Coronavirus (Scotland) (No.2) Act 2020: thirteenth report on the Scottish Ministers' responses to requests for information under the Freedom of Information (Scotland) Act 2002

Report on the Scottish Ministers’ handling of requests for information under the Freedom of Information (Scotland) Act 2002 for the period from 27 May to 26 July 2022

This document is part of a collection


Requests for information

(a) Backlogs in responding to requests

20. Under section 10(1) of FOISA, a Scottish public authority must respond to requests for information promptly, and in any event by not later than the 20th working day after it receives the request[5].

21. We have interpreted "backlogs in responding to requests" as meaning requests for information under FOISA which:

(a) were not answered by the 20th working day after receipt; and

(b) remained unanswered at the end of the reporting period on 26 July 2022.

22. The number of requests in this category is 72.

(b) How many requests have been responded to

23. We have interpreted this as relating to the number of requests for information under FOISA that were responded to at any point within the reporting period, regardless of the date on which those requests were received.

24. The number of requests in this category is 586.

(c) What was provided in response to requests

25. We have interpreted this as relating to the information that is disclosed to requests for information under FOISA.

26. In the interests of openness and transparency, in July 2017 the Scottish Ministers began to publish online their responses to requests where information has been disclosed[6]. This information is accessible from the Scottish Government website[7]. Accordingly, we have not included this information in this report, as a single request may result in the disclosure of hundreds of pages of information.

27. Publication is not a mandatory requirement under FOISA, and relatively few authorities publish the information that they disclose in this way.

28. Within the Scottish Government, publication takes place after a final response has been issued to the requester. The final responses are passed to the FOI Unit, which selects the cases in which information has been disclosed and prepares them for publication. This process involves a number of checks, principally to ensure that the requester's personal information is not inadvertently disclosed. The FOI Unit also ensures that responses are prepared in an accessible format for online publication.

29. The Scottish Government remains committed to publishing the information disclosed in response to requests for information and has put in place arrangements to address a current backlog in published responses.

(d) Cases which were partially refused

30. We have interpreted this as relating to the number of requests for information under FOISA that we responded to within the reporting period where we:

(a) disclosed some information; and

(b) issued a refusal notice under section 16(1), (4) or (5) of FOISA in respect of other information

31. It excludes requests where we disclosed all the information requested and those where we did not disclose any information to the requester.

32. The number of requests where we disclosed some information, and issued a refusal notice under section 16(1), (4) or (5) of FOISA in respect of other information, is 96.

Contact

Email: foi@gov.scot

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