Mr. Chakery was provided two opportunities to limit the scope of his request so that the amount being charged is reduced.
At the end of the article Mr. Chakery comments that government entities already have the costs of responding to information requests built within their budgets. While that may be true for obtaining a database that is already available, there is no provision in the budgets to handle this type of request which requires examination of each document to determine whether it meets the criteria of his request. The 22,000 hours necessary to complete this request is equal to 11 FTEs who most likely earn around $50,000 per year. The estimated bill from Grand Prairie ISD is probably on the low side since it does not include any charges for the medium chosen to respond (paper or electronically), providing it in a format that is searchable by computer (e.g., PDF files are usually not searchable), or receiving clearance from ISD attorneys as to whether any of the material is considered confidential.
It's apparent that an entity could receive numerous public information requests to the point that it would essentially bog down staff so they could not respond to the routine needs of that entity. While I believe in government transparency, the taxpayers should not be responsible for paying what can be nuisance requests or retaining staff who may or may not receive public information requests.