On March 10, 2010, pursuant to the Freedom of Information Act (FOIA), 5 U.S.C. § 552, Appellant Joel Havemann filed six requests for information with the Social Security Administration (SSA). Per 5 U.S.C. § 552(a), the SSA was required “within 20 days after” receiving the request to (1) determine “whether to comply with [the] request” and (2) “immediately notify [Havemann] of [its] determination and the reasons therefor.”
Id.
§ 552(a)(6)(A)(i). The SSA sent Havemann six letters, dated March 16 and 17, 2010, acknowledging receipt of his requests and inviting him to inquire regarding their status if he did not hear from them in thirty days. On June 8, 2010, Havemann filed a complaint in the United States District Court for the District of Maryland, (1) alleging that the SSA had failed to comply with the deadlines imposed by 5 U.S.C. § 552(a)(6)(A) and (2) seeking “injunctive relief compelling the release and disclosure of the requested agency records.” The SSA then provided the following notifications to Havemann regarding its disclosure determinations: On August 13, 2010, it sent Havemann a letter denying Requests I, II, and IV, and partially denying Request III; on September 10, 2010, it sent a letter asking for clarification regarding Request V; and on September 13, 2010, it sent a letter communicating that it would partially grant Request VI. Later it reversed some of these determinations, but ultimately, as detailed below, it complied only partially with Havemann’s requests. As to the information that it withheld, it moved for summary judgment, maintaining that “further disclosure would constitute a ‘clearly unwarranted invasion of personal privacy’ under 5 U.S.C. § 552(b)(6).”
Havemann v. Astrue,
No. 10-1498,
I.
Havemann is a free-lance journalist and filed his FOIA requests in conjunction with research for a story that he expects to publish in the National Journal. He is working with Ronald Cooley, a former SSA employee who is not a party to this case. According to Cooley, Havemann’s story (or stories) “will take an in-depth look at the workings inside the SSA and, to a lesser degree, the [Veteran’s Administration (VA) ], as to their administration of certain of their benefit programs, and the relevant inter-agency interactions.” This appeal involves three of Havemann’s six requests — Requests I, II, and V.
A.
In Request I, Havemann sought information regarding married couples “where both members ... were applying for *144 and/or receiving Supplemental Security Income (SSI) benefits as an ‘aged, blind or disabled individual with an eligible spouse’ and where such benefits were denied or subsequently stopped because the couple also received a pension from the Department of Veterans Affairs.” Said differently, Havemann sought records with the following three characteristics:
• The latest “type of master record” 1 is “aged, blind or disabled individual with eligible spouse”;
• The record shows a denial of SSI for excess income in 1990 or later, or shows that the individual and spouse had been receiving SSI that was stopped in 1990 or later, due to excess income;
FOIA Request I (Veteran Couple Request)
Data Requested Data Released
Social Security Number (SSN) or alternative identifier Alternative Identifier
Current or last shown “Master Record” Yes
Full Name No
Address with 9-digit zip code No (only initial 5 digits of zip code released)
SSI application date No
Code for most recent state and county of residence No (only state code released)
Current SSI status Yes
Reason for SSI denial Yes
Denial Date Yes
Date of status change due to excess income Yes
Disability Payment Code 2 Yes
Ledger Account File (LAF) Code 3 Yes
Date of Birth No (only year released)
Earned Income Yes
Unearned Income Yes
• The record shows that one or both members of the couple received, or began receiving, a VA benefit (pension or compensation) based on need.
Havemann’s purpose for this request is to “shed light on the SSA’s handling of a regulatory policy concerning war veterans and their spouses who receive a VA pension ... and also file for SSI benefits.”
The SSA released some of the information requested. Below, we delineate the requested versus released information in the same manner as the district court. The left column shows the information requested and the right column indicates to what extent the information was released. Havemann challenges the SSA’s withholding of the month and day of birth, and the SSI application date.
B.
In Request II, Havemann sought information regarding individuals who were over age sixty-five, who were receiving or *145 entitled to SSI payments, and whose “most recent SSI record show[ed] no current receipt of [Social Security] benefits.” As to these individuals, Havemann also requested data indicating their date of enrollment in Medicare Part A and other Medicare information. Here, Havemann’s purpose is “to shed light on the SSA’s handling of referrals of SSI recipients] for Premium Part A Medicare ... through the QMB [Qualified Medicare Beneficiary] Program.” The SSA released some of the data that Havemann requested, as shown below:
FOIA Request II (QMB Medicare Request)
Data Requested Data Released
SSN or alternative identifier Alternative Identifier
Citizenship/alien status Yes
Current or last shown “Master Record” Yes
Address with 9-digit zip code No (only initial 5 digits of zip code released)
SSI application date No
Code for most recent state and county of residence No (only state code released)
Individual Recipient Identification Code Yes
Current Payment Status Code Yes
Beneficiary Identification Code (BIC) Yes
Date of Birth No (only year released)
LAF Code Yes
Most recent federal SSI amount payable Yes
Most recent federally administered SSI state amount payable_ Yes
Hospital insurance enrollment and supplemental medical insurance information Yes
Havemann challenges the SSA’s withholding of the month and day of birth.
C.
In FOIA Request V, Havemann sought information regarding deceased “primaries” (ie., individuals whose SSN number is recorded in the Master Beneficiary Record and on whose earnings the record is based) and the beneficiaries listed on their record, including the primary. Havemann’s purpose for this request is “to assess and publicize how well the government is administering Title 38 of the United States Code, Veterans’ Benefits.” The chart below delineates the information that the SSA released.
