FOIA Advisor

Allan Blutstein

Court opinions issued May 5, 2025

Court Opinions (2025)Allan BlutsteinComment

Texas Pub. Policy Found. v. U.S. Dep’t of State (5th Cir.) -- reversing lower court in a 2-1 decision and holding that Exemption 6 did not protect the names and email addresses of rank-and-file State Department employees (i.e., non-policy makers) who were involved in developing President Biden’s emissions reduction target after rejoining the Paris Agreement; the majority found that the Department’s fears about potential harassment, doxing, or unwanted attention were not substantiated with credible evidence; that there was a significant public interest in understanding how government policy is formed, even when those involved are not senior officials; and that work-issued emails did not merit the same privacy protections as personal information; the dissent opined that Exemption 6 protected the names and email addresses of rank-and-file employees because their participation in “a high-profile and controversial matter” could expose them to harassment, whereas the rescinded nature of the emissions pledge weakened public interest in disclosure.

Citizens for Responsibility & Ethics in Wash. v. DHS (D.D.C.) -- ruling that DHS properly relied on Exemption 7(C) to withhold the identity of a Secret Service agent who had communicated with the founder of Oath Keepers concerning its potential presence at a September 2020 presidential rally; rejecting plaintiff’s argument that the communications at issue were created for political purposes rather than to fulfill the agency’s law enforcement mission; further, in weighing the agent’s privacy interests against any public interest in disclosure, the court rejected plaintiff’s argument that the agent acted improperly or that disclosure would shed additional light on Secret Service’s operations.

Summaries of all published opinions issued in 2025 are available here. Earlier opinions are available for 2024 and from 2015 to 2023.

Monthly roundup: April 2025

Monthly Roundup (2025)Allan BlutsteinComment

Below is a summary of the notable FOIA court decisions and news from last month, as well as a look ahead to FOIA events in May.

Court decisions

We identified and posted 15 decisions in the month of April, a sharp drop-off from the 41 decisions we summarized in March. Of note, if anything, was Am. Oversight v. DOJ (D.D.C.), in which the court held that DOJ properly withheld Volume Two of Special Counsel Jack Smith’s 2025 investigatory report because a federal district court in Florida had barred DOJ from disclosing it. Plaintiff principally attacked the Florida court’s decision as invalid, but the D.C. court remarked that “FOIA litigation is not a way to challenge that decision. The statute provides remedies for when agencies improperly hold records, not when they comply with allegedly mistaken court orders.”

Although excluded from our list of opinions, the court in Citizens for Responsibility & Ethics in Washington v. U.S. DOGE Service, No. 25-0511 (D.D.C.) ordered the government to start processing DOGE records even though the issue of whether DOGE is subject to FOIA has not been settled on the merits. In a separate order, the same court also permitted plaintiff to conducted limited discovery.

Top News

  • FOIA staff at CDC, FDA, and NIH were fired in the beginning of April, reportedly as part of the Department’s plan to centralize all FOIA operations.

  • The Senate Judiciary Committee held a FOIA hearing on April 8, 2025.

  • The D.C. Circuit heard argument in the last FOIA case of its term on April 11, 2025.

  • On April 29, 2025, DOJ/OIP released a summary of agency annual reports for FY 2024. See our commentary here.

May Events

May 6: DOJ/OIP Procedural Requirements, and Fee and Fee Waivers Training

May 14: DOJ/OIP Litigation Training

May 21: DOJ/OIP Administrative Appeals, FOIA Compliance, and Customer Service Training

FOIA Commentary: FOIA metrics for FY 2024

FOIA Commentary (2025)Allan BlutsteinComment

Last week, the Department of Justice’s Office of Information Policy published a summary of the data reported by agencies in their annual Freedom of Information Act reports for fiscal year 2024. FOIA Advisor reported some of the FY 2024 raw data that had been posted on FOIA.gov in mid-March, such as the total number of requests and appeals, backlogs, and processing costs. Staffers Allan Blutstein (AB), Kevin Schmidt (KS), and Ryan Mulvey (RM) share their thoughts on OIP’s report.

