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| My county clerk has just come to me in a panic, stating that the Fort Bend County Atty (the author of the request for the fateful GA-0519) has told HIS clerk to redact not only SSN's from documents, but also all personal information, including, for example, driver's license numbers. I think this is going beyong the scope of GA-0519, and that any redaction other than SSNs might have to be cleared by the AG before the redacted document can be released. I'd be interested in hearing other opinions.
Also, based on fn 7 to the opinion, I am redacting all SSNs from any discovery I send out, as least for the time being. |
| Posts: 24 | Location: Stratford, Texas, Sherman | Registered: February 05, 2001 |
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| Posts: 341 | Location: Tarrant County, Texas | Registered: August 24, 2001 |
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| Posts: 85 | Location: Abilene TX | Registered: March 17, 2005 |
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| Thanks, David. Where can I find confirmation of this fact? Is there a document on the web? |
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| this is the article about in the houston chronicle.
Order that paralyzed clerks' offices suspended
By GARY SCHARRER Copyright 2007 Austin Bureau
AUSTIN � Attorney General Greg Abbott has withdrawn temporarily an opinion banning the disclosure of Social Security numbers after his decision paralyzed some county clerk offices around the state.
The 60-day suspension gives the Legislature some time to fix the problem.
"For the next 60 days, everything is business as usual (at the courthouses)," House Ways and Means Chairman Jim Keffer, R-Eastland, said after canceling a hearing on emergency legislation to address Abbott's ruling. "Now we have 60 days to try to make sure that we don't cause more problems than we are trying to solve."
In his letter to Fort Bend County Attorney Roy Cordes Jr., Abbott recognized the consequences of his recent opinion, which brought "a virtual halt to a tremendous amount of business and commerce in Texas."
Because lawmakers signaled their intent to address the conflict immediately, Abbott said he suspended his opinion, meaning it has "no force or effect" for the 60 days.
Earlier, Abbott had said Social Security numbers for living people are confidential and must be exempted from required disclosure under the state's Public Information Act. But the ruling created unmanageable complications for county clerks responsible for decades-old documents that often contain many Social Security numbers, publicly filed during previous eras when they weren't valuable tools for identity thieves.
Many county clerks closed their operations, which halted real estate and other transactions.
"I do appreciate the attorney general staff's willingness to work with us on this. The process can work if people don't go nuclear," Keffer said.
gscharrer@express-news.net |
| Posts: 1243 | Location: houston, texas, u.s.a. | Registered: October 19, 2001 |
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| Posts: 1243 | Location: houston, texas, u.s.a. | Registered: October 19, 2001 |
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| In the old days the AG would pull it and all you would find is the letter pulling it. But this one still has the opinion at the end. The problems with the legislative bills presently include the extremes. Deleting 552.147 returns us to the days where we have to ask the Attorney General to delete SSN every time we have an open record request. However, if AG is going to misinterpret 552.147 to reach this kind of result maybe it should sink in a watery grave. Sadly, with Scott B. gone on a well-deserved vacation or at least not answering his email my sounding board for some of these ideas is muted. Our office will have some sort of support for some kind of bill in the next few days. Hopefully, the sponsor for one of these many fixes will be persuaded to add the fix. |
| Posts: 267 | Location: Mansfield, Texas | Registered: August 07, 2001 |
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| Posts: 341 | Location: Tarrant County, Texas | Registered: August 24, 2001 |
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