GBAA-E - PUBLIC INFORMATION PROGRAM: ACCESS TO PUBLIC INFORMATION
GUIDELINES FOR COPY CHARGES
The charges in this exhibit, to recover costs associated with providing copies
of public information, are based on estimated average costs to governmental
bodies across the state.
Copy charges are as follows:
- Standard-paper copy. The charge for standard-paper copies reproduced by
means of an office machine copier or a computer printer is $.10 per page
or part of a page. Each side that has recorded information is considered
a page.
- Nonstandard-size copy. The charges for nonstandard copies are:
- Diskette - $1.00
- Magnetic tape - actual cost
- Data cartridge - actual cost
- Tape cartridge - actual cost
- Rewritable CD (CD-RW) - $1.00
- Non-rewritable CD (CD-R) - $1.00
- Digital video disc (DVD) - $3.00
- JAZ drive - actual cost
- Other electronic media - actual cost
- VHS video cassette - $2.50
- Audio cassette - $1.00
- Oversize paper copy (e.g., 11" x 17", greenbar, bluebar,
not including maps and photographs using specialty paper) - $.50
- Specialty paper (e.g., Mylar, blueprint, blueline, map, photographic)
- actual cost
Personnel charges are as follows:
- If a particular request requires the services of a programmer in order
to execute an existing program or to create a new program so that requested
information may be accessed and copied, a district may charge for the programmer's
time. The hourly charge for a programmer is $28.50 an hour, which includes
fringe benefits. Only programming services will be charged at this hourly
rate. Districts that do not have in-house programming capabilities will comply
with requests in accordance with Government Code 552.231. [See
CQ]
- The charge for labor costs incurred in processing a request for public
information is $15.00 an hour, which includes fringe benefits. The labor
charge includes the actual time to locate, compile, and reproduce the requested
information.
- 3. A labor charge will not be billed in connection with complying with
requests that are for 50 or fewer pages of paper records, unless the documents
to be copied are located in two or more separate buildings that are not physically
connected to each other or a remote storage facility. For purposes of this
provision, two buildings connected by a covered or open sidewalk, an elevated
or underground passageway, or a similar facility, are not considered to be
separate buildings.
- A labor charge should not be recovered for any time spent by an attorney,
legal assistant, or any other person who reviews the requested information:
- To determine whether a district will raise any exceptions to disclosure
of the requested information under Government Code, Subchapter C, Chapter
552; or
- To research or prepare a request for a ruling by the attorney general's
office pursuant to section 552.301 of Government Code. [See
CQ]
- When confidential information pursuant to a mandatory exception of the
Act is mixed with public information in the same page, a labor charge may
be recovered for time spent to redact, blackout, or otherwise obscure confidential
information in order to release the public information. A labor charge will
not be made for redacting confidential information for requests of 50 or
fewer pages, unless the request also qualifies as a labor charge pursuant
to Government Code 552.261(a)(1) or (2).
Overhead charges are as follows:
- Whenever any labor charge is applicable to a request, a district may
include the charges direct and indirect costs, in addition to the specific
labor charge. This overhead charge would cover such costs as depreciation
of capital assets, rent, maintenance and repair, utilities, and
administrative overhead. If a district chooses to recover such costs, a
charge will be made in accordance with the methodology described in item
3
below. Although an exact calculation of costs will vary, the use of a
standard charge will avoid complication in calculating such costs and will
provide uniformity for charges made statewide.
- An overhead charge will not be made for requests for copies of 50 or fewer
pages of standard paper records unless the request also qualifies for a labor
charge pursuant to Government Code 552.261(a)(1) or (2).
- The overhead charge will be computed at 20 percent of the charge made to
cover any labor costs associated with a particular request. For example,
if one hour of labor is used for a particular request, the formula would
be as follows:
Labor charge for locating, compiling, and reproducing, $15.00 x .20
= $3.00; or programming labor charge, $28.50 x .20 = $5.70. If a request
requires one hour of labor charge for locating, compiling, and reproducing
information ($15.00 per hour); and one hour of programming labor charge
($28.50 per hour), the combined overhead would be: $15.00 + $28.50 =
$43.50 x .20 = $8.70.
