FOIA Advisor

Q&A: utility companies in Connecticut

Q&A (2015-2025)Allan BlutsteinComment

Q.  Can I submit a FOIA request to a public utility in Connecticut?

A.  I believe public utility records are subject to Connecticut's FOIA, though I am not aware of any reported court decisions.  Certain utility records, however, are not required to be disclosed.  For example, Conn. Gen. Stat. § 7-232a provides that a municipal utility may withhold any "commercially valuable, confidential or proprietary information" from public disclosure under FOIA.  Additionally, municipal utilities may withhold records "which identify or could lead to identification of the utility usage or billing information of individual customers, to the extent such disclosure would constitute an invasion of privacy." Conn. Gen. Stat. § 16-262c.

FOIA News: National Archives Hit With Lawsuit Over Clinton Emails

FOIA News (2015-2025)Kevin SchmidtComment

National Archives Hit With Lawsuit Over Clinton Emails

By Alana Goodman, Washington Free Beacon, Oct. 21, 2015

A conservative group is suing the National Archives to turn over details about its review process of Hillary Clinton’s emails, according to a lawsuit filed on Wednesday.

The National Archives reviewed 1,246 Clinton emails last spring that State Department officials had previously determined were “personal” and should be withheld from the public. The Archives said last May that it agreed with State’s assessment that none of the messages were related to official business.

However, Citizens United, a nonprofit filmmaking group, has been pressing the National Archives for more information on its review process. The organization filed a lawsuit on Wednesday, after the agency failed to respond to a public records request submitted in June.

Citizens United has requested “any and all correspondence, schedules, memoranda, attendee lists, and any other records related to the planning, attendance, and methodology” used during the review.

Read more here.

Court opinion issued Oct. 20, 2015

Court Opinions (2015-2024)Allan BlutsteinComment

Gahagan v. U.S. Customs & Border Prot. (E.D. La.) -- rejecting agency's argument that an "I-826" form that was released to plaintiff with unmarked redactions was not responsive to plaintiff's request, and ordering agency to submit a revised Vaughn index to account for the withholdings; further finding that the agency's declaration was admissible because the declarant had requisite personal knowledge about the processing of the request.  

Summaries of all opinions issued since April 2015 available here.

Court opinions issued Oct. 14, 2015

Court Opinions (2015-2024)Allan BlutsteinComment

Aqualliance v. U.S. Bureau of Reclamation (D.D.C.) -- finding that agency properly invoked Exemption 9 to withhold information regarding the construction, location, and depth of water wells; rejecting plaintiff's argument that the exemption applied to oil and gas wells only.  The court further found that Exemption 6 did not justify the agency's redaction of the names and addresses of various participants in water transfer programs, participants in real water valuations, and well owners because plaintiff demonstrated that the public interest in disclosure outweighed the privacy interest at stake.

Sack v. Dep't of Justice (D.D.C.) -- ruling that the FBI properly withheld:  (a) records relating to the selection process for FBI Polygraph Examiners under Exemption 2; (b) a recommendation concerning the feasibility of hiring non-agent polygraph examiners under Exemption 5 (deliberative process privilege); and (c) information about procedures and techniques used by FBI agents to conduct polygraph examinations pursuant to Exemption 7(E).  

Summaries of all cases since April 2015 are available here.

FOIA News: FOIA Advisory Committee meeting Oct. 20

FOIA News (2015-2025)Allan BlutsteinComment

The FOIA Advisory Committee will be holding its quarterly meeting at the National Archives and Records Administration (NARA) Building on October 20, 2015, from 10:00 a.m. to 1:00 p.m. EDT.  To attend the meeting, you must register here by 5:00 p.m. EDT on October 19, 2015.  The Committee will focus its discussion on FOIA oversight and accountability, proactive disclosure, and FOIA fees.

FOIA News: Expedited processing is fast-track to nowhere, opines CJR

FOIA News (2015-2025)Allan BlutsteinComment

Why FOIA's speed clause is broken

By Erin Carroll, Columbia Journalism Review, Oct. 15, 2015

In August of 2013, the Associated Press made a straightforward records request to the State Department. It wanted Hillary Clinton’s calendars from her tenure as Secretary of State—and it wanted them quickly. Noting the likelihood of a Clinton presidential run, the AP sought to make use of a Freedom of Information Act provision that allows the press to jump to the front of the line when information is urgently needed.

The State Department’s response: there was nothing pressing the public needed to know. The agency agreed to process the request, but did not promise haste. More than two years later, with the presidential election underway and Clinton’s records from her time at the State Department at the center of the story, the agency still has not provided the calendars. It is under a court order to do so by November 5.

The State Department’s response to the AP is increasingly common. In 2014, agencies denied 87 percent of the 9,981 so-called “expedited processing” requests made under FOIA. This is up from a rejection rate of only 53 percent in 2008. And the rejection rate at certain agencies is far higher. The Securities and Exchange Commission granted only three of the 253 expedited processing requests it received last year.

This high rejection rate reflects wider dysfunction in the enforcement of FOIA, the legendary open government law that will mark its fiftieth anniversary next year. “Non-responsiveness is the norm,” Karen Kaiser, general counsel for the AP, told a US Senate panel in May. “The reflex of most agencies is to withhold information, not to release, and often there is no recourse for a requester other than pursuing costly litigation.” 

Journalists are always complaining about FOIA. Yet, there is surprisingly little talk about the provision that can fast track media requests. Legally speaking, the expedited processing provision is special. It is one of the few laws that grant journalists a preference over ordinary citizens, in this case putting them at the front of an agency’s often-lengthy FOIA queue. 

In recent years, however, the government’s definition of “urgent” has drifted far from the media’s. “The whole thing is a bit of a joke,” said Mark Horvit, executive director of Investigative Reporters and Editors. He explained how a FOIA request made two years ago by a student of his was just fulfilled—after the student’s graduation. “So what is expedited? One-and-a-half years?” 

Federal officials say journalists may be expecting too much.

“The standards are strict,” says Melanie Ann Pustay, director of the Justice Department’s Office of Information Policy, which oversees FOIA compliance. She suspects that “more and more requesters are asking for expedited processing, but they’re not meeting the standard.”

Read more here

FOIA News: Update on State Dep't FOIA staffing

FOIA News (2015-2025)Allan BlutsteinComment

State Department details hiring spree linked to Hillary Clinton email FOIA crush

By Josh Gerstein, POLITICO, Oct. 14, 2015

The State Department has offered positions to about half of the 50 personnel Secretary of State John Kerry has promised to hire for the swamped agency office that handles Freedom of Information Act request, but only three staffers have been formally transferred thus far, according to a new court filing.

The submission Tuesday night said the request for help last month drew 84 applications and resulted in 23 offers, all but one of which were accepted.

However, of the three employees who started recently, only one is actually reviewing FOIA requests. The other two were sent to work on Congressional document production "with the intent that they will free two more experienced reviewers to move to the...FOIA Litigation and Appeals Branch once the new hires are trained," State official John Hackett wrote in the declaration filed in U.S. District Court (and posted here.)

Read more here.

FOIA News: Inspector General issues report on USDA's FOIA operations

FOIA News (2015-2025)Allan BlutsteinComment

In response to a congressional request, the Inspector General of the U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA) has issued a report that examines the USDA's FOIA operations as of October 2010.  The report addresses whether any involvement of noncareer officials in FOIA process “resulted in any undue delay of a response, or the withholding of any document or portion of any document that would otherwise have been released but for a noncareer official’s involvement in the process.”  Read the report here.