State ex rel. Cable News Network, Inc. v. Bellbrook-Sugarcreek Local Schools (Slip Opinion) , 2020 Ohio 5149 ( 2020 )


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  • [Until this opinion appears in the Ohio Official Reports advance sheets, it may be cited as State
    ex rel. Cable News Network, Inc. v. Bellbrook-Sugarcreek Local Schools, Slip Opinion No. 2020-
    Ohio-5149.]
    NOTICE
    This slip opinion is subject to formal revision before it is published in an
    advance sheet of the Ohio Official Reports. Readers are requested to
    promptly notify the Reporter of Decisions, Supreme Court of Ohio, 65
    South Front Street, Columbus, Ohio 43215, of any typographical or other
    formal errors in the opinion, in order that corrections may be made before
    the opinion is published.
    SLIP OPINION NO. 2020-OHIO-5149
    THE STATE EX REL. CABLE NEWS NETWORK, I NC., ET AL., APPELLANTS, v.
    BELLBROOK-SUGARCREEK LOCAL SCHOOLS ET AL., APPELLEES.
    [Until this opinion appears in the Ohio Official Reports advance sheets, it
    may be cited as State ex rel. Cable News Network, Inc. v. Bellbrook-Sugarcreek
    Local Schools, Slip Opinion No. 2020-Ohio-5149.]
    Public records law—Ohio Student Privacy Act—R.C. 3319.321(B) prohibits the
    disclosure of public-school records pertaining to a deceased adult former
    student without the written consent of the adult former student, with no
    exception for the former student’s death—Court of appeals’ judgment
    denying requested writ of mandamus affirmed.
    (No. 2019-1433—Submitted June 3, 2020—Decided November 5, 2020.)
    APPEAL from the Court of Appeals for Greene County, No. 2019CA0047,
    2019-Ohio-4187.
    __________________
    SUPREME COURT OF OHIO
    STEWART, J.
    {¶ 1} At issue in this appeal is whether a public-school district must release
    records pertaining to a deceased adult former student in response to a public-records
    request. The Second District Court of Appeals found that R.C. 3319.321(B), a
    provision of the Ohio Student Privacy Act (“OSPA”), prohibits disclosure of such
    records without the written consent of the adult former student, with no exception
    for the former student’s death.           Because the OSPA unambiguously forbids
    disclosure of the requested records, we affirm.
    I. FACTS AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND
    {¶ 2} On August 4, 2019, 24-year-old Connor Betts killed nine people and
    injured 27 others in a mass shooting in Dayton. Police officers shot and killed Betts
    at the scene. Betts was a 2013 graduate of Bellbrook High School, which is part of
    the school district of appellee Bellbrook-Sugarcreek Local Schools (the “school
    district”).
    {¶ 3} Appellants in this case are seven local and national media
    organizations.1 On August 4 and 5, 2019, each of them submitted a public-records
    request to the school district under R.C. 149.43. They requested school records
    related to Betts, including but not limited to disciplinary records. The school
    district denied appellants’ requests, stating that the records were exempt from
    disclosure under R.C. 149.43(A)(1)(v), which applies to records the release of
    which “is prohibited by state or federal law.” Specifically, the school district
    identified the Family Educational Rights and Privacy Act, 20 U.S.C. 1232g
    (“FERPA”), and the OSPA as statutes that exempted Betts’s records from
    disclosure under R.C. 149.43(A)(1)(v). In an e-mail addressed to multiple members
    1. The appellants are (1) Cable News Network, Inc., (2) Cox Media Group Ohio, Inc., d.b.a. Dayton
    Daily News and WHIO-TV Channel 7, (3) Scripps Media, Inc., d.b.a. WCPO-TV, (4) The
    Cincinnati Enquirer, a Division of GP Media, Inc., (5) The New York Times Company d.b.a. The
    New York Times, (6) American Broadcasting Companies, Inc., d.b.a. ABC News, and (7) The
    Associated Press.
    2
    January Term, 2020
    of the press, appellee school district superintendent Douglas A. Cozad, Ph.D.,
    acknowledged that the federal government generally interprets FERPA rights as
    expiring upon a student’s death but indicated that “Ohio law offers broader
    protections for students’ records.”
    {¶ 4} On August 9, 2019, appellants filed an action in the Second District
    for a writ of mandamus against the school district and Dr. Cozad, in his official
    capacity as superintendent and the custodian of the records sought. Appellants
    alleged that they have a clear legal right to inspect Betts’s records under R.C.
    149.43(B) and that neither FERPA nor the OSPA prohibits the school district from
    releasing them.
    {¶ 5} The Second District denied the writ. The court first observed that it
    “does not appear to be controversial or unsettled” that the OSPA prohibits the
    release of public-school records about adult former students without their consent.
    2019-Ohio-4187, 
    134 N.E.3d 268
    , at ¶ 17. The court then rejected appellants’
    argument that the OSPA’s privacy protections for an adult former student lapse at
    the former student’s death.        The Second District found that the OSPA
    unambiguously protects an adult former student’s records from disclosure, with no
    exception for the former student’s death. See
    id. at ¶ 23-25.
    Having found that the
    OSPA prohibited the school district from releasing Betts’s student records, the
    Second District did not reach the issue of whether FERPA likewise prohibited their
    release.
    Id. at ¶ 30.
            {¶ 6} Appellants appealed to this court as of right.
    II. ANALYSIS
    {¶ 7} We review a court of appeals’ judgment in a mandamus action filed
    there as if the action had been brought originally in this court. State ex rel. Dynamic
    Industries, Inc. v. Cincinnati, 
    147 Ohio St. 3d 422
    , 2016-Ohio-7663, 
    66 N.E.3d 734
    ,
    ¶ 7. To be entitled to a writ of mandamus, appellants must establish, by clear and
    convincing evidence, (1) a clear legal right to the requested relief and (2) a clear
    3
    SUPREME COURT OF OHIO
    legal duty on the part of the school district to provide it. State ex rel. Cincinnati
    Enquirer v. Sage, 
    142 Ohio St. 3d 392
    , 2015-Ohio-974, 
    31 N.E.3d 616
    , ¶ 10.
    Because mandamus is the appropriate remedy to compel compliance with R.C.
    149.43, appellants need not demonstrate the absence of an adequate remedy in the
    ordinary course of law. State ex rel. Cincinnati Enquirer v. Pike Cty. Gen. Health
    Dist., 
    154 Ohio St. 3d 297
    , 2018-Ohio-3721, 
    114 N.E.3d 152
    , ¶ 12.