KS: This is the third straight year with double digit percentage increases in FOIA requests (see graph of requests received since FY2015 here):

  • FY23 to FY24 = 25%

  • FY22 to FY23 = 29%

  • FY21 to FY22 = 10%

What is driving these large increases in request volume? Are we finally seeing the effects of AI helping individuals and organizations submit large volumes of requests? If this trend holds and full-time FOIA staff drops from buyouts and reductions in force, FY25 could be a disaster in terms of unanswered requests and backlog growth.

RM: Good questions, Kevin. I would be interested to see data on the total number of unique requesters, rather than distinct requests. I don’t know if that information is maintained by any agencies or could easily be calculated. I acknowledge it isn’t required to be included in each agency’s annual report. Perhaps that’s something OIP could change for next year? It might be useful for navigating claims that the uptick in requests is driven by a select group of what some might term “vexatious” requesters.

Personally, I had expected to see an uptick in the proportion of rarer dispositions issued on processed FOIA requests, specifically categories like “not an agency record,” “duplicate," “improper,” and “not reasonably described.” But the numbers there are only slightly higher than in FY23, and they don’t seem to be drastically different from earlier years either.

What really stuck out to me, though, was the +400% increase in subsection (a)(2) records posted online by agency FOIA offices. The total number of proactively disclosed records itself has only increased slightly by 0.77%. (I wonder how many people notice that?!) I would have appreciated a bit more information about why FOIA offices (as opposed to program offices) did so much better with posting roughly 1.5 million more documents online. What sorts of records were these?

AB: We all know what isn’t keeping the number of requests in check: too-rarely-charged processing fees. Some may view that as a good thing, especially frequent FOIA requesters, but should Joe and Jane Taxpayer bear the brunt of the $700 million-plus in costs? I think not. As for the number of unique requesters, Ryan, I share your curiosity. But OIP should not obligate agencies to figure out and report that data. Just peruse or ask for FOIA logs, as academics curious about other issues have done. And why did you expect agencies to deny substantially more requests on non-exemption grounds, pray tell? I actually know why, but I’ll let you spell it out for our readers. Confession is good for the soul.

I’ll chose a different area of DOJ’s report to focus on: the average processing time for “simple” track requests. DOJ reported that the “average processing time for simple track requests for agencies that reported data . . . was 44 days,” which is an 11.6 percent increase from 39.4 days in FY 2023. I have two comments about that: first, 44 days is the highest average processing time reported for simple requests since such data was first reported in 2011 (DOJ reported in median days before then). Second, I have discovered—by reviewing the raw data on FOIA.gov—that DOJ’s reported government-wide average response times are highly inaccurate, because DOJ uses arithmetic means instead of weighted means. In other words, DOJ gives absolutely no weight to the fact that agencies process different amounts of requests. That is a significant error given that DHS, for example, processed 60 percent of all requests in FY 2024 with an average response time of only 5 days for simple requests. In sum, the government has processed simple track requests at a faster rate than DOJ has reported.

Not to belabor the point, but I must note that DOJ is well aware that weighted means is a more accurate measurement, as it expressly instructs agencies with components to use them for annual reporting purposes (or to use response times for every single request across components). See Department of Justice Handbook for Agency Annual Freedom of Information Act Reports 32-33 (2024). Additionally, DOJ doesn’t even bother to report an overall response time for “complex” requests, which is just as well since any number it would generate via arithmetic means would be inaccurate—or as the renowned Supreme Court litigator Lisa Blatt might bluntly say, it would be “a lie.”

KS: A day after I drafted my first comment above on the increase in requests, the Brechner Center published a blog that included a quote from OIP:

“We called and talked with Lindsay Steel, chief of the OIP compliance office, and while she couldn’t comment on specific causes of the increase, she said her office was surprised by the data. “The increase really was unprecedented,” Steel said.” 

Just did a quick check of the DHS Privacy Office FOIA Log for FY2024 and found 3 people from one organization submitted almost 1/3rd of all requests. So that lends some evidence that the increases might be attributable to certain groups and potential AI use. 

