delivered the Opinion of the Court.
We granted certiorari in this case to consider whether the governmental deliberative process privilege exists in Colorado. We hold that such a privilege does exist. We hold further that materials falling within the ambit of the deliberative process privilege are not subject to disclosure in the context of a request for public records under the Colorado open records laws, §§ 24-72-201 to -309, 7 C.R.S. (1998) (the “open records laws”). Accordingly, we reverse the judgment of the court of appeals in
White v. City of Colorado Springs,
I.
Pursuant to the open records laws, respondent David White requested copies of certain materials in the possession of the Community Services Department of the City of Colorado Springs. The requested materials included a report generated by an outside consultant, Dr. Don Warrick, (the ‘Warrick Report”) at the request of the head of the Community Services Department, Carla Hartsell. The report contained the results of an investigation of the Industrial Training Division, an entity under the supervision of the Community Services Department. The report was related to an internal evaluation of the Industrial Training Division.
Hartsell, as custodian of the Warrick Report, denied inspection of the report, asserting that the report was privileged under the governmental deliberative process privilege. Hartsell, however, did release a copy of the consultant contract between the City and Dr. Warrick which revealed the fees paid for his services. Pursuant to section 24-72-204(5), 7 C.R.S. (1998), White applied to the District Court of El Paso County for an order directing Hartsell and the City (the “Petitioners”) to show cause why they should not permit inspection of the Warrick Report. The Petitioners maintained that inspection of the report was properly denied under section 24-72-204(3)(a)(IV), 7 C.R.S. (1998), because the report was “рrivileged information” within *1046 the meaning of the statute. 1 White asserted that the deliberative process privilege does not exist in Colorado, and thus the Petitioners had no basis to deny the inspection request.
After a hearing and in camera review of the Warrick Report, the trial court agreed with the Petitioners and discharged the order to show cause. The trial court found that the open records laws excepted information from inspection that is protected by the deliberative process privilege. The trial court found further that the Warrick Report was protected by the privilege because: (1) the report was “predecisional,” (2) the report “contains information that is candid and personal from employees of the Industrial Training Division,” and (3) “public disclosure of the report would chill honest and frank communications in the future.”
The court of appeals reversed.
See White,
The court of appeals also looked to recent amendments to the open records laws in which the General Assembly exempted from the definition of public records “ ‘work product prepared for elected officials.’”
White,
Upon certiorari review by this court, the Petitioners claim that the deliberative process privilege is a
common
law evidentiary privilege that exists independently of either the open records laws or the FOIA. Thus, the Petitioners contend that the fact that the open records laws do not contain language identical to the FOIA is not dispositive of whether the privilege exists in Colorado. The Petitioners assert that the policies supporting the privilege in the context of the federal government are equally applicable to state government. Further, the Petitioners allege that the deliberative process privilege, and the policies which support its existence, have already been recognized under a different name by this court in
Martinelli v. District Court,
II.
Essential to the question of whether the deliberative process privilege exists in Colorado is an understanding of the origin and purposes of the privilege. Thus, we will first discuss the development and rationale of the deliberative process privilege. Next, we will examine the role of the privilege in Colorado.
A.
The deliberative process privilegе is unique to the government.
See Coastal States Gas Corp. v. Department of Energy,
*1047
According to some commentators, the deliberative process privilege originated in the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries within the concept of the English “crown privilege.”
See
Russell L. Weaver & James T.R. Jones,
The Deliberative Process Privilege,
54 Mo.L.Rev. 279, 283 (1989) (hereinafter, “Weaver & Jones,
The Deliberative Process Privilege
”). Early American cases recognized a privilege derived, to some degree, from the crown privilege.
See id.
at 284 n. 29. Although these cases did not recognize the deliberative process privilege by name, the eases “did protect materials of the sort which the deliberative process privilege now encompasses.”
Id.
at 285. Those early eases that are generally considered critical to the development of the privilege in this country, and to our discussion, include
Morgan v. United States,
The Court in
Morgan
encountered a challenge to the method used by the Secretary of Agriculture to set stockyard rates. The Court held, “[I]t was not the function of the court to probe the mental processes of the Secretary in reaching his conclusions.”