    {¶ 8} “We begin with the premise that ‘public records are the people’s
    records, and that the officials in whose custody they happen to be are merely
    trustees for the people.’ ” State ex rel. Cincinnati Enquirer v. Ohio Dept. of Pub.
    Safety, 
    148 Ohio St. 3d 433
    , 2016-Ohio-7987, 
    71 N.E.3d 258
    , ¶ 32, quoting State
    ex rel. Patterson v. Ayers, 
    171 Ohio St. 369
    , 371, 
    171 N.E.2d 508
    (1960).
    Consistent with that premise, the court construes R.C. 149.43 liberally in favor of
    broad access and resolves any doubt in favor of disclosure. State ex rel. Toledo
    Blade Co. v. Seneca Cty. Bd. of Commrs., 
    120 Ohio St. 3d 372
    , 2008-Ohio-6253,
    
    899 N.E.2d 961
    , ¶ 17. “Exceptions to disclosure under the Public Records Act
    [R.C. 149.43] are strictly construed against the public-records custodian, and the
    custodian has the burden to establish the applicability of an exception.” State ex
    rel. Miller v. Ohio State Hwy. Patrol, 
    136 Ohio St. 3d 350
    , 2013-Ohio-3720, 
    995 N.E.2d 1175
    , ¶ 23.
    {¶ 9} The school district is a “public office” under R.C. 149.43(A)(1). And
    the parties do not dispute that the school district’s records pertaining to Betts are
    “records” as defined by R.C. 149.011(G). The parties’ dispute centers upon the
    applicability of R.C. 149.43(A)(1)(v), which exempts from disclosure records the
    release of which is prohibited by state or federal law. The Second District held that
    the OSPA, R.C. 3319.321, is a state law that prohibits the school district’s
    disclosure of records pertaining to Betts, notwithstanding his death.
    A. R.C. 3319.321(B) Applies to Former Students of a Public School
    {¶ 10} R.C. 3319.321(B) states:
    4
    January Term, 2020
    No person shall release, or permit access to, personally
    identifiable information other than directory information concerning
    any student attending a public school, for purposes other than those
    identified in division (C), (E), (G), or (H)2 of this section, without
    the written consent of the parent, guardian, or custodian of each such
    student who is less than eighteen years of age, or without the written
    consent of each such student who is eighteen years of age or older.
    (Footnote added.) When applicable, R.C. 3319.321(B) creates an exception to the
    definition of a public record under R.C. 149.43(A)(1). See R.C. 149.43(A)(1)(v);
    State ex rel. School Choice Ohio, Inc. v. Cincinnati Pub. School Dist., 147 Ohio
    St.3d 256, 2016-Ohio-5026, 
    63 N.E.3d 1183
    , ¶ 15-16, 31-34. The school district
    and Dr. Cozad argue that the court need not go further than the plain language of
    R.C. 3319.321(B) to conclude that the statute applies to Betts’s student records.
    {¶ 11} The intent of the General Assembly “is primarily determined from
    the language of the statute itself.” Stewart v. Trumbull Cty. Bd. of Elections, 
    34 Ohio St. 2d 129
    , 130, 
    296 N.E.2d 676
    (1973). And when a statute’s language is
    unambiguous, there is no interpretation required: the court must simply apply the
    statute as written. State ex rel. Ohio Presbyterian Retirement Servs., Inc. v. Indus.
    Comm., 
    151 Ohio St. 3d 92
    , 2017-Ohio-7577, 
    86 N.E.3d 294
    , ¶ 19. This court will
    not insert language to modify an unambiguous statute under the guise of statutory
    interpretation. State ex rel. Sears, Roebuck & Co. v. Indus. Comm., 
    52 Ohio St. 3d 144
    , 148, 
    556 N.E.2d 467
    (1990).
    {¶ 12} The Second District acknowledged, and appellants do not dispute,
    that R.C. 3319.321(B)’s protections apply to records pertaining to adult former
    2. None of the purposes in R.C. 3319.321(C), (E), (G), or (H) are applicable to this case.
    5
    SUPREME COURT OF OHIO
    students of a public school. 2019-Ohio-4187, 
    134 N.E.3d 268
    , at ¶ 17. We have
    also implied as much. In State ex rel. Souffrance v. Doe, 
    132 Ohio St. 3d 38
    , 2012-
    Ohio-1906, 
    968 N.E.2d 477
    , the appellant was denied access to student records he
    requested, on the basis that FERPA barred disclosure.
    Id. at ¶ 1-2.
    The appellant
    claimed the records he requested were not exempt from public-records disclosure
    because they related “only to persons who are no longer students.”
    Id. at ¶ 2.
    Citing
    to both FERPA and R.C. 3319.321(B), we held: “[T]his claim lacks merit because
    the persons were students when the records were created and originally
    maintained.”
    Id. {¶ 13} Despite
    no party raising the issue here or in the Second District
    below, the dissent opines that we should decide this case on the basis that R.C.
    3319.321(B) does not protect the student records of former students at all.
    Interpreting R.C. 3319.321(B) as being “written in the present tense,” the dissent
    posits that the statute protects only the personally identifiable information of a
    student who is currently attending the public school from which the records are
    sought.     Dissenting opinion at ¶ 1.    The dissent’s view is not an accurate
    interpretation of R.C. 3319.321(B). And there is good reason why.
    {¶ 14} A valid interpretation of R.C. 3319.321(B) belies the significance
    ascribed by the dissent to the statute’s use of the present-tense verb “attending.”
    The statute prohibits a person from releasing “personally identifiable information
    * * * concerning any student attending a public school.” This language does not
    mean that the student to whom the information pertains must be presently attending
    the public school. Rather, the “any student attending a public school” language
    speaks to whether the information at issue relates to a student’s attendance at a
    public school, regardless of the student’s status at the time the information is
    requested. In other words, the statute is concerned not with the current status of the
    person whose information is being requested but rather with whether the personally
    6
    January Term, 2020
    identifiable information at issue relates to an individual’s attendance at the public
    school.
