The Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) appeals from a judgment of the district court that ordered the EPA, pursuant to the Freedom of Information Act (FOIA), to release a document entitled “Merit Promotion Rating Plan Specifications” (Rating Plan),
I
Background
A. Facts
The Rating Plan is a document used by EPA evaluators to rank job candidates according to their experience and skills. The first part of the Rating Plan consists of the rating factors. The rating factors are evaluation categories that identify the experience and skills necessary for job performance. Each rating factor is assigned a numerical weight that reflects the importance of that factor to satisfactory job performance. The second part of the Rating Plan is a measuring device to evaluate the applicant’s skills within each rating factor. This measuring device consists of four descriptions of experience levels for each rating factor. These descriptions attempt to categorize and distinguish each candidate’s skills. Under the Rating Plan, each level of experience is assigned a point value from one to four, which is then multiplied by the rating factor. Applicants with the highest scores then are afforded further consideration.
After being denied the promotion to a Supervisory Environmental Protection Specialist, a GS-13 position, Ms. Kaganove sought release of the Rating Plan. The EPA refused Ms. Kaganove’s request. It relied on Exemption 2 of the FOIA. 5 U.S.C. § 552(b)(2). That exemption allows an agency to refuse disclosure of documents that “relate[ ] solely to the internal personnel rules and practices of an agency.” Id. The EPA claims that disclosure would provide applicants with detailed knowledge of rating formulas and, consequently, they might exaggerate their credentials. Because much of the information provided by job candidates is unverifiable, or only verifiable at a great cost, the EPA submits that a device such as the Rating Plan is the only practicable means of ensuring the accuracy of the claims of employment applicants.
B. District Court Opinion
The EPA and Ms. Kaganove filed cross-motions for summary judgment. In ruling on those motions, the district court first concluded, relying on
Department of the Air Force v. Rose,
The court then examined a sample rating plan for a different EPA position that Ms. Kaganove had offered to the court. According to the court, this sample plan reflected a bias in favor of employees who had experience in a particular department area. This was in direct conflict with the EPA’s objective of achieving agency-wide experience. Accordingly, the court concluded that “because of the complexity of the EPA’s mission, the recognition by its own director of the need for EPA managers with agency-wide experience and the findings of the NAPA panel, 1 it is a matter *886 of significant public interest whether the EPA is actively promoting those with agency-wide experience.” Id. at 358 (footnote supplied). Thus, the court determined that there was a significant and genuine public interest in the document sought by Ms. Kaganove.
Having concluded that the Rating Plan did involve a matter of genuine public interest, the court proceeded to determine whether the document could nonetheless be protected under the approach announced in
Crooker v. Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco & Firearms,
Here, the district court expressly declined to state whether it agreed with the
NTEU
decision.
[T]he EPA rating plan will not become obsolete. At most, the EPA will be forced to utilize a verification process to screen out fraudulent applications. This is because the EPA cannot change the required levels of experience needed for each job because the requirements, unlike questions about an applicant’s experience, are not flexible.
Id. Thus, the court believed that NTEU was inapposite and that Exemption 2 of the FOIA did not provide the EPA with a basis for nondisclosure.
II
Analysis
The opinion of the district court reflects a careful study of the relevant statutory provisions. However, while we owe its labors our respectful and careful attention, we are presented here with a question of law that we review de novo.
The FOIA establishes a general legislative policy in favor of the disclosure of public documents. The Act contains, however, nine express exemptions that allow nondisclosure.
United States Dep’t of Justice v. Julian,
— U.S. —,
Exemption 2 of the FOIA permits nondisclosure for documents that are “related solely to the internal personnel rules and practices of an agency.” 5 U.S.C. § 552(b)(2). Under Exemption 2, both parties to this appeal agree that the EPA need not release the Rating Plan if the Plan does not relate to a matter of “genuine and significant public interest.”
Rose,
We need not decide this close question. In
Rose,
the Supreme Court concluded that the primary purpose of Exemption 2 was to exempt from disclosure documents devoid of genuine and significant public interest.
Exemption 2 is applicable where the document consists of internal instructions to such government officials as investigators and bank examiners. In such a case disclosure would permit circumvention of the law, and there is no substantial, valid external interest of the community at large in revelation. That composite presents a matter that involves solely internal personnel rules and internal practices of an agency for purposes of making Exemption 2 applicable.
Jordan,
The Freedom of Information Reform Act of 1986, Pub.L. No. 99-570, subtit. N, 100 Stat. 3207, 3207-48 (1986), evidences that
Crooker
was correctly decided. The Reform Act codified
Crooker,
as it applies to law enforcement agencies, into Exemption
*889
7 of the FOIA. Pursuant to section 1802 of the Reform Act, Exemption 7 now provides, in pertinent part, that “guidelines for law enforcement investigations or prosecutions [need not be disclosed] if such disclosure could reasonably be expected to
risk circumvention of the
law_” 5 U.S.C. § 552(b)(7)(E) (emphasis supplied). The legislative history of the Reform Act expressly states that this amendment was modeled after “the ‘circumvention of the law’ standard that the D.C.Circuit established in its en banc decision in
Crooker v. BATF,
As noted above, in
NTEU,
the District of Columbia Circuit applied
Crooker
to a case very much like ours. The
NTEU
court held that Exemption 2 was applicable even if the agency could not identify a particular statute or regulation threatened by disclosure. Rather, the court said that
Crooker
was apposite whenever a document related to predominantly internal personnel matters and if disclosure of the document would render it “obsolete for the purpose for which [it was] designed.”
