Peer News LLC v. City of Honolulu & Dep't of Budget & Fiscal Servs. , 431 P.3d 1245 ( 2018 )


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  •     ***FOR PUBLICATION IN WEST’S HAWAII REPORTS AND PACIFIC REPORTER***
    Electronically Filed
    Supreme Court
    SCAP-XX-XXXXXXX
    21-DEC-2018
    08:12 AM
    IN THE SUPREME COURT OF THE STATE OF HAWAII
    ---o0o---
    PEER NEWS LLC, dba CIVIL BEAT,
    Plaintiff-Appellant,
    vs.
    CITY AND COUNTY OF HONOLULU and
    DEPARTMENT OF BUDGET AND FISCAL SERVICES,
    Defendants-Appellees.
    SCAP-XX-XXXXXXX
    APPEAL FROM THE CIRCUIT COURT OF THE FIRST CIRCUIT
    (CAAP-XX-XXXXXXX; CIV. NO. 15-1-0891-05)
    DECEMBER 21, 2018
    McKENNA, POLLACK, AND WILSON, JJ., WITH NAKAYAMA, J.,
    DISSENTING, WITH WHOM RECKTENWALD, C.J., JOINS
    OPINION OF THE COURT BY POLLACK, J.
    Hawai‘i law has long stated that “[o]pening up the
    government processes to public scrutiny and participation is the
    only viable and reasonable method of protecting the public’s
    interest.”    Hawaii Revised Statutes § 92F-2 (2012).         Therefore,
    in establishing the legal framework governing public access to
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    government records, the Hawai‘i legislature declared “that it is
    the policy of this State that the formation and conduct of
    public policy--the discussions, deliberations, decisions, and
    action of government agencies--shall be conducted as openly as
    possible.”   
    Id. This case
    concerns the propriety of State and local
    agencies withholding certain inter- and intra-office
    communications when disclosure is formally requested by a member
    of the public.     In a series of eight opinion letters issued
    between 1989 and 2007, the State of Hawaii Office of Information
    Practices took the position that, based on a statutory exception
    provided in Hawai‘i’s public record law that permits the
    nondisclosure of records that would frustrate a legitimate
    government function if revealed, a “deliberative process
    privilege” exists that protects all pre-decisional, deliberative
    agency records without regard for the relative harm that would
    result from any specific disclosure.        Relying on these opinion
    letters, the Office of Budget and Financial Services for the
    City and County of Honolulu denied a public records request for
    certain internal documents generated during the setting of the
    City and County’s annual operating budget.
    We hold that, because the deliberative process
    privilege attempts to uniformly shield records from disclosure
    without an individualized determination that disclosure would
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    frustrate a legitimate government function, it is clearly
    irreconcilable with the plain language and legislative history
    of Hawai‘i’s public record laws.           The Office of Information
    Practices therefore palpably erred in interpreting the statutory
    exception to create this sweeping privilege.           Accordingly, we
    vacate the grant of summary judgment in this case and remand for
    a redetermination of whether the records withheld pursuant to
    the purported privilege fall within a statutory exception to the
    disclosure requirement.
    I.     BACKGROUND AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY
    A.        Developing Honolulu’s Operating Budget
    Each year, the City and County of Honolulu (City) sets
    its annual operating budget through a series of exchanges
    between its various departments and branches.           The process
    begins with the Mayor providing a list of intended policies and
    priorities for the coming fiscal year to the Department of
    Budget and Fiscal Services (BFS).           BFS in turn sends a notice
    detailing the Mayor’s policies and priorities to the directors
    of the departments that make up the City’s executive branch
    (with limited exceptions1), soliciting an operating budget
    request from each department.         Thereafter, the departments each
    1
    Pursuant to Sections 7-106(i) and 17-103(2)(f) of the Revised
    Charter of the City and County of Honolulu, the Board of Water Supply and the
    Honolulu Rapid Transit Authority prepare their own operating budgets.
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    prepare and submit a formal memorandum to BFS justifying all
    proposed expenditures for the coming fiscal year in relation to
    the Mayor’s policies and priorities, thus providing an initial
    recommendation regarding the money to be allocated to the
    department.   Those departments that generate revenue also
    provide preliminary projections outlining the funds they expect
    to take in, thereby giving BFS an estimate of the City’s
    expected revenues and expenditures for the coming fiscal year.
    During the months following BFS’s receipt of the
    operating budget request, various parties from BFS engage with
    the requesting agencies and the office of the City’s Managing
    Director in a series of discussions regarding each department’s
    proposed budget, revising the request as needed to account for
    budgetary considerations and changes in the Mayor’s policies and
    priorities.   The budget request is eventually submitted to the
    Mayor, who may make further adjustments based on additional
    discussions with the BFS Director and Managing Director.            Once
    the Mayor makes final decisions regarding each department’s
    budget, BFS produces a combined executive budget for submission
    to the City Council.     After a public hearing, the City Council
    revises the executive budget as it deems appropriate before
    formally adopting it, at which point it is presented to the
    Mayor to be signed or vetoed in the same manner as other
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    legislation.    See Revised Charter of the City and County of
    Honolulu § 9-104 (1998).
    B.    Civil Beat’s Request
    On March 5, 2015, Nick Grube, a reporter for the
    online news outlet Peer News LLC d/b/a Civil Beat (Civil Beat),
    sent an email to BFS requesting access to or copies of the
    “narrative budget memo for Fiscal Year 2016” for each of the
    City’s departments.      Grube stated in his email that the request
    was made pursuant to the Hawaii public records law.2
    On March 13, 2015, BFS sent a notice to Grube
    acknowledging his request and informing him that the agency was
    invoking the “extenuating circumstances” exception contained in
    the Hawaii Administrative Rules (HAR) to extend its time limit
    for responding.3     Then, on April 7, 2015, BFS provided Grube with
    2
    Although Grube did not further identify the legal authority for
    his request, the disclosure of government records in Hawai‘i is broadly
    governed by the Uniform Information Practices Act, which is codified in
    Hawaii Revised Statutes Chapter 92F. HRS § 92F-11 (2012), which sets forth
    an agency’s affirmative disclosure obligations, provides in relevant part as
    follows:
    (a) All government records are open to public inspection
    unless access is restricted or closed by law.
    (b) Except as provided in section 92F-13, each agency upon
    request by any person shall make government records
    available for inspection and copying during regular
    business hours.
    3
    With some exceptions, HAR § 2-71-13(b) (1999) requires an agency
    to provide notice of whether it intends to withhold or disclose a record
    within ten business days of receiving a formal public records request and,
    when appropriate, to disclose the document within five business days
    thereafter. HAR §§ 2-71-13(c) and 2-71-15 (1999) allow an agency to extend
    (continued . . .)
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    a second notice, this time denying his request in its entirety,
    stating that the legitimate government function of agency
    decision-making would be frustrated by disclosure of the
    requested records.4
    In a memorandum attached to the second notice, BFS
    cited a series of opinion letters from the State of Hawai‘i
    Office of Information Practices (OIP) interpreting the provision
    of the Hawai‘i Uniform Information and Practices Act (UIPA)
    codified in Hawaii Revised Statutes (HRS) § 92F-13(3) (2012),
    which exempts documents from disclosure when disclosure would
    frustrate a legitimate government function.5             The memorandum
    stated that HRS § 92F-13(3) creates a “deliberative process
    (. . . continued)
    the period to twenty business days for providing notice of its intent when
    extenuating circumstances apply. In its form notice to Grube, BFS checked
    the boxes indicating that extenuating circumstances were present because
    Grube’s request required “extensive agency efforts to search, review, or
    segregate the records, or otherwise prepare the records for inspection or
    copying” and that the agency needed additional time “to avoid an unreasonable
    interference with its other statutory duties and functions.”
