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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> First-tier Tribunal (General Regulatory Chamber) >> Sharp v Information Commissioner [2024] UKFTT 290 (GRC) (11 April 2024) URL: http://www.bailii.org/uk/cases/UKFTT/GRC/2024/290.html Cite as: [2024] UKFTT 290 (GRC) |
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General Regulatory Chamber
Information Rights
Heard on: 11 March 2024 Decision given on: 04 April 2024 |
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B e f o r e :
TRIBUNAL MEMBER ANNE CHAFER
TRIBUNAL MEMBER PAUL TAYLOR
____________________
KATE SHARP |
Appellant |
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- and - |
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THE INFORMATION COMMISSIONER |
Respondent |
____________________
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
Decision: The appeal is allowed in part.
Substituted Decision Notice:
Organisation: Herefordshire Council.
Complainant: Ms Kate Sharp
The Substitute Decision – IC-235651-T9K9
1. For the reasons set out below Herefordshire Council ('the Council') were entitled to withhold the requested information under regulation 12(4)(e) (internal communications) of the Environmental Information Regulations 2004 ('EIR') save for the information set out in paragraph 2.
2. The Council were not entitled to withhold the email from the ward councillor at page A43 of the closed bundle.
3. The Council must take the following steps:
a. Disclose the email from the ward councillor to the appellant within 42 days of the date this decision is sent to the Council by the tribunal.
4. Any failure to abide by the terms of the tribunal's substituted decision notice may amount to contempt which may, on application, be certified to the Upper Tribunal.
Introduction
Factual background
"[the case officer's] distressed state was brought on as a result of what she perceived to be a very unsettling, accusatory personal attack of her professional conduct. I accept that you have maintained in very clear terms that you have not received a good service from the Council, but within the context of her preparing for an impending Committee site visit, my view is that this was not the time or the place for you to take out your frustrations on an individual."
"I am taking legal advice on the implications of what happened at the site visit today and if I can provide a further up-to-date update today I will. However for the time being you should be assured that the item will progress."
…
"I should say that I'm in the process of reviewing the way in which the application was assessed prior to the recommendation being formulated as, until yesterday, I was unaware of the specific invite to [the neighbouring property] and the invite that you extended."
"I thought it might be helpful to outline the advice given to your outgoing chair by HALC
a. PLANNING APPLICATION
Because of the current level of hostility in the parish concerning the interpretation of the NDP and the apparent link to the planning application coming before Herefordshire Council's planning committee tomorrow, it would be in the best interests of the Parish Council to rely on their minuted support for the application which is printed within the Planning Officer's report and is in the public domain. I do not believe that the Parish Council has previously agreed who would attend planning committee meetings on behalf of the Parish Council and therefore any councillor who chooses to attend, even though he/she may have the tacit support of other councillors, is not officially there on behalf of the parish council. Even though the outgoing Chair was not connected to the application, HALC's advice was for him not to attend and possibly state something which was not the official view of the Parish Council.
Since the Chair's resignation, the suggestion for who should attend the Planning Committee on behalf of the Parish Council has come from the applicant himself, who has a financial interest in the application, and the person he has suggested has participated in lobbying all Herefordshire Councillors on the Planning Committee concerning an interpretation of the NDP which would benefit the application. It could therefore be construed that the councillor in question is not impartial and it puts that councillor in a very sensitive position in the eyes of 'Joe Public' from a code of conduct point of view.
The only view that is genuinely from Callow and Heywood Parish Council is the one sent into the Planning Officer by the previous Clerk. There is absolutely no point in any councillor going along to the meeting to read that statement when it is already in the Planning Officer's report. The integrity of any councillor who attends under the current circumstances could be brought into question, as well as the integrity of the parish council as an entity.
The advice therefore is for councillors to leave the decision making to the responsible body (Herefordshire Council) and not run the risk of personal opinions being put forward as the view of the parish council.
…"
Request
"From November 2021 to the present day, I request any and all communication (sent or received) between Council employees and Councillors that refers to planning application 214270.
Details of meetings and phone records should also be included. Correspondence regarding the administration of application 214270 between parties must be included and also, correspondence of events before, during and after the site visit and before, during and after the planning committee meeting.
To include but not to limited to: Elsie Morgan, Simon Withers, Kevin Bishop, Christy Bolderson, all members of the Planning Committee, any other Councillor or Council employee, any officer involved in the planning process (NDP manager, Historic Building Officer etc) members of legal services etc.."