    {¶ 15} Bolstering this interpretation is the fact that the General Assembly
    enacted the OSPA to bring the state’s public schools into compliance with FERPA,
    which grants funding only to those educational institutions that abide by FERPA’s
    requirements for protecting the privacy of students. See 20 U.S.C. 1232g(b)(1);
    School Choice Ohio, 
    147 Ohio St. 3d 256
    , 2016-Ohio-5026, 
    63 N.E.3d 1183
    , at
    ¶ 31. As we observed in Souffrance, FERPA mandates that public schools protect
    the records of both current and former students. 
    132 Ohio St. 3d 38
    , 2012-Ohio-
    1906, 
    968 N.E.2d 477
    , at ¶ 2. This requirement is made explicit by FERPA’s
    definition of student as “any person with respect to whom an educational agency or
    institution maintains education records or personally identifiable information,” 20
    U.S.C. 1232g(a)(6). Because an educational institution may maintain information
    on former students no longer attending the educational agency or institution, such
    former students fall under FERPA’s protections. See also 34 C.F.R. 99.3 (defining
    student as “any individual who is or has been in attendance at an educational agency
    or institution and regarding whom the agency or institution maintains education
    records”); 73 Fed.Reg. 74806, 74811 (2008) (“It has long been the [Department of
    Education’s] interpretation that records created or received by an educational
    agency or institution on a former student that are directly related to the individual’s
    attendance as a student are not excluded from the definition of education records
    under FERPA * * *”).
    {¶ 16} The dissent would have us believe that the General Assembly
    intended for R.C. 3319.321(B) to fall short of FERPA requirements by limiting its
    application to current students. This would be a nonsensical reading of a statute
    specifically intended to bring Ohio into compliance with FERPA and to help ensure
    that Ohio schools can receive federal funds.
    7
    SUPREME COURT OF OHIO
    B. R.C. 3319.321(B) Prohibits Disclosure
    {¶ 17} We next turn to the question whether R.C. 3319.321(B) applies to
    the records of an adult former student who has died. In this regard, we hold that
    the language of R.C. 3319.321(B) is unambiguous and creates an applicable
    exception under R.C. 149.43(A)(1)(v), regardless whether the relevant records
    pertain to an adult former student who has died.
    {¶ 18} R.C. 3319.321(B) generally prohibits the release of personally
    identifiable information concerning any student without the written consent of the
    student’s parent, guardian, or custodian (if the student is under 18 years of age) or
    the student himself (if the student is over 18). And while the legislature included
    certain exceptions to that general prohibition (for “directory information” and
    disclosure for purposes identified in R.C. 3319.321(C), (E), (G), or (H)3), it did not
    enact an exception for the death of an adult former student. Therefore, under the
    plain language of R.C. 3319.321(B), the school district is prohibited from releasing
    any personally identifying information about Betts without his consent. The
    Second District correctly denied the writ.
    C. There is No Ambiguity to Justify Appellants’ Interpretive Analysis
    {¶ 19} Despite the plain language of the statute, appellants and their amici
    take the position that R.C. 3319.321(B) does not prohibit the release of an adult
    former student’s records when the student has died. Their arguments focus on
    FERPA’s protections, which are generally understood not to extend to the
    education records of deceased adults despite no express statutory language to that
    3. R.C. 3319.321(C) allows “administrative use of public school records by a person acting
    exclusively in the person’s capacity as an employee of a board of education or of the state or any of
    its political subdivisions, any court, or the federal government.” R.C. 3319.321(E) allows disclosure
    of a student’s records to a law-enforcement officer investigating a student who is or may be a
    missing child. R.C. 3319.321(G) allows disclosure of records requested under R.C. 2151.14 or
    2151.141 concerning probation departments and persons on community control. And R.C.
    3319.321(H) allows a public-school principal to report information about a student’s commission
    of certain criminal offenses.
    8
    January Term, 2020
    effect. FERPA is significant, they argue, because the OSPA was enacted to bring
    Ohio’s public schools into compliance with it. See School Choice Ohio, 147 Ohio
    St.3d 256, 2016-Ohio-5026, 
    63 N.E.3d 1183
    , at ¶ 31-32; see also Ohio Legislative
    Service Commission, Summary of 1976 Enactments, January-July, at 87 (summary
    of Am.S.B. No. 367, 136 Ohio Laws, Part I, 318).
    {¶ 20} Appellants first emphasize that FERPA and the OSPA were enacted
    against a backdrop of the common-law right to privacy. This is significant because
    under the prevailing case law at that time, a common-law cause of action for
    invasion of privacy lapsed with the death of the individual to whom it belonged.
    See, e.g., Young v. That Was The Week That Was, 
    423 F.2d 265
    , 265-266 (6th
    Cir.1970) (applying Ohio law). Thus, if Congress or the General Assembly
    intended in FERPA or the OSPA, respectively, to extend those statutes’ privacy
    protections beyond an individual’s death, appellants argue that they would have
    done so expressly because to do otherwise would have been in derogation of the
    common law.
    {¶ 21} Appellants also argue that agency interpretation of FERPA should
    inform our analysis. The United States Department of Education is the federal
    agency charged with construing FERPA. 20 U.S.C. 1232g(f) and (g). And that
    department’s Family Policy Compliance Office has long advised that an adult
    student’s rights under FERPA terminate at the student’s death. Appellants and their
    amici contend that this should inform the interpretation of R.C. 3319.321(B)
    because the OSPA was enacted to bring Ohio law into compliance with FERPA.
    {¶ 22} The factors emphasized by appellants and their amici are consistent
    with those that a court may consider in determining legislative intent. But inquiry
    into any of these factors is inappropriate absent an initial finding that the language
    of a statute is ambiguous. Dunbar v. State, 
    136 Ohio St. 3d 181
    , 2013-Ohio-2163,
    
    992 N.E.2d 1111
    , ¶ 16; see State v. Polus, 
    145 Ohio St. 3d 266
    , 2016-Ohio-655, 
    48 N.E.3d 553
    , ¶ 7.
    9
    SUPREME COURT OF OHIO
    {¶ 23} Appellants use interpretive guides to argue that R.C. 3319.321(B)
    should be interpreted like FERPA, such that the protections against disclosure of
    an adult former student’s information expire at death. But appellants have not
    established, as a threshold matter, how R.C. 3319.321(B) is ambiguous with respect
    to the absence of an exception for an adult former student’s death. A statute is
    ambiguous “only if its language is susceptible of more than one reasonable
    interpretation.” (Emphasis omitted.) Dunbar at ¶ 16. Appellants posit that there
    is ambiguity created by the OSPA’s silence on posthumous application, but they do
    not explain how that silence makes R.C. 3319.321(B) susceptible to more than one
    interpretation.
