Q. How many times can someone use FOIA to get information about another person from the same agency?
A. The federal FOIA does not limit the number of requests that an individual may submit. Nor am I aware of any quotas on the state level.
Q. How many times can someone use FOIA to get information about another person from the same agency?
A. The federal FOIA does not limit the number of requests that an individual may submit. Nor am I aware of any quotas on the state level.
FAA Rolls Out Registered UAS Owner Location Database
By Jane Edwards, ExecutiveGov, May 23, 2016
The Federal Aviation Administration has rolled out a database that contains information on the location of each registered owner of small unmanned aircraft systems in response to several Freedom of Information Act requests.
FAA said Wednesday the system only includes data on each UAS owner’s zip code, city and state and excludes the owners’ names and street addresses from disclosure in compliance with a FOIA exemption that seeks to safeguard data from possible infringement of personal privacy.
Read more here.
Sack v. U.S. Dep't of Def. (D.C. Cir.) -- reversing district court's holding that a Ph.D. student was ineligible for reduced FOIA fees as an "education institution." In reaching its ruling, the D.C. Circuit stated that the government's distinction between teachers -- who are eligible for reduced fees under OMB's 1987 fee guidance -- and students was "entirely unexplained and unpersuasive." With respect to the polygraph records requested by plaintiff, the D.C. Circuit affirmed the district's decision that such records were protected from disclosure under Exemption 7(E).
Summaries of all opinions issued since April 2015 available here.
Q. Is it possible to submit a FOIA request for all FOIA that were submitted for the year 2015 to a local body of government [in Illinois]?
A. Not only is it possible, I've seen it done. Note that various smaller-sized agencies in Illinois proactively publish their FOIA logs, e.g., Lake Bluff Elementary School District, City of Monticello.
Another Year Another Unhelpful FOIA Report
By Liz Hempowicz, Project on Government Oversight, May 20, 2016
The Office of Information Policy (OIP) recently published its annual Summary and Assessment of the Chief FOIA Officer Reports for 2016. It’s hard to take their findings seriously, however, when they conclude that agencies earned overwhelmingly positive marks despite growing dissatisfaction among requesters who use the Freedom of Information Act (FOIA).
Two good examples of bad methodology can easily be found in the survey questions OIP used to rate both: 1) how well agencies implement the President’s and the Attorney General Holder’s instructions to proactively disclose documents where possible; and 2) how well agencies are reducing their backlogs of FOIA requests. These examples reflect the larger problem with FOIA implementation: that agencies are less focused on the quality of responses and released records, and more about complying with the law’s requirements on paper.
Frequent FOIA requesters are frustrated with both of these aspects, so the perfunctory questions of whether an agency has a process to identify proactive disclosures or if the backlog has decreased don’t get to the root of the problems.
Read more here.
By Megan Wilson, The Hill, May 20, 2016
Students filing open records requests with the federal government should be eligible for reduced fees, an appeals court ruled Friday.
Filing a request under the Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) can sometimes result in hundreds or thousands of dollars in charges that are requested by federal officials for duplicating documents and conducting searches.
While some entities — such as the media and teachers at educational institutions — qualify to have these fees reduced, the Defense Department declared that Kathryn Slack, a student, did not.
“If teachers can qualify for reduced fees, so can students,” wrote Judge Brett Kavanaugh in a U.S. Court of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit decision released on Friday. “Students who make FOIA requests to further their coursework or other school-sponsored activities are eligible for reduced fees under FOIA because students, like teachers, are part of an educational institution.”
Read more here.
The Interior Department should honor Congress' intentions on FOIA mediation
By Alex Howard, Sunlight Foundation, May 19, 2016
According to a letter published by the Office of Government Information Services (OGIS), the U.S. Department of the Interior is effectively ignoring six attempts by the Federal Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) Ombudsman to mediate FOIA requests dating back to February 2015.
In doing so, Interior is honoring neither the spirit nor intent of the Honest Leadership and Open Government Act of 2007, which established OGIS within the National Archives and Records Administration. Sens. Patrick Leahy, D-Vt., and John Cornyn, R-Texas, created OGIS "so that all Americans can be confident that their FOIA requests would be addressed openly and fairly." The purpose of OGIS is to act as an independent arbiter that starts a process to resolve disputes between federal agencies and FOIA requesters.
Interior ignoring repeated requests for mediation from OGIS goes beyond disregarding the instruction of the president and U.S. attorney general to approach compliance with the Freedom of Information Act with the "presumption of openness."
Read more here.
Ex-Aide to Hillary Clinton Testifies About Email Server
By Eric Lichtblau, New York Times, May 18, 2016
A former aide to Hillary Clinton when she was secretary of state testified behind closed doors for two hours Wednesday in the first in a series of depositions that are likely to raise more questions about Mrs. Clinton’s use of a private email server just as she prepares for an election campaign against Donald J. Trump.
The former aide, Lewis A. Lukens, testified under oath about his knowledge of Mrs. Clinton’s private email system as part of a lawsuit brought against the State Department by a conservative legal advocacy group, Judicial Watch.
At least five other officials — including two of Mrs. Clinton’s top aides at the State Department, Cheryl Mills and Huma Abedin — are also scheduled to testify in the lawsuit over the next six weeks in what promises to be an unwelcome distraction for the Clinton campaign.
The last deposition is set for June 29 — less than a month before the start of the Democratic National Convention in Philadelphia, where Mrs. Clinton is widely expected to win her party’s nomination for president over challenger Bernie Sanders.
Read more here.
By Lachlan Markay, Wash. Free Beacon, May 18, 2016
Congress unanimously advanced a measure on Wednesday to subject the White House’s team of national security advisers to laws giving the public access to internal administration documents.
An amendment to a key Defense Department funding bill brought forward by Rep. Jackie Walorski (R., Ind.) would require the White House National Security Council to produce internal records in response to requests under the Freedom of Information Act.
The amendment comes in the midst of controversy over admissions by Deputy National Security Adviser Ben Rhodes in a recent New York Times interview that he and media allies created an “echo chamber” to promote the administration’s nuclear deal with Iran.
Read more here.
By Jesse Franzblau, BORDC/DDF, May 17, 2016
On May 15th, a broad coalition of open government and accountability organizations and media outlets are launching a “50 Days of FOIA” campaign — counting down the days to the 50th anniversary of the Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) on July 4, 2016. The campaign aims to highlight the importance of the FOIA, while promoting the passage of meaningful reform legislation that now has the potential to become law by the time the statute turns 50 in less than two months.
For nearly 50 years, the FOIA has empowered the public by providing access to information essential for democratic governance and accountability. The law has also been used as a critical tool used to make the public aware of countless acts of waste, fraud, and abuse. With documents obtained under FOIA, countless media outlets, watchdog groups and individuals have broken stories about the about hazardous drinking water in Flint, Michigan, the IRS’ civil forfeiture program, mistreatment of veterans at the VA medical offices, overdue inspections of the United States’ aging infrastructure, use of immigrant detention centers to hold minors,corporate abuse, and much more.
Read more here