Credit: Photo by Dave Decker
A state appeals court Tuesday will hear arguments in a dispute about whether Gov. Ron DeSantisโ€™ administration violated Floridaโ€™s public-records law by not properly providing documents about a controversial plan to fly migrants from Texas to Massachusetts last year.

A three-judge panel of the 1st District Court of Appeal will take up the DeSantis administrationโ€™s appeal of an October ruling by Leon County Circuit Judge J. Lee Marsh that the records law was violated.

The non-profit Florida Center for Government Accountability filed the lawsuit after seeking records about the state-funded flights in September of 49 migrants from San Antonio, Texas, to Marthaโ€™s Vineyard in Massachusetts. In a brief filed at the appeals court, lawyers for the state disputed that delays in providing the requested documents were a violation of the law.

โ€œThe circumstances in this case amply justify the timing of EOGโ€™s (the Executive Office of the Governorโ€™s) response,โ€ the brief said. โ€œThose circumstances include the breadth and complexity of the requests; the volume of competing requests; finite resources; a hurricane response; and even the need to respond to this lawsuit. EOG is not aware of any public records case in which a government agency has faced anything approaching this array of impediments.โ€

But a brief filed by the Florida Center for Government Accountability disputed the stateโ€™s arguments.

โ€œFirst, EOG ignores longstanding precedent which holds that the only delay permitted by the (public records) act is the limited time allowed for a custodian to retrieve public records and redact those portions that are exempt,โ€ the groupโ€™s brief said. โ€œRather than accept the well-established principle that local conditions do not define reasonableness, EOG stretches the definition in a manner that encourages agencies to delay the production of public records.โ€