Morgan,
In
Carl Zeiss Stiftung,
the court recognized a “well-established” evidentiary privilege for “intra-governmental documents reflecting advisory opinions, recommendations and deliberations comprising part of a process by which governmental decisions and policies are formulated.”
In the cases discussed above, the courts termed the privilege at issue the “executive” privilege. Traditionally, the executive privilege has at least two components or branches: one based in the constitution and the other based in the common law.
See, e.g., Sears,
As the United States Court of Appeals for the District of Columbiа
2
observed, in sorting the different facets of the executive privilege, the protection for the deliberative processes of government officials generally comes from “the common sense-common law privilege, i.e., the recognition that the Government cannot operate in a fish bowl.”
Vaughn II,
Hence, the deliberative process privilege has often been referred to as the common law executive privilege. Indeed, our review of those cases which disсuss the common law privilege protecting the deliberative processes of government reveals that courts have employed several names to describe the privilege. The following names have been used interchangeably (if not always precisely): “executive privilege,” “deliberative process privilege,” “governmental privilege,” and “official information privilege.”
See, e.g., In re Sealed Case, 121
F.3d at 736 (noting that “the most frequent form of executive privilege raised in the judicial arena is the deliberative process privilege”);
Tax Analysts v. Internal Revenue Serv.,
Although the privilege protecting the deliberative processes of government originated as a common law privilege, the privilege is most commonly encountered, at the federal level, in FOIA litigation.
See In re Sealed Case,
In addition to the federal authorities, several state courts have recognized the privilege protecting the deliberative processes of government.
See, e.g., Capital Info. Group v. Alaska,
B.
This court has never explicitly recognized the deliberative process privilege by that name. In
Martinelli,
however, we accepted the common law evidentiary privilege “variously referred to as the ‘official information,’ ‘governmental,’ or ‘executive’ privilege.”
That the terms “official information privilege,” “executive privilege,” “deliberative
*1050
process privilege,” and “governmental privilege” are used interchangeably and refer to the same concept is illustrated further by examining the authorities relied upon in
Martinelli
to support the existence of the privilege. One such authority observes, “The origins of the common law official information privilege can be traced to
Kaiser Aluminum & Chemical Corp. v. United States."
Note,
Discovery of Government Documents,
at 156;
see Martinelli,
Another authority relied upon in Martinel-li makes clear that the privilege for “official information” protects precisely the class of documents shielded by the common law executive or deliberative process privilege:
[T]here remains the question whether the department or agency head may properly invoke privilege as to materials in his official custody claimed by him not to be secrets of state but something less. The answer to that question is yes.... The privilege is not automatic; it is not held to exist merely because the document or other information happens to be in governmental custody. On the other hand, it has been held applicable to interdepartmental communications, reports of agents and subordinates, advisory recommendations and departmental records and files.
8 John H. Wigmore,
Evidence
§ 2378, at 805 & n. 21 (McNaughton rev.1961) (citing
Kaiser); see Martinelli,
In
Martinelli,
we also looked to the case of
Wood v. Breier,
Finally, we note that our discussion of the privilege at issue in
Martinelli
parallels the traditional distinction between the cоnstitutional and common law components of the executive privilege. After acknowledging that we were addressing some form of executive privilege, we took care to “specifically exclude” from our discussion that form of the privilege “which relates to diplomatic or military secrets.”
Martinelli,
Thus, not only has the evidentiary privilege recognized in Martinelli been sometimes called the deliberative process privilege, but it derives from the same common law origins and encompasses the same policy concerns as the deliberative process privilege. 6 Accordingly, we conclude that the deliberative process privilege is part of the common law of Colorado. 7
III.
In light of our recognition of the deliberative process privilege as part of the common law of Colorado, we next address the sub *1051 stantive requirements for the protection of the privilege. We will then discuss the appropriate procedure for asserting the deliberative process privilege.
A.
The deliberative process privilege is a qualified privilege.
See, e.g., In re Sealed Case,
[The privilege] serves to assure that subordinates within an agency will feel free to provide the decisionmaker with their uninhibited opinions and recommendations without fear of later being subject to public ridicule or criticism; to protect against premature disclosure of proposed policies before they have been finally formulated or adopted; and to protect against confusing the issues and misleading the public by dissemination of documents suggesting reasons and rationales for a course of action which were not in fact the ultimate reasons for the agency’s action.
