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United Kingdom Information Tribunal including the National Security Appeals Panel |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> United Kingdom Information Tribunal including the National Security Appeals Panel >> Roberts v IC [2008] UKIT EA_2008_0050 (04 December 2008) URL: http://www.bailii.org/uk/cases/UKIT/2008/EA_2008_0050.html Cite as: [2008] UKIT EA_2008_0050, [2008] UKIT EA_2008_50 |
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Information Tribunal Appeal
Number: EA/2008/0050 Information Commissioner’s Ref:
FS50107607 |
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Heard on Papers at Procession
House On: 21 October 2008 |
Decision Promulgated On: 4
December 2008 |
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BEFORE |
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CHAIRMAN
CHRIS RYAN
and
LAY MEMBERS
ROGER CREEDON
MICHAEL
HAKE |
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BETWEEN: |
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ALASDAIR ROBERTS |
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Appellant |
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And |
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THE INFORMATION COMMISSIONER |
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Respondent |
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Decision |
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The Tribunal upholds the decision notice dated 22 May 2008 and
dismisses the appeal. |
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Appeal Number: EA/2008/0050 |
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Reasons for Decision |
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Introduction
1. The issue that arises in
this Appeal is whether the Information Commissioner was correct in
deciding that the Ministry of Defence (“MOD”) had complied with its
obligations under the Freedom of Information Act 2000 (“FOIA”) when it
refused a request for certain information on the basis that the estimated
cost of complying with it would have exceeded the cost limit provided for
under FOIA section 12 and regulations made under it.
The request for information
2. On 30 October 2005
Professor Alasdair Roberts of Syracuse, New York State, USA (“the
Complainant”) submitted a freedom of information request to the MOD
requesting the following information:
“For all FOIA requests
recorded in the MOD AIT on the date of processing this request, the
following fields of data:
Date Request
Received;
Expiry Date;
Organisation;
Applicant
Type;
Postcode;
Country;
Status;
Date Response
Sent;
Closed
Date |
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Appeal Number: EA/2008/0050
I wish to receive this data
only in electronic form, either as a tab-delimited text file, or as an
Excell spreadsheet.
Please contact me if you like
clarification of this request. In particular, I would be glad to discuss
the deletion of fields which may contain date that might be subject to
exemption under FOIA.”
3. Following an exchange of
communications which clarified that the request had been intended to cover
all FOI requests up to the date of the request, the MOD refused it in a
letter dated 20 December 2005, relying on FOIA section 12. The refusal was
maintained, following a request for an internal review. The review was
undertaken by David Wray OBE, the MOD’s Director of Information
(Exploitation), who notified the Complainant of the outcome of the review
in a letter dated 17 February 2006.
4. FOIA section 12 provides
that a public authority is not required to communicate information to any
person requesting it if it “estimates that the cost of complying with
the request would exceed the appropriate limit.” It is accepted by
both parties to this Appeal that the “appropriate limit” is that provided
in The Freedom of Information and Data Protection (Appropriate Limit and
Fees) Regulations 2004 (“the Regulations”) and that, on the facts of this
case, it was £600. The Regulations also determine how the estimate is to
be carried out. They do so in the following terms:
“Estimating the cost of
complying with a request - general
4. – (1) This
regulation has effect in any case in which a public authority proposes to
estimate whether the cost of complying with a relevant request would
exceed the appropriate limit.
(2) …
(3) In a case in which
this regulation has effect, a public authority may, for the purpose of its
estimate, take account only of the costs it reasonably expects to incur in
relation to the request in-(a) determining whether it holds the
information, |
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Appeal Number: EA/2008/0050
(b) locating the
information, or a document which may contain the
information,
(c) retrieving the
information, or a document which may contain the information,
and
(d) extracting the information from a document
containing it.
