Fair-and-reasonable (FAR). That's the standard, the test for organisations handling personal information (PI) under the proposed privacy reforms. The FAR principle is also found in the 'Objects' section of the FOI Act at Section 3(4), outlining that FOI functions "are to be performed and exercised, as far as possible, to facilitate and promote public access to information, promptly and at the lowest reasonable cost."
And yes - fair call, I was pushing the envelope with the 'FAR' reference, but Commonwealth agencies may need to re-examine their approaches to what is fair-and-reasonable and what constitutes the lowest-reasonable-cost (LRC) when managing access-to-information (ATI) or data-subject-requests (DSARs), regardless if they arise under the FOI or Privacy acts.
Why? in FY23, Commonwealth FOI programs ran up a bill of $70 million, with APS and other salary costs taking the lion's share of those resources (+$65 million) for processing almost 35,000 FOIs. However, most FOI practitioners would likely admit that the $70 million price tag significantly underestimates the actual cost to their agencies. This is particularly the case when dealing with complex or vexatious applicants, who can monopolise an FOI unit's time form months or years, along with HR, legal and other business units. My own, unscientific estimates are that agencies can often double their reported FOI costs when accounting for the actual time-and-resources spent on FOIs.
And then there's the small matter of privacy reforms. Under these reforms, Commonwealth organisations will need to provide some documentation when responding to requests for PI. Agencies will need to provide details of searches, third-party consultations and the reasons for not disclosing or deleting certain PI. In other words, the privacy reforms will likely require agencies to produce FOI-like determinations.
The effect? Negating or reducing the practical benefit and resource-savings of processing PI-focused access requests under the Privacy Act. Judging from the EU's experience after the passage of General Data Protection Regulation - where the numbers of DSARs reportedly doubled, agencies will likely get a huge uptick in PI-related requests after the privacy reforms come into force. It follows that this 'uptick' in DSARs will demand additional spending and efforts by resource-constrained agencies already struggling with their FOI workloads.
Or will it? Stated another way - are there other options that could help agencies manage access requests in a FAR manner, or even streamline FOI and privacy procedures that won't require legislative changes and additional costs? Possible, but that would require some challenging conversations around some of the following points - and hopefully more!
Again, these comments and questions are meant to be a starting point, an entrée for Commonwealth agencies to start thinking about how best to manage increasingly complex, voluminous and challenging FOIs and DSARs in the face of ever-shrinking budgets. Arguable the lowest-reasonable-cost or LRC principle should not only be considered from the perspective of FOI and DSAR applicants, but also from that of Commonwealth agencies and the taxpayers who fund these programs. Why? It's only fair-and-reasonable.