Honorable Chuck Gross State Senator, District 23 State Capitol Building, Room 434 Jefferson City, MO 65101
Dear Senator Gross:
You have submitted a request to this office for an opinion in response to the following questions:
Can the St. Louis Post-Dispatch obtain a copy of the voter registration electronic media (CD-ROM) pursuant to their Chapter 610 RSMO request or may the Election Authority refuse under Chapter
115.157 , RSMo to provide such CD-ROM or copy and elect to give CD-ROM or paper access only in the office of the Election Authority?Pursuant to §
115.158 , should the Election Authority deny such request on the grounds it is for a "commercial purpose" in that the Post is not making the request for a story, but to build a database to check facts?
Section
The information described in Section
[E]lectronic media or printouts showing unique voter identification numbers, voters' names, dates of birth, addresses, townships or wards, and precincts [broken down into specified fields, and] . . . the names, dates of birth and addresses of voters, or any part thereof, within the jurisdiction of the election authority who voted in any specific election, including primary elections, by township, ward or precinct, provided that nothing in this chapter shall require such voter information to be released to the public over the Internet.
Section
Any information contained in any state or local voter registration system, limited to the master voter registration list or any other list generated from the information, subject to chapter 610, RSMo, shall not be used for commercial purposes; provided, however, that the information can be used for elections, for candidates, or for ballot measures, furnished at a reasonable fee. Violation of this section shall be a class B misdemeanor.
Both Section
In interpreting statutes, we ascertain the legislature's intent by considering the plain and ordinary meaning of the words in the statute.Cox v. Dir. of Revenue,
In this vein, the Sunshine Law states: "It is the public policy of this state that meetings, records, votes, actions, and deliberations of public governmental bodies be open to the public unless otherwise provided by law. Sections
We have reviewed a copy of the Post-Dispatch's written request for the voter registration database. It represents that neither the reporter making the request, nor her employers would use the information for a "commercial purpose." The letter represents that the Post-Dispatch intends to use the information "to check spellings on names, and double check ages, for example. The data would not be used for advertising purposes or solicitation."
Neither the facts presented in your opinion request, nor thePost-Dispatch's letter requesting the voter registration records indicate that the request is for information other than that described in Section
While there is no dispute that the Post-Dispatch is a for-profit enterprise, the courts frequently distinguish editorial functions from commercial functions. See, e.g., Litzinger v. Pulitzer Publ'g Co.,
The penalties for violation of Sections
Based on these considerations, we do not believe there is a basis for declining to provide the records requested by the Post-Dispatch in the circumstances identified in your opinion request.
Subsequent to your request, the Governor signed Conference Committee Substitute for Senate Substitute for Senate Committee Substitute for House Substitute for House Bill No. 511, 92nd General Assembly, First Regular Session (2003). House Bill 511, which took effect August 28, 2003, amends both Sections
For purposes of this section, "commercial purposes" means the use of a public record for the purpose of sale or resale or for the purpose of producing a document containing all or part of the copy, printout, or photograph for sale or the obtaining of names and addresses from public records for the purpose of solicitation or the sale of names and addresses to another for the purpose of solicitation or for any purpose in which the purchaser can reasonably anticipate the receipt of monetary gain from the direct or indirect use of the public record.
House Bill 511.
Our opinion does not change under this new language. ThePost-Dispatch has made a specific representation that it will not use voter registration data for "solicitation," and we believe that any theory that the Post will enjoy even an indirect monetary gain from increased circulation based on better fact-checking through the use of the data is speculative at best. Particularly in light of the requirement that exceptions to the Sunshine Law's policy of openness be strictly construed to promote openness, we do not understand the phrase "commercial purposes" to include "fact checking" of the editorial content of a newspaper.
Your request also appears to focus on whether an election authority may elect to provide access to the information described in Section
Very truly yours,
JEREMIAH W. (JAY) NIXON Attorney General