FOIA Request V (MBR Request)
Data Requested Data Released
SSN of the deceased primary record holder No
BIC Yes
Payment Identification Code Yes
Sex of Beneficiary Yes
SSI entitlement and termination dates Yes
Code for most recent state and county of residence No (only state released)
Primary Insurance Amount (PIA) Yes
Month and year of PIA Yes
9-digit zip code No
Date of birth No (only year released)
*146 LAF code_Yes
Monthly Benefit Amount (MBA)_No
Monthly Benefit Payment (MBP)_. No
SSI benefit type_Yes
SSI status code_Yes
Havemann challenges the withholding of the month and day of birth, the MBA, the MBP, the county code, and the zip code.
II.
Although our standard of review for grants of summary judgment generally is de novo,
Adams v. Trs. of the Univ. of N.C.-Wilmington,
A.
FOIA was enacted in 1967 as a means of “facilitating public access to [g]overnment documents.” Its predecessor, Section 3 of the Administrative Procedure Act (APA), 5 U.S.C. § 1002 (1964), ostensibly existed for the same purpose but, as time passed, was viewed “more as a withholding statute than a disclosure statute.”
Dept. of Air Force v. Rose,
B.
The parties do not dispute that Exemption 6 applies to the data at issue here.
See U.S. Dept. of State v. Wash. Post Co.,
1.
We think it obvious that the beneficiaries implicated by Havemann’s requests have a privacy interest in the information that the SSA has collected about them. Individuals have a right to control dissemination of information about their person, even if that “information may [already] be available to the public in some form.”
U.S. Dept. of Defense v. Fed. Labor Relations Auth.,
Specific individuals obviously are identifiable through data that is exclusive to their person, such as a name, address, or social security number. Such data is termed a “unique identifier.” At issue here are elements of data that are not unique identifiers, but that, according to the SSA, function as unique identifiers because they can be combined with other available information to identify specific individuals. The district court agreed with the SSA’s categorization of this data and its decision to deny disclosure because of the possibility that the data could be used to single out certain beneficiaries. We find the district court’s decision sound. The record provided to this Court demonstrates that the SSA thoroughly analyzed and demonstrated the methods through which the withheld data could lead to the identification of specific individuals. The district court relied on the SSA’s analysis, and we can ascertain no reason why it should not have done so. Moreover, Havemann’s arguments to the contrary fall short because they focus on whether singular pieces of withheld data (e.g., month and day of birth, SSI application date, etc.) could lead to the identification of individuals rather than on whether those pieces of data working in combination with other information could assist in such identification.
Havemann faults the SSA’s rationale for withholding this data, charging that it is speculative: “[T]he Agency withheld the date of birth from disclosure based on the premise that personal information
could lead
to identification of a living individual. However[,] the cases dealing with this issue hold that possibility of identification is not a sound bas[is] for nondisclosure.” But Havemann’s argument lacks merit. It is true that an agency cannot withhold information based on a “mere possibility]” that an individual’s privacy will be invaded.
See Department of Air Force v. Rose,
2.
Having concluded that beneficiaries’ privacy interests are at stake, we evaluate whether those interests are outweighed by the public’s interest in disclosure. Per the Supreme Court, “the only relevant public interest in the FOIA balancing analysis [is] the extent to which disclosure of the information sought would ‘she[d] light on an agency’s performance of its statutory duties’ or otherwise let citizens know ‘what their government is up to.’ ”
U.S. Dept. of Defense v. Fed. Labor Rel. Auth.,
Havemann’s stated intent to evaluate the SSA’s administration of various benefit programs fits within FOIA’s goal of “shed[ding] light on an agency’s performance of its statutory duties.” But he fails to satisfactorily articulate how the withheld data aids his pursuits. In his brief to this Court, he avers that “to properly inform the public about SSA’s operations and associated failures, [he] needs records and combinations of records that pertain to individuals.” But the information that the SSA has already disclosed does relate to individuals, and Havemann does not indicate why it is insufficient. Havemann further maintains that “dates of birth are essential to identification of eligibility for certain categories of benefits.” As noted by the district court, however, the SSA has explained that Havemann can achieve nearly 100% accuracy on eligibility determinations with access simply to the year of birth. Thus, it is unclear how access to the month and day of beneficiaries’ birth will assist Havemann in any significant way.
Having reviewed the district court’s decision and Havemann’s arguments, we are convinced that any interest the public may have in the withheld data is sufficiently outweighed by the privacy interests that would be compromised by such disclosure. The public’s interest in disclosure of the withheld data is negligible at best. The SSA has provided significant details for more than 140 million individuals, and such details appear sufficient to allow Havemann to conduct his analysis. To the extent that they are lacking, we do not believe that the marginal gains ostensibly possible through further disclosure are worth the burdens that will likely result to beneficiaries’ privacy interests. Accordingly, we conclude that the district court “had an adequate factual basis for the decision [it] rendered” and that its decision was not clearly erroneous.
Spannaus,
III.
Havemann contends that he is entitled to attorney’s fees and costs and that the district court erred in denying his motion to this effect. Per 5 U.S.C. § 552(a)(4)(E), “[t]he court may assess against the United States reasonable attorney fees and other
*149
litigation costs reasonably incurred in any case under this section in which the complainant has substantially prevailed.” A complainant “substantially prevails]” in a case when he proves that “(1) his filing of the FOIA action was necessary to obtain the information sought and (2) the action had a ‘substantial causative effect’ on the ultimate receipt of that information.”
Long v. U.S. I.R.S.,
IV.
For the reasons stated above, we affirm the judgment of the district court. We dispense with oral argument because the facts and legal contentions are adequately presented in the materials before the Court and argument would not aid the decisional process.
AFFIRMED.
