15 February 2014

Freedom

Readers of this blog will recall that I'm unimpressed by the Office of the Australian Information Commissioner, an agency that hasn't meaningfully engaged with the community, has been permissive in belatedly responding to bad practice in the public and private sectors, and in responding to Freedom of Information applications has increasingly acted in ways that are contrary to its rhetoric about responsiveness and openness. As I indicated to the OAIC recently, it can hardly expect agencies to embrace that rhetoric when they see the OAIC, as champion of FOI, consistently relying on delays and under-resourcing to evade public access to information about privacy policy.

I was thus pleased to see 'Here's an office that's hardly free with information' by Michael West in today's Sydney Morning Herald.

West comments that
If the government was looking for some low-hanging fruit to make its budget savings, it might be tempted to cast a quiet eye over the Office of the Australian Information Commissioner. 
Were it do so, however, it might find that the Office of the Australian Information Commissioner was so low-hanging as to qualify not as fruit but rather as a root vegetable. 
Perusing the annual report for the office, one finds that the commissioners - of which there are three - ''delivered 59 speeches and presentations'' for the year to June 2013. 
Yet in the same period, the office managed only 89 ''information commissioner review decisions''. Of these, the office decided in favour of other government agencies seeking to keep publicly-funded information away from the public 65 per cent of the time. 
So it was that we posed a question to the office. As the head count had averaged 85.27 during the year, and as they had collectively made just 89 decisions, was it reasonable to assume that the rate of decisions equated to roughly one decision per staff member per year? 
Not at all, we were advised. 
The office has more functions than merely making decisions. Its mandate spans freedom of information, privacy matters and information policy. 
Although some staff work in only one of these three areas, many work across two or all three functions. The office estimates that 35 per cent of its resources are directed towards exercising its ''freedom of information functions''. 
The real strike rate then is 2.98 decisions per staff member per year. 
A cynic could be deluded into thinking, as this rate of decisions was in inverse correlation to the surfeit of speeches, reams of policy advice and the explosion in guidelines, that this was bureaucracy heaven. A cynic, however, would not understand the real demands of agency ''through-put''. 
Some 447 freedom of information requests were backed up in the system at year's end, up 25 per cent on the previous year. Of these, 105 had been filed at the office for longer than 12 months. 
However, the legendary Will Matthews FOI request was not among these. Matthews' Homeric campaign to wrest a straight answer out of government celebrates its 10th anniversary this year and is again bogged down in the Administrative Appeals Tribunal. ...  
But we digress. To its credit, the office does acknowledge a lack of breakneck speed: ''This level of delay has a detrimental effect on the FOI system,'' the annual report says. 
The blame, however, lies with government. The office has called for an increase in its $10 million funding. It wants more staff, not fewer. The feeling is not mutual, though, as staff turnover for the year was 24.7 per cent, roughly one in four. 
Nonetheless, some metrics are on the up. Wages and salaries rose 9 per cent and fees paid to consultants were up 20 per cent. 
(Note to self: tactfully refrain from snide comment here.) 
One person who has enjoyed the office experience says he was told straight away that it would be at least six months before a case officer would be assigned to his case. 
''If you question the delays,'' this person said, ''the message is: 'This is how we roll, everyone has to wait.' ''The office clock is different to the applicant's clock. When you get a letter you have to respond within two weeks. But when it's their turn to respond, time stands still. The seasons pass.'' ... 
Another metric tells the story: 95 of 419 applicants simply withdrew last year. ''The take away is 'don't bother asking' because you will be put in a queue so long or dealt with so slowly that giving up becomes the only logical course of action,'' the weary source said.
Note: I haven't been in contact with Mr West.