OPINION BY
This matter is on remand from the Pennsylvania Supreme Court. The issue to be addressed is whether unfunded state program applications are publiс records subject to disclosure pursuant to the law known as the Right to Know Act (Act), Act of June 21, 1957, P.L. 390, as amended, 65 P.S. §§ 66.1-66.4. We conclude they are not and affirm the decision of the agency.
Pursuant to the Act, the Tribune-Review Publishing Company and WPXI (the Tribune-Review) requested that the Department of Community and Economic Development (DCED) disclose the “denied: applications for state-funded grants under the Community Revitalization Program.”
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DCED declined to disclose the applications because “they had not been approved and reduced to executed contracts” (hereinaftеr referred to as “unfunded applications”) and in the opinion of DCED were then not public records subject to disclosure under the Act. DCED’s disclоsure denial letter was appealed to this Court. Upon initial consideration, this Court concluded that all applications for funds under the Program are essential components to the Department’s decision as to which applicants are to receive grants undеr the Program; therefore, the applications constitute public records under the Act. The Supreme Court disagreed; reversed the оpinion of this Court, and remanded the case back to this Court for our consideration in light of the Supreme Court’s decision in
LaValle v. Office of General Counsel,
In
LaValle,
Mr. Justice Saylor enunciated the principle that predeeisional, internal, deliberative aspects of agency decision making are not within the definitiоnal scope of the term “public record” as contained in the Act since the mandatory disclosure of such information could have a chilling effect on the deliberative process of the agency.
Id.,
A public record is
Any ... contract dealing with the receipt or disbursement of funds by an agency ... and any minute, order or decision by an agency ... and any minute, order or decision by an agency fixing the personal or property rights, privilеges, immunities, duties or obligations of any person....
Section 1(2) of the Act, 65 P.S. § 66.1(2). Public records are accounts, vouchers, or contracts deаling with fiscal aspects of government and minutes, orders, or decisions fixing personal or property rights of a person or group of persons.
North Hills News Record v. Town of McCandless,
The deliberative process privilege protects from disclosure documents containing “confidential deliberations of law or policymaking, reflecting opinions, recommendations, or adviсe.”
Commonwealth ex rel. Unified Judicial System v.
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Vartan,
The deliberative process privilege applies to pre-decisional communications, which reflеct on legal or policy matters.
Id.; LaValle.
Thus, not subject to disclosure are staff reports used to determine the appropriateness of utility tariff changes,
Commonwealth v. Pennsylvania Public Utility Commission,
Herein, the Tribune-Review failed to sustain its burden of proving that the documents sought are public records. The Tribune-Review’s document request to DCED sought access to “unfunded grant applications (hereinafter unfunded applications) that have been acted upon — that is, that reflect an agency decision affecting property rights — are public documents under the Commonwealth’s Right to Know Law.” (Tribune-Review letter of August 10, 1999.) DCED produced no further documents asserting that the unfunded applications had not been acted upon, i.e., nоt reduced to executed contracts. The Tribune-Review produced no evidence or legal argument supporting its contention that unfunded applications are public records.
Moreover, unfunded grant applications reflect by definition, those applicаtions that the agency has not funded, which at most, are a reflection of the administrative machinations that move grant applicatiоns to either the “funded folder” or to the “unfunded folder.” The mere fact that the grant application has not been reduced to an executed contract does not compel the conclusion that the application has been acted upon; in fact, it strongly suggеsts that nothing has yet been decided. Absent a showing that an agency has acted upon the applications, i.e., done more than merely characterize, we conclude that the mere characterization of grant applications as “unfunded” reflects the deliberаtive process and as such the documents are not subject to disclosure. Additionally, there is no evidence of record that the documents sought formed either the basis for, or a condition precedent of, the decision to fund grant applications; Therefore, the documents are not essential components of an agency decision, 3 and are not subject to disclosure. Once the appliсations are acted upon, i.e., granted, the applications are public records subject to disclosure. LaValle.
Accordingly, we conclude that DCED had just cause to deny the Tribune-Review Publishing Company and WPXI access to unfunded Community Revitalization Program grant applications.
ORDER
AND NOW, this 3rd day of January 2003, the decision of the Department of Community and Economic Development denying the Tribune-Review Publishing Company and WPXI access tо unfunded *1265 Community Revitalization Program grant applications is affirmed.
Senior Judge JIULIANTE dissents.
Notes
. An extensive factual account is set forth in the opinion authored by Senior Judge Jiuli-
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ante found at
. Our review is limited to determining whether the denial of the request for information was for just and proper cause. LaValle.
.
Nittany Printing & Publishing Co., Inc. v. Centre County Board of Commissioners,
