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Copies of the original document can be ordered from the Government
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Printing Office (202) - - for $3.00 each?. Document #
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A Citizens Guide on Using the Freedom of Information Act and the
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Privacy Act of 1974 to Request Government Records
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102nd Congress
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House Report. 102-146
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July 10, 1991
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Committed to the Committee of the Whole House on the State of the Union
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and ordered to be printed
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Sponsor: Mr. Conyers, from the Committee on Government Operations,
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submitted the following:
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Fourth Report
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Conference Report
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based on a study by the government information, justice, and
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agriculture subcommittee
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On June 26, 1991, the Committee on Government Operations approved
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and adopted a report entitled "A Citizens Guide on Using the Freedom of
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Information Act and the Privacy Act of 1974 to Request Government
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Records." The chairman was directed to transmit a copy to the Speaker
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of the House.
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I. Preface
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In 1977, the House Committee on Government Operations issued the
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first Citizens Guide on how to request records from federal agencies.
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The original Guide was reprinted many times and widely distributed. The
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Superintendent of Documents at the Government Printing Office reported
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that almost 50,000 copies were sold between 1977 and 1986 when the
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guide went out of print. In addition, thousands of copies were
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distributed by the House Committee on Government Operations, Members of
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Congress, the Congressional Research Service, and other federal
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agencies. The original Citizens Guide is one of the most widely read
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congressional committee reports in history. A Citizens Guide on How to
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Use the Freedom of Information Act and the Privacy Act in Requesting
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Government Documents, House Report No. 95-796, 95th Cong., 1st Sess.
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(1977).
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In 1987, the Committee issued a revised Citizens Guide. The new
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edition was prepared to reflect changes to the Freedom of Information
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Act made during 1986. As a result of special efforts by the
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Superintendent of Documents at the Government Printing Office, the
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availability of the new Guide was well publicized. The 1987 edition
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appeared on GPOs "Best Seller" list in the months following its
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issuance. A Citizens Guide on Using the Freedom of Information Act and
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the Privacy Act of 1974 To Request Government Records, House Report
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No. 100-199, 100th Cong., 1st Sess. (1987).
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During the 100th Congress, major amendments were made to the
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Privacy Act of 1974. The Computer Matching and Privacy Protection
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Act of 1988 added new provisions to the Privacy Act and changed
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several existing requirements.
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None of the changes affects a citizens rights to request or see
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records held by federal agencies. However, some of the information in
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the 1987 Guide became outdated as a result, and a third edition was
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issued in 1989. Public Law 100-503. A Citizens Guide on Using the
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Freedom of Information Act and the Privacy Act of 1974 To Request
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Government Records, House Report No. 101-193, 101st Cong., 1st Sess.
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(1989).
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During the 101st Congress, the Privacy Act of 1974 was amended
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through further adjustments to the Computer Matching and Privacy
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Protection Act of 1988. The changes do not affect access rights. This
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fourth edition of the Citizens Guide reflects all changes to the FOIA
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and Privacy Act made through the end of 1990. Minor editorial changes
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have also been made.
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II. Introduction
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A popular Government without popular information or the means of
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acquiring it, is but a Prologue to a Farce or a Tragedy or perhaps
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both. Knowledge will forever govern ignorance, and a people who mean
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to be their own Governors, must arm themselves with the power knowledge
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gives. James Madison Letter to W.T. Barry, August 4, 1822, in G.P.
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Hunt, ed., IX The Writings of James Madison 103 (1910).
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The Committee wishes to acknowledge the assistance of Harold C.
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Relyea, Specialist, American National Government, Government Division,
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Congressional Research Service, in the preparation of this report.
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The Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) establishes a presumption that
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records in the possession of agencies and departments of the Executive
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Branch of the United States government are accessible to the people.
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This was not always the approach to federal information disclosure
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policy. Before enactment of the FOIA in 1966, the burden was on the
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individual to establish a right to examine these government records.
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There were no statutory guidelines or procedures to help a person
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seeking information. There were no judicial remedies for those denied
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access.
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With the passage of the FOIA, the burden of proof shifted from the
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individual to the government. Those seeking information are no longer
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required to show a need for information. Instead, the "need to know"
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standard has been replaced by a "right to know" doctrine. The
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government now has to justify the need for secrecy.
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The FOIA sets standards for determining which records must be
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disclosed and which records can be withheld. The law also provides
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administrative and judicial remedies for those denied access to
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records. Above all, the statute requires federal agencies to provide
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the fullest possible disclosure of information to the public.
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The Privacy Act of 1974 is a companion to the FOIA. The Privacy
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Act regulates federal government agency record keeping and disclosure
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practices. The Act allows most individuals to seek access to federal
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agency records about themselves. The Act requires that personal
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information in agency files be accurate, complete, relevant, and
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timely. The subject of a record may challenge the accuracy of
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information. The Act requires that agencies obtain information directly
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from the subject of the record and that information gathered for one
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purpose not be used for another purpose. As with the FOIA, the
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Privacy Act provides civil remedies for individuals whose rights have
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been violated.
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Another important feature of the Privacy Act is the requirement
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that each federal agency publish a description of each system of
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records maintained by the agency that contains personal information.
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This prevents agencies from keeping secret records.
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The Privacy Act also restricts the disclosure of personally
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identifiable information by federal agencies. Together with the FOIA,
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the Privacy Act permits disclosure of most personal files to the
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individual who is the subject of the files. The two laws restrict
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disclosure of personal information to others when disclosure would
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violate privacy interests.
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While both the FOIA and the Privacy Act support the disclosure of
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agency records, both laws also recognize the legitimate need to
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restrict disclosure of some information. For example, agencies may
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withhold information properly classified in the interest of national
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defense or foreign policy, trade secrets, and criminal investigatory
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files. Other specifically defined categories of confidential
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information may also be withheld.
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The essential feature of both laws is that they make federal
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agencies accountable for information disclosure policies and practices.
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While neither law grants an absolute right to examine government
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documents, both laws establish the right to request records and to
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receive a response to the request. If a record cannot be released, the
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requester is entitled to be told the reason for the denial. The
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requester also has a right to appeal the denial and, if necessary, to
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challenge it in court.
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These procedural rights granted by the FOIA and the Privacy Act
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make the laws valuable and workable. As a result, the disclosure of
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federal government information cannot be controlled by arbitrary or
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unreviewable actions.
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III. Recommendations
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The Committee recommends that this Citizens Guide be made widely
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available at low cost to anyone who has an interest in obtaining
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documents from the federal government. The Government Printing Office
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and federal agencies subject to the Freedom of Information Act and the
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Privacy Act of 1974 should distribute this report widely.
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The Committee also recommends that this Citizens Guide be used by
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federal agencies in training programs for government employees who are
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responsible for administering the Freedom of Information Act and the
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Privacy Act of 1974. The Guide should also be used by those government
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employees who only occasionally work with these two laws.
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IV. How To Use This Guide
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This report explains how to use the Freedom of Information Act and
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the
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Privacy Act of 1974. It reflects all changes to the laws made since
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1977. Major amendments to the Freedom of Information Act passed in 1974
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and 1986. A major addition to the Privacy Act of 1974 was enacted in
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1988. Minor amendments to the Privacy Act were made in 1989 and 1990.
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This Guide is intended to serve as a general introduction to the
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Freedom of Information Act and the Privacy Act. It offers neither a
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comprehensive explanation of the details of these Acts nor an analysis
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of case law. The Guide will enable those who are unfamiliar with the
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laws to understand the process and to make a request. In addition, the
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complete text of each law is included in an appendix. This Guide is
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primarily intended to help the general public. It includes a complete
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explanation of the basics of the two laws. In the interest of producing
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a guide that would be both simple and useful to the intended audience,
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the Committee deliberately avoided addressing some of the issues that
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are highly controversial. The Committee cautions against treating the
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neutrally written descriptions contained in this report as definitive
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expressions of the Committees views of the law or congressional intent.
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The Committee has expressed its views on some of these issues in other
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reports. See, for example, Security Classification Policy and Executive
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Order 12356, House Report No. 97-731, 97th Cong., 2d Sess. (1982); Who
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Cares About Privacy? Oversight of the Privacy Act of 1974 by the
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Office of Management and Budget and by the Congress, House Report
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98-455, 98th Cong., 1st Sess. (1983); Electronic Collection and
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Dissemination of Information by Federal Agencies: A Policy Overview,
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House Report 99-560, 99th Cong., 2d Sess. (1986); Freedom of
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Information Act Amendments of 1986, House Report 99-832, 99th Cong., 2d
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Sess. (1986) (report to accompany H.R. 4862). The latter report is a
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legislative report for a bill reforming the business procedures of the
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FOIA. The bill did not become law. The 1986 amendments to the FOIA were
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made by the Freedom of Information Reform Act of 1986, Public Law
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99-570. There were no committee reports in either House or Senate
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accompanying the Freedom of Information Reform Act.
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Readers should be aware that FOIA litigation is a complex area of
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law. There are thousands of court decisions interpreting the FOIA.
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These decisions must be considered in order to develop a complete
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understanding of the principles governing disclosure of government
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information. Anyone requiring more details about the FOIA, its history,
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or the case law should consult other sources. There has been less
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controversy and less litigation over the Privacy Act, but there is
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nevertheless a considerable body of case law for the Privacy Act as
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well. There are other sources of information on the Privacy Act as
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well. See, e.g., U.S. Department of Justice, Freedom of Information
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Case List (published annually).
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However, no one should be discouraged from making a request under
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either law. No special expertise is required. Using the Freedom of
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Information Act and the Privacy Act is as simple as writing a letter.
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This Citizens Guide explains the essentials.
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V. Which Act To Use
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The access provisions of the FOIA and the Privacy Act overlap in
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part. The two laws have different procedures and different exemptions.
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As a result, sometimes information exempt under one law will be
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disclosable under the other.
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In order to take maximum advantage of the laws, an individual
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seeking information about himself or herself should normally cite both
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laws. Requests by an individual for information that does not relate
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solely to himself or herself should be made only under the FOIA.
