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                                    | VIRGINIA FREEDOM OF INFORMATION ADVISORY COUNCILCOMMONWEALTH 
                                  OF VIRGINIA
 |  AO-05-24
 July 
                            9, 2024 Howard 
                            E. (Gene) Rice, Jr.Fredericksburg, Virginia
 Request received via email
  
                            The staff of the Freedom of Information Advisory Council 
                            is authorized to issue advisory opinions. The ensuing 
                            staff advisory opinion is based solely upon the information 
                            presented in your email of August 14, 2023. Dear 
                            Mr. Rice:  
                            You have requested an advisory opinion on two specific 
                            issues relative to the Virginia Freedom of Information 
                            Act (§ 2.2-3700 et seq. of the Code of Virginia) 
                            (FOIA):  
                             
                              1. Whether additional compensation received by a 
                              public official or employee that is provided by 
                              sources other than the public body itself can be 
                              included in the rate charged to respond to FOIA 
                              requests; and  2. 
                              Whether there is a conflict of interest for a public 
                              official or employee to conduct a search for records 
                              in which the public official or employee is the 
                              subject of the FOIA request and if so, whether the 
                              public official or employee should recuse himself 
                              from the FOIA process.  
                            Factual Background  
                            As background information, you submitted a FOIA request 
                            to the Virginia Military Institute (the Institute) 
                            for all communications between you and the Institute's 
                            FOIA Officer (the FOIA Officer) on July 21, 2023. 
                            You stated that on July 31, 2023, the FOIA Officer 
                            responded to your request notifying you that the Institute 
                            would need to charge for this records request and 
                            inquiring if you would like a cost estimate for your 
                            request. You confirmed that you would like a cost 
                            estimate. You stated that the Institute provided the 
                            following:  
                             
                              a. Official A (1a., 1b.): 1 hour @ $35.68 = $35.68  
                              b. FOIA Officer (2a., 3, 4c.-m., 5a.-b.): 15 hours 
                              @ $61.22 = $918.30  
                              c. Superintendent (3., 4c., 4e.-g., 4p.): 2 hours 
                              @ $315.50 = $631.00  
                              d. Official B (4g.): 0.5 hours @ $99.87 = $49.94  
                              e. Institute IT (4a.-b.): 20 hours @ $47.70 = $954.00  
                              f. TOTAL: $2,588.92  On 
                            July 31, 2023, you "asked for a greater breakout 
                            of costs with the intent of trying to identify whether 
                            particular aspects of [your] request were cost drivers 
                            that might not be worth the cost." However, you 
                            stated that the FOIA Officer "refused any further 
                            breakout in this regard" and "then [you] 
                            asked whether he was taking into account material 
                            previously requested and supplied that duplicated 
                            [your] own request." On August 1, 2023, you stated 
                            that the FOIA Officer "replied saying identifying 
                            any duplication was up to the requestor, not [the 
                            Institute]."  
                            You stated that on August 1, 2023, you asked the FOIA 
                            Officer "for a breakdown of how he arrived at 
                            the charges for [the Superintendent's cost]" 
                            to which he replied on August 5, 2023, "[the 
                            Superintendent's] salary is $656,250 per year" 
                            and "[b]ased on 2,080 hours in a work year, his 
                            hourly rate is $315.50." You then stated that 
                            you asked him "to provide costs based on actual 
                            cost to public funds, foundation or other sourced 
                            funds, and any fringe benefits costs also assessed." 
                            You stated that on August 7, 2023, he refused, saying 
                            "[the Institute] is unaware of any statute, regulation, 
                            or opinion that requires the Institute to break down 
                            the estimate by fund source." You stated that 
                            on that same day you asked the FOIA Officer "to 
                            provide the public funded annual salary for [the Superintendent]," 
                            which he did. Accordingly, the public funded portion 
                            of the Superintendent's annual salary was reported 
                            as "$166, 994" (assumed to be the public 
                            funded amount in fiscal year 2023–2024). You stated 
                            that you then asked the FOIA Officer "why [you] 
                            were being charged for a salary, 75% of which was 
                            provided by private funds, pointing him to AO-03-12."
 You 
                            stated that the FOIA Officer's reply was as follows:  
                             
                              AO-03-12 is also not relevant in this matter. The 
                              cost to [the Institute] of employing [him] as superintendent 
                              is $656,250 per year. His hourly rate is $315.50. 
