Our reference: FOI 23-257
Mr Ryan Austin
Right to Know:
xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx@xxxxxxxxxxx.xxx.xx
Dear Mr Austin,
Decision on your Freedom of Information Request
I refer to your request of 24 April 2023, to the Classification Board (the Board), seeking access to documents
under the
Freedom of Information Act 1982 (FOI Act).
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Your request
You requested access to:
All documents relating to the classification of the film 'Infinity Pool' (File number: T23/19108;
Classification number: CLAS-115627)
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Authority to make decision
I am authorised to make decisions in relation to Freedom of Information requests under section 23(1) of the
FOI Act.
3
Material taken into consideration
In making my decision, I had regard to the following:
• the terms of your request
• the content of the documents captured by your request
• the provisions of the FOI Act
• the guidelines issued by the Australian Information Commissioner under section 93A of the FOI Act
(the FOI Guidelines)
• advice from departmental officers with responsibility for the subject matter contained in the
documents captured by your request
GPO Box 594, Canberra ACT 2601, Australia
telephone website
s infrastructure.gov.au | arts.gov.au
link to page 7
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Decision
I have identified three documents that are relevant to your request. These documents were in the possession
of the Board when your request was received.
I have decided to grant partial access to three documents.
A schedule setting out the documents relevant to your request, with my decision in relation to those
documents, is at
ATTACHMENT A.
My reasons for refusing access to information that is relevant to your request are set out below.
4.1 Section 47F – Documents affecting personal privacy
Section 47F of the FOI Act provides that a document is conditionally exempt if its disclosure would involve the
unreasonable disclosure of personal information about any person (including a deceased person).
Personal Information
Personal information has the same meaning as in the Privacy Act. Specifically, section 6 of the Privacy Act
provides that
personal information means information or an opinion about an identified individual, or an
individual who is reasonably identifiable whether the information or opinion is true or not; and whether the
information or opinion is recorded in a material form or not.
Paragraph 6.131 of the FOI Guidelines states that for particular information to be personal information, an
individual must be identified or reasonably identifiable.
Paragraph 6.130 of the FOI Guidelines states that personal information can include a person’s name, address,
telephone number, date of birth, medical records, bank account details, taxation information and signature.
An individual is a natural person rather than a corporation, trust, body politic or incorporated association.
I am satisfied that parts of the documents marked ‘s47F’ an individual.
Unreasonable Disclosure of Personal Information
Section 47F(2) of the FOI Act provides that, in determining whether the disclosure would involve the
unreasonable disclosure of personal information, I must have regard to the following matters:
(a)
the extent to which the information is well known
(b)
whether the person to whom the information relates is known to be (or to have been) associated
with the matters dealt with in the document
(c)
the availability of the information from publicly accessible sources
(d)
any other matters that the agency or Minister considers relevant.
Paragraph 6.138 of the FOI Guidelines states that:
The personal privacy exemption is designed to prevent the unreasonable invasion of third parties’
privacy. The test of ‘unreasonableness’ implies a need to balance the public interest in disclosure of
government-held information and the private interest in the privacy of individuals. The test does not,
however, amount to the public interest test of s 11A(5), which follows later in the decision making
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process. It is possible that the decision maker may need to consider one or more factors twice, once to
determine if a projected effect is unreasonable and again when assessing the public interest balance.
I note that the AAT, in
Re Chandra and Minister for Immigration and Ethnic Affairs [1984] AATA 437 at paragraph
259, stated that:
... whether a disclosure is ‘unreasonable’ requires … a consideration of all the circumstances, including
the nature of the information that would be disclosed, the circumstances in which the information was
obtained, the likelihood of the information being information that the person concerned would not wish
to have disclosed without consent, and whether the information has any current relevance … it is also
necessary in my view to take into consideration the public interest recognised by the Act in the disclosure
of information … and to weigh that interest in the balance against the public interest in protecting the
personal privacy of a third party ...
Paragraphs 6.142 and 6.143 of the FOI Guidelines state:
6.142
Key factors for determining whether disclosure is unreasonable include:
• the author of the document is identifiable
• the documents contain third party personal information
• release of the documents would cause stress on the third party
• no public purpose would be achieved through release
6.143
As discussed in the leading s 47F IC review decision of
‘FG’ and National Archives of Australia
[2015] AICmr 26, other factors considered to be relevant include:
• the nature, age and current relevance of the information
• any detriment that disclosure may cause to the person to whom the information relates
• any opposition to disclosure expressed or likely to be held by that person
• the circumstances of an agency’s collection and use of the information
• the fact that the FOI Act does not control or restrict any subsequent use or dissemination
of information released under the FOI Act
• any submission an FOI applicant chooses to make in support of their application as to their
reasons for seeking access and their intended or likely use or dissemination of the
information, and
• whether disclosure of the information might advance the public interest in government
transparency and integrity
For the reasons outlined above, I decided that the part of the documents marked ‘s47F’ is conditionally exempt
from disclosure under section 47F of the FOI Act.
Where information is found to be conditionally exempt, I must give access to that information unless access at
this time would, on balance, be contrary to the public interest. I have addressed the public interest
considerations below.
4.2 Public interest considerations
Pursuant to section 11A(5) of the FOI Act, I must give access to conditionally exempt information unless access
to that information at that time would, on balance, be contrary to the public interest. I have therefore
considered whether disclosure of the conditionally exempt information would be contrary to the public interest.
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I note that paragraph 6.5 of the FOI Guidelines states that the public interest test is considered to be:
• something that is of serious concern or benefit to the public, not merely of individual interest
• not something of interest to the public, but in the interest of the public
• not a static concept, where it lies in a particular matter will often depend on a balancing of interests
• necessarily broad and non-specific and
• relates to matters of common concern or relevance to all members of the public, or a substantial
section of the public.
