The Right to Information Act 2009 (Qld) (RTI Act) gives people the right to access agency1 documents, subject to some exceptions and limitations. It also provides parties affected by the decision, usually the applicant or a consulted third party, with review rights.
Affected parties can only apply for review of a reviewable decision, as set out in schedule 4A of the RTI Act. Reviewable decisions under the RTI Act which raise search issues are:
These reviewable decisions can be internally reviewed by the agency or externally reviewed by the Office of the Information Commissioner (OIC).
Refer to Review rights under the RTI Act guideline for more information.
The onus is generally on the agency to demonstrate that its searches were sufficient, and it located all documents within the scope of an application.2 For a documents non-existent or unlocatable decision, the agency will need to demonstrate it met certain specific criteria.
The OIC will advise the agency if search issues are being considered during the review.
Refer to Documents nonexistent or unlocatable guideline for more information.
As part of assessing the sufficiency of an agency’s searches, the OIC may request agency submissions which set out:
The OIC will also require a record of the agency’s searches and signed search certification forms from officers involved in the searching and may ask the agency to undertake additional searches and enquiries to demonstrate all reasonable steps have been taken to locate relevant documents.
The OIC seeks to informally resolve issues under review. As part of informally resolving sufficiency of search issues, the OIC asks agencies to provide submissions in a format which can be disclosed to the applicant. If the agency is concerned about any part of its submissions being provided to the applicant, the agency should advise the OIC of its concerns.
The OIC may also request information directly from officers in the relevant business unit involved in the creation and/or recordkeeping of relevant documents, as these officers have detailed knowledge of these practices and procedures.
If a review cannot be resolved informally, the OIC will issue a formal decision.
If additional in scope documents are identified during the external review of an access application, section 105A of the RTI Act allows the OIC to refer those documents back to the agency to make a decision if:
The OIC will consult with the agency before any referral occurs. If the documents are referred, the external review will continue minus those documents.
If the OIC refers the additional documents back to the agency, the applicant is taken to have made a new, fully compliant access application to the agency for those additional documents. No access or processing charges are payable for the new application.
The valid application day for the application will be the day the documents were referred back to the agency. The applicant does not need to pay an application fee or provide evidence of identity or authority if the agent is unchanged from the initial application. If the applicant has a new agent acting for them, the valid application day will be the day the agency receives evidence of authority for the new agent.
Refer to Timeframes under the RTI Act and Managing noncompliant applications for more information.
If additional documents are not referred back to the agency, they will be considered by the OIC during the review. The same informal resolution process that applies to other documents in issue may apply, so the OIC may seek:
If access to the additional documents cannot be informally resolved, the OIC will issue a formal decision.