    {¶ 24} The language of R.C. 3319.321(B) is unambiguous and is not truly
    susceptible to differing interpretations. The records of a person who attended a
    public school can be disclosed only with the consent of the student, if that student
    is 18 years of age or older. If that student is deceased, he is no longer available to
    grant consent. But R.C. 3319.321(B) provides no exception for that circumstance.
    If the General Assembly intended for the death of a person to alter the
    confidentiality of certain information, it could have expressly enacted such a rule.
    Indeed, in other contexts, the General Assembly has done so. See, e.g., R.C.
    5119.28(A)(16) (a person’s mental-health records no longer considered
    confidential when the person has been deceased for 50 years). Interpreting R.C.
    3319.321(B)’s protections to expire upon the death of an adult former student
    would effectively rewrite the statute under the guise of interpretation.          See
    Hulsmeyer v. Hospice of Southwest Ohio, Inc., 
    142 Ohio St. 3d 236
    , 2014-Ohio-
    5511, 
    29 N.E.3d 903
    , ¶ 23 (noting that the court must give effect to the words used
    in a statute, “making neither additions nor deletions from words chosen by the
    General Assembly”); State ex rel. Sapp v. Franklin Cty. Court of Appeals, 118 Ohio
    St.3d 368, 2008-Ohio-2637, 
    889 N.E.2d 500
    , ¶ 26 (declining to recognize an
    exception that the statutory language does not recognize).
    10
    January Term, 2020
    {¶ 25} Moreover, even if we were to view R.C. 3319.321(B) through the
    lens of the common-law right to privacy, our interpretation would not be different.
    Appellants and their amici argue that applying R.C. 3319.321(B) to the records of
    a deceased adult former student is in derogation of the common law because a
    person’s common-law right to privacy lapses at death. Thus, they urge that the
    statute’s silence on posthumous application should be interpreted consistently with
    the common-law rule.
    {¶ 26} The premise that applying R.C. 3319.321(B) to the records of a
    deceased adult former student is in derogation of the common law, however, is not
    robust. Most of the cases cited for the proposition that a person’s common-law
    privacy rights lapse at death deal with the existence of a tort cause of action for
    invasion of privacy. But R.C. 3319.321(B) says nothing about and does not have
    an impact on a tort cause of action for invasion of privacy. The statute imposes
    duties of confidentiality upon persons in possession of “personally identifiable
    information” concerning a student (or former student) of an Ohio public school.
    The fact that those duties do not end upon the death of an adult student is unrelated
    to a common-law tort claim for invasion of privacy.
    {¶ 27} Appellants also cite State ex rel. Findlay Publishing Co. v.
    Schroeder, 
    76 Ohio St. 3d 580
    , 
    669 N.E.2d 835
    (1996), in support of their argument
    that the application of the OSPA to records of deceased adult former students is in
    derogation of the common law and should therefore be interpreted not to protect
    the confidentiality of information after an adult former student’s death. Schroeder
    was a public-records mandamus case in which a newspaper sought to compel a
    county coroner to disclose records for cases in which the cause of death was suicide.
    Id. at 580.
    Among other justifications for confidentiality, the coroner relied upon
    the right to privacy as a basis for withholding the records under R.C. 149.43(A)(1).
    Id. at 582.
    This court rejected the coroner’s justification for withholding the records
    and found that even if a “privacy exemption” existed that could conceivably limit
    11
    SUPREME COURT OF OHIO
    disclosure of otherwise public records, it was unclear whether the exemption would
    apply to the coroner’s records concerning suicides.
    Id. at 583.
    This court therefore
    found that the release of the suicide-victim records was not prohibited by state or
    federal law and granted a writ of mandamus compelling the coroner to disclose
    them under R.C. 149.43.
    Id. {¶ 28} Schroeder
    is distinguishable and does not help appellants’ position.
    Schroeder supports the proposition that there is no common-law right to privacy
    that shields records of deceased individuals from disclosure under R.C. 149.43. But
    the school district and Dr. Cozad did not rely upon common-law privacy rights to
    withhold records pertaining to Betts. Rather, they relied on the confidentiality
    duties imposed by statute as the applicable state-law exception to disclosure.
    Indeed, this court signaled that it might have decided Schroeder differently had
    there been a confidentiality statute in play. See Schroeder at 582 (noting that “there
    is no legislative scheme protecting the names of suicide victims from disclosure or
    incorporating the personal privacy exemption adopted by other states and the
    federal government”). The difference in this case is that there is a legislative
    scheme protecting personally identifiable information. And there is no textual basis
    in that legislative scheme to conclude that the confidentiality duties imposed upon
    school districts expire at the death of an adult former student.
    D. R.C. 149.43(A)’s Sunset Provision
    {¶ 29} The so-called sunset provision in R.C. 149.43(A) further undercuts
    appellants’ argument that R.C. 3319.321(B)’s silence about posthumous
    application somehow renders it ambiguous. The sunset provision states:
    A record that is not a public record under division (A)(1) of
    this section and that, under law, is permanently retained becomes a
    public record on the day that is seventy-five years after the day on
    which the record was created, except for any record protected by
    12
    January Term, 2020
    the attorney-client privilege, a trial preparation record as defined in
    this section, a statement prohibiting the release of identifying
    information signed under section 3107.083 of the Revised Code, a
    denial of release form filed pursuant to section 3107.46 of the
    Revised Code, or any record that is exempt from release or
    disclosure under section 149.433 of the Revised Code.
    (Emphasis added.) R.C. 149.43(A).
    {¶ 30} Thus, any record that is not a public record because of an applicable
    exception becomes a public record 75 years after its creation. In other words, the
    exceptions in R.C. 149.43(A)(1) themselves expire for records that are permanently
    retained. In this case, the school district states (and appellants do not dispute) that
    Ohio law generally requires student records to be maintained permanently.
    {¶ 31} As we stated earlier, the fact that R.C. 3319.321(B) does not specify
    what happens to the confidentiality of student records upon the death of an adult
    former student does not render the statute ambiguous. The existence of the sunset
    provision in R.C. 149.43 underscores this point. R.C. 3319.321(B)’s silence on
    posthumous application means that, as an exception to the definition of a public
    record, it is subject to the expiration date in R.C. 149.43(A)(1). As the Second
    District observed, the existence of the sunset provision in R.C. 149.43(A)(1)
    suggests that the General Assembly’s omission of a “death exception” to the
    confidentiality of student records in R.C. 3319.321(B) “was not unintentional.”
