Senate Bill No. 386
(By Senators Boley and Love)
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[Introduced January 31, 2007; referred to the Committee on the
Judiciary.]
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A BILL to amend and reenact §29B-1-4 of the Code of West Virginia,
1931, as amended, relating to exempting from public disclosure
specific engineering plans of public utility plants and
equipment.
Be it enacted by the Legislature of West Virginia:
That §29B-1-4 of the Code of West Virginia, 1931, as amended,
be amended and reenacted to read as follows:
ARTICLE 1. PUBLIC RECORDS.
§29B-1-4. Exemptions.
(a) The following categories of information are specifically
exempt from disclosure under the provisions of this article:
(1) Trade secrets, as used in this section, which may include,
but are not limited to, any formula, plan pattern, process, tool,
mechanism, compound, procedure, production data, or compilation of
information which is not patented which is known only to certain individuals within a commercial concern who are using it to
fabricate, produce or compound an article or trade or a service or
to locate minerals or other substances, having commercial value,
and which gives its users an opportunity to obtain business
advantage over competitors;
(2) Information of a personal nature such as that kept in a
personal, medical or similar file, if the public disclosure thereof
would constitute an unreasonable invasion of privacy, unless the
public interest by clear and convincing evidence requires
disclosure in the particular instance: Provided, That nothing in
this article shall be construed as precluding an individual from
inspecting or copying his or her own personal, medical or similar
file;
(3) Test questions, scoring keys and other examination data
used to administer a licensing examination, examination for
employment or academic examination;
(4) Records of law-enforcement agencies that deal with the
detection and investigation of crime and the internal records and
notations of such law-enforcement agencies which are maintained for
internal use in matters relating to law enforcement;
(5) Information specifically exempted from disclosure by
statute;
(6) Records, archives, documents or manuscripts describing the
location of undeveloped historic, prehistoric, archaeological, paleontological and battlefield sites or constituting gifts to any
public body upon which the donor has attached restrictions on usage
or the handling of which could irreparably damage such record,
archive, document or manuscript;
(7) Information contained in or related to examination,
operating or condition reports prepared by, or on behalf of, or for
the use of any agency responsible for the regulation or supervision
of financial institutions, except those reports which are by law
required to be published in newspapers;
(8) Internal memoranda or letters received or prepared by any
public body;
(9) Records assembled, prepared or maintained to prevent,
mitigate or respond to terrorist acts or the threat of terrorist
acts, the public disclosure of which threaten the public safety or
the public health;
(10) Those portions of records containing specific or unique
vulnerability assessments or specific or unique response plans,
data, databases, and inventories of goods or materials collected or
assembled to respond to terrorist acts; and communication codes or
deployment plans of law enforcement or emergency response
personnel;
(11) Specific intelligence information and specific
investigative records dealing with terrorist acts or the threat of
a terrorist act shared by and between federal and international law-enforcement agencies, state and local law enforcement and other
agencies within the Department of Military Affairs and Public
Safety;
(12) National security records classified under federal
executive order and not subject to public disclosure under federal
law that are shared by federal agencies, and other records related
to national security briefings to assist state and local government
with domestic preparedness for acts of terrorism;
(13) Computing, telecommunications and network security
records, passwords, security codes or programs used to respond to
or plan against acts of terrorism which may be the subject of a
terrorist act;
(14) Security or disaster recovery plans, risk assessments,
tests, or the results of those tests;
(15) Architectural or infrastructure designs, maps or other
records that show the location or layout of the facilities where
computing, telecommunications or network infrastructure used to
plan against or respond to terrorism are located or planned to be
located; and
(16) Codes for facility security systems; or codes for secure
applications for such facilities referred to in subdivision (15),
subsection (a) of this section; and
(17) Specific engineering plans and descriptions of public
utility plant and equipment used, or to be used, to serve the public.
(b) As used in subdivisions (9) through (16), subsection (a)
of this section, the term "terrorist act" means an act that is
likely to result in serious bodily injury or damage to property or
the environment and is intended to:
(1) Intimidate or coerce the civilian population;
(2) Influence the policy of a branch or level of government by
intimidation or coercion;
(3) Affect the conduct of a branch or level of government by
intimidation or coercion; or
(4) Retaliate against a branch or level of government for a
policy or conduct of the government.
(c) Nothing in the provisions of subdivisions (9) through
(16), subsection (a) of this section, should be construed to make
subject to the provisions of this chapter any evidence of an
immediate threat to public health or safety unrelated to a
terrorist act or the threat thereof which comes to the attention of
a public entity in the course of conducting a vulnerability
assessment response or similar activity.
NOTE: The purpose of this plant is to exempt from public
disclosure specific engineering plans of public utility plant and
equipment.
Strike-throughs indicate language that would be stricken from
the present law, and underscoring indicates new language that would
be added.