Office of Government Information Services (OGIS)

OGIS Issue Assessment: Commonly Requested Categories of First-party Records

Published August 30, 2021 

Introduction

The Freedom of Information Act (FOIA), 5 U.S.C. § 552(h) directs the Office of Government Information Services (OGIS) to review agency FOIA policies, procedures and compliance; identify procedures and methods for improving compliance; and to offer dispute resolution services to requesters and agencies as a non-exclusive alternative to litigation. As the FOIA Ombudsman, OGIS plays a unique role in the FOIA process, identifying issues and recommending opportunities for changes to improve the FOIA process.

Background

Each day, people seeking records about themselves use the FOIA process to obtain their records as they navigate health care, employment, immigration, law enforcement or other issues that intersect in some way with the federal government.

Both the FOIA and the Privacy Act of 1974, 5 U.S.C. § 552a, grant a right of access to federal records. Most often, but not always, agencies consider requests to access one’s own records as Privacy Act requests, or “first-party” or “first-person” requests. The Privacy Act’s access provisions apply only to U.S. citizens and lawful permanent residents. Generally, federal agencies process access requests under both the Privacy Act and the FOIA to provide requesters with the greatest degree of access. If information is exempt from the access provisions of the Privacy Act, the agency will process the request under FOIA. When an agency processes a request under both laws, it may withhold information only if the requested information is exempt under both laws.

The Privacy Act and the FOIA are often read in tandem; The Privacy Act allows individuals to access records about themselves, while the FOIA allows the public to access government information.[1] Law Professor Margaret B. Kwoka has studied the topic extensively and argues that first-party requests conflict with FOIA’s original legislative intent of transparency about government operations. She notes that first-person requests “are frequently vital to the requester’s interests . . . [t]hey do not, however, advance Congress’ primary goal in enacting FOIA: to promote democratic oversight of government activities.”[2]

​Professor Kwoka divides first-party requesters into four broad categories: (1) those using FOIA as a stand-in for administrative discovery relating to a pending agency proceeding or civil litigation; (2) those trying to retrieve documents they need to apply for a government benefit; (3) those using FOIA for discovery relating to private benefits: they use it to obtain information useful for private litigation (such as workplace litigation) or for obtaining products on the private market (such as insurance policies); and (4) those who seek  historical files for personal use or personal interest.[3]

FOIA and discovery provide entirely different avenues for obtaining information from the federal government. Discovery is used during litigation to obtain information, usually from an opposing party, while FOIA provides a general right of public access to records. A FOIA requester who is a private party litigant in a civil or a criminal matter is not entitled to greater FOIA access than the average FOIA requester.

Also noteworthy is that many first-party records contain names and other personally identifying information (PII) about other third-party individuals. Law enforcement records, for example, often contain the names of witnesses, suspects or individuals who are merely mentioned but are not the subject of the records. Immigration records frequently contain information about third parties, particularly in cases in which a “petitioner” files forms to request benefits on behalf of another person – i.e., a “beneficiary.” Protecting third-party information in all federal records remains a crucial government function regardless of the access method.

Why OGIS Did This Assessment

The 2018-2020 term of the FOIA Advisory Committee, a group of 20 FOIA experts from inside and outside the government appointed by the Archivist of the United States, studied first-party requests and noted in its July 2020 final report that “many government agencies have come to rely on FOIA to address … needs for access to information by the public beyond the worthy goals of transparency and accountability [for all] originally contemplated by Congress.”[4]

The Committee’s final report cited Professor Kwoka’s research on first-party requests at the Veterans Health Administration; the Social Security Administration; the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission; and the three Department of Homeland Security components that enforce civil immigration law (Customs and Border Protection (CBP), Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) and U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services (USCIS)). In light of the effect of first-party requests on the FOIA process at those agencies, the FOIA Advisory Committee recommended that OGIS and the Office of Information Policy (OIP) at the Department of Justice ask agencies to identify common categories of records requested frequently under the FOIA and/or Privacy Act by or on behalf of individuals seeking records about themselves. The Committee’s recommendation seeks to help agencies explore and consider alternative and more efficient ways for requesters to access records about themselves. (See FOIA Advisory Committee Recommendation No. 2020-14).

This report identifies common categories of records requested frequently under the FOIA and/or Privacy Act by – or on behalf of – individuals seeking records about themselves and completes OGIS’s work on FOIA Advisory Committee Recommendation No. 2020-14. OGIS will continue to monitor the issue.