Coastal States,
Thus, a key question in a deliberative process privilege case is whether disclosure .of the material would expose an agency’s decisionmaking process in such a way as to discourage discussion within the agency and thereby undermine the agency’s ability to perform its functions. See
Schell,
Predecisional documents are protected because the “quality of a particular agency decision will clearly be affected by the communications received by the decisionmaker on the subject of the decision prior to the time the decision is made.”
Sears,
Conversely, postdecisional documents, communications made after the decision and designed to explain it, are not protеcted by the privilege. This distinction is supported by two considerations. First, the quality of a decision will not be affected by forced disclosure of communications occurring after the decision is finally reached.
See Sears,
*1052
Material that is predeeisional in nature normally retains its protection even after the decision is made.
See May v. Department of Air Force,
The predecisional/postdecisional dichotomy is a useful starting point in determining which documents are privileged. Of course, not all predeeisional material is privileged; the material must also be part of the deliberative process by which a decision is made.
See Taxation with Representation Fund,
While the fact/opinion distinction is helpful in determining what is privileged, courts should not “mechanically apply” the test in every case.
Wolfe,
Courts have also looked to other considerations in assessing whether material is predeeisional and deliberative. The function and significance of the document in the agency’s decisionmaking process are relevant.
See Taxation with Representation Fund,
Furthermore, courts examine the identity and decisionmaking authority of the office or person issuing the material.
See Taxation with Representation Fund,
Finally, in addition to assessing whether the material is prédecisional and deliberative, and in order to determine if disclosure of the material is likely to adversely affect the purposes of the privilege, courts inquire whether “the document is so candid or personal in nature that public disclosure is likely in the future to stifle honest and frank communication within the agency.”
Coastal States,
B.
The initial burden of proof falls upon the government entity asserting the deliberative process privilege.
See Coastal States,
The government cannot meet these requirements by conclusory and generalized allegations of privilege. Most courts require that the assertion of the privilege be made in the form of a
“Vaughn
index,” named for the decision which first imposed the requirement.
See Vaughn I,
The
Vaughn
index should provide a specific description of each document claimed to be privileged.
See Mead Data Cent.,
Properly constructed, the
Vaughn
index should provide litigants with fundamental information about the allegedly privileged material, and provide them with a
*1054
meaningful opportunity to challenge the government’s claims.
See Arthur Andersen,
To reiterate, the deliberative process privilege is a qualified privilege. It may be overcome upon a showing that the discoverant’s interests in disclosure of the materials is greater than the government’s interests in their confidentiality.
See, e.g., Martinelli,
In most cases, where thе party seeking discovery makes a sufficient showing of need, the court should grant an in camera inspection.
See Hamilton, 414
A.2d at 927;
First Judicial Dist. Court,
IV.
We next determine that the deliberative process privilege may be asserted in response to an open records request. Finally, we apply the privilege to the facts before us.
A.
In the instant case, respondent White requested inspection of the Warrick Report pursuant to the open records laws. The Petitioners do not dispute the fact that the Warrick Report is a “public record” under the open records laws. See § 24-72-202(6)(a)(I), 7 C.R.S. (1998). The Petitioners contend, however, that material protected by the deliberative process privilege is not subject to public inspection because section 24-72-204(3)(a)(IV) exempts “privileged information.” We agree.
*1055
In enacting the open records laws, the General Assembly “did not intend that the open records laws would supplant discovery practice in civil litigation.”
Martinelli,
One of the most frequently asserted common law privileges for government-held information is the deliberative proсess privilege.
See
discussion
supra
Part II. Federal courts have found that Exemption 5 of the FOIA incorporates the attorney-client privilege, the attorney work product privilege, and the deliberative process privilege. The court of appeals has specifically found that section 24-72-204(3)(a)(IV) incorporates the attorney-client privilege and the attorney work product privilege.
See Denver Post,
Furthermore, we are not persuaded that recent amendments to the open records laws have abrogated this common law privilege.
See White,
Statutes are not presumed to alter the common law unless they expressly, or by necessary implication, provide for such alteration.
