Coalition of Journalists for Open Government Part 1 an Opportunity Lost Re Foia Report Jul 2008
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An Opportunity Lost Part I An in-depth analysis of FOIA performance from 1998 to 2007 July 3, 2008 COALITION OF JOURNALISTS FOR OPEN GOVERNMENT COALITION OF JOURNALISTS FOR OPEN GOVERNMENT 1101 Wilson Blvd, Suite 1100, Arlington, VA. 22209 703-807-2100 7/3/08 An Opportunity Lost A just completed study by the Coalition of Journalists for Open Government shows that federal departments and agencies have made little if any progress in responding to Freedom of Information Act requests, despite a two-year-old presidential order to improve service. The CJOG findings are in stark contrast to a bullish Justice Department report made public in mid-June that claims “remarkable improvements.” The CJOG review of performance reports shows agencies did cut their record backlog but more because of a steep decline in requests than stepped up processing of requests. It also indicated scant improvement and some regression in traditional measures of response, including the amount of time requesters have to wait for an answer and whether a request or an appeal is granted. The Justice Department based its assessment primarily on progress agencies made toward selfestablished process goals. The CJOG study, using reporting requirements mandated by Congress, assessed actual performance in responding to FOIA requests. The CJOG study looked at 25 departments and agencies that handle the bulk of the third-party information requests. It looked at but did not incorporate a comparative analysis of the performance of four agencies, including the Department of Veterans Affairs and the Social Security Administration, that include large numbers of first person Privacy Act requests in their FOIA reporting. These requests are quickly and routinely handled and their inclusion would skew a meaningful analysis of FOIA response issues. Here’s what the CJOG review found: • The 25 agencies blew an opportunity to make a significant dent in their huge backlog of requests. Those agencies received the fewest requests since reporting began in 1998 — 63,000 fewer than 2006. But they processed only 2,100 more requests than they did in 2006 when the backlog soared to a record 39%. • The backlog did fall to 33% of requests processed, primarily because of significant reductions at Homeland Security (97% to 62%), HUD (188% to 10%), and the Securities and Exchange Commission, (126 to 55%). Eleven agencies showed no improvement or greater backlogs. • Faced with a mandate to bring down the backlog and improve service, agencies cut FOIA personnel. The number of FOIA workers fell by 8%. Spending on FOIA processing was down 3% . • Agencies got even stingier in granting requests. Fewer people got all the information they sought than at any time since agency reporting began in 1998. The percent of requesters getting either a full or a partial grant fell to 60%, also a record low. • Those who did get information still had to endure lengthy delays. Fifteen of the agencies reported slower processing times than the year before in the handling of “Simple” requests and 13 showed slower times in dealing with “Complex” requests. And all 21 agencies that processed requests in the “Complex” category said they missed the 20-day statutory response deadline for at least half of the requests processed. • Those who file administrative appeals are usually out of luck. Even more so in 2007. However, a majority of the agencies did say “no” more quickly. In 2007, the percentage of appeals granted dropped to the lowest level in 10 years. Only 13% of those who appealed got any satisfaction. Of those who appealed, only 3% got all the records requested; another 10% received a partial grant. In its report, the Justice Department noted at one point that the executive order challenged agencies to deal