MEMORANDUM AND ORDER
This action is brought by the Commonwealth of Massachusetts Department of Public Welfare (“the State Agency”) under the Freedom of Information Act (“the
By letter dated September 10, 1987, Kristen Bauer, the Assistant General Counsel of the State Agency, requested the release, pursuant to the Act, of various documents regarding the implementation of 45 CFR sec. 205.42(g). This federal agency regulation sets out general guidelines for reducing federal financial participation in the cooperatively funded Aid to Families with Dependent Children program (“AFDC”) as well as the provisions under which such reductions might be waived by the Federal Agency’s Family Support Administration.
1
Ms. Bauer specifically requested all documents “relating to”
2
the evaluation of states’ so-called “good faith waiver” requests. Russell M. Roberts, Director of the Freedom of Information/Privacy Act Division of the Federal Agency’s Office of Public Affairs, withheld certain of these documents, citing 5 U.S.C. sec. 552(b). This provision makes the Act’s mandatory disclosure requirements inapplicable to certain “types of information that the Executive Branch must have the option to keep confidential, if it so chooses.”
Environmental Protection Agency v. Mink,
The Federal Agency has submitted a
Vaughn
affidavit outlining the contents of the five documents in question,
Vaughn v. Rosen,
A. Exemption 2: “Internal Personnel Rules and Practices”
The factual, indeed the legal, parameters of Exemption 2 are not yet clear in this Circuit. Exemption 2 of the Act permits an agency in receipt of a disclosure request to refuse to disclose documents that are “re
The Supreme Court in
Department of the Air Force v. Rose,
As indicated, the first prong of the
Crooker
test recognizes that the “critical considerations ... [focus on whether the material] is used for predominantly internal purposes____”
The second prong of the
Crooker
test— whether disclosure in fact “significantly
In light of the
Rose
dicta noted above and in the absence of legislative history clearly to the contrary,
preCrooker
courts of appeals generally engrafted a “circumvention” element into their readings of Exemption 2 when dealing with material published for the benefit of federal law enforcement officers, the release of which might hinder effective law enforcement.
See, e.g., Caplan v. Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco & Firearms,
It is indisputable that “disclosure, not secrecy, is the dominant objective” of the Act.
Rose,
Accordingly, this Court rules that the second prong of the
Crooker
test — affirmatively requiring a showing of significant risk of circumvention of agency regulation or other law by the disclosure of material that relates predominantly to internal agen
In this case, two of the five contested documents are being withheld pursuant to Exemption 2. The first document is a 53-page guide, in the form of a workbook, for the Family Support Administration’s 1982 Waiver Review Process (“Document 1” or “the 1982 Guide”). The 1982 Guide is intended for use by administrators reviewing a State’s request for waiver of the federal financial participation reduction (triggered by a State’s failure to meet target error standards) by reason of that State’s timely development and implementation of corrective action reasonably designed to meet the target error rate. See 45 CFR sec. 205.42(g)(2)(v). Subsection (g)(2)(v) of the pertinent agency regulation promulgates the four factors the Family Support Administration will evaluate in determining whether a State has indeed made a good faith effort in these circumstances. 8 The 1982 Guide supplements the standards as set out in the published regulation, but is not intended for public dissemination. It contains further criteria to be applied in evaluating whether a given factor under consideration weighs in favor of granting waiver or does not and, if it does, what weight that factor should be given overall. The published regulation merely indicates that “we will consider” the four listed factors. See 45 CFR sec. 205.42(g)(2)(v). The 1982 Guide thus provides a framework for an administrator to “score” a State’s performance with respect to each of the four factors and assigns percentages of relative weight to accord the scores achieved by the State under each factor.
The second document for which exemption is claimed under Exemption 2 is the Family Support Administration’s 1981 Waiver Review Guide (“Document 5” or the “1981 Guide”), a fourteen page type
Normally, administrative staff manuals, like these, and instructions to staff that affect a member of the public must be revealed. 5 U.S.C. sec. 552(a)(2)(C). The question before the Court is whether Exemption 2 will except the material from disclosure. This material is not “solely” related either to internal personnel rules or to the internal practices of an agency, as it also “relates” to the financing of the jointly funded AFDC program, a matter of significant public interest. The material thus is not exempt from disclosure by the express language of the exemption. Clearly, though, the two documents are predominantly for internal use: to instruct agency operatives in determining whether a state meets the Family Support Administration’s qualifications for a waiver of a reduction in federal financial participation. Therefore, under Crooker, the material will be exempt under Exemption 2 only if disclosure of these documents risks circumvention of the law.
