SCC has informally adopted a rule that requires
a requestor to provide payment for responsive documents within ten business days or the request
will be considered abandoned. However, the facts here show that the SCC did not deny the
requests because payment was not received within ten business days. Herrick’s and Podriznik’s
payments for PRR-927, PRR-720, and PRR-817 all missed the ten day deadline. However, when
payment was eventually received, the SCC processed the requests. Under these facts, this
payment requirement does not violate the PRA. As a result, the SCC did not violate the PRA
with its payment requirement.9
9
Herrick seems to argue that the SCC’s lagging internal procedures regarding residents’ fund
transfer requests preclude him from meeting the ten-business-day payment requirements.
However, none of Herrick’s requests to transfer funds in the record show he timely placed his
request before the payment deadline expired. Further, none of Herrick’s requests were denied
based on noncompliance with the payment requirements. We do not address this argument.
9
No. 50364-6-II
Regarding Herrick’s argument that the SCC’s costs were unreasonable, the PRA allows
agencies to charge for the actual costs and to promulgate rules to that effect. RCW 42.56.070,
.120. The SCC has promulgated a rule regarding costs. WAC 388-880-150(3). The WAC states
that, for paper copies, the SCC charges 15 cents per single-sided page or 30 cents for double-
sided pages, plus the actual cost of the mailing container and postage. WAC 388-880-150(3)(a).
For electronic copies:
PDF [(portable document format)] or TIFF [(tagged image file format)] type copies
of SCC records may be provided when appropriate at the cost of fifty dollars per
hour or thirteen cents per page, in the native format, plus cost of media, mailing
container and postage. When charged an hourly rate, it shall be prorated based on
the actual time used to scan the documents and transfer them to electronic media.
Due to privacy and security concerns when exemptions apply to any part of the
information provided, copies of electronic records must normally be provided in
PDF or similar format.
WAC 388-880-150(3)(b).
Herrick argues that the cost of $29.95 for 449 pages of NAPs to be placed on a CD was
unreasonable because Medina only copied a folder. Herrick does not argue how the SCC’s costs
for records do not comply with the PRA or how the PRA’s statutory language regarding costs is
impermissible. Further, beyond his personal belief that the costs of obtaining the records is too
high, Herrick does not support how $29.95 for 449 pages of records on a CD would be
unreasonable. Mere allegations, argumentative assertions, or conclusive statements do not raise
issues of material fact sufficient to preclude a grant of summary judgment. Greenhalgh, 160
Wn. App. at 714. As a result, Herrick does not raise issues regarding costs sufficient to
overcome a grant of summary judgment. Accordingly, Herrick’s arguments regarding costs and
payment for records arguments fail.
10
No. 50364-6-II
C. Consolidating PRR-67 and PRR-677 into PRR-927
Herrick argues that the SCC should not have consolidated his PRR-677 and PRR-67 into
Podriznik’s PRR-927. Herrick argues that the SCC’s confusion does not justify abandoning his
initial requests. He contends that the SCC has an obligation under the PRA to communicate with
the requestor and seek clarity when necessary. He argues that the lack of communication led the
SCC to improperly abandon PRR-677 and PRR-67 and roll those requests into PRR-927, a
request he contends Podriznik never made. We hold that the SCC did not violate the PRA when
it consolidated PRR-677 and PRR-67 into PRR-927.
If an agency receives a request that is unclear, the agency may seek clarification from the
requestor regarding the request. RCW 42.56.520(3)(a). Conversely, if an agency is “unclear
about what was requested, it [is] required to seek clarification.” Neighborhood All. of Spokane
County v. Spokane County, 172 Wn.2d 702, 727, 261 P.3d 119 (2011) (emphasis added).
Under the PRA, agencies must adopt rules that “provide for the fullest assistance to
inquirers and the most timely possible action on requests for information” but still “prevent
excessive interference with other essential functions of the agency.” RCW 42.56.100. The SCC
promulgated a rule stating that a PRA request to the SCC should provide the requestor’s name
and address, state that the request is for public records, and identify the specific records
requested. WAC 388-880-150(1)(a).
Here, the SCC considered Herrick’s PRR-677 and PRR-67 requests administratively
closed for nonpayment. Then, Herrick’s legal team contacted the SCC to pay the costs of the
requests. When Podriznik e-mailed Medina for an invoice for PRR-677 and PRR-67, Medina
created the new request, PRR-927.
