Hawaii 2024 Regular Session

Hawaii Senate Bill SB2686 Compare Versions

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1-THE SENATE S.B. NO. 2686 THIRTY-SECOND LEGISLATURE, 2024 S.D. 1 STATE OF HAWAII A BILL FOR AN ACT RELATING TO THE DISCLOSURE OF PERSONAL INFORMATION OF CERTAIN PUBLIC SERVANTS. BE IT ENACTED BY THE LEGISLATURE OF THE STATE OF HAWAII:
1+THE SENATE S.B. NO. 2686 THIRTY-SECOND LEGISLATURE, 2024 STATE OF HAWAII A BILL FOR AN ACT relating to the disclosure of personal information of certain public servants. BE IT ENACTED BY THE LEGISLATURE OF THE STATE OF HAWAII:
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47- SECTION 1. The legislature finds that across the country, elected state and local officials, judges, election officials, school board officials, and others in decision-making positions that directly impact the public or an individual and other high-profile government positions have experienced an alarming increase in acts of violence, or attempts to engage in acts of violence, at their personal residence or the residence of a family member. In the past three years, two government officials and the family member of another were killed at their home. Most recently, in October 2023, Maryland Judge Andrew Wilkinson was shot and killed in his driveway by a litigant in a case pending before him. Earlier in 2023, in February, New Jersey Councilwoman Eunice Dwumfour was shot and killed outside her home. In July 2020, U.S. District Court Judge Esther Salas' son, Daniel Anderl, was shot and killed in their family home in New Jersey by an attorney who had appeared before the judge. In October 2022, Paul Pelosi, Speaker of the House Nancy Pelosi's spouse, was brutally assaulted in the couple's home, resulting in hospitalization and surgery due to a skull fracture received during the altercation. In October 2020, the U.S. Federal Bureau of Investigation thwarted a group that was planning to kidnap the governor of Michigan, Gretchen Whitmer, and ultimately nine individuals were convicted or pled guilty in the prosecution that ensued. The legislature also finds that a 2021 study titled "On the Frontlines of Todays Cities: Trauma, Challenges and Solutions" by the National League of Cities found that eighty-one per cent of local public officials surveyed said they had experienced harassment, threats, or violence in recent years. In addition to having their safety and well-being threatened, the report found that harassment and violent behavior interrupted local officials' ability to do their jobs and led to the loss of institutional knowledge due to resignations. Other public servants, including local election officials, have also experienced increased threats and harassment. According to a Brennan Center for Justice April 2023 of over ten thousand local election officials across the country, thirty per cent reported being threatened, harassed, or abused. More than half reported that the threats were in person. Seventy-three per cent believed that threats against election officials have increased recently. The legislature also finds that data gathered by the federal and state courts illustrates that the trend of threats and inappropriate communications against public officials is increasing. Federal judges and other court personnel were the targets of more than four thousand five hundred threats and other inappropriate communications in 2021, according to the United States Marshals Service. This represents an increase of eighty-one per cent from the number of threats in fiscal year 2016, just five years prior, and a two hundred thirty three per cent increase in threats since fiscal year 2008. At the state level, the number of threats and other inappropriate communications to Hawaiʻi judges have increased tenfold since 2012. A recent Marshals Service audit found that federal judges' safety is at greater risk when they are away from the courthouse. This statement is borne out by incidents involving attacks against both federal and state judges at their residences, which have resulted in the deaths of or serious injuries to judges and their family members. In multiple cases, the attacker or would-be attacker used the Internet to access judges' personal information. The legislature notes that Act 46, Session Laws of Hawaii 2022 (Act 46), which established a judicial security task force, was passed in recognition of the need for additional measures to ensure the safety of judges in Hawaiʻi. The task force recommended that legislation to protect personal information be enacted. Accordingly, the purpose of this Act is to create the offense of unlawful publication of personal information that prohibits disclosures of personal information by a person or organization that intends to cause harass, disparage, or harm a public servant. This Act is not intended to restrain a public servant from independently making public their own personal information. SECTION 2. Chapter 711, Hawaii Revised Statutes, is amended by adding a new section to be appropriately designated and to read as follows: "§711- Unlawful publication of personal information. (a) No person or organization shall knowingly disclose or post protected personal information including but not limited to the home address or telephone number of any public official with the intent to cause reputational harm, emotional injury, or bodily injury that is likely to occur, or threatening to cause bodily injury to that individual. (b) A violation of this section is a misdemeanor; provided that a violation of this section that results in the actual reputational harm, emotional injury, or bodily injury of the public official or the public official's spouse or child, is a class C felony." SECTION 3. Chapter 801G, Hawaii Revised Statutes, is amended by adding a new section to be appropriately designated and to read as follows: "§801G- Publication and disclosure of public servants' personal information; restrictions. (a) Except as otherwise provided in subsection (d), upon receipt of a written request from a covered public servant, a person or organization shall not disclose or make publicly available content that includes the protected personal information of the covered public servant and their family. After a person or organization has received a written request, the person or organization shall: (1) Remove the protected personal information from the Internet within seventy-two hours; (2) Ensure that the protected personal information is not made available on any website or subsidiary website controlled by that person or organization; and (3) Not distribute, give, or transfer the protected personal information to any other person or organization through any medium. (b) A written request pursuant to