FOI Act Summary
Freedom of Information Overview
The Freedom of Information Act 2000, provides a general right of access to information held by Public Authorities (PA). Anyone can request information from a PA and has the right to be told:
- Whether the PA holds the information, and
- If it does, to be provided with the information
Key points :
- Anyone is entitled to make an FOI request for any information held by a public authority (PA)
- Requests must be in writing, including email or FAX and can be given to any member of staff
- Requests need not mention FOI and the PA cannot ask "Why?" the request is being made
- Information is anything held in a recorded form, e.g. paper files, loose papers, emails, electronic documents, photos, plans, maps, CCTV, videotapes, audiotapes, voice mails.
- Requests should be dealt with promptly and the PA should provide the information within 20 working days
- Requests are free if they cost less than £450 worth of effort. But disbursements (copying, postage etc) can be charged
- Above £450 pounds, the PA can decline the request
- There are exemptions, e.g. personal data is covered by the Data Protection Act.
- Environmental information is covered by separate legislation. This is similar to FOI but only applies to information about land, air, atmosphere, water etc
- In some cases the PA has to decide if it is in the public interest to disclose information even if there is an exemption
- If a PA is required to disclose information that might affect the rights and interests of third parties, consultation should take place with them first
- A PA must manage information properly and preserve all important records
- A PA must maintain a "Publication Scheme" which contains information routinely available without needing a formal FOI request
Downloads
See Also
Useful Websites
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Contacts
Freedom of Information
foi@hart.gov.uk
Tel: 01252 774156
foi@hart.gov.uk
Tel: 01252 774156

