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Open Records

Open records requests in North Carolina

North Carolina Public Records Law

How the North Carolina Public Records Law works

North Carolina's Public Records Law (N.C. Gen. Stat. § 132-1 et seq.) defines public records broadly, encompassing all documents, papers, electronic records, and other materials made or received by any agency of North Carolina government in connection with public business. The law covers all state and local agencies, including departments, counties, municipalities, and school boards, and grants any person the right to access these records without stating a reason. North Carolina's statute does not specify a mandatory response timeline, instead requiring agencies to provide access "as promptly as possible."

Fees may be charged for the actual cost of reproducing records, and agencies must provide a fee estimate in advance for large requests. The North Carolina Attorney General's office provides informal guidance. Enforcement is through superior court, where a successful requester may recover attorney's fees. The absence of a hard response deadline has been a point of criticism, as it can enable delays without clear legal consequence. Common exemptions include attorney-client privileged records, personnel records, and records related to ongoing criminal investigations.

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Filing in North Carolina means knowing the right agency, the right statute, and the right language. We draft, file, and follow up, flat $99. Optional follow-up, appeals, and troubleshooting available at $100/hour with your approval.

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