with the severe backlog of unprocessed requests in a manner “consistent with available resources.” The CJOG study shows that FOIA spending at the 25 agencies studied fell by $7 million to $233.8 million and the agencies put 209 fewer people to work processing FOIA requests. A few agencies did manage to find additional resources, but most did what they did with less. For instance, Homeland Security, despite a 20% reduction in FOIA personnel, processed 23,000 more requests in 2007, a 21% increase. The rose-colored Justice report said in boldface that an increase in the number of “incoming requests” challenged agencies on backlog reduction, but that statement is dependent on counting the combination FOIA-Privacy Act requests made to Health and Human Services and the Social Security Administration by individuals seeking personal records. Those agencies have historically handled those requests quickly, with little or no backlog. The troubled agencies, whose performance prompted the executive order, experienced a significant drop in requests in 2007, a fact ignored by Justice. The 25 agencies in the CJOG study — all of the departments except HHS, plus 12 agencies handling at least 1,000 FOIA requests a year — experienced a 13 percent drop in requests, from 494,270 in 2006 o 431,170 last year. The Justice report also gives credit in some places where it isn’t due. In citing specific agencies for “improvements in the area of backlog reduction” it named Agriculture, Education, and Labor. Whatever gains they made, it wasn’t in actually reducing their percentage backlog. Indeed, Education and Labor showed both a numerical and percentage gain. The CJOG study, including a variety of tables showing both full 2007 results and comparisons by reporting categories, can be found at www.cjog.net. FOR ADDITIONAL INFORMATION, CONTACT: Pete Weitzel, Coordinator pweitzel@cjog.net Combined Agency Performance, 1998 to 2007 Requests Year Received Processed Grants Backlog Percent Full Partial Percent Denials Other * 1998 573,772 575,198 72,076 13% 290,915 66,302 69% 23,003 169,371 1999 602,138 589,643 81,215 14% 295,246 70,430 68% 19,402 188,718 2000 653,724 648,315 84,340 13% 331,814 72,418 67% 20,999 187,123 2001 545,720 537,630 95,280 18% 278,513 76,267 73% 13,093 118,810 2002 505,390 515,860 81,081 16% 272,765 86,353 70% 13,949 142,793 2003 532,570 531,688 83,393 16% 253,109 108,375 68% 13,154 157,019 2004 547,193 524,909 105,119 20% 234,438 116,544 67% 15,383 166,227 2005 525,247 480,306 149,262 31% 198,635 106,184 63% 11,435 156,443 2006 494,546 459,044 178,837 39% 187,954 106,197 64% 12,558 130,086 2007 431,170 460,665 149,890 33% 164,147 113,042 60% 14,365 163,442 Change 1998-2007 -142,308 -114,270 77,913 164% -159,653 41,188 -13% -9,694 -21,113 *Other Reasons for Non-Disclosure: A series of reasons unrelated to FOIA exemptions that explain why a request was denied, such as "no such record", "request withdrawn" and "not an agency record". Under a presidential directive to improve service to requesters, the 25 agencies surveyed processed 2,100 more requests in 2007, the first full fiscal year following the order. That was, however, still well below all other prior years. The slight processing gain and a 13% decrease in the number of requests received made possible a 6 percentage point reduction in the backlog to 33% of the requests processed. This, however, is still the second highest backlog on record and meant that one out of three requests was not processed in the year received. At the same time, agencies got stingier in granting information requests. Full grants hit a record low, both in raw numbers and as a percent of requests processed. Only 36% of the requesters received full grants in 2007 compared with 41% in 2006 and 56% in 1998. Partial grants were up slightly, but so were outright denials. Agency Backlog, 1998-2002-2006-2007 1998 Department/ Agency Agriculture Commerce Defense Education Energy Homeland Sec. HUD Interior Justice Labor State Transportation Treasury CIA CPSC EEOC EPA GSA Archives NASA NLRB NRC NSF SEC SBA Subtotal KEY: 2002 2006 2007 Percent Requests Processed Yearend Backlog Percent Requests Processed 88,204 1,506 2% 78,062 2,012 3% 2,283 157 7% 2,063 298 14% 106,191 10,240 10% 76,943 12,543 16% 1,679 137 8% 1,718 219 13% 2,314 741 32% 3,319 1027 31% Department of Homeland Security was established in 2003. 