MEMORANDUM OPINION
Plaintiff Ellen Smith filed a Freedom of Information Act request seeking Department of Labor documents related to a mining disaster. Deeming DOL’s response insufficient, she brought this FOIA suit challenging the Agency’s redaction of certain information. As this litigation has progressed, Defendants have made three supplemental releases, effectively narrowing the dispute to just 77 redacted lines on eight pages. Having now reviewed in camera all of the redactions, the Court finds no improper withholding and will thus grant Defendants’ Motion for Summary Judgment and deny Plaintiffs Cross-Motion.
I. Background
Plaintiff is the publisher of a newsletter,
Mine Safety and Health News,
that covers the mining industry. PI. Motion, Declaration of Ellen Smith, ¶ 1. In January 2009, she submitted a FOIA request to the Department of Labor to obtain a “copy of the Martin County Coal Corporation Accident investigation, given to the Assistant Secretary of Labor for Mine Safety and Health on or about Dec. 9, 2002 by the Office of the Inspector General.”
Id.,
¶ 10. This
DOL forwarded the request to OIG, which delegated it to FOIA officer Kimberly Pacheco. Def. Motion, Declaration of Kimberly Pacheco, ¶ 5. Pacheco reviewed agency files and determined that the Agency had already responded to several identical FOIA requests: one from Smith in 2003 and two from third parties in 2004. Id., ¶ 6. In response to these previous requests, DOL had released a two-page cover letter from the Inspector General to the Secretary of Labor, a two-page executive summary, and the 25-page investigative report that OIG had prepared in the course of responding to the accident. Id. Pacheco accordingly responded to Smith’s 2009 request by releasing the previously disclosed 29 pages, with some redactions on eаch page. Id., ¶¶ 7-8.
Plaintiff appealed these redactions to the Solicitor's Office in February 2009. Id., ¶ 9. Because of backlogged appeals, Plaintiffs case was reviewed in November 2009. Def. Motion, Declaration of William W. Thompson II, ¶¶ 6-7. Associate Solicitor for Management and Administrative Legal Services William W. Thompson II affirmed certain redactions, but released 24 of the 29 pages in fuller form. Id., ¶ 7.
Pacheco then recеived a subsequent FOIA request from Plaintiff on December 13, 2009. Pacheco Deck, ¶ 10. Plaintiff requested the table of contents of, and all exhibits appended to, the accident investigation report. Id. These documents, consisting of 205 pages, were located by an OIG special agent who worked on the investigation. Id. Pacheco reviewed the documents and determined that 106 pages required further review by the Mine Safety and Health Administrаtion (MSHA) because MSHA had generated the information they contained. Id., ¶ 11. On April 15, 2010, OIG released the remaining 99 pages with some redactions and explained that the additional 106 pages were being reviewed by MSHA. Id., ¶ 12.
Plaintiff appealed this response to the Solicitor’s Office in May 2010. Thompson Deck, ¶ 8. An additional release was made as a result: 18 redacted pages were released in fuller form. Id., ¶ 9. The Solicitor’s Office, however, аffirmed the redaction of names of OIG special agents, references to an individual’s career plans external to DOL, personal phone numbers, and identifying information of people who were subject to internal personnel discussions. Id., ¶ 13.
MSHA subsequently concluded its review of the documents sent to it. Def. Motion, Declaration of Lanesia Washington, ¶ 6. Portions of exhibits included in MSHA’s Draft Internal Review Report to OIG were compаred to exhibits included in the Final Report. Id. Some information included in the Draft Report, but not the Final Report, was redacted. Id. MSHA, though, disclosed all 106 pages, at least in some form. Washington Deck, Exh. C.
Plaintiff next filed suit in this Court on July 23, 2010, challenging Defendants’ redactions. During the course of the litigation, Defendants released more unredacted pages on three separate occasions. Prior to briefing, Plaintiff had received all 234 pages of the report and its exhibits, with redactions made to information on just 51 individual pages. During the course of briefing Cross-Motions for Summary Judgment, the dispute was narrowed even further. At present, only seven documents covering eight pages and containing 77 redacted lines remain in dispute.
See
PI. Motion at 2. On July 7, 2011, this Court ordered Defendants to produce the eight disputed pages for
in camera
review. Defendants produced those documents six days later, and the Court has sinсe re
II. Legal Standard
Summary judgment may be granted if “the movant shows that there is no genuine dispute as to any material fact and the movant is entitled to judgment as a matter of law.” Fed.R.Civ.P. 56(a);
see also Anderson v. Liberty Lobby, Inc.,
FOIA cases typically and appropriately are decided on motions for summary judgment.
Defenders of Wildlife v. U.S. Border Patrol,
III. Analysis
Plaintiff argues that the Agency erred in three respects. First, she claims that DOL failed to include a segregability analysis in its Vaughn index and that the Vaughn index itself is inadequate.
See Vaughn v. Rosen,
A. DOL’s Vaughn Index and Segregability
Plaintiff first argues that DOL’s submissions fail to specifically identify the reasons why a particular .exemption is relevant; in addition, they do not correlate such reasons with the particular part of the withheld document so as to permit Plaintiff and the Court to effectively evaluate the claimed exemptions. This contention, however, is belied by an examination of DOL’s submissions.
A proper Vaughn index provides a specific factual description of each document sought, including a general description of the document’s contents, and information about the date, time, and place of the document’s creation.
See Missouri Coal. for Env’t Found. v. U.S. Army Corps of Engineers,
In addition, the Agency’s Vaughn index describes the rationale for the exemptions invoked and provides the locations in the disclosed documents where redactions are made under those exemptions. In fact, at the actual sites of redaction, the number of the relevant exemption is provided. Indices such as this one have generally been accepted by courts as long as “[e]ach deletion [is] correlated specifically and unambiguously to the corresponding exemption ... [which] [is] adequately explained by functional categories ... [so as to] place[ ] each document into its historical and investigative perspective.”
