This аppeal presents the question whether the Duncan Ordinance, 1 DCMR § 1000
et seq.
(1986), is a “statute” within the meaning of Exemption 6 of the District of Columbia Freedom of Information Act (FOIA), D.C.Code § l-1524(a)(6) (1987 RepLVol.). We hold that it is not and, therefore, could not be the basis for denying the request of appellants, the publisher and a reporter of the Milwaukee Sentinel newspaper (“the Sentinel”), for records concerning the arrest of Robert W. Kasten, Jr., a United State’s Senator from Wisconsin, for driving while intoxicated.
1
Appel-lees, the Metropolitan Police Department (MPD) and the Office of the Corporation Counsel (Corporation Counsel), denied the Sentinel’s requests for the records based on Exemption 6 of the FOIA, D.C.Code § l-1524(a)(6), which shields records that
I
On December 12, 1985, Senator Kasten was arrested by District police officers for driving while intoxicated. By letters dated December 23,1985, the Sentinel filed FOIA requests with the MPD and the Corporation Counsel for records concerning the “аrrest and subsequent court appearance of Senator Kasten.” 2 Both the Corporation Counsel and the MPD denied the Sentinel’s requests, and the Sentinel appealed those denials, first to the Corporation Counsel and then to the Mayor. By letter dated June 5, 1986, the Secretary of the District of Columbia acknowledged receipt of the appeal letter, but no substantive response was forthcoming.
On June 12, 1986, counsel for the Sentinel informed Senator Kasten’s office of the Sentinel’s intention to file a lawsuit to obtain records pertaining to the Senator’s arrest. Senator Kasten asked the Sentinel to delay filing the suit in order to give him an opportunity to obtain the records, which the Sentinel agreed to do. By letter dated June 18, 1986, a member of Senator Kas-ten’s staff forwarded to the Sеntinel a copy of the press release issued by the MPD, a summary of the contents of the MPD’s “desk book,” and a copy of the Chemical Test Certification Form, which shows the results of Senator Kasten’s breathalyzer tests. The Sentinel already had a copy of the MPD’s press release, and had access to the information in the “desk book,” which is publicly available. See D.C.Code §§ 4-131, -135 (1981). The Chemical Test Certification Form, which was not previously available, provided the Sentinel with some additional information. However, because the Sentinel was unable to obtain the complete records of the arrest and subsequent proceedings, it commenced an action in Superior Court. 3 See id. § 4-132.
The parties filed cross-motions for summary judgment. At oral argument, appel-lees contended that the requestеd arrest records were exempt from disclosure under the Duncan Ordinance because the ordinance is a “statute” within the meaning of FOIA Exemption 6. In an oral ruling, the motions judge granted summary judgment in favor of appellees on two grounds. First, although acknowledging that the Duncan Ordinance is not a statute as that term is commonly construed, the judge concluded that the term “statute” is not necessarily limited to an enactment by an elected legislature but may well include other duly promulgated policies that reflect a considered governmental judgment. Second, the judge recognized that although the Board of Commissioners had only quasi-legislative powers pursuant to delegations of authority by Congress, the Board nevertheless was empowered to promulgate laws, such as the Duncan Ordinance, that were binding on the MPD. Conversely, because the Duncan Ordinance was not a regulation promulgated by the MPD, the judge was satisfied that construing the Duncan Ordinance as a statute fulfilled the
II
The Sentinel contends that the motions judge erred in ruling that the Duncan Ordinance precludes disclosure under FOIA Exemption 6, D.C.Code § l-1524(a)(6), which by its terms applies only to “statutes.” The Sentinel argues that the Duncan Ordinance is plainly not a “statute” because the Board of Commissioners, which promulgated the Ordinance, was not vested with any legislative authority, but was restricted to mere administrative activity, and that the Council of the District of Columbia was well aware of this fact when it enacted the FOIA. Therefore, the Sentinel argues that the judge erred in failing to construe Exemption 6 narrowly in accordance with the FOIA’s mandate favoring disclosure of records and to give the term “statute” its ordinary meaning rather than extending the reach of Exemption 6 to include regulations such as the Duncan Ordinance.
