Delaware Public Records and FOIA: Accessing Government Documents

Delaware's Freedom of Information Act, codified at Title 29, Chapter 100 of the Delaware Code, establishes the legal framework governing public access to government records and open meetings across state and local agencies. The statute defines which records are subject to disclosure, which are exempt, and the procedural obligations agencies must follow when responding to requests. Understanding this framework is essential for journalists, legal professionals, researchers, and private citizens seeking documentation of government activity.

Definition and scope

Delaware's FOIA statute applies to all "public bodies" as defined by 29 Del. C. § 10002, encompassing state agencies, boards, commissions, departments, and any entity that exercises governmental authority or receives a majority of its funding from public sources. The law covers both records access and open meeting requirements — two distinct obligations that share a single statutory chapter.

A "public record" under Delaware FOIA is defined broadly: any information of any kind, owned, made, used, retained, received, produced, composed, drafted, or otherwise compiled or collected, by any public body, relating to public business. This definition extends to electronic records, email, text messages on government devices or accounts, and digital databases.

Scope limitations and exclusions applicable to this page:

This page addresses Delaware state FOIA law only. It does not cover the federal Freedom of Information Act (5 U.S.C. § 552), which governs federal agencies and is administered separately through each federal department. Federal FOIA requests for records held by the U.S. government — including federal grants administered in Delaware — fall outside Delaware FOIA entirely. Similarly, records held by private entities that merely contract with the state are not automatically subject to Delaware FOIA unless the entity itself meets the statutory definition of a "public body." The Delaware Department of State administers certain state-level transparency functions but does not serve as a central FOIA clearinghouse — each agency handles its own requests.

How it works

Delaware FOIA imposes specific procedural requirements on both requesters and agencies. The following breakdown covers the operative steps:

  1. Submission of request — A written request must be submitted to the designated FOIA coordinator of the relevant public body. Delaware law does not require requesters to state a reason for the request or identify themselves beyond what is necessary for communication.
  2. Agency general timeframe — Under [29 Del. C. The response must either provide the records, deny the request with a written explanation citing the applicable exemption, or notify the requester that additional time is needed.
  3. Fee structure — Agencies may charge for the cost of reproducing records. Delaware law does not cap per-page copying fees by statute, leaving agencies to set their own schedules, though fee waivers are available in defined circumstances.
  4. Denial and appeal — If a request is denied, the requester may petition the Delaware Department of Justice for a determination. The Attorney General's office issues written opinions that are publicly available and constitute the primary interpretive authority on Delaware FOIA disputes short of litigation. The Delaware Attorney General has issued hundreds of such opinions establishing precedent for how exemptions are applied.
  5. Judicial remedy — If the Attorney General's determination is unsatisfactory, requesters may seek relief in the Delaware Superior Court under 29 Del. C. § 10005.

Common scenarios

Delaware FOIA requests arise across a wide range of governmental interactions. Documented categories include:

Decision boundaries

Not all records held by public bodies are subject to disclosure. Delaware FOIA enumerates 22 categories of exempt records under 29 Del. C. § 10002(l). The two most frequently invoked exemptions are:

Deliberative process privilege — Applies to pre-decisional, deliberative communications among agency personnel. To qualify, the record must be both predecisional (created before a final agency decision) and deliberative (reflecting the give-and-take of the consultative process). Factual portions of otherwise exempt deliberative documents may remain subject to disclosure through redaction and partial production.

Attorney-client privilege — Communications between a public body and its legal counsel for the purpose of obtaining legal advice are exempt. This applies to the Delaware Attorney General's advice to state agencies and to counsel retained by local governmental bodies.

The contrast between these two exemptions is operationally significant: deliberative process exemptions are agency-controlled and can be waived through disclosure or agency choice; attorney-client privilege is more robust and survives even when records are inadvertently disclosed in some circumstances. Requesters challenging a denial on either ground must petition through the Attorney General's office before seeking judicial review.

The home reference index provides structured access to the full range of Delaware government topics, including legislative, executive, and judicial functions relevant to FOIA's administrative and legal context. Practitioners navigating transparency obligations across multiple state agencies should also consult Delaware's Administrative Code, which contains agency-specific procedural rules that may supplement the baseline FOIA statute.

References