11
No. 50364-6-II
The SCC’s decision to open a new request, instead of reviving abandoned requests, did
not violate the PRA. Podriznik’s e-mail to Medina supplied his name and address, stated his
message was about public records, and identified the records through their assigned request
designations, PRR-677 and PRR-67. The e-mail contained all the necessary components of a
new PRA request. PRR-677 and PRR-67, the requests Podriznik’s e-mail referenced, were
closed for nonpayment. Although the SCC could have sought clarification from Podriznik
regarding his request, the PRA does not require this, because what was being requested was
clear. RCW 42.56.520(3)(a). Instead, as was the case here, the SCC reasonably determined
Podriznik was making a new PRA request. Accordingly, we hold that the SCC’s consolidation
of PRR-677 and PRR-67 into PRR-927 did not violate the PRA.10
D. Adequate Search under the PRA
Herrick argues that the SCC inadequately searched for the NAPs and the Alder meeting
requests. We hold that although the SCC’s search for the Alder meeting minutes was adequate,
there is a question of material fact regarding the adequacy of the SCC’s search for the NAPs.
The failure to adequately search for responsive documents is a violation of the PRA.
Neighborhood All., 172 Wn.2d at 721. A search for records pursuant to a PRA request must be
“reasonably calculated to uncover all relevant documents.” Neighborhood All., 172 Wn.2d at
720. Reasonableness is dependent on the facts of each case. Neighborhood All., 172 Wn.2d at
720. An agency is not required to search every possible place a record may conceivably be
10
Herrick also argues that the SCC should have sought clarification from him regarding the
Alder meeting minutes in PRR-720. However, PRR-720 is not unclear as to what records were
sought and the SCC understood what Herrick requested regarding the Alder meeting minutes.
Herrick’s argument is essentially a restatement of his adequate search argument. We do not
address Herrick’s clarification argument, and we address his adequate search argument below.
12
No. 50364-6-II
stored, but only those places where a record is reasonably likely to be found. Neighborhood All.,
172 Wn.2d at 720. An agency cannot limit its search to only a single record system if there are
other record systems where a record may likely be. Neighborhood All., 172 Wn.2d at 720. Put
another way, an agency must search more than one place if there are additional sources for
requested information. Neighborhood All., 172 Wn.2d at 720. However, an agency need not
“search every possible place a record may conceivably be stored, but only those places where it
is reasonably likely to be found.” Neighborhood All., 172 Wn.2d at 720. Further, the mere fact
that a record is eventually found does not itself establish the inadequacy of an agency’s search.
Kozol v. Dep’t of Corr., 192 Wn. App. 1, 8, 366 P.3d 933 (2015).
We conduct a fact specific inquiry to determine if a search is reasonable. Neighborhood
All., 172 Wn.2d at 720. We review the scope of the agency’s search as a whole and whether that
search was reasonable, not whether the requester has presented alternatives that he believes
would have more accurately produced the records he requested. Hobbs v. Wash. State Auditor’s
Office, 183 Wn. App. 925, 944, 335 P.3d 1004 (2014). The issue of whether a search was
reasonably calculated, and therefore adequate, is separate and apart from whether additional
responsive documents exist but are not found. Neighborhood All., 172 Wn.2d at 720.
On a motion for summary judgment, an agency bears the burden of showing its search
was adequate beyond material doubt. Neighborhood All., 172 Wn.2d at 721. To prove that its
search was adequate, the agency may rely on reasonably detailed, nonconclusory affidavits from
its employees submitted in good faith. Neighborhood All., 172 Wn.2d at 721. The affidavits
“should include the search terms and the type of search performed, and they should establish that
13
No. 50364-6-II
all places likely to contain responsive materials were searched.” Neighborhood All., 172 Wn.2d
at 721.
1. Summary Judgment was Improper for Requests Regarding NAPs
Herrick argues that the search for the NAPs was inadequate. He argues that once SCC
realized all NAPs were not in the intranet folder, and because SCC knew that a copy of each
NAP was in each resident’s clinical folder, the SCC had an obligation to get the missing NAPs
individually. We hold that there is a material doubt regarding the adequacy of the search for the
NAPs.
Herrick requested, “All New Arrival Profiles (NAPs), or the equivalent, from 1990 to
[July, 2014], for every resident ever processed under 71.09 regardless of petition status or current
residency.” CP at 237. Multiple declarations detail the SCC’s process for searching for NAPs.
Dr. DeMarco’s declaration stated, “A New Admission Profile is done when there is a new
admission to the SCC.” CP at 130. Further, “When the NAP is completed, it is placed in a
separate folder with all of the other NAPs. After the resident is admitted to SCC, a folder is
established in the Records Department for that resident, and the NAP is placed in the resident’s
folder.” CP at 131. Medina stated that she produced all NAPs. She copied all the NAPs in the
NAP folder on the SCC intranet and compared this to another list of NAPs. After discovering
two were missing, she sought them out and produced them for the request.