The cases in which courts have found a significant risk that dissemination of such internal documents might result in a circumvention of agency regulations or other law are strikingly different, factually, from the instant case. In
Ginsburg, Feldman & Bress,
for instance, the Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit affirmed a ruling that the Federal Energy Administration’s guidelines and instructions to employees who audit the petroleum industry’s compliance with various federal laws and regulations should be exempt from disclosure under Exemption 2.
What makes this case strikingly different from those just cited is the fact that here it is the Commonwealth of Massachusetts — one of the sovereign states within the federal union — that desires production. This Court is aware of no reported case in which a sovereign state has requested disclosure of federal administrative manuals
Falling back, the Federal Agency contends that, even if the motives of Massachusetts itself cannot be impugned, Exemption 2 may be invoked to bar access to its officials who could well be motivated to bend the regulations to maximize the federal revenues sought by the Commonwealth. This contention is likewise inapposite in the circumstances presented here.
9
State officials are entitled to a presumption of regularity in discharging their duties.
See Fryer v. Department of Public Utilities,
Accordingly, the documents withheld on the ground of Exemption 2 must be disclosed.
B. Exemption 5: The “Deliberative Process” Privilege
The federal agency also seeks protection from disclosure under Exemption 5, 5 U.S.C. sec. 552(b)(5), which covers “inter-agency or intra-agency memorandums [sic] or letters which would not be available by law to a party other than an agency in litigation with the agency.” The parameters of Exemption 5 are clearer than those of Exemption 2: it “simply incorporates civil discovery privileges.”
United States v. Weber Aircraft Corp.,
The Supreme Court has expressly recognized that Congress intended Exemption 5 to encompass an “executive privilege” sufficiently broad to include confidential advisory opinions the disclosure of which would be injurious to the consultative functions of government, so as to protect the government’s deliberative and decision-making processes.
Sears,
To come within Exemption 5, the material in question cannot represent effective agency policy.
11
Also, although it protects advisory materials which truly reflect the deliberative or policymaking processes of an executive agency, Exemption 5 does not protect “purely factual, investigative matters.”
Environmental Protection Agency v. Mink,
Not surprisingly, it has become nearly axiomatic in jurisprudence under the Act that to assert an executive privilege so as to come under the aegis of the Exemption 5 “deliberative process” exemption, government must show that the material sought to be withheld is both “predecisional” and “deliberative.”
Wolfe v. Department of Health and Human Services,
Three documents, and parts of a fourth, are in question here. “Document 2” consists of one hundred fifty five pages of analysis, treating the nature of the supporting information filed in nineteen states’ 1981 petitions for waiver of the reduction in federal financial participation in AFDC programs, petitions which were grounded in the argument that waiver is appropriate in view of the existence of extraordinary circumstances that made it impossible to meet targeted error rates. “Document 3” is a document of seven pages which sum
The Court rules that disclosure of Documents 2, 3, and 4 will not reveal predicisional deliberative material. The documents are compilations of factual data which are not protected by Exemption 5.
See Environmental Protection Agency, v. Mink,
Neither do these documents reflect “advisory opinions, recommendations and deliberations comprising part of a process by which governmental decisions and policies are formulated” within the meaning of the deliberative process privilege.
National Labor Relations Board v. Sears, Roebuck & Co.,
That portion of Document 5, the 1981 Waiver Review Guide, which consists of marginal handwitten notations by an unknown hand, is also being withheld pursuant to Exemption 5. This Court rules that the government has not sustained its burden of proof to establish an executive privilege with respect to these notations. The federal agency argues that the notations suggest ways to improve the methods of analyzing waiver requests and therefore they amount to intra-agency “advisory opinions and recommendations.”
See Meade Data Central, Inc. v. United States Department of the Air Force,
C. Conclusion
Since the Federal Agency has failed, for the reasons limned above, to establish the
Notes
. The AFDC program is a welfare program jointly administered and funded by the federal government and the states. State administrators determine who is eligible for AFDC payments and make payments to those families. The federal government participates in the program by "matching" the funds expended by the states in AFDC payments so that each sovereign shares the welfare burden equally. The United States Office of Family Assistance, Family Support Administration, however, monitors states' payments for error and will reduce or increase the amount of federal financial participation depending on the percentage of AFDC payments erroneously made by a State. 45 CFR sec. 205.-42-43. The purpose behind this scheme is to create the incentive for states to reduce the amount of payments made in error to those not eligible for AFDC benefits. If a State does not meet the national standard for error, or the target error rate established for the individual State, its federal matching funds will be partially disallowed unless the State shows that it made a good faith effort to meet the target rate. 45 CFR sec. 205.42(f). The applicable federal regulations indicate that a finding that a State did not meet the target error rate despite a good faith effort may be made only in "extraordinary circumstances.” See 45 CFR sec. 205.42(g).