Microfiche and microfilm charges are as follows:
- If a district already has information that exists on microfiche or microfilm
and has copies available for sale or distribution, the charge for a copy
must not exceed the cost of its reproduction. If no copies of the requested
microfiche or microfilm are available and the information on the fiche or
film can be released in its entirety, a district should make a copy of the
fiche or film. The charge for a copy must not exceed the cost of reproduction.
Districts that do not have in-house capability to reproduce microfiche or
microfilm are encouraged to contact the Texas State Library before having
the reproduction made commercially.
- If only a master copy of information in microform is maintained, the charge
is $.10 per page for standard-size paper copies plus any applicable labor
and overhead charge for more than 50 copies.
Remote document retrieval charges are as follows:
- Due to limited on-site capacity of storage of documents, it is frequently
necessary to store information that is not in current use in remote storage
locations. Every effort should be made by a district to store current records
on-site. To the extent that the retrieval of documents results in a charge
to comply with a request, it is permissible to recover costs of such services
for requests that qualify for labor charges under current law.
- If a district has a contract with a commercial records storage company,
whereby the private company charges a fee to locate, retrieve, deliver, and
return to storage the needed record(s), no additional labor charge will be
factored in for time spent locating documents at the storage location by
the private company's personnel. If after delivery to a district, the
boxes must still be searched for records that are responsive to the request,
a labor charge is allowed in accordance with item 2 under personnel charges,
above.
Computer resource charges are as follows:
- The computer resource charge is a utilization charge for computers based
on the amortized cost of acquisition, lease, operation, and maintenance of
computer resources, which might include, but is not limited to, some or all
of the following: central processing units (CPUs), servers, disk drives,
local area networks (LANs), printers, tape drives, other peripheral devices,
communications devices, software, and system utilities.
- These computer resource charges are not intended to substitute for cost
recovery methodologies or charges made for purposes other than responding
to public information requests.
- The charges in this section are averages based on a survey of governmental
bodies with a broad range of computer capabilities. Each district using this
cost recovery charge will determine which category(ies) of computer system(s)
used to fulfill the public information request most closely fits its existing
system(s) and set its charge accordingly:
Type of System |
Rate |
| Mainframe |
$10.00 per CPU minute |
| Midsize |
$ 1.50 per CPU minute |
| Client/Server |
$ 2.20 per clock hour |
| PC or LAN |
$ 1.00 per clock hour |
- The charge made to recover the computer utilization cost is the actual
time the computer takes to execute a particular program times the applicable
rate. The CPU charge is not meant to apply to programming or printing time;
rather, it is solely to recover costs associated with the actual time required
by the computer to execute a program. This time, called CPU time, can be
read directly from the CPU clock, and most frequently will be a matter of
seconds. If programming is required to comply with a particular request,
the appropriate charge that may be recovered for programming time is described
above, at Personnel Charges. No charge should be made for computer print-out
time. For example, if a mainframe computer is used, and the processing time
is 20 seconds, the charges would be as follows: $10.00 / 3 = $3.33; or $10.00/(60
/ 20) = $3.33.
A district that does not have in-house computer capabilities will comply with
requests in accordance with Government Code 552.231. [See
CQ]
The actual cost of miscellaneous supplies, such as labels, boxes, and other
supplies used to produce the requested information may be added to the total
charge for public information.
Governmental bodies may add any related postal or shipping expenses that are
necessary to transmit the reproduced information to the requesting party.
Pursuant to Office of the Comptroller of Public Accounts' rules, sales
tax will not be added on charges for public information. (34 TAC, Part 1, Chapter
3, Subchapter O, Sections 3.341 and 3.342).
1 TAC 111.63; 111.70
Adopted: 9/29/95
Amended: 11/14/97, 5/28/03, 11/18/05
Reviewed: 11/21/03
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