MEMORANDUM OPINION & ORDER
The Edmonds Institute (“Edmonds”) is a non-profit organization whose mission is the maintenance and protection of ecosystems and their inhabitants. Edmonds brings this action under the Freedom of Information Act (“FOIA”), 5 U.S.C. § 552, seeking the release of certain documents from the National Park Service (“NPS”) at the Department of the Interior (“DOI”) relating to the NPS’s proposal to enter into “benefits sharing” agreements with private parties permitting the collection and commercial use of biological materials from national parks.
The DOI has filed a motion for summary judgment, to which it has attached a Vaughn index listing the documents it has withheld or redacted. Edmonds has filed a cross-motion for summary judgment, arguing that the DOI was wrong to withhold certain communications between the agency and an outside contractor under Exemption 5 of FOIA; used an improper cutoff date for the search for and release of documents; failed to submit an adequate Vaughn index and provide all segregable portions of released documents; and violated the Administrative Procedure Act (“APA”) by delaying a response to Ed-monds’ FOIA request for more than the twenty days specified in the statute.
For the reasons stated below, the Court grants in part and denies in part the parties’ respective motions, ordering the DOI to submit a more complete Vaughn index before the Court turns to the Exemption 5 question, but rejecting the contentions that the DOI used an invalid cut-off date and violated the APA.
I. Vaughn Index and Segregability
Congress enacted the FOIA “to open up the workings of government to public scrutiny through the disclosure of government records.”
Stern v. FBI,
When an agency withholds information pursuant to a FOIA exemption, it usually must produce a “Vaughn index,” a description of the records, or portions of records, withheld by the agency.
See Vaughn v. Rosen,
Once the agency identifies a document that it believes falls within an exemption, it must undertake a “segregability analysis,” in which it separates the exempt from the non-exempt portions of the document, and produces the relevant non-exempt information.
See Vaughn,
The materials that the DOI submitted in this case fall short of this standard. The DOI has produced a table listing, for each document, the sender, the recipient, a brief characterization of the nature of the document (a typical listing is “Email re: draft text”), and a number corresponding to one of eight categories of documents set out in the accompanying declaration of an NPS official. All but one of the documents remaining in dispute are labeled as Category l, 2 which the declaration describes only as consisting of “emails among Department and other agency personnel, including contractors and consultants, commenting on the development of the Benefits-Sharing EIS.” 3 Decl. of Susan Mills (“Mills Dec!.”), Nov. 10, 2004, ¶ 10. The declaration provides a more detailed description for six of the withheld Category 1 documents, but none of the others. 4 The submissions also do not tailor the exemption claim to a particular portion of each of the withheld documents, even failing to describe whether a document was withheld in part or in full. The DOI relies for its segregation analysis on a single paragraph in the declaration *109 that states that the withheld documents were evaluated for segregability and that
reasonably segregable factual material has been released whenever possible, unless such factual information is inextricably intertwined with deliberative communications, or where the drafter’s selection of which factual material to include in the document would indicate the nature of the deliberative communication.
Mills Decl. ¶ 20.
These materials are deficient in two respects, each of which the DOI should remedy in a new Vaughn index. First, the DOI must provide a brief but sufficiently detailed description of the content of each document it continues to withhold under Exemption 5.
See Oglesby v. U.S. Dep’t of the Army,
Second, the new index should connect the claimed exemption to the relevant withheld portions of each document, and explain whether there is any information
*110
that can be segregated as non-exempt from the rest of the document.
See Schiller,
The Court will therefore direct the DOI to produce a more detailed Vaughn index.
See Schiller,
II. Cut-off Date
Edmonds contends that the DOI erred in declining to produce any documents created after December 31, 2002. However, the governing regulation provides that, when responding to a FOIA request, the DOI will “include any records in its possession and control as of the date it begins its search.” 43 C.F.R. § 2.21. The DOI has submitted a declaration from an official at the NPS averring that the search for documents in this case began no later than December 31, 2002. Supp. Decl. of Susan Mills, Jan. 26, 2005, ¶ 3. Thus, the DOI chose a date no earlier than the date-of-search as the cut-off date for the pro *111 duction of documents, consistent with its own regulations.
Edmonds argues that the DOI should instead have used the date the documents were released as the cut-off date (in this case, February 20, 2004). This proposal, however, is inherently flawed, leading as it would to an ever-moving target for the production of documents under FOIA. Every postponement in the release of the documents would require the agency to perform a new search to include all documents created before the new release date, which in turn would postpone the date of release once again. This result is both inefficient and uncertain, and the Court sees no reason to adopt it here.
8
The D.C. Circuit has all but endorsed the use of date-of-search as the cut-off date for FOIA requests.
