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United Kingdom Information Tribunal including the National Security Appeals Panel


You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> United Kingdom Information Tribunal including the National Security Appeals Panel >> Baker v Information Commissioner and Dept of Communities and Local Government" [2007] UKIT EA_2006_0043 (01 June 2007)
URL: http://www.bailii.org/uk/cases/UKIT/2007/EA_2006_0043.html
Cite as: [2007] UKIT EA_2006_43, [2007] UKIT EA_2006_0043

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Appeal Number: EA/2006/0043
Appeal Number: EA/2006/0043
Environmental Information Regulations 2004 (“EIR”).
Heard at Finance and Tax Tribunal,
Bedford Square,
London
Decision Promulgated
Date 01 June 2007
BEFORE
INFORMATION TRIBUNAL DEPUTYCHAIRMAN
Chris Ryan
And
LAY MEMBERS
Dave Sivers
And
Paul Taylor
B E T W E E N
RT HON LORD BAKER OF DORKING CH
Appellant
and
THE INFORMATION COMMISSIONER
Respondent
and
THE DEPARTMENT FOR COMMUNITIES AND LOCAL GOVERNMENT
Additional Party
Representation:
For the Appellant:            Hugh Tomlinson QC
For the Respondent: Timothy Pitt-Payne
For the Home Office: Eleanor Grey
Decision
The Tribunal has decided in favour of the Appellant on this Appeal and
that the Department for Communities and Local Government should
disclose the information in question within 28 days. The Tribunal
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Appeal Number: EA/2006/0043
accordingly issues the following substitute decision notice in place of
the decision notice dated 13 June 2006
2

Appeal Number: EA/2006/0043
FREEDOM OF INFORMATION ACT 2000 (SECTION 50 and 58(1))
ENVIRONMENTAL INFORMATION REGULATIONS 2004
SUBSTITUTED DECISION NOTICE
Dated 1st June 2007
Name of Public authority:                     Department for Communities and
Local Government (formerly the Office of the Deputy Prime Minister)
Address of Public authority: Elland House, Bressenden Place,
London SW1E 5DU
Name of Complainant:                The Rt. Hon. Lord Baker of Dorking C.H.
The Decision Notice of the Information Commissioner dated 13 June 2006
shall be substituted as follows:
Nature of Complaint
The public authority failed to disclose information relating to the submissions
made to the Deputy Prime Minister following the report of the Planning
Inspector in the application to build Vauxhall Tower in London.
Action Required
Within 28 days the Department for Communities and Local Government shall
make available to the Complainant, in unredacted form, the written
submissions by officials provided to Deputy Prime Minister on 8 December
2004 and 28 February 2005.
Dated this 1 day of June 2007
Deputy Chairman
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Appeal Number: EA/2006/0043
Reasons for Decision
Background
1.  This appeal arises from a decision of the Deputy Prime Minister on 14
July 2005 to grant planning permission for the construction of a 50
storey residential tower near Vauxhall Bridge in London. There had
earlier been an inquiry conducted by a planning inspector which had
concluded that planning permission for the building should be refused.
In May 2006 the Office of the Deputy Prime Minister was replaced by
the Department for Communities and Local Government. In this
decision we use the word “Department” to refer to each of them as
nothing turns on the change to the organisation which had
responsibility for responding to the original request and to the
Information Commissioner’s subsequent investigation.
2.  Before he made his decision rejecting the inspector’s recommendation
the Minister had been provided with advice from his officials in the form
of two submissions, one dated 8 December 2004 and the other 28
February 2005. The issue to be determined on this Appeal is whether
the advice to the Minister, contained in those submissions, including
any opinions of the officials expressed in them, should have been
made available to the Appellant in response to a request under
Regulation 5(1) of the Environmental Information Regulations 2004
(“EIR”). The Department rejected the request on the basis that the
information requested was exempt under EIR regulation 12(4)(e). The
Information Commissioner decided, in a Decision Notice dated 13 June
2006, that the submissions as a whole should have been disclosed but
that the advice of the officials, and any opinions expressed by them,
should be redacted and not disclosed.
3.  The Appellant appealed against the Information Commissioner’s
decision notice and this Tribunal ordered that the Department be joined
as an Additional Party to the Appeal. The Department itself accepted
the Information Commissioner’s decision as to the disclosure of the
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Appeal Number: EA/2006/0043
rest of the two submissions and they have therefore been made
available to the Appellant, with any advice or opinions redacted.