What OGIS Reviewed

To fulfill  FOIA Advisory Committee Recommendation No. 2020-14, OIP asked agencies that received more than 50 FOIA requests in fiscal year (FY) 2019 to answer the following in their 2021 Chief FOIA Officer (CFO) Reports: Does your agency frequently receive common categories of first-party requests? If so, please describe the types of requests and if your agency has explored establishing alternative means of access to these records outside of the FOIA process?[5]

OGIS reviewed the responses of the 70 agencies that answered this question in their 2021 CFO Reports and analyzed individual agency and component efforts regarding categories of information that were the subject of first-party requests and agency processes for responding to such requests.

We note that agencies are not required to report on the number of first-party requests they receive each year although some agencies do track this information on their own. At USCIS, for example, requests for Alien Files (A-Files) or certain immigration records within A-Files, account for a vast majority of records requests – 99 percent when OGIS assessed the USCIS FOIA program in FY 2018.[6] (The A-File is the official government record that contains information regarding transactions involving an individual as they pass through the U.S. immigration and inspection process.) 

The agencies’ responses to the CFO Report first-party inquiry mirror what the 2018-2020 term of the FOIA Advisory Committee observed: There are numerous reasons why citizens (and non-citizens) require access to government information and records other than to hold the government accountable.

A copy of the data from our review, including the names of agencies that submitted 2021 Chief FOIA Officer Reports, links to the reports, the number of FOIA requests processed in FY 2020 (the most recent year for which data was available), whether the agency frequently receives first-party requests, the categories of commonly requested records, and whether the agency has established alternative means of access to records outside of the FOIA process is available on this spreadsheet.

Finding 1: A Majority of the Agencies that Submitted Chief FOIA Officers Reports in 2021 Frequently Receive First-party Requests

Of the 70 agencies that submitted CFO Reports in 2021, 61 percent reported that they frequently receive first party-requests. Of the agencies that reported frequently receiving first-party requests, 89 percent received more than 100 FOIA requests in FY 2020.

Figure 1: Percentage of agencies that submitted 2021 Chief FOIA Officer Reports and frequently receive first-party requests

Figure 1:

Finding 2: First-party Requesters Frequently Request General Categories of Records Maintained by Most Agencies

An analysis of the 2021 CFO Report data shows that agencies frequently receive first-party requests for general categories of records maintained by most agencies. Table 1 lists the categories of records maintained by most agencies.

Table 1: Categories of Records Maintained by Most Agencies and Frequently Sought by First-party Requesters*
*Please note the table headers are clickable, sort the table by clicking the column header.

Category of Record Requested Agencies
Employee Appeals, Grievances and Complaints Records All
Employee Payroll, Personnel, and Time and Attendance Records All
Employee Personnel Records All
Employee Reasonable Accommodation Records All
Employee Training Records All
FOIA/Privacy Act Request Records All
Law Enforcement Records Most[7]
Offices of Inspectors General (OIG) Investigation Records Most[8]
Personnel Investigation and Security Clearance Records All

Finding 3: First-party Requesters Frequently Seek Access to Unique Records Maintained by Specific Agencies

A review of agency responses to the 2021 CFO Reports shows that agencies frequently receive first-party requests from individuals who have interacted with the agency and seek particular benefits. Table 2 lists categories of records frequently requested by individuals seeking records from particular agencies.

Table 2: Categories of Agency-Specific Records Frequently Sought by First-party Requesters According to 2021 Chief FOIA Officer Reports*
*Please note the table headers are clickable, sort the table by clicking the column header.