See Public Citizen v. Dep’t of State,
III. Administrative Procedure Act
Edmonds finally contends that it is entitled to a declaratory judgment that the DOI acted contrary to law in violation of the APA when it failed to respond to Ed-monds’ FOIA requests within the twenty working dates required by statute. 5 U.S.C. § 552(a)(6)(A)© & (ii). The law is clear, however, that review under the APA is unavailable when another statute provides an adequate remedy.
See Bowen v. Massachusetts,
The FOIA statute offers a clear and simple remedy for agency non-compliance with the FOIA deadlines: a motion asking the court to compel the agency to act on the FOIA request.
See 5
U.S.C. § 522(a)(4)(B) (district court has “jurisdiction to enjoin the agency from withholding agency records and to order the production of any agency records improperly withheld from the complainant”);
see also Oglesby,
CONCLUSION
The parties’ cross-motions for summary-judgment are GRANTED in part and DENIED in part. The DOI shall submit a revised Vaughn index by not later than September 22, 2005. The parties shall file renewed cross-motions for summary judgment by not later than October 24, 2005, responses thereto by not later than November 23, 2005, and any replies by not later than December 7, 2005.
SO ORDERED.
Notes
. A detailed description of the withheld documents is of particular importance in a case such as this, where the agency is claiming that the documents are protected by the deliberative process privilege under Exemption 5.
See, e.g., Defenders of Wildlife v. United States Dep’t of Agriculture,
. A single document apparently in dispute is labeled as Category 2, which the declaration explains is an "email ... from a contractor to an NPS employee” that "provides a revision of an existing MTA [Material Transfer Agreement] with a third party.” Id. ¶ 12.
. The declaration uses "EIS” as a shorthand for Environmental Impact Statement.
. For instance, the declaration states that "the document identified as Vaughn index No. 52, sent to the team drafting the EIS, provides section-by-section comments to a draft of the Benefits-Sharing EIS.” Id.
. A detailed description of each document is unnecessary where it would be repetitive or would reveal the exempt information the agency is attempting to withhold.
See, e.g., Judicial Watch, Inc. v. United States Dep't of Energy,
. The DOI has withheld the documents at issue in this action pursuant to the deliberative process privilege under Exemption 5. Ed-monds has challenged the withholding not on the ground that the documents are post-deci-sional or factual (the usual bases for contesting a claim of deliberative process privilege), but instead on the ground that the documents are communications with an outside organization and therefore not "intra-agency” documents within the meaning of Exemption 5. The DOI responds that the outside organization is a private contractor of the agency and therefore the communications with the organization are "intra-agency” under the rule of
Dep’t of the Interior v. Klamath Water Users Protective Ass’n,
The Court will not, at this time, require the DOI to provide more information to determine whether the outside organization was in fact acting as a private contractor. The Vaughn index, with its focus on the content of individual documents rather than the náture of the relationship among the relevant parties, does not seem well-suited to this task. The Court nonetheless anticipates that the information contained in a more complete Vaughn index will not only allow Edmonds to determine whether it should object to withholding of any of the documents (or portions of documents) as post-decisional or factual, but will also shed some additional light on the role played by the outside organization in its relationship with the DOI.
See Animal Legal Defense Fund,
. Edmonds has moved for an
in camera
review of a substantial number of the withheld documents. The D.C. Circuit has consistently emphasized that "a district court should not undertake in camera review of withheld documents as a substitute for requiring an agency’s explanation of its claimed exemptions in accordance with
Vaughn.” Spirko,
. The agency's declarant explains that although it commenced the "voluminous” search for the requested documents shortly after receiving the request, "the Yellowstone staff did not have the capacity to adequately process the documents until early 2004.” Supp. Mills Decl. ¶ 5.
. Edmonds explained at the hearing that it believes an order under the APA would send a message to the DOI that it is acting in violation of law. However, if the DOI again fails to act within the prescribed statutory deadlines, an order under section 522(a)(4)(B) would presumably send the same message. Until such time as Edmonds is seeking the concrete remedy of agency action on its re
*112
quest, a declaratory judgment action is not the favored course.
See United Christian Scientists v. Christian Science Bd. of Directors,
. At any rate, the APA appears to provide precisely the same remedy.
See
5 U.S.C. § 706(1) (authorizing a reviewing court to "compel agency action unlawfully withheld or unreasonably delayed”). Here, the DOI has acted on the FOIA request, and so nothing more could be gained from an action under the APA. Edmonds does not cite a single case, and the Court is unaware of any, where a court has awarded relief other than compelling an agency to act when a plaintiff charges that the agency has failed to act before a statutory deadline.
See Office of Foreign
Assets
Control v. Voices in Wilderness,