    2019-Ohio-4187, 
    134 N.E.3d 268
    , at ¶ 25 fn. 6.
    E. Liberal Construction of the Public Records Act Does Not Justify Adding an
    Exception to R.C. 3319.321(B)
    {¶ 32} Appellants and their amici also call attention to this court’s liberal
    construction of the Public Records Act, contending that this principle should
    militate in favor of finding that R.C. 3319.321(B) does not shield the public-school
    13
    SUPREME COURT OF OHIO
    records of a deceased adult former student from disclosure. Indeed, this court
    liberally construes R.C. 149.43(A) in favor of broad access and strictly construes
    exceptions against the public-records custodian. State ex rel. Rocker v. Guernsey
    Cty. Sheriff’s Office, 
    126 Ohio St. 3d 224
    , 2010-Ohio-3288, 
    932 N.E.2d 327
    , ¶ 6-7.
    {¶ 33} But principles like these do not authorize a court to rewrite statutory
    language. See Presbyterian Retirement Servs., Inc., 
    151 Ohio St. 3d 92
    , 2017-Ohio-
    7577, 
    86 N.E.3d 294
    , at ¶ 20. Neither a liberal construction of the Public Records
    Act nor a strict construction of its exceptions gives license to add language to R.C.
    3319.321(B), which contains no exception for a deceased adult former student.
    While there might be policy reasons to carve out an exception to R.C.
    3319.321(B)’s protections for situations like the one before us in this case, the
    decision to do so is not ours to make. “Because the General Assembly is the final
    arbiter of public policy, judicial policy preferences may not be used to override
    valid legislative enactments.” State ex rel. Tritt v. State Emp. Relations Bd., 
    97 Ohio St. 3d 280
    , 2002-Ohio-6437, 
    779 N.E.2d 226
    , ¶ 17.
    III. CONCLUSION
    {¶ 34} Having found that R.C. 3319.321(B) prohibits the disclosure of the
    records sought by appellants, we need not reach the issue of whether FERPA
    likewise prohibits disclosure. The school district correctly denied appellants’
    public-records request under the unambiguous language of the OSPA.                  We
    therefore affirm the Second District’s judgment denying the requested writ of
    mandamus.
    Judgment affirmed.
    O’CONNOR, C.J., and FRENCH, FISCHER, DEWINE, and DONNELLY, JJ.,
    concur.
    KENNEDY, J., dissents, with an opinion.
    _________________
    14
    January Term, 2020
    KENNEDY, J., dissenting.
    {¶ 35} The text of R.C. 3319.321(B) is written in the present tense and
    unambiguously limits the release of “personally identifiable information other than
    directory information concerning any student attending a public school” (emphasis
    added); it does not prohibit a public school from releasing the records of a former
    student who is deceased and therefore not currently “attending” that school. The
    majority reads the text in both the present and past tenses to pertain to both students
    currently attending public school and former students who attended public school.
    However, the General Assembly’s use of the word “attending” is not susceptible to
    both a present- and past-tense interpretation. For this reason, the plain language of
    R.C. 3319.321(B) does not prohibit a school district from releasing student records
    pertaining to a deceased former student.        Consequently, the statute does not
    establish an exception to the release of public records under the Public Records Act.
    {¶ 36} Accordingly, I dissent and would reverse the judgment of the Second
    District Court of Appeals and remand this matter for that court to determine in the
    first instance appellee Bellbrook-Sugarcreek Local Schools’ alternative argument
    that the Family Educational Rights and Privacy Act, 20 U.S.C. 1232g (“FERPA”),
    prohibits the release of records pertaining to a deceased adult former student who
    attended public school.
    Law and Analysis
    {¶ 37} Although the appellant media organizations argue that neither the
    Ohio Student Privacy Act (“OSPA”) nor FERPA prohibit the release of the public-
    school records of a student who attains 18 years of age and subsequently passes
    away, the court of appeals addressed only the OSPA. My analysis today is likewise
    limited to reviewing that statute.
    Statutory Construction
    {¶ 38} This case presents a narrow issue regarding the meaning of R.C.
    3319.321(B), returning us to a familiar place: statutory interpretation. As we
    15
    SUPREME COURT OF OHIO
    explained long ago, “[t]he question is not what did the general assembly intend to
    enact, but what is the meaning of that which it did enact.” Slingluff v. Weaver, 
    66 Ohio St. 621
    , 
    64 N.E. 574
    (1902), paragraph two of the syllabus. “When the
    language of a statute is plain and unambiguous and conveys a clear and definite
    meaning, there is no need for this court to apply the rules of statutory
    interpretation.” Symmes Twp. Bd. of Trustees v. Smyth, 
    87 Ohio St. 3d 549
    , 553,
    
    721 N.E.2d 1057
    (2000). Rather, “[a]n unambiguous statute is to be applied, not
    interpreted.” Sears v. Weimer, 
    143 Ohio St. 312
    , 
    55 N.E.2d 413
    (1944), paragraph
    five of the syllabus.
    The Public Records Act
    {¶ 39} The Public Records Act requires a public office to make copies of
    public records available to any person upon request, within a reasonable period of
    time. R.C. 149.43(B)(1). A “public record” is a record kept by a “public office,”
    R.C. 149.43(A)(1), and this court has held that “school districts are public offices
    and the records containing students’ personally identifiable information are
    records” subject to the public-records law. State ex rel. School Choice Ohio, Inc.
    v. Cincinnati Pub. School Dist., 
    147 Ohio St. 3d 256
    , 2016-Ohio-5026, 
    63 N.E.3d 1183
    , ¶ 15. R.C. 149.43(A)(1)(v), however, provides that “[r]ecords the release of
    which is prohibited by state or federal law” are not public records and thus not
    subject to release. See School Choice Ohio at ¶ 15.
    The Ohio Student Privacy Act
    {¶ 40} Part of the Ohio Student Privacy Act, R.C. 3319.321(B), provides
    that
    [n]o person shall release, or permit access to, personally
    identifiable information other than directory information concerning
    any student attending a public school, for purposes other than those
    identified in division (C), (E), (G), or (H) of this section, without the
    16
    January Term, 2020
    written consent of the parent, guardian, or custodian of each such
    student who is less than eighteen years of age, or without the written
    consent of each such student who is eighteen years of age or older.
