Opinion for the Court filed by Circuit Judge D.H. GINSBURG.
D.H. GINSBURG, Circuit Judge:
This appeal arises from an attempt by Local 2782 of the American Federation of Government Employees to obtain access, under the Freedom of Information Act, 5 U.S.C. § 552, to records documenting the promotion practices of the Census Bureau, a unit of the Department of Commerce. The Department denied its request for these dоcuments, and the Union brought suit in district court. When the court had entered summary judgment for the Department,
AFGE v. United States Dep’t of Commerce,
I. BackgRound
The AFGE, and the appellants personally, have filed numerous griеvances with the Population Division of the Census Bureau and with the Census Bureau itself, alleging that the Bureau has violated its own Merit Assignment Program by systematically pre-selecting employees to receive promotions for which other employees should have been allowed to compete. The Bureau rejected these grievances, thе last of which was filed in December of 1983, because the grievants failed to produce supporting evidence.
In December 1983, the AFGE filed with the Bureau three separate and somewhat overlapping requests for documents, invoking the FOIA, which provides “any person” with an enforceable right of access to all federal “agency recоrds,” except to the extent that such records fall within one or more of the nine exemptions listed in the Act. The appellants claim that they must have these documents in order to prove that the alleged pre-selection took place.
In Request 1, the AFGE sought access to “seven black covered notebooks situated directly bеhind the present desk of Barbara Glass, Administrative Office, Population Division,” which it believed to contain official government forms, known as “SF-52s,” that the Division uses in order to initiate requests for personnel actions, such as promotions; handwritten indices; and memoranda recommending particular Division employees for promotions to positions that are supposed to be filled competitively. In Request 2, the AFGE sought “all records, notes, and memoranda written between January 1, 1978,” and December 2, 1983, recommending a Division employee for promotion. Finally, in Request 3, the AFGE sought
A. Inspection of every chronological office file and correspondence file, internal and external, for every branch office, stаff office, assistant division chief office, division chief office, assistant director’s office, deputy director’s office, and director’s office;
B. Inspection of every division or staff administrative office file in the Bureau which records, catalogues, or stores SF-52s or stores promotion recommendation memos, or both; and
C. Inspection of every memo recommending promotion of any employee during FY 82 and FY 83 found or known to any branch chief or higher level supervisor employed at the Bureau.
(Emphases in original.)
The Bureau denied all three requests in their entirety. On appeal, the Department of Commerce upheld the Bureau’s decision except with respect to Request 3C, but conditioned inspection of documents responsive to that request upon the Union’s payment of a search fee of $3,560. With *206 respect to Requests 1 and 2, the Department relied upon the deliberative process privilege of Exemption 5 to the FOIA, which covers “inter-agency or intra-agency memorandums or letters which would not be available by law to a party other than an agency in litigation with the agency”; and upon Exemption 6, which covers “personnel and medical files and similar files the disclosure of which would constitute a clearly unwarranted invasion of personal privacy,” 5 U.S.C. § 552(b)(5), (6). The Department maintained that Requests 3A and 3B did not “reasonably describe[ ]” the documents that the Union was seeking, as required by 5 U.S.C. § 552(a)(3), and that those requests would impose an undue burden upon the Bureau, which would havе “to search virtually every file contained in over 356 branch and division offices, up to and including the director’s office.” (The Department did not invoke Exemption 5 with respect to Request 3B, although it appears to seek access to the same types of documents as do Requests 1 and 2.)
The Union then sued the Department of Commerce in district сourt, challenging the denials and alleging that the search fee was unreasonable in amount and imposed in bad faith. In its answer to the complaint, the Government rested upon the same grounds that the Department had given in deciding the Union’s administrative appeal. In its subsequent motion for summary judgment, however, the Government introduced two additional justifications for its refusal to release the documents described in Requests 1 and 2. It claimed, first, that the handwritten indices contained in the seven notebooks are not "agency records” within the coverage of the FOIA, “having been created by an enterprising employee ... on her own initiative and for her own personal convenience,”
With respect to Requests 1 and 2, the district court granted the Government’s motion for summary judgment solely upon the basis of Exemption 5.
II. Analysis
Liminally.