Category of Record Requested Agency/Department and Component Acronym
Consumer Complaints Consumer Financial Protection Bureau CFPB
Medical and/or Service Records Corporation for National and Community Service CNCS
Council of the Inspectors General on Integrity and Efficiency (CIGIE)Records  Council of the Inspectors General on Integrity and Efficiency CIGIE
Borrower's Single-Family Housing Loan or Mortgage Servicing records Department of Agriculture: Rural Development RD
Census survey information Department of Commerce: Census Bureau Census
Grant Portfolios Department of Commerce: Economic Development Administration EDA
Student Loan Records Department of Education ED
Civil Rights Investigation Records Department of Education ED
Office of Civil Rights Investigation Files Department of Health and Human Service: Office for Civil Rights OCR
Beneficiary Records Department of Health and Human Services: Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services CMS
Claims records submitted by disaster survivors; records submitted by federal flood-insurance policy holders Department of Homeland Security: Federal Emergency Management Agency FEMA
Training Records Department of Homeland Security: Federal Law Enforcement Training Centers  FLETC
Office of Biometric Identity Management (OBIM) records Department of Homeland Security: Privacy Office PRIV
Transportation Worker Identification Credential (TWIC) Application Records and Redress Applications Records Department of Homeland Security: Transportation Security Administration TSA
Alien Files (A-Files)* Department of Homeland Security: U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services USCIS
Merchant Mariner Records Department of Homeland Security: U.S. Coast Guard USCG
Intelligence Records Department of Homeland Security: U.S. Coast Guard USCG
Records of apprehension, detention, deportation, entry, exit, expedited removal, background investigations, or inspections by Customs and Border Protection Department of Homeland Security: U.S. Customs and Border Protection CBP
I-94 records Department of Homeland Security: U.S. Customs and Border Protection CBP
Travel industry reservation data such as passenger name record (PNR) Department of Homeland Security: U.S. Customs and Border Protection CBP
Voluntary return records Department of Homeland Security: U.S. Customs and Border Protection CBP
Records documenting a foreign individual’s detention and/or deportation by the U.S. government. Department of Homeland Security: U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement ICE
Immigration Bond Records Department of Homeland Security: U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement ICE
Medical records while someone was detained by Immigration and Customs Enforcement Department of Homeland Security: U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement ICE
Student and Exchange Visitor Information affecting those previously or currently in F-1, F-3, J-1, M-1, and I-20 status Department of Homeland Security: U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement ICE
Mortgage and Loan Records Department of Housing and Urban Development HUD
Records filed in a case in one of the nation’s immigration courts. Department of Justice: Executive Office for Immigration Review EOIR
Identity History Summaries (commonly referred to as "rap sheets") Department of Justice: Federal Bureau of Investigation FBI
Employment Actions and Investigative Files Department of Labor DOL
Applications from U.S. citizens for U.S. passports Department of State DOS
Visa requests from noncitizens to enter the U.S. Department of State DOS
Law Enforcement Records Department of the Interior DOI
Individual debt and Treasury payment records; first-party tax transcripts and tax returns; coin order history records; complaint and investigatory records on first party requesters; and Federal Alcohol Permit and or other tax information Department of the Treasury Treasury
Airmen medical records and certificates. Commercial drivers requesting individual driving records for employment. Department of Transportation DOT
Military health records Department of Veterans Affairs: Records Management Center RMC
Discrimination Charge Files Equal Employment Opportunity Commission EEOC
Consumer Complaint Records Federal Communications Commission FCC
Consumer Complaints Federal Trade Commission FTC
Merit Systems Protection Board Appeal Case Files Merit Systems Protection Board MSPB
Records related to accidents, personnel matters, or investigations conducted by protective services National Aeronautics and Space Administration NASA
Military personnel records National Archives and Records Administration: National Personnel Records Center NPRC
Civilian personnel records National Archives and Records Administration: National Personnel Records Center NPRC
Grant Application Records National Endowment for the Arts NEA
Peer-review evaluations of unsuccessful funding applications National Endowment for the Humanities NEH
National Labor Relations Board Case Files National Labor Relations Board NLRB
Accident Information National Transportation Safety Board NTSB
Personnel records, retirement records and clearance records. Office of Personnel Management OPM
Clearance reports that reveal a person’s level and status of clearance Office of the Director of National Intelligence ODNI
Returned Peace Corps Volunteer records, applicant records, former staff member records, records involved in a particular event; and medical records Peace Corps PC
Pension eligibility, income verifications, pension beneficiary designations, benefit election forms, agency data supporting benefit determinations, and settlement and trusteeship working group agreements Pension Benefit Guaranty Corporation PBGC
Loss verification reports Small Business Administration SBA
Original applications for Social Security Cards, information from claim files, and earnings histories. Social Security Administration SSA
Consumer complaints and other records an individual submitted to the agency U.S. Consumer Product Safety Commission CPSC
Employment Actions and Investigative Files U.S. Postal Service USPS

Finding 4: Some Agencies Provide Alternative Non-FOIA Means to Access First-party Records

A review of the 2021 CFO Report responses shows that some agencies and components are making records available to first-party requesters through means outside the FOIA. In some cases, agencies make records available online to first parties through online portals and in other instances, they provide information to individuals through agency service centers. Below in Table 3 are highlights from the 2021 CFO Reports.

Table 3: Non-FOIA Means to Access Agency Record According to 2021 Chief FOIA Officer Reports*
*Please note the table headers are clickable, sort the table by clicking the column header.

