際際滷s from a presentation given in Newcastle, March 2012, on journalists' use of the Freedom of Information Act 2000
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Freedom of Information: tips for journalists
1. Tip 1: know your exemptions
Be clear on what isn't exempt e.g. in terms of
personal data, you won't get Mr X's medical
records, but you can get information relating to
his or her activities in a public role (e.g. a
council leader's claims for trips abroad)
With qualified exemptions, be prepared to make
a good public-interest argument search
for/quote relevant precedents
Be prepared to negotiate to get (at least a
decent amount of) what you want
2. Tip 2: be precise
Most FOI officers want to do their job but that
isn't second-guessing what you want
Define terms: e.g. if asking for correspondence,
clarify this means all letters, memos, reports
and emails
Set a clear time period and be clear if the
public body works in calendar or financial years
3. Tip 3: work with the cost limit
If you ask for e.g. all correspondence between
x and y for last five years, you won't get it
If you ask for e.g. all emails between x and y
with 'z' in the subject heading, you will
Try to find out if information is kept in a specific
format (e.g. database or spreadsheet) then
ask for that database or spreadsheet
Build in some flexibility e.g. 'last 12-month
period for which figures are readily available'
4. Tip 4: 'stage' your requests
Give a maximal version but make clear you
would accept less to avoid the cost ceiling
For example: All data about x for the last five
calendar years; or, if that breaches the cost
limit, then the last three calendar years; or, if
that breaches the cost limit, then the last
calendar year
Can stage in other ways, too e.g. All letters
between x, y, z; or at least between x and y
5. Tip 5: don't give them an 'out'
If you think certain documents might contain
elements that would fall foul of an exemption
(e.g. individuals' names), point out that you are
prepared to consider some degree of redaction
Suggest alternative information e.g. if can't
get names of police officers, ask for ranks,
division, whether male or female. (This will give
you a better story but also make it easier for
you to track down the precise information
through other sources)
6. Tip 6: pitfalls of statistics
Many statistics available elsewhere ONS,
Hansard, local government sites
Should be monitored as a matter of course
Don't pass off old statistics as new
Don't just ask for figures get details, too
If possible, ask for 'raw-data' documents (such
as spreadsheets) rather than a pr辿cis
If you are asking for statistics, be ambitious
11. Tip 7: FOI is just the start
Information must be put in context and the story
must be developed
Case studies
Expert interpretation
Reaction
Graphical representation
16. Tip 8: documents and dossiers
Think about major events try to get hold of
relevant letters, reports and other documents
In many cases these are filed in one place so
asking for them may NOT fall foul of the cost
limit
Government departments seem better at
providing these than local authorities
Do your research so you know what is new and
what is not
19. Tip 9: know your FOI officer
They are not the enemy they have a job to do
and being prepared to be flexible and negotiate
helps both parties
Should be lines of communication often by
modifying a request slightly, or limiting its
scope, will get the result you want
20. Tip 10: know what you want
Are there specific documents that you know
exist?
Plan your questions carefully with a journalistic
nose for a story. What is the intro likely to be?
What other information are you likely to need
beyond the headline data? Make sure you ask
for this at the same time
22. Tip 11: steal good ideas
Previous FOI requests can be found in various
places many can be adapted for reuse
Public bodies often keep a list of FOIs they
have answered online
whatdotheyknow.com
David Higgerson's FOI blog has a weekly
selection of the best media FOI requests
Google news searches for 'freedom of
information'
Twitter many good discussion of #FOI
25. Tip 12: the limits of FOI
FOI use doesn't = investigative genius
If you get information through the act you
should mention it but shock-horror 'obtained
under FOI...' intros are a clich辿
Contacts are still the best means of identifying
and obtaining controversial documents
Press officers will often issue information
We don't want a relationship where both they
and we revert to FOI as a matter of course