                              The opinion you cited refers to a case where a county 
                              supervisor is trying to charge a requester for vacation 
                              time that the county supervisor would have to take 
                              from their employer in order to fulfill the request. 
                              This is not the case for the superintendent. Even 
                              if no private funds were available, [the Institute] 
                              is still contractually obligated to pay him $656,250 
                              per year.  
                            After which, you submitted a request to our office 
                            for "a formal opinion on if additional compensation 
                            received by a public official or employee that is 
                            provided by sources other than the public body itself 
                            can be included in the rate charged to respond to 
                            FOIA requests" and "whether involvement 
                            in the target of a FOIA [request] constitutes Conflict 
                            of Interest from which a FOIA Officer should recuse 
                            himself."  
                            Analysis  
                            Your first question is whether additional compensation 
                            received by a public official or employee that is 
                            provided by sources other than the public body itself 
                            can be included in the rate charged to respond to 
                            FOIA requests.  
                            FOIA policy, as stated in § 2.2-3700 of the Code 
                            of Virginia, is to ensure "the people of the 
                            Commonwealth ready access to public records in the 
                            custody of a public body or its officers and employees." 
                            Additionally, it provides that "[a]ll public 
                            bodies and their officers and employees shall make 
                            reasonable efforts to reach an agreement with a requester 
                            concerning the production of the records requested." 
                            As to calculating charges, subsection F of § 
                            2.2-3704 of the Code of Virginia provides in relevant 
                            part as follows:  
                             
                              [A] public body may make reasonable charges not 
                              to exceed its actual cost incurred in accessing, 
                              duplicating, supplying, or searching for the requested 
                              records. . . . No public body shall impose any extraneous, 
                              intermediary, or surplus fees or expenses to recoup 
                              the general costs associated with creating or maintaining 
                              records or transacting the general business of the 
                              public body. Any duplicating fee charged by a public 
                              body shall not exceed the actual cost of duplication. 
                              . . . All charges for the supplying of requested 
                              records shall be estimated in advance at the request 
                              of the citizen.1  FOIA 
                            does not specifically address how to calculate the 
                            actual costs incurred by a public body in accessing, 
                            duplicating, supplying, or searching for requested 
                            records. In prior opinions, this office has opined 
                            that a public body's authority to assess allowable 
                            charges for the production of requested records "would 
                            include charges such as the hourly rate of pay for 
                            the staff that researched and responded to the request 
                            and cost of copies."2 "FOIA generally presumes 
                            that processing a records request is a ministerial 
                            task that will be performed by administrative or clerical 
                            staff."3 As such, "[t]his office has opined 
                            that reasonable cost, not to exceed actual cost, may 
                            properly be assessed to a requestor for the staff 
                            time extended in responding to [a] request."4 
                            However, "[w]hether the charge is reasonable 
                            is a question for the courts."5 The emphasis in 
                            the previous opinions was that charges must be "limited 
                            specifically to the actual cost to a public body for 
                            accessing, duplicating, supplying, or searching for 
                            the requested records."6  In 
                            American Tradition Institute v. Rector and Visitors 
                            of the University of Virginia, the Supreme Court 
                            of Virginia addressed the calculation of permissible 
                            charges by a public body for responding to FOIA requests.7 
                            As previously stated, subsection F of § 2.2-3704 
                            of the Code of Virginia provides that a public body 
                            may assess reasonable charges for the actual cost 
                            incurred "in accessing, duplicating, supplying, 
                            or searching for requested records." Since public 
                            records may contain certain information that would 
                            be unlawful to disclose, a public body is required 
                            to search and review records for any excluded information 
                            prior to release. In this case, the Supreme Court 