Applicable legal provisions
4.  Regulation 5(1) of EIR requires a public authority that holds
environmental information to make it available on request. However,
the effect of regulation 12 is that the public authority may refuse to
disclose information if any one of a number of exceptions to disclosure
applies and “in all the circumstances of the case, the public interest in
maintaining the exception outweighs the public interest in disclosing
the information” (regulation 12(1)(b)).
5.  The exemption on which the Department has relied in this case is set
out in regulation 12(4)(e) i.e. that “the request involves the disclosure of
internal communications”.
6.  Regulation 12(2) provides that in dealing with a request for information
“A public authority shall apply a presumption in favour of disclosure”.
Issues for consideration on the Appeal
7.  As the matter came to us it had already been agreed by the parties
that:
a.  The information originally requested by the Appellant was
“environmental information” falling within the scope of the EIR;
b.  It was correct to characterise the two submissions as “internal
communications”, so that the regulation 12(4)(e) exemption was
engaged;
c.   The balance of public interest supported the Department’s
refusal to disclose any part of the submissions before the
Minister had made his decision to grant planning permission;
8.  Once that decision had been made the balance of the public interest
favoured the release of the factual elements of the submissions. It is
also common ground that, although the first request for information pre-
dated the Minister’s decision, it would be appropriate for the Tribunal to
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Appeal Number: EA/2006/0043
adopt the pragmatic approach of considering any requirement to
disclose as at the date when that decision had been made. This was
the basis on which disclosure was refused by the Department at the
conclusion of an internal review of its original response to the request,
and was also the basis of the Information Commissioner’s Decision
Notice that forms the basis of this appeal. We have agreed to proceed
on this basis.
9.  The issue we have to decide, therefore, is whether or not the
Information Commissioner was right to decide that, even after the
Minister’s decision had been promulgated, the public interest still
supported the withholding of the advice and opinions of the officials
making the submissions. We have to decide that issue against the
background of a presumption in favour of disclosure (regulation 12(2))
and taking account of all the circumstances of the case before us
(regulation 12(1)(b)).
10. The Tribunal’s jurisdiction is determined by section 58 of the Freedom
of Information Act (“FOIA”), which applies to environmental information
cases, by virtue of regulation 18 of EIR, with minor modifications that
do not have any impact in the circumstances of this case. The relevant
parts of section 58 read:
“(1) If on an appeal … the Tribunal considers –
(a) that the notice against which the appeal is brought is
not in accordance with the law, or
(b) to the extent that the notice involved an exercise of
discretion by the Commissioner, that he ought to have
exercised his discretion differently,
the Tribunal shall allow the appeal or substitute such other
notice as could have been served by the Commissioner;
and in any other case the Tribunal shall dismiss the appeal.
(2) On such an appeal, the Tribunal may review any finding of
fact on which the notice in question was based
.”
We therefore have wide powers to review the Information
Commissioner’s decision. In exercising those powers in respect of the
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Appeal Number: EA/2006/0043
public interest balance our approach is that its application is a mixed
question of fact and law and not the exercise of a discretion.
11. We have reached our decision on this Appeal without inspecting the
unredacted versions of the two submissions. We were, however,
provided with an agreed bundle of documents and heard detailed
submissions from the legal representatives of the Appellant, the
Information Commissioner and the Department during a hearing that
took place in London on 8 May 2006, extending into the morning of 9
May. In the course of that hearing we took evidence (principally in the
form of cross examination based on previously filed written witness
statements) from the following:
a.  On behalf of the Appellant:
(a) The Appellant himself, a former Government Minister;
(b) Mr Gordon Chard, until recently the Director of Planning
and City Development at Westminster City Council;
(c) Mr Alastair Robson, Assistant Director – Policy in the
Transport and Environment Department of East Sussex
County Council;
(d) Ms Pauline Stockell, an elected member of both
Maidstone Borough Council and Kent County Council
with extensive experience of Planning Committee work.
b.  On behalf of the Department, Mr Paul Hudson who is currently
Chief Planner for the Department but who, prior to his
appointment to that post in June 2006 he had held a number of
senior posts in the field of planning and economic development
at local authority level.