See Vaughan v. McMinn,
Moreover, nothing in the legislative history of these amendments suggests that the General Assembly contemplated the deliberative process privilege or the official information privilege (as it was termed in
Martinelli).
Instead, the legislative history demonstrates that the 1996 amendments were intended to extend the traditional notions of the attorney-client and attorney work product privileges to cover certain legislative materials.
See
Hearing on S. 96-212 Before the Senate Committee on Business Affairs & Labor, 60th Gen. Assembly, 2nd Reg. Sess. (Mar. 11, 1996); Hearing on S. 96-212 Before the House Committee on State, Veterans, & Military Affairs, 60th Gen. Assembly, 2nd Reg. Sess. (Apr. 9, 1996).
See generally White,
As it does in the discovery context, the government entity asserting the privilege has the initial burden of proof in response to a public records request. The government must compile a proper
Vaughn
index with supporting affidavits.
See, e.g., Mead Data Cent.,
[t]he ability of a private litigant to override a privilege claim set up by the Government, with respect to an otherwise disclosable document, may itself turn on the extent of the litigant’s need in the context of the facts of his particular case; or on the nature of the case. However, it is not sensible to construe the [FOIA] to require disclosure of any document which would be disclosed in the hypothetical litigation in which the private party’s claim is the most compelling.... Exemption 5 was intended to permit disclosure of those intra-agen-cy memoranda which would “routinely be disclosed” in private litigation.
Sears,
Therefore, once the government has met its burden of proof by satisfying the procedural requirements, the privileged material is beyond public inspection.
B.
In the present case, the Petitioners asserted that the Warrick Report is protected by the deliberative process privilege, and is therefore exempt from inspection under section 24-72-204(3)(a)(IV). The trial court responded to this assertion of privilege by taking testimony on the issue of the government’s need for confidentiality and by conducting an in camera review of the Warrick Report. The transcript of the hearing on the order to show cause, as well as the text of the court’s order, make clear that the court applied the proper legal standards in assessing the deliberative process privilege claim. The court found that (1) the report was “predecisional,” (2) the report “contains information that is candid and personal from employees of the Industrial Training Division,” and (3) “public disclosure of the re *1057 port would chill honest and frank communications in the future.” Accordingly, the court concluded that the reрort was protected by the deliberative process privilege.
Because we had not articulated the procedural requirements for assertion of the privilege at the time the Petitioners made their claim, we will not evaluate the claim for strict compliance with these requirements. Under these circumstances, we find that the trial court’s in camera review was more than an adequate substitute for an evaluation of a
Vaughn
index. Like the trial court, we have conducted our own examination of the Warrick Report. We subsequently review the trial court’s conclusions pursuant to an abuse of discretion standard.
Cf. Bond v. District Court,
Our review of the Warrick Report confirms that it contains an evaluation of the working environment and policies of the Industrial Training Division. The report contains observations on the current atmosphere and suggestions on how to improve it. Thus, the report qualifies as predecisional in that it was designed to guide the Petitioners in developing strategies to improve the division. The report is also deliberative. The report is largely composed of employees’ opinions as to the strengths and weaknesses of the Industrial Training Division and its administrator. The role of these opinions and observations was to assist the decisionmaking process rather than to serve as an expression of a final agency decision.
We also note that neither Dr. Warrick, the author of the report, nor the employees interviewed by him possessed the authority to promulgate final decisions for the agency. They could only offer suggestions to the true decisionmakers, and did so in the report. Furthermore, in order to promote frank and open discussion during an agency’s deliberative process, the deliberative process privilege protects opinions and recommendations to a government agency by outside consultants so long as such opinions and recommendations are obtained during the agency’s deliberative predecisional process.
See Wu v. National Endowment for Humanities,
Respondent White also argues that the Warrick Report does not qualify for the protection of the deliberative process privilege because (1) the Petitioners have not identified a specific policy or decision to which the report is connected and (2) the report contains the results of a survey and therefore contains diselosable factual material. Hence, White asserts that the trial court erred in finding that the report came within the ambit of the privilege. We disagree.