I'm not in theory opposed to Allan's suggestion of charging more processing fees to cover the costs of FOIA, but It would have to be a flat fee processed online at the point of the initial request. If the feds try to copy how they do it at the state and local level with fee estimates for every request with payment by mailed checks, nothing would ever get done. I'm not sure FOIA processors would like the results of this change though. Requesters that paid a fee will highly motivated to get their money's worth and be in contact as much as possible. 

RM: I am quite open to fee reform. The whole fee system needs to be simplified—for example, let’s get rid of the limitations introduced by the 2016 FOIA Improvement Act—and modernized. I like the idea of a flat fee, as you suggest Kevin, at the point of submission. Short of that, if you simultaneously raise fees, eliminate preferred fee categories, and make public-interest fee waivers more liberally available, you could potentially create a situation where agencies find it worthwhile to collect, and those requesters who truly deserve records at a discounted rate are still able to receive them as such. The status quo just isn’t sustainable without Congress deciding to appropriate more money for FOIA at the line-item level.

And to your question, Allan . . . my expectation was based on two things. First, with the much-discussed increase of “bot”-drafted and submitted requests, as well as what some might term “vexatious” requests, I expected more agencies to be guarding the front door, as it were. Second, and somewhat relatedly, I’ve personally noticed an uptick in the number of FOIA cases where DOJ is arguing that requests aren’t reasonably described. Admittedly, that doesn’t mean agencies are doing the same thing at the administrative level. I also suppose it’s possible there’s some correlation between larger, more complex requests—the sort the government would, in fact, want to treat as invalid—and the requesters likely to litigate. That could be skewing my perspective a bit. Still, I thought there might be some effect on the data trends. On a less serious note, I am personally fascinated by the agency-control question and these other non-exemption dispositions, so . . . the more they happen, the more I get to talk about them!

AB: Well said on fee reform, Ryan, except the public-interest fee waiver standard is liberal enough. Only seven states even have a mandatory public-interest fee waiver, according to a 2021 survey by the Maine legislature. I might exclude commercial requesters from any flat fee proposal, Kevin, and would allow agencies to impose surcharges for voluminous records. Eliminating search fees—even if only for non-commercial requesters—would encourage larger and more complex requests and drive up the government’s costs far beyond the amount of the nominal flat fees collected.

FOIA News: This and that

FOIA News (2025)Allan BlutsteinComment

FOIA News: OIP releases summary of FY 2024 data

FOIA News (2025)Allan BlutsteinComment

Summary of Fiscal Year 2024 Annual FOIA Reports Published

By DOJ/OIP, FOIA Post, Apr. 29, 2025

The Office of Information Policy (OIP) has released its Summary of Annual FOIA Reports for Fiscal Year (FY) 2024. This summary provides an overview of FOIA activities across the government during the previous fiscal year, looks at key statistics in FOIA administration, and identifies trends in FOIA processing.  Each summary serves as a resource for both agencies and the public to gain an understanding of overall FOIA administration.

As highlighted in this year's summary, the government received yet another record-setting 1,501,432 requests during FY 2024 – a 25.15% increase in requests received over last fiscal year.  Agencies largely kept pace with this demand by processing1,499,265 requests. 

Read more here.

FOIA Commentary: FOIA Advisor’s 10-year anniversary

FOIA Commentary (2025)Allan Blutstein1 Comment

FOIA Advisor launched in April 2015 with a two-man crew, Allan Blutstein and Kevin Schmidt, who until a few months earlier had worked together at Cause of Action Institute. They were joined in December 2016 by another mutual colleague, Ryan Mulvey, who was then working for COA Institute from London. In the ensuing years we have all relocated, changed employers, and collectively raised nine children. A heartfelt thank you to our readers for motivating us to keep the blog going. To mark our double-digit anniversary, we’ve independently generated lists of our personal top ten FOIA events over the past decade. First, we present a brief side-by-side comparison; below that, our individual comments on our selections.