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Congress intended that the two laws be considered together in the
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processing of requests for information. Many government agencies will
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automatically handle requests from individuals in a way that will
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maximize the amount of information that is disclosable. However, a
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requester should still make a request in a manner that is most
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advantageous and that fully protects all available legal rights. A
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requester who has any doubts about which law to use should always cite
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both the FOIA and the Privacy Act when seeking documents from the
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federal government.
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VI. The Freedom of Information Act
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A. The Scope Of The Freedom of Information Act
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The federal Freedom of Information Act applies to documents held by
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agencies in the executive branch of the federal government. The
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executive branch includes cabinet departments, military departments,
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government corporations, government controlled corporations,
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independent regulatory agencies, and other establishments in the
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executive branch.
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The FOIA does not apply to elected officials of the federal
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government, including the President, Vice President, Senators, and
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Congressmen. The FOIA does not apply to the federal judiciary. The FOIA
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does not apply to private companies; persons who receive federal
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contracts or grants; tax-exempt organizations; or state or local
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governments. The Presidential Records Act of 1978, 44 U.S.C.
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2201-2207 (1982), does make the documentary materials of former
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Presidents subject to the FOIA in part. Presidential papers and
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documents generated after January 20, 1981, will be available subject
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to certain restrictions and delays under the general framework of the
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FOIA. Virtually all official records of the Congress are available to
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the public. The Congressional Record, all bills introduced in the House
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and the Senate, and all committee reports (except for those containing
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classified information) are printed and disseminated. Most committee
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hearings are also printed and available. Copies of most congressional
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publications are available at federal depository libraries throughout
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the county. Historical records of the Congress are made available in
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accordance with procedures established by House and Senate rules. In
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addition, almost all activities of the Congress take place in public.
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The sessions of the House and Senate are normally open to the public
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and televised. Most committee hearings and markups are open to the
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public, and some are televised.
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All States and some localities have passed laws like the FOIA that
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allow people to request access to records. In addition, there are other
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federal and state laws that may permit access to documents held by
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organizations not covered by the federal FOIA. See, e.g., the Federal
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Fair Credit Reporting Act, 15 U.S.C. 1681 et seq. (1982) (providing
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for access to files of credit bureaus); the Federal Family Educational
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Rights and Privacy Act of 1974, 20 U.S.C. 1232g (1982) (providing
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for access to records maintained by schools and colleges). Some states
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have enacted laws allowing individuals to have access to personnel
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records maintained by employers. See, e.g., Michigan Compiled Laws
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Annotated 423.501.
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B. What Records Can Be Requested Under The FOIA?
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The FOIA requires agencies to publish or make available for public
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inspection several types of information. This includes: (1)
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descriptions of agency organization and office addresses; (2)
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statements of the general course and method of agency operation; (3)
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rules of procedure and descriptions of forms; (4) substantive rules of
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general applicability and general policy statements; (5) final opinions
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made in the adjudication of cases; and (6) administrative staff manuals
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that affect the public. This information must either be published in
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the Federal Register or made available for inspection and copying
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without the formality of an FOIA request.
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All other "records" of a federal agency may be requested under the
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FOIA. However, the FOIA does not define "record." Any item containing
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information that is in the possession, custody, or control of an agency
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is usually considered to be an agency record under the FOIA. Personal
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notes of agency employees may not be agency records. A document that is
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not a "record" will not be available under the FOIA.
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The form in which a record is maintained by an agency does not
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affect its availability. A request may seek a printed or typed
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document, tape recording, map, photograph, computer printout, computer
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tape or disk, or a similar item.
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Of course, not all records that can be requested must be disclosed.
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Information that is exempt from disclosure is described below in the
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section entitled "Reasons Access May Be Denied Under the FOIA."
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The FOIA carefully provides that a requester may ask for records
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rather than information. This means that an agency is only required to
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look for an existing record or document in response to an FOIA request.
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An agency is not obliged to create a new record to comply with a
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request. An agency is not required to collect information it does not
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have. Nor must an agency do research or analyze data for a requester.
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When records are maintained in a computer, an agency is required to
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retrieve information in response to an FOIA request. The process of
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retrieving the information may result in the creation of a new document
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when the data is printed out on paper or written on computer tape or
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disk. Since this may be the only way computerized data can be
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disclosed, agencies are required to provide the data even if it means a
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new document must be created.
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Requesters must ask for existing records. Requests may have to be
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carefully written in order to obtain the desired information.
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Sometimes, an agency will help a requester identify a specific document
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that contains the information being sought. Other times, a requester
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may need to be creative when writing an FOIA request in order to
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identify an existing document or set of documents containing the
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desired information.
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There is a second general limitation on FOIA requests. The law
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requires that each request must reasonably describe the records being
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sought. This means that a request must be specific enough to permit a
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professional employee of the agency who is familiar with the subject
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matter to locate the record in a reasonable period of time.
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Because agencies organize and index records in different ways, one
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agency may consider a request to be reasonably descriptive while
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another agency may reject
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a similar request as too vague. For example, the Federal Bureau of
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Investigation has a central index for its primary record system. As a
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result, the FBI is able to search for records about a specific person.
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However, agencies that do not maintain a central name index may be
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unable to conduct the same type of search. These agencies may reject a
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similar request because the request does not describe records that can
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be identified.
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Requesters should make requests as specific as possible. If a
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particular document is required, it should be identified precisely,
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preferably by date and title. However, a request does not always have
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to be that specific. A requester who cannot identify a specific record
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should clearly explain his or her needs. A requester should make sure,
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however, that a request is broad enough to include all desired
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information.
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For example, assume that a requester wants to obtain a list of toxic
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waste sites near his home. A request to the Environmental Protection
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Agency for all records on toxic waste would cover many more records
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than are needed. The fees for such a request might be very high, and it
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is possible that the request might be rejected as too vague.
|
||
|
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A request for all toxic waste sites within three miles of a
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particular address is very specific. But it is unlikely that EPA would
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have an existing record containing data organized in that fashion. As a
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result, the request might be denied because there is no existing record
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containing the information.
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The requester might do better to ask for a list of toxic waste sites
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in his city, county, or state. It is more likely that existing records
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might contain this information. The requester might also want to tell
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the agency in the request letter exactly what information is desired.
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This additional explanation may help the agency to find a record that
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meets the request.
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Many people include their telephone number with their requests. Some
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questions about the scope of a request can be resolved quickly when an
|
||
agency employee and the requester talk. This is an efficient way to
|
||
resolve questions that arise during the processing of FOIA requests.
|
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|
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It is to everyone's advantage if requests are as precise and as
|
||
narrow as possible. The requester benefits because the request can be
|
||
processed faster and cheaper. The agency benefits because it can do a
|
||
better job of responding to the request. The agency will also be able
|
||
to use its resources to respond to more requests. The FOIA works best
|
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when both the requester and the agency act cooperatively.
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|
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C. Making an FOIA Request
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The first step in making a request under the FOIA is to identify the
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agency that has the records. An FOIA request must be addressed to a
|
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specific agency. There is no central government records office that
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services FOIA requests.
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Often, a requester knows beforehand which agency has the desired
|
||
records. If not, a requester can consult a government directory such
|
||
as the United States Government Manual. This manual has a complete
|
||
list of all federal agencies, a description of agency functions, and
|
||
the address of each agency. A requester who is uncertain about which
|
||
agency has the records that are needed can make FOIA requests at more
|
||
than one agency. The United States Government Manual is sold by the
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Superintendent of Documents of the U.S. Government Printing Office.
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||
Virtually every public library should have a copy on its shelves.
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||
|
||
Agencies normally require that FOIA requests be in writing. Letters
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||
requesting records under the FOIA can be short and simple. No one needs
|
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a lawyer
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||
|
||
to make an FOIA request. Appendix 1 of this Guide contains a sample
|
||
request letter.
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The request letter should be addressed to the agency's FOIA Officer
|
||
or to the head of the agency. The envelope containing the written
|
||
request should be marked Freedom of Information Act Request in the
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bottom left-hand corner.
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|
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All agencies have issued FOIA regulations that describe the request
|
||
process in greater detail. For example, large agencies may have several
|
||
components each of which has its own FOIA rules. A requester who can
|
||
find agency FOIA regulations in the Code of Federal Regulations
|
||
(available in many libraries) might find it useful to check these
|
||
regulations before making a request. A requester who follows the
|
||
agency's specific procedures may receive a faster response. However,
|
||
the simple procedures suggested in this guide will be adequate to meet
|
||
the minimum requirements for an FOIA request.
|
||
|
||
There are three basic elements to an FOIA request letter. First, the
|
||
letter should state that the request is being made under the Freedom of
|
||
Information Act. Second, the request should identify the records that
|
||
are being sought as specifically as possible. Third, the name and
|
||
address of the requester must be included.
|
||
|
||
Under the 1986 amendments to the FOIA, fees chargeable vary with the
|
||
status or purpose of the requester. As a result, a requester may have
|
||
to provide additional information to permit the agency to determine the
|
||
appropriate fees. Different fees can be charged to commercial users,
|
||
representatives of the news media, educational or noncommercial
|
||
scientific institutions, and individuals. The next section explains the
|
||
fee structure in more detail.
|
||
|
||
There are several optional items that are often included in an FOIA
|
||
request. The first is the telephone number of the requester. This
|
||
permits an agency employee processing a request to speak with the
|
||
requester if necessary.
|
||
|
||
A second optional item is a limitation on the fees that the
|
||
requester is willing to pay. It is common for a requester to ask to be
|
||
notified in advance if the charges will exceed a fixed amount. This
|
||
allows the requester to modify or withdraw a request if the cost may be
|
||
too high. Also, by stating a willingness to pay a set amount of fees
|
||
in the original request letter, a requester may avoid the necessity of
|
||
additional correspondence and delay.
|
||
|
||
A third optional item sometimes included in an FOIA request is a
|
||
request for a waiver or reduction of fees. The 1986 amendments to the
|
||
FOIA changed the rules for fee waivers. Fees must be waived or reduced
|
||
if disclosure of the information is in the public interest because it
|
||
is likely to contribute significantly to public understanding of the
|
||
operations or activities of the government and is not primarily in the
|
||
commercial interest of the requester. Decisions about granting fee
|
||
waivers are separate from and different than decisions about the amount
|
||
of fees that can be charged to a requester.
