The Angling Trust’s legal arm – Fish Legal – has welcomed the recent order from the Information Commissioner for the Environment Agency (EA) to release pollution records and monitoring data for the River Test. The EA had repeatedly refused to provide the information on the grounds that supplying it would be ‘manifestly unreasonable’.
Fish Legal –  whose lawyers provide free legal support to more than 900 member clubs,  riparian owners and syndicates throughout the UK – regularly asks the EA for  its monitoring data, fisheries records and details of investigations into  pollution incidents using the Environmental Information Regulations 2004.
  In the 2008  season, stretches of the river Test became discoloured. Losing confidence in  the EA’s investigation into the potential sources of the pollution, members  called on Fish Legal for help.
  
  Fish Legal then asked the EA for reports and data in order to gain a better  understanding of the threats facing this section of one of the most well-known  chalk streams for fishing in the UK, if not the world.
  
  The EA’s web  site indicates that this information should have been readily available: 
  “The Environment Agency is an open  and transparent organisation. We have always recognised the vital role that  access to information plays in helping us achieve our goals. Such access is  essential to the credibility of our regulatory functions. As we rely on your  power and influence to help us achieve sustained environmental improvements, we  will ensure that you have up-to-date environmental information available. We  therefore encourage you to seek information from us.”
  
  In any case,  a public authority would be obliged to provide environmental information under  the Environmental Information Regulations. However, there are certain  ‘exemptions’ which an authority can use to avoid its statutory obligation to  release documents. The EA refused to provide the information as it argued it  would take too much time and place a ‘manifestly unreasonable’ burden on their  employees. The EA also said that a cost of up to £2,000 would be incurred when  responding, but this charge was soon retracted when challenged.
  Believing  that the EA was cynically using exemptions under the Regulations to avoid  scrutiny of their work, and fearing that the EA could use the same arguments in  the future, Fish Legal referred the refusal to the Information Commissioner’s  Office in June 2009.
  
  In its formal  Decision Notice, the Information Commissioner agreed with Fish Legal that the  EA had behaved unlawfully.
  
  The  Commission‘s damning Decision:
  • Referring to the claim by the EA that it would take between 60 and 90 hours  to respond to the request, the Information Commissioner found that the Agency  had “failed to  provide convincing evidence that its estimates are reliable or reasonable under  the circumstances”. 
  • For example, records which the EA had claimed would take 10 minutes each to  read through would, in the Information Commissioner’s view, take “at most 1 minute to read through, and  in some cases only seconds”. The estimate given by the EA,  that simply extracting the information would consume 26 hours of Agency staff  time, was, in fact, a gross exaggeration. 
  • Commenting on arguments put forward by the EA that field staff would have to  be taken away from their normal duties to search for the information, the  Commissioner found no evidence for such a claim. Furthermore, the Commissioner  felt that with a staff of over 13,000 the EA was “best placed to deal with requests of  this size”.
  • The Commissioner found that the volume and complexity of a single request was  not an applicable ground on its own to apply the “manifestly unreasonable”  exemption, as there were already provisions allowing an extension of time to  respond to large and complicated requests. This undermined the entire basis for  the EA’s arguments for avoiding disclosure, notwithstanding its failure to  assess the time for responding accurately.
  • The Commissioner considered that attempts by an angling club to access  existing monitoring and fisheries data in order to take “proactive steps to ascertain risks  and dangers to the river prior to further incidents occurring” was “an example of  the environmental information regulations being used to ‘best effect’”.  The Commissioner stressed that the regulations were provided precisely to allow  members of the public to have a say in how well their environment was being  protected.
  • The Information Commissioner highlighted the importance of the River Test not  only for fishermen but also for the many businesses – including hotels, fishing  guides, restaurants and associated services – which rely on its reputation to  attract visiting anglers.
  
  Justin Neal, Head Solicitor at Fish Legal, said:
  “We were amazed at the EA’s  use of the ‘manifestly unreasonable’ exemption, which is usually reserved for  the vexatious litigant or serial complainer, not the legal arm of the national  representative and governing body for angling. Due to the importance of  accessing environmental information for our work on behalf of our members, we  pushed for a formal Decision Notice to ensure that this exemption could not be  misused by other regional EA teams in the future.”
  
  Mark Lloyd,  Chief Executive of the Angling Trust and Fish Legal, said:
“With the support of the  Angling Trust and Fish Legal, angling clubs and riparian owners play a vital  role reporting, investigating and tackling pollution problems at a local level,  to protect the rivers they treasure. These roles look set to be formalised as  part of the Government’s Big Society agenda and the Environment Agency’s  unwarranted secrecy was standing in the way of this. We are pleased that the  Commissioner has highlighted the importance of allowing angling clubs and  riparian owners access to monitoring data so that they can play their part in  improving our rivers for fish and other wildlife. We look forward to receiving  promptly the information we requested nearly a year and a half ago which will  allow us to understand better some of the potential threats facing the River  Test.”
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