    4
    BFS or Grube could have requested that the State of Hawai‘i Office
    of Information Practices review the record request pursuant to Hawaii Revised
    Statutes §§ 92F-15.5(a) or 92F-42(1)-(2) (2012), but neither party elected to
    do so.
    5
    HRS § 92F-13 (2012) provides in relevant part as follows:
    This part shall not require disclosure of:
    . . . .
    (3) Government records that, by their nature, must be
    confidential in order for the government to avoid the
    frustration of a legitimate government function[.]
    6
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    privilege” that shields government records from disclosure when
    they are pre-decisional and deliberative in nature.           (Citing OIP
    Op. Ltr. No. 00-01 (Apr. 12, 2000); OIP Op. Ltr. No. 90-8 (Feb.
    12, 1990).)   Under the privilege, BFS stated, agencies are not
    required to disclose “‘recommendations, draft documents,
    proposals, suggestions, and other subjective documents’ that
    comprise part of the process by which the government formulates
    decisions and policies.”      (Quoting OIP Op. Ltr. No. 04-15 at 4
    (Aug. 30, 2004).)
    Construing Grube’s request to refer to the operating
    budget memoranda from each of the City’s departments, BFS argued
    that disclosure of these documents would have a chilling effect
    that would lower the quality of the information provided to BFS
    and consequently impair its decision-making.          The requests were
    thus the precise sort of records the deliberative process
    privilege created by HRS § 92F-13(3) was intended to exempt from
    disclosure, BFS concluded.
    On April 13, 2015, Civil Beat submitted a letter from
    its counsel encouraging BFS to favor public access, waive any
    concerns about the frustration of government functions, and
    produce the records in the interest of transparency.            On April
    30, 2015, BFS provided Civil Beat with a third notice revising
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    its denial to allow partial disclosure of the requested
    information.6    The revised notice stated that BFS still intended
    to withhold the proposed budget amounts and those budget
    justifications that involved “safety inspections, staffing,
    training and equipment.”7
    C.    Circuit Court Proceedings
    On May 8, 2015, Civil Beat filed a two-count complaint
    against the City and BFS in the Circuit Court of the First Court
    (circuit court) seeking declaratory and injunctive relief.8
    Count I of the complaint sought an order declaring that the OIP
    precedent adopting the deliberative process privilege was
    palpably erroneous, as well as an order enjoining the City and
    BFS from invoking the purported privilege to deny public access
    6
    The City and BFS have at various stages of this case
    characterized this notice as a waiver of the deliberative process privilege
    with respect to the portions of the requested records BFS intended to
    disclose. During oral argument before this court, however, counsel for the
    City and BFS stated that BFS determined these portions of the records were
    not protected by the privilege, making a waiver unnecessary. Oral Argument
    at 00:49:20-58, Peer News LLC v. City & Cty. of Honolulu (No. SCAP-16-114),
    http://oaoa.hawaii.gov/jud/oa/17/SCOA_060117_SCAP_16_114.mp3.
    7
    Additionally, BFS stated that it intended to withhold information
    regarding specific staff salaries pursuant to HRS § 92F-13(1), which provides
    as follows: “This part shall not require disclosure of . . . (1) Government
    records which, if disclosed, would constitute a clearly unwarranted invasion
    of personal privacy.” HRS § 92F-14(b)(6) (2012) elaborates, “The following
    are examples of information in which the individual has a significant privacy
    interest: . . . (6) Information describing an individual’s finances, income,
    assets, liabilities, net worth, bank balances, financial history or
    activities, or creditworthiness.” Civil Beat does not challenge BFS’s right
    to withhold this information, and we therefore do not address the matter
    further.
    8
    The Honorable Virginia L. Crandall presided.
    8
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    to governmental records.       Count II sought access to copies of
    the departmental budget memoranda identified in Civil Beat’s
    March 5, 2015 request, subject to the redaction of specific
    salaries.
    The City and BFS filed a joint answer on June 1, 2015,9
    and then filed two joint motions for partial summary judgment on
    October 19, 2015--one for each count in Civil Beat’s complaint.
    Civil Beat responded by filing two combined opposition/cross-
    motions for summary judgment on November 13, 2015.
    In its oppositions/cross-motions,10 Civil Beat asserted
    that a broad deliberative process privilege would contradict the
    legislature’s plainly stated intent that, under the UIPA, agency
    “deliberations . . . shall be conducted as openly as possible.”
    (Quoting HRS § 92F-2 (2012).)        Civil Beat further contended that
    the UIPA’s legislative history indicates that the legislature
    made a purposeful decision not to adopt a deliberative process
    privilege, which at the time of the UIPA’s enactment was
    9
    The City and BFS initially filed a third-party complaint against
    OIP, arguing that any declaratory relief or litigation expenses that Civil
    Beat was entitled to should be granted against OIP and not the City or BFS.
    OIP answered arguing, inter alia, that it had never issued any opinion
    regarding the records at issue in this case and that it was not responsible
    for the City or BFS’s application of its precedents. On July 23, 2015, the
    City, BFS, and OIP stipulated to the dismissal without prejudice of the
    third-party complaint against OIP, which the circuit court approved and
    ordered.
    10
    Civil Beat first presented the arguments contained in its
    oppositions/cross-motions in a prior motion for summary judgment, which was
    denied.
    9
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    codified in both federal law and the model statute upon which
    the UIPA was based.
    Even assuming that the UIPA contains a deliberative
    process privilege, Civil Beat continued, the exception should be
    read narrowly to require weighing the public’s interest in
    disclosure against the government’s need for secrecy.            The
    privilege should also apply only to documents containing the
    personal opinions of agency staff, Civil Beat argued, and it
    should last only as long as the agency decision to which the
    records pertain remains pending.         Here, the public’s interest in
    the disclosure of the budget requests outweighed the City’s need
    for secrecy, Civil Beat contended, arguing that the documents
    reflected the policy of the various departments rather than the
    personal opinions of individual staff and that the Mayor’s
    executive budget had already been finalized and publicly
    released.   The budget requests would therefore not be covered by
    a deliberative process privilege even if such a privilege
    existed, Civil Beat concluded.
    By contrast, the City and BFS argued that the UIPA’s
    legislative history does not show that the legislature intended
    to omit the deliberative process privilege, but rather to
    mindfully incorporate it into the broader “frustration of a
    legitimate government function” exception.         Furthermore, they
    continued, because the privilege originated under the federal
    10
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    common law, it is alternately supported by HRS § 92F-13(4),
    which shields “[g]overnment records which, pursuant to state or
    federal law including an order of any state or federal court,
    are protected from disclosure.”11
    On December 3, 2015, following a hearing on all four
    motions, the circuit court orally ruled in favor of the City and
    BFS on all issues.      The court first found that the OIP opinions
    adopting the deliberative process privilege were not palpably
    erroneous because they were not clearly contrary to the
    legislative intent of HRS § 92F-13(3).          The court further found
    that the requested budget memoranda were pre-decisional,
    deliberative documents prepared as part of the budget-setting
    process and were thus covered by the deliberative process
    privilege.    On January 13, 2016, the circuit court entered
    written orders granting the City and BFS’s motions, and final
    judgment was entered on February 5, 2016.          Civil Beat filed a
    timely notice of appeal.
    D.    ICA Proceedings and Transfer
    Before the ICA, Civil Beat raised three points of
    error:
    11
    The State of Hawaii was granted leave to participate as amicus
    curiae and filed a brief supporting the City’s stance that a deliberative
    process privilege exists under the UIPA. The State took no position,
    however, as to whether the City properly applied the privilege when it
    withheld access to the requested records in the present case.