|
||
|
||
A requester should keep a copy of the request letter and related
|
||
correspondence until the request has been finally resolved.
|
||
|
||
D. Fees and Fee Waivers
|
||
|
||
FOIA requesters may have to pay fees covering some or all of the
|
||
costs of processing their requests. As amended in 1986, the law
|
||
establishes three types of fees that may be charged. The 1986 law makes
|
||
the process of determining the applicable fees more complicated.
|
||
However, the 1986 rules reduce or eliminate entirely the cost for
|
||
small, non-commercial requests.
|
||
|
||
First, fees can be imposed to recover the cost of copying documents.
|
||
All agencies have a fixed price for making copies using copying
|
||
machines. A requester is usually charged the actual cost of copying
|
||
computer tapes, photographs, and other nonstandard documents.
|
||
|
||
Second, fees can also be imposed to recover the costs of searching
|
||
for documents. This includes the time spent looking for material
|
||
responsive to a request. A requester can minimize search charges by
|
||
making clear, narrow requests for identifiable documents whenever
|
||
possible.
|
||
|
||
Third, fees can be charged to recover review costs. Review is the
|
||
process of examining documents to determine whether any portion is
|
||
exempt from disclosure. Before the 1986 amendments took effect, no
|
||
review costs were charged to any requester. Effective on April 25,
|
||
1987, review costs may be charged to commercial requesters only. Review
|
||
charges only include costs incurred during the initial examination of a
|
||
document. An agency may not charge for any costs incurred in resolving
|
||
issues of law or policy that may arise while processing a request.
|
||
|
||
Different fees apply to different requesters. There are three
|
||
categories of FOIA requesters. The first includes representatives of
|
||
the news media, and educational or noncommercial scientific
|
||
institutions whose purpose is scholarly or scientific research. A
|
||
requester in this category who is not seeking records for commercial
|
||
use can only be billed for reasonable standard document duplication
|
||
charges. A request for information from a representative of the news
|
||
media is not considered to be for commercial use if the request is in
|
||
support of a news gathering or dissemination function.
|
||
|
||
The second category includes FOIA requesters seeking records for
|
||
commercial use. Commercial use is not defined in the law, but it
|
||
generally includes profit making activities. A commercial user can be
|
||
charged reasonable standard charges for document duplication, search,
|
||
and review.
|
||
|
||
The third category of FOIA requesters includes everyone not in the
|
||
first two categories. People seeking information for personal use,
|
||
public interest groups, and non-profit organizations are examples of
|
||
requesters who fall into the third group. Charges for these requesters
|
||
are limited to reasonable standard charges for document duplication and
|
||
search. Review costs may not be charged. The 1986 amendments did not
|
||
change the fees charged to these requesters.
|
||
|
||
Small requests are free for a requester in the first and third
|
||
categories. This includes all requesters except commercial users. There
|
||
is no charge for the first two hours of search time and for the first
|
||
100 pages of documents. A non-commercial requester who limits a request
|
||
to a small number of easily found records will not pay any fees at all.
|
||
|
||
In addition, the law also prevents agencies from charging fees if
|
||
the cost of collecting the fee would exceed the amount collected. This
|
||
limitation applies to all requests, including those seeking documents
|
||
for commercial use. Thus, if the allowable charges for any FOIA request
|
||
are small, no fees are imposed.
|
||
|
||
Each agency sets charges for duplication, search, and review based
|
||
on its own costs. The amount of these charges is listed in agency FOIA
|
||
regulations. Each agency also sets its own threshold for minimum
|
||
charges.
|
||
|
||
The 1986 FOIA amendments also changed the law on fee waivers. Fees
|
||
now must be waived or reduced if disclosure of the information is in
|
||
the public interest because it is likely to contribute significantly to
|
||
public understanding of the operations or activities of the government
|
||
and is not primarily in the commercial interest of the requester.
|
||
|
||
The 1986 amendments on fees and fee waivers have created some
|
||
confusion. Determinations about fees are separate and distinct from
|
||
determinations about fee waivers. For example, a requester who can
|
||
demonstrate that he or she is a news reporter may only be charged
|
||
duplication fees. But a requester found to be a reporter is not
|
||
automatically entitled to a waiver of those fees. A reporter who seeks
|
||
a waiver must demonstrate that the request also meets the standards for
|
||
waivers.
|
||
|
||
Normally, only after a requester has been categorized to determine
|
||
the applicable fees does the issue of a fee waiver arise. A requester
|
||
who seeks a fee waiver should ask for a waiver in the original request
|
||
letter. However, a request for a waiver can be made at a later time.
|
||
The requester should describe how disclosure will contribute to public
|
||
understanding of the operations or activities of the government. The
|
||
sample request letter in the appendix includes optional language asking
|
||
for a fee waiver.
|
||
|
||
Any requester may ask for a fee waiver. Some will find it easier to
|
||
qualify than others. A news reporter who is only charged duplication
|
||
costs may still ask that the charges be waived because of the public
|
||
benefits that will result from disclosure. A representative of the news
|
||
media, a scholar, or a public interest group are more likely to qualify
|
||
for a waiver of fees. A commercial user may find it difficult to
|
||
qualify for waivers.
|
||
|
||
The eligibility of other requesters will vary. A key element in
|
||
qualifying for a fee waiver is the relationship of the information to
|
||
public understanding of the operations or activities of government.
|
||
Another important factor is the ability of the requester to convey that
|
||
information to other interested members of the public. A requester is
|
||
not eligible for a fee waiver solely because of indigence.
|
||
|
||
E. Requirements for Agency Responses
|
||
|
||
Each agency is required to determine within ten days (excluding
|
||
Saturdays, Sundays, and legal holidays) after the receipt of a request
|
||
whether to comply with the request. The actual disclosure of documents
|
||
is required to follow promptly thereafter. If a request is denied in
|
||
whole or in part, the agency must tell the requester the reasons for
|
||
the denial. The agency must also tell the requester that there is a
|
||
right to appeal any adverse determination to the head of the agency.
|
||
|
||
The FOIA permits an agency to extend the time limits up to ten days
|
||
in unusual circumstances. These circumstances include the need to
|
||
collect records from remote locations, review large numbers of records,
|
||
and consult with other agencies. The agency is supposed to notify the
|
||
requester whenever an extension is invoked. Agencies that take more
|
||
than ten days to respond to a request do not always notify each
|
||
requester that an extension has been invoked.
|
||
|
||
The statutory time limits for responses are not always met. An
|
||
agency sometimes receives an unexpectedly large number of FOIA requests
|
||
at one time and is unable to meet the deadlines. Some agencies assign
|
||
inadequate resources to FOIA offices. The Congress does not condone the
|
||
failure of any agency to meet the laws time limits. However, as a
|
||
practical matter, there is little that a requester can do about it. The
|
||
courts have been reluctant to provide relief solely because the FOIA's
|
||
time limits have not been met.
|
||
|
||
The best advice to requesters is to be patient. The law allows a
|
||
requester to consider that his or her request has been denied if it has
|
||
not been decided within the time limits. This permits the requester to
|
||
file an administrative appeal or file a lawsuit in federal district
|
||
court. However, this is not always the best course of action. The
|
||
filing of an administrative or judicial appeal will not necessarily
|
||
result in any faster processing of the request.
|
||
|
||
Each agency generally processes requests in the order of receipt.
|
||
Some agencies will expedite the processing of urgent requests. Anyone
|
||
with a pressing need for records should consult with the agency FOIA
|
||
officer about how to ask for expedited treatment of requests.
|
||
|
||
F. Reasons Access May Be Denied Under the FOIA
|
||
|
||
An agency may refuse to disclose an agency record that falls within
|
||
any of the FOIA's nine statutory exemptions. The exemptions protect
|
||
against the disclosure of information that would harm national defense
|
||
or foreign policy,
|
||
privacy of individuals, proprietary interests of business,
|
||
functioning of the government, and other important interests. A
|
||
document that does not qualify as an "agency record" may be denied on
|
||
this basis. However, most records in the possession of an agency are
|
||
"agency records" within the meaning of the FOIA.
|
||
|
||
An agency may withhold exempt information, but it is not always
|
||
required to do so. For example, an agency may disclose an exempt
|
||
internal memorandum because no harm would result from its disclosure.
|
||
However, an agency is not likely to agree to disclose an exempt
|
||
document that is classified or that contains a trade secret.
|
||
|
||
When a record contains some information that qualifies as exempt,
|
||
the entire record is not necessarily exempt. Instead, the FOIA
|
||
specifically provides that any reasonably segregable portions of a
|
||
record must be provided to a requester after the deletion of the
|
||
portions that are exempt. This is a very important requirement because
|
||
it prevents an agency from withholding an entire document simply
|
||
because one line or one page is exempt.
|
||
|
||
Exemption 1. Classified Documents
|
||
|
||
The first FOIA exemption permits the withholding of properly
|
||
classified documents. Information may be classified in the interest of
|
||
national defense or foreign policy.
|
||
|
||
The rules for classification are established by the President and
|
||
not the FOIA or other law. The FOIA provides that, if a document has
|
||
been properly classified under a presidential Executive Order, the
|
||
document can be withheld from disclosure.
|
||
|
||
Classified documents may be requested under the FOIA. An agency can
|
||
review the document to determine if it still requires protection. In
|
||
addition, the Executive Order on Security Classification establishes a
|
||
special procedure for requesting the declassification of documents. If
|
||
a requested document is declassified, it can be released in response to
|
||
an FOIA request. However, a document that is declassified may still be
|
||
exempt under other FOIA exemptions. At the time that this guide was
|
||
prepared, the current Executive Order on Security Classification was
|
||
E.O. 12356 which was promulgated by President Reagan on April 2, 1982.
|
||
The text of the order can be found at 47 Federal Register 14874-84
|
||
(April 6, 1982). The rules for mandatory review for declassification
|
||
are in Section 3.4 of the Executive Order.
|
||
|
||
Exemption 2. Internal Personnel Rules and Practices
|
||
|
||
The second FOIA exemption covers matters that are related solely to
|
||
an agency's internal personnel rules and practices. As interpreted by
|
||
the courts, there are two separate classes of documents that are
|
||
generally held to fall within exemption two.