Keys v. DOJ,
Plaintiff nevertheless points to several cases in arguing that DOL’s Vaughn index is inadequate because it fails to contain the requisite segregability analysis.
See, e.g., Isley v. EOUSA,
B. Exemption 5
Even if the Vaughn index is sufficient, Plaintiff argues that Defendants’ claimed exemptions are improper. She first targets DOL’s redactions under Ex
DOL justifies its invocation of Exemption 5 under the “Deliberative Process Privilege.”
See
Pacheco Decl., ¶ 17. “One of the traditional evidentiary privileges available to the Government in the civil discovery context is the common-sense, common-law deliberative process privilege.”
Jordan v. DOJ,
Two requirements must be met to permit valid invocation of this privilege. The communication to be withheld must be
predecisional
— i.e., “antecedent to the adoption of an agency policy,”
Jordan,
Associate Solicitor Thompson affirmed OIG’s application of Exemption 5 “to withhold internal agency discussion about a possible action to take, i.e., a proposed MSHA citation, which was different from the violations MSHA ultimately issued.” Pacheco Decl., ¶ 15. OIG redacted “MSHA employee’s [sic] thoughts, actions, opinions and ideas as the employees weighed and debated the application of a particular citation that MSHA ultimately decided not to issue.” Id., ¶ 17. As a result, DOL’s redactions clearly satisfy both of the requirements of the privilege. First, since the redacted portion of the report contains information about a citation that was considered but not issued, the subject matter is necessarily antecedent to the decision not to issue that citation. Plaintiffs contentions to the contrary — stating that the “OIG Report was published on December 9, 2002, well after the citations were issued,” PI. Motion at 13 — hold no water because the question is whеther the deliberation, not the publication of the report, preceded the citation. It obviously did.
Similarly, the information is deliberative. Deliberative material “reflects
C. Exemptions 6 and 7(C)
Plaintiff next argues that Defendants improperly redacted material under Exemptions 6 and 7(C). The privacy interest in Exemption 6 is narrowеr than in Exemption 7(C), so if the redactions satisfy the former, no examination of the latter is necessary. Exemption 6 protects redactions under the following criteria: first, the information must be contained within “personnel and medical files and similar files”; second, the disclosure of the information “would constitute a clearly unwarranted invasion of personal privacy”; and third, if the first two requirements are met, the privacy interest must be weighed against the public interest in disclosure.
See
5 U.S.C. § 552(b)(6);
see also Armstrong v. Executive Office of the President,
The
in camera
review demonstrates that the information that DOL seeks to withhold — including names of low-level MSHA employees, identifying information about individuals who were the subject of internal personal discussions, personal opinions of job performance, personal phone numbers, a home address, and a personal e-mail address — meets the “similar files” requirement.
2
In
United States Department of State v. Washington Post Co.,
All of the redactions here arе either personal or job-performance information. DOL’s Vaughn index, moreover, explains that the redactions were made under Exemptions 6 and 7(C) because they
Disclosure of the withheld information must also “constitute a clearly unwarranted invasion of personal privacy” in order to be exempt. The disclosure must compromise a substantial, as opposed to а
de minimis,
privacy interest.
See, e.g., Multi Ag Media LLC v. USDA,
Here, DOL claims that “[revealing this information could risk that the individuals would be the subject of unwarranted, unwelcome, and unexpected contacts by individuals and subject these individuals to embarrassment and jealousy from co-workers.” Vaughn Index, ¶ 5. “[A]n employee has at least a minimal privacy interest in his or her employmеnt history and job performance evaluations ... [and] [t]hat privacy interest arises in part from the presumed embarrassment or stigma wrought by negative disclosures.”
People for Ethical Treatment of Animals v. USDA
The Court agrees that failure to redact the information here would constitute an unwarranted invasion of employees’ personal privacy. The information redacted directly relates to performance appraisals and contains some negative evaluations. This is identical to what the preceding cases here kept private.
Having found that Defendants have satisfied the first two Exemption 6 requirements, the Court must now weigh the public interest in disclosure against the individuals’ privacy interests. The only valid public interest in the FOIA context is one that serves FOIA’s core purpose of shedding light on an agency’s performance of its statutory duties.
See DOJ v. Reporters Committee for Freedom of the Press,
Plaintiff argues that the public interest is great because it involves the propriety of a government investigation into a mining disaster. Yet she fails to satisfy her burden for two central reasons. First, Plaintiffs “evidence” consists only of unsubstantiated allegations of a government cover-up. Her supporting “statements” in the OIG report are, in actuality, only “allegations” and “suggestions” by others that were determined to be unfounded. Secоnd, the Court’s in camera review has demonstrated that the redacted material is entirely unrelated to the allegations Plaintiff makes. The public interest, therefore, does not outweigh the individuals’ privacy interests.
As the Agency’s redactions pursuant to Exemption 6 were valid, the Court need not consider Exemption 7(C).
IV. Conclusion
Because Defendants properly segregated redactions from releases made pursuant to Plaintiffs FOIA request, and those redactions were proper under Exemptions 5 and 6, the Court will grant Defendants’ Motion and deny Plaintiffs Motion. An Order consistent with this Opinion will issue today.
SO ORDERED.
Notes
. The Court has also reviewed Defendants' Motion, Plaintiff's Cross-Motion and Opposilion, Defendants’ Reply and Opposition, and Plaintiff’s Reply.
. Exhibit 48 contains information redacted in the privacy interest of Dr. Celeste Monforton, former Special Assistant for the Assistant Secretary for MSHA. Because Monforton has waived her privacy interest in this information, see Monforton Decl., this information was disclosed.
