This is an HTML version of an attachment to the Freedom of Information request 'LEX database entries for 'Sandbank''.



Our reference: [LEXD 1341] FOI 25/26-0063, [LEXD 1345] FOI 25/26-0064, [LEXD 1352] 
FOI 25/26-0065, [LEXD 1362] FOI 25/26-0066 
 
 
 
6 August 2025 
 
David Wright 
By email: xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx@xxxxxxxxxxx.xxx.xx, foi+request-13385-
xxxxxxxx@xxxxxxxxxxx.xxx.xx, xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx@xxxxxxxxxxx.xxx.xx, 
xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx@xxxxxxxxxxx.xxx.xx  
 
 
Dear David Wright 
Freedom of Information request — Request consultation process 
Thank you for your 4 pieces of correspondence received on 8 July 2025, in which you 
requested access under the Freedom of Information Act 1982 (FOI Act) to documents held 
by the National Disability Insurance Agency (NDIA). 
These 4 requests are being treated as one request for the purpose of section 24(2) of the 
FOI Act. This means you only have to respond to this letter once, to negotiate the scope of 
all your requests at the same time. 
Scope of your request 
These 4 requests have been grouped together because they all related to the same subject 
matter. They are all seeking entries contained in the NDIA’s LEX system that reference 4 
independent medical experts by name. 
You have requested access to the fol owing documents: 
[LEXD 1341] FOI 25/26-0063 
“…In several proceedings before the Administrative Appeals Tribunal (AAT)/Administrative 
Review Tribunal (ART), the NDIA has engaged Micheal Sandbank to act as an Independent 
Medical Expert (IME)/Independent Expert Clinician (ICE). Usually this is to prepare an 
Independent Medical Examination/report for the proceeding, and also sometimes to appear 
as an expert witness at a hearing. 

I request all entries contained in the NDIA's LEX database which reference 'Sandbank'. 
 
1  
 

 
Please provide me with a complete record of all such LEX database entries, containing all 
entered fields, in Microsoft Excel format.” 

[LEXD 1345] FOI 25/26-0064 
“…In several proceedings before the Administrative Appeals Tribunal (AAT)/Administrative 
Review Tribunal (ART), the NDIA has engaged David Pincus to act as an Independent 
Medical Expert (IME)/Independent Expert Clinician (ICE). Usually this is to prepare an 
Independent Medical Examination/report for the proceeding, and also sometimes to appear 
as an expert witness at a hearing. 

I request all entries contained in the NDIA's LEX database which reference 'Pincus'. 
Please provide me with a complete record of all such LEX database entries, containing all 
entered fields, in Microsoft Excel format.” 

[LEXD 1352] FOI 25/26-0065 
“…In several proceedings before the Administrative Appeals Tribunal (AAT)/Administrative 
Review Tribunal (ART), the NDIA has engaged Kenneth Maclean to act as an Independent 
Medical Expert (IME)/Independent Expert Clinician (ICE). Usually this is to prepare an 
Independent Medical Examination/report for the proceeding, and also sometimes to appear 
as an expert witness at a hearing. 

I request all entries contained in the NDIA's LEX database which reference 'Maclean'. 
Please provide me with a complete record of all such LEX database entries, containing all 
entered fields, in Microsoft Excel format.” 

[LEXD 1362] FOI 25/26-0066 
“…In several proceedings before the Administrative Appeals Tribunal (AAT)/Administrative 
Review Tribunal (ART), the NDIA has engaged Michael McDowell to act as an Independent 
Medical Expert (IME)/Independent Expert Clinician (ICE). Usually this is to prepare an 
Independent Medical Examination/report for the proceeding, and also sometimes to appear 
as an expert witness at a hearing. 

I request all entries contained in the NDIA's LEX database which reference 'McDowel '. 
Please provide me with a complete record of all such LEX database entries, containing all 
entered fields, in Microsoft Excel format.” 


 

 
Practical refusal 
I am authorised to make decisions under section 23(1) of the FOI Act. 
I am writing to advise that your request does not provide enough information about the 
documents you are seeking as is reasonably necessary to al ow us to identify them. This is 
called a ‘practical refusal reason’ under section 24AA of the FOI Act. 
I am also writing to advise that the work involved in processing your request in its current 
form would substantial y and unreasonably divert the resources of the NDIA from its other 
operations due to its size. This is also called a ‘practical refusal reason’ under section 24AA 
of the FOI Act. 
On this basis, I intend to refuse your request. However, before I make a final decision, I am 
writing to provide you with an opportunity to revise your request. This is called a ‘request 
consultation process’ as set out under section 24AB of the FOI Act. You have 14 days to 
respond to this notice in one of the ways set out below. 
Why I intend to refuse your request 
We have consulted with relevant NDIA staff who could be expected to be able to identify 
documents within the scope of the request, including staff who are knowledgeable about 
how to conduct searches of the NDIA’s LEX systems. Those searches indicate that the NDIA 
unable to locate documents that may be relevant to your request. This outcome shows that 
the terms of your request do not provide sufficient information to allow us to identify the 
specific documents that you are seeking. 
This is because the NDIA’s LEX system is not a “database” that can be exported into an 
Excel spreadsheet. LEX a matter management software that contains numerous linked 
documents, records and notes in the form of emails, attachments, file notes, references to 
legislative acts, staff reminders, timesheet entries, invoices, and more. You can read more 
about what LEX is on the company’s website: LEX - Lex Australia - software for in-house 
lawyers and contract managers 

