Information Tribunal


 Thursday, 1 May 2008, 20:28 0

Martin Rosenbaum: "it looks like we are going to find out more about this, following an important decision issued today by the Information Tribunal."

 Wednesday, 20 February 2008, 11:07 0

David Miliband: "In accordance with the Information Tribunal’s decision of 22 January 2008, I have today released what has been described as John Williams’ draft of the September 2002 Iraq weapons of mass destruction dossier."

 Friday, 7 December 2007, 11:38 0

"Lawyers have long argued that there is absolute protection against the publication of legally privileged advice. Robert Verkaik, Law Editor, finds a case which challenges this"

 Tuesday, 2 October 2007, 19:09 0

"The future of [Ofcom's Sitefinder website] which details all the mobile phone masts in the UK is in doubt following a row over divulging "commercially sensitive" information." (Cough. Scrape! Cough.)

 Saturday, 29 September 2007, 11:02 0

"A dead woman’s medical records should not be released because a duty of confidentiality survives her death, the Information Tribunal has ruled. …"

 Wednesday, 23 May 2007, 23:54 0

"A quick look at the Tribunal’s decisions page supports the impression of an increased amount of decisions being made. … Despite this increase in decisions, a backlog in pending appeals has developed."

 Friday, 4 May 2007, 13:42 0

"The Information Tribunal has forced the disclosure of strategic reviews of the identity cards system by the Office of Government Commerce, which opposed the disclosure of the information."

 Monday, 30 April 2007, 13:02 0

Martin Rosenbaum clears up some of the dodgy reporting on the Balen Report ruling: "This does not affect the Trbunal’s ability to overrule the Commissioner on most issues, just on whether information comes under the derogations which apply to the BBC …"

How the FOI (Amendment) Bill slipped through

Thursday, 25 January 2007, 10:09

The Guardian’s David Hencke today looks at how the Freedom of Information (Amendment) Bill slipped through its second reading unopposed in the House of Commons:

On the day Westminster was convulsed by the revelations surrounding the dawn arrest of Ruth Turner, the senior Downing Street aide, in the cash-for-honours investigation, MPs approved on the nod the second reading of a bill to exclude parliament from the Freedom of Information Act.

David Maclean, the former Tory chief whip, introduced the measure in a private member’s bill. …
He acknowledged the effect of the bill would be to exempt parliament from the act at a time when the parliamentary authorities have lost a case at an information tribunal after trying to block more detailed disclosure of MPs’ expenses.

When it was put to him that he had chosen the very end of a busy parliamentary day to get a second reading, he said: “I am showing some of the younger hands how you can get a bill through parliament after long experience as a whip in both getting and blocking bills through parliament.”

Hencke’s report also notes that because it is a private member’s bill, Maclean will be allowed to chose the members of the committee that scrutinises his bill. There are also the first hints of opposition, from Lib Dem MP Norman Baker, who recently won a Information Tribunal case against the House of Commons in order to force the release of MPs’ expenses.

3 comments

Martin StabeA UK-centric look at new media and online journalism.
 
 

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