ADMINISTRATIVE LAW – RIGHT TO INFORMATION – REFUSAL TO DEAL – previous application for same documents – whether the later application, on its face, discloses any reasonable basis for again seeking access – where the first application has been the subject of a completed external review – section 43 of the Right to Information Act 2009 (Qld) – section 43(3) of the Right to Information Act 2009 (Qld)
1. The applicant applied[1] to the Department of Environment and Resource Management (Department)[2] under the Right to Information Act 2009 (Qld) (RTI Act) for access to certain information about water licences and riverine protection permits on a specified lot of land (the Property).
2. The Department located 135 relevant pages and decided[3] to:
3. The applicant sought internal review[4] of the Department’s decision.
4. On internal review, the Department affirmed its original decision.[5]
5. The applicant applied to the Office of the Information Commissioner (OIC) for external review.[6]
6. During the course of the review, the Department identified a previous application made to the Department by the applicant, for documents concerning the Property. Accordingly, the issue of whether the Department was entitled to refuse to deal with part of the access application under section 43 of the RTI Act was considered.
7. In the circumstances, the Department is entitled to refuse to deal with the part of the access application which remains in issue in this review under section 43(3)(d)(ii) of the RTI Act.
8. Significant procedural steps relating to the external review are set out in the appendix to this decision.
9. The decision under review is the Department’s internal review decision dated 26 April 2012.
10. Evidence, submissions, legislation and other material considered in reaching this decision are disclosed in these reasons (including footnotes and appendix).
11. During the course of the external review, the parties informally resolved all but one issue under review.
12. Accordingly, the only issue remaining is whether the Department is entitled to refuse to deal with the access application under section 43 of the RTI Act to the extent that it seeks access to documents relating to the approval of a culvert on the Property.
13. Section 43 of the RTI Act applies if:[7]
14. Relevantly, section 43(3)(d)(ii) of the RTI Act allows an agency to refuse to deal with the later application to the extent that it seeks access to documents requested under the first application, if the agency’s decision on the first application has been the subject of a completed review (other than an internal review).
15. Yes, for the reasons that follow.
16. On 21 January 2011, the applicant made its first application to the Department seeking access to “all documents held by (the Department) in relation to (the Property)” for the period 18 October 1946 to 21 January 2011.
17. The applicant subsequently lodged another application (which is the subject of this external review) seeking access to various categories of documents relating to the Property for the period 1 January 1990 to 3 February 2012. The only part of this second access application which remains under review is that which seeks access to documents relating to approval of the culvert on the Property (Approval Documents).
18. The applicant provided OIC with information suggesting the culvert was built in 2004.[8]
19. After carefully considering the scope of the access applications, I am satisfied that the later application seeks access to the same documents sought under the first application because the scope of the first application:
20. On its face, the later application discloses no reasonable basis for the applicant to again seek access to the Approval Documents.
21. During the course of the external review, the applicant made submissions about the sufficiency of the Department’s searches for documents responding to the access application. Relevantly, the applicant referred to a Departmental Record of Meeting dated 24 November 2011 which indicates that the culvert was built in 2004 as a basis to expect that the Approval Documents are held by the Department.
22. In the course of considering the sufficiency of the Department’s searches for other documents (which are no longer in issue in this review), OIC sought the Department’s response to the applicant’s submission in relation to the relevant Departmental Record of Meeting. A Departmental officer from the relevant business unit advised OIC[10] that the Department:
23. I have carefully considered the applicant’s basis for seeking access to Approval Documents and am not satisfied in the circumstances that the access application discloses a reasonable base for again seeking access to these documents. Moreover, based on the Department’s submissions set out in the preceding paragraph, I consider it reasonable to conclude in any event that no Approval Documents are held by the Department.
24. The Department’s decision on the first application was the subject of a completed external review by the OIC.[11] Accordingly, section 43(3)(d)(ii) of the RTI Act applies.
25. I am satisfied that the Department is entitled to refuse to deal with the later application to the extent that it seeks access to documents sought under the first application on the basis set out above.
26. I vary the Department’s decision by finding that the Department is entitled to refuse to deal with the part of access application remaining in issue under section 43(3)(d)(ii) of the RTI Act.
27. I have made this decision as a delegate of the Information Commissioner, under section 145 of the RTI Act.
________________________
Assistant Information Commissioner Corby
Date: 17 December 2012
Date | Event |
6 February 2012 | By application to the Department dated 3 February 2012, the applicant sought access to information created after 1 January 1990, concerning water licences and riverine protection permits relating to specified lots of land. |
8 March 2012 |
The Department advised the applicant that it had located 135 relevant pages and decided to:
|
27 March 2012 | By correspondence the applicant applied to the Department for internal review of its decision on the basis that further relevant documents should exist with the Department |
26 April 2012 | The Department affirmed its original decision on internal review. |
25 May 2012 | By correspondence, the applicant applied to OIC for external review of the Department’s decision on the grounds that “searches undertaken of (the Department’s) files are still deficient” and “(t)here are documents still missing”. |
31 May 2012 |
OIC requested the Department undertake further searches as necessary to locate any additional documents responding to the access application and provide a submission setting out:
|
6 June 2012 | The Department provided OIC with submissions on the sufficiency of its searches. The Department also submitted that part of the access application sought access to information already sought in a previous application made to the Department by the applicant. |
7 June 2012 | OIC made enquiries with the Department regarding the scope of the previous access application. |
30 August 2012 – 3 September 2012 | OIC made enquiries with the relevant business unit about the sufficiency of searches for relevant documents. The relevant business unit submitted that no further documents existed relevant to the access application and provided relevant information about its processes. |
27 September 2012 | By correspondence, OIC conveyed a preliminary view to the applicant that the Department was entitled to refuse to deal with part of the access application under section 43(3)(d)(ii) of the RTI Act; and that the Department was entitled to refuse access to any additional documents under sections 47(3)(e) and 52(1)(a) of the RTI Act on the basis that the Department had undertaken all reasonable steps to locate further documents and no such documents exist. |
9 October 2012 | The applicant wrote to OIC indicating that it did not accept the preliminary view in relation to the refusal to deal issue, but otherwise accepted OIC’s view in relation to the sufficiency of the Department’s searches. |