[PRODUCT] FOI Isn’t “Transparency.” It’s Pressure.

by Chaz Stevens, CLE Faculty
[PRODUCT] FOI Isn’t “Transparency.” It’s Pressure.
Most people file public records requests like they’re ordering a pizza.
“Any and all emails about X.”
“Anything you have on Y.”
Congrats. You just handed the agency a stall button.
FOI isn’t about learning stuff.
FOI is about making an institution account for itself in writing.
And that’s where it gets interesting.
Process Beats Protest
Protest is noise.
Process is gravity.
Systems don’t break because you yell at them.
They break when they’re forced to explain the decision path… step-by-step… on the record.
If you’re trying to “raise awareness,” FOI is the wrong tool.
If you’re trying to force clarity… FOI is a control surface.
The Stevens Method, in Plain English
Don’t ask what records they have.
Ask what records must exist if they followed their own rules.
That one sentence flips the whole game.
Because now “no records” isn’t a shrug. It’s a confession.
And if they do produce records?
Now you’ve got a process map you can test.
Stop Writing “Any and All”
“Any and all” is FOI self-harm.
It invites:
- “Burdensome” objections
- Fee shakedowns
- Endless “we’re still searching”
- A PDF dumpster fire full of junk you didn’t need
Instead, you use constraint language.
“Records sufficient to show…”
It’s not polite.
It’s surgical.
Why “Records Sufficient to Show” Hits Hard
Because it forces them to pick the decision artifacts.
Not the fluff.
Not the noise.
The stuff that proves the process happened.
And if it didn’t happen?
They either admit it… or they invent a story in writing. Either way, you’ve got leverage.
Quick reality check: a narrow production is not a failure.
It’s their claimed version of the process.
Which means you can now compare it to the rulebook.
What You’re Actually Requesting
You’re not asking for “emails.”
You’re asking for the paper trail that must exist if the decision was lawful.
That usually means some mix of:
- intake forms / submissions
- eligibility checks
- staff review notes
- approvals / denials / recommendations
- internal guidance used to apply the policy
- exceptions, overrides, “special handling”
- calendars and meeting logs that show who was in the room
No artifacts?
No process.
Pushback Is Data
When an agency throws friction at you, don’t treat it like a delay.
Treat it like telemetry.
Fee demands… delay tactics… “use our portal”… “be more specific”… heavy redactions.
That’s discretionary stress leaking out of the system.
You document it.
You preserve it.
You use it.
Because the records are only half the story.
The resistance is the other half.
FOI Isn’t a One-Off. It’s a Campaign
One request teaches.
A structured series forces change.
A real FOI pressure campaign does things like:
- box them into consistent explanations
- expose selective enforcement
- convert informal norms into formal contradictions
- build an evidentiary record without discovery
That’s not “activism.”
That’s systems debugging.
The Question That Changes Everything
Don’t ask:
“What records do you have?”
Ask:
“What records must exist if you followed your own rules?”
That’s where FOI stops being passive… and starts being dangerous.
Legally.
Ethically.
Institutionally.
One Paragraph. Two Outcomes. Only One Creates Leverage.
Before (what everyone writes)
“Any and all emails, documents, notes, texts, or communications related to the approval of the holiday display at City Hall between November 1 and December 15, including communications between staff, elected officials, and outside parties.”
Looks reasonable.
Feels thorough.
Is functionally useless.
You just invited:
- a “burdensome” objection
- a fee estimate
- three weeks of delay
- 400 pages of irrelevant junk
And zero accountability.
After (Engineered Request)
“Records sufficient to show how the decision to approve the holiday display at City Hall was evaluated and approved, including records reflecting the criteria applied, who participated in the review, any eligibility determinations made, and any exceptions or deviations from the governing policy.”
Same length.
Same subject.
Now it’s a trap.
If they produce records, you get the decision logic.
If they say no records exist, they’ve admitted the process was informal or undocumented.
If they stall, over-redact, or lawyer up… that reaction becomes evidence.
That’s the difference between asking for information and forcing an institution to explain itself in writing.
FAQs
1. Is this a template pack or a theory essay?
Both, but weighted toward execution: request language, targeting logic, and iteration.
2. What’s “decision artifacts”?
Records created when someone exercises judgment: approvals, criteria, exceptions, notes, routing, logs.
3. Does this work outside Florida?
Yes. The framework is jurisdiction-agnostic; you swap in your state’s statute terms.
4. Will this help with denials and “no records” replies?
Yes. “No records” becomes a diagnostic outcome you can exploit with narrower follow-ups.
5. Is this legal advice?
No. It’s an operational method for requesting records under public-records laws. Though I teach CLE (Continuing Legal Education) classes to attorneys, I am not a lawyer.
6. Who is it for?
People who already file PRRs/FOIAs and want higher signal, less sludge.
7. What format do I receive?
Digital download (PDF).
Want the Template?
The FOI Request Engineering Playbook gives you the structure… the language… the reusable template.
Not theory.
Not vibes.
A repeatable method you can run on any agency that claims it has rules.
Process beats protest.
About the Author
Chaz Stevens is a systems stress-tester who uses public-records law the way engineers use diagnostics: to see how things actually work under load. For more than three decades, he’s applied FOI, sunshine laws, and procedural literalism to expose rule drift, undocumented discretion, and selective enforcement inside government institutions.
His work focuses on process over protest — extracting written records, decision trails, and approval logic that agencies rely on but rarely publish. The Stevens Method is built on lawful pressure, repeatable tactics, and outcomes that force clarity: comply neutrally, formalize the exception, or contradict yourself on paper.
His advanced playbook reflects real-world use, not theory. It’s written for practitioners who want leverage, not lectures.

Learn more about him on Wikipedia.
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