Freedom Of Information
Act
FOI is all about the right of access
The Freedom of Information Act 2000 did, from 1 January 2005, give everyone for the
first time a general legal right to be provided, on request, with any information held by
all public authorities subject to stated exemptions. These authorities include Central
Government and Local Authorities (including Parishes and Charter Trustees) under
Schedule 1 of the Act. Anyone has a right to ask public authorities for any information
they hold and there is no requirement to explaining why the information is being
requested.
What information is covered by the Act?
Anything public authorities create, hold or process. This includes, for example,
e-mails, letters, reports, faxes, file notes, notes of phone calls, videos, audio records -
they are all "information" potentially disclosable under the Act - even a casual
comment scrawled on the side of a minute may be covered. The Act will apply
retrospectively to existing information, no matter how old, as well as that produced
from 1 January 2005.
How can requests for information under the Act be made?
A request can be made in any written form (eg. letter, e-mail, fax) and need not
mention the Act - it will still apply. It is important to bear this in mind whenever
considering how to respond to requests for information. It is also important to be
aware that requests can be made to anyone, at any level, within the public authority
and that the request must state the name and address of the person applying for the
information and the required information.
The information requested, unless exempted under the Act, must be supplied within
20 working days of being requested. A refusal to release the information must be
given in writing and the reasons for refusal specified along with the applicant's right to
appeal.
Should the information requested always be provided?
The information should be disclosed unless it falls under one of the exemptions in the
Act. The Act provides for public access to information which may be supplied in any
format, unless the applicant has specified a preferred format for receiving it - this can
include copies of or access to (ie viewing at offices) actual records if that is what the
applicant requests.
There is a range of exemptions under the Act that will allow certain types of
information to be withheld under certain circumstances. The majority of these
exemptions require a "public interest test" to be applied. For those exemptions where
the public interest test applies, a request may only be refused if the public interest in
withholding the information outweighs that in disclosing it.
What are the Exemptions?
There are 23 exemptions from the general rights of access.
For example:
Certain information relating to national security, information that would prejudice
international relations, commercially sensitive information and confidential information.
Environmental information is exempt as access rights are covered by the
Environmental Information regulations.
An applicant wishing to access information about themselves should use their rights
under the Data Protection Act. Personal data about other people cannot be released if
to do so would breach the Data Protection Act.
If the applicant already has reasonable access to the information they want then they
should use that means. Therefore if information is available through a publication
scheme the public authority can simply direct the applicant to its scheme.
Some of the exemptions require the public authority to consider whether it is in the
public interest to withhold information. Consideration of the public interest may take
longer than the 20 days normally allowed for responding to requests. In these cases
the public authority must give the applicant an estimate of when it will have reached a
decision on where the public interest lies within 20 days of receiving the request.
How should the information be provided?
The applicant can either ask for a copy of the information they seek, the chance to
inspect the records, or even to be provided with a summary of the information. The
public authority should try and provide the information in the form requested unless it
is unreasonable to do so. If any of the information requested is exempt the applicant
should be told which of the exemptions has been relied on to withhold the information.
How will the access rights in the Act be enforced?
The Act establishes an Information Commissioner who has wide-ranging powers of
enforcement and is already taking a close interest in how public authorities are
preparing to implement the Act. From 1 January 2005, anyone can complain if
dissatisfied with the way a request has been dealt with, or with the information
supplied.
Can information already published be used?
The Act places a duty on public authorities to adopt and maintain publication schemes
which must be approved by the Information Commissioner. Such schemes are
intended to advise people how they can gain access to information, which has been
pro-actively published. A publication scheme is a guide to the types of information that
the authority routinely publishes, the format in which the information is available in and
how much it will cost if there are any charges.
Information that is available by other means or is intended for future publication is
always exempt and a request for such information may be refused.
A person can contact the authority in any way, such as telephone, email, fax or in
writing and ask to see their publication scheme. They can then make a request for any
of the information included within the scheme.
Are there codes of practice? Where can I get advice?
Two codes of practice have been created under the Act which will be of help to public
authorities in meeting their new responsibilities.
The first code produced under section 45 of the Act is sometimes referred to as the
Access Code. It deals with how to handle requests for information including:
• the level of advice and assistance it is expected,
• transferring requests from one public authority to another,
• consulting with third parties who may be affected by the release of information.
It also deals with complaints procedures and how the Act impacts on public sector
contracts.
The second code is made under section 46 of the Act and deals with records
management. If a public authority does not have good records management
procedures in place it may well find it difficult to comply with its obligations under the
Act.
Also available are full information and guidance on the Act on www.dca.gov.uk
(the website of the Department of Constitutional Affairs and on the Information
Commissioners website at www.informationcommissioner.gov.uk.
Do Public Authorities have a duty to provide assistance?
Public authorities are required to provide advice and assistance to people who have
made or who are thinking of making a request. This will help applicants understand
their rights under the Act and identify the information they want.
Can we Charge for the information?
Public authorities are allowed to charge a fee for responding to requests. The amount
that can be charged is set out in regulations (The Freedom of Information and Data
Protection (Appropriate Limit and Fees) Regulations 2004 - S.I. 3244/2004). Guidance
on those regulations can be found at http://www.dca.gov.uk/foi/feesguide.htm.
The Freedom of Information Act also allows for public authorities to decline to comply
with certain requests for information on the grounds of cost where these requests
would be particularly expensive ie if the cost of complying would exceed the
"appropriate limit" prescribed in the Regulations (£450).
The Freedom of Information Act has always been intended to build on existing
channels for providing information: to provide access to information where it did not
previously exist rather than replacing existing access regimes. To that end, it makes
provision that where information is reasonably accessible to applicants through other
means, such as through other legislation or through an authority's publication scheme,
it is exempt from FOI. This means that the rules for costing and charging for
compliance with the Act do not apply in these cases.
If a public authority wishes to charge a fee it must inform the applicant in writing. The
20 days for responding to requests is put on hold until the fee is paid. If the fee is not
paid within 3 months it is assumed the applicant no longer wants the information.
What if there are complaints?
If the applicant is not happy with the response they receive they must first complain to
the public authority. If they are still unhappy they may complain to the Information
Commissioner who will decide whether the request has been handled properly.
What can the Information Commissioner do by way of enforcement?
Both the applicant and the public authority are informed of the Commissioner's
decision in a Decision Notice. Where appropriate the Decision Notice will instruct the
public authority what steps it needs to take to comply with the Act, this may include
the release of information. Both the applicant and the public authority may appeal
against a decision notice to the Information Tribunal.
The Commissioner can also issue a public authority with an Enforcement Notice
stating what steps it should take to comply with the Act. Although it is similar to a
Decision Notice in some respects, the Commissioner does not need to wait to respond
to a complaint from an applicant that a request has been incorrectly handled before
taking this form of enforcement action. Only the public authority may appeal to the
Information Tribunal against such a notice.
The West Wycombe Freedom of Information Inventory |