    11
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    1. Whether OIP and the circuit court erred in recognizing a
    deliberative process privilege, and thus a presumption of
    secrecy for records of government deliberations . . . .
    2. Whether the circuit court erred in applying the
    deliberative process privilege standard to bar disclosure
    of the requested departmental budget memoranda, without
    weighing the public interest in disclosure of government
    financial information, the lack of harm to the privilege’s
    core concern for personal opinions of vulnerable employees,
    or the passage of time. . . .
    3. Whether the circuit court erred when it held that the
    requested departmental budget memoranda “are protected by
    the deliberative process privilege” – allowing the City to
    entirely withhold the memoranda – even though the court
    acknowledged that purely factual information within a
    privileged record is not protected and the City conceded
    that portions of the requested records contained purely
    factual information.[12]
    On September 9, 2016, Civil Beat applied for transfer
    to this court, arguing that the case presents novel legal issues
    and questions of fundamental public importance.           This court
    granted Civil Beat’s application for transfer on October 12,
    2016.
    II.   STANDARDS OF REVIEW
    The legislature has directed that OIP’s opinions be
    considered as precedent in a UIPA enforcement action such as
    12
    In their answering brief, the City and BFS argue that these
    points of error are a “gross mischaracterization” of the arguments made below
    and urge the court to instead accept their alternate points of error. As
    discussed, Civil Beat argued in its cross-motion for summary judgment in
    Count II that the circuit court should consider the public’s interest in
    disclosure when determining whether the operating budget requests were
    protected by the privilege. Civil Beat also contended that OIP’s adoption of
    the deliberative process privilege effectively created a presumption that all
    agency deliberations are confidential. We therefore hold that all of Civil
    Beat’s points of error were properly preserved, and we consider them
    accordingly.
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    this so long as they are not “palpably erroneous.”           HRS § 92F-
    15(b) (2012 & Supp. 2017).
    This court reviews a grant or denial of summary
    judgment de novo.    Querubin v. Thronas, 107 Hawai‘i 48, 56, 
    109 P.3d 689
    , 697 (2005).
    III. DISCUSSION
    Although OIP has opined for nearly thirty years that a
    deliberative process privilege exempts certain inter- and intra-
    agency documents from the UIPA’s disclosure requirements, see,
    e.g., OIP Op. Ltr. No. 89-9 (Nov. 20, 1989); OIP Op. Ltr. No.
    F19-01 (Oct. 11, 2018), this court has not heretofore had an
    opportunity to consider the propriety of this interpretation.
    We first consider the privilege in relation to the plain
    language of the UIPA before turning to the UIPA’s legislative
    history for indications of the legislature’s intent regarding
    the public disclosure of deliberative agency records.
    A. The Language of the UIPA
    As we have often stated, “the fundamental starting
    point for statutory interpretation is the language of the
    statute itself.”    State v. Wheeler, 121 Hawai‘i 383, 390, 
    219 P.3d 1170
    , 1177 (2009) (quoting Citizens Against Reckless Dev.
    v. Zoning Bd. of Appeals of City & Cty. of Honolulu (CARD), 114
    Hawai‘i 184, 193, 
    159 P.3d 143
    , 152 (2007)).         “[W]here the
    statutory language is plain and unambiguous, our sole duty is to
    13
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    give effect to its plain and obvious meaning.”          
    Id. (quoting CARD,
    114 Hawai‘i at 
    193, 159 P.3d at 152
    ).
    In adopting the deliberative process privilege, OIP
    relied upon HRS § 92F-13(3), which shields from disclosure those
    “[g]overnment records that, by their nature, must be
    confidential in order for the government to avoid the
    frustration of a legitimate government function.”           The
    unambiguous meaning of this provision is that, to fall within
    its parameters, a record must be of such a nature that
    disclosure would impair the government’s ability to fulfil its
    proper duties.    But the deliberative process privilege as
    formulated by OIP gives no direct consideration to whether a
    particular disclosure would negatively impact a legitimate
    government function.     Instead, a record is shielded by the
    privilege anytime it is “pre-decisional” and “deliberative.”
    OIP Op. Ltr. No. 90-3 at 12 (Jan. 18, 1990) (explaining that a
    communication is protected by the privilege if it is made prior
    to an agency decision and “makes recommendations or expresses
    opinions on . . . policy matters” (quoting Vaughn v. Rosen, 
    523 F.2d 1136
    , 1143-44 (D.C. Cir. 1975)).
    The City and BFS argue that all pre-decisional,
    deliberative records would frustrate a legitimate government
    function if disclosed.     Administrators faced with the
    possibility that their remarks will be publicly disseminated are
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    less likely to offer frank and uninhibited opinions for fear of
    public criticism or ridicule, they argue, and inhibiting the
    free exchange of ideas will in turn diminish the quality of
    agency decision-making.       Thus, a determination that a record is
    pre-decisional and deliberative is functionally equivalent to a
    finding that disclosure of the record would impair a legitimate
    government function, the City and BFS appear to conclude.
    But the UIPA itself makes clear that these generalized
    concerns alone are not sufficient to constitute frustration of a
    legitimate government function within the meaning of the
    statute.    HRS § 92F-2, which sets forth the legislature’s
    purposes in enacting the UIPA and provides principles for
    interpreting the law, states in relevant part the following:
    In a democracy, the people are vested with the ultimate
    decision-making power. Government agencies exist to aid
    the people in the formation and conduct of public policy.
    Opening up the government processes to public scrutiny and
    participation is the only viable and reasonable method of
    protecting the public’s interest. Therefore the
    legislature declares that it is the policy of this State
    that the formation and conduct of public policy--the
    discussions, deliberations, decisions, and action of
    government agencies--shall be conducted as openly as
    possible.
    (Emphases added.)     The statute goes on to provide that the UIPA
    “shall be applied and construed to promote its underlying
    purposes and policies,” including, inter alia, to “[p]romote the
    public interest in disclosure” and “[e]nhance governmental
    accountability through a general policy of access to government
    records.”
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    Insofar as a tradeoff exists between inhibiting the
    frank exchange of ideas and ensuring agency accountability
    through public oversight, HRS § 92F-2 clearly expresses a policy
    preference in favor of “[o]pening up the government processes to
    public scrutiny.”        The list of the UIPA’s underlying purposes
    and policies, which was provided to guide our interpretation,
    repeatedly emphasizes that ensuring government accountability
    through public access and disclosure was among the legislature’s
    top priorities in enacting the statute.13            Moreover, the law
    expressly states that “the formation . . . of public policy,”
    including “discussions” and “deliberations,” “shall be conducted
    as openly as possible.”          HRS § 92F-2.
    As the City and BFS readily admit, the deliberative
    process privilege is specifically designed to protect from
    public scrutiny “documents reflecting advisory opinions,
    recommendations[,] and deliberations comprising part of a
    process by which government decisions and policies are
    formulated”--the precise opposite of the policy HRS § 92F-2
    explicitly declares the UIPA should be interpreted to promote.
    (Emphasis added) (quoting NLRB v. Sears, Roebuck & Co., 
    421 U.S. 13
                   The only countervailing consideration included in the rules of
    construction    is the personal privacy of individuals. See HRS § 92F-2(5)
    (stating the    UIPA should be interpreted to “[b]alance the individual privacy
    interest and    the public access interest, allowing access unless it would
    constitute a    clearly unwarranted invasion of personal privacy”).
