The Freedom Of Information Act
History, Overview and How To Use It Yourself
 

What is ‘Freedom of Information?
Put simply, Freedom of Information (FOI for short) is the right to know what your government is doing – how it spends your tax dollars, how it creates and implements policy, how it makes decisions that affect you.

It refers to your right to examine records and documents and to your right to observe – and participate in –your government’s decision-making processes.

Government processes, activities and decisions may affect you directly or indirectly. They determine the amount of taxes you pay and the kinds of government services you receive. Governments and their agencies regulate many activities in your home and business life. Your ability to participate in, monitor and, perhaps, protest government decisions relates directly to your ability to know what your government is doing.

FOI is the opposite of secrecy. It means the doors and files of government are open and available to the public, instead of being closed to all but a select few.

In some circles, “Freedom of Information” is called “Right to Know,” but the meaning is the same.

 

Is the right of public access to documents and meetings in the Constitution?
It is not included in the Constitution of the United States, but some state constitutions include a right to examine records and attend meetings of public entities.

 

If not in the Constitution, where is freedom of information guaranteed at the federal level?
The landmark piece of legislation is the Freedom of Information Act, or FOIA, which Congress passed, and President Lyndon Johnson signed in 1966. That law covers all departments, agencies and offices within the Executive Branch of the federal government. The FOIA does not cover Congress, the federal judiciary, or the President, but it does cover the Executive Office of the President.

It has been updated and expanded since then, most recently in 1996, when Congress extended the FOIA to cover records stored in electronic form. Those amendments, officially known as the “Electronic Amendments” but known informally as “E-FOIA,” also ordered executive agencies to construct Internet sites to make it easier for the public to gain access to their information. The law ordered agencies to follow a list of minimum requirements for those sites.

Ten years after Congress passed the FOIA, it passed the “Government in the Sunshine Act,” sometimes referred to as the “Sunshine Act” or by its initials, GITSA.

This law requires that any federal Executive Branch commission, committee or other “collegial” body make its decisions in public meetings. Among the agencies it covers are the Securities and Exchange Commission, the Federal Communications Commission and the Federal Trade Commission. The Sunshine Act provisions are found within the federal Administrative Procedure Act at 5 U.S.C. § 552b.

Still another federal law, the Federal Advisory Committee Act (FACA), mandates that meetings of special federal task forces be open to the public. (In July 2001, Congress’ General Accounting Office sued Vice-President Dick Cheney, alleging that Cheney’s energy task force met in secret in violation of the FACA.)

There also are federal laws that address particular kinds of records. For instance, the Presidential Records Act, passed in 1978, specifically addresses how and when presidential papers are made available under the FOIA. The provisions of that law were changed in 2001 by an Executive Order signed by President George W. Bush. That order requires the National Archives to inform a former president (or his estate) that records are eligible for release. It also gives the sitting president and the former president the power to block release of records covered by the Presidential Records Act.

 

Is Congress subject to the FOIA?
No. Congress operates under its own rules, which allow reporters and the general public to observe its sessions. Most committee meetings and hearings are open. However, access to the House and Senate galleries is rationed among media, dignitaries, families of members of Congress, and people who obtain gallery passes from members.

Why is Congress not subject to the FOIA? The easy answer is that Congress did not want it that way. (Congress routinely exempts itself from many federal laws.) A more political answer is that, in the 1960s, Congress wanted to know more about the administration’s actions in Vietnam and was unable to get the information under existing laws. In general, Congress also considered the greatest threat of secrecy to be within the Executive Branch, not from Congress.

 

What about access to records kept in state and local governments?
All states have their own versions of the FOIA, some of which have been on the books for almost 100 years. Records and meetings may be covered in a single statute or in separate ones. Some call it the “Freedom of Information Act,” the “Open Records Act,” or the “Right to Know Act,” and some give it a different name. Florida calls its open records and meetings laws, collectively, “The Sunshine Law.”

Records and/or meetings at the local level (city, municipality, county, township, school district or other subdivision of state government) are covered by state law, unless specifically exempted.