this section shall be valid if the covered public servant or a representative of the covered public servant's employer submits a request in writing directly to a person or organization; provided that the covered public servant has given written consent to the representative. A written request shall specify what protected personal information shall be maintained as private. A written request is valid until the covered public servant provides the person or organization with written permission to release the protected personal information, or until the covered public servant's death. (c) If a person or organization violates this section, the covered public servant or family member whose protected personal information is made public as a result of the violation may bring an action seeking damages as well as injunctive or declaratory relief in any court of competent jurisdiction. If the court finds in the plaintiff's favor and or grants injunctive or declaratory relief, the person or organization responsible for the violation shall be required to pay the costs and reasonable attorney's fees of the covered public servant or their family. (d) This section shall not apply to: (1) Protected personal information that the covered public servant or family member voluntarily publishes on the Internet after the effective date of this chapter; (2) Records pertaining to property presumed abandoned pursuant to chapter 523A, the Uniform Unclaimed Property Act; (3) Information subject to disclosure pursuant to a court order; (4) Filings made pursuant to chapter 490, the Uniform Commercial Code, and recorded judgments; (5) Copies of recorded instruments affecting title to real property that contain protected personal information that are provided by the bureau of conveyances to a title insurance company that has requested to access the record in its ordinary course of business; and (6) Records a government agency provides to any other government entity pursuant to this chapter; provided that this paragraph shall not provide an exemption for persons or organization to disclosure information. (e) For purposes of this section: "Covered public servant" means: (1) The governor; (2) The lieutenant governor; (3) The state administrative director appointed pursuant to section 26-3; (4) Any head of a state department established under section 26-4; (5) Any member of the legislature; (6) Any active, formerly active, or retired: (A) Justice of the Hawaii supreme court; (B) Judge of the Hawaii intermediate court of appeals; (C) Judge of a Hawaii circuit court or circuit family court; (D) Judge of a Hawaii district court or district family court; or (E) Per diem judge of a Hawaii district court or district family court; (7) Any active, formerly active, or retired: (A) Justice of the United States Supreme Court; (B) Judge of the United States Court of Appeals; (C) Judge or magistrate judge of the United States District Court; or (D) Judge of the United States Bankruptcy Court, who resides in the State, formerly resided in the State while serving as a federal judge, or owns real property in the State; (8) The administrative director of the courts; (9) The deputy administrative director of the courts; (10) Any employee or volunteer of the office of elections; or (11) Any person designated for good cause by the governor, chief justice, chairperson of the office of Hawaiian affairs, president of the senate, or speaker of the house of representatives in the designator's respective body. "Disclose" means to sell, manufacture, give, provide, lend, trade, mail, deliver, transfer, post, publish, distribute, circulate, disseminate, present, exhibit, advertise, or offer by any means including but not limited to electronic transmission and on any medium including but not limited to the Internet. "Family" means spouses or reciprocal beneficiaries, former spouses or former reciprocal beneficiaries, persons who have a child in common, parents, children, persons related by consanguinity, persons jointly residing or formerly residing in the same dwelling unit, and persons who have or have had a dating relationship. "Government agency" means any department, division, board, commission, public corporation, or other agency or instrumentality of the State or any county. "Home" means a permanent residence and any secondary residences affirmatively identified by the covered public servant but does not include a work address or investment property. "Organization" means an association or entity including a charitable, religious, or nonprofit organization; for-profit organization; or business entity, formed for a specific purpose. "Protected personal information" includes a home address and any property ownership information; contact information including but not limited to a home telephone number, cellular phone number, and direct telephone number to a covered person's private office or chambers; personal email address; directions to the covered public servant's or a family members' home; photograph of a covered public servant's or a family members' home that legibly displays the address or otherwise identifies the location; photograph of a covered public servant's or family member's vehicle that legibly displays the vehicle license plate number; the names and locations of schools and day care facilities attended by the children of the covered public servant; identity of children of the covered public servant that are under the age of eighteen; voter registration information; the contents of any application for absentee voter's ballots; property tax records; and the name and address of the employer of any family member. "Publicly available content" means any written, printed, or electronic document or record that provides information or that serves as a document or record maintained, controlled, or in the possession of a government agency that may be obtained by any person or entity, from the Internet, from the government agency upon request either free of charge or for a fee, or in response to a request pursuant to chapter 92F. "Post or display" means to communicate to another or to otherwise make available to the general public." SECTION 4. If any provision of this Act, or the application thereof to any person or circumstance, is held invalid, the invalidity does not affect other provisions or applications of the Act that can be given effect without the invalid provision or application, and to this end the provisions of this Act are severable. SECTION 5. This Act does not affect rights and duties that matured, penalties that were incurred, and proceedings that were begun before its effective date. SECTION 6. New statutory material is underscored. SECTION 7. This Act shall take effect on September 1, 2024.
