On consideration of the Petition for Review filed on March 21, 2016, and the response filed on April 4, 2016,
IT IS ORDERED:
1. The Office of Children's Services (OCS) petitions for review from a December 2015 discovery оrder allowing the exchange of confidential records between Jane Doe and OCS and a February 2016 order to compel granting Jane Doe's request for disclosure of lаrgely unredacted OCS files likely to contain sensitive information regarding children and foster parents not party to 'these proceedings.
2. Jane Doe had been under OCS's legal сustody as a result of Child in Need of Aid proceedings, and OCS then placed her with a foster parent, Anya James, who later adopted her. In September 2014 Jane Doe sued OCS for negligently placing her with James, alleging that she and her adoptive siblings were "starved, tortured, and deprived of educational, health and social needs" while in James's care. Jane Doe sought support for her assertion that OCS had a pattern of negligence toward children in its custody by requesting disclosure of OCS's adoption records for other children рlaced in James's home, as well as OCS's foster parent and foster home records for "all other children place[d] with Anya James.
3. In December 2015 the superior court granted Jane Doе's request, ordering disclosure of the non-party records to "the parties, their counsel, employees of counsel legitimately involved in litigation, and witnesses," subject to some confidentiality agreements. In February 2016 the court affirmed its December 2015 grant of disclogure and entered an order compelling OCS's production without addressing OCS's inquiry whether in camerа review would be conducted before disclosure to protect non-party privacy interests.
4. The superior court is directed to revisit the portions of its discovery ordеr regarding OCS files on "any other children placed with Anya James" (other than the adoptive siblings) and on every foster parent with whom each of those children, as well as Jane Doe and her adoptive siblings, were placed.
5. In revisiting its order the superior court should engage in-and express its reasoning about-balancing between Jane Doe's interest in disсlosure of these files and the non-parties' privacy rights.
6. The superior court should also express its reasoning regarding the necessity of reviewing these files in camera, considering various factors including but not limited to: the relevancy of the voluminous disclosure; the potential of unnecessarily disclosing sensitive, non-party informatiоn;
7. This order resolves the petition for review.
Entered by direction of the court.
Notes
. Jane Doe argues the petition for review is untimely. Without déciding whether this petition was timely filed we note that Alaskа Appellate Rule 502(b) allows us to validate an untimely petition sua sponte; we deem the matter raised sufficiently important to consider on its merits, and because the December 2015 order and the February 2016 order are interrelated, we consul-er them both here.
. . Jane Doe's adoptive siblings, but no other non-parties, have consented to disclosure of their OCS files to Jane Doe.
. Redaction would be limited to personal information as defined in AS 45.48.010-.995 (Personal Information Protection Act). See AS 45.48.090(1)(B) (including governmental agenсies as "covered persons" required to comply 'with the Act), and (7) (defining "personal infor- © mation" as the individual's name in combination with one of the following: Social Security number; driver's license or state identification card number; account, credit card, or debit card number alone if no personal code is necessary to access the account; account or card number along with personal code if such code is necessary to access the account; or access codes for finаncial accounts). |
. See State v. Glass,
. See Doe,
. See Jones v. Jennings,
. See Falcon v. Alaska Pub. Offices Comm'n,
, Jones,
; See Doe,
. See Noffke,
, See Alaska R, Civ. P. 26(M)@)G@iH) (allowing court to limit discovery if "'the burden or expense of the proposed discovery outweighs its likely benefit").