Factors favouring disclosure
Section 11B of the FOI Act provides that factors favouring access to conditionally exempt information in the
public interest include whether access to that information would do any of the following:
• promote the objects of the FOI Act (including all matters set out in sections 3 and 3A)
• inform debate on a matter of public importance
• promote effective oversight of public expenditure
• allow a person to access his or her own personal information.
Having regard to the above, I consider that disclosure of the conditionally exempt information at this time:
• would provide access to documents held by an agency of the Commonwealth which would promote
the objects of the FOI Act by providing the Australian community with access to information held by
the Australian Government.
• would not inform debate on a matter of public importance
• would not promote effective oversight of public expenditure
• would not allow you access to your own personal information.
Factors weighing against disclosure
I consider that the following factors weigh against disclosure of the conditionally exempt information at this
time, on the basis that disclosure:
• could reasonably be expected to prejudice the protection of an individual’s right to personal privacy
o I note that the substance of the information that is relevant to your request has been released to
you and disclosure of the personal information would not provide you with any further insight into
the workings of government beyond that substantive information
In making my decision, I have not taken into account any of the irrelevant factors set out in section 11B(4) of
the FOI Act, which are:
(a)
access to the conditionally exempt information could result in embarrassment to the
Commonwealth Government, or cause a loss of confidence in the Commonwealth Government
(b)
access to the conditionally exempt information could result in any person misinterpreting or
misunderstanding that information
(c)
the author of the document was (or is) of high seniority in the agency to which the request for
access to the document was made
(d)
access to the conditionally exempt information could result in confusion or unnecessary debate.
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link to page 8
Conclusion – disclosure is not in the public interest
For the reasons set out above, after weighing all public interest factors for and against disclosure, I decided
that, on balance, disclosure of the conditionally exempt information would be contrary to the public interest. I
am satisfied that the benefit to the public resulting from disclosure of the conditionally exempt information is
outweighed by the benefit to the public of withholding that information.
4.3 Section 22 – deletion of irrelevant and/or exempt material
Section 22 of the FOI Act applies to documents containing irrelevant and/or exempt material and allows an
agency to delete such material from a document.
I decided that the documents captured by your request contain material which can reasonably be regarded as
irrelevant to your request. As such, an edited copy of those documents has been prepared in accordance with
section 22(1)(a)(ii) of the FOI Act. This information is marked ‘s22’ in the documents released to you.
The documents contain personal identifiers of public servants. When your request was acknowledged, we
notified you that personal information of public servants below the SES level and all email addresses, signatures
and direct telephone numbers would be considered irrelevant to the scope of your request unless you told us
that you were expressly seeking access to that information. On the basis that you did not notify us otherwise,
I decided this information is irrelevant to your request and it has been deleted under section 22 of the FOI Act
as outlined above.
As I decided that some information you have requested is exempt from disclosure, I have prepared an edited
copy of the documents being released by deleting the exempt information under section 22(1)(a)(i) of the FOI
Act.
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Legislative provisions
The FOI Act, including the provisions referred to in my decision, are available on the Federal Register of
Legislation website:
www.legislation.gov.au/Series/C2004A02562.
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Your review rights
Your review rights in relation to this decision are set out at
ATTACHMENT B.
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Publication of material released under the FOI Act
Where I have decided to release documents to you, the Board may also publish the released material on its
Disclosure Log. The Board will not publish personal or business affairs information where it would be
unreasonable to do so.
For your reference the Disclosure Log can be found here:
www.infrastructure.gov.au/about-us/freedom-
information/freedom-information-disclosure-log.
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Further information
The Department of Infrastructure, Transport, Regional Development, Communications and the Arts provides
administrative assistance to the Board in relation to the processing of FOI requests. If you require further
information regarding this decision, please contact the Department’s FOI Section at
xxx@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx.xxx.xx.
Yours sincerely
Fiona Jolly
Director
22 May 2023
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link to page 1
ATTACHMENT A.
SCHEDULE OF DOCUMENTS FOI 23-
Doc No.
Num of
Date of document
Description of document
Decision on
Provision of
Pages
access
FOI Act
1.
8
31 March 2023
Blues notes for Infinity Pool
Partial
s22
release
2.
5
4 April 2023
Decision Report
Partial
s22
release
3.
2
4 April 2023
Classification Certificate
Partial
s22
release
s47F
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ATTACHMENT B.
YOUR REVIEW RIGHTS
If you are dissatisfied with my decision, you may apply for a review of it.
Information Commissioner review or complaint
You have the right to seek a review by the Information Commissioner of this decision.
An application for IC review must be made in writing to the Office of the Australian Information Commissioner
(OAIC) within 60 days of the decision.
If you are not satisfied with the way we have handled your FOI request, you can lodge a complaint with the
OAIC. However, the OAIC suggests that complaints are made to the agency in the first instance.
While there is no particular form required to make a complaint to the OAIC, the complaint should be in writing
and set out the reasons for why you are dissatisfied with the way your request was processed. It should also
identify the Classification Board as the agency about which you are complaining.
You can make an IC review application or make an FOI complaint in one of the following ways:
• online at www.oaic.gov.au/freedom-of-information/reviews-and-complaints/
• via email to xxxxx@xxxx.xxx.xx
• by mail to GPO Box 5218 Sydney NSW 2001, or
• by fax to 02 9284 9666.
More information about the Information Commissioner reviews and complaints is available on the OAIC website
here: www.oaic.gov.au/freedom-of-information/foi-review-process.
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