SUZANNE H. SEGAL, Magistrate Judge.
The Court has received and considered the parties' Stipulated Protective Order (the "Proposed Order"). (Dkt. No. 18). The Court cannot adopt the Proposed Order as drafted by the parties. The parties may submit a revised proposed stipulated protective order, but must correct the following deficiencies.
First, the Proposed Order fails to include an adequate statement of good cause. (Proposed Order at 1, ¶ 1-2). The Court may only enter a protective order upon a showing of good cause.
In any revised proposed stipulated protective order submitted to the Court, the parties must include a statement demonstrating good cause for entry of a protective order pertaining to the documents or information described in the order. The paragraph containing the statement of good cause should be preceded by a heading stating: "GOOD CAUSE STATEMENT." The parties shall articulate, for each document or category of documents they seek to protect, the specific prejudice or harm that will result if no protective order is entered.
Second, the Proposed Order is overbroad. (Proposed Order at 4, ¶ h). A protective order must be narrowly tailored and cannot be overbroad. Therefore, the documents, information, items or materials that are subject to the protective order shall be described in a meaningful and specific fashion (for example "personnel records," "medical records," or "tax returns," etc.). Here, the parties define confidential information as "all originals and copies of any document and/or information that any party has designated as such by stamping or otherwise marking each page `CONFIDENTIAL.'" (
In the alternative, if the parties seek a "blanket" protective order, as opposed to an order protecting individually-identified documents, the stipulation must state the justification for this type of protective order.
Third, a protective order may not bind the Court or its personnel. (Proposed Order at 4, ¶ 5). Any revised proposed stipulated protective order may not include language that binds the Court or obligates Court personnel to act in a certain manner in relation to confidential documents.
Fourth, the Court will not agree to the procedures the parties propose in the event of a dispute regarding the designation of confidential information. (Proposed Order at 5, ¶ 1-2). In the event of a dispute regarding the designation of confidential information, the procedure for obtaining a decision from the Court is that set forth in Local Rule 37. If the parties want to file the Joint Stipulation required by Local Rule 37 under seal, the parties may file a stipulation to that effect or the moving party may file an ex parte application making the appropriate request. The parties must set forth good cause in the stipulation or ex parte application as to why the Joint Stipulation or portions thereof should be filed under seal.
Fifth, parties must follow procedures from Local Rule 79 for submitting confidential information to the court. (Proposed Order at 9-10, ¶ n). If confidential material is included in any papers to be filed in Court, such papers shall be accompanied by an application pursuant to Local Rule 79, to file the papers — or the confidential portion thereof — under seal. The application shall be directed to the judge to whom the papers are directed. Pending the ruling on the application, the papers or portions thereof subject to the sealing applications shall be lodged under seal.
The Court advises the parties that all future discovery documents shall include the following in the caption: "[
The parties may submit a revised Stipulation and [Proposed] Protective Order for the Court's consideration.
IT IS SO ORDERED.