Preliminarily, it is important to note what the Duncan Ordinance is. The Duncan Ordinance was promulgated when the Board of Commissioners of the District of Columbia adopted the recommendations of a committee that it had appointed to examine the effect of arrest records on employment opportunity in the District of Columbia. The report concluded that the effects were generally adverse and that broad restrictions on the dissemination of arrest records were required. Specific rule рroposals to prevent the routine dissemination of arrest records were contained in the report. On November 2, 1967, the Board of Commissioners approved the proposed rules. It is these rules that are referred to as the Duncan Ordinance, the name being that of the Corporation Counsel who served as chairman of the Committee to Investigate the Effects of Police Arrest Records on Employment Opportunities in the District of Columbia. 5
Both parties agree, and we concur, that under the Duncan Ordinance, unexpurgated adult arrest records
6
can only be
The Duncan Ordinance does not stand alone, however, as the only law in the District of Columbia pertaining to the release of arrest records. Also relevant to the dissemination of arrest records is the FOIA, a D.C. statute of general applicability governing the public’s right of access to all records, including arrest records, maintained by the District of Columbia government. The public policy 9 of the FOIA is stated in D.C.Code § 1-1521, which provides:
Generally the public policy of the District of Columbia is that all persons are enti-tied to full and complete information regarding the affairs of government and the official acts of those who represent them as public officials and employees. To that end, provisions of this chapter shall be construed with the view toward expansion of public access and the minimization of costs and time delays to persons Requiring information.
Accordingly, this court has held that “[t]he general policy underlying the D.C. FOIA favors disclosure of information about governmental affairs and the acts of public officials, including a narrow reading of exemptions from disclosure.”
Dunhill v. Director, District of Columbia Dep’t of Transportation,
The FOIA’s right of access to public records is set forth in section l-1522(a) which provides that “Any person has a right to inspect, and at his or her discretion to copy, any public record of the Mayor or an agency, except as otherwise expressly provided by § 1-1524_” Section 1-1524 enumerates the exemptions from the general disclosure mandate. Exemption 6 exempts:
(6) Information specifically exempted from disclosure by statute (other than this section), provided that such statute:
(A) Requires that the matters be withheld from the public in such a manner as to leave no discretion on the issue; or
(B) Establishes particular criteria for withholding or refers to particular types of matters to be withheld.
D.C.Code § l-1524(a)(6) (emphasis added).
Whether the MPD was required to release Senator Kasten’s arrest records to appellants under the FOIA or properly withheld disclosure of the records under the Duncan Ordinance depends on whether the Duncan Ordinancе, as promulgated by the Board of Commissioners, is a “statute” under FOIA Exemption 6. Thus we must decide whether the Board of Commissioners was vested with legislative authority that included the power to enact statutes, and this involves consideration of both the nature of the Commissioners’ delegated authority and the intent of the D.C. Council when it enacted Exemption 6.
A.
Between 1800 and 1871, the government in the District of Columbia was “ ‘strictly municipal in its character.’ ”
Filippo v. Real Estate Comm’n of the District of Columbia,
The necessary operation of these provisions of the statutes [of 1874 and 1878] is to cause the District commissioners to be merely administrative officers with ministerial powers only. The sum of the municipal powers of the District of Columbia are neither vested in nor exercised by the District commissioners. They are, on the contrary, vested in the Congress of the United States, acting pro hac vice as the legislative body of the District, and the commissioners of the District discharge the functions of administrative officials.
District of Columbia v. Bailey,
However, in 1892, pursuant to its power to delegate its legislative authority,
District of Columbia v. John R. Thompson Co.,
Determining the precise scope of the legislative authority delegated to the Board of Commissioners is not without difficulty, however. This arises from the very uniqueness of the District of Columbia within our governmental system.
11
See Filippo, supra,
The Court in
Thompson
also made clear, however, that even with the substantial delegation of police power by Congress to the Board of Commissioners in 1892, the Board of Commissioners’ legislative authority was not as broad as that which Congress had delegated to the Legislative Assembly. There is language in
Thompson
which refers to the 1892 Act as delegating to the Board of Commissioners authority to repeal laws enacted by the Legislative Assembly.