We will refer later, and in context, to particular elements of the
evidence.
Application of the public interest test
12. The Appellant’s primary position was that, given the presumption in
favour of disclosure set out in EIR regulation 12(2), he did not have to
establish any public interest in favour of disclosure. However, he
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Appeal Number: EA/2006/0043
argued that, if it was necessary for him to do so, there were a number
of considerations that favoured disclosure. The Department and the
Information Commissioner argued that the main factor in favour of
maintaining the exemption was the risk that civil servants would be less
frank and impartial in their advice, and less punctilious in recording it, if
they knew that it was likely to be exposed to public attention and,
possibly, public criticism. They did not claim that any direct harm
would result from disclosure of the specific information that is in issue
in this case. The anticipated harm, they claimed, was the more general
impact on decision making processes within government in the future.
It was said that this risk outweighed any of the public interest factors in
favour of disclosure.
Factors in favour of maintaining the exemption.
13. In support of the Department’s case on the perceived risk of prejudice
to the giving of impartial advice, the first witness statement of Mr
Hudson explained, in general terms, that the material redacted from the
submissions in the form that we viewed them included consideration of
the risk of legal challenge, the officials’ interpretation on compliance
with policy and advice on whether or not to accept the Inspector’s
recommendations. He stressed the importance of Ministers receiving
from their officials private, honest and informed advice which analysed
the position and set out all the courses without covering up any
uncomfortable facts. He said that if “officials no longer felt able to give
frank advice, because of fear of disclosure, decision making would be
damaged”.
14. Mr Hudson’s evidence was supplemented by statements previously
made in another Information Tribunal case. This was The Department
for Education and Skills v Information Commissioner and The Evening
Standard – (
Case EA/2006/0006). The context of the DfES case was a
request for disclosure of information on the formulation of government
policy for school funding and a claim to exemption under section 35 of
the Freedom of Information Act 2000. The evidence in question in that
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Appeal Number: EA/2006/0043
case was given by Andrew Lord Turnbull (former Head of the Home
Civil Service) and Paul Britton (Director General Domestic Policy
Group, Cabinet Office).It was placed before us, with the agreement of
the parties, in the form of exhibits to a second witness statement from
Mr Hudson, which also exhibited extracts from the transcript of the
hearing in the DfES case recording cross examination based on those
statements. It was argued before us that the Turnbull and Britton
evidence set out the government’s areas of concern as to the adverse
effects of disclosure, in the case of the formulation of general policy,
and that those concerns applied with equal force to advice in respect of
a specific administrative decision on a planning issue. The concerns
that have potential relevance to this Appeal included the following:
a.  A loss of candour in exchanges between Ministers and officials,
and dilution of civil servants’ willingness to present Ministers
with the truth, even when it takes an inconvenient form, or to
rigorously test the potential disadvantages of a proposed course
of action.
b.  The fear that a civil servant might be asked to justify and defend
a planning decision which he or she had recommended a
Minister to take, which would be unfair as officials are not able to
answer back if attacked.
c.   Concern that Ministers should not have to defend themselves for
having reached a decision that did not follow advice from their
own officials.
d.  The danger that decisions would not be fully or widely debated,
but would only be discussed with a small number of close
confidantes in the course of unminuted meetings.
e.  The erosion of the tradition of proper record-keeping within the
civil service with a consequent damaging effect on the quality of
decision making itself.
15. The, differently constituted, Tribunal in the DfES case concluded, in the
light of the evidence and competing arguments it had heard, that there
were a number of principles that should guide its decision on
disclosure. These included the following:
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Appeal Number: EA/2006/0043
a.  The purpose of maintaining the exemption and imposing
confidentiality was the protection from compromise or unjust
public opprobrium of civil servants, not ministers. It could
discern no unfairness in exposing an elected politician, after the
event, to challenge for having rejected one possible policy
option in favour of another.
b.    It was accepted that the disclosure of policy options, whilst
policy was in the process of formulation, would be undesirable in
that it would deny Ministers and officials the time and space they
needed in order to explore all options and reach a concluded
view on the policy to apply. It was a judgment to be made in the
light of the particular circumstances of each case how soon after
a policy had been finalised and announced disclosure should be
made of the advice that supported it.
c.   If the information requested was not already in the public
domain, the publication of other information relating to the same
topic for consultation, information or other purpose ought not to
be a significant factor in a decision as to disclosure.
d.  As to the likely response of civil servants to the possibility of
disclosure the decision reads:
“In judging the likely consequences of disclosure on officials`
future conduct, we are entitled to expect of them the courage
and independence that has been the hallmark of our civil
servants since the Northcote - Trevelyan reforms. These are
highly – educated and politically sophisticated public servants
who well understand the importance of their impartial role as
counsellors to ministers of conflicting convictions.”