(4) To the extent to which any
of the costs which a public authority takes into account are attributable
to the time which persons undertaking any of the activities mentioned in
paragraph (3) on behalf of the authority are expected to spend on those
activities, those costs are to be estimated at a rate of £25 per person
per hour.” |
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5. The rationale for both the
initial refusal and Mr Wray’s decision to uphold it on review was as
follows:
a. The MOD acknowledged
that it held the information requested as part of a computerised
information system (the Access to Information Toolkit – “AIT”), which had
been specially developed by a third party contractor for the purpose of
logging and tracking FOIA requests.
b. AIT had been designed to
capture, track and monitor requests for information but was not capable of
generating, automatically, statistics or management reports other than a
report for a single working day. The information requested by the
Complainant would therefore have to be extracted from the system
manually.
c. The estimate that
the £600 limit referred to in paragraph 4 above would have been exceeded
was based on the cost of one person spending three and a half working days
on the task. This represented 1512 minutes, on the basis of a standard
working day of 7 hours 25 minutes. |
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Appeal Number: EA/2008/0050 |
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d. The effect of the
request for information was that the relevant data for 244 days would have
had to be extracted and the MOD estimated that this would have taken 10
minutes for each day, resulting in a total of 2440 minutes, which
exceeded, by some margin, the “cap” of 1512 minutes mentioned
above.
e. These calculations were
said not to take account of any additional time that would have been taken
up in validating the data for omissions or errors.
f. It was not
possible to overcome the need for day to day data extraction by having a
database report program written by one of the MOD’s own programmers, as
the Complainant had suggested, because the design and maintenance of AIT
had been contracted out to a third party.
The complaint to the Information
Commissioner
6. On 20 February 2006 the
Complainant lodged a complaint with the Information Commissioner about the
way in which the MOD had handled his request. His complaint included
criticism of the MOD’s failure to comply with its obligation (imposed by
FOIA section 16) to advise and assist those seeking
information.
7. After a seriously
delayed investigation the Information Commissioner finally issued a
Decision Notice on 22 May 2008 in which he concluded that the MOD had
acted correctly in refusing the Complainant’s request under section 12 of
the Act as the appropriate limit would have been exceeded. However he also
decided that MOD had been in breach of its duty under section 16 of the
Act to advise and assist the Complainant. The MOD has not appealed the
section 16 aspect of the Decision Notice and so that stands. As to section
12 the Information Commissioner accepted the MOD’s estimate of the cost of
manual extraction of the information summarised above. He also
investigated the cost of having an appropriate program written by the
third party contractor responsible for maintaining the AIT system and
concluded that this too would have exceeded the £600 limit under the
Regulations.
The appeal to the Tribunal |
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Appeal Number: EA/2008/0050 |
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8. On 19 June 2008 the
Complainant issued a Notice of Appeal to this Tribunal asserting that the
Decision Notice contained a number of errors. He elected to have his
appeal determined without a hearing and, with the Information
Commissioner’s consent, we have proceeded on that basis, relying on an
agreed bundle of documents and written submissions prepared by each party.
The Grounds of Appeal, as supplemented by the Complainant’s written
submissions, categorised the Complainant’s criticisms under four heads and
we will deal with each one of them in turn after first making some
comments about section 12 generally.
9. Section 12 does
not require the public authority to make a precise calculation of the
costs of complying with a request. Only an estimate is required. That
estimate, however, must be a reasonable one and may only be based on the
activities covered by Regulation 4(3). Those activities do not include
consideration of exemptions, or redactions, as confirmed by the Tribunal
in Jenkins (EA/2006/0067). Neither may costs include those relating
to data validation or communication.
10. What amounts to a
reasonable estimate can only be considered on a case by case basis. We
recognise this aspect may be an important consideration for requestors
seeking to exercise their information rights under FOIA. It is not
sufficient for a public authority simply to assert the appropriate limit
has been exceeded. As was made clear in Randall (EA/2007/0004) an
estimate has to be “sensible, realistic and supported by cogent evidence”
In this case we have considered the evidence provided to us of the steps
taken by the Information Commissioner to test the estimate and are
satisfied with his decision that it complied with that test.