3,354 1,456 43% 4,171 671 16% 5,002 545 11% 4,378 902 21% 195,105 25,304 13% 184,928 32,545 18% 17,540 994 6% 18,201 809 4% 2,317 5,349 231% 4,636 5,343 115% 17,406 4,362 25% 17,540 3,885 22% 56,184 7,014 12% 47,812 7,681 16% 7,169 4,716 66% 3,046 1,547 51% 13,467 239 2% 9,636 166 2% 17,551 1,343 8% 16,735 1,701 10% 18,848 6,117 32% 19,259 4,567 24% NR NR 1,407 141 10% 5,930 1,111 19% 8,826 3,590 41% 2114 230 11% 1723 137 8% 6133 162 3% 5550 206 4% 448 53 12% 426 55 13% 213 15 7% 254 2 1% 3,190 114 4% 2,888 821 28% 2,293 72 3% 2,117 65 3% 59,065 1,987 72,266 1,904 3,861 111,943 2,631 5,086 54,925 23,608 3,866 8,758 39,518 2,579 4,728 16,936 12,685 1,454 8,884 1,132 5,553 364 340 8,268 6,245 1,868 309 18,216 539 910 108,472 4,941 1,481 8,004 906 3,799 2,197 3,924 896 84 1,779 1,973 79 7,193 241 269 36 5 10,403 46 3% 16% 25% 28% 24% 97% 188% 29% 15% 4% 98% 25% 10% 35% 2% 11% 16% 5% 81% 21% 5% 10% 1% 126% 1% 31,651 1,949 78,392 1,670 3,698 135,297 7,661 5,437 53,889 27,581 4,792 9,542 28,785 3,031 4,402 14,879 12,066 1,347 12,386 1,326 4,278 351 343 12,564 3,348 1,683 212 26,195 663 646 83,661 764 876 7,649 1,269 4,085 2,194 3,066 776 280 1,416 1,727 86 5,177 331 158 34 2 6,909 31 5% 11% 33% 40% 17% 62% 10% 16% 14% 5% 85% 23% 11% 26% 6% 10% 14% 6% 42% 25% 4% 10% 1% 55% 1% 574,935 458,586 178,570 39% 460,665 149,890 33% Requests Processed Yearend Backlog 71,977 Percent 13% Increase from prior period Requests Processed 515,638 Yearend Backlog 80,933 16% Yearend Backlog Percent NR=Not Reported The overall backlog improved to 33% in fiscal 2007, aided by a sharp falloff in requests received and significant processing increases in two agencies, Homeland Security and HUD. The combined backlog was cut by 24,500 requests as 14 of the 25 agencies reduced backlog. Homeland Security geared up for the more than 135,000 requests it received in 2006 and when the volume fell well below that, it was able to bring its backlog down to 62%. HUD nearly tripled its production and cut its backlog from 188% to 10% The next most improved was the SEC, which had a 126% backlog in 2006 but reduced that to 55% in 2007. The Wait for a Response to Simple, Complex and Expedited Requests in Median Days Department/ Agency Agriculture Commerce Defense Education Energy Homeland Sec. HUD Interior Justice Labor State Transportation Treasury CIA CPSC EEOC EPA GSA NARA NASA NLRB NRC NSF SEC SBA 1998 Simple Complex 2002 Expedited Simple Complex 131 268 12 2 \ 85 9 \ 905 10 30 5 12 45 16 39 2.5 20 58 13 30 3 5 \ 35 7 \ 180 NR 184 NR 75 238 Department of Homeland Security was established in 2003. 22 NR NR 15 \ 59 34\ 83 18 NR 4.5 10 \ 58 NR 1 \ 40 1 \ 292 1 \ 18 3 \ 49 13 \ 621 10 25 3 1 \ 25 7 \ 49 333 NR 85 351 431 14 40 9 8 39 14 22 20 4 \ 17 6 \ 383 NR 440 NR 7 83 7 30 NR 7 27 15.5 NR 4 19 NR 16 20 \ 27 7 17 \ 113 31 \ 123 NR NR NR NR 14 29 NR NR 7 20 17 27 20 19 29 10 NR NR 12 NR 15 15 NR 14 25 10 NR NR 10 NR 7 151 NR 16 137 12 NR 9 1 NR 2006 Expedited 3 \ 76 NR 1 2 \ 10 118 Simple Complex 2007 Expedited Simple Complex Expedited 5 \ 27 5 \ 33 1\ 190 2\ 28 225 29 2\5 NR NR 5 6 \ 75 NR NR 3 NR 23 NR 5 2 \ 100 12 17 15 \ 478 2 \ 108 2 \365 60 2 \ 89 1 \ 109 3 \ 30 54 1 \ 36 2 \ 24 7 6 19 15 \ 101 NR 5 5 \ 140 6 13 18 15 8 \ 912 45 5 \ 15 13 \ 279 34 \ 431 17 \ 232 145 4 \ 79 12 \ 510 4 \ 44 210 14 \ 142 3 \ 224 59 45 NR 40 \ 156 16 20 7 \ 91 NR 230 NR 706 2 \ 15 44 NR 1 \ 15 2\6 7 \ 233 9 \ 80 2 \ 28 3 \ 98 3 \ 19 232 9 \ 60 1\9 NR NR 4 8 \ 81 NR 