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The Freedom of Information Act confers on individuals a right of access to information held in the university's records, a right to have official information relating to them amended where it is incomplete, incorrect or misleading and a right to have made known to them the reasons for decisions that have materially affected them. This means that apart from information already published or otherwise available, individuals may apply
The Act will not impose changes in the university's objectives or functions. It will, however, mean:
It will be necessary to exempt from release certain types of information where their release would cause a harm or injury prejudicial to the functioning of the university or would be contrary to the public interest. In practical terms, this means that the key exemptions will be records relating to processes still in deliberation, records relating to the performance of certain investigative functions and negotiations, and the disclosure to third parties of personal information, commercially sensitive information or information obtained in confidence. An individual will have the right to seek review of an initial decision to refuse access. This will be to a higher authority within the university. Should the requester be unhappy with the outcome of the review, he/she may appeal the decision to the Information Commissioner, an independent arbiter under the Act. The internal review will normally take place before an appeal to the Information Commissioner.
In order to provide greater access for the general community to information about how the University operates, as well as to aid individuals in framing requests, the University is preparing, under sections 15 and 16, two reference guides. The guide published under section 15, will give information on, details of how to make a request, when and how the information will be communicated to the requester, the fee structure for processing requests where applicable, and the rights of review and appeal in the event of the requester being dissatisfied at the outcome. It also contains details of the university's functions, its organisational structure, the services it provides and the classes of records it holds. The second guide, under section 16, will contain the policies, procedures and guidelines used by the university in decision-making, along with the rights, benefits, obligations and penalties imposed by the university in carrying out its functions and the methods by which these are administered, so that the individual will be able to obtain the reasons for decisions materially affecting him/her.