Decision Notice
Appeal
The Commissioner's response
Legal framework
(a) the state of the elements of the environment, such as air and atmosphere, water, soil, land, landscape and natural sites including wetlands, coastal and marine areas, biological diversity and its components, including genetically modified organisms, and the interaction among these elements;
(b) factors, such as substances, energy, noise, radiation or waste, including radioactive waste, emissions, discharges and other releases into the environment, affecting or likely to affect the elements of the environment referred to in (a);
(c) measures (including administrative measures), such as policies, legislation, plans programmes, environmental agreements, and activities affecting or likely to affect the elements and factors referred to in (a) and (b) as well as measures or activities designed to protect those elements
35. …an approach that assesses whether information is "on" a measure by reference to whether it "relates to" or has a "connection to" one of the environmental factors mentioned, however minimal…is not permissible because, contrary to the intention of the Directive, it would lead to a general and unlimited right of access to all such information.
37. …It is therefore first necessary to identify the relevant measure. Information is "on" a measure if it is about, relates to or concerns the measure in question. Accordingly, the Upper Tribunal was correct first to identify the measure that the disputed information is "on".
42. Furthermore, Mr Choudhury accepted that it is possible for information to be "on" more than one measure. He was right to do so. Nothing in the EIR suggests that an artificially restrictive approach should be taken to regulation 2(1) or that there is only a single answer to the question "what measure or activity is the requested information about?". Understood in its proper context, information may correctly be characterised as being about a specific measure, about more than one measure, or about both a measure which is a sub-component of a broader measure and the broader measure as a whole. In my view, it therefore cannot be said that it was impermissible for the Judge to conclude that the Smart Meter Programme was "a" or "the" relevant measure.
43. It follows that identifying the measure that the disputed information is "on" may require consideration of the wider context and is not strictly limited to the precise issue with which the information is concerned, here the communications and data component, or the document containing the information, here the Project Assessment Review. It may be relevant to consider the purpose for which the information was produced, how important the information is to that purpose, how it is to be used, and whether access to it would enable the public to be informed about, or to participate in, decision-making in a better way. None of these matters may be apparent on the face of the information itself. It was not in dispute that, when identifying the measure, a tribunal should apply the definition in the EIR purposively, bearing in mind the modern approach to the interpretation of legislation, and particularly to international and European measures such as the Aarhus Convention and the Directive. It is then necessary to consider whether the measure so identified has the requisite environmental impact for the purposes of regulation 2(1).
(e) the request involves the disclosure of internal communications.
The Task of the Tribunal
Issues
38.1. Does the EIR apply?
38.2. It is accepted that the withheld information is internal communications.
38.3. Does the public interest in maintaining the exception outweigh the public interest in disclosing the information?
Evidence and submissions
Email trail | Page no. | Description |
1 | A49-A50 and A84-85 | An email trail within which planning officers have sought legal advice in regard to concerns being raised by Mrs Sharp regarding the planning application process. |
2 | A8 | A conversation between two officers (an officer and their line manager) deciding how they will handle a complaint made by Mrs Sharp, who the Investigating Officer will be and how they will respond to it. |
3 |
A1 | A conversation between two officers (an officer and their line manager) who are discussing the decision made at planning committee and also the actions which led to a planning officer becoming upset and breaking down during a site visit, and how that officer will be supported going forward. |
4 | A36 | A conversation between two officers (an officer and their line manager) regarding the upcoming planning committee and a decision made not to respond to Mrs Sharp's latest email prior to the outcome of the committee. |
5 | A43 | An email from the Ward Councillor asking for an update. |
6 |
A57 | Duplicate – appears in email trail 8 – an officer asking for advice from their line manager how to proceed given capacity issues |
7 |
A65 |
Two emails between officers and a Councillor discussing the ongoing issues with the planning case. The third email on this page is in the open bundle at p 212. |
7 | A66 | This is in the open bundle at p 212, save for irrelevant personal information that has been redacted. |
8 |
A75 |
Conversations that are a continuation of email trail 6 and the advice given by a line manager to a member of their team around how best to respond. |
Discussion and Conclusions
EIR
Internal communications
Public interest balance
Signed Sophie Buckley
Judge of the First-tier Tribunal
Date: 4 April 2024