The Office of Personnel Management has withdrawn a proposed rule issued in July 2008 to amend its FOIA regulations, according to a notice issued today in the Federal Register. OPM plans to revise its FOIA regulations “in the near future to align with modern capabilities for submission and processing of FOIA requests.”
FOIA News (2026)
FOIA News: DOGE seeks to dodge FOIA discovery
FOIA News (2026)CommentTrump Administration Asks Supreme Court to Halt DOGE Inquiry
By Zoe Tillman, Bloomberg News, Mar. 23, 2026
The Trump administration asked the US Supreme Court to block a government watchdog group from questioning a senior official and obtaining internal records about the Department of Government Efficiency project once led by Elon Musk.
The March 18 request by the Justice Department is part of a long-running legal fight with Citizens for Responsibility and Ethics in Washington, which is seeking to uncover information about DOGE’s efforts last year to drastically cut federal spending and fire thousands of government workers.
The justices intervened in the same case last year in favor of the administration, halting CREW’s fact-finding push. But the case was sent back to a federal appeals court, which allowed CREW’s requests for documents and testimony to proceed after the liberal-leaning organization narrowed some of its lines of inquiry.
Read more here.
FOIA News: Staffing woes worsened FOIA delays, per agency reports
FOIA News (2026)Comment‘Significant’ staff cuts drive rising FOIA backlogs
The latest reports from agency chief FOIA officers illustrate how the Trump administration's workforce cuts drove another increase in FOIA backlogs.
By Justin Doubleday, Fed. News Network, Mar. 20, 2026
The Trump administration’s workforce cuts and an ever-increasing number of Freedom of Information Act requests have deepened challenges for already strained federal offices charged with overseeing FOIA processing.
Annual FOIA reports and related chief FOIA officer reports, released by the Justice Department in recent weeks, offer insights into an unprecedented year for federal FOIA offices. While governmentwide FOIA backlogs have been on the rise for years, the workforce reductions in 2025 compounded existing challenges facing FOIA offices, the reports show.
Most FOIA offices are increasingly turning to artificial intelligence and other automation technologies to streamline the FOIA process and make up for staffing gaps. But many of those efforts are early in development and have largely failed, so far, to make much of a dent in rising backlogs.
At the Defense Department, the FOIA backlog rose by 42% to more than 30,000 cases across the department by the end of fiscal 2025. A FOIA request is backlogged when an agency fails to respond within the statutory timeframe of 20 working days.
DoD’s chief FOIA officer attributed the increase in backlogs to “loss of staff, increases in the number of incoming requests, to include complexity of those requests, and litigation.”
Read more here.
FOIA News: DOJ announces recipients of FOIA awards with eyebrow-raising commentary
FOIA News (2026)CommentOn March 20, 2026, the U.S. Department of Justice Office of Information Policy announced the recipients of its 2026 Sunshine Week FOIA Awards, recognizing federal employees and teams for their work administering the Freedom of Information Act. The awards were presented in three categories: Exceptional Service by a FOIA Professional or Team, Exceptional Advancements in Information Technology to Improve FOIA Administration, and the Lifetime Service Award.
Associate Attorney General and Chief FOIA Officer Stanley E. Woodward declared that the current Department of Justice is the “most transparent . . . in our nation’s history.” OIP Director Sean Glendening attributed FOIA workload challenges in part to “a small group of frequent requesters” who submit complex requests.
FOIA News: This and that
FOIA News (2026)CommentOGIS Publishes Four New Ombuds Observers Clarifying FOIA Terms of Art, FOIA Ombuds
6 FOIA tips to boost your reporting, Nat’l Press Club
The FOIA: Off to a slow start, picked up speed, now hitting a brick wall, Thomas Susman
Kalshi and Polymarket Targeted by Journalists, Law. St. Media
People are requesting more government records than ever. Why are they getting less?, Anna Massoglia
FOIA News: Sunshine Week in full swing; FOIA info remains in the dark
FOIA News (2026)CommentAs of 9:59am this morning, six departments still have not published their annual FOIA reports for fiscal year 2025: Agriculture; Health & Human Services; Homeland Security; Justice, Treasury; and Veterans Affairs. The reports were required to be posted on March 1, 2026. Additionally, nine departments apparently missed yesterday’s deadline to publish Chief FOIA Officer Reports.
