Hi Team,
It looks like i've got my dates mixed up! This week is school holidays, however your schedule says that you should be reading chapter 2. OOPS!! Anyway here is chapter 2 wrap up.
Chapter 2
Did you know . . . .
- FOI Act, 1991 only relates to SA's local & state govt agencies and the universities;
- FOI applications must be made in writing and submitted to the agency with the necessary application fee;
- You are not allowed to question the reason of the applicant's application;
- FOI Applications need to be responded to in 30 calendar days;
- An Australian postal address must be specified on the written application. I checked with the FOI team and PO Boxes in Australia can be used;
- Application fees can be waived by the agency;
- FOI applications can include the access to various types of records, highlighting the importance of ensuring that data migration from technologies that are fast becoming redundant is always forefront in our minds when preserving records (think audio cassette tapes, it is almost impossible to buy a walkman these days)
- That if an applicant identifies that an agency's record/s are incomplete, incorrect, out-of-date or misleading, the applicant has the right to apply for an amendment;
- Check out Part 6, section 52, pg 30 of the Act
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| Fig 1 - What are your thoughts? |
Within our class
there are not a lot of students who have had to directly deal with an FOI
application/request. In most agencies
the FOI Officer and the RM Officer are two different people. Sometimes the FOI
Officer sits, or is situated within/near the RM team. If you don't know who your agency's FOI
Officer is, find out who they are. Make
yourself known to them.
The Freedom Of
Information Act, 1991 is only applicable to local & state government &
universities within SA. It does not
apply to federal or interstate government agencies or to the private sector. Each state and the commonwealth have their
own FOI legislation. Further details are
available on our website.
The objectives of the
FOI Act is to promote openness in government and facilitate more effective
participation from members of the public.
This means that information
concerning the administration and operations
of government are readily available to the public.
FOI Applications can
impact quite heavily on an agency and not having your records and documents in
order can only add to the frustrations!
Did you know that once an FOI Application is received by the agency,
that the agency has only 30 calendar days
to respond! It might sound like a long
time, but calendar days also includes weekends and public holidays.
Imagine juggling a
couple FOI Applications that access determinations need to be finalised. To add to the tight deadline, the Act also
identifies that postage of the access determination will take 5 calendar days.
. . Before you know it you are looking at a 25 calendar day turnaround!
If you think that you
are not going to make the 30 day deadline, you have 20 calendar days in which
you are to advise the applicant for an extension. This extension must be
provided in writing to the applicant (another 5 days for postage!). Ideally
you would put your business efficiency skills to use & contact the
applicant on the phone, advise of the delay, negotiate a mutually acceptable
time frame and advise that a letter to that effect will be sent to confirm the
new arrangement.
There are some agencies that are excluded from the FOI Act (Schedule 2, pg 39), meaning that they do not need to provide information under the Act. Could you imagine organised crime groups putting in an FOI Application with the SA Police in regards to certain manuals on how police activities/operations are carried out?
This info (and a lot more) is available on
our website. If you have any detailed
FOI questions direct them to your FOI Officer or the State Records FOIP team on
08 8204 8786.
Article of the week
While doing some research on what articles are out there in relation to RM I came across thishttp://www.zdnet.com/vic-govt-makes-its-spatial-data-available-to-public-7000017739/?s_cid=e551&ttag=e551
Some interesting reading. What are your thoughts on making records readily available to the community, rather than putting in an FOI request? Would this process make it easier, or harder for the community to access records created by the government? I'm interested to hear your thoughts.
Enjoy your school holidays & hope to see people on 30/7 for Chapter 3.
Please let me know if you are unable to make the class.
Ciao,
Melisa Z-G

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