Redaction: The law states that
any "reasonably segregable" portions of an otherwise exempt record will
be provided to a requester after redaction of parts which are not to be disclosed. The review process may include redacting (blacking
out) material which is exempt. However, where non-exempt material is
so "inextricably intertwined" that disclosure of it would leave only
meaningless words and phrases, or where the editing required for partial
disclosure would be so extensive as to effectively result in the creation of new records,
the entire record may be withheld. Consult your legal servicing office
if contemplating a response which asserts materials are nonsegregable.
Redacting Documents - Checklist
In response to FOIA requests, appeals, or litigation, FOIA liaisons
may be asked to provide copies of documents to the NOAA FOIA Officer, who
will forward them to the
Department of Commerce FOIA Officer, as well as to the appropriate
Attorney/Advisor in the Office of the General Counsel.
_____ Original documentation responsive to FOIA requests must be retained in the appropriate NOAA action office.
_____ Duplicate copies of documentation must be made available to the NOAA FOIA Office upon request.
_____ FOIA documents must be segregated, easily identifiable, and maintained in secure places by both the NOAA FOIA Office, as well as NOAA action offices.
_____ If portions of documents are exempt from disclosure pursuant to one or more FOIA exemptions, the above requirements apply to both the redacted and the unredacted documents.
_____ When redacting documents, THE ORIGINAL DOCUMENT MUST NEVER BE
ALTERED. Instead, a photocopy of the original document should be redacted.
The amount
of information, and the appropriate exemption, MUST be indicated on
the responsive document.
_____ In addition to other records retention requirements that apply,
the documents must be retained pursuant to records retention requirements
for FOIA documents for 6 years (or
longer if there is ongoing litigation).
_____ At the end of the FOIA records retention period, or litigation,
whichever is longer, the NOAA action office must ensure final disposition
in accordance with the Federal Records
Retention Schedule..
What form of measurement should agencies use in notifying FOIA requesters of the amount of information that has been deleted or withheld in a FOIA request?
Agencies should follow a commonsense rule of
advising requesters about withheld information in whatever way most effectively
indicates the nature of what is being withheld.
Under the Electronic FOIA amendments, agencies are ordinarily
obligated to indicate the amount of information that has been deleted from
records that are withheld in part, see 5 U.S.C. § 552(b),
as amended by Electronic Freedom of Information Act Amendments of 1996,
5 U.S.C.A. § 552(b) (West Supp. 1997), and also to advise the
requester of the volume of what is withheld as exempt whenever entire records
(or entire pages of them) are being withheld, see 5 U.S.C. §
552(a)(6)(F) (as amended). See FOIA Update, Fall 1996, at 11.) As a practical
matter, agencies usually will meet the first
of these two obligations through administrative markings on redacted records,
including records that are disclosed in electronic form.See
FOIA Update, Winter 1997, at 6. To meet the second obligation,
agencies
must, in the words of the statute, "make a reasonable effort to estimate
the volume" of what is being entirely withheld. 5 U.S.C.
§ 552(a)(6)(F). This volume estimate usually will take the form of
numbers of pages of records that are being withheld in their entireties--and
in relatively small-volume cases, it should be reasonably possible to provide
an exact page count. In larger-volume cases, an agency may use a page-count
estimate. In some such cases, an agency may give a specification or an
estimate of the number of entire documents withheld, so long as it also
gives the requester a good understanding of the volume of those documents.
It is even possible that in some cases, such as where a large volume of
records is withheld to prevent harm to an ongoing law enforcement investigation
under Exemption 7(A), an agency's estimate of the volume of what is being
withheld (if it would cause no harm to provide it) could best be expressed
in terms of boxes, file cabinet drawers, or even linear feet of withheld
records. For withheld records that exist in electronic form, an agency
could use either an applicable electronic form of measurement (e.g., kilobytes,
megabytes, or an electronic "word count"), or a more conventional record
equivalent (e.g., standard document pages), whichever would be the most
effective means of estimating the volume of those records for the requester.
Return to Table
of Contents
Last Updated July 2003