    16
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    132, 150 (1975)).     Indeed, adopting the City and BFS’s argued
    interpretation would render much of HRS § 92F-2 a dead letter,
    for one is hard pressed to imagine “deliberations” or
    “discussions” constituting the “formation . . . of government
    policy” that are not pre-decisional and deliberative.14            Such a
    result would be contrary to the “cardinal rule of statutory
    construction that courts are bound, if rational and practicable,
    to give effect to all parts of a statute.”          Coon v. City & Cty.
    of Honolulu, 98 Hawai‘i 233, 259, 
    47 P.3d 348
    , 374 (2002)
    (quoting Franks v. City & Cty. of Honolulu, 
    74 Haw. 328
    , 339,
    
    843 P.2d 668
    , 673 (1993)).       As this court has long held, “no
    clause, sentence, or word shall be construed as superfluous,
    void, or insignificant if a construction can be legitimately
    found which will give force to and preserve all words of the
    statute.”    
    Id. (quoting Franks,
    74 Haw. at 
    339, 843 P.2d at 673
    ).
    14
    Communications between decision-makers and their subordinates
    regarding adopting available courses of action prior to the making of a
    decision is the very definition of deliberations in common usage, case law,
    and the OIP’s own precedents. See Deliberation, Black’s Law Dictionary (10th
    ed. 2014) (“The act of carefully considering issues and options before making
    a decision or taking an action[.]”); Abramyan v. U.S. Dep't of Homeland Sec.,
    
    6 F. Supp. 3d 57
    , 64 (D.D.C. 2013) (“A record is deliberative if ‘it reflects
    the give-and-take of the consultative process.’” (emphasis added) (quoting
    Judicial Watch, Inc. v. FDA, 
    449 F.3d 141
    , 151 (D.C. Cir. 2006)); OIP Op.
    Ltr. No. 90-3 at 12 (explaining that a document is deliberative when it
    “makes recommendations or expresses opinions on . . . policy matters”).
    Thus, the City and BFS’s analysis effectively reads out of HRS § 92F-2 the
    express “policy of this State that the formation and conduct of public
    policy--the discussions, deliberations . . . of government agencies--shall be
    conducted as openly as possible.”
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    In light of the policy statement and rules of
    construction contained in HRS § 92F-2, the disclosure of pre-
    decisional, deliberative records cannot be said to inherently
    frustrate a legitimate government function within the meaning of
    the UIPA.15   Thus, because the deliberative process privilege
    15
    This is not to say that certain types of deliberative
    communications will not qualify for withholding when the government can
    identify a concrete connection between disclosure and frustration of a
    particular legitimate government function. For instance, if disclosed prior
    to a final agency decision, many pre-decisional draft documents may impair
    specific agency or administrative processes in addition to inhibiting agency
    personnel from expressing candid opinions. However, an agency must clearly
    describe what will be frustrated by disclosure and provide more specificity
    about the impeded process than simply “decision making.” See infra Section
    III.D.
    Additionally, writings that are truly preliminary in nature, such
    as personal notes and rough drafts of memorandum that have not been finalized
    for circulation within or among the agencies, may not qualify as government
    records for purposes of an agency’s disclosure obligations. See OIP Op. Ltr.
    No. 04-17 (Oct. 27, 2004) (“[W]e find, in line with the number of other state
    and federal courts that have similarly construed other open records laws,
    that the determination of whether or not a record is a ‘government record’
    under the UIPA or a personal record of an official depends on the totality of
    circumstances surrounding its creation, maintenance and use. . . . [C]ourts
    have distinguished personal papers. . . from public records where they ‘are
    generally created solely for the individual’s convenience or to refresh the
    writer’s memory, are maintained in a way indicating a private purpose, are
    not circulated or intended for distribution within agency channels, are not
    under agency control, and may be discarded at the writer's sole discretion.’”
    (internal citations omitted)(quoting Yacobellis v. Bellingham, 
    780 P.2d 272
    ,
    275 (Wash. App. 1989)); Shevin v. Byron, Harless, Schaffer, Reid & Assocs.,
    Inc., 
    379 So. 2d 633
    , 640 (Fla. 1980) (“To be contrasted with ‘public records’
    are materials prepared as drafts or notes, which constitute mere precursors
    of governmental ‘records’ and are not, in themselves, intended as final
    evidence of the knowledge to be recorded . . . . [unless] they supply the
    final evidence of knowledge obtained in connection with the transaction of
    official business.”); cf. Conn. Gen. Stat. § 1-210(e)(1) (2018)
    (“[D]isclosure shall be required of: . . . [i]nteragency or intra-agency
    memoranda or letters, advisory opinions, recommendations or any report
    comprising part of the process by which governmental decisions and policies
    are formulated, except disclosure shall not be required of a preliminary
    draft of a memorandum, prepared by a member of the staff of a public agency,
    which is subject to revision prior to submission to or discussion among the
    members of such agency.”).
    (continued . . .)
    18
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    attempts to uniformly shield records from disclosure without a
    determination that disclosure would frustrate a legitimate
    government function, it is inconsistent with the plain language
    of HRS § 92F-13(3).
    B. The Legislative History of the UIPA
    A review of the UIPA’s legislative history confirms
    that HRS § 92F-13(3) was not intended to create a blanket
    privilege for deliberative documents.
    Prior to 1988, public access to government records in
    Hawai‘i was governed by two primary statutes that were often in
    tension, as well as a wide range of other statutes concerning
    access to specific records.       See 1 Report of the Governor’s
    Committee on Public Records and Privacy apps. B-D (1987)
    (setting forth statutes governing disclosure of government
    records) (hereinafter Governor’s Report).          Hawai‘i’s “Sunshine
    Law,” codified in HRS Chapter 92, contained a broad disclosure
    mandate.    The law stated that “[a]ll public records shall be
    available for inspection by any person” with limited exceptions
    for documents related to litigation, certain records that would
    (. . . continued)
    It is also noted that, when there is a true concern that
    disclosure of deliberative communications may expose specific individuals to
    negative consequences, the individuals’ identities may potentially qualify
    for withholding pursuant to HRS § 92F-13(1) if their privacy interests
    outweigh the public’s interest in disclosure.
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    damage the “character or reputation of any person,” and specific
    records for which state or federal law provided otherwise.              HRS
    § 92-51 (1985).    Hawai‘i’s Fair Information Practice law, on the
    other hand, contained a broad prohibition on the disclosure of
    “personal records,” which were expansively defined to include
    “any item, collection, or grouping of information about an
    individual that is maintained by an agency.”          HRS § 92E-1
    (1985); see also HRS § 92E-4 (1985).
    The tension between HRS Chapters 92 and 92E, which
    were “written at different times for different purposes and
    without regard for each other,” created substantial conflict and
    uncertainty, leading Governor John Waihee to convene an Ad Hoc
    Committee on Public Records and Privacy Laws in 1987 to consider
    possibilities for reform.      Governor’s Report at 2-3.        After
    receiving public comment and holding a series of public
    hearings, the Committee produced a four-volume Governor’s Report
    that comprehensively detailed the competing interests implicated
    on a wide range of related issues in order to provide a factual
    foundation for sound policy making.        
    Id. at 5.
    In its chapter on “Current Issues and Problems,” the
    Governor’s Report contained a section entitled “Internal
    Government Processes.”     
    Id. at 101.
        The Report described the
    internal processes of government as “[o]ne of the areas of
    greatest tension in any review of public records law,” noting
    20
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    the conflict between ensuring government accountability and
    permitting agencies to freely communicate internally.             
    Id. While discussing
    the differing interests at stake in the
    disclosure of internal agency correspondence and memoranda, the
    Governor’s Report noted that, based on testimony from the
    Honolulu Managing Director, “[t]hese materials are not currently
    viewed as public records by government officials under Chapter
    92, HRS, though there are records which the courts have opened
    up on an individual basis.”       
