This is an HTML version of an attachment to the Freedom of Information request 'Corruption at the APSC – John Lloyd, Marco Spaccavento, the Liberal Party and the IPA'.


 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
NTS 
 
By Email: xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx@xxxxxxxxxxx.xxx.xx 
 
Our Reference: LEX 640 
 
Dear applicant, 
 
 Freedom of Information request 
 
1.  I am writing about your request dated 8 September 2023 for access to documents 
under the Freedom of Information Act 1982 (FOI Act) held by the Australian Public 
Service Commission (Commission).  
 
2.  I am an authorised officer under subsection 23(1) of the FOI Act to make decisions 
in relation to Freedom of Information (FOI) requests.  
 
Request Consultation Process 
 

3.  I am writing to advise that the work involved in processing your request in its current 
            form would substantially and unreasonably divert the resources of this agency from     
            its other operations due to its size and broad scope. This is called a practical refusal  
            reason’ under section 24AA of the FOI Act. 
 
4.  On this basis, I intend to refuse access to the documents you requested. However, 
before I make a final decision to do this, you have an opportunity to revise your 
request. This is called a ‘request consultation processes’ as set out under section 
24AB of the FOI Act. 
 
5.  You have 14 days to respond to this notice in one of the ways set out below. 
 
Why I intend to refuse your request 
 

6.  You requested access to documents in the following terms:  
 
  Under the FOI Act, I seek a copy of any document prepared by the APSC from 1 
January 2023 onwards, and provided to any of the following:   
i) media organisations, ii) Commonwealth agency heads, or  iii) lobby groups 


 

such as the IPA or the Centre for Independent studies in relation to the working 
conditions of the non-SES APS employees.   

 
7.  Under subsection 24AA(2) of the FOI Act an agency or minister must have regard to 
the resources that would have to be used for: 
    identifying, locating or collating the documents within the filing system of the 
agency or the office of the Minister; 
  deciding whether to grant, refuse or defer access to a document to which the 
request relates, or to grant access to an edited copy of such a document 
(including resources that would have to be used for examining the document or 
consulting with any person or body in relation to the request); 
  making a copy or an edited copy, of the document; and 
  notifying any interim or final decision on the request. 
 
8.  Further to the above, the Commission may have regard to other matters in deciding if 
a practical refusal reason exists, relevantly: 
    the staffing resources available to an agency; 
  the impact that processing a request may have on other work in an agency; and 
  whether an applicant cooperates in framing a request to reduce the processing 
workload. 
 
9.  I have taken into account all of the above matters in forming my preliminary decision 
to refuse your request. I have not taken into account: 
    any reasons that you have given for requesting access; or 
  the Commission’s belief as to what your reasons are for requesting access; or 
  any maximum amount, specified in the regulations, payable as a charge for 
processing a request of that kind. 
 
10. My reasons are set out below. 
 
Reasons 
 
11. Firstly, I am of the preliminary view that processing your request would be a 
substantial diversion of the Commission’s resources because:  
    collecting and reviewing the volume of material involved would be significant; 
  identifying, locating and or collating documents would particularly be onerous 
as it is estimated that documents from multiple sources will be found that may 
be captured by the form the request takes; and  
  the contents of the documents will require diligent examination and likely 
involve significant redactions. 
 
12. Secondly, I am also of the preliminary view that processing your request would be an 
unreasonable diversion of the Commission’s resources because: 
  the Commission is a portfolio agency, with limited staffing resources available; 
  the Commission does not have, nor has ever previously required, any 

 

permanent dedicated FOI staffing resources as it has historically received a low 
number of FOI requests that are capable of being managed within the existing 
resources;  
  the Commission has limited capacity to obtain temporary resourcing in 
considering the impact of processing your request; and 
  the Commission is currently working on a number of priority matters related to 
the Government’s public service reform agenda including in relation to in 
relation to the working conditions of non-SES APS employees. Processing 
your request would unreasonably divert resources that would otherwise be 
dedicated to performing the essential operations of the agency. 
 
Amount of time to process your request 
 

13. Based on a preliminary assessment of the volume of documents and a review of a 
sample of their contents, a breakdown of the time estimated for each stage in 
processing a request is approximately: 
 
Search and retrieval  
Time required to undertake tasks  
Executing searches, examining relevant 
up to 60 hours 
documents and collating documents  
 
Decision making  
  
Identify and examine relevant documents  
up to 50 hours 
Redacting pages  
up to 100 hours 
Consult third parties  
up to 12 hours 
Writing statement of reasons  
 
up to 3 hours  
Compiling schedule of documents  
up to 10 hours 
Process Subtotal  
up to 235 hours 
Process Total (minus ‘first 5 hours free’)  
up to 230 hours 
 
 
Request consultation process 
 
14. You now have an opportunity to revise your request to enable it to proceed. 
 
15. Revising your request can mean narrowing its scope to make it more manageable or 
explaining in more detail the documents rather than the information you wish to 
access. For example, by providing more specific information about exactly what 
documents you are interested in, the Commission will be able to pinpoint the 
documents more quickly and avoid using excessive resources to process documents 
you are not interested in. 
 
16. Before the end of the consultation period, you must do one of the following, in 
writing: 
  withdraw your request; 
  make a revised request; or 
  tell us that you do not wish to revise your request. 
 
17. The consultation period runs for 14 days and starts on the day after you receive this 

 

notice. 
 
18. During this period, you are welcome to seek assistance from the Commission to 
revise your request. If you revise your request in a way that adequately addresses the 
practical refusal grounds outlined above, we will recommence processing it. Please 
note that under subsection 24AB(8) of the FOI Act the time taken to consult you 
regarding the scope of your request is disregarded for the purposes of the 30 day time 
limit for processing your request. 
 
19. If you do not do one of the three things listed above during the consultation period or 
you do not consult the Commission during this period, your request will be taken to 
have been withdrawn. 
 
Contacts 
 
20. If you require clarification on matters in this letter please contact the Commission’s 
FOI Officer by email at xxx@xxxx.xxx.xx. 
 
 
Yours sincerely 
 
 
 
 
Melanie McIntyre 
Authorised FOI decision maker 
27 September 2023