I will begin by briefly outlining the main features of the FOI Act since some of you may be unfamiliar with this new piece of legislation. I will then go on to consider the role of the public interest in the framework of the Act before discussing the considerations which should be taken into account in determining where the public interest lies.
I Main features of the FOI Act:
The Act is made up of 5 main elements:
1. Right of access to records.
The Act provides a right of access to any record held by or under the control of a public body. This right marks a departure from the traditional approach to disclosure of official documents in two main ways. First, the provision of access to official records is no longer at the discretion of the holder of those records and secondly, there is no requirement that an individual seeking access to records under the FOI Act should have to establish any particular interest or reason for obtaining access to the records sought.
The right of access is not, however, absolute. It is restricted both in terms of limitations on the scope of the Act, and by the fact that the right of access is made subject to a number of exclusions and exemptions.
(a) Scope
The scope of the Act is limited in two main respects. First, not all bodies which hold official records are covered by the legislation. The Act covers central government departments as well as a range of central government bodies which are listed in the First Schedule. Health Boards and Local Authorities must be brought within the scope of the Act within eighteen months of its passing of the Act i.e by the 21st October. The Garda Síochána are a notable exclusion from the Act, but there is provision for their inclusion by means of regulation. The Minister for Finance has the power to bring a range of other bodies within the purview of the Act, again by means of regulation.
The second limitation on the scope of the Act concerns the issue of retrospective effect. The Act applies only to records created after its coming into operation (i.e. after 21st April 1998) except where the records sought relate to personal information of the requester or where the granting of access to prior records would be necessary or expedient "in order to understand" records originating after the commencement of the Act.
(b) Exclusions and Exemptions
The other main restriction on the right of access to records conferred by the Act are the exclusions and exemption provisions. Some records are excluded entirely from the application of the Act, while others may be exempted in certain circumstances. The excluded records include such records as those which are otherwise available to the public. The exemption provisions are aimed at balancing the right to freedom of information against other legitimate interests. They encompass both interests based on the common good such as those of preserving the security of the state or maintaining law enforcement, and more individualistic interests such as those of privacy and confidentiality. In all twelve grounds for exemption are set out in the Act. They are in respect of: meetings of the government; deliberations of public bodies; functions and negotiations of public bodies; parliamentary, court and certain other matters, law enforcement and public safety; security, defence and international relations; information obtained in confidence; commercially sensitive information; personal information; research and natural resources; financial and economic interests of the State and public bodies; and enactments relating to non-disclosure of records.
2. Publication of Information
Section 15 requires the publication by public bodies of a reference book setting out details of the structure, organisation and functions of the public body, and of the services it provides. It also requires publication of information on the classes of records held by the public body and of details of arrangements for obtaining access to those records and for having amendments made to personal records in its custody. Information on the body's appeals mechanisms must also be included. Section 16 requires the publication of what is often referred to as the "internal law" of the public body, in other words the rules, guidelines, precedents and the like used by the body in making decision or recommendations under schemes administered by that body.
3. Amendment of Personal Information
The Act provides a mechanism whereby public bodies, who are in possession of personal information, can be required to amend that information where it is incomplete, incorrect or misleading. The provisions apply to all information held by a public body regardless of how access to it has been obtained. The type of amendments provided for are: the alteration of the record to make the information complete, correct or not misleading; the addition to the record of a note specifying the respects in which the public body is satisfied that the information is incomplete, incorrect or misleading; or the deletion of the information. There is also provision for the annotation of records where applications for amendment are unsuccessful. Reasonable steps must be taken to notify those to whom the affected record was given in the previous 12 months of any amendments.
4. Right to reasons for administrative decisions
The FOI Act confers on individuals the right to a written statement of reasons and findings of fact in respect of any act of a public body concerning that individual, provided the individual has a material interest in a matter affected by the act.