    Id. However, a
    review of applicable statutes and caselaw
    makes clear that this view was inaccurate.          Under HRS Chapter
    92, public records were expansively defined to include
    essentially all written materials created or received by an
    agency, save only those “records which invade the right of
    privacy of an individual.”       HRS § 92-50 (1985) (“As used in this
    part, ‘public record’ means any written or printed report, book,
    or paper . . . of the State or of a county . . . in or on which
    an entry has been made . . . or which any public officer or
    employee has received . . . .” (emphases added)).16            The
    definition did not exclude deliberative communications, nor were
    16
    The dissent’s attempted narrowing of HRS § 92-50’s parameters,
    Dissent at 22 n.3, is contrary to the plain text of the statute.
    21
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    such public records excluded from the broad disclosure mandate
    contained in HRS § 92-51.
    Thus, prior to the enactment of the UIPA,
    deliberative, pre-decisional agency records were open to public
    inspection under the plain language of HRS Chapter 92.             It is
    therefore unsurprising that both available court decisions on
    the subject resulted in an order that the government agency
    disclose the deliberative materials sought.           See Pauoa-Pacific
    Heights Cmty. Grp. v. Bldg. Dep’t, 79 HLR 790543, 790556 (Jan.
    9, 1980) (ordering disclosure of “building applications,
    building plans, specifications, supporting documentation and
    inter and intra office memorandum, reports and recommendations
    requested by Plaintiffs” (emphasis added)); Honolulu Advertiser,
    Inc. v. Yuen, 79 HLR 790117, 790120, 790128 (Oct. 10, 1979)
    (ordering the release of “all interoffice and intraoffice
    memorandum, memos to file, or telephone logs pertaining to the
    Mililani Sewage Treatment Plant”).17
    17
    In the order issued in Yuen, the court initially stated that “the
    state of Hawaii has no discretion to withhold the requested records contained
    in its files from the public unless the records requested are specifically
    exempted from public inspection by constitution, statute, regulation, court
    rule, or common law privilege.” Yuen, 79 HLR at 790128. Prior to filing its
    order, however, the court crossed out “or common law privilege,” appearing to
    specifically reject upon further consideration any argument that the
    government could rely upon common law principles like the deliberative
    process privilege to resist its statutory disclosure obligations. See 
    id. 22 ***FOR
    PUBLICATION IN WEST’S HAWAII REPORTS AND PACIFIC REPORTER***
    Spurred by the release of the Governor’s Report,
    legislators in the Hawai‘i House of Representatives in 1988
    introduced the bill that would become the UIPA, largely basing
    the law on the Model Uniform Information Practices Code (MUIPC)
    that had been promulgated in 1980 by the National Conference of
    Commissioners on Uniform State Laws.        H. Stand. Comm. Rep. No.
    342-88, in 1988 House Journal, at 972.         As adopted by the House,
    the bill incorporated twelve exceptions to disclosure derived
    from Section 2-103 of the MUIPC, including an exemption for
    deliberative agency records:
    § -13 Information not subject to duty of disclosure. (a)
    This chapter shall not require disclosure of:
    (1) Information compiled for law enforcement
    purposes, including victim or witness assistance
    program files, if the disclosure would:
    (A) Materially impair the effectiveness of an
    ongoing investigation, criminal intelligence
    operation, or law enforcement proceeding;
    (B) Identify a confidential informant;
    (C) Reveal confidential investigative
    techniques or procedures, including criminal
    intelligence activity; or
    (D) Endanger the life of an individual;
    (2) Inter-agency or intra-agency advisory,
    consultative, or deliberative material other than
    factual information if:
    (A) Communicated for the purpose of decision-
    making;
    and
    (B) Disclosure would substantially inhibit the
    flow of communications within an agency or
    impair an agency’s decision-making processes[.]
    (3) Material prepared in anticipation of litigation
    which would not be available to a party in litigation
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    with the agency under the rules of pretrial discovery
    for actions in a circuit court of this State;
    (4) Materials used to administer a licensing,
    employment, or academic examination if disclosure
    would compromise the fairness or objectivity of the
    examination process;
    (5) Information which, if disclosed, would frustrate
    government procurement or give an advantage to any
    person proposing to enter into a contract or
    agreement with an agency including information
    involved in the collective bargaining process
    provided that a roster of employees shall be open to
    inspection by any organization which is allowed to
    challenge existing employee representation;
    (6) Information identifying real property under
    consideration for public acquisition before
    acquisition of rights to the property; or information
    not otherwise available under the law of this State
    pertaining to real property under consideration for
    public acquisition before making a purchase
    agreement;
    (7) Administrative or technical information,
    including software, operating protocols, employee
    manuals, or other information, the disclosure of
    which would jeopardize the security of a record-
    keeping system;
    (8) Proprietary information, including computer
    programs and software and other types of information
    manufactured or marketed by persons under exclusive
    legal right, owned by the agency or entrusted to it;
    (9) Trade secrets or confidential commercial and
    financial information obtained, upon request, from a
    person;
    (10) Library, archival, or museum material
    contributed by private persons to the extent of any
    lawful limitation imposed on the material;
    (11) Information that is expressly made
    nondisclosable or confidential under federal or state
    law or protected by the rules of evidence.
    (12) An individually identifiable record not
    disclosable under part III.
    H.B. 2002, 14th Leg., Reg. Sess., § 1 at 8-10 (1988) (emphasis
    added).
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    During consideration by the Senate, the Senate
    Government Operations Committee heard testimony from a number of
    parties critical of the exemption for inter-agency or intra-
    agency advisory, consultative, or deliberative material.             The
    witnesses argued that the exemption would close many agency
    records that were open to the public under then-existing law.
    The Chairman of the non-profit government watchdog group Common
    Cause Hawai‘i, for example, testified that the exemption
    “relating to inter and intra-agency records . . . would result
    in closing off access to records which are currently open to the
    public,” resulting in “a major NET loss of public information.”
    The Honolulu Advertiser and KHON-TV also objected to the
    exemption, stating that it would “appear to deny access to
    documents which are now public records under existing law and
    which are critical to the public’s right to know.”            And one of
    the former members of the Ad Hoc Committee on Public Records and
    Privacy that created the Governor’s Report testified that the
    provision “relating to inter- and intra-agency records would
    result in closing off access to records which are currently open
    to the public.”18
    18
    The former Ad Hoc Committee member noted that “although access to
    such records is resisted in practice, the only Hawaii legal case resulted in
    the disclosure of this type of internal agency correspondence.”
    25
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    After receiving this testimony, the Senate version of
    the bill was amended to remove the twelve specific exemptions in
    the House bill and add four of the more general exemptions
    contained under current law, including the frustration of a
    legitimate government function exception now codified in HRS §
    92F-13(3).   S. Stand. Comm. Rep. No. 2580, in 1988 Senate
    Journal, at 1095.    Nine of the twelve exemptions contained in
    the House bill were included in the Standing Committee Report--
    in the same order in which they occurred in the House bill--as
    examples of records for which disclosure would frustrate a
    legitimate government function:
    (b) Frustration of legitimate government function. The
    following are examples of records which need not be
    disclosed, if disclosure would frustrate a legitimate
    government function,
    (1) Records or information compiled for law
    enforcement purposes;
    (2) Materials used to administer an examination
    which, if disclosed, would compromise the validity,
    fairness or objectivity of the examination;
    (3) Information which, if disclosed, would raise the
    cost of government procurements or give a manifestly
    unfair advantage to any person proposing to enter
    into a contract agreement with an agency, including
    information pertaining to collective bargaining;
    (4) Information identifying or pertaining to real
    property under consideration for future public
    acquisition, unless otherwise available under State
    law;
    (5) Administrative or technical information,
    including software, operating protocols and employee
    manuals, which, if disclosed, would jeopardize the
    security of a record-keeping system;
    (6) Proprietary information, such as research
    methods, records and data, computer programs and
    26
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    software and other types of information manufactured
    or marketed by persons under exclusive legal right,
    owned by an agency or entrusted to it;
    (7) Trade secrets or confidential commercial and
    financial information;
    (8) Library, archival, or museum material contributed
    by private persons to the extent of any lawful
    limitation imposed by the contributor; and
    (9) Information that is expressly made nondisclosable
    or confidential under Federal or State law or
    protected by judicial rule.