First Ground of Appeal: The
MOD was not entitled to rely on its cost estimate because it failed to
consider alternative methods for extracting the information as proposed by
the Complainant.
11. The Complainant argues
that the MOD should not be permitted to rely upon section 12 unless it has
demonstrated that it contemplated all reasonable methods for extracting
data from the database in question. He says that, in particular, it had an
obligation to consider certain alternative methods which he had brought to
its attention.
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Appeal Number: EA/2008/0050 |
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12. Section 12 provides that
the public authority may rely on its costs estimate to refuse a request
but does not expressly make that reliance conditional on the quality or
nature of the estimate. One must look in the Regulations for any guidance
as to how the estimate should be made. In that connection Regulation 4(3)
provides that the public authority may only take account of the costs it
reasonably expects to incur in carrying out certain specific tasks. It
says no more about any steps that the public authority should take in
evaluating possible methods of extracting data. However, the word
“estimate” itself provides some guidance. It points to something more than
a guess or an arbitrarily selected figure. It requires a process to be
undertaken, which will involve an investigation followed by an exercise of
assessment and calculation. The investigation will need to cover matters
such as the amount of information covered by the request, its location,
and the hourly cost of those who will have the task of extracting it (in
this case a rate imposed by the Regulations). The second stage will
involve making an informed and intelligent assessment of how many hours
the relevant staff members are likely to take to extract the information.
Clearly the whole exercise must be undertaken in good faith and, as the
Regulation provides, involve an element of reasonableness.
13. We can envisage
circumstances where it might be concluded that a public authority ought
not to be permitted to rely on the reasonableness of its estimate if it
had failed to give appropriate consideration to a cheaper available means
for doing so. It does not follow from this that it only needs a person
requesting information to suggest one alternative which the public
authority had not considered for it to be prevented from relying on its
estimate. It is only if an alternative exists that is so obvious to
consider that disregarding it renders the estimate unreasonable that it
might be open to attack. And in those circumstances it would not matter
whether the public authority already knew of the alternative or had it
drawn to its attention by the requestor or any other third
party.
14. In this case the
Complainant suggested three alternatives. First, he said that the MOD
could have used report-building capabilities incorporated in its own
database program. Second, that one or more existing standard reports could
have been utilised. However, the Information Commissioner accepted the
MOD’s evidence that the AIT system did not include a report application
that could generate the
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Appeal Number: EA/2008/0050
information requested and that to
create one would have required additional software to be written. No
evidence was adduced before us to undermine that finding and we accept it.
The Complainant’s third suggestion was that the MOD’s database specialists
could have written a special program to extract the necessary information.
The evidence on this was that the MOD’s arrangement with the company it
had engaged to maintain the AIT system precluded it from undertaking its
own re-programming and that the contractor had estimated that it would
have taken a total of 15 man days to develop the necessary program. The
cost, based on the standard £25 per hour provided for in the Regulations
(reg. 4(5) ) would have exceeded by some way the £600 limit.
15. We conclude therefore:
a. that the
Complainant set the test at too high a level in requiring the public
authority to consider all reasonable methods of extracting
data;
b. that circumstances might
exist where a failure to consider a less expensive method would have the
effect of preventing a public authority from relying on its estimate for
the purposes of section 12; but that
c. this was not the
situation on the facts of this particular case because none of the
alternatives proposed by the Complainant would have achieved the required
cost reduction.
Second Ground of Appeal: The
MOD failed to consider whether part of the requested data could have been
released.
