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Do
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Don't
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Find out who to send your request to. If you
address your request directly to the appropriate contact within the
authority then you may receive a prompter response.
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Use offensive or threatening language.
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Include your name, address and other contact
details in the request.
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Level unfounded accusations at the authority
or its staff.
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Clearly state that you are making your
request under the Freedom of Information Act/Environmental
Information Regulations.
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Make personal attacks against employees.
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Be as specific as possible about the
information you want rather than asking general questions. Try to
include details such as dates and names whenever you can. It may
also assist the authority in identifying the information if you
explain the purpose behind your request.
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Use FOI to reopen grievances which have
already been fully addressed by the authority, or subjected to
independent investigation with no evidence of wrongdoing being
found.
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Re-read your request to check for any wording
which is unclear or open to interpretation.
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Make assumptions about how the authority
organises its information or tell them how to search for the
information you want.
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Use straightforward, polite language; avoid
basing your request or question on assumptions or opinions, or
mixing requests with complaints or comments.
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Bury your request in amongst lengthy
correspondence on other matters or underlying complaints
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Specify whether you have any preferences as to
how you would like to receive the information, for example if you
would prefer a paper copy or to receive an email.
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Use requests as a way of ‘scoring points’
against an authority
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Give the authority ample opportunity to
address any previous requests you have made before submitting new
ones.
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Send ‘catch-all’ requests for information
(such as ‘please provide me with everything you hold about ‘x’)
when you aren’t sure what specific documents to ask for. If in
doubt, try searching on the authority’s website or enquiring
whether any indexes and file lists are available. Alternatively,
ask the authority for some advice and assistance in framing your
request.
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Stay focused on the line of enquiry you are
pursuing. Don’t let your attention start to drift onto issues of
minor relevance.
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Submit frivolous or trivial requests; remember
that processing any information request involves some cost to the
public purse.
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Think about whether making a request is the
best way of achieving what you want. If you have an underlying
complaint then it may be better to just take your complaint to the
relevant ombudsman and let them investigate.
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Disrupt a public authority by the sheer weight
of requests or the volume of information requested. Whether you are
acting alone or in concert with others, this is a clear misuse of
the Act and an abuse of your ‘right to know’.
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Aim to be flexible if the authority advises
that it can’t meet the full request on cost grounds and asks you to
narrow it down. Try to work with the organisation to produce a
streamlined version of the request which still covers the core
information that is most importance to you.
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Deliberately ‘fish’ for information by
submitting a very broad or random requests in the hope it will
catch something noteworthy or otherwise useful. Requests should be
directed towards obtaining information on a particular issue,
rather than relying on pot luck to see if anything of interest is
revealed.
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Make repeat requests unless circumstances, or
the information itself, have changed to the extent that there are
justifiable grounds to ask for the information again
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