Agency/Department and Component Acronym Alternative Means of Access
Consumer Financial Protection Bureau CFPB The agency frequently receives first-party requests for consumer complaints which are available outside of the FOIA process through its Consumer Complaint Database. The database is a collection of complaints about consumer financial products and services that the CFPB sends to companies for response.
Department of Agriculture: Forest Service FS The FS frequently receives requests from unsuccessful job applicants inquiring about the hiring process. The FS FOIA staff partnered with its Human Resources Management (HRM) team to develop a process outside of FOIA in which unsuccessful applicants may request certain records directly from HRM in accordance with the agency’s Master Agreement and Merit Promotion and Internal Placement directive (Department Regulation 4030-355-002).
Department of Health and Human Services: Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services CMS CMS frequently receives requests for beneficiary data. HHS reports that requested CMS beneficiary data is  reviewed for recent Medicare information and made available directly online via Blue Button.
Department of Homeland Security: U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services USCIS The Department’s 2021 CFO Report explained that most of the requests it receives are from individuals seeking access to their own immigration files. The report noted that as USCIS moves to the electronic filing of immigration forms, submitters will have access to all applications, petitions, and supporting documents provided to the agency through a my.USCIS account, reducing the reliance on FOIA for access to immigration documents.
Department of Homeland Security: U.S. Customs and Border Protection CBP CBP most frequently receives first-party requests for records concerning traveler requests, employees seeking job/position information on themselves, and employee background investigations. Although not specifically mentioned in the Department’s 2021 CFO Report, individuals may use CBP’s I-94 website to obtain copies of their most recent I-94 admission record and a limited travel history such as the arrival and departure date information for a passport number for the past five years.
Department of Homeland Security: U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement ICE First-party requesters seeking access to their personnel and investigative files can send their requests directly to the Office of Professional Responsibility. These requests go through a different process than ICE FOIA requests. FOIA staff review the records for law enforcement-sensitive information; however, the FOIA is not applied.
Department of Justice: Executive Office for Immigration Review EOIR EOIR is rolling out the EOIR Courts and Appeals System (ECAS), a paperless Immigration Court filing and tracking system in which the attorney representing the individuals can access records without filing a FOIA request. Additionally, the attorney can review these documents at the Immigration Court, and a limited number of copies of the documents can be released to the attorney at the court's direction.
Department of Justice: Federal Bureau of Investigation FBI The FBI’s Criminal Justice Information Services Division allows requesters to access Identity History Summary Check records outside the FOIA process. The application instructions and necessary forms for obtaining these records are available online.
Department of the Treasury TREAS The agency reports that it has developed alternative means for access to the records outside of the FOIA process by establishing websites and call centers to provide individuals with the information they seek. The agency reports that these practices significantly decrease the turnaround time to obtain the requested information, with some requests taking 24 hours or less.
Equal Employment Opportunity Commission EEOC The EEOC reports that private sector charge file requests comprise the majority of the agency’s first-party FOIA requests. Section 83 of Volume I of the EEOC Compliance Manual, an administratively created mechanism to obtain charge files, provides requesters with an alternative means to access charge files that is outside of the FOIA process. In its 2021 CFO Report, the agency notes that confidentiality provisions and/or privacy concerns prevent the agency from posting particular records online.
Merit Systems Protection Board  MSPB Most first-party requesters almost exclusively seek their MSPB appeal case file.  Many are able to access their current or recent appeal files through MSPB’s e-Appeal online system, a web-based system with access restricted to case parties only.  The agency encourages requesters to use e-Appeal to access and download electronic copies of their appeal file whenever circumstances allow.
National Archives and Records Administration: National Personnel Records Center NPRC The NRC employs the eVetRecs Request Veterans Records System to reduce the number of first party requests for military records.
Peace Corps PC The Peace Corps receives first-party requests regarding Returned Peace Corps Volunteer (RPCV) records, applicant records, former staff member records, and those involved in a particular event. RPCVs can now request their medical records through an online request portal that is managed by the agency’s Medical Records Office.
Pension Benefit Guaranty Corporation PBGC

The agency makes first-party information available  via My Pension Benefit Access (MyPBA), through postings in the agency’s Electronic Reading Room and search engines on its public-facing websites, such as its

Trusteed Pension Plan and Insurance Plans Search pages.