    
    Id. Of the
    three exemptions contained in the House bill that
    were not included as examples of records that would frustrate a
    legitimate government interest if disclosed, two were
    encompassed by other provisions of the Senate bill.19             Only one
    exemption that was present in the House bill was omitted
    entirely: the deliberative process provision that the testifying
    witnesses had objected to on the basis that it would close
    records that were open under then-existing law.            Compare 
    id., with H.B.
    2002, 14th Leg., Reg. Sess., § 1 at 8-10 (1988).
    That the omission was intentional is confirmed by the
    report of the Conference Committee, which opted to adopt the
    general exceptions to disclosure contained in the Senate’s
    version of the bill.       In discussing the frustration of a
    19
    Section -13(a)(3), which exempted nondiscoverable litigation
    materials, was recodified as a separate exception to disclosure in the
    provision that would become HRS § 92F-13(2). Similarly, section -13(a)(12),
    which exempted individually identifiable records, was encompassed by the
    provision that would become the HRS § 92F-13(1) exception that shields
    records when disclosure would constitute “a clearly unwarranted invasion of
    personal privacy.”
    27
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    legitimate government function exception, the Conference
    Committee Report referenced the examples listed in the Senate
    Standing Committee Report before stating, “The records which
    will not be required to be disclosed under [this section] are
    records which are currently unavailable.          It is not the intent
    of the Legislature that this section be used to close currently
    available records, even though these records might fit within
    one of the categories in this section.”          Conf. Comm. Rep. No.
    112-88, in 1988 House Journal, at 818 (emphasis added).
    Thus, the legislative history of the UIPA indicates
    that the legislature made a conscious choice not to include a
    deliberative process privilege in the UIPA because it would
    close off records that were historically available to the public
    under Hawai‘i law.20     OIP’s adoption of such a privilege is
    20
    Other legislative history further demonstrates the Hawai‘i
    legislature’s rejection of the deliberative process privilege. When adopting
    the Hawaii Rules of Evidence (HRE) in 1980, for instance, the Hawaii
    legislature disclaimed all common law privileges that were not codified by
    statute--including the deliberative process privilege that existed under
    federal common law. See HRE Rule 501 & cmt. In choosing which privileges to
    so codify, the legislature and judiciary declined to adopt a deliberative
    process privilege despite one being contained in the proposed federal rules
    after which the HRE were modeled. See Rules of Evidence for the United
    States Courts & Magistrates, 
    56 F.R.D. 183
    , 251-52 (Nov. 20, 1972)
    (containing a proposed Rule 509 granting the government a privilege to refuse
    disclosure of “official information,” which was defined to include
    “intragovernmental opinions or recommendations submitted for consideration in
    the performance of decisional or policymaking functions”); HRE Rule 501 cmt.
    (noting that the proposed Rules of Evidence for U.S. Courts and Magistrates
    served as a model for the HRE).
    28
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    therefore contrary to the clear signals the legislature provided
    as to the intended functioning of the statute.
    C. OIP’s Interpretation of HRS § 92F-13(3) is Palpably Erroneous
    The legislature has provided that OIP’s
    interpretations of the UIPA in an action to compel disclosure
    should generally be considered precedential.          HRS § 92F-15(b).
    Nevertheless, our precedents and the UIPA itself make clear that
    we are not bound to acquiesce in OIP’s interpretation when it is
    “palpably erroneous.”     Peer News LLC v. City & Cty. of Honolulu,
    138 Hawai‘i 53, 67, 
    376 P.3d 1
    , 15 (2016); HRS § 92F-15(b).            This
    is to say that “judicial deference to an agency’s interpretation
    of [even] ambiguous statutory language is ‘constrained by our
    obligation to honor the clear meaning of a statute, as revealed
    by its language, purpose, and history.’”         Kanahele v. Maui Cty.
    Council, 130 Hawai‘i 228, 244, 
    307 P.3d 1174
    , 1190 (2013)
    (quoting Morgan v. Planning Dep’t, Cty. of Kaua‘i, 104 Hawai‘i
    173, 180, 
    86 P.3d 982
    , 989 (2004)).
    We have held that, even when OIP has maintained a
    position for many years without challenge, it is this court’s
    duty to reject that position if it is plainly at odds with the
    UIPA.   In ‘Ōlelo: The Corp. for Community Television v. OIP, for
    instance, this court considered the “totality of the
    circumstances” test OIP had adopted from out-of-jurisdiction
    precedent to identify an “agency” for purposes of the UIPA.                116
    29
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    Hawai‘i 337, 346-49, 
    173 P.3d 484
    , 493-96 (2007).           Though the
    test had been applied in nine OIP opinions over the course of
    seventeen years,21 this court nonetheless held it invalid because
    it was contrary to the “plain and unambiguous” definition of
    “agency” contained in HRS § 92F–3 (1993).          
    Id. at 351,
    173 P.3d
    at 498.    Similarly, in a previous case also entitled Peer News
    LLC v. City & County of Honolulu, this court determined that a
    nineteen-year-old OIP opinion stating that police officers have
    only a de minimis privacy interest in employment-related
    misconduct information was palpably erroneous because the
    interpretation rendered portions of the UIPA a “nullity.” 138
    Hawai‘i at 
    67, 376 P.3d at 15
    .       Such a result was “inconsistent
    with [the] underlying legislative intent” of the statute, we
    held.     
    Id. at 67
    n.10, 376 P.3d at 15 
    n.10.
    Like OIP’s interpretation of HRS § 92F-3 in ‘Ōlelo, OIP
    has maintained in multiple opinions issued over an extended
    period that HRS § 92F-13(3) creates a deliberative process
    privilege.22    As discussed, however, such an interpretation is
    21
    See OIP Op. Ltr. Nos. 05-09, 04-02, 02-08, 94-24, 94-23, 94-05,
    93-18, 91-05, 90-31.
    22
    See OIP Op. Ltr. No. F19-01 at 9 (Oct. 11, 2018) (“OIP has issued
    a long line of opinions since 1989 that recognize and limit the deliberative
    process privilege as a form of the frustration exception in section 92F-
    13(3).”); see also, e.g., OIP Op. Ltr. Nos. 07-11, 04-15, 00-01, 93-19, 91-
    24, 90-8, 90-3, 89-9.
    (continued . . .)
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    contrary to the clear and unambiguous language of HRS § 92F-
    13(3) and the statement of purposes and policies contained in
    HRS § 92F-2.    And, like in Peer News, the privilege is plainly
    inconsistent with the legislative history of the UIPA, which
    indicates that the legislature specifically rejected a
    deliberative process exception before enacting the law.23             OIP
    therefore palpably erred in adopting an interpretation of HRS §
    92F-13(3) that is irreconcilable with the plain text and
    (. . . continued)
    The City and BFS argue that, by failing to act to correct these
    OIP opinions, the legislature has tacitly approved OIP’s interpretation of
    HRS § 92F-13(3). As the United States Supreme Court has stated, even a very
    long period of legislative silence cannot be invoked to validate a statutory
    interpretation that is otherwise impermissible. Zuber v. Allen, 
    396 U.S. 168
    , 185 n.21 (1969). Legislative inaction may indicate a range of
    conditions other than approval, including “unawareness, preoccupation, []
    paralysis,” or simply trust in the state’s court system to correct a clearly
    inconsistent interpretation. 
    Id. We therefore
    decline to recognize
    legislative acquiescence in OIP’s interpretation of HRS § 92F-13(3).
