The University of Texas at Austin and Jay Hartzell, in His Official Capacity as Interim President of the University of Texas at Austin, Petitioners, v. GateHouse Media Texas Holdings II, Inc., d/b/a Austin American-Statesman, Respondent
No. 23-0023
Supreme Court of Texas
December 31, 2024
Argued October 1, 2024
On Petition for Review from the Court of Appeals for the Eighth District of Texas
CHIEF JUSTICE HECHT delivered the opinion of the Court.
In this case the federal Family Educational Rights and Privacy Act of 1974 (FERPA) and Texas’ Public Information Act (PIA) intersect. The Austin American-Statesman1 requested that the University of Texas at Austin disclose the final results of disciplinary hearings
involving sex offenses. The University refused to produce the information without requesting a decision of the Office of the Attorney General (OAG). We hold that the PIA authorized the University‘s refusal without an OAG opinion and, therefore, that the trial court should have granted the University‘s motion for summary judgment. We reverse the court of appeals’ judgment2 and render judgment for the University.
I
A
FERPA protects student privacy by conditioning the receipt of federal funds on an educational institution‘s compliance with certain requirements.3 As relevant here, the act prohibits federal funding of a university with “a policy or practice of permitting the release of education records” without the student‘s consent.4 “Education records” are broadly defined as “those records, files, documents, and other materials” that “contain information directly related to a student” and “are maintained by an educational agency or institution“.5 The term
includes disciplinary records,6 but the act makes exceptions to the general rule prohibiting their disclosure.
Nothing in this section shall be construed to prohibit an institution of postsecondary education from disclosing the final results of any disciplinary proceeding conducted by such institution against a student who is an alleged perpetrator of any crime of violence . . . or a nonforcible sex offense, if the institution determines as a result of that disciplinary proceeding that the student committed a violation of the institution‘s rules or policies with respect to such crime or offense.7
If an institution chooses to disclose the final results of a disciplinary proceeding in accordance with this exception, those results “shall include only the name of the student, the violation committed, and any sanction imposed by the institution on that student“.8 The results “may include the name of any other student, such as a victim or witness, only with the written consent of that other student.”9
B
1
Texas’ PIA reflects “the policy of this state” that the public “is entitled, unless otherwise expressly provided by law, at all times to complete information about the affairs of government and the official acts of public officials and employees.”10 The act states that it “shall be liberally construed in favor of granting a request for information.”11
Subchapter B provides the general rule of disclosure. Under
2
The PIA makes exceptions to the general rule of disclosure in
The PIA excepts other kinds of information from disclosure without making the information confidential.21 The Legislature has
given the governmental body discretion to disclose information in this category even though disclosure is not required.
3
Subchapter C includes an exception for student records in
”[t]his subsection does not prohibit the disclosure” of a student record if it “is authorized by [FERPA] or other federal law.”26
Subsection (c) clarifies that “[a] record covered by Subsection (b) shall be made available on the request of” three categories of people: “(1) educational institution personnel; (2) the student involved or the student‘s parent, legal guardian, or spouse; or (3) a person conducting a child abuse investigation” under the Family Code.27 Subsection (d), which we discuss below, addresses the institution‘s authority to “redact information covered under Subsection (b)“.28 Subsection (e) specifies that “[i]f an applicant for admission to an educational institution described by Subsection (b)“—or a parent or guardian of a minor applicant—“requests information in the record of the applicant, the educational institution shall disclose any information” related to the applicant‘s application that was provided
4
There is a hoop a governmental body potentially must jump through before withholding information as excepted from the general rule of disclosure. Under
general about whether the information is within that exception“.30 But it must do so only “if there has not been a previous determination about whether the information falls within one of the exceptions.”31 And there is at least one more caveat: under
When an OAG decision is required, the governmental body “must ask for the attorney general‘s decision and state the exceptions that apply within a reasonable time but not later than the 10th business day after the date of receiving the written request.”33 There are additional statutory requirements related to the governmental body‘s request for an OAG decision.34 Under
5
The PIA provides a mechanism to have a dispute over its provisions settled in court. In
II
A
On August 30, 2019, the executive editor of the Statesman emailed University President Gregory Fenves and Senior Vice President–Chief Financial Officer Darrell Bazzell a request for the “final results” of certain disciplinary hearings conducted by the University since 2014. Quoting FERPA
This is a request under the Texas Public Information Act
for disclosure of public records. It is made on behalf of the Austin American–Statesman newspaper and its parent company, GateHouse Media.
This request seeks “final results” of all disciplinary hearings conducted by your institution into any student since Jan. 1, 2014, in which it was determined that the student is either “an alleged perpetrator of a crime of violence,” including forcible sex offenses, or “an alleged perpetrator of a nonforcible sex offense,” and with respect to the allegation made against him or her, the student has committed a violation of your institution‘s rules or policies. The “final results” should include only:
- The name of the student;
- The violation committed, meaning the institutional rules or code sections that were violated and any essential findings supporting the institution‘s conclusion that the violation was committed; and
- Any sanction imposed by your institution against the student, meaning a description of the disciplinary action taken by the institution, the date of its imposition, and its duration.