The wording of your request does not provide sufficient information for me to understand 
what LEX records specifical y you are seeking access to. As such, you have not provided 
sufficient detail for me to identify the documents you want to access. 
In addition, the NDIA doesn’t operate a single LEX system; it has multiple LEX systems. 
Each LEX system is designed for use in a particular sub-team within the NDIA. Each LEX 

 

 
system potentially has tens of thousands of main records. Each main record is potentially 
linked to hundreds of file notes, attachments, reminders and other documents. You have not 
specified which version of LEX you wish us to search. Therefore, my interpretation is that 
you wish me to search all versions of LEX, which encompasses hundreds of thousands – or 
potentially mil ions - of documents. 
If we were to search all LEX systems for all records of any kind, created within any date 
range, using the keywords you have provided, I estimate there would be tens of thousands 
of hits. Most of these hits would be false positives, as your keywords are simply surnames. 
These surnames wil  be shared by numerous other people – including NDIS participants and 
NDIA staff members.  
These hits wil  not be in the form of “entries,” as you have suggested. They wil  be in the 
form of documents which may be many pages in length and may take the form of personal 
emails, medical reports, assessments, and other highly sensitive materials. You do not have 
the authority to access the personal information of other people involved with the NDIS.  
On my reasonable estimate, I consider that there is more than 10,000 pages worth of 
material that falls within the scope of your request as currently worded. At a conservative 
estimate of 1 minute per page, this would take an FOI officer more than 166 hours to simply 
review and collate the documents.   
The documents that are assessed as being within scope of the request wil  then need to be 
reviewed for sensitivities and possible exemption under the FOI Act and scheduled. As I 
have already mentioned, it is highly likely that numerous documents wil  contain sensitive 
personal material that is exempt from disclosure under the FOI Act. AS such, each 
document wil  need to be redacted on a line-by-line basis to obscure the information that is 
exempt from disclosure. 
In addition, you have requested that the information is provided to you in the form of an 
Excel document. This re-formatting will be time-consuming and depend on cumbersome 
manually process. It wil  involve combining thousands of records of varying lengths, all in 
different file types, extracted separately from numerous different LEX systems. This re-
formatting wil  also increase the length of time it wil  take to process your request. 
Moreover, the material wil  likely contain the information of multiple affected third parties. We 
have an obligation under the FOI Act to consult with each affected third party before 
releasing information that affects them. As such, we wil  need to consider al  required 
consultations and carry these out. 

 

 
Furthermore, a decision wil  need to be made on each document in turn, and a decision 
letter prepared. This wil  significantly increase the hours that it wil  take an FOI officer to 
process your request.  It is my estimate that it wil  require over 300 hours to process your 
request, as it is currently worded. 
As a result, I am of the view that the work involved in the processing of this request would 
substantial y and unreasonably divert the resources of the NDIA from its other operations. 
Request consultation process 
You now have an opportunity to revise your request to enable it to proceed. 
In this context, revising your request means both narrowing the scope of the request to make 
it more manageable and explaining in more detail the documents you wish to access. For 
example, by providing more specific information about exactly what documents you are 
interested in, the NDIA wil  be able to pinpoint the documents more quickly and avoid using 
excessive resources to process documents you are not interested in. 
To reduce the scope of your request, you might like to consider: 
•  Including a date range, such as 1 January 2025 to 8 July 2025 (the date of your request) 
•  Specifying which version of LEX you wish to search. 
•  Specifying whether you wish us to search only main matter records on LEX, or to also 
search other documents and notes attached to those main records. If you wish us to 
search linked attachments, please specify what kind. 
•  Using more descriptive keywords, such as full names: “Kenneth Maclean” or “Michael 
McDowel ” or “David Pincus” or “Michael Sandbank.” This wil  reduce the number of false 
positives in the search results. 
•  Specifically stating that you do not wish to access the personal information of any NDIS 
participants or NDIA staff members. Specifically stating that if other people’s personal 
information appears within searches, you agree for it to be redacted on the grounds of 
personal privacy. 
•  Removing your stipulations on the format you wish to access these documents in.  
You have 14 days from the date you receive this letter to contact me and do one of the 
following: 

 

 
a.  withdraw your request 
b.  make a revised request 
c.  indicate that you do not wish to revise the request. 
During this period, you are welcome to seek assistance to revise your request. If you revise 
your request in a way that adequately addresses the practical refusal reason outlined above, 
we wil  recommence processing it. 
Please note that the time taken to consult with you regarding the scope of your request is not 
taken into account for the purposes of the timeframe for processing your request. 
You can contact me by email at xxx@xxxx.xxx.xx. 
Alternatively, you can reply in writing to the following address:  
Freedom of Information Section 
Information Release, Privacy and Legal Operations Branch   
Reviews and Information Release Division 
National Disability Insurance Agency 
GPO Box 700 
CANBERRA   ACT   2601 
 
If you do not contact me within this period, that is by 20 August 2025, your FOI request wil  
be taken to have been withdrawn under subsection 24AB(7) and wil  not be dealt with any 
further. 
Please do not hesitate to contact me if you have any questions or require help. 
 
Yours sincerely 
Laura 
Laura LDP633 
Assistant Director 
Information Release, Privacy and Legal Operations Branch 
Reviews and Information Release Division