Herrick, in his reply to the SCC’s motion for summary judgment, provided an exhibit that
purported to compare a master list of 436 SCC residents against the NAPs produced from PRR-
14
No. 50364-6-II
927. His exhibit appeared to show that over 80 NAPs were not provided, but that over 70
duplicative NAPs were provided.11
The SCC must search those places where a record is reasonably likely to be found and
cannot limit its search to only a single record system if there are other record systems where a
record may likely be. See Neighborhood All., 172 Wn.2d at 720. Medina searched and produced
all the NAPs in the NAPs intranet folder. She examined these NAPs against another list, realized
two were missing, and then produced those two missing documents. According to Dr. DeMarco,
every resident upon admission receives a NAP, and each admitted resident has a folder in the
records department that contains their NAP. The list Medina used to check her search could
have been a list for resident folders, but her declaration lacks clarity on the list that was utilized.
As a result, taking the evidence in a light most favorable to Herrick, there could have been a
record system, the resident folders, that was seemingly not searched for PRR-927 or PRR-817.
Dr. DeMarco’s declaration shows that NAPs are reasonably likely, if not certainly, in the
resident folders.
Viewing the evidence in a light most favorable to Herrick, the nonmoving party,
Herrick’s exhibit, alongside Medina’s and Dr. DeMarco’s declarations, Herrick has shown that a
portion of the NAPs were excluded from the documents provided. Further, he has shown that the
SCC seemingly did not search a record system where the NAPs were reasonably likely to be
located. The SCC has not shown its search was adequate beyond material doubt. As a result, we
reverse the trial court’s grant of summary judgment on the NAPs requests.
11
We assume, for purposes of summary judgment, that this exhibit is correct. The duplication
highlighted by the exhibit shows how Medina could have thought the NAP folder contained the
correct number of NAPs, even though NAPs for several residents were missing.
15
No. 50364-6-II
2. SCC Adequately Searched for Request PRR-720
Regarding PRR-720, Herrick argues that the SCC did not adequately search for the Alder
meeting minutes. We disagree.
The SCC relies on a number of affidavits to show it adequately searched for Herrick’s
requests. Medina states that she began by looking in the folder containing all SCC meeting
minutes and the specific subfolder where Alder meeting minutes should have been located. In
the subfolder, there were no records responsive to PRR-720. Medina expanded her search to
other folders that she thought might contain the Alder meeting minutes, but still found nothing.
Medina then contacted Mosley and Ghan to assist in finding the requested records.
Mosley looked through all meeting minutes on the SCC intranet and searched physical file
cabinets in multiple program areas. Mosley spent over a month looking for responsive
documents and expanding her search. The responsive documents Mosley eventually located
were sent to Medina.
Herrick argues that because he was provided some other Alder related documents during
discovery for different litigation, the search was inadequate. However, a search need not be
perfect to be adequate, Neighborhood All., 172 Wn.2d at 720, and the mere fact that a record is
eventually found does not itself establish the inadequacy of an agency’s search. Kozol, 192 Wn.
App. at 8.
Here, the SCC conducted an adequate search. When the records were not located where
Medina thought they should be, she expanded her search to other areas and contacted other
individuals. Based on her investigation, Mosley searched through additional electronic and
physical record storage areas. Mosley found responsive documents and they were provided to
16
No. 50364-6-II
Herrick. The SCC looked for records in places likely to contain them, expanded its search,
continued to follow obvious leads as they arose, and produced documents as they were found.
We hold that the SCC conducted an adequate search for PRR-720.
E. The SCC Timely Produced Records
Herrick also contests the timeliness of the SCC’s responses to his requests. Specifically,
Herrick complains that the SCC’s redactions took too long. We disagree.
The PRA requires agencies to act promptly, within five business days of receiving a PRA
request. RCW 42.56.520(1). Within that time frame, the agency may alert the requester that the
request was received and provide a reasonable timeline for producing records responsive to the
request. RCW 42.56.520(1)(c). However, the PRA does “not require an agency to comply with
its own self-imposed deadlines as long as the agency was acting diligently in responding to the
request in a reasonable and thorough manner.” Hobbs, 183 Wn. App. at 940.
Herrick and Podriznik received the proper five day letters from the SCC. Herrick or
Podriznik were kept informed of Medina’s progress, and Podriznik specifically assured Medina
that she need not rush the redactions. Herrick was also kept informed of the progress of his
different requests. Because the SCC’s responses to the requests complied with the PRA,
Herrick’s timeliness argument fails.
We affirm the trial court’s summary judgment dismissal regarding the SCC’s costs and
payment requirements, its combining of PRR-677 and PRR-67 into PRR-927, the adequacy of its
search for PRR-720, and its compliance with the PRA’s timeliness requirements. We reverse
regarding the summary judgment dismissal of Herrick’s claim of an inadequate search for the
NAPs. We remand for further proceedings.
17
No. 50364-6-II
A majority of the panel having determined that this opinion will not be printed in the
Washington Appellate Reports, but will be filed for public record in accordance with RCW
2.06.040, it is so ordered.
Worswick, J.
We concur:
Lee, A.C.J.
Cruser, J.
18