JLARC metrics explained: What Washington’s data reveals about the true cost of public records
Public records obligations exist in every state — but few jurisdictions have clear, defensible insight into what those obligations actually cost. Washington State is an exception.
Since 2017, Washington has required agencies spending more than $100,000 annually responding to public records requests (PRR) to report detailed cost, time, and workload metrics to the Joint Legislative Audit and Review Committee (JLARC). The resulting dataset offers a rare, real‑world view into the operational impact of public records request management — one that is highly relevant for local enterprise governments across the country.
JLARC’s reporting mandate is specific to Washington, but the pressures it reveals are universal. State, county, city, special district, and education agencies everywhere face rising request volume, increasing complexity, and growing legal exposure — all while operating under tight staffing and budget constraints.
JLARC data turns these challenges into measurable facts, making it a valuable reference point for agencies evaluating modernization, staffing models, or technology investments.
Staff time is the largest cost driver. In 2018, 204 Washington agencies reported spending more than 1 million staff hours responding to more than 350,000 public records requests, with an average of 2.83 hours per request. That equates to between 480 and 595 full‑time employees dedicated to PRR work statewide.
The data also highlights sharp variation by agency type. School districts averaged nearly 23 hours per request, higher education institutions averaged more than 10 hours, and other jurisdiction types spent less but still faced significant cumulative workload.
Total PRR costs extend far beyond staff time. JLARC requires agencies to report staff costs, legal review costs, supplies and services, and overhead. These categories show how public records work draws resources from across an organization, not just records teams.
Litigation risk is material and measurable. In 2018 alone, reported PRR‑related litigation costs exceeded $4.5 million, covering attorney fees, court costs, settlements, and penalties. Defensibility failures carry real financial consequences.
Cost recovery is limited. Washington only allows recovery of narrow ‘actual costs,’ such as copying and mailing. ]Staff time — the primary cost driver — cannot be recovered, reinforcing the importance of reducing processing time and rework.
JLARC helps Washington go beyond mandated reporting to show what operational maturity looks like when it’s embedded directly into the public records workflow. Rather than treating reporting as an after‑the‑fact compliance exercise, JLARC metrics make workload, cost, and risk visible as part of day‑to‑day operations.
Agencies with strong reporting practices can:
This level of visibility is difficult to achieve with spreadsheets, inboxes, or disconnected systems. JLARC highlights how reporting functions as a control layer — turning public records processing from a reactive obligation into a manageable operation.
Granicus Records Request Management is aligned directly to JLARC reporting requirements, with built‑in metrics and automated data collection that simplify compliance for Washington agencies. That same structure provides value nationwide by giving agencies a proven framework to measure cost, effort, and risk.
Within Operations Cloud, reporting becomes a byproduct of daily workflows — not a manual, after‑the‑fact task — supporting audit readiness, operational insight, and ROI analysis.
While not every state mandates JLARC‑style reporting, every agency faces the same pressures. Agencies that treat public records data as an operational asset — rather than a compliance obligation — are better positioned to manage growth, reduce risk, and justify modernization.
Schedule a one‑on‑one consultation to explore how Records Request Management reporting can help uncover cost drivers, reduce litigation exposure, and support a defensible business case for modernization.