It went on to say:
“Likewise, decisions should not assume the worst of the public.
The answer to ill-informed criticism of the perceived views of
civil servants is to inform and educate the critic, however hard
that task may be, not to deny information, simply through fear
that it may reflect adversely and unfairly on a particular official”.
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Appeal Number: EA/2006/0043
16. We have first to consider, therefore, the extent to which the principles
enunciated in that case ought properly to be applied to the facts of this
Appeal. We remind ourselves, first, that we are not obliged to follow
other decisions of this Tribunal. We also note that regulation 12(4)(e)
refers simply to “internal communications” without identifying their
contents. So, on the face of the provision we are required to apply,
there is no indication that the exemption is intended to have particular
application to decision makers and their advisers or that it is intended
to avoid premature disclosure during the period of time before a
decision has been finalised. Moreover, it is, on the facts of this Appeal,
only the question of disclosure after the Minister’s decision on planning
consent had been promulgated that we are required to consider. It was
also argued before us that different considerations may apply in cases
where the relevant advice was given in support of a specific decision
on an administrative issue as opposed to a wide policy review
undertaken over a period of time – a view not shared by Miss Grey,
representing the Department, who argued that this distinction was less
clear than had been suggested.
17. We think that there is a potential difference, from the perspective of a
civil servant, between a situation where he or she advises on – and
possibly assists the Minister in interpreting - general policy and one
where the advice concerns an administrative decision. In the latter
case the advice may well have a more immediate impact on the lives of
those affected by it and in controversial cases this might even result in
more direct, possibly virulent, criticism of his or her contribution to the
decision.
18. There are also dangers, in our view, in applying too rigorously
principles developed in respect of FOIA section 35 to the quite different
language of regulation 12 EIR. However, we believe that the principles
set out in the DfES case, and summarised above, do provide broad
guidance for us in considering the circumstances of this Appeal. In
particular we believe that we received reinforcement for the confidence
in the resilience of the civil service reflected in the passage quoted in
paragraph 15.d above from some of the evidence which we heard.
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Appeal Number: EA/2006/0043
First, Mr Chard was asked by a member of the panel whether he had
seen any change in the attitude of local authority employees since the
FOIA regime was first mooted and training given for its implementation.
His answer was that he believed that they had become more rigorous
and disciplined in recognition of the fact that what they wrote might
become the subject of public scrutiny – they were more aware of the
need, in his words, to “get it right”. We see no reason to believe that
the employees of central government dealing with environmental
information will not adopt a similarly responsible and positive approach
in the future. The second element of evidence on the point was given
by the Department’s own witness, Mr Hudson, who said, in the course
of his cross examination by Mr Tomlinson for the Appellant, that he
thought that although the fear of publicity would lead to a change in the
manner in which advice would be proffered, it would not alter the
content of the advice. There would, he said, be a greater tendency to
give advice orally and not in writing. He explained that this is what had
happened when the reports of local authority planning officers were
first exposed to public inspection in the early 1990s. However, he
added that it had been acknowledged that this represented bad
practice and that it was less prevalent these days. He accepted that it
was a matter of effective staff management, at both central and local
government level, to ensure that complete advice was made available
to decision makers and properly recorded. Against that background
we believe that, should a requirement to disclose advice to a Minister
generate a tendency to adopt bad practice in the way that advice is
given or recorded, effective management guidance should deal with
the problem in the same way that it appears to have done at local
authority level. Finally, we were told by the Appellant during his cross
examination, confirmed by Mr Hudson, that even if advice were given
to a Minister orally and not set out in a written submission, any material
discussion would be minuted by the Minister’s private office. We think
that this provides further protection against the outcome which the
Department fears.
