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Publishing names in newspaper…

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gryndor

Member
CA

Our local water utility company just published the names of all their delinquent customers in the newspaper. Is this not illegal? Where can I find the line of what’s allowed and what’s too far?
 


adjusterjack

Senior Member
Perfectly legal.

In fact, California's Franchise Tax Board publishes a list of delinquent taxpayers on its website.

Top 500 delinquent taxpayer list | FTB.ca.gov

Members of the public can freely access the list just as they can freely read the newspaper and see who's delinquent with the water bill..

Pay your bills on time if you don't want your name on delinquency lists.
 

gryndor

Member
Perfectly legal.

In fact, California's Franchise Tax Board publishes a list of delinquent taxpayers on its website.

Top 500 delinquent taxpayer list | FTB.ca.gov

Members of the public can freely access the list just as they can freely read the newspaper and see who's delinquent with the water bill..

Pay your bills on time if you don't want your name on delinquency lists.
Oh, we’re not in it. I ask because my husband manages the community Facebook page and it got posted there. He’s wondering if he needs to remove the post.

For the record, we always pay our bills.
 

quincy

Senior Member
CA

Our local water utility company just published the names of all their delinquent customers in the newspaper. Is this not illegal? Where can I find the line of what’s allowed and what’s too far?
The legality can depend on the delinquent status of the customer’s account.
 

not2cleverRed

Obvious Observer
Oh, we’re not in it. I ask because my husband manages the community Facebook page and it got posted there. He’s wondering if he needs to remove the post.

For the record, we always pay our bills.
"Needs" is ill defined here.

Legally, repeating public information is not defamatory. If someone has paid their bills and is still being listed, their gripe should be with the utility company.

Whether it violates Facebook or Group rules is another issue and not a legal one.

If the post is at odds with the community page rules, he should feel free to remove the post. If the community page is for something other than gossiping about neighbors, then he can choose to delete it and add a pinned post about being a supportive community or something, and that posts may be removed if they are divisive or not relevant to the page's mission.

For example, my hometown's "keeping in touch page" doesn't allow links to obituaries.
 

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