|
||
|
||
First, information relating to personnel rules or internal agency
|
||
practices is exempt if it is trivial administrative matter of no
|
||
genuine public interest. A rule governing lunch hours for agency
|
||
employees is an example.
|
||
|
||
Second, an internal administrative manual can be exempt if
|
||
disclosure would risk circumvention of law or agency regulations. In
|
||
order to fall into this category, the material will normally have to
|
||
regulate internal agency conduct rather than public behavior.
|
||
|
||
Exemption 3. Information Exempt Under Other Laws
|
||
|
||
The third exemption incorporates into the FOIA other laws that
|
||
restrict the availability of information. To qualify under this
|
||
exemption, a statute must require that matters be withheld from the
|
||
public in such a manner as to leave no discretion to the agency.
|
||
Alternatively, the statute must establish particular criteria for
|
||
withholding or refer to particular types of matters to be withheld.
|
||
|
||
One example of a qualifying statute is the provision of the Tax Code
|
||
prohibiting the public disclosure of tax returns and tax return
|
||
information. Another qualifying Exemption 3 statute is the law
|
||
designating identifiable census data as confidential. Whether a
|
||
particular statute qualifies under Exemption 3 can be a difficult legal
|
||
question. 26 U.S.C. 6103 (1982). 8517 13 U.S.C. 9 (1982). 4.
|
||
|
||
Exemption 4. Confidential Business Information
|
||
|
||
The fourth exemption protects from public disclosure two types of
|
||
information: trade secrets and confidential business information. A
|
||
trade secret is a commercially valuable plan, formula, process, or
|
||
device. This is a narrow category of information. An example of a trade
|
||
secret is the recipe for a commercial food product.
|
||
|
||
The second type of protected data is commercial or financial
|
||
information obtained from a person and privileged or confidential. The
|
||
courts have held that data qualifies for withholding if disclosure by
|
||
the government would be likely to harm the competitive position of the
|
||
person who submitted the information. Detailed information on a
|
||
company's marketing plans, profits, or costs can qualify as
|
||
confidential business information. Information may also be withheld if
|
||
disclosure would be likely to impair the governments ability to obtain
|
||
similar information in the future.
|
||
|
||
Only information obtained from a person other than a government
|
||
agency qualifies under the fourth exemption. A person is an individual,
|
||
a partnership, or a corporation. Information that an agency created on
|
||
its own cannot normally be withheld under exemption four.
|
||
|
||
Although there is no formal requirement under the FOIA, many
|
||
agencies will notify a submitter of business information that
|
||
disclosure of the information is being considered. The submitter then
|
||
has an opportunity to convince the agency that the information
|
||
qualifies for withholding. A submitter can also file suit to block
|
||
disclosure under the FOIA. Such lawsuits are generally referred to as
|
||
"reverse" FOIA lawsuits because the FOIA is being used in an attempt to
|
||
prevent rather than to require the disclosure of information. A reverse
|
||
FOIA lawsuit may be filed when the submitter of documents and the
|
||
government disagree whether the information is confidential. See
|
||
"Predisclosure Notification Procedures for Confidential Commercial
|
||
Information," Executive Order 12600 (June 23, 1987).
|
||
|
||
Exemption 5. Internal Government Communications
|
||
|
||
The FOIA<49>s fifth exemption applies to internal government documents.
|
||
An example is a letter from one government department to another about
|
||
a joint decision that has not yet been made. Another example is a
|
||
memorandum from an agency employee to his supervisor describing options
|
||
for conducting the agency's business.
|
||
|
||
The purpose of the fifth exemption is to safeguard the deliberative
|
||
policy making process of government. The exemption encourages frank
|
||
discussion of policy matters between agency officials by allowing
|
||
supporting documents to be withheld from public disclosure. The
|
||
exemption also protects against premature disclosure of policies before
|
||
final adoption.
|
||
|
||
While the policy behind the fifth exemption is well-accepted, the
|
||
application of the exemption is complicated. The fifth exemption may be
|
||
the most difficult FOIA exemption to understand and apply. For example,
|
||
the exemption protects the policy making process, but it does not
|
||
protect purely factual information related to the policy process.
|
||
Factual information must be disclosed unless it is inextricably
|
||
intertwined with protected information about an agency decision.
|
||
|
||
Protection for the decision making process is appropriate only for
|
||
the period while decisions are being made. Thus, the fifth exemption
|
||
has been held to distinguish between documents that are pre-decisional
|
||
and therefore may be protected, and those which are post-decisional and
|
||
therefore not subject to protection. Once a policy is adopted, the
|
||
public has a greater interest in knowing the basis for the decision.
|
||
|
||
The exemption also incorporates some of the privileges that apply in
|
||
litigation involving the government. For example, papers prepared by
|
||
the governments lawyers can be withheld in the same way that papers
|
||
prepared by private lawyers for clients are not available through
|
||
discovery in civil litigation.
|
||
|
||
|
||
Exemption 6. Personal Privacy
|
||
|
||
The sixth exemption covers personnel, medical, and similar files the
|
||
disclosure of which would constitute a clearly unwarranted invasion of
|
||
personal privacy. This exemption protects the privacy interests of
|
||
individuals by allowing an agency to withhold intimate personal data
|
||
kept in government files. Only individuals have privacy interests.
|
||
Corporations and other legal persons have no privacy rights under the
|
||
sixth exemption.
|
||
The exemption requires agencies to strike a balance between an
|
||
individual<EFBFBD>s privacy interest and the publics right to know. However,
|
||
since only a clearly unwarranted invasion of privacy is a basis for
|
||
withholding, there is a perceptible tilt in favor of disclosure in the
|
||
exemption. Nevertheless, the sixth exemption makes it harder to obtain
|
||
information about another individual without the consent of that
|
||
individual.
|
||
|
||
The Privacy Act of 1974 also regulates the disclosure of personal
|
||
information about an individual. The FOIA and the Privacy Act overlap
|
||
in part, but there is no inconsistency. An individual seeking records
|
||
about himself or herself should cite both laws when making a request.
|
||
This ensures that the maximum amount of disclosable information will be
|
||
released. Records that can be denied to an individual under the
|
||
Privacy Act are not necessarily exempt under the FOIA.
|
||
|
||
|
||
Exemption 7. Law Enforcement
|
||
|
||
The seventh exemption allows agencies to withhold law enforcement
|
||
records in order to protect the law enforcement process from
|
||
interference. The exemption was amended slightly in 1986, but it still
|
||
retains six specific subexemptions.
|
||
|
||
Exemption (7)(A) allows the withholding of a law enforcement record
|
||
that could reasonably be expected to interfere with enforcement
|
||
proceedings. This exemption protects an active law enforcement
|
||
investigation from interference through premature disclosure.
|
||
|
||
Exemption (7)(B) allows the withholding of information that would
|
||
deprive a person of a right to a fair trial or an impartial
|
||
adjudication. This exemption is rarely used.
|
||
|
||
Exemption (7)(C) recognizes that individuals have a privacy
|
||
interest in information maintained in law enforcement files. If the
|
||
disclosure of information could reasonably be expected to constitute an
|
||
unwarranted invasion of personal privacy, the information is exempt
|
||
from disclosure. The standards for privacy protection in Exemption 6
|
||
and Exemption (7)(C) differ slightly. Exemption (7)(C) protects against
|
||
an unwarranted invasion of personal privacy while Exemption 6 protects
|
||
against clearly a unwarranted invasion. Also, Exemption (7)(C) allows
|
||
the withholding of information that "could reasonably be expected to"
|
||
invade someone's privacy. Under Exemption 6, information can be
|
||
withheld only if disclosure "would" invade someone's privacy.
|
||
|
||
Exemption (7)(D) protects the identity of confidential sources.
|
||
Information that could reasonably be expected to reveal the identity of
|
||
a confidential source is exempt. A confidential source can include a
|
||
state, local, or foreign agency or authority, or a private institution
|
||
that furnished information on a confidential basis. In addition, the
|
||
exemption protects information furnished by a confidential source if
|
||
the data was compiled by a criminal law enforcement authority during a
|
||
criminal investigation or by an agency conducting a lawful national
|
||
security intelligence investigation.
|
||
|
||
Exemption (7)(E) protects from disclosure information that would
|
||
reveal techniques and procedures for law enforcement investigations or
|
||
prosecutions or that would disclose guidelines for law enforcement
|
||
investigations or prosecutions if disclosure of the information could
|
||
reasonably be expected to risk circumvention of the law.
|
||
|
||
Exemption (7)(F) protects law enforcement information that could
|
||
reasonably be expected to endanger the life or physical safety of any
|
||
individual. 8. Exemption 8. Financial Institutions
|
||
|
||
The eighth exemption protects information that is contained in or
|
||
related to examination, operating, or condition reports prepared by or
|
||
for a bank supervisory agency such as the Federal Deposit Insurance
|
||
Corporation, the Federal Reserve, or similar agencies. 9. Exemption 9.
|
||
Geological Information
|
||
|
||
The ninth FOIA exemption covers geological and geophysical
|
||
information, data, and maps about wells. This exemption is rarely used.
|
||
|
||
G. FOIA Exclusions
|
||
|
||
The 1986 amendments to the FOIA gave limited authority to agencies
|
||
to respond to a request without confirming the existence of the
|
||
requested records. Ordinarily, any proper request must receive an
|
||
answer stating whether there is any responsive information, even if the
|
||
requested information is exempt from disclosure.
|
||
|
||
In some narrow circumstances, acknowledgment of the existence of a
|
||
record can produce consequences similar to those resulting from
|
||
disclosure of the record itself. In order to avoid this type of
|
||
problem, the 1986 amendments established three "record exclusions."
|
||
|
||
The exclusions allow an agency to treat certain exempt records as if
|
||
the records were not subject to the FOIA. An agency is not required to
|
||
confirm the existence of three specific categories of records. If these
|
||
records are requested, the agency may respond that there are no
|
||
disclosable records responsive to the request. However, these
|
||
exclusions do not broaden the authority of any agency to withhold
|
||
documents from the public. The exclusions are only applicable to
|
||
information that is otherwise exempt from disclosure.