47+ SECTION 1. The legislature finds that across the country, elected state and local officials, judges, election officials, school board officials, and others in decision-making positions that directly impact the public or an individual and other high-profile government positions have experienced an alarming increase in acts of violence, or attempts to engage in acts of violence, at their personal residence or the residence of a family member. In the past three years, two government officials and the family member of another were killed at their home. Most recently, in October 2023, Maryland Judge Andrew Wilkinson was shot and killed in his driveway by a litigant in a case pending before him. Earlier in 2023, in February, New Jersey Councilwoman Eunice Dwumfour was shot and killed outside her home. In July 2020, U.S. District Court Judge Esther Salas' son, Daniel Anderl, was shot and killed in their family home in New Jersey by an attorney who had appeared before the judge. In October 2022, Paul Pelosi, Speaker of the House Nancy Pelosi's spouse, was brutally assaulted in the couple's home, resulting in hospitalization and surgery due to a skull fracture received during the altercation. In October 2020, the U.S. Federal Bureau of Investigation thwarted a group that was planning to kidnap the governor of Michigan, Gretchen Whitmer, and ultimately nine individuals were convicted or pled guilty in the prosecution that ensued. The legislature also finds that a 2021 study titled "On the Frontlines of Todays Cities: Trauma, Challenges and Solutions" by the National League of Cities found that eighty-one per cent of local public officials surveyed said they had experienced harassment, threats, or violence in recent years. In addition to having their safety and well-being threatened, the report found that harassment and violent behavior interrupted local officials' ability to do their jobs and led to the loss of institutional knowledge due to resignations. Other public servants, including local election officials, have also experienced increased threats and harassment. According to a Brennan Center for Justice April 2023 of over ten thousand local election officials across the country, thirty per cent reported being threatened, harassed, or abused. More than half reported that the threats were in person. Seventy-three per cent believed that threats against election officials have increased recently. The legislature also finds that data gathered by the federal and state courts illustrates that the trend of threats and inappropriate communications against public officials is increasing. Federal judges and other court personnel were the targets of more than four thousand five hundred threats and other inappropriate communications in 2021, according to the United States Marshals Service. This represents an increase of eighty-one per cent from the number of threats in fiscal year 2016, just five years prior, and a two hundred thirty three per cent increase in threats since fiscal year 2008. At the state level, the number of threats and other inappropriate communications to Hawaii judges have increased tenfold since 2012. A recent Marshals Service audit found that federal judges' safety is at greater risk when they are away from the courthouse. This statement is borne out by incidents involving attacks against both federal and state judges at their residences, which have resulted in the deaths of or serious injuries to judges and their family members. In multiple cases, the attacker or would-be attacker used the Internet to access judges' personal information. The legislature notes that Act 46, Session Laws of Hawaii 2022 (Act 46), which established a judicial security task force, was passed in recognition of the need for additional measures to ensure the safety of judges in Hawaii. The task force recommended that legislation to protect personal information be enacted. Accordingly, the purpose of this Act is twofold. The first purpose is to classify certain personal information held by all state and county government agencies as exempt from disclosure by government under chapter 92F, Hawaii Revised Statutes, the state's Uniform Information Practices Act, including information that identifies the personal residence and other personally identifying information of public servants who are at greater risk of harm due to the high-profile nature of their government jobs, including being charged with important decision-making functions, without affecting the public's right to hold the government accountable by ensuring access to public records. The second purpose of this Act is to create the offense of unlawful publication of personal information that prohibits disclosures of personal information by a person or organization that intends to cause harass, disparage, or harm a public servant. This Act is not intended to restrain a public servant from independently making public their own personal information. SECTION 2. Section 92F-12, Hawaii Revised Statutes, is amended by amending subsection (a) to read as follows: "(a) Any other provision in this chapter to the contrary notwithstanding, each agency shall make available for public inspection and duplication during regular business hours: (1) Rules of procedure, substantive rules of general applicability, statements of general policy, and interpretations of general applicability adopted by the agency; (2) Final opinions, including concurring and dissenting opinions, as well as orders made in the adjudication of cases, except to the extent protected by section [92F-13(1);] 92F-13(a)(1); (3) Government purchasing information, including all bid results, except to the extent prohibited by section 92F-13; (4) Pardons and commutations, as well as directory information concerning an individual's presence at any correctional facility; (5) Land ownership, transfer, and lien records, including real property tax information and leases of state land; (6) Results of environmental tests; (7) Minutes of all agency meetings required by law to be public; (8) Name, address, and occupation of any person borrowing funds from a state or county loan program, and the amount, purpose, and current status of the loan; (9) Certified payroll records on public works contracts except social security numbers and home addresses; (10) Regarding contract hires and consultants employed by agencies: (A) The contract itself, the amount of compensation; (B) The duration of the contract; and (C) The objectives of the contract, except social security numbers and home addresses; (11) Building permit information within the control of the agency; (12) Water service consumption data maintained by the boards of water supply; (13) Rosters of persons holding licenses or permits granted by an agency that may include name, business address, type of license held, and status of the license; (14) The name, compensation (but only the salary range for employees covered by or included in chapter 76, and sections 302A-602 to 302A-639, and 302A‑701, or bargaining unit (8)), job title, business address, business telephone number, job description, education and training background, previous work experience, dates of first and last employment, position number, type of appointment, service computation date, occupational group or class code, bargaining unit code, employing agency name and code, department, division, branch, office, section, unit, and island of employment, of present or former officers or employees of the agency; provided that this paragraph shall not require the creation of a roster of employees; and provided further that this paragraph shall not apply to information regarding present or former employees involved in an undercover capacity in a law