                            determined that this exclusion review is included 
                            within "the ordinary meaning of 'searching.'"8 
                            The Supreme Court held that a public body is allowed 
                            to charge a reasonable fee for exclusion review of 
                            records.9 Notwithstanding, 
                            "FOIA does not require a public body to charge 
                            a requester at all," but if charges are assessed, 
                            FOIA provides that a public body may only do so "within 
                            the stated limitations."10 "If higher-level 
                            staff or officials are processing a request, their 
                            higher pay rate may reflect the actual cost incurred, 
                            but it will not necessarily be reasonable to charge 
                            at the higher pay rate unless there is some specific 
                            reason why the request must be handled by a higher-level 
                            person."11 In this matter, it should be noted that 
                            you specifically asked for records in the possession 
                            of or prepared by the Superintendent, including his 
                            emails, in which case "it does not seem unreasonable 
                            on its face that an official would search his or her 
                            own email account."12  Without 
                            further disclosure of the duties and responsibilities 
                            of the Institute's administrative staff, and the level 
                            of access to the Superintendent's files and email 
                            account granted to staff, it is unfeasible to consider 
                            whether it was reasonable for the Superintendent to 
                            handle your request personally or whether search and 
                            review could have been entrusted to lower-paid staff 
                            instead. "As a general matter, it is best to 
                            have lower-paid staff handle FOIA requests whenever 
                            possible in order to minimize the charges involved, 
                            thus furthering the stated policy of providing ready 
                            access to public records."13 Delegating search 
                            and review responsibilities to staff may also demonstrate 
                            a public body's adherence to the FOIA requirement 
                            in subsection F of § 2.2-3704 of the Code of 
                            Virginia to "make all reasonable efforts to supply 
                            the requested records at the lowest possible cost." Through 
                            another FOIA request, you obtained a copy of the Superintendent's 
                            employment contract and provided it to our office. 
                            In reviewing the employment contract, Section D of 
                            the agreement provides that the Institute will pay 
                            the Superintendent as compensation for services to 
                            be performed "an annualized base salary of $625,000 
                            beginning July 1, 2021 (the "Base Salary"), 
                            less applicable deductions." Section D, in relevant 
                            part, provides that:  
                             
                              [o]f the total Base Salary each year, [the Institute] 
                              will pay from state funds that amount specified 
                              annually in the Commonwealth's Appropriation Act, 
                              and the balance will be paid from either (a) private 
                              gifts, endowment funds, or income from endowments 
                              and gifts or (b) other sources from which presidential 
                              salary supplements were paid prior to June 30, 1997 
                              [(a) and (b), collectively, "Other Funds"]. 
                              Any increase in the Base Salary will be paid only 
                              upon approval by resolution of the Board and will 
                              be based upon the Superintendent's performance during 
                              the previous twelve (12) months in connection with 
                              the annual evaluation of his performance, as described 
                              in Section E of this Agreement. With 
                              the exception of $330,000 of the annual Base Salary(stated 
                              above), the Board in its sole discretion may direct 
                              that the remaining portion of the annual Base Salary 
                              will be deferred into one or more established deferred 
                              compensation plans as outlined in section F.4 of 
                              this employment agreement.  
                            The FOIA Officer disclosed that the Institute is contractually 
                            obligated to pay the Superintendent $656,250 per year 
                            (which our office is assuming reflects the amount 
                            paid in fiscal year 2023–2024). So, the issue is whether 
                            FOIA provides that the amount of the Superintendent's 
                            annualized base salary paid from state funds (the 
                            amount specified annually in the Commonwealth's Appropriation 
                            Act) of $166,964 or the total annualized base salary 
                            of $656,250 paid primarily by "Other Funds" 
                            as specified in the employment contract should be 
                            utilized when calculating the actual cost incurred 
                            by the public body in responding to FOIA requests. 
