The Freedom of Information Act Is Failing Due to Government Bloat
In FY 2024, over 200,000 Freedom of Information Act requests were backlogged, according to the Government Accountability Office.

The Freedom of Information Act (FOIA), a landmark law to increase government accountability, is falling short in its aim to improve transparency with American citizens, according to a recent report from Open the Books. FOIA gives the public the freedom to request government records from federal agencies, with the exception of certain information involving the White House, congressional records, confidential financial information, national security matters, and law enforcement records. In recent years, government-caused inefficiency has increased wait times for FOIA requests, which "have become so long they undercut the accountability FOIA is meant to provide," per Open the Books.
The report finds that across federal agencies last year, FOIA requests labeled as "complex" took an average of 267 days to generate a response, and "simple" requests an average of 39 days for the agency to initially respond, "but 31 agencies still took in excess of 100 days on average." While agencies are required by law to respond to FOIA requests within 20 days, "in practice many require extensions for months or even years, citing big backlogs of records requests."
Two agencies were especially slow. The Commerce Department had an average wait time of 836 days, and the Department of Veterans Affairs had an average wait time of 811 days—or over two years.* And the amount of backlogged FOIA requests is rapidly increasing.
The U.S. Government Accountability Office (GAO) reports that "in FY 2022, the government-wide request backlog surpassed 200,000 requests for the first time." These numbers have more than doubled since FY 2013, when the number of backlogs was a modest 95,564 in comparison.
While understaffing at federal agencies may be partially to blame, Open the Books found cases of government officials deliberately delaying FOIA requests. The group mentions the case of David Morens, an adviser to former Director of the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases Anthony Fauci, whose emails showed that "he had been evading FOIA requests as a matter of institutional practice." In one email, Morens says he learned "from our FOIA lady here how to make emails disappear after I am FOIA'd but before the search starts…Plus I deleted most of those earlier emails after sending them to gmail."
Open the Books offers potential fixes to FOIA's problems, including updating FOIA's outdated legacy software, removing bureaucrats who slow-walk requests, and instituting staffing quotas. However, these solutions won't fully fix the problems that are inherent with a large and overly bloated administrative state, where huge information backlogs and impossibly redacted information are the norm.
*CORRECTION: This article originally misstated the average length in years that it took the Commerce Department and the Department of Veterans Affairs to respond to a FOIA request.
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Ah, you expect the perfect law to save you from the bureaucracy?
F-bomb minstrelsy:
"Stewart’s routine was both uninspired and unholy — an act that failed to edify any audience. But it raised an important cultural question: How did comedians come to replace political commentators (whether cable and network political actors, or PBS pundits)? The politicization of entertainment ruins show business. Despite congratulating the tiny applause-meter audience, Colbert, like Stewart, just isn’t funny. Their late-night host creed: Save democracy by reducing it to f-bomb minstrelsy."
https://www.nationalreview.com/2025/07/jon-stewarts-f-bomb-chorus/
FOIA requests are always overbroad and almost always fishing expeditions or federal employees (current or former) looking for dirt on colleagues. Its a complete waste of time that I don't want added to my tax bill.
Got some sources for that first sentence assertion?
Purely anecdotal, I know, but I was involved in a court case where a part was FOIA'ing government records using search term descriptions of emails that were so broad they generated tens of thousands of documents, many of which were irrelevant and some of which were confidential by law (for example, private medical information submitted to government agencies). They then complained that the case was delayed by the government's need to review and sift through the half dozen or so items of information the party actually wanted.
I should have been clearer, my fault. I do believe they are overbroad, but mostly from incompetence, not fishing expeditions; and why would current government employees use FOIA to get dirt on colleagues? That's what I was really after.
I guess you could say ...
* dons sunglasses *
... my comment request was overbroad.
We could FOIA a sample of FOIA requests to see just how stupid they are, but I'm sure the bureaucrats are too busy dealing with stupid FOIA requests.
FOIA the Epstein List.
Just keep electing democrats. The problem will go away.
Too many laws and regulations have no enforcement mechanism. Start fining individual bureaucrats. That would speed things up. Who do FOIA requests go to, some FOIA officer? Some clerk? Threaten him with a fine, which can be got out of only by fingering someone else, like a boss who won't allocate the resources. If that boss pleads too much work, great! Now you get to blame Congress for assigning too much work, and start prioritizing work. Too bad Congress can't be fired for assigning too much work.
I've dealt with bureaucrats. I've had bosses assign too much work. One job, I actually had two co-bosses, both assigning tasks without any kind of coordination, and when I asked, they told me to just deal with it, which I did by quitting after six months or so. They also told me to stop filing bug reports, which I thought was pretty funny; what's the point of testing software if not to report bugs? I ignored them and kept on filing bug reports.
Bureaucrats.
"Quis custodiet ipsos custodes?"
Color me gobsmacked that there are still journalists who use FOIA to gather info. Based on what they write they are only sourcing from the PR department
The Freedom of Information Act is failing because fuck you, that's why.
This is a perfect example of why Congress -not the agency or the Prez - should be (and constitutionally is required to be) the oversight authority.
Of course since Congress is incompetent and corrupt and cronyist and should be executed, this is instead evidence that a panel of citizens (chosen randomly by sortition) should be the ones that Congress delegates its oversight to.
No. We, the People, should be the ultimate oversight authority, and elections are a sorry way to get there. What is needed is some way for people, individuals, to challenge government laws, regulations, and actions. Absent that, government will continue to grow, because the only way bureaucrats can measure their success is by budget, subordinates, and new regulations. Note how vital it is to issue new regulations; otherwise it looks like they have nothing to do and should be disbanded.
"The Commerce Department had an average wait time of 836 days, and the Department of Veterans Affairs had an average wait time of 811 days—or more than three years."
365 days/year x 3 years= 1,095 days.
Maybe they were calculating business days, 260 per year, 780 for three years.
I can't speak to the Commerce Department, but the VA's records contain a multitude or private or personal information about individual veterans and/or their families that nobody in their right mind would want subject to indiscriminate public release if it were about them. So, yeah, it's going to take time to respond and redact that sort of information.
Um, that’s not a bug in the system, it’s a feature.
Do you think processing FOIA requests is cost-free? You claim government "bloat" is the problem, but how can bloat delay FOIA requests? If anything, staff who must be hired just to process unlimited and unbounded numbers of FOIA requests is itself wasteful bloat.
High-five. If someone wants 10 years of some middle-management bureaucrat's paper-pushing, they can get it the old fashioned way, with a subpoena.
Nonsense like this doesn't help.
I recognize that the bloat and glut of bureaucracy is part of the problem - but an EQUAL part of the problem is people who think that FOIA requests can and should be used for dynamite fishing.
Tailor your requests, have an idea what you're looking for, and cast your rod in the correct direction. If you don't get a bite, try it again. Don't just chuck a stick of dynamite in the lake and hope a fish falls in your boat. You're not only wasting FOIA's time, you're wasting the time of everyone else who wants to make FOIA requests.