First of all, the government need not be able to point to a specific decision or policy in connection with which the material was prepared in order for the material to be considered predecisional. See discussion supra Part III.A. Although it is unnecessary to point to a specific decision or policy, we note that petitioner Hartsell’s affidavit to the court identified “the evaluation and assessment of the Industrial Training Division and its Administrator in order to identify any current problems within the Industrial Training Division and to develop strategies to improvе the division,” as a specific deliberative process to which the Warrick Report was related.
Secondly, while it is true that the report contains the results of a survey of employees, it does not follow that this material is necessarily factual in nature. As explained above, the report is composed almost entirely of the employees’ personal opinions. These contents can hardly be defined as purely factual material. We therefore reject White’s arguments. We conclude that the trial court did *1058 not abuse its discretion in finding that the report was protected by the deliberative process privilege.
V.
We hold that the deliberative process privilege is part of the common law of this state. We also find that the open records laws exempt material that comes within the scope of the privilege from public inspection. Because the court of appeals found that the privilege does not exist in Colorado, we reverse the judgment of that court.
Notes
. Section 24-72-204(3)(a) provides, in part:
The custodian shall deny the right of inspection of the following records, unless otherwise provided by law ...:
[[Image here]]
(IV) Trade secrets, privileged information, and confidential commercial, financial, geological, or geophysical data furnished by or obtained from any person;
(Emphasis added.)
. Because the deliberative process privilege belongs uniquely to the government (and, most often, to administrative agencies), this federal court has emerged as the preeminent authority on matters related to the privilege.
. 5 U.S.C. § 552(b) provides:
This section [regarding mandatory disclosure] does not apply to matters that are—
[[Image here]]
(5) inter-agency or intra-agency memorandums or letters which would not be available by law to a party other than an agency in litigation with the agency;
. Thus, insofar as the federal executive branch is concerned, thе information protected by the deliberative process privilege is also covered by FOIA Exemption 5. It has been held, however, that the deliberative process privilege "is a tripartite privilege because it exists for the legislative and judicial branches of government as well as for the executive.”
Daily Gazette Co., Inc. v. West Va. Dev. Office,
. In a similar situation, the Supreme Court of Alaska held that, although it had never recognized the deliberative process privilege by that name, its prior recognition of the executive privilege was precedent for the existence of the deliberative process privilege in Alaska.
See Capital Info. Group,
. We find it significant that the common law evidentiary privilege, described in
Morgan,
which protects the "mental processes” of an executive or administrative officer has long been recognized in this state.
See Gilpin County Bd. of Equalization v. Russell,
. The predecisional requirement of the privilege does not turn on the ability of an agency to identify a specific decision in connection with which the material was prepared.
See id.
at 151 n. 18,
. The passage of time may be a factor in evaluating the government’s need to protect the material from disclosure.
See
Walker & Jones,
The Deliberative Process Privilege,
at 293. "As time passes, one might expect the impact of disclosure to diminish. Few officials are likely to be deterred from engaging in robust discussion about a pending policy merely because their communications might become public at some point in the distant future.”
Id.
at 317;
see also Fisher v. Renegotiation Bd.,
. Of course, if the document contains non-seg-regable factual data, the index should note the existence of that material and explain why it is not segregable.
. Ultimately, the availability and scope of in camera review is within the discretion of the trial court.
See, e.g., Bureau of Nat’l Affairs, Inc. v. United States Dep’t of Justice,
. Because the deliberative process privilege is so dependent upon the individual document and the role it plays in the administrative process, the precedents in this area are of limited assistance in determining whether the privilege should apply in a particular instance.
See Coastal States,
. The Supreme Court of Vermont held the same in interpreting a similar provision of the Vermont Access to Public Records statute which exempted from disclosure material protected by any statutory or common law privilege.
See Killington,
. “Work product” includes "all intra- or inter-agency advisory or deliberative materials assembled for the benefit of elected officials, which materials express an opinion or are deliberative in nature and are communicated for the purpose of assisting such elected officials in reaching a decision within the scope of their authority." § 24-72-202(6.5)(a), 7 C.R.S. (1998). "Work product” also includes “all documents relating to the drafting of bills or amendments, pursuant to section 2-3-505(2)(b), C.R.S., and all research projects conducted by staff of legislative council pursuant to section 2-3-304(1), C.R.S.” § 24-72-202(6.5)(b).