                             As 
                            with many other colleges and universities across the 
                            Commonwealth, the Institute is supported in part by 
                            a nonprofit foundation. The VMI Foundation (the Foundation) 
                            was established with the objective "to build 
                            an endowment to provide for the advancement, promotion, 
                            welfare and progress of the [Institute and the Institute's 
                            Alumni Association]."14 The Foundation "solicits 
                            unrestricted donations for immediate use, gifts for 
                            designated or restricted purposes, and future gifts 
                            through wills, life insurance policies, charitable 
                            remainder trusts, and the Foundation's Pooled Income 
                            Fund."15 "With this private money, the Foundation 
                            supports constant improvement of academic and co-curricular 
                            programs."16 "Funds raised by the Foundation 
                            are used for providing scholarships and other academic 
                            and athletic program support to the Institute and 
                            its related alumni associations."17  The 
                            Foundation operates as a nonprofit organization that 
                            offers programs including co-curriculum, facility 
                            support, scholarships, and other programs for the 
                            benefit of the students who attend the Institute.18 
                            The Foundation's mission is "to raise, steward, 
                            and invest the funds entrusted to it by members of 
                            the [Institute] Family for the sole purpose of advancing 
                            [the Institute]."19 Funds raised by the Foundation 
                            are used for the benefit of the students who attend 
                            the Institute, which includes scholarship aid and 
                            support for many of the co-curricular clubs and programs 
                            offered at the Institute (such as the Honor Court, 
                            Glee Club, Band, and Debating Team).20 "The Foundation 
                            also supports the publication of the alumni magazine, 
                            'The Alumni Review.'"21 "Support of the Institute 
                            by the Foundation represents approximately 35% of 
                            the Institute's total budget."22  Our 
                            office issued an advisory opinion in 2009 that addressed 
                            the issue of whether a foundation that was a financial 
                            fundraising agent of a public body was itself a public 
                            body subject to FOIA.23 This opinion addressed the definition 
                            of public body, specifically the language "any 
                            committee, subcommittee, or other entity however designated, 
                            of the public body created to perform delegated functions."24 
                            The opinion stated "that once established, the 
                            [American Frontier Culture] Foundation is a corporate 
                            entity in its own right separate from the [public 
                            body]."25 This opinion also analyzed the role of 
                            nonprofit fundraising corporations such as the Foundation 
                            that typically raise money from private sources, which 
                            are then used "to support the operations of the 
                            nonprofit corporation and to provide support to a 
                            public body."26 Instead of receiving public funds, 
                            these nonprofit fundraising organizations collect 
                            "private donations and gifts and then [pass] 
                            them on to the public entities."27 The opinion 
                            concluded that "the [American Frontier Culture] 
                            Foundation is not supported wholly or principally 
                            by public funds, nor is it a committee, subcommittee, 
                            or other entity however designated, of the [public 
                            body]" and therefore, it "is not a public 
                            body subject to FOIA."28  
                            In Transparent GMU v. George Mason Univ., 
                            the Supreme Court of Virginia agreed with previously 
                            issued FOIA Advisory Council opinions and concluded 
                            "that the circuit court did not err in finding 
                            that the [GMU] Foundation was a private, separate 
                            corporation and was not an "entity of" George 
                            Mason University (GMU) created by GMU to perform delegated 
                            functions of GMU."29 The Supreme Court found that 
                            the GMU Foundation was not supported by public funds 
                            and was not the alter ego or agent of GMU for purposes 
                            of FOIA.30 The Supreme Court held that "GMU and 
                            the [GMU] Foundation are separate and distinct entities, 
                            one being a public institution and the other being 
                            a private corporation."31 Based on the foregoing 
                            reasons, the Supreme Court affirmed "the judgment 
                            of the circuit court finding that the [GMU] Foundation 
                            is not a public body subject to FOIA."32 As a general 
                            rule, private nonprofit fundraising organizations 
                            like the Foundation are not public bodies, and therefore, 
                            are not subject to FOIA. In 
                            previous opinions, our office opined on whether or 
                            not a public body could charge for fringe benefits 
                            provided to employees. Subsection F of § 2.2-3704 
                            of the Code of Virginia provides that "[n]o public 
                            body shall impose any extraneous, intermediary, or 
                            surplus fees or expenses to recoup the general costs 
                            associated with creating or maintaining records or 
                            transacting the general business of the public body." 