21 1 \ 60 NR 7 NR NR 2 \ 45 13 11.5 11 \ 574 9 \ 132 2 \ 344 20 \ 45 1 \ 917 1 \ 131 3 \ 63 67 3 \ 56 2\35 8 10 18 13\49 0 9 21 6 11 20.8 67 8 \ 331 45 45.5 0 \ 578 0 \ 286 15 \262 30 \ 120 13 \ 169 5 \ 819 2 \ 65 212 20 \ 401 6 \ 977 56 40 NR 32 \ 141 25 1,603 38 NR 40 NR 705 3 \ 111 14 1 0 0*23 9 \ 549 9 \ 19 5 \ 20 2 \ 363 2 41 1 \ 184 0 0 0 8 38 \ 75 0 10 365 NR 0 NR 0 NR 7 NR NR 7 NR NR KEY: Missed Response Deadline NR=None Reported Note: Some agencies do not report agency-wide totals, instead showing only the median response time in days for each component. In those instances, we have recorded the range — the lowest and highest component times reported within the agency. We then used the highest median day response time as our indicator of compliance. None of the agencies that reported handling Complex requests met the 20-working day deadline. For Simple requests, 14 missed the deadline. In neither category was there an improvement from 2006. Eight of the agencies did reduce the median wait time in the handling of Complex requests but five of those appeared to do so at the expense of Simple request processing, which slipped. Overall, only 5 agencies improved their handling of Simple requests. Comparing Agency Grants of FOIA Requests, 1998-2002-2006-2007 Department/ Agency 1998 Granted in Full Partial Grant Percent Granted in Full 98% 70,965 Partial Grant Percent Granted in Full Partial Grant 2007 Percent Granted in Full Partial Grant Percent 84,144 94% 53,472 2,225 94% 27,046 1,793 91% Commerce Defense Education Energy Homeland Sec. HUD Interior Justice Labor State Transportation Treasury CIA CSPC EEOC EPA GSA NARA NASA NLRB NRC NSF SEC 1,332 240 69% 855 380 60% 65,164 9,998 71% 40,458 11,133 67% 1,144 319 87% 1,079 344 83% 1,183 355 66% 2,227 277 75% Department of Homeland Security was established in 2003. 2,631 313 88% 1,686 384 50% 3,225 647 77% 2,212 764 68% 65,135 31,036 49% 81,426 40,571 66% 5,556 2,179 44% 5,514 6,442 66% 650 572 53% 634 818 31% 8,918 2,047 63% 8,803 2,171 63% 34,054 5,604 71% 21,144 4,622 54% 3,188 1,652 68% 391 999 46% 12,586 470 97% 8561 531 94% 3,623 11,372 85% 1,335 11,853 79% 16,718 746 93% 9,080 603 50% NR 205 945 169 79% 5,423 157 94% 8,141 48 93% 1,156 534 80% 693 592 75% 5,342 180 90% 4304 455 86% 232 93 73% 175 110 67% 69 92 76% 51 157 82% 889 416 41% 522 333 30% 672 35,452 795 2,913 13,296 1,212 2,443 19,537 9,046 418 3,401 22,966 267 3,753 973 4,204 905 454 387 3,402 141 29 2,065 382 12,886 772 306 53,222 371 1,186 7,045 6,954 864 2,274 2,959 939 465 10,787 612 161 161 334 478 108 245 181 53% 67% 82% 83% 59% 60% 71% 48% 68% 33% 65% 66% 47% 89% 69% 38% 73% 7% 64% 70% 68% 81% 27% 769 37,642 639 2,909 13,608 2,171 2,578 22,036 12,617 437 3,135 15,238 344 3,467 800 4,613 929 863 408 3,201 147 39 5,691 395 12,691 583 278 62,832 719 949 6,562 6,608 929 2,236 2,950 1,100 379 9,643 624 125 339 380 387 98 255 187 60% 64% 73% 86% 56% 38% 65% 53% 70% 29% 56% 63% 48% 87% 70% 43% 78% 10% 59% 84% 70% 86% 47% All KEY: 2,339 2006 Agriculture SBA 1,908 2002 1,438 719 94% 1487 213 80% 5,678 202 94% 2,820 168 89% 323,800 71,854 69% 272,688 86,308 70% 187,881 106,119 64% 164,147 113,042 60% Average and Below NR= Not Reported In 2007, full grants awarded by agencies fell to a record low number, and were only half that in 1998, when reporting began. Partial grants did increase by 6% but this was not enough to offset the decline in full grants as Combined grants fell to 60% of the requests processed. Eleven of the 24 agencies granted fewer requests overall in 2007 than in 2006. FOIA Grants, Initial Requests and Appeals, 1998 to 2007 Initial Requests Percent Change 1998-2007 1998 1999 2000 2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 Requests Processed 574,935 589,387 648,087 537,423 515,638 531,448 524,697 480,109 458,586 460,665 -20% Full Grants 323,800 327,817 353,062 302,480 272,688 253,014 234,387 198,565 187,881 164,147 -42% 