Posted on

Councilmen Voigt continues his attack of Village residents Making OPRA Requests

Voigt OPRA

June 4,2017

the staff of the Ridgewood blog

Ridgewood NJ, Councilmen Voigt continues his attack of Village residents over the weekend with more posts on who is making legal OPRA requests .Voigt and his cronies on the Financial Advisory Committee clearly prefer to operate in a vale of secrecy .

While this is clearly an attempt to pressure residents , from exercising their legal rights and limit and restrict public access to information in the Village .

Councilmen Voigt  continues to attempt to squash OPRA requests by pushing the idea of a vast Mayoral conspiracy against him. However years of running this blog would suggest that sunlight is still the best political sanitizer.

Screenshot 2017 06 04 at 7.33.36 AM e1496577271920

So what is OPRA:

SECTION 1 – OPRA DEFINED What is the Open Public Records Act (OPRA)? OPRA is the State statute that replaces the old “Right to Know Law” which governs thepublic’s access to government records in New Jersey. The law is compiled in the statutes as N.J.S.A. 47:1A-1 et seq.

In accordance with the Open Public Records Act, Village offices, officials  and departments  have to make available public records through formal requests. Requests may be submitted in writing by submitting a “records request form”  by completing the online form below.

According to the  Citizen’s Guide to the Open Public Records Act – State of New Jersey ; OPRA provides overriding public policies in the legislative findings (N.J.S.A. 47:1A-1) which must be considered during the handling of all OPRA requests for access to government records. Those public policies are:

 Government records must be readily accessible for inspection, copying, or examination by its citizens, with certain exceptions, for the protection of the public interest.

 Any limitations on the right of access to government records must be interpreted in favor of the public’s right of access.

 A public agency has a responsibility and an obligation to protect a citizen’s personal information that is in the possession of a public agency when disclosure of that information would violate the citizen’s reasonable expectation of privacy.”

In fact, in Burnett v. County of Bergen, 198 N.J. 408 (2009), the Court held without ambiguity, that the privacy provision “is neither a preface nor a preamble.” Rather, “the very language expressed in the privacy clause reveals its substantive nature; it does not offer reasons why OPRA was adopted, as preambles typically do; instead, it focuses on the law’s implementation.” “Specifically, it imposes an obligation on public agencies to protect against disclosure of personal information which would run contrary to reasonable privacy interests.”

If you want to exercise your legal right to access records under the Open Public Records Act this is how you do it in Ridgewood :
How to Request Government Records?

1. All government records are subject to public access under the Open Public Records Act (“OPRA”), unless specifically exempt.

2. A request for access to a government record under OPRA must be in writing, hand-delivered, mailed, transmitted electronically, or otherwise conveyed to the appropriate custodian. N.J.S.A. 47:1A-5.g. The seven (7) business day response time does not commence until the records custodian receives the request form. If you submit the request form to any other officer or employee of the Village of Ridgewood, that officer or employee must either forward the request to the appropriate custodian, or direct you to the appropriate custodian. N.J.S.A. 47:1A-5.h.

3. Requestors may submit requests anonymously. If you elect not to provide a name, address, or telephone number, or other means of contact, the custodian is not required to respond until you reappear before the custodian seeking a response to the original request.

4. The fees for duplication of a government record in printed form are listed on the front of this form. We will notify you of any special service charges or other additional charges authorized by State law or regulation before processing your request. Payment shall be made by cash, check or money order payable to the Village of Ridgewood.

5. You may be charged a 50% or other deposit when a request for copies exceeds $25. The Village of Ridgewood custodian will contact you and advise you of any deposit requirements. You agree to pay the balance due upon delivery of the records. Anonymous requests in excess of $5.00 require a deposit of 100% of estimated fees.

6. Under OPRA, a custodian must deny access to a person who has been convicted of an indictable offense in New Jersey, any other state, or the United States, and who is seeking government records containing personal information pertaining to the person’s victim or the victim’s family. This includes anonymous requests for said information.

7. By law, the Village of Ridgewood must notify you that it grants or denies a request for access to government records within seven (7) business days after the agency custodian of records receives the request. If the record requested is not currently available or is in storage, the custodian will advise you within seven (7) business days after receipt of the request when the record can be made available and the estimated cost for reproduction.

8. You may be denied access to a government record if your request would substantially disrupt agency operations and the custodian is unable to reach a reasonable solution with you.

9. If the Village of Ridgewood is unable to comply with your request for access to a government record, the custodian will indicate the reasons for denial on the request form or other written correspondence and send you a signed and dated copy.

10. Except as otherwise provided by law or by agreement with the requester, if the agency custodian of records fails to respond to you within seven (7) business days of receiving a request, the failure to respond is a deemed denial of your request.

11. If your request for access to a government record has been denied or unfilled within the seven (7) business days required by law, you have a right to challenge the decision by the Village of Ridgewood to deny access. At your option, you may either institute a proceeding in the Superior Court of New Jersey or file a complaint with the Government Records Council (“GRC”) by completing the Denial of Access Complaint Form. You may contact the GRC by toll-free telephone at 866-850-0511, by mail at PO Box 819, Trenton, NJ, 08625, by e-mail at grc@dca.state.nj.us, or at their web site at www.state.nj.us/grc. The Council can also answer other questions about the law. All questions regarding complaints filed in Superior Court should be directed to the Court Clerk in your County.

12. Information provided on this form may be subject to disclosure under the Open Public Records Act.

Click here to download OPRA Request Form

14 thoughts on “Councilmen Voigt continues his attack of Village residents Making OPRA Requests

  1. Open. Public. Records. Act. Designed to shine a light on the individual agendas of elected officials such as yourself Mr. Voigt. Remember you are a public SERVANT meaning you work for us. Not the other way around. I have never regretted a vote in any election as much as I regret the one I cast for you.

  2. Bait and switch. A Trojan Horse. This man clearly lied his way into getting elected, pretending to be someone he clearly wasn’t.

  3. The residents, that he exposed in hos post, should sue Voight and file a complaint with the local finance Board. He needs to be sanctioned and removed.

  4. This is out of hand and Anne Loving is a busy body who should mind her own business. She is not an elected official and although the letter of the law allows her to do this that does not mean she should, and anyone encouraging this should be careful what they wish for because they are opening a can of worms and if the Mayor is unable to control her council then she shouldn’t be Mayor.

  5. Why was he forwarding garage plans to the builder / developer?

  6. Post your desired OPRA requests here.
    They will be submitted.

  7. Why hasn’t thr FAC been disbanded?

  8. 11:05. The mayor’s job is not to control the council members. We need 5 free thinking individuals.

    Any resident is allowed to mske an OPRA request. That is nit being a “busy body ” it is practicing good citizenship.

  9. Spot on 2:22. There is plenty of blame to go around to the entire council.

  10. 11:05 Ann loving is not a busy body she’s an involved resident for years and opra exists for a reason. Voigts emails are evidence of his working in concert with Evan weitz and staging public comment with Weitz and Janet willett.
    You say the mayor should control “her” council? It’s not “her” council. there’s no controlling crazy and Voight is a nut job.
    6:42pm four hardworking, dedicated elected officials shouldn’t be blamed for one crackpot.

  11. It would behoove voigt to put the village ahead of his petty nonsense. He must be hiding something big to engage in this shallow commentary. What is Vogt hiding?

  12. Is it true…. can Voigt be worse than Aronsohn?
    Nah… but neither is worth a damn

  13. 7:42… you forgot to start singing “Kumbaya”…

  14. 11:05am take your head out of your arse and start seeing some day light.

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *