The Freedom of Information
Act (FOIA),
which can be found in Title 5 of the United
States Code, section 552, was enacted in 1966 and provides
that any person has the right to request access
to federal agency records or information. All
agencies of the United States government are
required to disclose records upon receiving a
written request for them, except for those
records that are protected from disclosure by the
nine exemptions. This right of access is
enforceable in court.
On October 2, 1996,
President Clinton signed into law the Electronic
Freedom of Information Act Amendments of 1996
(E-FOIA, for short). E-FOIA makes it possible for
you to have electronic access to the ITA FOIA
Reading Room. The new law requires agencies to
respond to a FOIA request within 20 working days
(excluding holidays).
To save you both time and
money, please browse the documents and
information sources which are currently available
on our ITA Homepage before submitting a FOIA
request. In addition, the four units of ITA
(Import Administration; U.S. & Foreign
Commercial Service (US&FCS); Trade
Development; and Market Access and Compliance);
maintain separate homepages with information
about their specific programs and activities. If
these resources do not contain the information
you are seeking, then you may consider filing a
FOIA request. (Note: For information about export
regulations, please see the homepage for the Bureau of Export
Administration.)
For more detailed
information, see the
Department of Justice Text on the Freedom of
Information Act.
- For additional general
type information on how to use the FOIA
see; A Citizen's Guide on Using the
Freedom of Information Act and the
Privacy Act of 1974 to Request Government
Records. This publication is available at
Federal Depository Libraries, the
Government Printing Office, or you can
access it through GPO Access (http://www.access.gpo.gov).
|