Thompson, supra,
Nor do decisions by the courts of the District of Columbia suggest that the Board of Commissioners had legislative authority in the nature of the statutory аuthority of a state legislature. Indeed, numerous decisions by our courts have held that “[t]he legislative authority of the [Board of] Commissioners was limited to the enactment of ‘reasonable and usual police regulations.’"
Newsweek Magazine v. District of Columbia Comm'n on Human Rights,
Of particular significance in this murky area is the fact that the D.C. Council itself has acknowledged a distinction betweеn the regulatory powers of the pre-Home Rule Council and its post-Home Rule statutory
Particularly relevant here as well, the Home Rule Council also saw fit to reenact as a D.C. statute certain discrete provisions of the Duncan Ordinance pertaining to juvenile arrest records. See D.C.Code §§ 16-2331 through 16-2336 (D.C.Law 2-22, effective September 23, 1977). Although these statutes provide nondisclosure rules similar to those contained in the Duncan Ordinance, the statutory provisions are more comprehensive, listing numerous nondisclosure exceptions, see D.C.Code § 16-2333 and providing criminal sanctions for their violation. See id. § 16-2336; cf. 1 DCMR § 10-1000.1-1000.3. Consequently, it is clear that the Council was not only awаre of the distinction between its regulatory and statutory authority, but chose to exercise its statutory power to codify certain pre-Home Rule regulations in instances where the Council deemed it appropriate to do so.
Given this recognition by the Council which enacted the FOIA, it logically follows that the Home Rule Council would not view an ordinance promulgated by the Board of Commissioners as a statute for the purposes of Exemption 6. Rather, statutory authority remained, since 1874 and until the enactment of the Home Rule Act in 1973, with the Congress, and such delegated powers as it vested in the Board of Commissioners (and by Presidential Reorganization authority in the D.C. Council established in 1967) were no more than the regulatory powers of a municipality as distinct from the statutory powers of a statе legislature.
15
This is not to suggest that the regulatory powers of the Board of Commissioners were insignificant.
See, e.g., Chewning, supra
note 11,
B.
The FOIA’s legislative history also does not suggest that the Council viewed the Duncan Ordinance as a statute falling within Exemption 6 or that the Council intended to use the term “statute” in Exemption 6 in a manner inconsistent with its ordinary meaning. 17
The FOIA was one of mаny bills considered by the Council soon after the Home Rule Act, supra note 13, became effective. At the time the Council began its consideration of Bill No. 1-119, the “D.C. Freedom of Information Act of 1975,” requests for information from the District Government were governed by Commissioner’s Order No. 71-370 (Nov. 2, 1971). 18 This order, which was first promulgated by then Commissioner Walter E. Washington, and was later replaced by a substantially similar Mayor’s Order No. 76-109 (May 4, 1976) promulgated by then Mayor Washington, contained a general provision mandating disclosure, subject to a number of exceptions, including an exception for “records specifically exempted from disclosure by law.” Freedom of Information, supra note 18, at 43, 45.
Bill No. 1-119 was introduced in the Council on June 10, 1975, in response to a number of compliance and enforcement problems that the Council perceived under the Commissioner’s Order. Id. at 26. The bill as first introduced contained a general mandate of disclosure subject to only three exemptions: (1) trade secrets, (2) disclosures of a personal nature that would amount to a clearly unwarranted invasion of privacy, and (3) law enforcement records in six designated circumstances. Id. at Ills. Conspicuously absent from the proposed bill was any exemption from disclosure for “records specifically exempted from disclosure by law” similar to that appearing in the Commissioner’s Order or the federal Freedom of Information Act, 5 U.S.C. § 552 et seq.
In the course of its deliberations, the Council received comments and suggested amendments to Bill No. 1-119 from the Corporation Counsel and a number of interested groups and individuals. In testimony before the Council’s Judiciary and Criminal Law Committee, William A. Robinson, As
certain reservations with respect to the bill’s provisions ... because the bill fails to include many of the significant exemptions provided in the Federal Freedom of Information Act and in Commissioner’s Order 71-730....
