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Public Works is UNISON Scotland's campaign for jobs, services, fair taxation and the Living Wage. This blog will provide news and analysis on the delivery of public services in Scotland. We welcome comments and if you would like to contribute to this blog, please contact Kay Sillars k.sillars@unison.co.uk - For other information on what's happening in UNISON Scotland please visit our website.

Monday 19 January 2015

Protecting information rights from damage caused by outsourcing

Immediate steps must be taken to protect freedom of information (FOI) rights from the damage caused by the outsourcing of important public services.

That's the message in a special report from The Scottish Information Commissioner, Rosemary Agnew to the Scottish Parliament.   The Report explains that the provision to extend FOI to non-public sector organisations delivering public functions has been “woefully underused” in the ten years since FOI law came into effect, with the consequence that some public functions are no longer open to full public scrutiny.

The Commissioner’s report reflects growing concern about the impact of changes in public sector delivery on information rights, something that UNISON Scotland has highlighted many times.  Since 2005, over 15,000 Scottish households have lost FOI rights following the transfer of local authority housing stock to housing associations and many more as services, particularly in the care sector, have been outsourced.  While the Scottish Government has the power to extend FOI to third parties that provide public services, this power has only been used once in the last decade.  This was in 2013 for the designation of local authority leisure and culture trusts.

Commissioner Rosemary Agnew said:

“The first decade of FOI in Scotland is a real success story.  Over 60,000 requests were made last year alone, and recent research revealed that 95% of the public believe that the right of access to the information held by public bodies is important. Worryingly though, our right to information is being slowly eroded. Rights have been gradually lost over the last 10 years as the responsibility for public service delivery is passed to third parties.  These rights are fundamental to ensuring public services are open, cost-effective and accountable to the public.  As the models for the delivery of public functions evolve and change, it is vitally important that the public’s right to the information held about the services that deliver them are protected and strengthened”.

The Commissioner’s Special Report, FOI 10 Years On: are the right organisations covered? contains a number of recommendations for action by Scottish Government Ministers to address her concerns.  The recommendations include:

• adopting a policy to ensure FOI rights are migrated whenever a body delivering public functions or services changes
• carrying out a review to identify where FOI rights have been lost over the past decade, and reinstate them
• taking steps to ensure that FOI rights apply to those bodies responsible for social housing and private prisons and
• adopting a factor based approach to wider FOI designation, to ensure that FOI rights apply to bodies which are considered to be delivering functions of a public nature.

The Commissioner’s Special Report is available on her website at: www.itspublicknowledge.info/reports.

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