The Chief Ombudsman Peter Boshier has published his half-yearly data on Official Information Act (OIA) and Local
Government Official Information and Meetings Act (LGOIMA) complaints.
The data covers the number of complaints received under each Act for the period 1 January 2023 to 30 June 2023, as well
as the number of complaints completed by the Ombudsman during this period.
The number of complaints received about government agency handling of requests under the OIA was 848, an increase from
808 in the last six-month period. The top three types of complaints were refusals in part (220), refusals in full (218)
and delays in making a decision (173). Of the total received, 662 were from individuals, 116 from media and 70 from
other sources.
School Boards were the subject of 84 OIA complaints made to the Ombudsman. This number includes two ‘bulk’ complaints
comprising multiple complaints, relating to the handling of identical requests made to a number of schools. Of the
total, 33 complaints were about delays in decisions, 22 were about full refusals and 17 about incomplete or inadequate
responses.
There were 174 complaints under LGOIMA in the same period, up slightly on the last six-monthly period when 164
complaints were received. The top three types of complaints were about refusals in part (49), delays in making decisions
(47) and refusals in full (34). Of the 174 complaints received, 142 were from individuals, 18 from media and 14 from
other sources.
During this period, the Chief Ombudsman has maintained his rigorous approach to investigating delays in responding to OIA and LGOIMA complaints.
"Agencies need to respect both the spirit and the letter of the law when it comes to the OIA and the LGOIMA," says Mr
Boshier. "They must make sure that information is made available unless there is a good reason to withhold it. It must
also be provided in a timely manner. This is critical to maintaining transparency and accountability across central and
local government."
A new self-assessment tool has been developed recently by the Ombudsman to help government agencies improve their compliance with the OIA by
assessing their own strengths and areas they need to work on. The Chief Ombudsman is intending to develop a similar tool
for local government agencies in the future.
At the same time as the Office published its complaints and outcomes data, the State Services Commission published its data on OIA requests received by agencies and their response times.