enforcement agency; (15) Information collected and maintained for the purpose of making information available to the general public; and (16) Information contained in or compiled from a transcript, minutes, report, or summary of a proceeding open to the public." SECTION 3. Section 92F-13, Hawaii Revised Statutes, is amended to read as follows: "§92F-13 Government records; exceptions to general rule. (a) This part shall not require disclosure of: (1) Government records which, if disclosed, would constitute a clearly unwarranted invasion of personal privacy; (2) Government records pertaining to the prosecution or defense of any judicial or quasi-judicial action to which the State or any county is or may be a party, to the extent that [such] the records would not be discoverable; (3) Government records that, by their nature, must be confidential in order for the government to avoid the frustration of a legitimate government function; (4) Government records which, pursuant to state or federal law including an order of any state or federal court, are protected from disclosure; and (5) Inchoate and draft working papers of legislative committees including budget worksheets and unfiled committee reports; work product; records or transcripts of an investigating committee of the legislature which are closed by rules adopted pursuant to section 21-4 and the personal files of members of the legislature. (b) Notwithstanding subsection (a), no government information including but not limited to protected personal information, which if disclosed would expose a public servant or any family member or household member of a public servant to harassment threats, or violence, shall be disclosed." SECTION 4. Chapter 801G, Hawaii Revised Statutes, is amended by adding a new section to be appropriately designated and to read as follows: "§801G- Publication and disclosure of public servants' personal information; restrictions. (a) Except as otherwise provided in subsection (d), upon receipt of a written request from a covered public servant, a person or organization shall not disclose or make publicly available content that includes the protected personal information of the covered public servant and their family. After a person or organization has received a written request, the person or organization shall: (1) Remove the protected personal information from the Internet within seventy-two hours; (2) Ensure that the protected personal information is not made available on any website or subsidiary website controlled by that person or organization; and (3) Not distribute, give, or transfer the protected personal information to any other person or organization through any medium. (b) A written request pursuant to this section shall be valid if the covered public servant or a representative of the covered public servant's employer submits a request in writing directly to a person or organization; provided that the covered public servant has given written consent to the representative. A written request shall specify what protected personal information shall be maintained as private. A written request is valid until the covered public servant provides the person or organization with written permission to release the protected personal information, or until the covered public servant's death. (c) If a person or organization violates this section, the covered public servant or family member whose protected personal information is made public as a result of the violation may bring an action seeking damages as well as injunctive or declaratory relief in any court of competent jurisdiction. If the court finds in the plaintiff's favor and or grants injunctive or declaratory relief, the person or organization responsible for the violation shall be required to pay the costs and reasonable attorney's fees of the covered public servant or their family. (d) This section shall not apply to: (1) Protected personal information that the covered public servant or family member voluntarily publishes on the Internet after the effective date of this chapter; (2) Records pertaining to property presumed abandoned pursuant to chapter 523A, the Uniform Unclaimed Property Act; (3) Information subject to disclosure pursuant to a court order; (4) Filings made pursuant to chapter 490, the Uniform Commercial Code, and recorded judgments; (5) Copies of recorded instruments affecting title to real property that contain protected personal information that are provided by the bureau of conveyances to a title insurance company that has requested to access the record in its ordinary course of business; and (6) Records a government agency provides to any other government entity pursuant to this chapter; provided that this paragraph shall not provide an exemption for persons or organization to disclosure information. (e) For purposes of this section: "Covered public servant" means: (1) Any person employed or retired, appointed, or volunteering for the State or any of its political subdivisions or agencies; (2) Members of boards and commissions who are appointed and confirmed pursuant to section 26-34, and other individuals including volunteers who are responsible for or assisting with government responsibilities; (3) Any active, formerly active, or retired justice of the United States Supreme Court, judge of the United States Court of Appeals, or judge or magistrate judge of the United States District Court or United States Bankruptcy Court, provided the person resides in the State. "Disclose" means to sell, manufacture, give, provide, lend, trade, mail, deliver, transfer, post, publish, distribute, circulate, disseminate, present, exhibit, advertise, or offer by any means including but not limited to electronic transmission and on any medium including but not limited to the Internet. "Family" means spouses or reciprocal beneficiaries, former spouses or former reciprocal beneficiaries, persons who have a child in common, parents, children, persons related by consanguinity, persons jointly residing or formerly residing in the same dwelling unit, and persons who have or have had a dating relationship. "Government agency" means any department, division, board, commission, public corporation, or other agency or instrumentality of the State or any county. "Home" means a permanent residence and any secondary residences affirmatively identified by the covered public servant but does not include a work address or investment property. "Organization" means an association or entity including a charitable, religious, or nonprofit organization; for-profit organization; or business entity, formed for a specific purpose. "Protected personal information" includes a home address and any property ownership information; contact information including but not limited to a home telephone number, cellular phone number, and direct telephone number to a covered person's private office or chambers; personal email address; directions to the covered public servant's or a family members' home; photograph of a covered public servant's or a family members' home that legibly displays the address or otherwise identifies the location; photograph of a covered public servant's or family member's vehicle that legibly displays the vehicle license plate number; the names and locations of schools and day care facilities attended by the children of the covered public servant; identity of children of the covered public servant that are under the age of eighteen; voter registration information; the contents of any application for absentee voter's ballots; property tax records; and the name and address of the employer of any family member. "Publicly available content" means any written, printed, or electronic document or record that provides information