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Appeal Number: EA/2006/0043
19. We regard the guidance set out in the DfES decision, combined with
the evidence summarised above (and the Appellant’s own confident
assertion that the officials with whom he worked in the past would not
have allowed the risk of publicity to undermine the independence of
their advice), to be a more reliable basis for our decision on this appeal
than the authority of Conway v Rimmer ([1968] 1 All E R 874) to which
we were referred. We do not think that comments on the likely
response of civil servants 40 years ago to the risk of their internal
communications being revealed in the rather different context of the
disclosure process in civil litigation provides any significant assistance
to us on the particular facts of this Appeal..
20. Mr Tomlinson argued that the case against disclosure was further
weakened by the fact that all advice given by local planning officers to
the members of a local authority planning committee was made
available to the public and that it was inconsistent to have a practice
under which the equivalent advice given to a Minister, on those cases
where he has the final decision on a planning matter, should not also
be disclosed. On this issue the parties co-operated in reducing a
considerable body of evidence, spread among several witness
statements, into a single agreed statement of facts summarising the
key elements of the planning process. This confirmed that where a
planning application is to determined by the local authority planning
committee the case officer will prepare a written report for the
committee setting out details of the application, relevant background
information, and a summary of the comments received in relation to the
application. The report will also set out the officer’s recommendation.
Before the meeting at which this report is to be considered the meeting
agenda and the report itself will be made available for public
inspection. The meeting itself takes place in public, usually with the
case officer first summarising the issues to be considered. The
subsequent debate and voting then also take place in public. The
committee must give reasons for its decision and, where the planning
officer’s recommendation is followed, it is likely to refer to those
reasons. However, where the officer’s recommendations are not
13

Appeal Number: EA/2006/0043
followed the minutes of the meeting are expected to record the
committee’s reasons in clear terms.
21. It was suggested, in both argument and in questions put in cross
examination to Mr Chard, Mr Robson and Ms Stockell, that it was
common for local authority planning officers to hold informal briefing
meetings with some or all members of the Planning Committee and
that the procedure at local authority level was therefore not as
dissimilar from Central Government as might appear to be the case. It
was evident from the answers given in cross examination that there
frequently is some form of meeting with at least the chair of the
Committee and that on occasions the resulting discussion might extend
beyond merely reviewing the agenda. However, no clear pattern of
behaviour emerged and no evidence was brought to light suggesting
that the requirement for full public disclosure of all relevant information
and advice was undermined by the use of private briefings to those
making decisions on the relevant committee. Mr Robson, in answer to
a question put to him in cross examination said that any substantive
issues touched on in the course of a pre-meeting briefing would
already have been covered in the planning officer’s report, which is
required to be comprehensive. We would expect that, if it were
suspected that the merits of a planning decision had been debated in
private, in the way that has been suggested, those members of a
planning committee whose party did not have a majority on the
committee, and who did not provide the Chair, would have realised
what had occurred and would have exposed the practice to publicity
and criticism. No evidence was adduced to this effect and, on the
basis of the evidence we did hear, we conclude that, if any pre-
meetings take place for any purpose other than to familiarise the Chair
with the agenda items to be considered, this is not a common or
widespread practice, and certainly not one that is regarded as an
acceptable norm. In our view, therefore, it does not seriously
undermine the general statement, which Mr Tomlinson invited us to
accept, that there is a significant inconsistency between the practice of
publishing all advice at local authority level and the withholding of
14

Appeal Number: EA/2006/0043
advice when a planning matter falls to be determined by the Secretary
of State.
22. We were invited to accept that there were a number of factors that
distinguished the procedure at local authority level from that at
Secretary of State level. We accept, as the Information Commissioner
argued, and Mr Hudson stated during his cross examination, that the
planning decisions habitually taken at local authority level are generally
much less complex than those which go through the route of a
Planning Inspector’s public enquiry and final determination by the
Secretary of State. We also accept that the Secretary of State’s
involvement occurs at a different stage in the overall process than the
stage at which a planning committee makes its decision. We do not,
however, see why it should follow that the public should be given full
disclosure of the advice given to those making the decision at one level
and not at the other. The fact that the Secretary of State’s decision
represents the final stage (subject to appeal to the courts or judicial
review) seems to us, if anything, to increase the desirability of full
disclosure, rather than to decrease it. Similarly, we consider that full
disclosure of the deliberations underlying a decision on a complex
matter is arguably more important than in the case of a simple one,
where the issues may be more immediately evident.