                            Our office has stated that "the fee for fringe 
                            benefits is a general cost associated with transacting 
                            the general business of the public body."33 If 
                            the portion of the Superintendent's annualized base 
                            salary paid by "Other Funds" is considered 
                            fringe benefits, then FOIA prohibits the assessment 
                            of any extraneous, intermediary, or surplus fees to 
                            recoup the general costs associated with transacting 
                            the general business of the public body.34 The Institute 
                            "may charge the actual amount incurred in searching 
                            for responsive public records based on the hourly 
                            rate of the employee who performed the search, not 
                            including fringe benefits."35 Therefore, following 
                            this reasoning, only the amount paid to the Superintendent 
                            in public funds calculated as $166,964 per year (assumed 
                            for fiscal year 2023–2024), could be used in calculating 
                            the hourly rate of pay of the employee to determine 
                            the actual cost to the public body.  As 
                            previously opined, "the fee associated with fringe 
                            benefits may be actual, but it is also extraneous 
                            to the production of requested records."36 "Fringe 
                            benefits are not incidental to the production of requested 
                            records."37 Even though "a public body may 
                            charge the hourly rate of the person responding to 
                            the request, it may not recoup costs not incidental 
                            to the request, such as benefits."38 "Benefits 
                            are part of the general overhead of the public body, 
                            and are not directly related to responding to a FOIA 
                            request."39 While the actual costs for the Superintendent's 
                            time may be assessed against a requestor, "it 
                            is the opinion of this office that the inclusion of 
                            fringe benefits as part of the charges that may be 
                            assessed is an extraneous fee to recoup the general 
                            costs of transacting the general business of the public 
                            body."40 "Charging a requestor for general 
                            costs associated with transacting the general business 
                            of the public body is both inconsistent with the plain 
                            language of FOIA and its policy of ready access."41 
                            "The charges allowed by FOIA must be directly 
                            related to providing the requested records."42 
                            Furthermore, "[c]harges are not to be used as 
                            a deterrent to requests, as that would be contradictory 
                            to the basic policy of FOIA favoring openness and 
                            ready access to public records."43  Our 
                            office has previously opined that when responding 
                            to a public records request under FOIA, "a Supervisor, 
                            or any other public official or employee, may charge 
                            at most whatever rate corresponds to his or her actual 
                            rate of pay as a public official or employee."44 
                            Such official cannot charge his "private, professional 
                            rate of pay to search for public records."45 Previously, 
                            our office emphatically noted that under subsection 
                            F of § 2.2-3704 of the Code of Virginia, "FOIA 
                            provides that a public body may 
                            make reasonable charges not to exceed its 
                            actual cost incurred. (Emphasis added.)"46 
                            The actual costs to be considered when calculating 
                            charges "are only those [costs] incurred by the 
                            public body," which does not include costs incurred 
                            by an official or employee individually.47 Thus, the 
                            Institute would be required to calculate more accurately 
                            the charge for two hours of the Superintendent's time 
                            based on 2,080 hours in a work year (as provided by 
                            the FOIA Officer) at $166,964 per year (annual salary 
                            paid in public funds), which equals $80.27/hour. Instead 
                            of two hours at $315.50/hour, which equals $631.00 
                            as calculated by the FOIA Officer, the rate of $80.27/hour 
                            multiplied by two hours of search and review time, 
                            which equals $160.54, would reflect the actual cost 
                            in public funds to the Institute for production of 
                            the records in response to your FOIA request. If 
                            it was determined otherwise, that the portion of the 
                            Superintendent's annualized base salary paid by "Other 
                            Funds" is not considered fringe benefits, then 
                            a factual determination would have to be made to determine 
                            whether the Institute has paid the Superintendent's 
                            annualized total base salary, or only some portion 
                            thereof, because only the costs incurred by the public 
                            body may be used when calculating FOIA charges. If 
                            some portion of the Superintendent's salary is paid 
                            by the Foundation, which is not a public body, then 
                            that portion may not be included as part of the actual 
                            costs incurred by the Institute. However, if the Institute 
                            pays the entire annualized base salary, then that 
                            salary would be properly used to determine the actual 
                            cost incurred by the Institute. Then, the hourly rate 
                            of pay as cited by the FOIA Officer would be considered 
                            accurate and appropriate to use for calculating cost 
                            of labor. Nevertheless, the question of whether the 
                            rate charged by a public body for accessing, searching, 
                            duplicating, reviewing, and supplying of records is 
                            reasonable in any particular instance is one for the 
                            courts.48  
                            Your second question is whether there is a conflict 
                            of interest for a public official or employee to conduct 
                            a search for records in which the public official 
                            or employee is the subject of the FOIA request and 
                            if so, whether the public official or employee should 
                            recuse himself from the FOIA process.  