or that serves as a document or record maintained, controlled, or in the possession of a government agency that may be obtained by any person or entity, from the Internet, from the government agency upon request either free of charge or for a fee, or in response to a request pursuant to chapter 92F. "Post or display" means to communicate to another or to otherwise make available to the general public." SECTION 5. Chapter 711, Hawaii Revised Statutes, is amended by adding a new section to be appropriately designated and to read as follows: "§711- Unlawful publication of personal information. (a) No person or organization shall knowingly disclose or post protected personal information including but not limited to the home address or telephone number of any public official with the intent to cause reputational harm, emotional injury, or bodily injury that is likely to occur, or threatening to cause bodily injury to that individual. (b) A violation of this section is a misdemeanor; provided that a violation of this section that results in the actual reputational harm, emotional injury, or bodily injury of the public official or the public official's spouse or child, is a class C felony." SECTION 6. If any provision of this Act, or the application thereof to any person or circumstance, is held invalid, the invalidity does not affect other provisions or applications of the Act that can be given effect without the invalid provision or application, and to this end the provisions of this Act are severable. SECTION 7. This Act does not affect rights and duties that matured, penalties that were incurred, and proceedings that were begun before its effective date. SECTION 8. Statutory material to be repealed is bracketed and stricken. New statutory material is underscored. SECTION 9. This Act shall take effect on September 1, 2024. INTRODUCED BY: _____________________________
4848
4949 SECTION 1. The legislature finds that across the country, elected state and local officials, judges, election officials, school board officials, and others in decision-making positions that directly impact the public or an individual and other high-profile government positions have experienced an alarming increase in acts of violence, or attempts to engage in acts of violence, at their personal residence or the residence of a family member. In the past three years, two government officials and the family member of another were killed at their home. Most recently, in October 2023, Maryland Judge Andrew Wilkinson was shot and killed in his driveway by a litigant in a case pending before him. Earlier in 2023, in February, New Jersey Councilwoman Eunice Dwumfour was shot and killed outside her home. In July 2020, U.S. District Court Judge Esther Salas' son, Daniel Anderl, was shot and killed in their family home in New Jersey by an attorney who had appeared before the judge. In October 2022, Paul Pelosi, Speaker of the House Nancy Pelosi's spouse, was brutally assaulted in the couple's home, resulting in hospitalization and surgery due to a skull fracture received during the altercation. In October 2020, the U.S. Federal Bureau of Investigation thwarted a group that was planning to kidnap the governor of Michigan, Gretchen Whitmer, and ultimately nine individuals were convicted or pled guilty in the prosecution that ensued.
5050
5151 The legislature also finds that a 2021 study titled "On the Frontlines of Todays Cities: Trauma, Challenges and Solutions" by the National League of Cities found that eighty-one per cent of local public officials surveyed said they had experienced harassment, threats, or violence in recent years. In addition to having their safety and well-being threatened, the report found that harassment and violent behavior interrupted local officials' ability to do their jobs and led to the loss of institutional knowledge due to resignations. Other public servants, including local election officials, have also experienced increased threats and harassment. According to a Brennan Center for Justice April 2023 of over ten thousand local election officials across the country, thirty per cent reported being threatened, harassed, or abused. More than half reported that the threats were in person. Seventy-three per cent believed that threats against election officials have increased recently.
5252
53- The legislature also finds that data gathered by the federal and state courts illustrates that the trend of threats and inappropriate communications against public officials is increasing. Federal judges and other court personnel were the targets of more than four thousand five hundred threats and other inappropriate communications in 2021, according to the United States Marshals Service. This represents an increase of eighty-one per cent from the number of threats in fiscal year 2016, just five years prior, and a two hundred thirty three per cent increase in threats since fiscal year 2008. At the state level, the number of threats and other inappropriate communications to Hawaiʻi judges have increased tenfold since 2012. A recent Marshals Service audit found that federal judges' safety is at greater risk when they are away from the courthouse. This statement is borne out by incidents involving attacks against both federal and state judges at their residences, which have resulted in the deaths of or serious injuries to judges and their family members. In multiple cases, the attacker or would-be attacker used the Internet to access judges' personal information. The legislature notes that Act 46, Session Laws of Hawaii 2022 (Act 46), which established a judicial security task force, was passed in recognition of the need for additional measures to ensure the safety of judges in Hawaiʻi. The task force recommended that legislation to protect personal information be enacted.
53+ The legislature also finds that data gathered by the federal and state courts illustrates that the trend of threats and inappropriate communications against public officials is increasing. Federal judges and other court personnel were the targets of more than four thousand five hundred threats and other inappropriate communications in 2021, according to the United States Marshals Service. This represents an increase of eighty-one per cent from the number of threats in fiscal year 2016, just five years prior, and a two hundred thirty three per cent increase in threats since fiscal year 2008. At the state level, the number of threats and other inappropriate communications to Hawaii judges have increased tenfold since 2012. A recent Marshals Service audit found that federal judges' safety is at greater risk when they are away from the courthouse. This statement is borne out by incidents involving attacks against both federal and state judges at their residences, which have resulted in the deaths of or serious injuries to judges and their family members. In multiple cases, the attacker or would-be attacker used the Internet to access judges' personal information. The legislature notes that Act 46, Session Laws of Hawaii 2022 (Act 46), which established a judicial security task force, was passed in recognition of the need for additional measures to ensure the safety of judges in Hawaii. The task force recommended that legislation to protect personal information be enacted.
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55- Accordingly, the purpose of this Act is to create the offense of unlawful publication of personal information that prohibits disclosures of personal information by a person or organization that intends to cause harass, disparage, or harm a public servant. This Act is not intended to restrain a public servant from independently making public their own personal information.
