What Can You Do While Waiting for a FOIA Response?
It often takes almost a year or more to get public records from the federal government. Here are some things you can do while you wait.

The government is slow, especially at answering questions about itself. In theory, the Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) lets Americans ask any federal agency for any public record and get a response back within 20 days. All 50 states have similar records laws. After all, government documents are the property of the taxpayer.
In practice, almost no government agency meets its own deadlines. FOIA requests can take weeks, months, or even years longer than the legal deadline. Law enforcement and intelligence agencies are notorious for sitting on requests for ages before handing back pages that are almost entirely censored with a black highlighter.
Using data from the public records site MuckRock, Reason calculated the average response times for several agencies. It turns out that you can do a lot of fun (and not so fun) things while waiting for bureaucrats to give you the documents that your taxes paid for.
The averages only include cases where the agency actually managed to turn up documents. It doesn't count requests that are still pending or cases where an agency straight-up ghosted the requester.
In the time it takes the Department of the Interior to respond (477 days), you could hike the Appalachian Trail twice (and then some).
In the time it takes Customs and Border Protection to respond (410 days), you could build 112 miles of border wall.
In the time it takes the Drug Enforcement Administration to respond (338 days), you could grow three pot plants consecutively.
In the time it takes the Bureau of Prisons to respond (318 days), you could serve out your sentence for a Zone C offense.
In the time it takes the Department of Education to respond (287 days), you could bring a baby to term.
In the time it takes the Coast Guard to respond (263 days), you could sail the world 6.5 times with world record yachtsman Francis Joyon.
In the time it takes the University of California, Berkeley, to respond (222 days), you could finish a spring and summer semester on campus.
In the time it takes the New York City Mayor's Office to respond (361 days), you could build a sixth of a mile on the Second Avenue subway extension.
In the time it takes the Federal Election Commission to respond (199 days), you could run a presidential campaign from the Pennsylvania caucuses to Election Day.
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You misspelled FYTW.
Write to your congresscritter demanding jail time for failing to meet the deadlines?
Jail your congresscritter for failing to force the executive branch to comply?
Discover who John Galt is?
Research why the answer is 42?
boarded a flight 4242 last week and thought I fucking hope this isn't the question.
"The averages only include cases where the agency actually managed to turn up documents. It doesn't count requests that are still pending or cases where an agency straight-up ghosted the requester."
What, like all the higher-ups at the NIH, CDC, and NIAID?
In the time it takes the Department of Education to respond (287 days),
you could bring a baby to term., you could successfully complete a full semester of HS-level biology, human anatomy, or sex education.Let's agree that the mileage may vary between the two of us.
Right, what do babies have to do with education. Now if he had said "you could complete a full academic school year though you might need to repeat it" that might make more sense for the department.
My experience wasn't that bad.
A few years ago, I submitted a FOIA request for a DoD document that had been classified in the 1950s. The request was for a technical assessment of an Air Force survival rifle evaluated by the lab, so it wasn't exactly a political hot potato.
The report was declassified and the evaluator waived the application fee. It took about two weeks.