16. The Complainant
asserted that he had made it clear in his initial request that he was
prepared to accept partial release. The request is quoted in full in
paragraph 2 above. It acknowledges that some of the data may fall within
one or more of the exemptions set out in FOIA but makes no reference to
any possible reduction in scope in order to reduce the costs of the
exercise. Nevertheless there is some evidence to suggest that partial
release might have been possible and the Decision Notice recorded the
Information Commissioner’s conclusion that the MOD could and should have
done more to clarify the Complainant’s request and explore how it might
have been adapted to enable the MOD to comply with it. This was the
basis |
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Appeal Number: EA/2008/0050 |
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for the Information
Commissioner’s decision that the MOD had not complied with its obligation
under section 16 to assist and advise the Complainant. In these
circumstances we believe that we should assume, in the Complainant’s
favour, that a partial release could have been achieved and that the MOD’s
failure to explore that possibility with the Complainant was the reason
why the option was not pursued.
17. The Complainant puts
forward two arguments on the impact of the MOD’s failure in this respect.
First, he says that public bodies have an obligation to consider the
possibility of partial release before invoking section 12. However, there
is no suggestion to that effect in either section 12 or the Regulations
and we reject it. The second argument, closely related to the first, is
that the failure to explore the possibility of partial release constituted
a failure to comply with the obligation under FOIA section 16 (to provide
advice and assistance to those seeking information from a public
authority) and that the duty to advise and assist must be fulfilled by a
public body as a prerequisite to the application of section
12.
18. Section 16 provides as follows:
“(1) It shall be the duty of a
public authority to provide advice and assistance, so
far as it would be reasonable
to expect the authority to do so, to persons who
propose to make, or have made,
requests for information to it.
(2) Any public authority
which, in relation to the provision of advice or
assistance in any case,
conforms with the code of practice under section 45 is
to be taken to comply with the
duty imposed by subsection (1) in relation to that
case”
As anticipated by section 16(2) a
code of practice (“the Code”) has been issued by the Secretary of State
under section 45 of the Act. It provides, in paragraph 14,
that:
“Where an authority is not
obliged to comply with a request for information because, under section
12(1) and regulations made under section 12, the cost of complying would
exceed the “appropriate limit” (i.e. the cost threshold)
the |
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Appeal Number: EA/2008/0050
authority should consider
providing an indication of what, if any, information could be provided
within the cost ceiling.”
19. It is certainly the case that
public authorities are encouraged to explore the scope of a request and to
enter into a dialogue with the person who has made a broad request for
information to see if it might be narrowed to the stage where it can be
complied with. There have been a number of Information Tribunal decisions
that have considered whether failure to consult in those circumstances
might amount to a breach of section 16 (see for example Fitzsimmons
(EA/2007/0124)) and others where it was found on the facts that there
had indeed been such a breach (see for example Urmenyi EA/2006/0093
and Meurnier EA/2006/0059). In other cases it has been found that
section 16 did not arise because the nature of the original request was
such that no dialogue was likely to have resulted in the scope of the
request being reduced to the level where it could be satisfied within the
costs limit (see Randall EA/2007/0004). None of those cases
included any suggestion that a breach of section 16 could have an effect
on whether or not the public authority was entitled to rely on its
estimate under section 12. However, in the case of Brown v Information
Commissioner (EA/2006/0088) an issue that arose was whether the public
authority could rely on section 12 in circumstances where, had they
complied with their obligations under section 16, there may have been no
basis to refuse the request under section 12. The Tribunal concluded in
that case that if the public authority had complied with section 16 the
original request could have been handled in such a way that it was
possible that the costs limit under 12 would not have operated as a bar to
disclosure. At paragraph 76 of its decision it said:
“We consider that in this
case, like in many others, section 12 cannot be regarded independently of
section 16. … We consider that before the Tribunal can find that a given
public authority is not obliged to comply with a request for information
because it estimates that the cost of doing so would exceed the
appropriate limit, it may need to consider whether, with assistance and
advice that it would have been reasonable for the public authority to
provide pursuant to section 16, the applicant could have narrowed, or
re-defined his request such that it could be dealt with without exceeding
the cost limits in section 12. If so, it may mean that the public
authority’s estimate that the cost of complying with the
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Appeal Number: EA/2008/0050 |
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request would exceed the
appropriate limit has not been made on a reasonable basis. To hold
otherwise could allow section 12 to be used in a way that significantly
undermines the effect of section 16.