Freedom of Information, supra note 18, at 54, 89. Accordingly, he advocated the adoption of an exemption like that contained in Commissioner’s Order No. 71-370 for “records specifically exempted from disclosure from law” and observed that under the bill as introduced, juvenile arrest records would no longer be exempt from disclosure. Id. Mr. Robinson further suggested:
It could serve a very useful purpose to the District if the present bill were modeled more closely after the Federal provisions gоverning freedom of information. Many courts have already construed the provisions of the Federal Act and thereby given a clarifying definition of its requirements. Such court precedents would serve as a useful guide in interpreting and construing such an act if it were adopted for the District.
Id.
The Council also received testimony from representatives of the American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU) who suggested two additional exceptions to disclosure which would reinforce the personal privacy of citizens. Noting “a tendency on the part of law enforcement agencies to erode the privacy guaranteed by [the Duncan Ordinance],” the ACLU advocated that the bill be amended “to make explicit the fact that privacy of arrest records under the Duncan Ordinance or any future modifiсation of the ordinance will not be altered as a result of the D.C. FOIA.” Freedom of Information, supra note 18, at 81. 19 The District of Columbia Bar Committee on Access to Government Information also noted that the federal Freedom of Information Act contained exemptions from disclosure not found in Bill No. 1-119. In contrast to the ACLU and the Corporation Counsel, however, the Bar Committee urged that “all legitimate interests in confidentiality are already protected by the specific exceptions from mandatory disclosure [in Bill No. 1-119], and so an exception allowing withholding under other statutes is unnecessary.” Id. at 103.
The Council in addition had before it a legal memorandum, prepared by the Legislative Research Center of the Georgetown University Law Center, which contained a comparative analysis of the proposed bill, the fedеral Freedom of Information Act and Commissioner’s Order No. 71-370. Id. at 171 et seq. After noting that the proposed bill lacked any provision addressing records exempted from disclosure by law, id. at 163, the memorandum stated, “If the Council intends that this bill would govern only the release of information not otherwise covered by law, then an exemption for materials otherwise exempted by statute should be included.” Id. at 198.
On September 1, 1976, the Council Committee on the Judiciary and Criminal Law reported a revised bill.
Freedom of Information, supra
note 18, at 19, 25. Among other changes, Bill No. 1-119 had been revised to include an exemption for “[(Information specifically exempted from disclosure by statute.”
Id.
at 21. The committee explained that “[t]he only exemptions from disclosure on which the Mayor’s Order and Bill No. 1-119 are in alignment are the exemptions for unwarranted invasion of рersonal privacy and for information exempt by statute.”
Id.
at 32. Noting that the amended bill incorporated most of the suggestions made by the Cor
Prior to passage, Bill No. 1-119 was revised one final time to incorporate changes to the federal Freedom of Information Act passed by Congress during the Council’s consideration of the pending FOIA bill. In the Council’s debate on Bill No. 1-119 on October 12, 1976, Councilmember David Clarke, Chairperson of the Committee on the Judiciary and Criminal Law, explained the revision to Exemption 6:
That provision exempts from the disclosure requirement of the Bill information specifically by statute. In the federal experience this was the original language. It is from the original federal Freedom of Information Act that they found that it was interpreted too broadly by the Supreme Court of the United States. It is after the Supreme Court of the United States [interpreted] this exemption as broadly exempt[ing] material from disclosure that the Congress of the United States passed, with respect to the federal law, an amendment very similar to the one that I am proрosing before this Council today.
The Executive Branch has indicated that if we are to have a Freedom of Information Act, it would be good for it to parallel with that so it would provide some basis of construction around it.
In that sphere and in order to have our laws as effective to [sic] the District of Columbia citizens as the federal law is for the national statutes which exempts disclosures^ our bill] must require that such matters be withheld from the public in such a manner as to leave no discretion on the issue, or establishes [sic] particular criteria for withholding or refers [sic] to particular types of matters to be withheld.
