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The California Public Records Act (CPRA) (Gov. Code § 7920.000 et seq.) guarantees public access to information concerning the conduct of government business, requiring state and local agencies to provide records upon request. Regional Centers were made subject to the CPRA as of January 1, 2026.

How to Make a Public Records Request Act Request

IRC supports the public’s right to access public records created and maintained by IRC in the normal course of business in accordance with the California Public Records Act (Gov’t Code §§ 7920.000 et seq.)

You may submit a Public Records Act Request by clicking the following link:

In reference to Public Records Act Requests, please use the email:

Catalogue of Enterprise Systems

Which Enterprise Systems Are Included

Enterprise systems are covered by Government Code §§ 7922.700 – 7922.725 of the California Public Records Act (CPRA). An “enterprise system” is a software application or computer system that (1) collects, stores, exchanges, and analyzes information that IRC uses; (2) is a multi-departmental system or a system that contains information collected about the public and (3) is a system of record. A “system of record” means a system that serves as an original source of data within IRC. Stated plainly, the CPRA requires IRC to create a catalog of multi-departmental systems or systems containing information about the public that store original records and to post the catalog on IRC’s website.

Which Systems Are Excluded

An enterprise system does not include (1) information technology (IT) security systems, including firewalls and other cybersecurity systems; (2) physical access control systems, employee identification management systems, video monitoring, and other physical control systems; (3)  infrastructure and mechanical control systems; (4) systems related to emergency services; (5) information that would reveal vulnerabilities to, or otherwise increase the potential for an attack on, IRC's IT system; and (6) the specific records that an IT system collects, stores, exchanges or analyzes.

The above shall not be interpreted to limit or expand a person’s right to inspect public records or change the process for requesting public records under the CPRA.