Proposed overhaul of NJ public records law

March 26, 2024

On March 14, New Jersey lawmakers temporarily halted their plans to limit the scope of the Open Public Records Act (OPRA), which compels local governments to release public records upon request, according to the Associated Press.

After a committee session advancing the bill, the state legislature pulled it from the Appropriations Committee in an effort to retool certain aspects, according to Politico.

Marc Pfeiffer, a senior policy fellow and associate director of the Bloustein Local Government Research Center at the Edward J. Bloustein School of Planning and Public Policy, said OPRA is utilized by journalists, activists and individuals seeking information about happenings inside the government.

“(OPRA) is used a lot by reporters … to ask questions about government stories and government issues,” he said. “You (also) have public interest groups who are doing investigations into various issues, (which) could be civil rights issues, could be environmental issues … and you have citizens who are interested in what’s going on in their town.”

Pfeiffer also said that other less traditional uses of the law include corporations such as credit agencies using OPRA for marketing purposes.

On March 16, in light of the controversy surrounding the bill, NJ Advance Media published an article sharing with readers how they have utilized the OPRA law in recent years, including an investigation of the Rutgers Athletics Department’s debt.

Pfeiffer said allegations of political motivation were not the reason behind the introduction of this law and that there is a genuine need to reform OPRA.

The proposed law would make certain aspects of OPRA more difficult for the public, including requesting emails and prohibiting the release of draft documents by local governments, he said.

“You can’t really run a government if every draft document that you have of exploring ideas is subject to public disclosure, because it doesn’t represent a final government action,” he said. “You really can’t do business in a full transparent mode.”

Pfeiffer also said the proposed changes to OPRA would require requests to be more specific and targeted and make email logs and calendars unavailable to the public through OPRA.

He said issues with the current OPRA system include the burdens that exist for small towns that have to pay staff to complete these requests and just the general workload a request can place on staffers.

Pfeiffer also said that some email requests are used for spam, an unforeseen consequence of the original OPRA law.

“Personal privacy is a real interesting challenge these days because the law was passed over 20 years ago,” he said. “Privacy has changed, and notions that people have of what is personally private … is really different today.”

Recent Posts

2026 NJDOT Complete Streets Summit Recap

On Tuesday, April 21, 2026, the NJDOT Bicycle and Pedestrian Resource Center hosted the eighth New Jersey Complete Streets Summit. This year’s event, centered on the theme “Every Journey Safer,” was a resounding success, bringing together more than 250 planners,...

The fastest way to ease the housing crisis? Rent control

Op-ed by Tram Hoang, a senior associate at PolicyLink, a national research and action institute and Mark Paul, associate professor at the Bloustein School of Planning and Public Policy at Rutgers University. Massachusetts is losing its working families. Not just to...

Kopp and Climate Scholars Assess Atlantic Coast Seasonal Flood Drivers

Seasonal Drivers of Storm Tides and Coastal Flood Impacts Along the US Atlantic Coast Abstract Due to sea‐level rise, densely populated coastal areas are facing increasing flood risk during coastal storms. Much of the US East Coast experiences extratropical cyclones...