71,854 76,373 78,558 81,013 86,308 108,320 116,482 106,126 106,119 113,042 48% 395,654 404,190 431,620 383,493 358,996 361,334 350,869 304,691 294,000 277,189 -26% 69% 69% 67% 71% 70% 68% 67% 63% 64% 60% Partial Grants Total Full/Partial Percent Granted Appeals Appeals Processed 1998 1999 2000 2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 Percent Change 1998-2007 9,481 10,433 9,881 9,595 7,561 8,181 7,280 6,636 6,601 9,073 -4% 570 462 366 504 373 335 282 299 229 290 -49% Partial Grants 1,304 1,731 1,391 1,094 1,094 823 946 938 842 899 -31% Total Full/Partial 1,874 2,193 1,757 1,598 1,467 1,158 1,228 1,237 1,071 1,189 -37% Percent Granted 20% 21% 18% 17% 19% 14% 17% 19% 17% 13% Full Grants The number of requests processed annually declined by 114,270 over the 10 years. And the requests granted has fallen by an even greater number, 118,465, or 30%. The numbers also show the dramatic shift by agencies from full to partial grants of information, giving requesters increasingly less of the information sought. The trend began in the Bush administration's first full fiscal year, 2002. Between a slow down in processing and more restrictive grant policies, 159,653 fewer requesters got full grants in 2007 than in 1998, and 118,465 fewer got a grant of any kind. Also, fewer people were successful in their appeals, with the number receiving either a full or partial appeal grant falling by 37%. The Results of FOIA Appeals by Agency, 1998-2002-2006-2007 Department/ Agency Agriculture Commerce Defense Education Energy Homeland Sec. HUD Interior Justice Labor State Transportation Treasury CIA CPSC EEOC EPA GSA NARA NASA NLRB NRC NSF SEC SBA All KEY: 1998 Appeals Processed 2002 Percent Granted Appeals Processed 2006 Percent Granted 186 48% 164 56 41% 78 1,098 14% 928 15 20% 13 115 35% 71 Department of Homeland Security was established in 2003. 33 18% 58 209 62% 165 3,626 15% 3,491 458 32% 319 179 63% 184 334 20% 184 2,421 13% 1,010 195 20% 224 43 14% 12 326 46% 416 38 24% 105 17 41% 11 14 14% 19 24 29% 21 40 15% 43 17 35% 15 3 67% 7 28 11% 55 59% 24% 21% 15% 24% Appeals Processed 2007 Percent Granted Appeals Processed Percent Granted 14% 50% 8% 44% 68% 18% 19% 13% 0% 40% 16% 73% 37% 38% 28% 20% 14% 31% 165 84 747 29 50 950 35 167 1,970 303 138 136 360 203 29 321 202 27 13 13 23 11 7 334 40% 21% 18% 31% 16% 13% 14% 17% 4% 37% 42% 31% 14% 19% 17% 44% 26% 44% 23% 23% 22% 45% 14% 15% 125 59 1,046 41 51 1,188 43 284 4,255 389 110 160 332 216 19 291 127 18 47 29 25 7 4 207 42% 14% 17% 31% 25% 17% 16% 10% 4% 36% 74% 27% 14% 72% 5% 73% 37% 56% 49% 41% 24% 57% 100% 27% 30 53% 20 45% 33 27% 10 110% 9,505 20% 7,613 19% 6,350 17% 9,073 13% Average and Below "Percent Granted" includes both full and partial grants. While the 25 agencies as a whole reported a significant increase in the number of appeals processed, that combined shift was almost exclusively the result of the Justice Department playing catch-up from 2006. Overall, 12 of the 25 agencies processed fewer appeals than in 2006. The percent of full and partial appeals granted dropped to an all-time low of 13% of the appeals processed. Justice led the turndowns, granting only 4% of the more than 4,200 appeals it recorded. Use of Exemptions by 25 Agencies in Denying Requests, 1998 to 2007 Exemption Cited Year 1 3 6 7a 7e 7f 1998 4,643 9,808 25,696 12,211 341 28,717 14,671 5,044 2,111 24 7 1999 4,354 9,865 26,230 10,839 216 28,859 11,537 4,686 1,686 77 19 2000 4,612 11,188 61,623 17,026 136 51,866 13,388 11,015 2,157 5 8 2001 3,598 6,255 93,853 11,319 128 84,764 7,655 13,615 1,631 117 6 2002 2,446 8,586 187,803 16,916 135 196,528 11,773 16,446 1,686 89 5 2003 3,607 11,082 55,484 12,282 123 48,006 8,476 11,902 1,658 80 5 2004 3,416 8,135 60,318 10,119 883 55,374 8,351 12,835 2,016 108 188 2005 2,940 9,354 48,696 8,034 427 44,883 6,674 19,161 1,039 102 11 2006 4,299 9,974 54,689 6,424 272 68,549 7,395 28,173 966 119 39 2007 4,150 