                                                               Top 10 FOIA events, 2015-2025

 

Allan Kevin Ryan
10. "Release to One, Release to All" (2015-2017)  10. Requests processed (2015-present) 10. Launch of FOIA.gov (2018)
9. OGIS’s first advisory opinion (2018)   9. NIH "FOIA lady" (2024) 9. OGIS's 10th Anniversary (2019)
8. Human Rights Def. Ctr. v. U.S. Park Police (D.C. Cir. 2025) 8. Cause of Action Inst. v. FTC (D.C. Cir. 2015) 8. FOIA Advisory Committee’s first term (2016)
7. FOIA Advisory Committee’s first term (2016) 7. FOIA personnel layoffs (2025) 7. Food Marketing Inst. v. Argus Leader Media (U.S. 2019)
6. One million FOIA requests (FY 2023)  6. Outside messaging services (2015-present) 6. Outside messaging services (2015-present)
5. Machado Amadis v. U.S. Dep’t of State (D.C. Cir. 2020) 5. Human Rights Def. Ctr. v. U.S. Park Police (D.C. Cir. 2025) 5. Competitive Enter. Inst. v. Office of Sci. & Tech. Policy (D.C. Cir. 2016)
4. Am. Immigration Lawyers Ass’n v. EOIR (D.C. Cir. 2016)   4. Food Marketing Inst. v. Argus Leader Media (U.S. 2019) 4. Am. Immigration Lawyers Ass’n v. EOIR (D.C. Cir. 2016) 
3. Cause of Action Inst. v. FTC (D.C. Cir. 2015) 3. COVID pandemic (2020-2021) 3. OMB Fee Guidelines revisions (2020)
2. Food Marketing Inst. v. Argus Leader Media (U.S. 2019) 2. FOIA Improvement Act of 2016 2. Human Rights Def. Ctr. v. U.S. Park Police (D.C. Cir. 2025)
1. FOIA Improvement Act of 2016 1. Hillary Clinton's private email server (2015-2016) 1. FOIA Improvement Act of 2016
Made with HTML Tables

Allan’s comments

10. “Release to One, Release to All” (2016)

The terms “Chuck Cunningham Syndrome” and “Mandyville” each refer to situations in which a television character disappears from a show without explanation and is never mentioned again. DOJ pulled off this Hollywood stunt when it shepherded a proactive posting idea, solicited public comments, and never spoke of it again after the Trump administration killed the proposal Jimmy Hoffa style. I refer readers to our previous commentary about this subject.   

9. OGIS’s first advisory opinion (2018) 

Some requesters naively hoped that OGIS would periodically issue formal advisory opinions--in their favor, of course--after the agency’s 2009 launch. Nine years later, OGIS’s first opinion landed like a relative dud. And OGIS has subsequently issued only one additional advisory opinion. I refer readers to our previous remarks about OGIS’s first opinion.

8. Human Rights Def. Ctr v. U.S. Park Police (D.C. Cir. 2025)

Agencies will have to be extra careful now that federal courts--in the District of Columbia, that is--can no longer use their “inherent judicial authority” to claw back or limit the use of records inadvertently released to FOIA requesters. The D.C. Circuit left open the possibility for such court orders, however, where the records are “subject to any independent legal prohibition on disclosure such as applies to classified documents.” How generous.

7. FOIA Advisory Committee’s first term (2016)

The Committee held the third meeting in its history at about the same time FOIA Advisor launched, and one year later it issued a grand total of one recommendation for the Archivist: namely, to encourage Office of Management and Budget to revise its 1987 fee guidance. OMB finally agreed to make limited changes in December 2020, but only after it was sued.

6. One million FOIA requests (FY 2023)

It was only a matter of time before the million-request threshold was reached, and we are well on our way to two million. This is what happens when the law provides virtually free requests, and new technology enables mass submissions. Note that agencies reported receiving as many as 21.7 million requests before FY 2008, but those counts included Privacy Act requests.

5. Machado Amadis v. U.S. Dep’t of State (D.C. Cir. 2020)

Machado was the first appellate case to consider the application of Congress’s ill-considered foreseeable harm standard, hence its unavoidable appearance on my list. This was a bad test case for requesters, however, given the patently exempt records at issue. The Circuit prudently rejected appellant’s attempt to require the government to submit a geometric proof to show that disclosure of lawyers’ FOIA appeal recommendation could chill agency deliberations.

