SHEILA K. OBERTO, Magistrate Judge.
On August 2, 2016, the parties filed a request seeking Court approval of their Stipulated Protective Order. (Doc. 11.) The Court has reviewed the proposed stipulated protective order and has determined that, in its current form, it cannot be granted. For the reasons set forth below, the Court DENIES without prejudice the parties' request to approve the stipulated protective order.
The proposed protective order does not comply with Rule 141.1 of the Local Rules of the United States District Court, Eastern District of California. Pursuant to Rule 141.1(c), any proposed protective order submitted by the parties must contain the following provisions:
Local Rule 141.1(c). The stipulated protective order fails to contain this required information.
Local Rule 141.1(c)(1) requires "[a] description of the types of information eligible for protection under the order[.]" The protective order, in its current form, does not identify the types of information eligible for protection in even the broadest of terms. (See Doc. 11, p. 2 (describing materials to be protected only as "certain documents and/or information that the others contend is private, highly confidential, and/or proprietary").)
The protective order also fails to identify the parties' need for protection in anything but the most general terms. As the parties do not present any particularized need for protection as to the identified categories of information to be protected, the protective order fails to comply with Local Rule 141.1(c)(2), which requires "[a] showing of particularized need for protection as to each category of information proposed to be covered by the order."
Finally, the requirement of Local Rule 141.1(c)(3) is not at all addressed. In its current form, the protective order does not show "why the need for protection should be addressed by a court order, as opposed to a private agreement between or among the parties."
The parties may re-file a revised proposed stipulated protective order that complies with Local Rule 141.1(c) and corrects the deficiencies set forth in this order.
Accordingly, IT
IT IS SO ORDERED.