Specimen Not a published audit. The structure and sourcing slots are real; the figures and citations are placeholders. When a finding clears review it drops into this identical template.
Public Records · County A

Does County A answer records requests within the ten‑day deadline the law sets?

Jurisdiction
County A, specimen
Domain
Public records access
Filed
[Month Year]
Verdict
Gap confirmed
01

The Question

What the public is entitled to ask, and the yes-or-no this audit answers.

State law gives any resident the right to inspect public records, and it sets a clock on the response. This audit asks one question: does County A meet that deadline in practice?

Not whether the law is sound; whether the county follows it. The audit ends in a yes or a no, sourced to the record.

02

The Standard

The written rule, quoted, with the primary citation.

The Public Records Act requires a public body to grant or deny a request within ten business days of receipt. A body that needs longer must say so in writing and state a date certain.

“…shall, within ten business days, either comply with or deny the request; any denial or extension shall be in writing.” [Statute § (quote pending clearance)]
03

The Gap

The measured distance between the standard and the record.

Across [N] requests filed between [date] and [date], the median time to a substantive response was [31] business days; roughly three times the statutory deadline.

[share]% of late requests carried no written extension notice, which the statute requires the moment a body passes the ten-day mark.

04

The Comparison

County A set against a neighbor and the state median; data-ink kept minimal.

The same statutory deadline binds every jurisdiction in the table. The only variable is performance against it.

JurisdictionDeadlineMedian responseMeets standard
County A10 business days31 daysNo
County B10 business days9 daysYes
State median10 business days14 daysPartial
05

The Counterargument

The strongest case against the finding, stated fairly.

The county attributes the delay to a single records officer and rising request volume, and notes that genuinely complex requests fall outside the strict clock. Both points are real.

Neither explains the missing extension notices. Those take minutes to send and are themselves required by the same statute.

06

The Connection

Bills and decisions that would change the standard or its enforcement.

Two measures touch this gap. SB-[XXX] would attach a daily penalty to missed deadlines; HB-[YYY] would fund a second records officer.

This audit takes no position on either. It records that both are live, and what each would change.

07

The Ask

The specific, checkable thing a reader can verify or request.

File a records request for the county’s response-time log for the last twelve months; the same data this audit used. If your numbers differ from ours, the discrepancy is the story.

The log is itself a public record under the statute this audit measures.

Verdict · Gap confirmed

County A’s median response of [31] business days is more than three times the ten‑day deadline the statute sets, and [share]% of requests lacked the written extension the law requires when that deadline is missed. The standard is written; the record does not meet it.

References & sources
  1. [1]
    Primary State Public Records Act, § [cite]
    Statute as currently enacted; controlling text for the ten-day standard.
    Archived [YYYY-MM-DD]
  2. [2]
    Primary Attorney General Opinion [no.]
    Interpretive opinion on the written-extension requirement.
    Archived [YYYY-MM-DD]
  3. [3]
    Data County A records-response log, [range]
    Obtained via request [no.]; per-request receipt and response timestamps.
    Archived [YYYY-MM-DD]
  4. [4]
    Data State records clearinghouse, [date]
    Cross-jurisdiction median response times used for the comparison.
    Archived [YYYY-MM-DD]
  5. [5]
    Statement County A Records Office, response to audit query
    On-record reply to the counterargument question, [date].
    Archived [YYYY-MM-DD]
  6. [6]
    Bill SB-[XXX], [session]
    Daily-penalty measure; status as of access date.
    Archived [YYYY-MM-DD]
  7. [7]
    Bill HB-[YYY], [session]
    Records-officer funding measure; status as of access date.
    Archived [YYYY-MM-DD]