4. Am. Immigration Lawyers Ass’n v. EOIR (D.C. Cir. 2016)

The court might have been correct that non-responsive redactions “find no home in FOIA’s scheme,” but this decision produced the absurd result of requiring agencies to process material that requesters have never identified in their requests and, if fees apply, requiring requesters to pay for it. DOJ should have nipped this claim in the bud by processing the “NR” material as soon as the requester expressed an interest in it.

3. Cause Action v. FTC (D.C. Cir. 2015)

Qualifying as a news media representative is a golden ticket for FOIA requesters. So, there was joy in “requester land” when the D.C. Circuit held that the statutorily required “audience” could consist of a single person, and a lack of prior publication history was not disqualifying.  In sum, the court one-upped Oprah’s “You get a car!” episode and told the blogging world “You get free requests!”

2. Food Marketing Inst. v. Argus Leader Media (U.S. 2019)

The highest court upended decades-worth of decisions concerning the meaning of “confidential” information under Exemption 4, notably striking down the substantial competitive harm test. Efforts in Congress to restore that complex test have (fortunately) failed. Although the Second Circuit held in 2022 that the foreseeable harm standard requires a showing of commercial or financial harm to the submitter, that does not materially raise the Exemption 4 bar. 

1. FOIA Improvement Act of 2016

Sergio Leone’s epic spaghetti Western would be a good subtitle for this legislation, namely the Good, Bad, and the Ugly. The good: mandating the creation of an online request portal and establishing a minimum 90-day appeal period; the bad: further limiting the assessment of fees for delayed responses; and the ugly: codification of a foreseeable harm standard. 

Kevin’s comments

10. Requests processed (2015-present)

I personally used FOIA at the federal and state level to break stories and hopefully educate the public on problems and solutions. I appreciate the assistance of all of the records officers that worked hard to respond to my many requests. I cannot leave them out of a 10-year anniversary. None of these stories would be possible without them. 

9. NIH “FOIA Lady” (2024)

A capstone to #3 (below), but it shows how FOIA is only effective if the people responding to requests are honest and committed to transparency. 

8. Cause Action v. FTC (D.C. Cir. 2015)

A big win for requesters. News media status should not be reserved for old establishment media.

7. FOIA personnel layoffs (2025)

What happens to FOIA backlogs and service with the reductions in headcount across the federal government? What happens to smaller agencies subsumed by larger ones like USAID moving to State? These are important questions.

6. Outside messaging services (2015-present)

The ongoing issues of political appointees foregoing official government email and chat programs and instead using third party messaging services, including those with auto delete, is one of the biggest problems for open government advocates at all levels of government. 

5. Human Rights Def. Ctr v. U.S. Park Police (D.C. Cir. 2025)

As someone subjected to one of these improper clawback attempts, I'm glad the D.C. Circuit reined in the practice. If used at all it should be reserved for properly classified information.

4. Food Marketing Inst. v. Argus Leader Media (U.S. 2019)

A FOIA case at SCOTUS is rare, but the impact of this one is still being felt and Congress has been trying to pass a bill to address it. 

3. FOIA during COVID (2020-2021)

FOIA during compelled remote work during the COVID pandemic raised novel questions for FOIA officers. Some could not process certain requests without being in office and others lost basic functionality. 

2. FOIA Improvement Act of 2016

A substantive FOIA reform bill passing Congress is a rare event. 

1. Hillary Clinton’s private email server (2015-2016)

Easily tops the list. The FOIA and the records management angle mix together in my view. The saga went on for years with the CREW FOIA request from Dec. 2012 to all of the follow up FOIA requests for Clinton's and emails of past Secretaries of State. 

Ryan’s comments

10. Launch of FOIA.gov (2018)

The creation of FOIA.gov was mandated by the 2016 Amendments, but it’s a noteworthy development on its own.  We should remember the decommissioning of FOIAonline in the wake of FOIA.gov’s debut, too. Unfortunately, while the former functioned as a proper portal, which housed records that could be accessed by the interested public, FOIA.gov is not a true “portal”—it’s just a redirection tool that doesn’t always work. It’s a clunky mess.