|
||
|
||
The first exclusion may be used when a request seeks information
|
||
that is exempt because disclosure could reasonably be expected to
|
||
interfere with a current law enforcement investigation (exemption
|
||
(7)(A)). There are three specific prerequisites for the application of
|
||
this exclusion. First, the investigation in question must involve a
|
||
possible violation of criminal law. Second, there must be reason to
|
||
believe that the subject of the investigation is not already aware that
|
||
the investigation is underway. Third, disclosure of the existence of
|
||
the records as distinguished from the contents of the records could
|
||
reasonably be expected to interfere with enforcement proceedings.
|
||
|
||
When all of these conditions exist, an agency may respond to an FOIA
|
||
request for investigatory records as if the records are not subject to
|
||
the requirements of the FOIA. In other words, the agency's response
|
||
does not have to reveal that it is conducting an investigation.
|
||
|
||
The second exclusion applies to informant records maintained by a
|
||
criminal law enforcement agency under the informants name or personal
|
||
identifier. The agency is not required to confirm the existence of
|
||
these records unless the informants status has been officially
|
||
confirmed. This exclusion helps agencies to protect the identity of
|
||
confidential informants. Information that might identify informants has
|
||
always been exempt under the FOIA.
|
||
|
||
The third exclusion only applies to records maintained by the
|
||
Federal Bureau of Investigation which pertain to foreign intelligence,
|
||
counterintelligence, or international terrorism. When the existence of
|
||
these types of records is classified, the FBI may treat the records as
|
||
not subject to the requirements of FOIA.
|
||
|
||
This exclusion does not apply to all classified records on the
|
||
specific subjects. It only applies when the records are classified and
|
||
when the existence of the records is also classified. Since the
|
||
underlying records must be classified before the exclusion is relevant,
|
||
agencies have no new substantive withholding authority.
|
||
|
||
In enacting these exclusions, congressional sponsors stated that it
|
||
was their intent that agencies must inform FOIA requesters that these
|
||
exclusions are available for agency use. Requesters who believe that
|
||
records were improperly withheld because of the exclusions can seek
|
||
judicial review.
|
||
|
||
H. Administrative Appeal Procedures
|
||
|
||
Whenever an FOIA request is denied, the agency must inform the
|
||
requester of the reasons for the denial and the requesters right to
|
||
appeal the denial to the head of the agency. A requester may appeal the
|
||
denial of a request for a document or for a fee waiver. A requester may
|
||
contest the type or amount of fees that were charged. A requester may
|
||
appeal any other type of adverse determination including a rejection of
|
||
a request for failure to describe adequately the documents being
|
||
requested. A requester can also appeal because the agency failed to
|
||
conduct an adequate search for the documents that were requested.
|
||
|
||
A person whose request was granted in part and denied in part may
|
||
appeal the part that was denied. If an agency has agreed to disclose
|
||
some but not all requested documents, the filing of an appeal does not
|
||
affect the release of the documents that are disclosable. There is no
|
||
risk to the requester in filing an appeal.
|
||
|
||
The appeal to the head of the agency is a simple administrative
|
||
appeal. A lawyer can be helpful, but no one needs a lawyer to file an
|
||
appeal. Anyone who can write a letter can file an appeal. Appeals to
|
||
the head of the agency often result in the disclosure of some records
|
||
that had been withheld. A requester who is not convinced that the
|
||
agency's initial decision is correct should appeal. There is no charge
|
||
for filing an administrative appeal.
|
||
|
||
An appeal is filed by sending a letter to the head of the agency.
|
||
The letter must identify the FOIA request that is being appealed. The
|
||
envelope containing the letter of appeal should be marked in the lower
|
||
left hand corner with the words "Freedom of Information Act Appeal."
|
||
Agency FOIA regulations will normally describe the appeal procedures
|
||
and requirements with more specificity. At some agencies, decisions on
|
||
FOIA appeals have been delegated to other agency officials. Requesters
|
||
who have an opportunity to review agency regulations in the Code of
|
||
Federal Regulations (available in many libraries) may be able to speed
|
||
up the processing of the appeal. However, following the simple
|
||
procedures described in this Guide will be sufficient to maintain a
|
||
proper appeal.
|
||
|
||
Many agencies assign a number to all FOIA requests that are
|
||
received. The number should be included in the appeal letter, along
|
||
with the name and address of the requester. It is a common practice to
|
||
include a copy of the agency's initial decision letter as part of the
|
||
appeal, but this is not required. It can also be helpful for the
|
||
requester to include a telephone number in the appeal letter.
|
||
|
||
An appeal will normally include the requesters arguments supporting
|
||
disclosure of the documents. A requester may include any facts or any
|
||
arguments supporting the case for reversing the initial decision.
|
||
However, an appeal letter does not have to contain any arguments at
|
||
all. It is sufficient to state that the agency's initial decision is
|
||
being appealed. Appendix 1 includes a sample appeal letter.
|
||
|
||
The FOIA does not set a time limit for filing an administrative
|
||
appeal of an FOIA denial. However, it is good practice to file an
|
||
appeal promptly. Some agency regulations establish a time limit for
|
||
filing an administrative appeal. A requester whose appeal is rejected
|
||
by an agency because it is too late may refile the original FOIA
|
||
request and start the process again.
|
||
|
||
A requester who delays filing an appeal runs the risk that the
|
||
documents could be destroyed. However, as long as an agency is
|
||
considering a request or an appeal, the agency must preserve the
|
||
documents.
|
||
|
||
An agency is required to make a decision on an appeal within twenty
|
||
days (excluding Saturdays, Sundays, and federal holidays). It is
|
||
possible for an agency to extend the time limits by an additional ten
|
||
days. Once the time period has elapsed, a requester may consider that
|
||
the appeal has been denied and may proceed with a judicial appeal.
|
||
However, unless there is an urgent need for records, this may not be
|
||
the best course of action. The courts are not sympathetic to appeals
|
||
based solely on an agency's failure to comply with the FOIA<49>s time
|
||
limits.
|
||
|
||
I. Filing a Judicial Appeal
|
||
|
||
When an administrative appeal is denied, a requester has the right
|
||
to appeal the denial in court. An FOIA appeal can be filed in the
|
||
United States District Court in the district where the requester lives.
|
||
The requester can also file suit in the district where the documents
|
||
are located or in the District of Columbia. When a requester goes to
|
||
court, the burden of justifying the withholding of documents is on the
|
||
government. This is a distinct advantage for the requester.
|
||
|
||
Requesters are sometimes successful when they go to court, but the
|
||
results vary considerably. Some requesters who file judicial appeals
|
||
find that an agency will disclose some documents previously withheld
|
||
rather than fight about disclosure in court. This does not always
|
||
happen, and there is no guarantee that the filing of a judicial appeal
|
||
will result in any additional disclosure.
|
||
|
||
Most requesters require the assistance of an attorney to file a
|
||
judicial appeal. A person who files a lawsuit and substantially
|
||
prevails may be awarded reasonable attorney fees and litigation costs
|
||
reasonably incurred. Some requesters may be able to handle their own
|
||
appeal without an attorney. Since this is not a litigation guide,
|
||
details of the judicial appeal process have not been included. Anyone
|
||
considering filing an appeal can begin by reading the provisions of the
|
||
FOIA on judicial review.
|
||
|
||
More information on judicial review under the FOIA and Privacy Act
|
||
can be found in Adler, Litigation Under the Federal Freedom of
|
||
Information Act and Privacy Act (American Civil Liberties Union
|
||
Foundation) (published annually).
|
||
|
||
VII. The Privacy Act of 1974
|
||
|
||
A. The Scope of the Privacy Act of 1974
|
||
|
||
The Privacy Act of 1974 provides safeguards against an invasion of
|
||
privacy through the misuse of records by federal agencies. In
|
||
general, the Act allows a citizen to learn how records are collected,
|
||
maintained, used, and disseminated by the federal government. The Act
|
||
also permits an individual to gain access to most personal information
|
||
maintained by federal agencies and to seek amendment of any incorrect
|
||
or incomplete information.
|
||
|
||
The Privacy Act applies to personal information maintained by
|
||
agencies in the executive branch of the federal government. The
|
||
executive branch includes cabinet departments, military departments,
|
||
government corporations, government controlled corporations,
|
||
independent regulatory agencies, and other establishments in the
|
||
executive branch. Agencies subject to the Freedom of Information Act
|
||
(FOIA) are also subject to the Privacy Act. The Privacy Act does
|
||
not generally apply to records maintained by state and local
|
||
governments or private companies or organizations. The Privacy Act
|
||
applies to some records that are not maintained by an agency.
|
||
Subsection (m) of the Act provides that, when an agency provides by
|
||
contract for the operation of a system of records on its behalf, the
|
||
requirements of the Privacy Act apply to those records. As a result,
|
||
some records maintained outside of a federal agency are subject to the
|
||
Privacy Act. Descriptions of these systems are published in the
|
||
Federal Register. However, most records maintained outside of federal
|
||
agencies are not subject to the Privacy Act.
|
||
|
||
The Privacy Act only grants rights to United States citizens and
|
||
to aliens lawfully admitted for permanent residence. As a result, a
|
||
foreign national cannot use the Acts provisions. However, a foreigner
|
||
may use the FOIA to request records about himself or herself.
|
||
|
||
In general, the only records subject to the Privacy Act are
|
||
records that are maintained in a system of records. The idea of a
|
||
"system of records" is unique to the Privacy Act and requires
|
||
explanation.
|
||
|
||
The Act defines a "record" to include most personal information
|
||
maintained by an agency about an individual. A record contains
|
||
individually identifiable information, including but not limited to
|
||
information about education, financial transactions, medical history,
|
||
criminal history, or employment history. A "system of records" is a
|
||
group of records from which information is actually retrieved by name,
|
||
social security number, or other identifying symbol assigned to an
|
||
individual.
|
||
|
||
Some personal information is not kept in a system of records. This
|
||
information is not subject to the provisions of the Privacy Act,
|
||
although access may be requested under the FOIA. Most personal
|
||
information in government files is subject to the Privacy Act.
|
||
|
||
The Privacy Act also establishes general records management
|
||
requirements for federal agencies. In summary, there are five basic
|
||
requirements that are most relevant to individuals.