Some Helpful Links

Historical Background
John Moss: Father of the Freedom of Information Act 
The John E. Moss Foundation
The Day Johnson Signed the Freedom of Information Act
The U.S. Freedom of Information Act at Age 35 
The History of the Freedom of Information Act
Effective Dates & Timetable for FOIA Amdendments
Statement of Senator Leahy on the Passage of the Electronic FOIA Act Amendments of 1996  
Australian Freedom of Information Act History 

The Law
United States Code
Code of Federal Regulations
Anderson's Ohio Revised Code
Anderson's Ohio Administrative Code
U.S. Code Title 5, Section 552: Administrative Procedure
U.S. Code Title 44 Section 3301: Definition of Records
U.S. CFR Title 36 Subchapter B: Records Management 
The Privacy Act of 1974 
Freedom of Information Act Amendments
The Freedom of Information Act, 1997
FOI Act & Regulations     
Electronic Freedom of Information Act Amendments of 1996 
The Clinger-Cohen Act--Information Technology Management Reform Act of 1996 
Basic Laws & Authorities of the National Archives & Records Administration
NARA General Records Schedules
ORC Title 1 Section 121.22: Ohio Open Meetings Law
ORC Title 1 Section 149: Documents, Reports & Records
ORC Title 1 Section 149.43: Availability of Public Records
The Ohio Open Records Law
List of Statutory Citations of State FOI Laws
Records-Related Laws
Food Lion v. ABC Amici Brief (1997)

Government Departments & Agencies
National Archives and Records Administration
Chief Information Officers Council
U.S. Department of Justice Office of Information & Privacy
Central Intelligence Agency Electronic Document Release Center
U.S. Army Records Management & Declassification Agency
U.S. Department of Agriculture Records Management
U.S. Environmental Protection Agency Records Management Program
The Federal Trade Commission Advisory Committee on Online Privacy & Security 
Federal Information & Records Managers Council
Ohio Department of Health
The Ohio Historical Society

Government Publications & Databases
U.S. Department of Justice Office of Information & Privacy: FOIA Update  
U.S. Department of Justice Office of Information & Privacy: FOIA Post 

FOIA 1996: Your Right to Federal Records
 
Your Right to Federal Records: Questions & Answers
National Archives Information for All Researchers
Department of Defence FOIA Program
Principal FOIA Contacts at Federal Agencies List  
Department of Health and Human Services Freedom of Information
CIA Document Database
Department of Justice FOIA
FBI: Freedom of Information Act List
Treasury Department FOIA 
The National Security Archive 


State Records
State FOI Laws
State Freedom of Information Laws
State FOI Contacts Index
Open Records, News Series & Surveys
The Ohio Historical Records Advisory Board-The Ohio 2003 Plan

Privacy Information
Privacy: Access Issues
The Privacy Paradox
Electronic Privacy Information Center
International Privacy Documents
Privacy International
Online Guide to Privacy Resources
Tools for Protecting Online Privacy
National ID Cards


Records Management
NARA: Records Management Basics
Federal Information & Records Managers Council 

Institute of Certified Records Managers
Records Management Links
Records Management Application: Certification Testing 
Useful Web Sites for Records Managers


General Information
Freedom of Information Laws 
Freedom of Information Acts
The Freedom of Information Center
Freedom of Information Clearinghouse
Freedom of Information Project
Freedom of Information & Sunshine Laws  
Sunshine Laws
Freedom of Information and Access
Electronic Privacy Information Center: Your Right to Federal Records
LLRX -- FOI Links in the News
A People Armed: Agency FOIA Implementation 
FOIA Information and Declassified Documents
Freedom of Information Under Attack 
Records & FOIA
Common Cause: Open Records
Access to Public Records: Introduction
Voices for Open Records: Arguments for Open Records
BRB Publications: Public Records
Land Record Sites
Criminal Records: Misdemeanors & Felonies
Tapping Officials' Secrets
A Practical Guide to Taping Conversations

Organizations
ACLU: American Civil Liberties Union 
Public Citizen  
The Reporters Committee for Freedom of the Press
Electronic Privacy Information Center
Electronic Frontier Foundation
National Association of Government Archives & Records Administrators 
The John E. Moss Foundation


Journals
Access Reports
Full Disclosure
Privacy Times

Tools
Federal Records Officers List by Agencies  
OAH's User's Guide to the Freedom of Information Act

Using the Freedom of Information Act
A Citizen's Guide to the Freedom of Information 
FOI Reference Guide 
Finding Federal Records
Guide to Researching Public Records
The First Amendment Handbook
US Vital Records Information
Ohio Vital Records Information
Records Management Definitions
Records Management Handbook

Forms
Sample FOIA and Privacy Act letters
Sample FOI Request Letter 
SPLC: Sample State FOI Letter
Federal Acquisition Regulations Forms: NARA
Ohio Birth & Death Certificate Request Forms

 

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