The American Federation of Government Employees (the Union), representing some civilian employees at Scott Air Force Base, wants the home addresses of non-members so it can communicate with them — to induce them to join or to learn their desires so it can better represent them whether they join or not. The Air Force offered to distribute the Union’s messages to each employee’s desk in sealed envelopes, and an administrative law judge concluded that this would afford satisfactory access. The Federal Labor Relations Authority disagreed, applying a rule it announced in
Farmers Home Administration Finance Office, St. Louis, Missouri,
Section 7114(b)(4) requires a federal employer to furnish a union with “data” that are “reasonably available and necessary
The FLRA concluded that access to home addresses is “necessary” because the delivery of union materials to employees at work may expose them to pressure. If they read the information on the spot, they may be accused of neglect of duty or subject to inquiry by supervisors; if they take it home unopened or throw it away, this may raise the eyebrows of fellow employees who fear they possess insufficient sympathy for the common cause. Although delivery at work might be sufficient at some times and places — as the AD found it would be at Scott Air Force Base — the Authority feared that the task of drawing lines case by case would be time consuming and imprecise. The employer could drag out the decision for years, and in the end the decision would not necessarily be accurate. Only a presumptive rule, the Authority thought, had reasonable prospect of effective, expeditious administration. The Authority relied both on the “routine use” exemption to the Privacy Act and on its interpretation of exemption 6 to the FOIA in concluding that disclosure was not prohibited by law. It allowed that “[disclosure need not be made in situations where, for example, the evidence discloses that a union has acted in a manner which leads to the conclusion that the employees whose addresses would be disclosed would be in imminent danger if the union knew where they lived” (
The Department of Justice, representing the Air Force and governmental employers in approximately 100 similar cases pending throughout the country, attacks FHAFO at every point. Disclosure is not necessary because of alternative means of communication; at the least there should be case by case decisions on the “necessity” question; if disclosure is necessary to something, that something is not the “collective bargaining” defined by 5 U.S.C. § 7103(a)(12); the routine use notice on which the FLRA relies refers the agency to FOIA principles and so is not really “routine”; and exemption 6 to the FOIA itself, the Department submits, treats the release of home addresses as unwarranted invasions of personal privacy.
Two courts have addressed one or more of these issues.
AFGE, Local 1760 v. FLRA,
We agree with the Second Circuit and therefore enforce the FLRA’s order without reaching the issues under § 7103(a)(12), § 7114(b)(4), and the routine use exemption to the Privacy Act. Because most arguments pro and con have been ventilated in published opinions and scholarly writings— e.g., Anthony T. Kronman, The Privacy Exemption to the Freedom of Information Act, 9 J. Legal Studies 727, 741-48 (1980) (criticizing Wine Hobby) —we set out an outline of our reasons.
Exemption 6 permits the government to withhold information that would create a “clearly unwarranted invasion of personal privacy”. The FOIA’s status as a disclosure law has led the Supreme Court to read this with strong emphasis on “clearly unwarranted”.
Department of the Air Force v. Rose,
There are of course exceptions. Some people have unlisted numbers. Some people in the phone book would not be there if their names could be associated with their occupations. We doubt that operatives of the CIA, or even agents of the FBI or guards of federal prisons, want to reveal their home addresses to those who may have scores to settle. A request for the home addresses of prison guards might create the risk of a “clearly unwarranted” invasion of privacy. Felons might use the addresses to retaliate, though sellers of home security systems might use the addresses for beneficent purposes; the net effect is hard to evaluate. The FLRA said much the same thing when it reserved decision on the disclosure of home addresses to unions with unsavory reputations. So, too, we held in
Marzen v. Department of Health and Human Services,
Even a modest disclosure could be “clearly unwarranted” if there were no reason for it. Incurring a harm for no gain is “clearly unwarranted”. Thus
Rose
and other cases require courts to compare the benefits and detriments of disclosure. In
Wine Hobby
the court treated the benefit of disclosure as nil because the requestor, a magazine, simply wanted to ask the winemakers to subscribe. This commercial transaction was entitled to no status as a benefit, the court thought. The Air Force wants us to put the Union’s request in the same category. More, the Air Force observes that the Union has an alternative—
The disposition of Wine Hobby, like the Air Force’s request that we consider alternative methods open to the Union, invites attention to the requestor’s proposed use. Today’s requestor is turned down; another requestor, with a different use, or a higher cost of obtaining the data (or accomplishing its ends in other ways), might have its request granted. Each invites us, as well, to decide whether the use in question is good or bad, to approve the one yet condemn the other. For ourselves, we see no evil in proposing commercial transactions. Each party to a commercial transaction perceives himself to be better off, and sneering at these gains by adding “mere” to them does not make them go away. Perhaps there are reasons why the government should not compete with sellers of commercial mailing lists — if only because the agency’s inability to charge for the real costs of compiling the lists would make them uneconomically cheap and lead to over-use — but these have not been expressed in exemption 6.
At all events, none of these considerations is important. The FOIA says that “any person” may obtain information. 5 U.S.C. § 552(a)(3). Either all requestors have access, or none do. The special needs of one, or the lesser needs of another, do not matter.
FBI v. Abramson,
We do not believe that the phrase “public interest” as used in the balancing in Exemptions 6 and 7(C) of the Act, means anything more or less than the general disclosure policies of the statute. Since Congress gave us no standards against which to judge the public interest in disclosure, we do not believe Congress intended the federal judiciary — when applying only Exemptions 6 and 7(C) of the Act — to construct its own hierarchy of the public interest in disclosure of particular information____ [A court should balance interests only to] consider whether there is a cognizable privacy interest in the information sought, and then appraise the impairment to that interest that would result from disclosure.
The privacy interest at stake here is slight; so too is the impairment. There are legitimate uses for home addresses; the Union proposes one such use. It is accordingly irrelevant that unions may have an alternative in sending packets to workers at the office.
The Union would prevail in a suit under the FOIA, just as the Second Circuit concluded. It would be silly to hold the FLRA to a higher standard of “necessity” than the one prevailing in civil litigation. The unfair labor practice order therefore must be enforced. Having said this, we hope that the Air Force and the Union compose their dispute. Both should have the interests of the employees at heart, and some employees may dislike the Union’s knowing their home addresses. The parties did not propose, and the FLRA did not consider, a middle ground under which each employee would receive a form with a request to check off whether he would like to receive the Union’s mail at home or at the office (perhaps with the proviso that the Union would receive the home addresses of those who do not return the form). Such an alternative might protect everyone’s legitimate interests. Ours is not to
Enforced.