    23
    The OIP opinions do not truly engage with the clear negative
    implication of the UIPA’s legislative history. In the 1989 opinion adopting
    the privilege, OIP set forth the Senate Committee Report’s examples of
    records that may fall under HRS § 92F-13(3) before summarily asserting that
    “[a]nother example of government records which if disclosed may result in the
    frustration of a legitimate government function are inter-agency and intra-
    agency memoranda or correspondence.” OIP Op. Ltr. No. 89-9 at 9. The
    opinion then discussed a number of federal cases interpreting the
    deliberative process exception contained in the federal Freedom of
    Information Act, 5 U.S.C. § 552(b)(5). OIP Op. Ltr. No. 89-9 at 9-11. But
    these cases interpreting the federal statute are relevant to the Hawai‘i
    legislature’s intent when enacting the UIPA only insofar as they demonstrate
    that the legislature was clearly aware that other jurisdictions had codified
    the deliberative process privilege, thus making their rejection of such a
    privilege all the more clear. Importantly, in adopting the privilege, OIP
    failed to consider or even mention those aspects of the UIPA’s legislative
    history that demonstrate that the privilege had been intentionally omitted
    from the final version of the statute.
    31
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    legislative intent of the statute.24          See Peer News, 138 Hawai‘i
    at 
    67, 376 P.3d at 15
    ; ‘Ōlelo, 116 Hawai‘i at 
    349, 173 P.3d at 496
    .    We accordingly conclude that the circuit court erred by
    upholding OIP’s interpretation and by granting summary judgment
    to the City and BFS.
    D. The Requirements of HRS § 92F-13(3)
    Because we hold that OIP palpably erred in adopting a
    deliberative process privilege pursuant to the HRS § 92F-13(3)
    exception for documents that would frustrate a legitimate
    government function if disclosed, we now provide guidance as to
    the provision’s proper application.           The 1988 Senate Standing
    Committee Report, which included examples of records that may
    fall under the HRS § 92F-13(3) exception “[t]o assist the
    24
    The City and BFS alternatively argue that the deliberative
    process privilege may be based on the HRS § 92F-13(4) exemption for
    “[g]overnment records which, pursuant to state or federal law including an
    order of any state or federal court, are protected from disclosure,”
    contending that the provision incorporates the federal common law
    deliberative process privilege. This novel theory has not been adopted by
    OIP, which has made some statements indicating that it takes a contrary
    position. See, e.g., OIP Op. Ltr. No. 05-06 at 3 (Mar. 22, 2005) (stating
    that HRS § 92F-13(4) applies “only where that record is made confidential by
    another statute” (emphasis omitted and added)). Whether reviewed under a
    palpably erroneous or de novo standard, the government’s argument fails to
    regenerate the privilege from federal common law.
    Further, as stated, a deliberative process privilege is contrary
    to the plain language of HRS § 92F-2 and the legislative history of the UIPA
    as a whole. We accordingly hold that the legislature did not intend HRS §
    92F-13(4) to incorporate the federal common law deliberative process
    privilege, which applies exclusively in federal courts when jurisdiction is
    based on a question of federal law. See Young v. City & Cty. of Honolulu,
    No. CIV 07-00068 JMS-LEK, 
    2008 WL 2676365
    , at *4 (D. Haw. July 8, 2008);
    supra note 20 (describing the Hawai‘i legislature’s rejection of the common
    law privilege when enacting the HRE).
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    Judiciary in understanding the legislative intent,” is highly
    instructive.   S. Stand. Comm. Rep. No. 2580, in 1988 Senate
    Journal, at 1095; see also Kaapu v. Aloha Tower Dev. Corp., 
    74 Haw. 365
    , 387-89, 
    846 P.2d 882
    , 891-92 (1993) (holding that
    competing development proposals would frustrate a legitimate
    government function within the meaning of HRS § 92F-13(3) if
    disclosed prior to the agency’s final selection of a developer
    because, inter alia, the records fell “within one or more of the
    classes of information described in the” Senate Standing
    Committee Report).    Although it is not necessary that a record
    fall within or be analogous to one of the enumerated categories
    for it to be shielded from disclosure under HRS § 92F-13(3), the
    list and the text of the Senate Standing Committee report
    provides guidance as to the provision’s operation.
    Notably, each of the legislature’s provided examples
    implicates a specific legitimate government function, including
    the enforcement of laws, the procurement of property, the fair
    administration of exams, and the maintenance of secure record-
    keeping systems.     By contrast, the City and BFS argued that the
    legitimate government function that may be frustrated by the
    disclosure of deliberative records was simply agency decision-
    making.   But “decision-making” is such a broad and ill-defined
    category that it threatens to encompass nearly all government
    actions, which almost inevitably involve decisions of some sort.
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    Indeed, even illegitimate actions beyond the government’s legal
    authority could likely be described as decisions.            Thus, to
    claim the protections of HRS § 92F-13(3), an agency must define
    the government function that would be frustrated by a record’s
    disclosure with a degree of specificity sufficient for a
    reviewing court to evaluate the legitimacy of the contemplated
    function.25   To hold otherwise would result in the provision
    having no meaningful limitations.
    Further, the Senate Standing Committee Report
    indicates that not even the expressly enumerated categories of
    records are automatically exempt from disclosure; the report
    describes the enumerated documents as “examples of records which
    need not be disclosed, if disclosure would frustrate a
    legitimate government function.”           S. Stand. Comm. Rep. No. 2580,
    in 1988 Senate Journal, at 1095 (emphasis added).            Thus, HRS §
    92F-13(3) calls for an individualized determination that
    disclosure of the particular record or portion thereof would
    frustrate a legitimate government function.26           That a record is
    of a certain type--whether that type is deliberative, pre-
    25
    Under HRS § 92F-15(c), “[t] he agency has the burden of proof to
    establish justification for nondisclosure.”
    26
    As BFS correctly determined in this case, redaction and
    disclosure of the remainder of the record is appropriate when the portion of
    a document that qualifies for withholding under one of HRS § 92F-13’s
    exceptions is reasonably separable from the record as a whole. See Peer
    News, 138 Hawai‘i at 
    73, 376 P.3d at 21
    .
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    decisional, or even a type included in or analogous to the
    examples set forth in the Senate Standing Committee Report--is
    not alone sufficient to shield the record from disclosure under
    the provision.    While such a designation may be instructive, an
    agency must nonetheless demonstrate a connection between
    disclosure of the specific record and the likely frustration of
    a legitimate government function, including by clearly
    describing the particular frustration and providing concrete
    information indicating that the identified outcome is the likely
    result of disclosure.     See OIP Op. Ltr. No. 03-16 at 8 (Aug. 14,
    2003) (stating that withholding disclosure of a coaching
    contract under HRS § 92F-13(3) was not justified because the
    university “has provided us with no specific examples of or any
    concrete information as to how disclosure of the contract will
    frustrate the Athletic Department’s ability to function”).
    In sum, to justify withholding a record under HRS §
    92F-13(3), an agency must articulate a real connection between
    disclosure of the particular record it is seeking to withhold
    and the likely frustration of a specific legitimate government
    function.   The explanation must provide sufficient detail such
    that OIP or a reviewing court is capable of evaluating the
    legitimacy of the government function and the likelihood that
    the function will be frustrated in an identifiable way if the
    record is disclosed.     See 
    id. at 8,
    16 (stating that “[w]e would
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    be remiss in our statutory duties if we simply accepted UH’s
    statement that disclosure [of the Head Coach’s compensation
    package] will frustrate a legitimate government function without
    any factual basis to support UH’s assertion” that disclosure
    “could have the impact of frustrating the Athletic Director’s
    ability to maintain a cohesive coaching team and a successful
    athletic program”).      In the absence of such a showing,
    withholding disclosure under the provision is not warranted.
