FOIA News: Independent assessment finds federal agency release rate for FOIA much lower than claimed
Independent assessment finds federal agency release rate for FOIA much lower than claimed
By Tom Susman, Sunlight Foundation, August 26, 2016
On a few occasions in the past couple of months, I have heard the refrain repeated that the Obama administration has a 91 percent disclosure rate for responses under the Freedom of Information Act. Melanie Pustay, the director of the Office of Information Policy at the Justice Department, used that figure at a Columbia conference in New York in June. Shaun Donovan, the director of the White House Office of Management and Budget, recited it at the FOIA Advisory Committee meeting last month.
I was curious about that percentage since it sounded extremely – actually unbelievably – high to me. Professor Peter Strauss also questioned the number during the Columbia conference. I asked a colleague who is adept at data crunching to go on FOIA.gov and see if he could figure out how you reached that number. He was able to identify the relevant FOIA data and incorporated it into the spreadsheet below.
If you include full and partial releases as constituting the total release rate, the ratio for all agencies in FY 2015 is 90.6 percent. That is likely where you are getting the 91 percent figure. That total release rate is not included as part of the FOIA data, but it has been added to the spreadsheet as the last column (highlighted in blue) by adding the released in full and released in part ratios.
If you look at the rates separately, for all agencies in FY 2015, the released in full ratio is 51.84 percent and the released in part ratio is 38.76 percent. We’ve inserted those numbers at the bottom of the spreadsheet where the total numbers for all agencies are calculated.
Read more here.