freedominfo.org - Update, August 6, 2007 

U. S. Congress Passes Freedom of Information Act Reform Bill 

http://www.freedominfo.org 

Washington, DC, August 6, 2007 - The United States Senate Friday joined the 
House of Representatives in passing bipartisan 
legislation that will fix several of the most glaring problems with the U.S. 
Freedom of Information Act. The OPEN 
Government Act of 2007, authored by Senator Patrick Leahy (D-Vt) and Senator 
John Cornyn (R-Tx), overcame a hold 
placed by Senator Jon Kyl (R-Az) on behalf of the U.S. Department of Justice.  
It passed late Friday evening by unanimous 
consent on the last day of the Congressional session before the August recess. 

After a conference to reconcile provisions between the House and Senate 
versions, the new law will implement several 
important reforms to the 41-year-old Freedom of Information Act. In particular, 
the bill will create new incentives for 
agencies to process FOIA requests in a timely manner and to avoid litigation. 
For the first time, federal agencies in the 
United States will be subject to a penalty if they delay in complying with FOIA 
requests: if the agency fails to respond to a 
request within the 20-day time period set forth in the statute, the agency will 
not be permitted to collect processing fees for 
that particular request. 

Also under the new language, a requester can obtain attorneys' fees when he or 
she is forced to file a lawsuit to make the 
government to release records, even when the government provides the records 
before the court orders them to do so. 
However, this provision would not allow the requester to recover attorneys' 
fees if the requester's claim lacks merit. 

The amendments also mandate several specific improvements to agency processing 
of FOIA requests, including requiring 
agencies to assign tracking numbers for FOIA requests that take longer than 10 
days to process so they will no longer fall 
through the cracks. In addition, agencies will have to report more accurately 
to Congress on their FOIA programs. 

Finally, the U.S. FOIA process will now look more like that of Mexico and other 
countries that provide individuals with an 
alternative to litigation in the event of disputes with government agencies 
over information requests. The OPEN Government 
Act will create a new ombuds office at the National Archives and Records 
Administration (to be named the Office of 
Government Information Services) to mediate conflicts between agencies and 
requesters and review FOIA compliance at all 
federal agencies. 

"These are commonsense reforms that will finally force agencies to fix 
egregious backlogs and reporting problems," said 
National Security Archive staff counsel Kristin Adair. "But, remarkably, it 
took several congressional terms to get these 
straightforward adjustments into the law, with obstruction from the executive 
branch all along the way, including, ironically, a 
secret hold by a Senator acting at the behest of the Department of Justice." 

Similar legislation passed the U.S. House of Representatives overwhelmingly 
during Sunshine Week in March 2007, but 
progress on the Senate bill has been halted for months by a hold placed by 
Senator Kyl on behalf of the Department of 
Justice. Despite strong opposition by the Department of Justice, the OPEN 
Government Act of 2007 was supported by more 
than 115 organizations, including public interest and media groups as well as 
business and political organizations spanning the 
political spectrum. After multiple editorials, including several in Senator 
Kyl's homestate Arizona Republic, assailed Kyl's 
position and nicknamed him "the Secrecy Senator," Kyl's staff negotiated new 
compromise language and finally allowed the 
bill to come up for a vote in the Senate. 

"This is a small step for open government, but a giant leap for the United 
States Senate," said Tom Blanton, director of the 
National Security Archive. "We applaud Congress' action to fulfill the intent 
of the Freedom of Information Act. This 
legislation will correct many of the deficiencies in FOIA that the Archive's 
audits have revealed." 

Part of the impetus for these important FOIA reforms was several audits of 
federal government FOIA practice, conducted by 
the National Security Archive and supported by the John S. and James L. Knight 
Foundation. The most recent Knight Open 
Government Survey report, released by the Archive in July 2007, found that the 
oldest still-pending FOIA requests had 
languished in federal agencies for as long as 20 years. The previous Knight 
Open Government Survey, released in March 
2007, found that only one out of five federal agencies had complied fully with 
the last FOIA reform legislation, the Electronic 
FOIA Amendments passed in 1996, intended to post so much government information 
on the Web that many FOIA requests 
would become unnecessary. 

Go to http://www.freedominfo.org to read this and other news stories about 
information advocacy around the world. 

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