As a threshold matter, appellants argue that the Government may not invokе Exemption 2, nor argue that the handwritten logs described in Request 1 do not constitute “agency records” within the meaning of the FOIA, because it did not rely upon those grounds in its answer to the complaint. (Nor, we have seen, had it done so in the administrative proceedings.) The Government responds broadly that it “is not required to plead its claims [sic] in its answer,” citing
Berry v. Department of Justice,
*207 We do not have to resolve this question today, however, for as detailed below, we hold that the documents described in Requеsts 1 and 2 are exempt from disclosure by reason of the deliberative process privilege found in Exemption 5. For the same reason, we do not find it necessary to address the applicability of Exemption 6, which the agency has asserted from the outset as a ground for denying Requests 1 and 2.
Requests 1 and 2.
Exemption 5 authorizes an agency to withhold from disclosure agency records that would not be discoverable “in litigation with the agency,” including information within the “deliberative process” privilege of the Executive Branch.
See EPA v. Mink,
The appellants cоntend that the documents described in Requests 1 and 2 are not within the scope of Exemption 5 because they “would ... be available by law to a party other than an agency engaged in litigation with the agency.” They refer us specifically to litigation under Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964, which, as they point out, has been extended to include the Government in its capacity as an employer. The cases upon which the appellants rely to establish the discoverability of promotion recommendation memoranda and the like in Title VII litigation all involve the documents of the private party, however, not documents internal to an agency of the Government.
See International Brotherhood оf Teamsters v. United States,
More narrowly, the appellants argue that the particular documents sought in Requests 1 and 2, although predecisional, are not deliberative because they “evince [nothing of an] internal debate on policy options,” sо that their disclosure would not reveal “the give-and-take of the consultative process.”
Coastal States,
The appellants’ insistence that their requests would cause no intrusion into agency deliberations does not bear scrutiny. An internal agency communication that makes a recommendation or expresses an opinion necessarily reflects the give-and-take of the agency’s deliberative process.
Vaughn v. Rosen,
The exemption ... covers recommendations, draft documеnts, proposals, suggestions, and other subjective documents which reflect the personal opinions of the writer rather than the policy of the agency. Documents which are protected by the privilege are those which would inaccurately reflect or prematurely disclose the views of the agency, suggesting as agency positiоn that which is as yet only a personal position.... We also ask whether the document is recommendato-ry in nature or is a draft of what will become a final document.
Under these criteria, the records described in Requests 1 and 2 are surely within Exemption 5. The indices to the seven notebooks reveal the names of some Population Division emplоyees whose promotion was recommended at one level but not approved by the ultimate decisionmaker. Similarly, the memoranda and the SF-52s recommended personnel actions to which the Bureau was not yet committed. In fact, the district court found that an SF-52 originating with the Population Division might undergo significant changes before a final deсision is taken. The Personnel Office must determine “whether the position is needed at all, at what cost and from whose budget, what the successful applicant will be expected to do, and to whom he or she will report, as well as who should be chosen to fill it.”
In order to come within the exception to the deliberative process privilege for tentative positions that are ultimately adopted by the agency,
see Coastal States,
Requests SA and SB.
Request 3A would require the Bureau to lоcate “every chronological office file and correspondent file, internal and external, for every branch office, staff office [etc.]” Request
*209
3B is similarly broad. As such, neither request “reasonably describes” a class of documents subject to disclosure, as required by 5 U.S.C. § 552(a)(3)(A). An agency need not honor a request that requires “an unreasonably burdensome search.”
Goland v. CIA,
Request 3C. With respect to Request 3C, the appellants argue that waiver of the $3,560 search fee is required “in the public interest because it is likely to contribute significantly to public understanding of the operations or activities of the government.” 5 U.S.C. § 552(a)(4)(A)(iii). We do not reach the question of the appellants’ entitlement to waiver of the fee, however, as there is nothing in the record to indicate that they requested it during the administrative proceedings before the agency.
As a general proposition, “a party seeking review of agency action [must] exhaust its administrative remedies before seeking judicial review.”
NRDC v. United States Environmental Protection Agency,
III. CONCLUSION
For the forеgoing reasons' the district court’s decision is in all respects
Affirmed.
Notes
The appellants refer us to two FOIA cases in which a federal agency was required to release promotion-related materials not unlike those at issue here.
See Core v. United States Postal Serv.,