|
||
|
||
First, each agency must establish procedures allowing individuals to
|
||
see and copy records about themselves. An individual may also seek to
|
||
amend any information that is not accurate, relevant, timely, or
|
||
complete. The rights to inspect and to correct records are the most
|
||
important provisions of the Privacy Act. This guide explains in more
|
||
detail how an individual can exercise these rights.
|
||
|
||
Second, each agency must publish notices describing all systems of
|
||
records. The notices include a complete description of personal-data
|
||
record keeping policies, practices, and systems. This requirement
|
||
prevents the maintenance of secret record systems.
|
||
|
||
Third, each agency must make reasonable efforts to maintain
|
||
accurate, relevant, timely, and complete records about individuals.
|
||
Agencies are prohibited from maintaining information about how
|
||
individuals exercise rights guaranteed by the First Amendment to the
|
||
U.S. Constitution unless maintenance of the information is specifically
|
||
authorized by statute or relates to an authorized law enforcement
|
||
activity.
|
||
|
||
Fourth, the Act establishes rules governing the use and disclosure
|
||
of personal information. The Act specifies that information collected
|
||
for one purpose may not be used for another purpose without notice to
|
||
or the consent of the subject of the record. The Act also requires that
|
||
each agency keep a record of some disclosures of personal information.
|
||
|
||
Fifth, the Act provides legal remedies that permit an individual to
|
||
seek enforcement of the rights granted under the Act. In addition,
|
||
federal employees who fail to comply with the Acts provisions may be
|
||
subjected to criminal penalties.
|
||
|
||
|
||
B. The Computer Matching and Privacy Protection Act
|
||
|
||
The Computer Matching and Privacy Protection Act of 1988 (Public
|
||
Law 100-503) amended the Privacy Act by adding new provisions
|
||
regulating the use of computer matching. Records used during the
|
||
conduct of a matching program are subject to an additional set of
|
||
requirements.
|
||
|
||
Computer matching is the computerized comparison of information
|
||
about individuals for the purpose of determining eligibility for
|
||
federal benefit programs. A matching program can be subject to the
|
||
requirements of the Computer Matching Act if records from a Privacy
|
||
Act system of records are used during the program. If federal Privacy
|
||
Act records are matched against state or local records, then the state
|
||
or local matching program can be subject to the new matching
|
||
requirements.
|
||
|
||
In general, matching programs involving federal records must be
|
||
conducted under a matching agreement between the source and recipient
|
||
agencies. The matching agreement describes the purpose and procedures
|
||
of the matching and establishes protections for matching records. The
|
||
agreement is subject to review and approval by a Data Integrity Board.
|
||
Each federal agency involved in a matching activity must establish a
|
||
Data Integrity Board.
|
||
|
||
For an individual seeking access to or correction of records, the
|
||
computer matching legislation provides no special access rights. If
|
||
matching records are federal records, then the access and correction
|
||
provisions of the Privacy Act apply. There is no general right of
|
||
access or correction for matching records of state and local agencies.
|
||
It is possible that rights are available under state or local laws.
|
||
|
||
There is, however, a requirement that an individual be notified of
|
||
agency findings prior to the taking of any adverse action as a result
|
||
of a computer matching program. An individual must also be given an
|
||
opportunity to contest such findings. The notice and
|
||
opportunity-to-contest provisions apply to matching records whether the
|
||
matching was done by the federal government or by a state or local
|
||
government. Section 7201 of Public Law 101-508 modified the due process
|
||
notice requirement to permit the use of statutory or regulatory notice
|
||
periods.
|
||
|
||
The matching provisions also require that any agency federal or
|
||
non-federal involved in computer matching must independently verify
|
||
information used to take adverse action against an individual. This
|
||
requirement was included in order to protect individuals from arbitrary
|
||
or unjustified denials of benefits. Independent verification includes
|
||
independent investigation and confirmation of information. Public Law
|
||
101-508 also modified the independent verification requirement in
|
||
circumstances in which it was unnecessary.
|
||
|
||
Most of the provisions of the Computer Matching and Privacy
|
||
Protection Act of 1988 were originally scheduled to become effective in
|
||
July 1989. Public Law 101-56 delayed the effective date for most
|
||
matching programs until January 1, 1990.
|
||
|
||
C. Locating Records
|
||
|
||
There is no central index of federal government records about
|
||
individuals. An individual who wants to inspect records about himself
|
||
or herself must first identify which agency has the records. Often,
|
||
this will not be difficult. For example, an individual who was employed
|
||
by the federal government knows that the employing agency or the Office
|
||
of Personnel Management maintains personnel files.
|
||
|
||
Similarly, an individual who receives veterans benefits will
|
||
normally find relevant records at the Department of Veterans Affairs or
|
||
at the Defense Department. Tax records are maintained by the Internal
|
||
Revenue Service, social security records by the Social Security
|
||
Administration, passport records by the State Department, etc.
|
||
|
||
For those who are uncertain about which agency has the records that
|
||
are needed, there are several sources of information. First, an
|
||
individual can ask an agency that might maintain the records. If that
|
||
agency does not have the records, it may be able to identify the proper
|
||
agency.
|
||
|
||
Second, a government directory such as the United States Government
|
||
Manual 22 contains a complete list of all federal agencies, a
|
||
description of agency functions, and the address of the agency and its
|
||
field offices. An agency responsible for operating a program normally
|
||
maintains the records related to that program. The United States
|
||
Government Manual is sold by the Superintendent of Documents of the
|
||
U.S. Government Printing Office. Virtually every public library should
|
||
have a copy.
|
||
|
||
Third, a Federal Information Center can help to identify government
|
||
agencies, their functions, and their records. These Centers, which are
|
||
operated by the General Services Administration, serve as
|
||
clearinghouses for information about the federal government. There are
|
||
Federal Information Centers throughout the country.
|
||
|
||
Fourth, every two years, the Office of the Federal Register
|
||
publishes a compilation of system of records notices for all agencies.
|
||
These notices contain a complete description of each record system
|
||
maintained by each agency. The compilation which is published in five
|
||
large volumes is the most complete reference for information about
|
||
federal agency personal information practices. The information that
|
||
appears in the compilation also appears sometimes in the Federal
|
||
Register. Each system notice contains the name of the system; its
|
||
location; the categories of individuals covered by the system; the
|
||
categories of records in the system; the legal authority for
|
||
maintenance of the system; the routine disclosures that may be made for
|
||
records in the system; the policies and practices of storing,
|
||
retrieving, accessing, retaining, and disposing of records; the name
|
||
and address of the manager of the system; procedures for requesting
|
||
access to the records; procedures for requesting correction or
|
||
amendment of the records; the source of the information in the system;
|
||
and a description of any disclosure exemptions that may be applied to
|
||
the records in the system. Agencies are required to publish in the
|
||
Federal Register a description of each system of records when the
|
||
system is established or amended. In the past, agencies were required
|
||
to publish an annual compilation in the Federal Register, but that
|
||
requirement was eliminated in 1982. As a result, for most agencies it
|
||
will be difficult to find a complete list of all systems of records in
|
||
the Federal Register. Some agencies do, however, reprint all system
|
||
notices from time to time. An agency's Privacy Act officer may be
|
||
able to provide more information about the agency's publication
|
||
practices.
|
||
|
||
The compilation formally called Privacy Act Issuances may be
|
||
difficult to find and hard to use. It does not contain a comprehensive
|
||
index. Copies will be available in some federal depository libraries
|
||
and possibly in other libraries as well. Although the compilation is
|
||
the best single source of detailed information about personal records
|
||
maintained by federal agencies, it is not necessary to consult the
|
||
compilation before making a Privacy Act request. A requester is not
|
||
required to identify the specific system of records that contains the
|
||
information being sought. It is sufficient to identify the agency that
|
||
has the records. Using information provided by the requester, the
|
||
agency will determine which system of records has the files that have
|
||
been requested.
|
||
|
||
Those who request records under the Privacy Act can help the
|
||
agency by identifying the type of records being sought. Large agencies
|
||
maintain hundreds of different record systems. A request can be
|
||
processed faster if the requester tells the agency that he or she was
|
||
employed by the agency, was the recipient of benefits under an agency
|
||
program, or had other specific contacts with the agency.
|
||
|
||
D. Making a Privacy Act Request for Access
|
||
|
||
The fastest way to make a Privacy Act request is to identify the
|
||
specific system of records. The request can be addressed to the system
|
||
manager. Few people do this. Instead, most people address their
|
||
requests to the head of the agency that has the records or to the
|
||
agency's Privacy Act Officer. The envelope containing the written
|
||
request should be marked " Privacy Act Request" in the bottom
|
||
left-hand corner. All agencies have Privacy Act regulations that
|
||
describe the request process in greater detail. Large agencies may have
|
||
several components, each of which has its own Privacy Act rules.
|
||
Requesters who can find agency Privacy Act regulations in the Code of
|
||
Federal Regulations (available in many libraries) might read these
|
||
regulations before making a request. A requester who follows the
|
||
agency's specific procedures may receive a faster response. However,
|
||
the simple procedures suggested in this guide are adequate to meet the
|
||
minimum statutory requirements for a Privacy Act request.
|
||
|
||
There are three basic elements to a request for records under the
|
||
Privacy Act. First, the letter should state that the request is being
|
||
made under the Privacy Act. Second, the letter should include the
|
||
name, address, and signature of the requester. Third, the request
|
||
should describe the records as specifically as possible. Appendix 1
|
||
includes a sample Privacy Act request letter.
|
||
|
||
It is a common practice for an individual seeking records about
|
||
himself or herself to make the request under both the Privacy Act of
|
||
1974 and the Freedom of Information Act. See the discussion in the
|
||
front of this guide about which act to use.
|
||
|
||
A requester can describe the records by identifying a specific
|
||
system of records, by describing his or her contacts with an agency, or
|
||
by simply asking for all records about himself or herself. The broader
|
||
and less specific a request is, the longer it may take for an agency to
|
||
respond.
|
||
|
||
It is a good practice for a requester to describe the type of
|
||
records that he or she expects to find. For example, an individual
|
||
seeking a copy of his service record in the Army should state that he
|
||
was in the Army and include the approximate dates of service. This will
|
||
help the Defense Department narrow its search to record systems that
|
||
are likely to contain the information being sought. An individual
|
||
seeking records from the Federal Bureau of Investigation may ask that
|
||
files in specific field offices be searched in addition to the FBI's
|
||
central office files. The FBI does not routinely search field office
|
||
records without a specific request.
