Hello.
Unfortunately, I'm not able to see any of you, so I'm just listening to this whole conference. I hope that you all can at least see me when I'm talking.
There are a whole lot of reasons, obviously, as you might expect, why some agencies have significant delays in responding to requests. Now, let me just say that out of 97 agencies, we have a significant portion that don't have significant delays. That's primarily because they're lower-volume agencies or the type of data they get is not complicated to process, so they're able to respond more quickly to requests.
I think the main reason why some agencies have backlogs—and certainly some can have significant backlogs of requests being many years old in some cases—is just the crush of incoming requests. The Department of Homeland Security, portions of the Department of Justice, the FBI, for instance, are just exceedingly popular with the public. They get lots and lots of requests, tens of thousands of requests every year. The crush of what's coming in the door literally overwhelms the system. Then obviously there is the complexity of the request also. It's not unusual for requesters to ask for things that involve boxes of material or file cabinets full of documents or thousands of e-mails, all of which have to be individually reviewed.
One of the things I'm focusing on in our new website is the ability to mash data. It's going to very helpful to me as well as to the agencies. I really want to stop lumping all backlogs in one big term, because we do ask agencies to report the time it takes them to respond to requests by type of request. They do distinguish between simple requests and complex requests, for example.
I think that one of the key ways we're going to tackle backlogs is to realize that we have different tracks in agencies and that it's most important that simple requests be responded to as promptly as possible. Requesters should have the option of saying that they will make a simple request that is low volume or low complexity, in exchange for the speed they will get by doing that. That way, that request isn't sitting behind a researcher who isn't as concerned with time but wants lots and lots of material, so their request is necessarily going to take longer.
Those are some of the issues we're wrestling with in terms of trying to manage it. At the end of the day, agencies will always say if you would just give us more people, more resources, more bodies to actually work on the request, that would be helpful. Looking for efficiencies, improving the way they handle the requests, and to try to be more efficient can go a long way.
Also, I think just our analysis of the issue needs to be more nuanced than it's been in the past.