55+ Accordingly, the purpose of this Act is twofold. The first purpose is to classify certain personal information held by all state and county government agencies as exempt from disclosure by government under chapter 92F, Hawaii Revised Statutes, the state's Uniform Information Practices Act, including information that identifies the personal residence and other personally identifying information of public servants who are at greater risk of harm due to the high-profile nature of their government jobs, including being charged with important decision-making functions, without affecting the public's right to hold the government accountable by ensuring access to public records.
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57- SECTION 2. Chapter 711, Hawaii Revised Statutes, is amended by adding a new section to be appropriately designated and to read as follows:
57+ The second purpose of this Act is to create the offense of unlawful publication of personal information that prohibits disclosures of personal information by a person or organization that intends to cause harass, disparage, or harm a public servant. This Act is not intended to restrain a public servant from independently making public their own personal information.
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59- "§711- Unlawful publication of personal information. (a) No person or organization shall knowingly disclose or post protected personal information including but not limited to the home address or telephone number of any public official with the intent to cause reputational harm, emotional injury, or bodily injury that is likely to occur, or threatening to cause bodily injury to that individual.
59+ SECTION 2. Section 92F-12, Hawaii Revised Statutes, is amended by amending subsection (a) to read as follows:
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61- (b) A violation of this section is a misdemeanor; provided that a violation of this section that results in the actual reputational harm, emotional injury, or bodily injury of the public official or the public official's spouse or child, is a class C felony."
61+ "(a) Any other provision in this chapter to the contrary notwithstanding, each agency shall make available for public inspection and duplication during regular business hours:
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63- SECTION 3. Chapter 801G, Hawaii Revised Statutes, is amended by adding a new section to be appropriately designated and to read as follows:
63+ (1) Rules of procedure, substantive rules of general applicability, statements of general policy, and interpretations of general applicability adopted by the agency;
64+
65+ (2) Final opinions, including concurring and dissenting opinions, as well as orders made in the adjudication of cases, except to the extent protected by section [92F-13(1);] 92F-13(a)(1);
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67+ (3) Government purchasing information, including all bid results, except to the extent prohibited by section 92F-13;
68+
69+ (4) Pardons and commutations, as well as directory information concerning an individual's presence at any correctional facility;
70+
71+ (5) Land ownership, transfer, and lien records, including real property tax information and leases of state land;
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73+ (6) Results of environmental tests;
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75+ (7) Minutes of all agency meetings required by law to be public;
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77+ (8) Name, address, and occupation of any person borrowing funds from a state or county loan program, and the amount, purpose, and current status of the loan;
78+
79+ (9) Certified payroll records on public works contracts except social security numbers and home addresses;
80+
81+ (10) Regarding contract hires and consultants employed by agencies:
82+
83+ (A) The contract itself, the amount of compensation;
84+
85+ (B) The duration of the contract; and
86+
87+ (C) The objectives of the contract,
88+
89+ except social security numbers and home addresses;
90+
91+ (11) Building permit information within the control of the agency;
92+
93+ (12) Water service consumption data maintained by the boards of water supply;
94+
95+ (13) Rosters of persons holding licenses or permits granted by an agency that may include name, business address, type of license held, and status of the license;
96+
97+ (14) The name, compensation (but only the salary range for employees covered by or included in chapter 76, and sections 302A-602 to 302A-639, and 302A‑701, or bargaining unit (8)), job title, business address, business telephone number, job description, education and training background, previous work experience, dates of first and last employment, position number, type of appointment, service computation date, occupational group or class code, bargaining unit code, employing agency name and code, department, division, branch, office, section, unit, and island of employment, of present or former officers or employees of the agency; provided that this paragraph shall not require the creation of a roster of employees; and provided further that this paragraph shall not apply to information regarding present or former employees involved in an undercover capacity in a law enforcement agency;
98+
99+ (15) Information collected and maintained for the purpose of making information available to the general public; and
100+
101+ (16) Information contained in or compiled from a transcript, minutes, report, or summary of a proceeding open to the public."
102+
103+ SECTION 3. Section 92F-13, Hawaii Revised Statutes, is amended to read as follows:
104+
105+ "§92F-13 Government records; exceptions to general rule. (a) This part shall not require disclosure of:
106+
107+ (1) Government records which, if disclosed, would constitute a clearly unwarranted invasion of personal privacy;
108+
109+ (2) Government records pertaining to the prosecution or defense of any judicial or quasi-judicial action to which the State or any county is or may be a party, to the extent that [such] the records would not be discoverable;
110+
111+ (3) Government records that, by their nature, must be confidential in order for the government to avoid the frustration of a legitimate government function;
112+
113+ (4) Government records which, pursuant to state or federal law including an order of any state or federal court, are protected from disclosure; and
114+
115+ (5) Inchoate and draft working papers of legislative committees including budget worksheets and unfiled committee reports; work product; records or transcripts of an investigating committee of the legislature which are closed by rules adopted pursuant to section 21-4 and the personal files of members of the legislature.
116+
117+ (b) Notwithstanding subsection (a), no government information including but not limited to protected personal information, which if disclosed would expose a public servant or any family member or household member of a public servant to harassment threats, or violence, shall be disclosed."
