The Minister for Public Expenditure and Reform, Mr. Brendan Howlin T.D. announced that the Government today approved the removal of the €15 FOI application fee for non-personal FOI requests as part of a suite of reforms to Ireland’s FOI regime.
It is planned that these changes will be introduced in the context of the enactment of the FOI Bill, 2013.
The Minister said:-
“Over the last number of months I have concluded that Ireland’s fees regime for FOI required a radical overhaul.
The €15 application fee will be abolished for all FOI requests and the Search, Retrieval and Copying fees will only apply where the preparation time for a request exceeds 5 hours. In other words, the vast majority of FOI requests will now be free of charge.
The FOI fees measures which I am putting in place restore the balance in relation to FOI fees envisaged in that path-breaking legislation. These reforms will allow our citizens access to information on a level par with best practice across the OECD. After all, information and data are the currencies of the new age.”
The Minister’s proposals highlight that the full realisation of the benefits of the restoration and reform of FOI embodied in the Bill must be enabled by a modern fees regime.
The centrepiece of the new system are modernised Search, Retrieval and Copying (SRC) fees which only apply where the preparation of FOI requests for decision-making require in excess of 5 hours of search and retrieval time. A cap is proposed on the total level of FOI fees that can be charged by a public body. An upper limit is also provided for above which a public body may refuse to process the request.
The Minister also said:-
“My assessment of FOI fees reform was strongly informed by the issues raised in the pre-legislative scrutiny of my proposals on FOI carried out by the Oireachtas Finance, Public Expenditure and Reform Committee the FOI Bill and the debate on the Bill during its passage through the Oireachtas, as well as the views of civil society participating to the preparation of Ireland’s Open Government Partnership (OGP) National Action Plan.”
My conclusions were strongly reinforced by discussions I had with colleagues and participants at the OGP Europe Regional Conference held in Dublin Castle in May which highlighted the vital role of FOI as a cornerstone of openness, transparency and accountability of government and public administration”.
The Minister’s assessment of and proposals on FOI fees are detailed in a paper published on the Department of Public Expenditure and Reform’s website www.per.gov.ie together with a draft Code of Practice for FOI for public consultation and the report of the External Review Group on FOI which were also approved by the Government for publication.
| Notes for Editors
FOI Fees The reforms to the FOI fees regime are as follows:
Review of FOI There were two main strands of the FOI review process:-
The External Review group’s remit was to advise on:
The report sets out the External group’s recommendations for enhancing implementation of FOI by public bodies and spans areas such as routine publication of information and use of publication schemes, communications/engagement with requesters, training, processing of requests, engagement between public bodies and the Office of the Information Commissioner, records management, and support structures and networks.
Code of Practice Key findings which emerged from the review raised both by the Public Bodies Review Group and the External Review Group as well as the Committee for Finance, Public Expenditure and Reform were addressed in the Code of Practice which sets out a step by step approach:
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