20. We are, of course, not
obliged to follow other decisions of this Tribunal and in this case, with
respect to our colleagues we are not prepared to do so. We acknowledge the
importance of public authorities discussing the scope of a request in an
attempt to adjust it so that complying with it would not exceed the costs
limit. However, that does not lead us to conclude that a failure to act in
this way renders a section 12 costs estimate invalid. We reach that
conclusion for the following reasons:
a. There is nothing in the
language of section 12 itself to suggest that the estimate may be
challenged for any reason other than that it fails to comply with the
Regulations.
b. Nor does section 16
specify that failure to comply with its requirement should invalidate an
estimate. In fact no sanction is mentioned in that section and it is to be
inferred that the only available sanctions are those set out in Part IV of
the FOIA, which make no reference to any consequential impact of breach on
the applicability of other provisions.
c. The relevant part
of the Code of Practice quoted in paragraph 18 above indicates that the
requirement to give advice only arises once the public authority has
reached the stage where section 12 applies (“Where an authority is not
obliged to comply with a request for information…). Neither the
statute nor the Code of Practice contain any suggestion that avoiding the
obligation to comply is conditional on first complying with the Code of
Practice or that a public authority must consult with the person seeking
information as part of the process by which it reaches an estimated costs
figure. This is entirely consistent with the purpose of the Code of
Practice, (which is to provide guidance only), and with the language of
section 16 itself, (which makes it clear in subsection (2) that the only
impact of the Code of Practice is that a public authority which complies
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Appeal Number: EA/2008/0050
have provided the advice and
assistance necessary to avoid a breach of subsection (1)).
21. We are conscious that,
without the direct connection for which the Complainant argues, a less
than ideal situation may arise. An estimate may be made and communicated
to the person seeking information without any offer of dialogue or
explanation. The Information Commissioner may subsequently order the
public authority to provide advice and assistance. Once his direction has
been complied with a new request may be made, having a reduced scope. A
new cost estimate will then have to be prepared if the public authority
wishes to rely on section 12 in respect of the new request. In theory this
process could be repeated several times, delaying the process for many
months, if not years. However, we fear that if we seek to avoid that type
of situation arising by declaring that the failure to advise or assist
invalidated the costs estimate in this case, we risk falling into the trap
of creating law, rather than interpreting the law as created by Parliament
in the FOIA. And the law so created could have the harmful effect of
requiring a public authority to spend many thousands of pounds over the
costs limit in complying with a request, not because its original estimate
had not been properly prepared, but solely because it had communicated it
to the person requesting information without adequate advice or
assistance.
22. Our conclusion on this
point should not undermine the importance of public authorities complying
with their obligation to advise and assist. It seems to us that section 16
has particular relevance to cases where it can be seen that a request for
information might be adjusted to ensure that the task of complying with it
would not involve cost in excess of the stipulated limit. We would hope
that in most circumstances the giving of advice and assistance would lead
to a dialogue which resulted in disclosure that was still of value to the
person requesting it but did not expose the public authority to excessive
cost. The need to rely on the estimate as a reason for refusing the
request completely would only then arise where agreement on scope could
not be reached.
Third Ground of Appeal: The
MOD should have used new reporting facilities when they became
available.
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Appeal Number: EA/2008/0050 |
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23. Since the date of the
Decision Notice the MOD has informed the Complainant that it now has
technical capabilities that it did not have at the time it refused the
original request, which would enable it to provide more of the originally
requested data within the cost limit. It had in fact informed the
Information Commissioner of this fact before the Decision Notice was
issued.
