WASHINGTON – Today,
Sen. Chuck Grassley (R-Iowa), Ranking Member of the Senate Judiciary Committee,
joined Rep. Carolyn B. Maloney, the Chairwoman of the House Committee on
Oversight and Reform, Senator Patrick Leahy, the Chairman of the Senate
Committee on Appropriations and Senator John Cornyn to issue the following
statement in recognition of Sunshine Week—held each year to highlight the
importance of government transparency—after the release of two Government
Accountability Office (GAO) reports that found that agencies increasingly
withheld information under FOIA during the period between 2012 and 2019:
“The
Freedom of Information Act is an important tool for the public to get
information about the actions of government. Two recent GAO reports highlight
that agencies more than doubled their use of statutory exemptions to withhold
information from the public since 2012. GAO also found that many agencies are
not complying with the legal obligation to proactively release information to
the public. We must prevent agencies from abusing FOIA and ensure that the
public has access to government information.”
GAO
recently released a
report
on FOIA (b)(3) exemptions, which specifically authorize agencies to withhold
information that is protected from disclosure under another law.
·
Agencies’ increased use of statutory exemptions
outpaced the rate of increase in all FOIA requests from 2012 to 2019. GAO found
that agencies’ use of (b)(3) exemptions grew by 135%, more than doubling during
this period. While the type of information requested was not reported, (b)(3)
exemptions increased by 91% during the first year of the Trump Administration. Full
denials of FOIA requests fell by 10% between 2012 and 2019, with a peak in
2016. During this period, partial denials increased by 76%.
Today,
GAO
reported
on agency compliance with requirements to proactively disclose certain
information.
·
Twenty-five agencies reported zero proactive
disclosures in 2018 and 2019. DOJ’s Office of Information Policy, which is
responsible for facilitating agency’s compliance with FOIA, did not follow up
or investigate why these agencies reported zero proactive disclosures.
·
The Department of Housing the Urban
Development, Veterans Health Administration, and Federal Aviation
Administration did not comply with statutory reporting requirements to
accurately report proactive disclosures.
·
GAO made eight recommendations including one
for DOJ to follow up with agencies that report no proactive disclosures and
encourage agencies to comply with the law.
-30-