Navigation
* Home /
News
/ Many public sector bodies will miss 1st January deadline…
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
MPs criticise Freedom of Information
implementation
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Many public sector bodies will miss 1st January
deadline…
Many government agencies and public sector bodies are unprepared
to deal with data requests under the Freedom of Information (FOI)
Act, which comes into force on 1 January 2005, according to MPs.
The report by the House of Commons Constitutional Affairs Committee
on FOI implementation found a lack of central guidance and a lack
of consistency around the different public bodies.
The FOI Act provides the public with a general right of access
to information held by 100,000 public authorities, who have a 20
day deadline to provide the information or explain why it is being
withheld.
The Department for Constitutional Affairs (DCA) is responsible
for making sure government bodies are prepared but its role has
been heavily criticised in the committee's report, which assessed
the readiness of the police, health and local government sectors.
The report said: "The further one goes away from Whitehall
departments, the more 'patchy' is the state of preparedness. The
DCA's failure to provide early guidance on technical matters and
gaps in its leadership on FOI have risked creating the impression
that FOI implementation is another chore to be undertaken, rather
than a catalyst for a cultural shift to greater openness."
While the police were praised for their preparations for the January
deadline, the report raised concerns about implementation in the
health and local government sectors. The report also calls the decision
to opt for a "big-bang" approach to implementation as
"questionable".
One issue raised about local government and the FOI Act was the
cost of technology to comply with the legislation. Dr Lydia Pollard,
e-government adviser at local government development body IDeA,
said electronic records management systems are essential for FOI
compliance but cost at least £250,000
"If you are a small district authority then that is an enormous
sum of money and so before you would invest anything like that you
would need to be sure you were getting the right number of enquiries
to justify implementing such a system," she said in the report.
The lack of consistency across the health service was also criticised.
"There is little evidence that the DCA has been sufficiently
active in providing the necessary leadership to ensure that many
of the organisational and technical problems have been addressed
in time in this sector.
|