|
||
|
||
An agency will generally require a requester to provide some proof
|
||
of identity before records will be disclosed. Agencies may have
|
||
different requirements. Some agencies will accept a signature; others
|
||
may require a notarized signature. If an individual goes to the agency
|
||
to inspect records, standard personal identification may be acceptable.
|
||
More stringent requirements may apply if the records being sought are
|
||
especially sensitive.
|
||
|
||
An agency will inform requesters of any special identification
|
||
requirements. Requesters who need records quickly should first consult
|
||
agency regulations or talk to the agency's Privacy Act Officer to
|
||
find out how to provide adequate identification.
|
||
|
||
An individual who visits an agency office to inspect a Privacy Act
|
||
record may bring along a friend or relative to review the record. When
|
||
a requester brings another person, the agency may ask the requester to
|
||
sign a written statement authorizing discussion of the record in the
|
||
presence of that person.
|
||
|
||
It is a crime to knowingly and willfully request or obtain records
|
||
under the
|
||
Privacy Act under false pretenses. A request for access under the
|
||
Privacy Act can only be made by the subject of the record. An
|
||
individual cannot make a request under the Privacy Act for a record
|
||
about another person. The only exception is for a parent or legal
|
||
guardian who can request records for a minor or a person who has been
|
||
declared incompetent.
|
||
|
||
E. Fees
|
||
|
||
Under the Privacy Act, fees can only be charged for the cost of
|
||
copying records. No fees may be charged for the time it takes to search
|
||
for records or for the time it takes to review the records to determine
|
||
if any exemptions apply. This is a major difference from the FOIA.
|
||
Under the FOIA, fees can sometimes be charged to recover search costs
|
||
and review costs. The different fee structure in the two laws is one
|
||
reason many requesters seeking records about themselves cite both laws.
|
||
This minimizes allowable fees. An individual seeking records about
|
||
himself or herself under the FOIA should not be charged review charges.
|
||
The only charges applicable under the FOIA are search and copy charges.
|
||
|
||
Many agencies will not charge fees for making a copy of a Privacy
|
||
Act file, especially when the file is small. If paying the copying
|
||
charges is a problem, the requester should explain in the request
|
||
letter. An agency can waive fees under the Privacy Act.
|
||
|
||
F. Requirements for agency responses
|
||
|
||
Unlike the FOIA, there is no fixed time when an agency must respond
|
||
to a request for access to records under the Privacy Act. It is good
|
||
practice for an agency to acknowledge receipt of a Privacy Act
|
||
request within ten days and to provide the requested records within
|
||
thirty days.
|
||
|
||
At many agencies, FOIA and Privacy Act requests are processed by
|
||
the same personnel. When there is a backlog of requests, it takes
|
||
longer to receive a response. As a practical matter, there is little
|
||
that a requester can do when an agency response is delayed. Requesters
|
||
should be patient.
|
||
|
||
Agencies generally process requests in the order in which they were
|
||
received. Some agencies will expedite the processing of urgent
|
||
requests. Anyone with a pressing need for records should consult with
|
||
the agency Privacy Act officer about how to ask for expedited
|
||
treatment of requests.
|
||
|
||
G. Reasons access may be denied under the Privacy Act
|
||
|
||
Not all records about an individual must be disclosed under the
|
||
Privacy Act. Some records may be withheld to protect important
|
||
government interests such as national security or law enforcement.
|
||
|
||
The Privacy Act exemptions are different than the exemptions of
|
||
the FOIA. Under the FOIA, any record may be withheld from disclosure if
|
||
it contains exempt information when a request is received. The decision
|
||
to apply an FOIA exemption is made only after a request has been made.
|
||
In contrast, Privacy Act exemptions apply not to a record but to a
|
||
system of records. Before an agency can apply a Privacy Act
|
||
exemption, the agency must first issue a regulation stating that there
|
||
may be exempt records in that system of records.
|
||
|
||
Without reviewing system notices or agency regulations, it is hard
|
||
to tell whether particular Privacy Act records are exempt from
|
||
disclosure. However, it is a safe assumption that any system of
|
||
records that qualifies for an exemption has been exempted by the
|
||
agency.
|
||
|
||
Since most record systems are not exempt, the exemptions are not
|
||
relevant to most requests. Also, agencies do not always rely upon
|
||
available Privacy Act exemptions unless there is a specific reason to
|
||
do so. Thus, some records that could be withheld will nevertheless be
|
||
disclosed upon request.
|
||
|
||
Because Privacy Act exemptions are complex and used infrequently,
|
||
most requesters need not worry about them. The exemptions are discussed
|
||
here for those interested in the Acts details and for reference when an
|
||
agency withholds records. Anyone needing more information about the
|
||
Privacy Acts exemptions can begin by reading the relevant sections of
|
||
the Act. The complete text of the Act is reprinted in an appendix to
|
||
this guide. In 1975, the Office of Management and Budget issued
|
||
guidance to federal agencies on the Privacy Act of 1974. Those
|
||
guidelines are a good source of commentary and explanation for many of
|
||
the provisions of the Act. The OMB guidelines can be found at 40
|
||
Federal Register 28948 (July 9, 1975).
|
||
|
||
The Privacy Acts exemptions differ from those of the FOIA in
|
||
another important way. The FOIA is mostly a disclosure law. Information
|
||
exempt under the FOIA is exempt from disclosure only. The Privacy
|
||
Act, however, imposes many separate requirements on personal records.
|
||
Some systems of records are exempt from the disclosure requirements,
|
||
but no system is exempt from all Privacy Act requirements.
|
||
|
||
For example, no system of records is ever exempt from the
|
||
requirement that a description of the system be published. No system of
|
||
records can be exempted from the limitations on disclosure of the
|
||
records outside of the agency. No system is exempt from the requirement
|
||
to maintain an accounting for disclosures. No system is exempt from the
|
||
restriction against the maintenance of unauthorized information on the
|
||
exercise of First Amendment rights. All systems are subject to the
|
||
requirement that reasonable efforts be taken to assure that records
|
||
disclosed outside the agency be accurate, complete, timely, and
|
||
relevant. Each agency must maintain proper administrative controls and
|
||
security for all systems. Finally, the Privacy Acts criminal
|
||
penalties remain fully applicable to each system of records.
|
||
|
||
1. General Exemptions
|
||
|
||
There are two general exemptions under the Privacy Act. The first
|
||
applies to all records maintained by the Central Intelligence Agency.
|
||
The second applies to selected records maintained by an agency or
|
||
component whose principal function is any activity pertaining to
|
||
criminal law enforcement. Records of criminal law enforcement agencies
|
||
can be exempt under the Privacy Act if the records consist of (A)
|
||
information compiled to identify individual criminal offenders and
|
||
which consists only of identifying data and notations of arrests, the
|
||
nature and disposition of criminal charges, sentencing, confinement,
|
||
release, and parole and probation status; (B) criminal investigatory
|
||
records associated with an identifiable individual; or (C) reports
|
||
identifiable to a particular individual compiled at any stage from
|
||
arrest through release from supervision.
|
||
|
||
Systems of records subject to the general exemptions may be exempted
|
||
from many of the Privacy Acts requirements. Exemption from the Acts
|
||
access and correction provisions is the most important. An individual
|
||
has no right under the Privacy Act to ask for a copy of or to seek
|
||
correction of a record subject to the general exemptions.
|
||
|
||
In practice, these exemptions are not as expansive as they sound.
|
||
Most agencies that have exempt records will accept and process Privacy
|
||
Act requests. The records will be reviewed on a case-by-case basis.
|
||
Agencies will often disclose any information that does not require
|
||
protection. Agencies also tend to follow a similar policy for requests
|
||
for correction.
|
||
|
||
Individuals interested in obtaining records from the Central
|
||
Intelligence Agency or from law enforcement agencies should not be
|
||
discouraged from making requests for access. Even if the Privacy Act
|
||
access exemption is applied, portions of the record may still be
|
||
disclosable under the FOIA. This is a primary reason individuals
|
||
should cite both the Privacy Act and the FOIA when requesting
|
||
records.
|
||
|
||
The general exemption from access does prevent requesters from
|
||
filing a lawsuit under the Privacy Act when access is denied. The
|
||
right to sue under the FOIA is not changed because of a Privacy Act
|
||
exemption.
|
||
|
||
2. Specific Exemptions
|
||
|
||
There are seven specific Privacy Act exemptions that can be
|
||
applied to systems of records. Records subject to these exemptions are
|
||
not exempt from as many of the Acts requirements as are the records
|
||
subject to the general exemptions. However, records exempt under the
|
||
specific exemptions are likely to be exempt from the Privacy Acts
|
||
access and correction provisions. Nevertheless, since the access and
|
||
correction exemptions are not always applied when available, those
|
||
seeking records should not be discouraged from making a request. Also,
|
||
the FOIA can be used to seek access to records exempt under the Privacy
|
||
Act.
|
||
|
||
The first specific exemption covers record systems containing
|
||
information properly classified in the interest of national defense or
|
||
foreign policy. Classified information is also exempt from disclosure
|
||
under the FOIA and will normally be unavailable under either the FOIA
|
||
and Privacy Acts.
|
||
|
||
The second specific exemption applies to systems of records
|
||
containing investigatory material compiled for law enforcement purposes
|
||
other than material covered by the general law enforcement exemption.
|
||
The specific law enforcement exemption is limited when as a result of
|
||
the maintenance of the records an individual is denied any right,
|
||
privilege, or benefit to which he or she would be entitled by federal
|
||
law or for which he or she would otherwise be entitled. In such a case,
|
||
disclosure is required except where disclosure would reveal the
|
||
identity of a confidential source who furnished information to the
|
||
government under an express promise that the identity of the source
|
||
would be held in confidence. If the information was collected from a
|
||
confidential source before the effective date of the Privacy Act
|
||
(September 27, 1975), an implied promise of confidentiality is
|
||
sufficient to permit withholding of the identity of the source. This
|
||
distinction between express and implied promises of confidentiality is
|
||
repeated throughout the specific exemptions of the Privacy Act.