    (Emphasis added.)
    {¶ 41} A plain reading of the unambiguous text of the statute limits the
    release of records concerning any student attending a public school. The word
    “attend” means “to be present at” and “go to,” Webster’s Third New International
    Dictionary 140 (2002), and the word “attending” is a present participle form of that
    verb, id.; see also Thomas v. Principal Fin. Group, 
    566 So. 2d 735
    , 739 (Ala.1990)
    (“ ‘Attending’ is the present participle of ‘attend’ ”); Bryan A. Garner, Garner’s
    Modern English Usage 1020 (4th Ed.2016) (defining “present participle” as “[a]
    nonfinite verb form ending in -ing and used in verb phrases to signal the progressive
    aspect”); Shell v. Burlington N. Santa Fe Ry. Co., 
    941 F.3d 331
    , 336 (7th Cir.2019)
    (citing Garner’s definition of a present participle).
    {¶ 42} Use of the present participle denotes present and continuing action.
    Webster’s at 1794 (explaining that a present participle “typically expresses present
    action in relation to the time expressed by the finite verb in its clause and * * * is
    used in the formation of the progressive tenses”); see also Shell at 336 (“ ‘Having’
    means presently and continuously. It does not include something in the past that
    has ended or something yet to come. To settle the technical debate, it is a present
    participle, used to form a progressive tense”); Khakhn v. Holder, 
    371 Fed. Appx. 933
    , 937 (10th Cir.2010) (explaining that by using the present participle
    “applying,” Congress unambiguously excluded people who had already had their
    applications denied); United States v. Hull, 
    456 F.3d 133
    , 145 (3d Cir.2006)
    (Ackerman, J., concurring in part and dissenting in part) (“Congress’s use of the
    present participle ‘committing’ connotes present, continuing action”); Competitive
    Energy Servs., L.L.C. v. Pub. Util. Comm., 
    2003 Me. 12
    , 
    818 A.2d 1039
    , ¶ 20, fn.
    17
    SUPREME COURT OF OHIO
    10 (“ ‘Purchasing’ is a present participle of the verb ‘purchase,’ indicating the
    present tense”).
    {¶ 43} The plain meaning of the phrase “any student attending a public
    school” refers to a person who is currently and continuously going to that school.
    In contrast, a person who attended school in the past cannot be said to be attending
    the school under any common usage of that word.
    {¶ 44} The conclusion that R.C. 3319.321(B) applies only to students
    presently attending a public school is fortified by the fact that it allows a school
    district to release student records with “the written consent of the parent, guardian,
    or custodian of each such student who is less than eighteen years of age” or “the
    written consent of each such student who is eighteen years of age or older.”
    (Emphasis added.) R.C. 3319.321(B). This language is also phrased in the present
    tense and speaks about a person who is a student. But an adult who no longer
    attends the public school is not a student at that school and his or her consent is not
    required before releasing his or her student records. That person was a student and
    now is a former student.
    {¶ 45} Moreover, this court has held that the OSPA, “R.C. 3319.321, was
    enacted to bring the state’s public schools into compliance with FERPA.” School
    Choice Ohio, 
    147 Ohio St. 3d 256
    , 2016-Ohio-5026, 
    63 N.E.3d 1183
    , at ¶ 31.
    FERPA defines “education records” to include “those records, files, documents,
    and other materials which--(i) contain information directly related to a student; and
    (ii) are maintained by an educational agency or institution or by a person acting for
    such agency or institution.” (Emphasis added.) 20 U.S.C. 1232g(a)(4)(A). The
    words “are maintained” are a verb phrase in the present tense referring to the current
    state of things. Similarly, FERPA defines “student” to “include[ ] any person with
    respect to whom an educational agency or institution maintains education records
    or personally identifiable information, but does not include a person who has not
    been in attendance at such agency or institution.” (Emphasis added.) 20 U.S.C.
    18
    January Term, 2020
    1232g(a)(6). This language provides that a person is a student protected by FERPA
    if he or she has been in attendance at the school and the school continues to maintain
    records pertaining to him or her, and we have recognized that federal law protects
    the records of both current and former students, State ex rel. Souffrance v. Doe, 
    132 Ohio St. 3d 38
    , 2012-Ohio-1906, 
    968 N.E.2d 477
    , ¶ 2.
    {¶ 46} The General Assembly therefore knew how to limit access to student
    records that are maintained by Ohio’s public schools or that pertain to a person who
    has been in attendance, yet it nonetheless chose to use only present-tense limiting
    language when enacting the release-of-records statute to those concerning “any
    student attending a public school.”
    {¶ 47} Accordingly, pursuant to its plain meaning, R.C. 3319.321(B)
    prohibits a public school from releasing or allowing access to a current student’s
    personally identifiable information (other than directory information) absent the
    parent’s or adult student’s consent, but it does not prohibit a public school from
    releasing or allowing access to student records of a former student. A student who
    died cannot be said to be a “student attending” public school. And for this reason,
    R.C. 3319.321(B) does not bar release of the records at issue in this case.
    The Majority’s Analysis
    {¶ 48} Although the majority admits that the General Assembly used the
    present-tense verb “attending,” it suggests that it is somehow improper to apply
    what I view to be the plain meaning of a statute when no party has asserted it. But
    the meaning of a statute is a question of law that we review de novo. See Bur. of
    Workers’ Comp. v. Verlinger, 
    153 Ohio St. 3d 492
    , 2018-Ohio-1481, 
    108 N.E.3d 70
    , ¶ 6. Our role in exercising the judicial power granted to us by the Ohio
    Constitution is to interpret and apply the statute as the General Assembly enacted
    it. See Slingluff, 
    66 Ohio St. 621
    , 
    64 N.E. 574
    , at paragraph two of the syllabus.
    The parties may espouse arguments regarding the meaning of a statute, but in the
    end, it is the courts that have the authority and the duty to “say what the law is,”
    19
    SUPREME COURT OF OHIO
    Marbury v. Madison, 
    5 U.S. 137
    , 177, 
    2 L. Ed. 60
    (1803). This court abdicates that
    responsibility if it rejects out of hand a plain-meaning analysis of a statute just
    because a party failed to assert it.
    {¶ 49} The majority also asserts that in Souffrance, we “implied” that R.C.
