Answer:
Clearwater will make our best effort to provide a good-faith invoice prior to labor costs being assessed for requests. However, we cannot guarantee that a good-faith deposit invoice can be provided for every request prior to costs being incurred. Public records requests, and the amount of resources the agency puts forth to respond, vary greatly. Good-faith deposit invoices for estimated costs to fulfill public records requests are provided as soon as possible once the research for the request is conducted. Research and/or retrieval of records may exceed thirty (30) minutes before a good-faith deposit invoice amount can be projected. Costs for the agency resources expended to fulfill the request will be charged whether or not a good-faith deposit invoice is provided prior to costs being incurred.
The results for some requests requiring extensive clerical or supervisory labor may be negative, and Clearwater may not have records responsive to the public records request. Good-faith deposits will not be returned for labor-expended researching requests even if the results are negative.
Because Clearwater is a state agency, credit cannot be extended. If you have a previously received public records, or an invoice for labor time already expended on your request, and you have not paid the costs associated with that response, Clearwater will not provide records for subsequent requests until such time as the past due amounts have been paid.