23. It was argued on behalf of the Information Commissioner that there
were two further reasons for saying that it was not fair to draw a
parallel between the procedure at local and central government level.
A planning decision by a local authority planning committee would, it
was said, be quite incomprehensible to the public if the reader did not
also have access to the written report and advice of the planning officer
and his or her oral summary given in the course of the committee
meeting. On the other hand, the Minister’s decision, without the civil
servants’ advice, is still comprehensible because it is set out in a fully
reasoned letter (which a planning committee decision is not) and is
accompanied by an equally detailed report from the inspector.
However, in our view, this argument applies an incorrect test. We
remind ourselves that the effect of Regulation 12(4)(e), read in context,
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Appeal Number: EA/2006/0043
is that all internal communications must be disclosed unless the public
interest balance is against disclosure. Nor is there any suggestion
elsewhere in EIR that the required disclosure is limited to material
which is necessary to make a particular decision comprehensible or
which serves any other particular function. And, even if it were limited
to information needed to aid comprehension, it is difficult to maintain
that a decision is has really been understood if the letter announcing it
sets out an apparently comprehensible rationalisation, but in fact
avoids mentioning some of the background reasoning, which
publication of the advice to the Minister would have revealed.
24. On behalf of the Department Miss Grey criticised any attempt to
minimise the significance of the detailed reasons set out in the decision
letter or to characterise it (in her view over-cynically) as nothing more
than a post hoc rationalisation of the Minister’s decision. She argued
that the Appellant’s apparent faith in the resilience of civil servants
should be sufficient to satisfy him that they would ensure that decision
letters did not “gloss over” or otherwise fail to record all relevant issues.
We certainly agree that we should not make our decision on the basis
of unfounded suggestions that the decision letter in this case may have
avoided or obscured any of the reasons that led the Minister to reach
his decision. And we agree with Miss Grey that we should draw
comfort from the fact that the Information Commissioner who, unlike
the Tribunal, did inspect an unredacted copy of each of the
submissions, expressed no concern in his Decision Notice on this
issue. It seems to us, however, that one reason for having a freedom
of information regime is to protect Ministers and their advisers from
suspicion or innuendo to the effect that the public is not given a
complete and accurate explanation of decisions; that the outcome is in
some way “spun” (to adopt the term whose very invention illustrates
this tendency towards cynicism and mistrust). Disclosure of internal
communications is not therefore predicated by a need to bring to light
any wrongdoing of this kind. Rather, by making the whole picture
available, it should enable the public to satisfy itself that it need have
no concerns on the point.
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Appeal Number: EA/2006/0043
Factors concerning disclosure
25. The Appellant’s case is that disclosure of the disputed information
would contribute to public understanding of the basis for the Minister’s
decision and would assist in informing public debate about the merits of
that decision. Both the Department and the Information Commissioner
recognise that there is some public interest in disclosure on this basis.
However, they submit that the value of the contribution is reduced by
the fact that the inspector’s report, the submissions by third parties to
the Minister and the detailed decision letter are already in the public
domain and by the fact that there is ample scope for the public to
participate in the decision making process (by, for example, making
representations to the inspector or the Minister). Mr Tomlinson, for the
Appellant counters that it is not sufficient to say that the public has
been provided with a substantial body of information and the
opportunity to make its voice heard before the decision was taken. The
point of transparency in decision making, he says, is that the public
comes to know what lies behind the decision, not just what appears in
the finely drafted, and possibly defensive, language of the decision
letter.
26. The Information Commissioner and the Department also argue that the
issue of accountability applies to elected public officials, (in this case
the Minister), and not to civil servants. It is the Minister’s decision, set
out in a fully reasoned format in the decision letter, which should be
subjected to public scrutiny. He is able to answer any critics in the
course of public debate. His officials do not have that opportunity and
are, properly, not accountable to the public in the same way that an
elected representative is. We accept that this is a factor to be given
appropriate weight in favour of maintaining the exemption.
