One of the earliest transparency scandals of the Obama Administration erupted in 2010 when the Associated Press discovered that officials at the Department of Homeland Security (“DHS”) had, “in a highly irregular move,” started to “filter hundreds of public records requests through political appointees, allowing them to examine what was being requested and delay releasing sensitive material.”  These appointees, along with senior officials and public affairs staff, effectively blocked or delayed the disclosure of potentially embarrassing or politically-damaging agency records under the Freedom of Information Act (“FOIA”).  Their interjection into the FOIA process—and retaliation against career staff members who objected to this “sensitive review”— resulted in a congressional inquiry and damning Oversight Committee report.  The Obama Administration politicized FOIA the same way at the Department of Housing and Urban Development, the Environmental Protection Agency, the State Department, and the Department of the Treasury.  The situation at DHS, however, has improved, according to a recently-released Inspector General report.

The July 7, 2009 memorandum establishing sensitive review procedures at DHS included extensive reporting requirements, including updates to the White House about agency disclosures.  The DHS Inspector General politely described this, in a March 2011 report, as “unprecedented.”  It “created inefficiencies that hampered full implementation” of the FOIA.  More troubling, the policy had the practical effect of targeting media organizations and critics of the Administration.  Agency officials regularly delayed requests from media outlets, for example, so that they could develop a public response to damaging records.  And other disclosure decisions were sometimes based on the political affiliation of a requester.

Now, in response to a June 2015 request from the U.S. Senate Homeland Security and Governmental Affairs Committee, the Inspector General has published a new report that revisits its earlier findings and suggests that the culture of FOIA politicization at DHS has improved.  Since 2011, DHS has “reduced the number of days that political appointees . . . have to review releases from 3 days to 1 day.”  The sensitive review process has been renamed the “1-Day Awareness Notification Process.”  And, in most cases, FOIA officers “no longer wait for approval before releasing responses to significant FOIA requests” because it is “not required.”  An audit of 57 “significant requests” showed that none were delayed because of political appointee intervention.

These findings are positive.  The more limited involvement of fewer political appointees—“an advisor to the DHS Secretary, an official in the Office of Public Affairs, and the Chief FOIA Officer”—as well as a shorter “notification” period, limits the potential for politicization while respecting agency leadership’s concern for being kept aware of disclosures that might ignite media attention.  The apparent removal of any sort of necessary “clearance” authorization from political staff, or the removal of a requirement to obtain such clearance before release, is also a helpful development.  Oddly, DHS’s revised procedures are only “informally documented” in a “2012 email” and “2015 draft guidance.”  According to the Inspector General’s report, the DHS Privacy Office aims to finalize them by the end of the year.  The sooner, the better.

Ryan P. Mulvey is Counsel at Cause of Action Institute.