    E. The Dissent’s Proposed Rule
    The dissent characterizes our holding--that a
    deliberative process privilege is clearly unsupported by the
    plain text and legislative history of the UIPA--as an “extreme
    position[],”27 and instead advocates for an approach similar to
    27
    It is noted that several other states have provided through
    statute and judicial determination that, as we hold today, deliberative
    agency records are generally not exempted from public records request. See,
    e.g., Conn. Gen. Stat. § 1-210(e)(1); Vt. Stat. tit. 1, § 317(c)(4); Braddy
    v. State, 
    219 So. 3d 803
    , 820 (Fla. 2017)(“Inter-office memoranda and intra-
    office memoranda communicating information from one public employee to
    another or merely prepared for filing, even though not a part of an agency's
    later, formal public product, would nonetheless constitute public records . .
    . .” (quoting Shevin v. Byron, Harless, Schaffer, Reid & Assocs., Inc., 
    379 So. 2d 633
    , 640 (Fla. 1980)). And an administrative decision in at least one
    other state has adopted a similar position in the absence of judicial
    guidance or an explicit statutory directive. See McKitrick v. Utah Attorney
    General’s Office, No. 2009-14, ¶ 7 (Utah State Records Comm. Sept. 17, 2009),
    https://archives.utah.gov/src/srcappeal-2009-14.html (“The AG’s Office also
    argued that access should be restricted . . . because the common law
    recognizes . . . a ‘deliberative process privilege’ for documents created
    within the executive branch of government. However, the cases proffered by
    the AG’s office supporting such position clearly predate the enactment of
    [Utah’s public record’s law].”); see also S. Utah Wilderness All. v.
    Automated Geographic Reference Ctr., Div. of Info. Tech., 
    200 P.3d 643
    , 656
    (Utah 2008) (holding that the requested internal agency records did not fall
    (continued . . .)
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    that taken by the Colorado Supreme Court in City of Colorado
    Springs v. White.     Dissent at 4-5 (citing 
    967 P.2d 1042
    (Colo.
    1998) (en banc)).     From White, the dissent derives a proposed
    framework for applying a circumscribed variation of the
    deliberative process privilege that shields agency deliberations
    only when an agency provides a detailed explanation of why the
    record qualifies for the privilege and the government’s interest
    in confidentiality outweighs the requester’s interest in
    disclosure.    Dissent at 30-32.      But material differences in
    Colorado’s public records statute and evidentiary rules make
    White inapposite to Hawai‘i’s UIPA, and the dissent would thus
    usurp the role of the legislature by reading a complex exception
    into the statute that has no basis in its text or legislative
    history.
    In White, the Colorado Supreme Court held that a
    deliberative process privilege inhered not in a public records
    exception for records that would frustrate government functions
    if disclosed, but rather an exception that expressly protected
    “privileged information” from 
    disclosure. 967 P.2d at 1045-46
    (citing Colo. Rev. Stat. § 24-72-204(3)(a)(IV) (1998)).             Unlike
    (. . . continued)
    within the narrow exception in Utah’s public record law for “temporary
    drafts” produced by an agency).
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    the Hawaii Rules of Evidence (HRE), the Colorado Rules of
    Evidence (CRE) provide that claims of privilege are governed by,
    inter alia, “the principles of the common law as they may be
    interpreted by the courts of the State of Colorado in light of
    reason and experience.”       CRE Rule 501.      The Colorado Supreme
    Court was thus acting within the bounds the legislature had
    established when in White it recognized a qualified deliberative
    process privilege “as part of the common law of Colorado” and
    held that the privilege and the balancing test it encompassed
    had been incorporated into the statutory public records
    exception for “privileged 
    information.” 967 P.2d at 1050
    , 54-
    55.
    In contrast, the dissent does not attempt to ground
    its deliberative process privilege in a UIPA exemption for
    documents that would be undiscoverable in litigation due to an
    evidentiary privilege.       This is unsurprising because, as
    discussed supra, note 20, the HRE do not allow for common law
    privileges, and the legislature specifically declined to adopt a
    deliberative process privilege when codifying those evidentiary
    privileges that are available.         See HRE Rule 501 (2006).       Thus,
    unlike in the Colorado public records law that was interpreted
    in White, there is no basis to incorporate a common law
    qualified deliberative process privilege or the balancing test
    it encompasses into the UIPA.
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    Indeed, not only is the dissent’s interpretation
    lacking in affirmative support, but there are strong textual
    signals in the UIPA actively weighing against such a reading.
    HRS § 92F-14 (2012) provides a statutory framework for
    evaluating when a record qualifies for withholding under HRS §
    92F-13(1), which shields “[g]overnment records which, if
    disclosed, would constitute a clearly unwarranted invasion of
    personal privacy.”    HRS § 92F-14(a) explicitly calls for a
    balancing test similar to the test the dissent would apply here,
    stating that a record will not qualify for withholding when “the
    public interest in disclosure outweighs the privacy interest of
    the individual.”    No analogous provision exists for the HRS §
    92F-13(3) frustration of a legitimate government function
    exception.   The implication of this absence is that “the
    legislature clearly knew how to” prescribe a balancing test, and
    its failure to do so with respect to HRS 92F-13(3) represents a
    conscious decision that one should not be applied.           Lales v.
    Wholesale Motors Co., 133 Hawai‘i 332, 345, 
    328 P.3d 341
    , 354
    (2014) (quoting White v. Pac. Media Grp., Inc., 
    322 F. Supp. 2d 1101
    , 1114 (D. Haw. 2004)).
    The dissent’s approach may well represent sound
    policy, and we express no opinion as to its advisability as
    matter of public administration.         But
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    [w]e are not at liberty to interpret a statutory provision
    to further a policy that is not articulated in either the
    language of the statute or the relevant legislative
    history, even if we believe that such an interpretation
    would produce a more beneficent result, for the Court's
    function in the application and interpretation of such laws
    must be carefully limited to avoid encroaching on the power
    of the legislature to determine policies and make laws to
    carry them out.
    Lopez v. State, 133 Hawai‘i 311, 323, 
    328 P.3d 320
    , 332 (2014)
    (original alterations and quotations omitted) (quoting Ross v.
    Stouffer Hotel Co. Ltd., Inc., 76 Hawai‘i 454, 467, 
    879 P.2d 1037
    , 1050 (1994) (Klein, J., concurring and dissenting)).              The
    determination as to whether and to what extent deliberative
    documents should be shielded from disclosure must be made by the
    legislature and not by judicial fiat.        So long as no such
    exception exists in the UIPA, this court may not supply its own.
    IV.   CONCLUSION
    The circuit court in this case erred in determining
    that the City and BFS were entitled to withhold the budget
    requests pursuant to a deliberative process privilege, which
    finds no basis in the plain text or legislative history of the
    UIPA.   Accordingly, we vacate the circuit court’s January 13,
    2016 Order Granting Defendants City and County of Honolulu and
    Department of Budget and Fiscal Services’ Motion for Partial
    Summary Judgment on Count I of the Complaint filed October 19,
    2015; January 13, 2016 Order Granting Defendants City and County
    of Honolulu and Department of Budget and Fiscal Services’ Motion
    for Partial Summary Judgment on Count II of the Complaint filed
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    October 19, 2015; and February 5, 2016 Judgment.           We remand this
    case for further proceedings consistent with the principles set
    forth in this opinion.
    Robert Brian Black                       /s/ Sabrina S. McKenna
    Sarah Goggans
    for appellant                            /s/ Richard W. Pollack
    Duane W.H. Pang                          /s/ Michael D. Wilson
    for appellees
    Marissa H.I. Luning
    for amicus curiae
    State of Hawai‘i
    41