27. It is said on behalf of the Appellant that the need for disclosure in the
present case is increased by the fact that the Minister’s decision was a
very controversial one (particularly because he did not follow the
recommendation of the inspector) and had serious ramifications for the
17

Appeal Number: EA/2006/0043
future appearance of London. The Information Commissioner has
argued that the controversial nature of the decision is a neutral factor.
On the one hand it may increase the public interest in knowing what
advice the Minister received and whether he followed it or rejected it
but, on the other hand, officials may be entitled to more protection from
public criticism in cases which attract vigorous debate and where,
possibly, feelings run high.
28. As we have said in paragraph 17 above, we do believe that civil
servants may be particularly vulnerable in cases where their advice has
contributed to a high profile, controversial administrative decision. We
have also made it clear in paragraph 24 above that we do not approach
our decision with any suspicion or cynicism as to the Minister’s attitude
towards his officials’ advice or the precision with which the reasons for
his decision were recorded in the decision letter. The advice may turn
out to have been bland in the extreme. It may be fully supportive of the
decision ultimately taken. Or it may have strongly recommended that
the inspector’s recommendation be adopted. We repeat that we
believe that the strength of the argument in favour of disclosure and
against maintaining the exemption is that disclosure will enable the
public to form a view on what actually happened and not on what it can
otherwise only guess at.
Conclusion
29.  We have concluded that, on the particular facts of this case, the
disclosure, after the date when the Minister’s decision had been
promulgated, of the advice and opinions of the civil servants in
question will not undermine to any significant extent the proper and
effective performance by civil servants of their duties in the future. The
extracts from the decision in DfES, set out in paragraph 15 above,
express confidence in the ability of both civil servants and the public to
adopt a sensible attitude in the relatively new environment which the
EIR and FOIA have created. We share that confidence. We hope that
we are justified in having equal confidence in the media to deal
18

Appeal Number: EA/2006/0043
responsibly with the information that falls into their hands as a result of
government now being conducted in a more public manner. Ministers,
who are responsible for the decisions, should continue to be held to
account for them, and not their officials. We can envisage that a
Tribunal considering a similar category of information in the future may
take a more restrictive view on disclosure if it has become apparent by
then that the media habitually use officials’ advice, disclosed under
freedom of information principles, as the basis for partial or
irresponsible criticism or to justify intrusion into the private lives of the
individuals who have contributed to that advice.
30. In light of the presumption in favour of disclosure and those of the
factors in favour of disclosure which we have identified in paragraphs
25 to 28 above, we have concluded that, once the Minister’s decision
had been promulgated, the public interest in maintaining the exemption
relied on did not outweigh the public interest in disclosing the disputed
information.
31. We should add that it was suggested to us, on behalf of both the
Department and the Information Commissioner, that the key date may
be, not the date when the Minister announced his decision, but a date
6 weeks later, being the latest date on which a challenge to the
decision might have been presented to the court under section 288 of
the Town and Country Planning Act 1990. We do not regard the
appeal period to have any relevance to this Appeal. The basis of any
court challenge would almost certainly be derived from the Minister’s
detailed reasons, as set out in the formal letter recording his decision,
and not the advice given to him before he made it.
32. An additional point on timing arose in the later stages of the hearing.
In the course of her closing submissions, Miss Grey, on behalf of the
Department, suggested that any disclosure of the disputed information
ought to be delayed for an unspecified period after the Minister’s
decision had been promulgated.          We understood that the
Department’s reason for this suggestion was that the submissions to
the Minister included, or may have included, legal advice which, if
disclosed, might provide an indication of the Department’s general
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Appeal Number: EA/2006/0043
approach with regard to the risk of legal challenge, which could be of
value to others having dealings with it in the future. Miss Grey very
fairly pointed out that this represented a change in the Department’s
position, as previously reflected in the terms of her skeleton argument.
However, she did not take up our suggestion that, if an argument along
these lines was to be pursued, we would need to view an unredacted
version of the two submissions, in order to assess the detailed content
of the advice in question, and to hear fresh submissions on the point.
Consequently we have no evidence on which to begin making a
decision on whether disclosure of the redacted information should have
been further delayed beyond the date when the Minister’s decision had
been promulgated. We have not therefore considered this issue any
further.
33. We accordingly direct the Department to disclose to the Appellant,
within 28 days of the date of this Decision, an unredacted version of
each of the submissions.
Deputy Chairman                                                                     Date 1st June
2007
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