118+
119+ SECTION 4. Chapter 801G, Hawaii Revised Statutes, is amended by adding a new section to be appropriately designated and to read as follows:
64120
65121 "§801G- Publication and disclosure of public servants' personal information; restrictions. (a) Except as otherwise provided in subsection (d), upon receipt of a written request from a covered public servant, a person or organization shall not disclose or make publicly available content that includes the protected personal information of the covered public servant and their family. After a person or organization has received a written request, the person or organization shall:
66122
67123 (1) Remove the protected personal information from the Internet within seventy-two hours;
68124
69125 (2) Ensure that the protected personal information is not made available on any website or subsidiary website controlled by that person or organization; and
70126
71127 (3) Not distribute, give, or transfer the protected personal information to any other person or organization through any medium.
72128
73129 (b) A written request pursuant to this section shall be valid if the covered public servant or a representative of the covered public servant's employer submits a request in writing directly to a person or organization; provided that the covered public servant has given written consent to the representative. A written request shall specify what protected personal information shall be maintained as private. A written request is valid until the covered public servant provides the person or organization with written permission to release the protected personal information, or until the covered public servant's death.
74130
75131 (c) If a person or organization violates this section, the covered public servant or family member whose protected personal information is made public as a result of the violation may bring an action seeking damages as well as injunctive or declaratory relief in any court of competent jurisdiction. If the court finds in the plaintiff's favor and or grants injunctive or declaratory relief, the person or organization responsible for the violation shall be required to pay the costs and reasonable attorney's fees of the covered public servant or their family.
76132
77133 (d) This section shall not apply to:
78134
79135 (1) Protected personal information that the covered public servant or family member voluntarily publishes on the Internet after the effective date of this chapter;
80136
81137 (2) Records pertaining to property presumed abandoned pursuant to chapter 523A, the Uniform Unclaimed Property Act;
82138
83139 (3) Information subject to disclosure pursuant to a court order;
84140
85141 (4) Filings made pursuant to chapter 490, the Uniform Commercial Code, and recorded judgments;
86142
87143 (5) Copies of recorded instruments affecting title to real property that contain protected personal information that are provided by the bureau of conveyances to a title insurance company that has requested to access the record in its ordinary course of business; and
88144
89145 (6) Records a government agency provides to any other government entity pursuant to this chapter; provided that this paragraph shall not provide an exemption for persons or organization to disclosure information.
90146
91147 (e) For purposes of this section:
92148
93149 "Covered public servant" means:
94150
95- (1) The governor;
151+ (1) Any person employed or retired, appointed, or volunteering for the State or any of its political subdivisions or agencies;
96152
97- (2) The lieutenant governor;
153+ (2) Members of boards and commissions who are appointed and confirmed pursuant to section 26-34, and other individuals including volunteers who are responsible for or assisting with government responsibilities;
98154
99- (3) The state administrative director appointed pursuant to section 26-3;
100-
101- (4) Any head of a state department established under section 26-4;
102-
103- (5) Any member of the legislature;
104-
105- (6) Any active, formerly active, or retired:
106-
107- (A) Justice of the Hawaii supreme court;
108-
109- (B) Judge of the Hawaii intermediate court of appeals;
110-
111- (C) Judge of a Hawaii circuit court or circuit family court;
112-
113- (D) Judge of a Hawaii district court or district family court; or
114-
115- (E) Per diem judge of a Hawaii district court or district family court;
116-
117- (7) Any active, formerly active, or retired:
118-
119- (A) Justice of the United States Supreme Court;
120-
121- (B) Judge of the United States Court of Appeals;
122-
123- (C) Judge or magistrate judge of the United States District Court; or
124-
125- (D) Judge of the United States Bankruptcy Court,
126-
127- who resides in the State, formerly resided in the State while serving as a federal judge, or owns real property in the State;
128-
129- (8) The administrative director of the courts;
130-
131- (9) The deputy administrative director of the courts;
132-
133- (10) Any employee or volunteer of the office of elections; or
134-
135- (11) Any person designated for good cause by the governor, chief justice, chairperson of the office of Hawaiian affairs, president of the senate, or speaker of the house of representatives in the designator's respective body.
155+ (3) Any active, formerly active, or retired justice of the United States Supreme Court, judge of the United States Court of Appeals, or judge or magistrate judge of the United States District Court or United States Bankruptcy Court, provided the person resides in the State.
136156
137157 "Disclose" means to sell, manufacture, give, provide, lend, trade, mail, deliver, transfer, post, publish, distribute, circulate, disseminate, present, exhibit, advertise, or offer by any means including but not limited to electronic transmission and on any medium including but not limited to the Internet.
138158
139159 "Family" means spouses or reciprocal beneficiaries, former spouses or former reciprocal beneficiaries, persons who have a child in common, parents, children, persons related by consanguinity, persons jointly residing or formerly residing in the same dwelling unit, and persons who have or have had a dating relationship.
140160
141161 "Government agency" means any department, division, board, commission, public corporation, or other agency or instrumentality of the State or any county.
142162
143163 "Home" means a permanent residence and any secondary residences affirmatively identified by the covered public servant but does not include a work address or investment property.
144164
145165 "Organization" means an association or entity including a charitable, religious, or nonprofit organization; for-profit organization; or business entity, formed for a specific purpose.
