The Right to Information Act 20091 (RTI Act) creates a right of access to documents in the possession or control of Queensland government agencies, subject to certain exclusions and exceptions.2 The RTI Act specifies the time periods for actions when processing application, including the time by which a reviewable decision must be given to the applicant.
This guideline explains how to calculate the time periods under the RTI Act.3
Timeframes in the RTI Act are calculated in business days.4 A business day is a day which is not a weekend or a holiday5 in the place where the agency is making their RTI decision.6 This may differ between agencies: for example, depending on where they are located, different RTI Units will have the public holiday for their show day will on different days.
If the RTI Unit is shut down on a day which is not a weekend or holiday, the day will be counted as a business day. This includes unplanned closures, for example because of extreme weather events, and planned closures such as any Christmas/New Year shut down.
A business day includes the entire day, beginning at 12:00am and ending at 11:59pm; it does not end when the agency’s office closes for the day. For example, a decision notice could be emailed to an applicant at 11:58pm on the due date if it was certain to arrive by 11:59pm.
The timeframes in which an agency must do something under the RTI Act are triggered by specific events,7 for example the processing period is triggered by the arrival of an application, even if the application does not meet all the legislative requirements.8
Refer to Timeframes for noncompliant and other defective applications for more information.
With one exception (see below), when calculating timeframes the day on which the event occurs (referred to here as Day Zero) does not count. This also applies when the event occurs on a day that is not a business day. For example, if the agency receives an RTI application on a weekend or public holiday this will be Day Zero; the next business day will be Day One of the processing period.
The processing period begins to run as soon as an application arrives in the agency, not the day it arrives in the RTI Unit. It is important that RTI applications are sent to the RTI Unit as quickly as possible.
When working out when the revision period begins after issuing a Charges Estimate Notice (CEN) under the RTI Act there is no Day Zero. When a CEN is issued, the processing period immediately stops, and the revision period immediately begin.9
If the last day of a timeframe is not a business day, the time frame ends on the next business day. For example, if day 24 of the processing period was on Friday, and the following Monday was a public holiday, the decision notice would be due on Tuesday, because that is the next business day.
An applicant must be given a reviewable decision by the end of the processing period. Even if the decision is made before the end of the processing period, if it is not given to the applicant before the processing period ends the decision will become a deemed refusal of access to all documents.10
For this reason, it is helpful to deliver the notice of decision by email if the applicant is happy to receive it that way. If this is not possible, the decision notices will have to be delivered by post, taking into account Australia Post’s timeframes for ordinary delivery,11 or another method.
Where an Act allows a document to be served by post, service is carried out by properly addressing, prepaying and posting the document as a letter.12 Notice is taken to be ‘given’ at the time in which the letter would be delivered in the ordinary course of business, unless the contrary is proved.
The agency can ask the applicant for extra time to make a decision at any time before the end of the processing period. This extra time is called the further specified period and it should be requested in business days. The applicant does not have to agree to the request but as long as they do not refuse and do not seek an external review,13 the agency can keep working on the application.
Decision Maker Jill receives a noncompliant application. She is working with the applicant to make it compliant, but she's aware that the processing period is running out. On day 20 she asks the applicant for an extension of 10 business days and he doesn't refuse.
On day 30 (25 business day processing period plus 5 days of the extension) the applicant makes his application compliant. The processing period restarts on the next business day.
The applicant’s agreement is not necessary to rely on the extra time requested. However, even if the applicant does agree, they can revoke it or seek an external review at any time during the further specified period.
The further specified period is not part of the processing period. It begins when the processing period ends.13 The agency can request as many extensions as required to process the application but each additional extension must be requested before the prior extension period ends.
Because the further specified period is not part of the processing period, trigger events that normally stop the clock during the processing period do not do so. For example, if an agency issues a Notice of Intention to Refuse to Deal during the further specified period, the further specified period keeps running. The agency will need to ask the applicant for any extra time it needs to process the application.
For information on dealing with specific timeframes under the RTI Act, please see these guidelines:
Current as at: March 27, 2023