    3319.321(B)’s protections apply to records pertaining to adult former students of a
    public school. Majority opinion at ¶ 12. A plain reading of Souffrance, however,
    reveals that that case concerned solely the question whether FERPA precluded the
    release of former students’ records, and nothing in the per curiam opinion indicates
    that any party had relied on the OSPA or that the court had intended to decide its
    scope. It was not before the court.
    {¶ 50} Further, the court in Souffrance referenced the OSPA only at the tail
    end of a string citation with a “see also” signal. That reference came behind
    citations to the Code of Federal Regulations and the Court of Appeals of Indiana
    and without any explanatory parenthetical. Even if the court intended that vague
    citation to constitute a decision that the OSPA protects the records of adult former
    students, that statement would not be binding on the court today. At best, the
    statement is dicta because it was unnecessary to resolving the issue before the court
    and therefore has “no precedential force” in a later case. State ex rel. DiFranco v.
    S. Euclid, 
    138 Ohio St. 3d 367
    , 2014-Ohio-538, 
    7 N.E.3d 1136
    , ¶ 24, superseded by
    statute on other grounds as stated in State ex rel. Cincinnati Enquirer v. Cincinnati,
    
    157 Ohio St. 3d 290
    , 2019-Ohio-3876, 
    135 N.E.3d 772
    , ¶ 12.
    {¶ 51} Nonetheless, the majority holds that
    [t]he language of R.C. 3319.321(B) is unambiguous and is not truly
    susceptible to differing interpretations. The records of a person who
    attended a public school can be disclosed only with the consent of
    the student, if that student is 18 years of age or older. If that student
    is deceased, he is no longer available to grant consent. But R.C.
    20
    January Term, 2020
    3319.321(B) provides no exception for that circumstance. If the
    General Assembly intended for the death of a person to alter the
    confidentiality of certain information, it could have expressly
    enacted such a rule. Indeed, in other contexts, the General Assembly
    has done so. See, e.g., R.C. 5119.28(A)(16) (a person’s mental-
    health records no longer considered confidential when the person
    has been deceased for 50 years). Interpreting R.C. 3319.321(B)’s
    protections to expire upon the death of an adult former student
    would effectively rewrite the statute under the guise of
    interpretation.
    (Emphasis added.) Majority opinion at ¶ 24.
    {¶ 52} But it is the majority that effectively rewrites the statute. It holds
    that R.C. 3319.321(B) protects former students who attended public school. But in
    order for the statute to read as the majority desires it to, words would need to be
    added to the statute as follows:
    No person shall release, or permit access to, personally
    identifiable information other than directory information concerning
    any student attending [or any former student who attended] a public
    school * * * without the written consent of the parent, guardian, or
    custodian of each such student [or former student] who is less than
    eighteen years of age, or without the written consent of each such
    student [or former student] who is eighteen years of age or older.
    (Brackets added.) If the General Assembly had enacted that language in R.C.
    3319.321(B), I could agree with the majority’s holding. However, the words
    “former” and “attended” do not exist in the statute that the legislature actually
    21
    SUPREME COURT OF OHIO
    enacted, and the majority therefore contravenes the fundamental precept that “a
    court may not rewrite the plain and unambiguous language of a statute under the
    guise of statutory interpretation,” Pelletier v. Campbell, 
    153 Ohio St. 3d 611
    , 2018-
    Ohio-2121, 
    109 N.E.3d 1210
    , ¶ 20.
    {¶ 53} “ ‘The preeminent canon of statutory interpretation requires us to
    “presume that [the] legislature says in a statute what it means and means in a statute
    what it says there.” ’ ” (Brackets added in BedRoc.) State ex rel. Lee v. Karnes,
    
    103 Ohio St. 3d 559
    , 2004-Ohio-5718, 
    817 N.E.2d 76
    , ¶ 27, quoting BedRoc Ltd.,
    L.L.C. v. United States, 
    541 U.S. 176
    , 183, 
    124 S. Ct. 1587
    , 
    158 L. Ed. 2d 338
    (2004),
    quoting Connecticut Natl. Bank v. Germain, 
    503 U.S. 249
    , 253-254, 
    112 S. Ct. 1146
    , 
    117 L. Ed. 2d 391
    (1992).
    {¶ 54} But although the majority claims to be simply applying the plain and
    unambiguous language of R.C. 3319.321(B), it goes beyond the four corners of the
    statute to consider canons of statutory construction, which apply only when a statute
    is ambiguous. See Wayt v. DHSC, L.L.C., 
    155 Ohio St. 3d 401
    , 2018-Ohio-4822,
    
    122 N.E.3d 92
    , ¶ 23.
    {¶ 55} In concluding that “the ‘any student attending a public school’
    language speaks to whether the information at issue relates to a student’s attendance
    at a public school,” majority opinion at ¶ 14—even though the phrase “relates to a
    student’s attendance” does not appear in the statute—the majority relies on what it
    asserts is the object of the statute, the circumstances under which the statute was
    enacted, the legislative history, and the consequences of a particular construction.
    See R.C. 1.49 (setting forth canons of statutory construction). However, there
    would be no need to resort to these canons of construction if the majority’s
    “interpretation” applied the plain meaning of R.C. 3319.321(B), because “[w]e do
    not look to the canons of statutory construction when the plain language of a statute
    provides the meaning.” Wayt, 
    155 Ohio St. 3d 401
    , 2018-Ohio-4822, 
    122 N.E.3d 92
    , at ¶ 23.
    22
    January Term, 2020
    {¶ 56} For example, the majority asserts that “the General Assembly
    enacted the OSPA to bring the state’s public schools into compliance with FERPA.”
    Majority opinion at ¶ 15, citing School Choice Ohio, 
    147 Ohio St. 3d 256
    , 2016-
    Ohio-5026, 
    63 N.E.3d 1183
    , at ¶ 31. But School Choice Ohio relied on an opinion
    of the attorney general, who actually opined that “R.C. 3319.321 was apparently
    passed in order to bring the state’s public schools into compliance with federal law”
    and specifically referred to a provision of FERPA protecting the right of parents to
    review the education records of their children. (Emphasis added.) 1987 Ohio
    Atty.Gen.Ops. No. 87–037, at 2-255.