Small Business Administration SBA The agency handles requests for loss verification reports directly though SBA loan centers.
Social Security Administration SSA The agency makes earnings records available to first-party requesters via my Social Security account.
U.S. Consumer Product Safety Commission CPSC The agency posts complaints authorized for online publication to its website at SaferProducts.gov. Requests for other documents submitted by consumers must still go through the FOIA Office.
U.S. Postal Service USPS The Postal Service’s public FOIA website contains instructions on how to obtain employment records outside of the FOIA process.

Conclusion

Recognizing that there is no one-size-fits-all approach to alternative processes for obtaining first-party records, OGIS recommends that agencies examine closely all of the records that they generate, collect and/or maintain  and seek creative ways to provide non-FOIA access to first-party records when possible. OGIS has long recognized the crucial link between a strong records management program and an efficient, effective and compliant FOIA program. The Technology Committee of the Chief FOIA Officers Council also recognized the strong link between FOIA and records management and recommended that agency FOIA professionals understand their agency’s records management policies and engage with records management staff.[9] (National Archives and Records Administration policies guide agency compliance with the Federal Records Act (FRA)), 44 U.S.C. Chap. 31.) The Technology Committee noted that when agency FOIA and records management professionals work together, records are better collected and released, driving agency compliance with both the FRA and FOIA.

The 2021 CFO Reports provided agencies the opportunity to survey their FOIA logs for commonly requested categories of records that are frequently the subject of first-party requests under FOIA, as the 2018-2020 term of the FOIA Advisory Committee recommended. Agencies that did not review their FOIA logs before responding to the 2021 CFO Report first-party question should consider doing so. The Committee also recommended that agencies “establish a set of procedures outside of the FOIA for requesters to access these types of records” and “ensure that these procedures guarantee access to the same amount of records or more records than is possible under FOIA within a quicker time frame.” Providing such access may depend on the volume of first-party requests that an agency receives and the technological and staffing resources that are – or might be – available to them. As noted in this report, many first-party records contain the names and other identifying information about other third-party individuals. Moving such requests outside of the federal FOIA process still would require agencies to protect the privacy of any third-party individuals.

OGIS also recommends that agencies use their websites to explain, in plain language, the steps requesters should take to obtain access to first-party records. Agency FOIA professionals who see practices in this report that might work at their agency should contact OGIS; we stand ready to facilitate discussions between agencies to share best practices about ways to provide non-FOIA access to the first-party records. 

Although this assessment completes FOIA Advisory Committee Recommendation No. 2020-14, OGIS will continue to monitor the issue of first-party requests. Additionally, a working group of the Process Subcommittee of the 2020-2022 term of the FOIA Advisory Committee is studying the issue to see whether additional recommendations may be warranted. Finally, we note that in providing access to commonly requested records outside of the FOIA process, agencies are helping to fulfill Committee Recommendation No. 2020-15 that “agencies provide for the dissemination of information outside of FOIA, including in online databases where members of the public may access commonly requested types of records.” 

Jennifer Dryer, Lead Archives Specialist at the National Declassification Center, conducted this assessment on temporary assignment to OGIS as part of a National Archives and Records Administration Cross-training Program.

Endnotes

[1] U.S. Department of Justice.Individual Right to Access.” United States Department of Justice Overview of the Privacy Act of 1974, 2020 edition.

[2] Margaret B. Kwoka,First-Person FOIA,” Yale Law Journal 127:8 (2018), at 2204.

[3] Id. at 2243.

[4] 2018-2020 FOIA Advisory Committee, Final Report and Recommendations to the Archivist of the United States, July 9, 2020.

[5] OIP did not require agencies that received 50 or fewer FOIA requests to answer 2021 Chief FOIA Officer Report questions and instead encouraged them to report on any efforts or successes not captured in their Annual FOIA Reports. See OIP Guidance: Guidelines for 2021 Chief FOIA Officer Reports (posted September 24, 2020).

[7] Records compiled for law enforcement purposes can include criminal, civil, or administrative enforcement, state or foreign law enforcement, as well as national security and homeland security-related records. Of the 70 agencies that submitted 2021 CFO Reports, in FY 2020, 84 percent cited one or more of Exemption 7’s six subparts, 5 U.S.C. §§ 552 (7)(A) - (7)(F), at least once. See foia.gov.

[8] Most but not all federal agencies have inspectors general. See Council of the Inspectors General on Integrity and Efficiency Inspectors General Directory., February 14, 2020.

Download the Data

Commonly Requested Categories of First-party Records - 2021 Chief FOIA Officer Reports

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