                            Subsection A of § 2.2-3704.1 of the Code of Virginia 
                            requires that all state public bodies subject to the 
                            provisions of FOIA, any county or city, any town with 
                            a population of more than 250, and any school board 
                            make available to the public upon request a notice 
                            of rights and responsibilities by state and local 
                            public bodies regarding the FOIA process. In addition, 
                            pursuant to subdivision A 2 of § 2.2-3704.1, 
                            these public bodies shall post a link to this notice 
                            of FOIA rights and responsibilities that includes, 
                            in relevant part, the following information, on the 
                            homepage of their respective official public government 
                            websites:   
                            2. 
                              Contact information for the FOIA officer designated 
                              by the public body pursuant to § 2.2-3704.2 
                              to (i) assist a requester in making a request for 
                              records or (ii) respond to requests for public records; 
                               Pursuant 
                            to subsection A of § 2.2-3704.2, FOIA requires 
                            that:   
                            All 
                              state public bodies, including state authorities, 
                              that are subject to the provisions of this chapter 
                              and all local public bodies and regional public 
                              bodies that are subject to the provisions of this 
                              chapter shall designate and publicly identify one 
                              or more Freedom of Information Act officers (FOIA 
                              officer) whose responsibility is to serve as a point 
                              of contact for members of the public in requesting 
                              public records and to coordinate the public body's 
                              compliance with the provisions of this chapter.  
                            Subsection B of § 2.2-3704.2 also provides that: 
                              
                            For 
                              such state public bodies, the name and contact information 
                              of the public body's FOIA officer to whom members 
                              of the public may direct requests for public records 
                              and who will oversee the public body's compliance 
                              with the provisions of this chapter shall be made 
                              available to the public upon request and be posted 
                              on the respective public body's official public 
                              government website at the time of designation and 
                              maintained thereafter on such website for the duration 
                              of the designation.  
                            In addition, subsection E of § 2.2-3704.2 requires 
                            that:   
                            Any 
                              such FOIA officer shall possess specific knowledge 
                              of the provisions of this chapter and be trained 
                              at least once during each consecutive period of 
                              two calendar years commencing with the date on which 
                              he last completed a training session by legal counsel 
                              for the public body or the Virginia Freedom of Information 
                              Advisory Council (the Council) or through an online 
                              course offered by the Council. Any such training 
                              shall document that the training required by this 
                              subsection has been fulfilled.  
                            This information is included to demonstrate that each 
                            public body's designated FOIA Officer is required 
                            by law to obtain specialized training on FOIA processes 
                            and provisions. FOIA Officers serve as a point of 
                            contact for members of the public in requesting public 
                            records and oversee and coordinate the public body's 
                            compliance with FOIA.  Your 
                            inquiry of whether there is a conflict of interest 
                            in the scenario of a FOIA Officer providing a response 
                            to a FOIA request in which that individual is the 
                            direct subject of the FOIA request is not unusual. 
                            Our office has previously received inquiries from 
                            requesters concerned whether their requests will be 
                            handled accordingly under law. Our office has issued 
                            several prior advisory opinions on the topic of "good 
                            faith" and the underlying presumption that an 
                            individual will obey the law, not violate it.49 Our 
                            office has previously concluded that: 
                            Considering 
                              the policy of FOIA, the legal duties it imposes, 
                              and the presumption that public officials will obey 
                              the law in carrying out their duties, therefore, 
                              it must be presumed that while the methods and extent 
                              of searches may vary, any search for records made 
                              under FOIA must be carried out in good faith.  
                            FOIA does not address conflicts of interest and does 
                            not provide guidance on whether a person who is the 
                            subject of a FOIA request should recuse themselves 
                            from searching and providing the records requested. 
                            In this matter, you specifically requested multiple 
                            records in the possession of or prepared by the FOIA 
                            Officer, including his email records. It is not unreasonable 
                            that an official would search his or her own email 
                            account.50  Every 
                            day, citizens across the Commonwealth submit FOIA 
                            requests for records to public bodies and their officers, 
                            employees, and staff members. In most localities, 
                            the number of staff and employees trained to respond 
                            to FOIA requests is limited. In many instances, the 
                            records requested by citizens are for the records 
                            in the possession of these individuals. Our office 
                            has previously opined on the role of public officials, 
                            employees, and staff members in responding to FOIA 
                            requests and the expectation of a "good faith" 
                            effort to conduct a search for records.51 FOIA does 
                            not require any public body's officials, employees, 
                            or staff members to recuse themselves from a records 
                            request. It is the responsibility of these officials, 
                            employees, and staff members trained in the requirements 
                            and provisions of FOIA to understand how to respond 
                            to requests in accordance with the law on behalf of 
                            the public bodies they serve. Unless there is evidence 
                            to the contrary, the presumption remains that these 
                            individuals are performing their duties appropriately.  