5. Enforcement
Decisions on FOI requests are made by the head of the public body to whom the request has been directed or by a person to whom this function has been delegated. Where a requester is unhappy with a decision on access there is provision for an appeal to be made against the original decision. This is provided for, in the first instance, by means of internal review. The establishment of the independent office of Information Commissioner is provided for in the Act. Decisions made on internal review can be appealed to the Information Commissioner who has the power to issue legally binding decisions.
II The FOI Act and the Public interest
The concept of the public interest plays an important role in the overall scheme of the Irish FOI Act. Indeed it can be argued that there is greater reliance on public interest tests in the Irish Act than in FOI legislation of other jurisdictions.
It is in the exemption provisions that the use of public interest tests is at its most prominent. Roughly half of the exemptions incorporate a public interest test. These public interest provisions allow the head of a public body or the Information Commissioner on appeal, to release records which would otherwise be exempt.
The following exemptions are subject to such a test: deliberation of public bodies (s.20); functions and negotiations of public bodies (section 21); information obtained in confidence (section 26); commercially sensitive information (section 27), research and natural resources (section 30) and financial and economic interests of the State and public bodies (section 31). A public interest test partly restricts the operation of the exemption concerning law enforcement and public safety (section 23(3)), that is to say, that while the withholding of the bulk of records relating to law enforcement and public safety is not subject to a public interest test, certain types of law enforcement and public safety records are subject to the operation of such a test.
The public interest test in incorporated into most of the exemption
provisions takes the form of providing that the exemption shall not apply
where
"in the opinion of the head [of the public body] concerned, the public interest would, on balance, be better served by granting than by refusing to grant the request."III The meaning of the "public interest"
Although it is a concept of central importance to the operation of Act, the "public interest" is not defined in the Act. The notion of "public interest" is one which is notoriously vague. Its has not yet been subjected to detailed examination by the Information Commissioner but it is doubtless one of the more difficult issues he, and indeed the heads of the public bodies, will have to grapple with in implementing the Act. While there is some variation in the form of public interest test employed in the Act, it is nonetheless clear in all cases that it involves a balancing exercise in which factors favouring disclosure must be weighed against arguments for withholding the information sought. Given the tradition of secrecy in government in Ireland it is to be expected that decision makers will have little difficulty in identifying factors which militate against the disclosure of requested information. In providing for a balancing process, the Act requires them to devote the same energy to identifying arguments favouring disclosure.
The exercise of identifying the various factors weighing in favour of or against disclosure will often be relatively straightforward. Public interest factors in favour of disclosure could, for example, include the following:
"enable members of the public to obtain access, to the greatest extent possible consistent with the public interest and the right to privacy, to information in the possession of public bodies"[emphasis added].Further light was shed on the purpose of the Act by the Minister of State responsible for the introduction of the FOI Bill, Ms Eithne Fitzgerald when she said:
"Our purpose is to ensure that we adopt the most effective mechanism for ensuring that the culture and practices of secrecy in public bodies are set aside for good ... Freedom of Information overturns the presumption of official secrecy set out in the Official Secrets Act 1963, and replaces it with the legal presumption that the public has a right to know."1These statements provide a strong basis for asserting that the public interest considerations in the Act must be interpreted in a way which leans in favour of disclosure.
Determinations of where the public interest lies in both these related
areas of law may help to set the parameters for the public interest in
FOI cases. While these cases may be useful in sketching the parameters
of the public interest in accessing official information, it must be borne
in mind that executive privilege and the law of confidence cannot be equated
with Freedom of Information legislation. There are important differences
between them which may affect the applicability of the case law to FOI
cases. In particular, the purposes of the FOI Act provide a strong statement
of the need for greater openness of official information, a factor which
does not come into play in the case law relating to executive privilege
or the law of confidence.
Those engaged in decision-making with respect to the public interest must look beyond the exercise of weighing the advantages of disclosure against its disadvantages. Existing case law in cognate areas and overseas FOI decisions can be useful in determining where the public interest lies in a particular case. However the overriding concern of decision makers must be to ensure that determinations of where the public interest lies in a particular case must take of the purpose of the Act as well as constitutional imperatives.
Endnote:
1 149 Seanad Debates Cols.1249- 1250 (Second Stage).