Disclosure of these records furthers the public interest and is important for our newsgathering. As such, we request that they be made available promptly . . ..
More than two weeks later, on September 16, 2019, the University‘s open records coordinator responded by email that FERPA does not require disclosure of the records requested and that the University was declining to provide them:
This email is provided in final response to your below request to The University of Texas at Austin. The Family Educational Rights and Privacy Act of 1974 (FERPA),
20 U.S.C. § 1232g , does not require The University to disclose any student information that is responsive to your request, and we decline to do so. Thank you.
The University did not request an OAG decision before responding.38
B
The Statesman sued the University under
The Statesman filed a motion for attorney fees under PIA
A divided court of appeals affirmed the part of the judgment requiring the University to produce the requested information.40 The majority held that under
establish a “compelling reason” for withholding the requested information in the face of its failure to request an OAG decision.41 This holding was based on its conclusion that
The majority went on to hold that the trial court abused its discretion by denying the Statesman‘s request for attorney fees, reversed that part of the trial court‘s judgment, and remanded.46 The only reference to
requirement.”47 The majority did not analyze the section‘s applicability to this case.
Justice Alley dissented. He recognized that “the PIA contains two sections addressing the confidentiality of student records,”
Justice Alley pointed to the language in
Turning to
excepted from the requirements of
Justice Alley characterized the second sentence of subsection (b) as “a catch-all provision . . . that mimics the permissive language used in FERPA for information requested by other individuals or entities not in the above list.”54 Noting its “does not prohibit” language, he reasoned that just as FERPA authorizes but does not require the release of final-results information, “section 552.114(b) also simply gives an educational institution the discretion to release final-results information in redacted form.”55 He added:
Had the legislature intended to require the release of such information, it knew how to do so, as it used mandatory language when requiring the release of information to certain specified categories of requestors, and it could have easily included a section requiring the mandatory release of final-results information as well, but chose not to.56
Justice Alley went on to consider whether the University was required to seek an OAG decision. He opined that it was not because OAG has previously determined “that an OAG decision is unnecessary
when an educational institution decides to withhold educational records protected by FERPA.”57 We granted the University‘s petition for review.
III
We start by examining whether the PIA requires the University to disclose the final-results records requested by the Statesman. The parties have focused their arguments on
We need not determine the exact meaning of
framework of the PIA includes
context and framework of the entire statute, in order to meld its words into a cohesive reflection of legislative intent.” (cleaned up)).
The Statesman argues that “except in conformity with” means “except where release is allowed by FERPA“, so
Finally, and echoing the court of appeals’ majority, the Statesman argues that the PIA‘s “general purpose” and its opening statement that the act should be “liberally construed in favor of granting a request for
information”63 require the interpretation it urges. We disagree. Neither the PIA‘s purpose nor its directive that the act be liberally construed in favor of disclosure overcomes the courts’ obligation to construe statutory text by its plain language.64
We hold that
IV
The remaining issue is whether disclosure is nonetheless required because the University did not timely seek an OAG decision under
There are other statutory clues that an OAG decision is not required here. If
before withholding documents under
The Statesman responds that the dictionary definition of “redact”67 and the statute‘s inclusion of the words “from information disclosed under
U.S. Department of Education to OAG, the Department communicated that “FERPA does not permit an educational agency or institution in Texas to disclose, without parental consent, education records to the OAG for the purpose of determining whether it has complied with the PIA or whether it has redacted more than is necessary under FERPA.”70 Since receiving that letter, OAG has refused to review education records submitted under
The University ultimately requested an OAG decision in March 2020, while litigation in the trial court was ongoing. OAG responded that, in accordance with the Department‘s 2006 letter, it would not review unredacted education records—or even redacted education records to determine whether the redactions comply with FERPA—and that it would “not address your argument under [S]ection 552.114 of the Government Code.” OAG continued: “Because the DOE has determined that educational agencies and institutions are in the best position to make determinations under FERPA, such agencies and institutions may withhold from public disclosure personally identifiable information in education records without the necessity of requesting an attorney general decision.” This letter is consistent with OAG‘s Public Information Handbook, which explains that “the attorney general will not address the applicability of FERPA to any records submitted as part of a request for decision. Such determinations under FERPA must be
made by the educational authority in possession of the education records.”71
We hold that the University was not required to seek an OAG decision before withholding the information requested by the Statesman.72
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The University established its entitlement to judgment as a matter of law. We reverse the court of appeals’ judgment and render judgment for the University.
Nathan L. Hecht
Chief Justice
OPINION DELIVERED: December 31, 2024