10,136 63,789 5,754 324 79,193 5,730 40,661 997 160 27 Total 38,065 94,383 678,181 110,924 2,985 686,739 95,650 163,538 15,947 881 315 Change 1998-2007 -11% 3% 148% -53% -5% 176% -61% 706% -53% 567% 286% The Nine Exemptions: 1: National Security 2: Internal Agency Rules 3: Statutory 4: Proprietary Information, Trade Secrets 5: Inter-Agency Memoranda 6: Personal Privacy 7: Law Enforcement Records 8: Ban Reports 9: Oil and Gas Well Data In memoranda in 2001 and 2002, former Attorney General Ashcroft and White House Chief of Staff Card told agencies to make greater use of Exemptions 2, 4 and 5 in handling "sensitive" information. The chart at right shows the increases in the use of each since 2001. The increases in the use of Exemptions 6 and 7c reflect the transfer of INS from the Justice Department to Homeland Security. 7b 7c 7d 8 9 Use of Exemptions in Denying Requests Year 2 Exemption Cited 4 5 All 1998 11,516 6,606 34,587 156,032 1999 7,839 5,880 27,735 139,725 2000 9,203 6,368 32,945 222,188 2001 12,005 4,987 18,578 258,511 2002 13,483 8,404 43,240 507,540 2003 10,385 9,254 37,127 209,472 2004 30,176 9,332 52,766 254,056 2005 41,211 9,185 55,205 246,884 2006 45,133 9,033 56,695 287,311 2007 56,341 10,136 67,561 344,663 Total 237,292 79,185 426,439 Change 1998-2007 389% 53% 95% 84% Other Reasons for Nondisclosure, 1998 to 2007 In reporting on the disposition of requests, agencies often cite "other" reasons to explain a non-disclosure decision that was not based on one of the exemptions. Here's a look at how often each of those reasons was cited by the 25 agencies. The most frequent reason cited is "no records" matching the request. Second is "referrals," meaning the request is sent to another agency and the process starts over. Reason Cited 1998 1999 2000 2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 No Records 59,022 50,537 57,966 59,890 52,054 63,794 69,964 70,786 67,946 63,836 Referrals 19,785 20,448 22,479 20,820 16,835 19,972 27,107 22,671 24,006 18,466 Request Withdrawn 9,880 9,536 8,692 8,578 14,225 10,347 9,021 8,819 9,520 11,055 Fee Related Reason 3,715 4,926 3,255 4,138 4,926 4,400 5,068 7,343 4,222 4,027 Not Reasonably Described 8,219 9,111 5,537 3,307 3,289 12,729 4,499 4,057 4,004 10,641 Not a Proper Request 15,945 16,700 15,612 21,122 23,101 16,188 21,760 20,958 9,593 11,549 Not an Agency Record 9,706 7,121 4,284 4,108 4,396 3,467 4,503 3,219 12,135 3,912 Duplicate Request 7,809 7,861 9,222 10,327 13,279 12,804 5,705 17,691 14,219 11,935 50,661 55,133 55,003 9,636 12,223 13,273 10,864 7,801 11,362 32,183 134,081 181,373 182,050 141,926 144,328 156,974 158,491 163,345 157,521 168,665 Other Total Year-to-Year Change in Other Reasons for Nondisclosure, 1998 to 2006 Reason Cited 1998-1999 1999-2000 2000-2001 2001-2002 2002-2003 2003-2004 2004-2005 2005-2006 2006-2007 1998-2007 -14% 15% 3% -13% 23% 10% 1% -4% -6% 8% 3% 10% -7% -19% 19% 36% -16% 6% -23% -7% Request Withdrawn -3% -9% -1% 66% -27% -13% -2% 8% 16% 12% Fee Related Reason 33% -34% 27% 19% -11% 15% 45% -43% -5% 8% Not Reasonably Described 11% -39% -40% -1% 287% -65% -10% -1% 166% 29% 5% -7% 35% 9% -30% 34% -4% -54% 20% -28% -27% -40% -4% 7% -21% 30% -29% 277% -68% -60% Duplicate Request 1% 17% 12% 29% -4% -55% 210% -20% -16% 53% Other 9% 0% -82% 27% 9% -18% -28% 46% 183% -36% 35% 0% -22% 2% 9% 1% 3% -4% 7% 26% No Records Referrals Not a Proper Request Not an Agency Record Total Comparing FOIA Processing Costs, Workforce and Efficiency, 2006 to2007 2006 Department/ Agency Agriculture Commerce Defense Education Energy Homeland Sec. HUD Interior Justice Labor State Transportation Treasury CIA CPSC EEOC EPA GSA NARA NASA NLRB NRC NSF SEC SBA Subtotal KEY: Processing Costs Requests Processed 2007 Cost per Request FTEs Requests per FTE Processing Costs Requests Processed Cost per Request FTEs Requests per FTE $10,990,198 $1,742,222 $64,181,003 2,502,689 $3,992,699 $27,384,371 $2,408,504 $7,895,813 $43,529,174 $15,787,200 $5,471,349 $7,500,350 $12,231,174 $8,870,000 $1,011,376 $2,499,564 $10,075,991 $1,334,000 $2,622,615 $1,473,386 $734,538 $1,060,923 $241,816 $4,283,262 59,065 1,987 72,266 1,904 3,861 111,943 2,631 5,086 54,925 23,608 3,866 8,758 39,518 2,579 4,728 16,936 12,685 1,454 8,884 1,132 5,553 364 340 8,268 $186 $877 $888 $1,314 $1,034 $245 $ 915 $1,552 $793 $669 $1,415 $856 $310 $3,439 $214 $148 $794 $917 $295 $1,302 $132 $2,915 $711 $518 206 19 824 27 67 1,031 41 125 459 179 108 72 116 75 10 46 277 18 32 22 7 5 2 40 287 105 88 71 58 109 64 41 120 132 36 122 449 34 473 368 46 81 278 51 761 73 227 207 $9,690,365 $1,329,011 $64,598,467 $2,334,654 $4,135,034 $22,618,918 $3,704,736 $9,797,472 $39,951,271 $17,757,759 $4,294,328 $7,181,964 $11,628,542 $9,000,000 $912,869 $2,492,130 $9,841,145 $1,440,000 $2,719,652 $1,920,656 $724,834 $1,109,456 $236,187 $3,509,418 31,651 1,949 78,392 1,670 3,698 135,297 7,661 5,437 53,889 27,581 4,792 9,542 28,785 3,031 4,402 14,879 12,066 1,347 12,386 1,326 4,278 351 343 12,564 $306 $682 $824 $1,398 $1,118 $167 $484 $1,802 $741 $644 $896 $753 $404 $2,969 $207 $167 $777 $1,069 $220 $1,448 $169 $3,161 $689 $279 170 19 971 23 21 811 69 184 421 225 104 84 122 82 10 41 119 24 30 24 10 7 2 32 186 105 81 73 176 167 112 30 128 123 46 114 236 37 440 366 101 56 413 56 450 50 229 393 $1,050,777 6,245 $168 15 414 $954,169 3,348 $285 12 274 $240,874,994 458,586 $526 3,823 120 $9,690,365 460,665 $508 3,614 127 Average and Above Average and Below Despite the presidential directive to improve service, agencies cut both overall FOIA spending and the number of employees who respond to requests. The overall cost per request fell for the 25 agencies surveyed and the efficiency rate — requests handled per employee — improved. Fifteen agencies spent well above the average, led by the Nuclear Regulatory Agency, the CIA and the Department of the Interior. The most efficient agencies were the National Labor Relations Board, Consumer Product Safety Commission and National Archives. Changes in Backlog and Agency Efficiency, 1998 to 2007 Requests Processed Year Percent Change Percent Change Backlog Cost per Request Percent Change Requests per FTE Percent Change 1998 1999 2000 2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 574,935 — 13% — $300 — 136 — 589,387 3% 14% 8% $220 -27% 137 1% 648,087 10% 13% -7% $283 29% 145 6% 537,423 -17% 18% 38% $416 47% 138 -5% 515,638 -4% 16% -11% $429 3% 135 -2% 531,448 3% 16% 0% $444 3% 136 1% 524,697 -1% 20% 25% $437 -2% 144 6% 480,109 -8% 31% 55% $494 13% 143 -1% 2006 458,586 -4% 39% 26% $526 6% 120 -16% 2007 460,665 0% 33% -15% $508 -3% 127 6% 1998-2007 2000-2007 -114,270 -20% — 153% $207 69% -7 -5% -187,422 -30% — 153% $225 80% -16 -11% The backlog of FOIA requests has risen 138% and the cost per request 69% even as the number of requests has fallen since reporting began in 1998. The agencies improved their efficiency ratings over 2006, however. FOIA Workforce Changes as Backlog Grows Year FTEs Year to Year Change Backlog Year to Year Change 1998 4,239 — 13% — 1999 2000 2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 3,901 4,185 3,507 3,828 3,903 3,650 3,350 -8% 7% -16% 9% 2% -6% -8% 14% 13% 18% 16% 16% 20% 31% 8% -7% 38% -11% 0% 25% 55% 2006 3,830 14% 39% 26% 2007 3,614 -6% 33% -15% The FOIA workforce in the 25 agencies studied fell in 2007 after a sharp increase the year before. Agencies were able to reduce backlog because the number of requests received declined. The Growing Gap in FOIA Costs, Fees Collected, 1998 to 2007 Year Total Cost Percent Change Total Fees Percent of Total Cost 1998 $172,314,911 — $2,671,831 1.6% 1999 $127,735,832 -26% $2,956,815 2.3% 2000 $183,570,211 44% $2,907,388 1.6% 2001 $212,981,503 16% $3,353,280 1.6% 2002 $220,943,934 4% $2,785,985 1.3% 2003 $235,821,688 7% $3,142,723 1.3% 2004 $228,793,338 -3% $3,063,469 1.3% 2005 $236,635,617 3% $2,790,143 