Freedom of Information, swpra note 18, at 65. The Council voted to adopt the revised version of Exemption 6 and the FOIA took effect, in its current form, on March 29, 1977. Id. at 72.
Thus, the FOIA’s legislative history does not suggest, as the MPD urges, that the Counсil specifically contemplated that the Duncan Ordinance was a statute within the meaning of Exemption 6. Rather, the history is clear that the Council adopted Exemption 6 to address the initial bill’s failure to include an exemption similar to that appearing in the Commissioner’s Order or the federal Freedom of Information Act. Although the representative from the ACLU specifically mentioned the Duncan Ordinance in his testimony, he was the only witness to do so; at no point in the legislative history does the Council refer to the ACLU’s testimony or to the Duncan Ordinance. By contrast, the Corporation Counsel, the Legislative Research Center of the Georgetown University Law Center, and several other witnesses expressly urged the Council to correct the deficiency in the initial bill, and the Council respondеd by doing just that.
The legislative history similarly reveals no indication that the Council intended to use the term “statute” in Exemption 6 in a manner inconsistent with its ordinary meaning. Indeed, in contrast to Exemption 6’s language exempting “[information specifically exempted from disclosure by
statute,”
Exemption 7, which protects information classified by a presidential executive order, provides an exemption for “[information specifically authorized by federal law_” (Emphasis added.) It is thus apparent that the Council distinguished between the use of the terms “statute” and “law” in Exemptions 6 and 7 to account for differing circumstances: the law referred to in Exemption 7 is an executive order which, like the Duncan Ordinance, has the full force and effect of law but is not a statute. Therefore, we find no persuasive reason for construing the word “statute” in
Accordingly, we hold on the basis of the plain language of the FOIA, its pro-disclosure mandate, its legislative history and the Home Rule Council’s recognition of the limited nature of the Board of Commissioners’ legislative authority that the Duncan Ordinance is not a statute within the meaning of FOIA § l-1524(a)(6). Although the Duncan Ordinance continues to have the full force and effect of law,
Spock v. District of Columbia,
Notes
. Senator Kasten was voluntarily dismissed from the case prior to the granting of summary judgmеnt and is not a party to this appeal. See note 3, infra.
. In accordance with an agreement with Senator Kasten, the Corporation Counsel entered a nolle prosequi to the charge after Senator Kas-ten successfully completed a counseling program pursuant to a first offender pre-trial diversion program for persons charged with driving while intoxicated per se. D.C.Code § 40 — 716(b)( 1) (1981 & 1987 Supp.); see 111 Daily Wash.L.Rptr. 1965 (Oct. 12, 1983) (pub-Iishing guidelines for Pre-trial Diversion Program).
. Senator Kasten sent a letter dated June 23, 1986, to the Sentinel in which he stated, “I have no objection to the release of this information and have no intentions of interfering with the disposition of the lawsuit.”
.The entire focus of oral argument, and the sole basis for the grant of summary judgment, was whether the Duncan Ordinance was a statute within the meaning of FOIA Exemption 6. On the record before us, it appears that the motions judge, having based his decision exclusively on the Duncan Ordinance, did not reach a number of other arguments that were raised in the parties’ motions for summary judgment. For example, appellees contended in their motion for summary judgment that the prosecutor’s Hies, which appellants originally had sought in addition to Senator Kasten’s arrest records, were exempt from disclosure. They also contended that the arrest records were exempt from disclosure under FOIA Exemption 2, D.C.Code § l-1524(a)(2), which exempts “[¡Information of a personal nature where the public disclosure thereof would constitute a clearly unwarranted invasion of personal privacy.” For their part, appellants contended in their motion for summary judgment that FOIA Exemption 3 (C), D.C.Code § 1-1524(a)(3)(C), which exempts from disclosure “Investigatory records compiled for law enforcement purpose's, but only to the extent that the production of such records would: ... (C) Constitute an unwarranted invasion of personal privacy,” would not provide an alternative ground for withholding Senator Kasten’s arrest records. Since these issues were not decided by the motions judge and are not pursued on appeal, we do not reach them.
