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Right to information
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Right to information

The Government Information (Public Access) Act 2009 replaced the Freedom of Information Act 1989 on 1 July 2010.

An Information Commissioner was appointed for the first time in NSW to oversee the new 'right to information' regime. The legislation favours the disclosure of Government information.

Read more about the legislation from the Office of the Information Commissioner.

Office of State Revenue

The Office of State Revenue (OSR) is a division of the NSW Department of Finance and Services (DFS). The State Debt Recovery Office (SDRO) is the Fines Division of OSR.

In NSW, the Government Information (Public Access) Act 2009 gives you the legal right to obtain access to information held by state government agencies, Ministers, local government agencies and other public bodies. You may also access information held by private companies on behalf of government agencies.

Under the right to information legislation, information may be accessed in four ways:

OSR must also disclose instances when an application for access to government information has been refused.

Documents tabled by OSR are also available on the NSW Parliament website.

Note: there is no need to make an access application for your own personal information, unless that information also affects information belonging to third parties. Personal information held by OSR includes correspondence between yourself and OSR about a fine or an enforcement order. It also includes any kind of application you have made to OSR and OSR's response. Personal information does not, however, include correspondence between OSR and any other agency.

More information

How to make an application to OSR

Step 1. Decide exactly what information you need and who has it

If you are not sure what documents or information to apply for, contact us.

OSR cannot process access applications for information held by other Government agencies. We cannot give you access to information held by a local council, the NSW Police Force, the NSW Roads and Maritime Services or the Australian Taxation Office. Requests should be made directly to the agency which holds the information being sought.

Step 2. Check if the information is already available

Check the relevant websites to see whether the information you are seeking is already available. It may be already released, be contained in a publication such as an Annual Report, be available through a Disclosure Log. In addition, you may be able to obtain non-personal and non-confidential information free on request.

If you are unsure if the information is available, contact us.

Step 3. Making a formal access application

Make your request on a Access Application Form and post or deliver it, together with the $30 application fee, to OSR at the address shown on the form. Please note that a formal access application is not valid unless it is accompanied by the required fee. An application is also invalid if it requests access to exempt information but we will try to negotiate a valid application with you.

Your rights under the Government Information (Public Access) Act 2009

Under right to information legislation, you must be given access to government information when you request it, unless there is an overriding public interest against disclosure. Agencies must apply a public interest test to determine whether there are public interest considerations against disclosure which, on balance, outweigh the public interest considerations in favour of disclosure. If an agency decides to refuse to provide access to government information, it must give its reasons for doing so.

Your access application must be determined within 20 working days of receipt. If this deadline is not met, you are entitled to a refund of your application fee and any processing charges you may have paid. The deadline may be extended by up to 10 more working days if consultation with a third party is required or documents need to be retrieved from archives. An applicant and an agency may also agree to an extension of time for processing an access application.

If the deadline for processing is not met, the access application is deemed to have been refused and review rights are automatically invoked.

Charges

Agencies are entitled to charge at the rate of $30 per hour for processing formal access applications and may make disclosure of information conditional on payment of the processing charge. The application fee of $30 counts as a payment toward any processing charge.

A 50% discount on processing charges must be given if an applicant holds a pensioner concession card, is a full-time student or is a non-profit organisation. A 50% discount may be given if an applicant is able to demonstrate that disclosure of the information being sought will be of special benefit to the public.

Rights of review

The right to information regime allows applicants extensive rights of review, either as an internal review by the agency or a review by the Information Commissioner and/or the Administrative Decisions Tribunal. An application for internal review will normally cost $40 and must be made within 20 working days of a decision being notified to an applicant. Applications for review to the Information Commissioner must be made within eight weeks of a decision being made.

Contact

For more information contact:

Right to information
Address:
  • Right to Information Officer,
    Office of State Revenue
    GPO Box 4042
    SYDNEY NSW 2001
Phone:
  • (02) 6354 7130
Email:


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Last updated: 24-Jan-2012
 
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