9. OGIS’s 10-Year Anniversary (2019)

The OPEN FOIA Act of 2009 created OGIS. In its first decade, it issued one advisory opinion. It published several compliance reports, facilitated agency self-assessments, and made recommendations about best practices—notably, on the use of “still interested” letters to administratively close requests. It would be great to see OGIS’s staffing and resources beefed up, so that it can serve a stronger independent ombudsman’s role.

8. End of the First Term of the FOIA Advisory Committee (2016)

The end of the first term of the FOIA Advisory Committee speaks for itself. I’d only note that Congress should codify the Committee’s existence, so its continued work is ensured by law.

7. Food Marketing Institute v. Argus Leader Media (U.S. 2019)

Of the two FOIA cases to make it to the Supreme Court in the past decade, Argus Leader is the more consequential one. I filed an amicus brief in support of the respondent. I think the elimination of the “competitive harm” test, and the radical altering of the meaning of “confidential,” has had a real impact on how the government processes alleged confidential commercial information. In the immediate aftermath, I highlighted potential problems on the horizon. I still think there’s cause for amending the statute, although the need to do so has been admittedly lessened by courts clarifying that the foreseeable-harm standard robustly applies in the Exemption 4 context.

6. Outside messaging services (2015-present) 

I continue to hear positive feedback in the FOIA world about the report on electronic-messaging records retention and disclosure that some of my colleagues at AFP Foundation and Cause of Action Institute published in 2020. “Gone in an Instant” explored in detail how  many agencies were so poorly complying with the Federal Records Act and NARA Bulletin 2015-02—and presumably now also Bulletin 2023-02. The problem has deepened with the use of commonplace use of encrypted messaging applications, like Signal, often without agency blessing.  It’s a major problem in the FOIA world right now.

5. Competitive Enter. Inst. v. Office of Sci. & Tech. Policy (D.C. Cir. 2016)  

The CEI decision marks the first instance of the D.C. Circuit recognizing the simple yet important proposition that records do not leave the control of an agency when they are stored on a private account controlled by an agency official. The historical context of that case cannot be understated—it came on the heels of the FBI opening an investigation into Secretary Hillary Clinton’s use of a private email server, and amidst other FOIA litigation that, in relevant part, sought discovery into Clinton’s email practices. But CEI has proven to be quite a durable precedent as government officials continue (amazingly!) to use personal accounts for conducting official business, perhaps in the hopes of avoiding transparency.

4. Am. Immigration Lawyers Ass’n v. EOIR (D.C. Cir. 2016)      

AILA was an important case because it ended the practice of subject-matter scoping. It also started an ongoing conversation about the foundational question of the definition of a “record”—a question that heretofore focused mainly on easy cases involving requests for tangible non-documentary objects, like JFK’s bloody suit coat or D.B. Cooper’s clip-on tie. I have a personal interest here, since I’ve litigated this question of the meaning of a “record” and written elsewhere about it.

3. OMB Fee Guidelines Revisions (2020)

I’m proud to say OMB’s revisions were prompted by litigation undertaken by Cause of Action Institute. Of course, the FOIA Advisory Committee had recommended that OMB take action, too. Setting aside the limited scope of OMB’s revisions and my personal quibble about their legal nature—are they a “rule” or not?—it’s great that OMB finally recognized the importance of significant court decisions like Cause of Action v. FTC, 799 F.3d 1108 (D.C. Cir. 2015), and Sack v. DOD, 823 F.3d 687 (D.C. Cir. 2016). Unfortunately, we’ll probably need to wait another 30 years before OMB does another update!

2. Human Rights Def. Ctr v. U.S. Park Police (D.C. Cir. 2025)

As a requester, I think this case was a fantastic development. Agencies have infrequently invoked claw-back over the years, tut there has been a demonstrated increase in its use recently. That’s one of the reasons I filed an amicus brief in support of the requester. Judge Pillard, writing for a unanimous panel, seemed to accept—or at least not reject—effectively all of our arguments, though she did not reach the First Amendment. This case mattered for a proper reading of the FOIA, but perhaps more importantly, for properly understanding the inherent powers of an Article III court.