. A request for all documents "relating to” a subject is usually subject to criticism as over-broad since life, like law, is “a seamless web," and all documents “relate" to all others in some remote fashion. Such a request thus unfairly places the onus of non-production on the recipient of the request and not where it belongs — • upon the person who drafted such a sloppy request. Just as such requests are objectionable under Fed.R.Civ.P. 26(b)(1), so ought they be objectionable under the Act. In this case, of course, the point is of no moment since the federal agency responded without objecting to the overbreadth of the request.
. As to the syntactic difficulties, the position of the District of Columbia Circuit Court of Appeals has long been that Exemption 2 may apply not only to internal personnel rules of an agency but also to the internal practices of an agency.
Ginsburg, Feldman & Bress v. Federal Energy Administration,
. The First Circuit has upheld the non-disclosure of a Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco and Firearms ("Bureau”) investigatory report "compiled for law enforcement purposes."
Wightman v. Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco & Firearms,
. The Court is mindful that in our structure of government it is ordinarily under a duty to eschew policy determinations concerning what is or is not of “legitimate public interest" as such determinations implicate core values under the First Amendment. Absent constitutional considerations, of course, its duty is to interpret the law Congress passed. The Court finds itself on the twin horns of a dilemma implicitly created by
Crooker.
On the one hand it is clear that in passing the Act "Congress has made the determination that except for certain specified materials, all government documents are of legitimate public interest.”
Crooker,
. Ventures into labyrinth of legislative history can be confusing. Peculiar hazards lurk with respect to the Freedom of Information Act. As the First Circuit has put it, discussing the scope of 5 U.S.C. sec. 552(b)(4) (Exemption 4):
The attempt to analyse the [Act’s] legislative history is complicated further by the fact that the 1966 House Report has been discredited as an aid to interpreting the Act because it was submitted after the Senate had made its report and passed the bill. The House then passed the bill without amendment, thereby depriving the Senate of the opportunity to object or concur in the interpretation of the Act written into the House Report.
9 to 5 Organization for Women Office Workers v. Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System,
. In the wake of
Crooker,
one panel of judges from the District of Columbia Circuit, in a
per curiam
opinion, expressed the view that "[i]t is conceivable that this [second prong requirement] may be overbroad in light of Supreme Court precedent and the legislative history."
Founding Church of Scientology of Washington, D.C., Inc.,
The Freedom of Information Reform Act of 1986 evidences that Crooker was correctly decided. The Reform Act codified Crooker, as it applies to law enforcement agencies, into Exemption 7 of the FOIA. Pursuant to section 1802 of the Reform Act, Exemption 7 now provides, in pertinent part, that “guidelines for law enforcement investigations or prosecutions [need not be disclosed] if such disclosure could reasonably be expected to risk circumvention of the law____” (emphasis supplied). The legislative history of the Reform Act expressly states that this amendment was modeled after "the 'circumvention of the law' standard that the D.C. Circuit established in its en banc decision in Crooker v. BATF,670 F.2d 1051 (D.C.Cir.1981) (en banc) (interpreting Exemption 2).” Because Congress saw fit to codify the very language of Crooker, and because nothing in the legislative history suggests the slightest disagreement with that case's holding, we believe that Crooker accurately expresses congressional intentions.
Kaganove,
. These are:
(A) Demonstrated commitment by top management to the error reduction program
(B) Sufficiency and quality of systems designed to reduce errors that are operational in the State
(C) Use of effective system and procedures for the statistical and program analysis of [the quality control system that provides data on incorrect payments and nonpayments] ...
(D) Effective management and execution of the correction action process ...
45 CFR sec. 205.42(g)(2)(v)(A-D).
. The limiting phrase is unfortunately necessary since situations can be imagined where state officials may actively seek to compromise or obstruct national domestic, foreign or defense policies.
See, e.g., Dukakis v. United States Department of Defense,
. The proper functioning and general purpose of executive privilege is well-settled. "Manifestly, the ultimate purpose of this long-recognized privilege is to prevent injury to the quality of agency decisions. The quality of a particular agency decision will clearly be affected by the [inter-agency or intra-agency] communications received by the decisionmaker on the subject of the decision prior to the time the decision is made.”
Sears,
. To be legitimate, law must be promulgated. "Secret law” is neither legitimate nor covered by executive privilege. There is thus a difference between agency policies established and followed to implement an agency’s statutory mandate, or what is effectively agency "law,” and what executive privilege protects. The Supreme Court has expressed this distinction: "Exemption 5, properly construed, calls for disclosure of all opinions and interpretations which embody the agency’s effective law and policy, and the withholding of all papers which reflect the agency’s group thinking in the process of working out its policy and determining what its law shall be."
Sears,