. The original Duncan Report rules appear as an appendix to
Morrow v. District of Columbia,
. The Duncan Ordinance pertains only to the dissemination of the MPD’s "central criminal records,” which document in a more complete fashion the progress of the prosecution of the MPD’s arrestees. These records are maintained at the MPD’s central police flies and are arranged in alphabetical order. D.C.Code § 4-132 (1981);
Morrow, supra
note 5,
. Section 1004.5 contains an exception, not relevant here, permitting the release of records more than 10 years old if the offender was incarcerated for any part of the preceding 10-year period.
. See note 3, supra. Appellees argued, in their motion for summary judgment, that Senator Kasten’s waiver was incomplete and unknowing. We do not reach this issue. See note 4, supra.
.The first step in construing any statutory provision is to examine the language of the statute to interpret its words according to their plain and ordinary meaning.
United States v. Bailey,
. "The Commissioners of the District of Columbia are authorized and empowered to make and enforce all such reasonable and usual police regulations ... as they may deem necessary for the protection of lives, limbs, health, comfort and quiet of all persons and the protection of all property within the District of Columbia.”
. Indeed, it is the uniqueness of the District of Columbiа within our governmental system that distinguishes the instant case from those decisions that discuss the differences between municipal regulations and state legislative enactments in terms of statewide applicability,
see, e.g., Gonzalez v. Automatic Employees Credit Union,
. In many respeсts the District is more akin to a state than to a municipality. The District is a unique entity in that it exercises "a great variety of governmental functions, including not only those which are commonly exercised by cities but others ... which are commonly exercised by states."
Firemen’s Ins. Co. v. Washington, supra,
. The Home Rule Council is officially denominated the Council of the District of Columbia, D.C.Code § l-222(a), as distinguished from the District of Columbia Council established under Reorganization Plan No. 3 of 1967, § 201(a), 1 D.C.Code 130 (1981).
. Pub.L. No. 93-198, 87 Stat. 774 (Dec. 24, 1973); D.C.Code § 1-175 (1987 Repl.Vol.) (Home Rule Act).
.Under the Home Rule Act, the D.C. Council’s legislative authority is not the same as that of a state legislature since no Council enactment, except temporary emergency laws, becomes effective until the expiration of a Congressional layover period. D.C.Code §§ l-201(a), 1-206, 1-229(a), 1-233(c)(1), (c)(2);
see Gary
v.
United States,
. Our conclusion that the Board of Commissioners did not possess statutory powers renders the cases cited by the MPD,
e.g., Fund for Constitutional Government v. National Archives & Records Service,
. Whilе our starting point in construing a statutory provision is the language itself, our primary goal is to ascertain and give effect to the intent of the legislative body that drafted the language.
Rosenberg v. United States,
.The legislative history of the FOIA is published in one volume. See Subcomm. on Administrative Practice & Procedure of the Senate Comm, on Judiciary, 95th Cong., 2d Sess., Freedom of Information: A Compilation of State Laws (Comm.Print 1978) (Freedom of Information ).
. A representative from Common Cause, a public interest group, also noted that "[m]ost freedom of information laws contain an exemption for records deemed confidential by other statutes” and that "[t]he Committee may want to consider adding this exemption." The Committee also heard testimony from representatives of the D.C. Public Interest Research Group, the Apartment and Office Building Association, the Capitol Hill Restoration Society, the Chesapeake & Potomac Telephone Company, the Jewish Community Council of Greater Washington and a private citizen.
. The MPD has misconceived the issue in the case by framing it in terms of whether the Council implicitly repealed the Duncan Ordinance when it enacted the FOIA. Although the Duncan Ordinance is not a statute within the meaning of Exemption 6, the ordinance continues to have vitality outside the arena of the FOIA. The Duncan Ordinance will continue to restrict the government's use and dissemination of arrest records, ensuring that such records are released only for legitimate law enforcement purposes, and will protect against the routine dissemination of arrest records for non-law enforcement purposes,
e.g,,
employment applications, licensing agencies, and credit institutions.
See Morrow, supra
note 5,