1. FOIA Improvement Act of 2016

Despite the slow speed at which they were implemented, the 2016 Amendments have had a positive impact on FOIA administration. Some of the reforms might have proven more theoretically valuable than practically so; the “Rule of 3,” for example, hasn’t worked as intended by Congress. That underscores a broader problem with Sec. 552(a)(2) compliance. And the new fee limitations have created an unexpected dynamic given agency backlogs and average processing times. But, more than anything, the codification of the foreseeable-harm standard has truly shifted the landscape. The standard has real teeth now that we’ve seen strong circuit precedent develop in cases like Reporters Committee for Freedom of the Press v. FBI,3 F.4th 350 (D.C. Cir. 2021), and Seife v. FDA, 43 F.4th 231 (2d Cir. 2022).

FOIA News: A pair of articles on DOGE

FOIA News (2025)Allan BlutsteinComment

Can DOGE Dodge Transparency Laws?

By Rachel Jones & Frank LoMonte, Am. Bar Assoc., Apr. 28, 2025

Imagine that a new president of the United States tasked the federal Office of Management and Budget (OMB) with identifying $2 trillion worth of federal spending that could be eliminated. Slashing the federal budget by nearly 30 percent would be the biggest news story in America, generating intense public interest, concern, and scrutiny. Predictably, journalists, researchers, and government watchdog organizations would soon be bombarding the OMB with requests under the Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) to determine how the agency intended to carry out such a drastic restructuring of the government.

But what if the same task were instead delegated to a cadre of the president’s most influential supporters, operating as a form of “shadow OMB” outside the confines of traditional government structures? Would open-government laws apply at all to the work of this unconventional “government efficiency” entity?

We may soon find out.

Read more here.

The Legal Battle for DOGE Transparency

How civil society groups are making the case for public-records access

By Kyle Paoletta, Columbia Journalism Rev., Apr, 28, 2025

In early February, the news broke that employees of the Department of Government Efficiency, or DOGE, had received an email ordering them to stop using Slack while lawyers sorted out the matter of “records migration.” The reasons were unclear, but the change had significant implications for communication: according to Jason R. Baron, a professor at the University of Maryland and former director of litigation at the National Archives and Records Administration, the transition represented the difference between DOGE’s internal correspondence being covered by the Federal Records Act, and thus subject to Freedom of Information Act requests, versus the Presidential Records Act, which would exclude the office from FOIA. “The administration position is that those records will not be accessible until 2034,” Baron said. “But if they’re subject to FOIA, those records are available now.”

Lawyers who specialize in public records and government transparency were uniformly shocked. As DOGE raced to upend the federal government, it was evidently also seeking to avoid scrutiny. When I spoke to Katherine Anthony, the deputy chief counsel of American Oversight, a good-government group, she told me that DOGE was effectively claiming the right to decide for itself which laws it had to comply with. “It’s kind of like saying, ‘I’m copying my lawyer on this email so it’s attorney-client privilege.’ That’s not how that works!” Anthony said. “There are legal tests that you have to apply to the specific substance of that email to decide whether it’s attorney-client privilege. Same here—there are legal tests that tell you whether or not a component within the Executive Office of the President is or is not subject to FOIA.”

Read more here.

FOIA News: Democrat seeks info on CDC’s FOIA office

FOIA News (2025)Allan BlutsteinComment

House oversight committee demands answers on gutting of CDC public records office

By Sydney Lupkin, NPR, Apr. 24, 2025

The top Democrat on the House Committee on Oversight and Accountability wants answers from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention about why its public records staff was gutted on April 1, when thousands of federal health agency workers were fired.

Rep. Gerry Connolly, a Democrat from Virginia, sent a letter to CDC's acting director Dr. Susan Monarez on Thursday, expressing "concern" about the 22 staffers who handled and fulfilled public records requests being placed on administrative leave until their jobs are eliminated on June 2. Their work has been mandated by Congress since the 1960s under the Freedom of Information Act, or FOIA.

Read more here.