NTEU’s construction of Exemption 2 is, in our view, consistent with the purposes of the FOIA. In
Rose,
the question left open by the Court was whether Exemption 2 applied when “regulations or
standards”
might be circumvented.
In our view, there is little doubt that the Rating Plan is a legitimate internal personnel document and that disclosure of the Rating Plan would frustrate the document’s objective. The Rating Plan is the sort of document that the EPA, and any other employer, reasonably would expect to be internal. Release of the Rating Plan would render it ineffectual because some job candidates, once informed in detail of the experiences that the EPA considered most valuable for a particular job, might amend the description of their prior employment. As the NTEU court said, referring to documents highly similar to the EPA’s Rating Plan:
The crediting plans are designed to measure actual experience and proven ability; it would seem to follow, in theory, that advance knowledge of their content should not affect the rating of the candidates. But the theoretical assumption is valid only if all applicants can be depended upon to be meticulously correct in describing their past experience and their qualified or quantifiable abilities. The uncontradicted affidavits of agency officials lead to the conclusion, however, that advance knowledge of the plans by applicants would allow and induce at least some of them to embellish — or perhaps even fabricate — their backgrounds to suit the appropriate crediting plan. Moreover, the indications are that the [United States Customs Service] does not possess the human and financial resources needed to identify fabrications, to verify their falsity, and to pursue the offending applicants with appropriate legal action. Indeed, it appears that a *890 great many of the elements in a crediting plan are capable of embellishment by an applicant in a manner that is not strictly fraudulent, or that cannot be proven to be fraudulent.
NTEU,
We can see no significant difference between NTEU and our case. The EPA’s Rating Plan is designed to measure an applicant’s “actual experience and proven ability.” Id. Uncontradicted affidavits offered by EPA officials suggest that advance knowledge of the Rating Plan would allow candidates to embellish their job and educational history in unverifiable ways so that they would receive a higher score on the Rating Plan’s numerical system. The district court suggested that the EPA could verify the information provided by job candidates. This objection ignores the EPA's submission that the practicalities of government administration and finance make such verification extraordinarily difficult if not impossible.
Accordingly, the judgment of the district court is reversed.
REVERSED.
Notes
. A panel of the National Academy of Public Administration (NAPA) had suggested in a re *886 port to the EPA in 1984 that the EPA needed to broaden its hiring practices in order to obtain managers with agency-wide experience.
. In
Rose,
editors of the New York University Law Review sought disclosure of case summaries of honor code violations at the Air Force Academy. The editors sought to write an article on military discipline. The Court began its analysis by considering the general purposes of the FOIA. The Court said that the general philosophy of the FOIA was to require full agency disclosure unless information was exempted under clearly delineated statutory language. The FOIA’s nine exemptions should “not obscure the basic policy that disclosure, not secrecy, is the dominant objective of the Act. ‘These exemptions are explicitly made exclusive, ...’ and must be narrowly construed.”
The Court then proceeded to examine the precise scope of Exemption 2, the exemption for information related “solely to the internal personnel rules and practices of an agency." 5 U.S.C. § 552(b)(2). The Court noted that the House and Senate Reports on the FOIA differed with respect to the scope of Exemption 2. The Senate Report said that examples of documents which can be exempted under Exemption 2 were "personnel’s use of parking facilities or regulations of lunch hours, statements of policy as to sick leave, and the like.” S.Rep. No. 813, 89th Cong., 1st Sess. 8 (1965). The House Report, on the other hand, appeared to adopt an entirely different approach. That report said:
Operating rules, guidelines, and manuals of procedure for Government investigators or examiners would be exempt from disclosure, but this exemption would not cover all ‘matters of internal management’ such as employee relations and working conditions and routine administrative procedures which are withheld under the present law.
H.R.Rep. No. 1497, 89th Cong., 2d Sess. 5 (1966) U.S.Code Cong. & Admin.News 1966, p. 2418.
The Court concluded that virtually all courts that have considered the issue have concluded that the Senate Report more accurately reflects congressional intent. Those courts that have relied on the House Report have only done so “where necessary to prevent the circumvention of agency regulations that might result from disclosure to the subjects of regulation of the procedural manuals and guidelines used by the agency in discharging its regulatory function.”
The Court proceeded to analyze whether case summaries of honor code violations and how they were treated were matters of genuine and significant public interest. The Court noted the unique nature of the armed forces and said that discipline and honor are critical to their effective operation. Therefore, the Court concluded that the public had a genuine and significant interest in how the Air Force Academy was dealing with violations of the Honor Code.
. A similar result had been reached in
Hardy v. Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco & Firearms,
. See supra note 2 for discussion of the House and Senate Reports.
