North Dakota Code § 44-04-18

Access to public records - Electronically stored information
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1. Except as otherwise specifically provided by law, all records of a public entity are 
public records, open and accessible for inspection during reasonable office hours. As 

used in this subsection, "reasonable office hours" includes all regular office hours of a 
public entity. If a public entity does not have regular office hours, the name and 
telephone number of a contact person authorized to provide access to the public 
entity's records must be posted on the door of the office of the public entity, if any. 
Otherwise, the information regarding the contact person must be filed with the 
secretary of state for state -level entities, for public entities defined in subdivision c of 
subsection 13 of section 44 -04-17.1, the city auditor or designee of the city for 
city-level entities, or the county auditor or designee of the county for other entities.
2. Upon request for a copy of specific public records, any entity subject to subsection 1 
shall furnish the requester one copy of the public records requested. An initial request 
need not be made in person or in writing, and the copy must be mailed upon request. 
A public entity may require written clarification of the request to determine what 
records are being requested, but may not ask for the motive or reason for requesting 
the records or for the identity of the person requesting public records. A public entity 
may charge up to twenty -five cents per impression of a paper copy. As used in this 
section, "paper copy" means a one -sided or two -sided duplicated copy of a size not 
more than eight and one-half by fourteen inches [19.05 by 35.56 centimeters]. For any 
copy of a record that is not a paper copy as defined in this section, the public entity 
may charge a reasonable fee for making the copy. As used in this section, "reasonable 
fee" means the actual cost to the public entity of making the copy, including labor, 
materials, and equipment. The entity may charge for the actual cost of postage to mail 
a copy of a record. An entity may require payment before locating, redacting, making, 
or mailing the copy. The public entity may withhold records pursuant to a request until 
such time as a requester provides payment for any outstanding balance for prior 
requests. An entity may impose a fee not exceeding twenty -five dollars per hour per 
request, excluding the initial hour, for locating records , including electronic records, if 
locating the records requires more than one hour. An entity may impose a fee not 
exceeding twenty-five dollars per hour per request, excluding the initial hour, for 
excising confidential or closed material under section 44 -04-18.10 from the records, 
including electronic records . If a public entity receives five or more requests from the 
same requester within seven days, the public entity may treat the requests as one 
request in computing the time it takes to locate and excise the records. If the entity is 
not authorized to use the fees to cover the cost of providing or mailing the copy, or 
both, or if a copy machine is not readily available, the entity may make arrangements 
for the copy to be provided or mailed, or both, by another entity, public or private, and 
the requester shall pay the fee to that other entity. This subsection does not apply to 
copies of public records for which a different fee is specifically provided by law.
3. Automation of public records must not erode the right of access to those records. As 
each public entity increases its use of and dependence on electronic recordkeeping, 
each agency must provide reasonable public access to records electronically 
maintained and must ensure that exempt or confidential records are not disclosed 
except as otherwise permitted by law. A public entity may not enter into a contract for 
the creation or maintenance of a public records database if that contract impairs the 
ability of the public to inspect or copy the public records of the agency, including public 
records online or stored in an electronic recordkeeping system used by the agency. An 
electronic copy of a record must be provided upon request at no cost, other than costs 
allowed in subsection 2, except if the nature or volume of the public records requested 
to be accessed or provided requires extensive use of information technology 
resources, the agency may charge no more than the actual cost incurred for the 
extensive use of information technology resources incurred by the public entity. 
"Extensive" is defined as a request for copies of electronic records which take more 
than one hour of information technology resources to produce.
4. Except as provided in this subsection, nothing in this section requires a public entity to 
create or compile a record that does not exist. Access to an electronically stored 
record under this section, or a copy thereof, must be provided at the requester's option 
in either a printed document or through any other available medium. A computer file is 

not an available medium if no means exist to separate or prevent the disclosure of any 
closed or confidential information contained in that file. Except as reasonably 
necessary to reveal the organization of data contained in an electronically stored 
record, a public entity is not required to provide an electronically stored record in a 
different structure, format, or organization. This section does not require a public entity 
to provide a requester with access to a computer terminal or mobile device. A public 
entity is not required to provide a copy of a record that is available to the requester on 
the public entity's website or on the internet. The public entity shall notify the requester 
the record is available online and direct the requester to the website where the record 
can be accessed. If the requester does not have reasonable access to the internet due 
to lack of computer, lack of internet availability, or inability to use a computer or the 
internet, the public entity shall produce paper copies for the requester, but may charge 
the applicable fees under this section.
5. A state -level public entity as defined in subdivision a of subsection 13 of section 
44-04-17.1 or a political subdivision as defined in subsection 11 of section 44-04-17.1, 
may establish procedures for providing access from an outside location to any 
computer database or electronically filed or stored information maintained by that 
entity. The procedures must address the measures that are necessary to maintain the 
confidentiality of information protected by federal or state law. Except for access 
provided to another state-level public entity or political subdivision, the state or political 
subdivision may charge a reasonable fee for providing that outside access. If the 
original information is keyed, entered, provided, compiled, or submitted by any political 
subdivision, the fees must be shared by the state and the political subdivision based 
on their proportional costs to make the data available.
6. Any request under this section for records in the possession of a public entity by a 
party to a criminal or civil action, adjudicative proceeding as defined in subsection 1 of 
section 28-32-01, or arbitration in which the public entity is a party, or by an agent of 
the party, must comply with applicable discovery rules or orders and be made to the 
attorney representing that entity in the criminal or civil action, adjudicative proceeding, 
or arbitration. The public entity may deny a request from a party or an agent of a party 
under this subsection if the request seeks records that are privileged under applicable 
discovery rules.
7. A denial of a request for records made under this section must describe the legal 
authority for the denial , or a statement that a record does not exist, and must be in 
writing if requested.
8. This section is violated when a person's right to review or receive a copy of a record 
that is not exempt or confidential is denied or unreasonably delayed or when a fee is 
charged in excess of the amount authorized in subsections 2 and 3.
9. It is not an unreasonable delay or a denial of access under this section to withhold 
from the public a record that is prepared at the express direction of, and for 
presentation to, a governing body until the record is mailed or otherwise provided to a 
member of the body or until the next meeting of the body, whichever occurs first. It also 
is not an unreasonable delay or a denial of access to withhold from the public a 
working paper or preliminary draft until a final draft is completed, the record is 
distributed to a member of a governing body or discussed by the body at an open 
meeting, or work is discontinued on the draft but no final version has been prepared, 
whichever occurs first.
10. For public entities headed by a single individual, it is not an unreasonable delay or a 
denial of access to withhold from the public a working paper or preliminary draft until a 
final draft is completed, or work is discontinued on the draft but no final version has 
been prepared, whichever occurs first. A working paper or preliminary draft shall be 
deemed completed if it can reasonably be concluded, upon a good-faith review, that all 
substantive work on it has been completed.
11. A disclosure of a requested record under this section is not a waiver of any copyright 
held by the public entity in the requested record or of any applicable evidentiary 
privilege.

12. A public entity may allow an individual to utilize the individual's own personal devices 
for duplication of records and, if so, shall establish reasonable procedures to protect 
the integrity of the records as long as the procedures are not used to prevent access 
to the records.
13. If repeated requests for records disrupt other essential functions of the public entity, 
the public entity may refuse to permit inspection of the records, or provide copies of 
the records. A public entity refusing to provide access or copies of public records under 
this section shall state in writing the reasons supporting the refusal and provide the 
reasoning to the requester. The requester may seek an attorney general's opinion 
under section 44-04-21.1, on whether the public entity's decision was proper.

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