    {¶ 57} In addition, School Choice Ohio cited to a summary of enactments
    prepared by the Ohio Legislative Service Commission. However, Ohio does not
    maintain a comprehensive legislative history of its statutes, State v. South, 144 Ohio
    St.3d 295, 2015-Ohio-3930, 
    42 N.E.3d 734
    , ¶ 20, and we have long recognized that
    “a report of the Legislative Service Commission, with respect to proposed
    legislation, may not be used to give a meaning to a legislative enactment other than
    that which is clearly expressed by the General Assembly,” Cleveland Trust Co. v.
    Eaton, 
    21 Ohio St. 2d 129
    , 138, 
    256 N.E.2d 198
    (1970).
    {¶ 58} The majority also applies a canon of construction in considering the
    consequences of a particular construction, claiming that its interpretation is needed
    “to help ensure that Ohio schools can receive federal funds,” majority opinion at
    ¶ 16. But FERPA does not condition education spending on the enactment of state
    legislation, and giving effect to the plain language of R.C. 3319.321(B) as the
    General Assembly enacted it does not affect one cent of federal funding for Ohio’s
    schools. This court has held that once a school accepts federal funds, it is prohibited
    from releasing student records covered by FERPA’s protections during the funding
    period. State ex rel. ESPN v. Ohio State Univ., 
    132 Ohio St. 3d 212
    , 2012-Ohio-
    2690, 
    970 N.E.2d 939
    , ¶ 23. Student records covered by FERPA are exempted
    from release as public records under R.C. 149.43(A)(1)(v).
    Id. at ¶ 25. 23
                                  SUPREME COURT OF OHIO
    {¶ 59} The United States Supreme Court has held that FERPA’s
    nondisclosure provisions are enforced solely by the Secretary of Education through
    her distribution of federal funds. See Gonzaga Univ. v. Doe, 
    536 U.S. 273
    , 287,
    
    122 S. Ct. 2268
    , 
    153 L. Ed. 2d 309
    (2002). And as the majority acknowledges in
    rejecting the appellants’ argument that the OSPA should be construed in accord
    with the secretary’s interpretation of FERPA, the Department of Education does
    not withhold funds from schools that have a practice or policy of granting access to
    the school records of former students who died as adults. Despite the majority’s
    bluster, then, this case has nothing to do with federal funding of Ohio schools but
    is really about whether the people of this state have a right to access public records.
    {¶ 60} But even if there were a risk to federal funding, it would not grant
    this court super-legislative authority to substitute its judgment for that of the
    General Assembly and rewrite the plain language that the General Assembly
    enacted. It may be good policy for Ohio to prohibit access to records pertaining to
    both current and former students of a public school, but it is the General Assembly,
    not this court, that is the ultimate arbiter of public policy in this state, Kaminski v.
    Metal & Wire Prods. Co., 
    125 Ohio St. 3d 250
    , 2010-Ohio-1027, 
    927 N.E.2d 1066
    ,
    ¶ 59. Our role “in reviewing legislative enactments is limited to interpreting the
    meaning of statutory provisions and determining whether they are in accord with
    the federal and state Constitutions.” Toledo v. State, 
    154 Ohio St. 3d 41
    , 2018-Ohio-
    2358, 
    110 N.E.3d 1257
    , ¶ 31. Second-guessing the wisdom of the legislature’s
    public-policy decisions does not fall within the scope of that review. See State ex
    rel. Ohio Congress of Parents & Teachers v. State Bd. of Edn., 
    111 Ohio St. 3d 568
    ,
    2006-Ohio-5512, 
    857 N.E.2d 1148
    , ¶ 20.
    {¶ 61} Because the unambiguous language of the statute as enacted by the
    General Assembly protects the records of “any student attending a public school,”
    R.C. 3319.321(B), not records that “relate[ ] to a student’s attendance,” majority
    24
    January Term, 2020
    opinion at ¶ 14, it does not extend that protection to students who are deceased or
    otherwise not attending a public school.
    Conclusion
    {¶ 62} R.C. 3319.321(B) does not prohibit the release of student records
    pertaining to the deceased former student sought in this case. Because R.C.
    3319.321(B) does not apply and the court of appeals did not reach the school
    district’s alternative argument that FERPA precludes the release of the student
    records, that leaves an open question whether FERPA applies, notwithstanding the
    secretary’s interpretation of it. I therefore would reverse the judgment of the court
    of appeals and remand this case for that court to resolve the issue in the first
    instance. The majority does not. Therefore, I dissent.
    _________________
    Faruki P.L.L., Erin E. Rhinehart, and Christopher C. Hollon, for appellants.
    Subashi, Wildermuth & Justice, Nicholas E. Subashi, and Tabitha Justice,
    for appellees.
    Dave Yost, Attorney General, Benjamin M. Flowers, Solicitor General, and
    Mark W. Altier, Assistant Attorney General, urging reversal for amicus curiae Ohio
    Attorney General Dave Yost.
    Zeiger, Tigges & Little, L.L.P., Marion H. Little Jr., and Kris Banvard,
    urging reversal for amicus curiae WBNS-TV, Inc.
    Baker & Hostetler, L.L.P., and Melissa D. Bertke, urging reversal for amici
    curiae The Reporters Committee for Freedom of the Press, The Brechner Center
    for Freedom of Information, The Media Institute, MPA—The Association of
    Magazine Media, The National Press Club, The National Press Club Journalism
    Institute, The National Press Photographers Association, The Ohio News Media
    Association, The Online News Association, Society of Professional Journalists, and
    Student Press Law Center.
    25
    SUPREME COURT OF OHIO
    Katie Townsend and Shannon Jankowski, urging reversal for amicus curiae
    The Reporters Committee for Freedom of the Press.
    Frank D. LoMonte, urging reversal for amicus curiae The Brechner Center
    for Freedom of Information.
    Covington & Burling, L.L.P, and Kurt Wimmer, urging reversal for amicus
    curiae The Media Institute.
    Ballard Spahr, L.L.P., and Charles D. Tobin, urging reversal for amici
    curiae The National Press Club and The National Press Club Journalism Institute.
    Mickey H. Osterreicher, urging reversal for amicus curiae National Press
    Photographers Association.
    Davis Wright Tremaine, L.L.P., Laura R. Handman, Alison Schary, and
    Thomas R. Burke, urging reversal for amicus curiae Online News Association.
    Baker & Hostetler, L.L.P., Bruce W. Sanford, and Mark I. Bailen, urging
    reversal for amicus curiae Society of Professional Journalists.
    _________________
    26