|
||
|
||
The third specific exemption applies to systems of records
|
||
maintained in connection with providing protective services to the
|
||
President of the United States or other individuals who receive
|
||
protection from the Secret Service.
|
||
|
||
The fourth specific exemption applies to systems of records required
|
||
by statute to be maintained and used solely as statistical records.
|
||
|
||
The fifth specific exemption covers investigatory material compiled
|
||
solely to determine suitability, eligibility, or qualifications for
|
||
federal civilian employment, military service, federal contracts, or
|
||
access to classified information. However, this exemption applies only
|
||
to the extent that disclosure of information would reveal the identity
|
||
of a confidential source who provided the information under a promise
|
||
of confidentiality.
|
||
|
||
The sixth specific exemption applies to systems of records that
|
||
contain testing or examination material used solely to determine
|
||
individual qualifications for appointment or promotion in federal
|
||
service, but only when disclosure would compromise the objectivity or
|
||
fairness of the testing or examination process. Effectively, this
|
||
exemption permits withholding of questions used in employment tests.
|
||
|
||
The seventh specific exemption covers evaluation material used to
|
||
determine potential for promotion in the armed services. The material
|
||
is only exempt to the extent that disclosure would reveal the identity
|
||
of a confidential source who provided the information under a promise
|
||
of confidentiality.
|
||
|
||
3. Medical Records
|
||
|
||
Medical records maintained by federal agencies for example, records
|
||
at Veterans Administration hospitals are not formally exempt from the
|
||
Privacy Acts access provisions. However, the Privacy Act authorizes a
|
||
special procedure for medical records that operates, at least in part,
|
||
like an exemption.
|
||
|
||
Agencies may deny individuals direct access to medical records,
|
||
including psychological records, if the agency deems it necessary. An
|
||
agency normally reviews medical records requested by an individual. If
|
||
the agency determines that direct disclosure is unwise, it can arrange
|
||
for disclosure to a physician selected by the individual or possibly to
|
||
another person chosen by the individual.
|
||
|
||
4. Litigation Records
|
||
|
||
The Privacy Acts access provisions include a general limitation on
|
||
access to litigation records. The Act does not require an agency to
|
||
disclose to an individual any information compiled in reasonable
|
||
anticipation of a civil action or proceeding. This limitation operates
|
||
like an exemption, although there is no requirement that the exemption
|
||
be applied by regulation to a system of records before it can be used.
|
||
|
||
H. Administrative appeal procedures for denial of access
|
||
|
||
Unlike the FOIA, the Privacy Act does not provide for an
|
||
administrative appeal of the denial of access. However, many agencies
|
||
have established procedures that will allow Privacy Act requesters to
|
||
appeal a denial of access without going to court. An administrative
|
||
appeal is often allowed under the Privacy Act, even though it is not
|
||
required, because many individuals cite both the FOIA and Privacy Act
|
||
when making a request. The FOIA provides specifically for an
|
||
administrative appeal, and agencies are required to consider an appeal
|
||
under the FOIA.
|
||
|
||
When a Privacy Act request for access is denied, agencies usually
|
||
inform the requester of any appeal rights that are available. If no
|
||
information on appeal rights is included in the denial letter, the
|
||
requester should ask the Privacy Act Officer. Unless an agency has
|
||
established an alternative procedure, it is possible that an appeal
|
||
filed directly with the head of the agency will be considered by the
|
||
agency.
|
||
|
||
When a request for access is denied under the Privacy Act, the
|
||
agency explains the reason for the denial. The explanation must name
|
||
the system of records and explain which exemption is applicable to the
|
||
system. An appeal may be made on the basis that the record is not
|
||
exempt, that the system of records has not been properly exempted, or
|
||
that the record is exempt but no harm to an important interest will
|
||
result if the record is disclosed.
|
||
|
||
There are three basic elements to a Privacy Act appeal letter.
|
||
First, the letter should state that the appeal is being made under the
|
||
Privacy Act of 1974. If the FOIA was cited when the request for access
|
||
was made, the letter should state that the appeal is also being made
|
||
under the FOIA. This is important because the FOIA grants requesters
|
||
statutory appeal rights.
|
||
|
||
Second, a Privacy Act appeal letter should identify the denial
|
||
that is being appealed and the records that were withheld. The appeal
|
||
letter should also explain why the denial of access was improper or
|
||
unnecessary.
|
||
|
||
Third, the appeal should include the requesters name and address. It
|
||
is a good practice for a requester to also include a telephone number
|
||
when making an appeal.
|
||
|
||
Appendix 1 includes a sample letter of appeal.
|
||
|
||
I. Amending records under the privacy act
|
||
|
||
The Privacy Act grants an important right in addition to the
|
||
ability to inspect records. The Act permits an individual to request a
|
||
correction of a record that is not accurate, relevant, timely, or
|
||
complete. This remedy allows an individual to correct errors and to
|
||
prevent incorrect information from being disseminated by the agency or
|
||
used unfairly against the individual.
|
||
|
||
The right to seek a correction extends only to records subject to
|
||
the Privacy Act. Also, an individual can only correct errors contained
|
||
in a record that pertains to himself or herself. Records disclosed
|
||
under the FOIA cannot be amended through the Privacy Act unless the
|
||
records are also subject to the Privacy Act. Records about unrelated
|
||
events or about other people cannot be amended unless the records are
|
||
in a Privacy Act file maintained under the name of the individual who
|
||
is seeking to make the correction.
|
||
|
||
A request to amend a record should be in writing. Agency regulations
|
||
explain the procedure in greater detail, but the process is not
|
||
complicated. A letter requesting an amendment of a record will normally
|
||
be addressed to the Privacy Act officer of the agency or to the agency
|
||
official responsible for the maintenance of the record system
|
||
containing the erroneous information. The envelope containing the
|
||
request should be marked " Privacy Act Amendment Request" on the lower
|
||
left corner.
|
||
|
||
There are five basic elements to a request for amending a Privacy
|
||
Act record.
|
||
|
||
First, the letter should state that it is a request to amend a
|
||
record under the Privacy Act of 1974.
|
||
|
||
Second, the request should identify the specific record and the
|
||
specific information in the record for which an amendment is being
|
||
sought.
|
||
|
||
Third, the request should state why the information is not accurate,
|
||
relevant, timely, or complete. Supporting evidence may be included with
|
||
the request.
|
||
|
||
Fourth, the request should state what new or additional information,
|
||
if any, should be included in place of the erroneous information.
|
||
Evidence of the validity of the new or additional information should be
|
||
included. If the information in the file is wrong and needs to be
|
||
removed rather than supplemented or corrected, the request should make
|
||
this clear.
|
||
|
||
Fifth, the request should include the name and address of the
|
||
requester. It is a good idea for a requester to include a telephone
|
||
number.
|
||
|
||
Appendix 1 includes a sample letter requesting amendment of a
|
||
Privacy Act record.
|
||
|
||
J. Appeals and Requirements For Agency Responses
|
||
|
||
An agency that receives a request for amendment under the Privacy
|
||
Act must acknowledge receipt of the request within ten days (not
|
||
including Saturdays, Sundays, and legal holidays). The agency must
|
||
promptly rule on the request.
|
||
|
||
The agency may make the amendment requested. If so, the agency must
|
||
notify any person or agency to which the record had previously been
|
||
disclosed of the correction.
|
||
|
||
If the agency refuses to make the change requested, the agency must
|
||
inform the requester of: (1) the agency's refusal to amend the record;
|
||
(2) the reason for refusing to amend the request; and (3) the
|
||
procedures for requesting a review of the denial. The agency must
|
||
provide the name and business address of the official responsible for
|
||
conducting the review.
|
||
|
||
An agency must decide an appeal of a denial of a request for
|
||
amendment within thirty days (excluding Saturdays, Sundays, and legal
|
||
holidays), unless the time period is extended by the agency for good
|
||
cause. If the appeal is granted, the record will be corrected.
|
||
|
||
If the appeal is denied, the agency must inform the requester of the
|
||
right to judicial review. In addition, a requester whose appeal has
|
||
been denied also has the right to place in the agency file a concise
|
||
statement of disagreement with the information that was the subject of
|
||
the request for amendment.
|
||
|
||
When a statement of disagreement has been filed and an agency is
|
||
disclosing the disputed information, the agency must mark the
|
||
information and provide copies of the statement of disagreement. The
|
||
agency may also include a concise statement of its reasons for not
|
||
making the requested amendments. The agency must also give a copy of
|
||
the statement of disagreement to any person or agency to whom the
|
||
record had previously been disclosed.
|
||
|
||
K. Filing a Judicial Appeal
|
||
|
||
The Privacy Act provides a civil remedy whenever an agency denies
|
||
access to a record or refuses to amend a record. An individual may sue
|
||
an agency if the agency fails to maintain records with accuracy,
|
||
relevance, timeliness, and completeness as is necessary to assure
|
||
fairness in any agency determination and the agency makes a
|
||
determination that is adverse to the individual. An individual may also
|
||
sue an agency if the agency fails to comply with any other
|
||
Privacy Act provision in a manner that has an adverse effect on the
|
||
individual.
|
||
|
||
The Privacy Act protects a wide range of rights about personal
|
||
records maintained by federal agencies. The most important are the
|
||
right to inspect records and the right to seek correction of records.
|
||
Other rights have also been mentioned here, and still others can be
|
||
found in the text of the Act. Most of these rights can become the
|
||
subject of litigation.
|
||
|
||
An individual may file a lawsuit against an agency in the federal
|
||
district court in which the individual lives, in which the records are
|
||
situated, or in the District of Columbia. A lawsuit must be filed
|
||
within two years from the date on which the basis for the lawsuit
|
||
arose.
|
||
|
||
Most individuals require the assistance of an attorney to file a
|
||
judicial appeal. An individual who files a lawsuit and substantially
|
||
prevails may be awarded reasonable attorney fees and litigation costs
|
||
reasonably incurred. Some requesters may be able to handle their own
|
||
appeal without an attorney. Since this is not a litigation guide,
|
||
details about the judicial appeal process have not been included.
|
||
Anyone considering filing an appeal can begin by reviewing the
|
||
provisions of the Privacy Act on civil remedies. See note 20.
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|