24. The Complainant has
conceded that ordinarily it would be inappropriate to consider changes in
circumstances after the time of the refusal of the original request. That
is of course right. Our role is to determine whether the public authority
was entitled to refuse to provide the information at the date when it
communicated that refusal to the Complainant. Subsequent events, including
technical developments, are irrelevant. However, the Complainant argues
that the failure to provide advice and assistance in this case
distinguishes it from the norm. He says that the duty to advise and assist
persisted throughout the period after the original refusal so that, once
the new facility became available, the MOD was no longer entitled to rely
on section 12.
25. We were not referred to
any provision of the FOIA which supported this argument and we do not
believe that there is one. If any such rule did exist it could have the
effect of requiring a public authority to notify a person who previously
had a request for information refused under section 12 whenever new
technology became available that would enable the request to be handled
more cheaply. Any such rule would impose an unreasonable burden on public
authorities to monitor the effect of new technical developments on all
previous requests that had been rejected on this basis. We do not believe
that the fact that the new technology became available in this case during
the course of the Information Commissioner’s investigation alters the
position. We therefore consider that this ground of appeal lacks any merit
and accordingly reject it.
Fourth Ground of Appeal: The
Information Commissioner should not have concluded his investigation
without requiring the MOD to comply with FOIA section 16.
26. The Complainant states
that the Information Commissioner was aware, some time before he issued
his Decision Notice, that the MOD had not complied with section 16 and
argues that at that stage he should have notified the MOD of his
conclusion
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Appeal Number: EA/2008/0050 |
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and made a “preliminary
suggestion” that it should remedy the situation. He says that the
Information Commissioner should not have concluded his investigation until
the MOD had been given a direction to that effect.
27. We are aware that the
Information Commissioner does on occasions assist parties to resolve their
dispute over a request for information. That process may sometimes be
assisted by him providing a preliminary indication of his views about the
merits of the complaint. However, if the parties do not reach agreement,
so that the complaint is withdrawn, he is obliged to proceed to make a
decision – see FOIA section 50(2). That decision must be based on the
facts that existed at the date when the public authority reached its
decision. Events that occurred subsequently, during the course of the
investigation, are unlikely to have any relevance.
28. It is conceivable that a
material failure by the Information Commissioner to follow proper
procedures in conducting his investigation could cause his Decision Notice
to fail to be in accordance with the law, for the purposes of FOIA section
58(1)(a). However, we do not believe that the Complainant’s criticism in
this case comes remotely near to establishing such an error. The criticism
is directed, not at the manner in which the Information Commissioner
conducted his investigation into the complaint, but at his alleged failure
to do enough to broker a settlement that would have made it unnecessary to
pursue the investigation further. Having reviewed the material provided to
us in respect of the investigation we think that the criticism is
unjustified in any event. But even if it were not we think that it relates
to an element of the Information Commissioner’s activities over which the
law gives us not jurisdiction.
A possible Fifth Ground of
Appeal: The MOD’s estimate included costs of validating information after
extraction
29. This ground of appeal
was not pursued in the Complainant’s written submissions. However, it did
appear in his original Grounds of Appeal and so we have considered it. It
is common ground between the parties that the effect of the Regulations is
that a public authority may not include in its section 12 estimate any
costs associated with validating information that it traces and extracts.
The
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Appeal Number: EA/2008/0050 |
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Complainant suggested that the
Information Commissioner had been in error because he allowed the MOD to
take the cost of validating information into account. However, we believe
that the argument is based on a mis-reading of the Decision Notice. The
Decision Notice recorded the basis of the estimate and then added that
“additional time would also be needed to validate the data for missing
and erroneous entries”. However, it is clear from the estimate itself
that validating costs had not been included and the MOD’s letter of 20
December 2005 rejecting the original request expressly stated that time to
validate data had not been taken into account for the purposes of its cost
calculations. The effect of the words quoted from the Decision Notice was
simply that, had the cost of validating been considered, the limit
provided for under the Regulations would have been exceeded by an even
greater margin.
Conclusion
30. For the reasons set out
above we dismiss the Appeal.
31. Our decision is
unanimous.
Signed
Chris Ryan
Deputy Chairman
Date: 3 December
2008 |
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