CONGRESS, Ariz. (AP) - The unincorporated town of Congress sits at the junction of state highways 71 and 89 in the middle of the Arizona desert, a no-stoplight kind of place if ever you saw one. It is so small, in fact, that the prickly pear cacti may very well outnumber the 1,700 or so souls who call Congress home.
And so it is a rather unlikely setting for a bitter open government dispute that has drawn attention far beyond the gossip being swapped at the local cafe.
"First Amendment, FOIA doesn't apply in Arizona?" asked a perplexed San Francisco Examiner.
What happened is this: The Congress Elementary School District , fed up with records requests from four women - two of whom have children in school - responded by suing them.
The district seeks to prevent the four from filing open records requests without first getting permission from a judge. The prohibition would extend to the defendants' "agents, servants or employees" and also bar the four from filing any lawsuits or claims against the school before a court, administrative agency or "other forum."
"It is absolutely outrageous and outrageously expansive," said the defendants' attorney, Carrie Ann Citren of the Goldwater Institute in Phoenix. "If any of them were hit in their car by a school bus, they would not be able to file a claim unless they went to a court first to ask permission. The two parents will never be able to find out their child's lessons plans.
"The whole idea behind our system of representation and our system of democracy is that members of the community, who have to foot the bill for public activities ... have a right to be able to know what's going on," she said.
But the district insists it has complied with the citizens' requests - over and over and over again, they maintain. They now insist it's gotten to the point of harassment, and that the requests are impeding this tiny, rural school district from its ability to function and educate. (The district, by the way, consists of just one school - the yellow and purple building on Tenderfoot Hill Road serving 112 children in kindergarten through eighth grade.)
"The district has done nothing but aid these people in the exercise of their rights. But these particular people have exercised their rights in an unreasonable manner," said Franklin Hoover, the school district's attorney. "At what point does the district have the right to say, enough is enough?"
It's one of the enduring conflicts surrounding public access. Is there ever a situation where too much is, really, too much? When following the law puts the rights of a few ahead of the larger mission of a public agency?
So-called serial requesters or frequent flyers can "literally clog up resources and bring everything to a halt," said Charles Davis, executive director of the National Freedom of Information Coalition at the University of Missouri School of Journalism.
Davis, who reviewed the Congress lawsuit, stressed he did not believe that was the situation in this case. He called the school district's decision to sue not only rare but said it could have a chilling effect far beyond Congress.
"What it does on the ground is scare the hell out of everybody," he said. "I can only imagine other requesters across the state will be like, `Oh my God. We can get sued for making an FOI request?'"
There have been legislative attempts - unsuccessful, Davis said - to place limits on the number of open records requests filed. A bill now pending in the Hawaii Legislature would allow state agencies to ask Hawaii's Office of Information Practices to declare an individual a "vexatious requester" if they've abused the process and restrict that person's requests for up to two years.
Under the proposal, factors constituting abuse include: filing a large quantity of requests; making duplicative or repetitive requests for the same action when the agency has already responded; and requests submitted for "nuisance value or harassment."
The measure was prompted, in part, by repeated requests made to the Hawaii Department of Health for President Obama's birth certificate - more than 50 e-mail inquiries a month, most made by a handful of people, Health Director Chiyome Leinaala Fukino said in testifying in support of the bill.
"The time and state resources it takes to respond to these often convoluted inquiries are considerable," Fukino said.
Texas taxpayer Thomas Ratliff can relate to "considerable." In 2007, Ratliff sued the Eanes Independent School District in Austin, saying its practice of responding to voluminous open records requests was an "illegal expenditure of public funds."
Ratliff claimed a small group of residents had made nearly 1,000 requests totaling about 100,000 pages of records. The cost of complying with those requests had exceeded $500,000, according to the lawsuit.
Randall "Buck" Wood, an attorney who helped draft the Texas open records law, took on Ratliff's case because he wanted to try to convince the state Legislature that the Public