                            Thank you for contacting this office. We hope that 
                            this opinion is of assistance.
  
                            Sincerely,
 
 Joseph 
                            UnderwoodSenior 
                            Attorney
 Alan 
                            Gernhardt
 Executive Director
   1The 
                            last sentence was amended effective July 1, 2022, 
                            pursuant to Chapter 756 of the Acts of Assembly of 
                            2022.2Freedom of Information Advisory Opinion 02 (2014).
 3Freedom of Information Advisory Opinions 03 (2012) 
                            and 07 (2011).
 4Freedom of Information Advisory Opinion 03 (2012), 
                            05 (2002), and 21 (2001).
 5Freedom of Information Advisory Opinions 03 (2012) 
                            and 05 (2002) (citing Freedom of Information Advisory 
                            Opinions 49 (2001) and 21 (2001)); see also Freedom 
                            of Information Advisory Opinions 07 (2011) and 06 
                            (2005).
 6Id.
 7See Am. Tradition Inst. v. Rector & Visitors 
                            of the Univ. of Va., 287 Va. 330.
 8Id. at 345.
 9Id. at 345
 10Freedom of Information Advisory Opinions 03 (2012) 
                            and 06 (2005).
 11Freedom of Information Advisory Opinions 03 (2012) 
                            and 07 (2011).
 12Freedom of Information Advisory Opinion 03 (2012).
 13Freedom of Information Advisory Opinion 03 (2012).
 14https://www.guidestar.org/profile/54-0505966
 15Id.
 16https://www.vmialumni.org/about/staff-directory/foundation/
 17https://www.causeiq.com/organizations/vmi-foundation,540505966/
 18https://www.bloomberg.com/profile/company/85063MF:US
 19https://www.bloomberg.com/profile/company/85063MF:US 
                            and https://www.causeiq.com/organizations/vmi-foundation,540505966/
 20https://www.guidestar.org/profile/54-0505966
 21Id.
 22Id.
 23Freedom of Information Advisory Opinion 09 (2009).
 24See Va. Code § 2.2-3701.
 25Freedom of Information Advisory Opinion 09 (2009).
 26Id.
 27Id.
 28Id.
 29Transparent GMU v. George Mason Univ., 
                            298 Va. 222, 244 (2019), 835 S.E.2d 544, 2019 Va. 
                            LEXIS 155, 2019 WL 6765854.
 30Id.. at 244-46.
 31Id. at 249.
 32Id. at 250.
 33Freedom of Information Advisory Opinion 05 (2002).
 34See Freedom of Information Advisory Opinions 05 
                            (2002) and 49 (2001).
 35Freedom of Information Advisory Opinion 02 (2014).
 36Freedom of Information Advisory Opinion 05 (2002).
 37Id.
 38Freedom of Information Advisory Opinions 04 (2004) 
                            and 05 (2002).
 39Freedom of Information Advisory Opinion 04 (2004).
 40Freedom of Information Advisory Opinion 05 (2002).
 41Id.
 42Freedom of Information Advisory Opinion 04 (2004).
 43Freedom of Information Advisory Opinions 03 (2012) 
                            (citing Freedom of Information Advisory Opinion 07 
                            (2011).
 44Freedom of Information Advisory Opinion 03 (2012).
 45Id.
 46Id.
 47Id.
 48See Freedom of Information Advisory Opinions 
                            03 (2012), 07 (2011), 06 (2005), 05 (2002), 49 (2001) 
                            and 21 (2001).
 49Freedom of Information Advisory Opinion 04 (2010); 
                            see also Freedom of Information Advisory 
                            Opinions 03 (2022), 01 (2022), and 02 (2012).
 50See Freedom of Information Advisory Opinions 
                            04 (2018) and 03 (2012).
 51See Freedom of Information Advisory Opinions 
                            03 (2023), 01 (2022), 04 (2018), 02 (2012), and 04 
                            (2010).
 |