A new tool allows journalists to quickly sort through FOIA data dumps
By Paroma Soni, Columbia Journalism Rev., Mar. 2, 2022
IN THE 2020 FISCAL YEAR ALONE, federal agencies received nearly 800,000 requests under freedom of information laws. The process is notoriously frustrating, marked by delays, denials, and appeals before documents are turned over (if they ever are). Even success can be exasperating—documents arrive in the form of large dumps, without any meaningful organization. All that work is time- and labor-intensive; for smaller newsrooms with fewer financial resources and less manpower, it may feel prohibitive. A recent foia workshop held by the Chicago Headline Club included a session called “More data, more problems,” aimed at finding new approaches to reporting with massive data dumps.
“I file a lot of foia requests, and I often get back hundreds and hundreds of emails, documents, and a ton of text files,” Hilke Schellmann, a journalism professor at New York University, says. “I don’t necessarily know what or where the smoking gun will be, but I know I don’t need to read hundreds of emails about someone’s lunch schedule to find it.”
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