1.2% 2006 $240,874,994 2% $3,140,836 1.3% 2007 $233,883,037 -3% $2,993,792 1.3% Costs have risen 36% since 1998, while fee revenues are up only 12%. The Non-Granting of Requests for Expedited Handling, 2002 to 2007 Department/ Agency 2002 R P 2003 % R P 2004 % R P 2005 % R P 2006 % R P 2007 % R P % — — NR 57 100% 5 2 40% 74% 1575 1304 83% — NR 11 — — NR 5 — 73% 294 200 68% — NR 1356 — — 140 97 69% 40% 572 183 32% — NR 108 — — NR 8 — — 208 80 — — NR 0 — NR 0 — 0% 0% 0 0 — 57% 814 520 64% — 30 5 17% — 0 0 — NR 2 — 25% — 12 12 100% — NR NR — — 14 0 — NR NR — — — 0 0 — NR NR — — 64% 71% * Department of Homeland Security was KEY: R=Requests P=Number Processed %=Percent Processed NR=Not Reported established in 2003. The percentage of expedited requests granted rose to 71% among those reporting, with the Defense Department at the top at 83%. However, the failure of the State Department to report on the number of requests received in either of the past two years may provide a slightly misleading picture. It granted only 4% when it last reported. Agriculture Commerce Defense Education Energy Home. Sec. HUD Interior Justice Labor State Trans. Treasury CIA CPSC GSA EEOC EPA NARA NASA NLRB NRC NSF SEC SBA Average NR 0 1,238 25 66 * 71 53 2,677 NR 117 NR 108 0 0 NR 50 0 0 NR NR 18 0 5 0 797 0 677 25 46 * 50 46 120 529 10 162 91 0 0 343 14 0 0 4 0 9 0 4 0 — — 55% 100% 70% * 70% 87% 4% — 9% — 84% — — — 28% — — — — 50% — 80% — 25% 1,526 0 1,358 76 8 194 NR 79 290 594 177 400 77 0 0 NR 40 0 0 51 NR 23 1 11 0 840 0 817 76 4 187 150 24 123 406 13 103 67 0 0 292 4 0 0 51 0 10 0 11 0 55% — 60% 100% 50% 96% — 30% 42% 68% 7% 26% 87% — — — 10% — — 100% — 43% 0% 100% — 56% 1,840 6 1,057 74 40 NR 180 133 257 NR 95 180 12 18 0 324 39 0 0 NR NR 29 2 10 0 526 6 841 74 40 692 60 63 134 130 8 59 3 1 0 321 21 0 0 44 0 5 0 10 0 29% 100% 80% 100% 100% — 33% 47% 52% — 8% 33% 25% 6% — 99% 54% — — — — 17% 0% 100% — 51% 940 2 528 NR 54 NR NR 54 536 NR 170 208 6 53 0 485 NR 0 2 5 NR 34 0 1 0 325 2 411 16 19 1,016 85 25 177 174 7 74 1 0 0 215 5 0 0 3 0 14 0 1 0 35% 100% 78% — 35% — — 46% 33% — 4% 36% 17% 0% — 44% — — 0% 60% — 41% — 100% — 41% NR 8 955 NR NR 1,674 NR NR 845 NR NR NR NR 40 4 748 NR 0 8 NR 0 NR 0 NR 0 255 8 708 15 58 1,229 90 39 341 113 16 81 9 0 0 428 18 0 2 9 0 2 0 0 0 Departments and Agencies Included in Study Agriculture Department of Agriculture Commerce Defense Education Energy Homeland Sec. HUD Interior Justice Labor State Transportation Treasury CIA CPSC EEOC EPA GSA NARA NASA NLRB NRC NSF SEC Department of Commerce Department of Defense Department of Education Department of Energy Department of Homeland Security Department of Housing and Urban Development Department of the Interior Department of Justice Department of Labor Department of State Department of Transportation Department of the Treasury Central Intelligence Agency Consumer Product Safety Commission Equal Employment Opportunity Commission Environmental Protection Agency General Services Administration National Archives and Records Administration National Aeronautics and Space Administration National Labor Relations Board Nuclear Regulatory Commission National Science Foundation Securities and Exchange Commission SBA Small Business Administration HHS Department of Health and Human Services OPM SSA Office of Personnel Management Social Security Administration VA Department of Veterans Affairs The 25 agencies listed in the top section and shown in all of the Coalition comparisons in this study are those included in frequent Government Accountability Office reports on FOIA, and several others with a high number of third-party FOIA requests. The four agencies listed in the section at the bottom are also regularly included in GAO studies but are shown only for reference here, because most requests are from individuals seeking personal records filed jointly under the Privacy Act and are routinely granted with minimal delay.