FoIA Oversight Under Pressure – A Systemic Concern

09/04/2026

The Freedom of Information Act was introduced to ensure transparency, accountability, and public confidence in public authorities. More than two decades on, questions are increasingly being asked about whether the system, and its oversight, continues to function as intended.


A Simple Expectation

At its core, FOIA requires a simple answer:

  • Is the information held at the time of the request?

That is the foundation of the Act.


A Growing Concern

A recent case suggests that, in practice, this question is not always addressed when it matters. The sequence:

  • a request is refused under section 14
  • no searches are undertaken
  • time passes
  • the position is later revisited
  • the authority states “information not held”
  • but cannot determine whether the information existed

The Role of Oversight

The Information Commissioner’s Office plays a central role in ensuring FOIA operates effectively. In many cases, it performs that role well. However, certain structural issues appear to arise.


1. Withdrawn exemptions are not examined

An exemption withdrawn during an ICO investigation:

  • is not examined
  • even though it directly affected the handling of the request

This creates a gap; the reason a request was not properly processed may never be considered.


2. Timing affects outcomes

FOIA assumes that:

  • requests are addressed promptly
  • information is assessed at the time

In practice:

  • internal reviews may take extended periods
  • ICO case allocation may take many months – currently up to 40 weeks!

During that time:

  • retention / deletion processes continue
  • evidence may degrade
  • positions become harder to establish

3. Internal review framework

There is no statutory timeframe for internal review. The ICO suggests:

  • 20 working days
  • up to 40 in complex cases

In practice:

  • longer periods are not uncommon

This raises a question; how often is the “exceptional” nature of extended reviews tested?


4. Section 77 – limited practical effect

Section 77 creates a criminal offence where information is destroyed or concealed following a request. However:

  • enforcement appears extremely rare
  • evidential thresholds are high – seemingly above ‘beyond reasonable doubt’.
  • time limits for prosecution are short

This creates a potential gap; the very circumstances in which section 77 is most relevant may also be those in which it is hardest to prove.


5. Resource vs prioritisation

The ICO has referred to resource constraints. This is understood.

However, it raises broader questions; how are priorities determined & how does that affect FOIA enforcement?


A Procedural Gap

Taken together, these factors suggest a broader issue. Where:

  • exemptions are applied early
  • searches are not undertaken
  • time passes
  • and oversight does not examine the cause

Outcomes may depend on process and timing rather than fact.


Why This Matters

This is not about an individual case. It is about whether the system:

  • reliably answers the question it is designed to answer
  • or, in some circumstances, allows that question to go unresolved

Final Observation

FOIA is not simply about access. It is about certainty.

If the system cannot reliably establish what was held at the time of a request, its effectiveness must be open to question.


More about an FoIA Loop-Hole can be read here.