Perhaps the new director of DOJ’s Office of Information Policy, Sean Glendening, will explain the delays—at least for DOJ—when he makes an appearance today at Sunshine Fest, a conference organized by University of Florida’s Brechner Freedom of Information Project, MuckRock, and the National Freedom of Information Coalition. No federal agency is planning to host a public Sunshine Week event this year. DOJ reportedly will bestow FOIA awards to federal FOIA professionals this week, but details have not been announced on DOJ’s website.
[ERRATA: The event at which OIP’s director will appear will take place after “Sunshine Fest” on Wednesday, March 18, 2026. See details here.]
FOIA News: FOIA fails—2026 edition
FOIA News (2026)CommentThe Foilies 2026
Recognizing the Worst in Government Transparency
By Dave Maass, Aaron Mackey, and Beryl Lipton, Elec. Frontier Found., Mar. 15, 2026
* * *
Established in 2015, The Foilies are an annual project by the Electronic Frontier Foundation and MuckRock to recognize the agencies, officials and contractors that thwart the public's right to know. We give out these tongue-in-cheek "awards" during Sunshine Week (March 15-21), a collective effort by media and advocacy organizations to highlight the importance of open government.
This year, we've got a few "winners" whose behavior defies belief.
Read more here.
FOIA News: Staff shortages delayed FOIA access last year, reports WaPo
FOIA News (2026)CommentDid Trump cuts slow access to public records? We found 26 cases that say yes.
Lawyers’ pleas for extensions reveal post-DOGE staffing woes at federal agencies’ Freedom of Information Act offices.
By Nate Jones, Wash. Post, Mar. 14, 2026
“Hello, the FOIA office has been placed on admin leave and is unable to respond to any emails.”
This was how the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention responded by email this past spring to a Freedom of Information Act request for records about the risk of catching measles in areas with low vaccination rates.
The public health institute’s FOIA office had lost too many staff members to fulfill public record requests — falling victim to President Donald Trump’s executive order to eliminate “waste, bloat, and insularity” in the federal government by significantly reducing its workforce.
As hundreds of thousands of federal employees were fired or chose to leave the government last year, FOIA requesters — myself included — wondered: Would these personnel reductions further undermine the federal government’s already strained ability to follow federal law and disclose public records when requested under FOIA?
The answer, we now know, is a resounding yes. Attorneys for at least 13 agencies and departments have explicitly stated in 26 FOIA lawsuits that the downsizings were the reasons for failures to meet FOIA deadlines, according to a Washington Post review of 339 active FOIA lawsuits.
Read more here.
FOIA News: The Deep Six
FOIA News (2026)CommentAs of 9:27am this morning, six departments have yet to post their FY 2025 annual reports: Agriculture; Health & Human Services; Homeland Security; Justice; Treasury; and Veterans Affairs. The deadline for agencies to provide reports to DOJ/OIP for clearance was December 12, 2025; the deadline to post final reports was March 1, 2026 (see here).
FOIA News: AFPF Sunshine Week Symposium - March 18, 2026
FOIA News (2026)Comment[FOIA Advisor: The event in the following announcement is being organized by FOIA Advisor’s own Ryan Mulvey with his employer, Americans for Prosperity Foundation. Learn more, and register to attend the free webinar, at https://americansforprosperityfoundation.org/sunshine!]
SIXTH ANNUAL SUNSHINE WEEK SYMPOSIUM – March 18, 2026
Americans for Prosperity Foundation (AFPF) is happy to announce its Sixth Annual Sunshine Week Symposium, which will bring together a panel of transparency experts to discuss cutting-edge issues related to the federal Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) and state open-records laws. Join us online for a robust exploration into the current state and future of FOIA on Wednesday, March 18th, from 10:00–11:30am ET.
Our expert panelists will explore the following issues, and more:
Improving proactive disclosure
Records retention and management practices in a digital age
Processing platforms, the rise of Artificial Intelligence, and agency resource limitations
The impact of copyright claims on public access
The state of FOIA enforcement—judicial review, OGIS mediation, and more
This year’s symposium participants include:
Ryan Mulvey, Senior Policy Counsel, Americans for Prosperity Foundation & Professorial Lecturer in Law, The George Washington University Law School
Margaret Kwoka, The Frank R. Strong Chair in Law, The Ohio State University Moritz College of Law
Frank LoMonte, Newsroom Legal Counsel, CNN & Adjunct Instructor, University of Georgia School of Law
Michael Sarich, Founder, FOIA University & Former FOIA Director, U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs
* Panelist affiliations provided for identification purposes only
Registration for online viewing is available here.