146166
147167 "Protected personal information" includes a home address and any property ownership information; contact information including but not limited to a home telephone number, cellular phone number, and direct telephone number to a covered person's private office or chambers; personal email address; directions to the covered public servant's or a family members' home; photograph of a covered public servant's or a family members' home that legibly displays the address or otherwise identifies the location; photograph of a covered public servant's or family member's vehicle that legibly displays the vehicle license plate number; the names and locations of schools and day care facilities attended by the children of the covered public servant; identity of children of the covered public servant that are under the age of eighteen; voter registration information; the contents of any application for absentee voter's ballots; property tax records; and the name and address of the employer of any family member.
148168
149169 "Publicly available content" means any written, printed, or electronic document or record that provides information or that serves as a document or record maintained, controlled, or in the possession of a government agency that may be obtained by any person or entity, from the Internet, from the government agency upon request either free of charge or for a fee, or in response to a request pursuant to chapter 92F.
150170
151171 "Post or display" means to communicate to another or to otherwise make available to the general public."
152172
153- SECTION 4. If any provision of this Act, or the application thereof to any person or circumstance, is held invalid, the invalidity does not affect other provisions or applications of the Act that can be given effect without the invalid provision or application, and to this end the provisions of this Act are severable.
173+ SECTION 5. Chapter 711, Hawaii Revised Statutes, is amended by adding a new section to be appropriately designated and to read as follows:
154174
155- SECTION 5. This Act does not affect rights and duties that matured, penalties that were incurred, and proceedings that were begun before its effective date.
175+ "§711- Unlawful publication of personal information. (a) No person or organization shall knowingly disclose or post protected personal information including but not limited to the home address or telephone number of any public official with the intent to cause reputational harm, emotional injury, or bodily injury that is likely to occur, or threatening to cause bodily injury to that individual.
156176
157- SECTION 6. New statutory material is underscored.
177+ (b) A violation of this section is a misdemeanor; provided that a violation of this section that results in the actual reputational harm, emotional injury, or bodily injury of the public official or the public official's spouse or child, is a class C felony."
158178
159- SECTION 7. This Act shall take effect on September 1, 2024.
179+ SECTION 6. If any provision of this Act, or the application thereof to any person or circumstance, is held invalid, the invalidity does not affect other provisions or applications of the Act that can be given effect without the invalid provision or application, and to this end the provisions of this Act are severable.
160180
161- Report Title: Public Servants; Public Officials; Government Records; Public Records; Personal Information; Disclosure; Prohibition; Criminal Offense; Unlawful Publication of Personal Information Description: Establishes within the State's Address Confidentiality Program protection for public servants that prohibits upon written request from the public servant or representative any person or organization from disclosing certain personal information. Establishes the offense of unlawful publication of personal information that prohibits any person or organization from knowingly disclosing protected personal information of public officials with the intent to cause reputational harm, emotional injury, or bodily injury. Takes effect 9/1/2024. (SD1) The summary description of legislation appearing on this page is for informational purposes only and is not legislation or evidence of legislative intent.
181+ SECTION 7. This Act does not affect rights and duties that matured, penalties that were incurred, and proceedings that were begun before its effective date.
182+
183+ SECTION 8. Statutory material to be repealed is bracketed and stricken. New statutory material is underscored.
184+
185+ SECTION 9. This Act shall take effect on September 1, 2024.
186+
187+
188+
189+INTRODUCED BY: _____________________________
190+
191+INTRODUCED BY:
192+
193+_____________________________
194+
195+
196+
197+
198+
199+ Report Title: Public Servants; Public Officials; Government Records; Public Records; Personal Information; Disclosure; Prohibition; Criminal Offense; Unlawful Publication of Personal Information Description: Exempts certain personal information of public servants from government records that are subject to disclosure under the State's Uniform Information Practices Act. Establishes within the State's Address Confidentiality Program protection for public servants that prohibits upon written request from the public servant or representative any person or organization from disclosing certain personal information. Establishes the offense of unlawful publication of personal information that prohibits any person or organization from knowingly disclosing protected personal information of public officials with the intent to cause reputational harm, emotional injury, or bodily injury. Takes effect 9/1/2024. The summary description of legislation appearing on this page is for informational purposes only and is not legislation or evidence of legislative intent.
200+
201+
162202
163203
164204
165205
166206
167207 Report Title:
168208
169209 Public Servants; Public Officials; Government Records; Public Records; Personal Information; Disclosure; Prohibition; Criminal Offense; Unlawful Publication of Personal Information
170210
171211
172212
173213 Description:
174214
175-Establishes within the State's Address Confidentiality Program protection for public servants that prohibits upon written request from the public servant or representative any person or organization from disclosing certain personal information. Establishes the offense of unlawful publication of personal information that prohibits any person or organization from knowingly disclosing protected personal information of public officials with the intent to cause reputational harm, emotional injury, or bodily injury. Takes effect 9/1/2024. (SD1)
215+Exempts certain personal information of public servants from government records that are subject to disclosure under the State's Uniform Information Practices Act. Establishes within the State's Address Confidentiality Program protection for public servants that prohibits upon written request from the public servant or representative any person or organization from disclosing certain personal information. Establishes the offense of unlawful publication of personal information that prohibits any person or organization from knowingly disclosing protected personal information of public officials with the intent to cause reputational harm, emotional injury, or bodily injury. Takes effect 9/1/2024.
176216
177217
178218
179219
180220
181221
182222
183223 The summary description of legislation appearing on this page is for informational purposes only and is not legislation or evidence of legislative intent.