Table of Contents
How RTI Helps Citizens Understand Government Policies and Decisions
In one line. Every policy — an income-tax notification, a subsidy withdrawn, a highway diverted, a syllabus changed — is preceded by a file. The file carries opinions, draft notes, the finance ministry's concurrence, and the final decision. RTI lets an Indian citizen read that file, with rare exceptions.
What that means in practice.
- You stop reading a policy second-hand. You read the file that produced it.
- You understand the trade-offs the government weighed.
- You become an informed citizen — neither cynical nor blindly trusting.
Did you know? The landmark judgment in Central Board of Secondary Education v. Aditya Bandopadhyay [(2011) 8 SCC 497] held that file notings and inter-departmental correspondence are “information” under Section 2(f) of the Act. They are disclosable — with limited exceptions under Section 8.
Why policy transparency matters
A democracy is not just a vote on polling day. Between one election and the next, thousands of decisions shape lives — petrol prices, import duties, school-book lists, railway fare revisions, city master plans.
For every such decision, there is a paper trail. Reading that trail:
- Reduces polarisation. You see the data, not just the tweet.
- Makes you a better voter.
- Makes you a better civil society participant.
- Builds trust between government and governed.
RTI is the tool for that reading.
What kind of decisions can RTI illuminate?
- Policy decisions — a new subsidy scheme, a discontinued scholarship, a GST-rate change.
- Regulatory decisions — a new BIS standard, a pharmacy pricing order.
- Administrative decisions — a transfer of officers, a creation of a new wing.
- Planning decisions — a master plan, a zoning change.
- Clearance decisions — an Environmental Clearance, a Telecom spectrum allocation.
What information can be asked under RTI
- The entire file that led to a decision.
- File notings — the chain of opinions recorded by joint secretary, director, under secretary, section officer.
- Draft notes prepared by the concerned wing.
- Consultation notes with other departments / ministries.
- Legal opinions obtained, unless privileged.
- Stakeholder feedback received during public consultation.
- Cabinet Note — but with Section 8(1)(i) restriction; only post-decisional disclosable.
- Implementation reports and monitoring data.
When to use RTI for policy information
- A policy changed and you want to know the evidence base.
- A scheme was withdrawn and you want the stated reasons.
- A committee report was commissioned and never published.
- A consultation was announced and the feedback never summarised.
- A minister made an announcement; you want the file.
Step-by-step filing
Online
- Central policy →
rtionline.gov.in→ concerned Ministry / Department. - State policy → state RTI portal → State Department.
- Regulator (SEBI, RBI, TRAI, IRDA, PFRDA, SERC) →
rtionline.gov.in.
Offline
- PIO, [Department], [Government of India / State], the Secretariat building.
- Rs. 10 fee; BPL free.
Sample RTI application
To, The Central / State Public Information Officer, [Concerned Ministry / Department], [Address] Subject: Information under Section 6(1) of the Right to Information Act, 2005, regarding the decision / policy: [Name of the notification / circular / scheme withdrawal, etc.]. Sir/Madam, I, [Full Name], citizen of India and resident of [Full Address], submit this request for information in respect of the following decision: Decision / Policy / Order: [Exact title and date, e.g., "Notification No. XXX dated DD-MM-YYYY withdrawing the ABC scholarship"] Ministry / Department: ________ Government of India / Government of [State]: ________ Please provide: 1. Certified copy of the file relating to the above decision, including all inter-departmental correspondence, draft notes, and the final approval. 2. File notings, in chronological order, from the originating wing to the final sanctioning authority. 3. Legal opinion obtained, if any, and its recommendation. 4. Stakeholder feedback received during any public consultation, and the summary submitted to the decision-maker. 5. Reasoning recorded by the final decision-maker, including acceptance or rejection of alternatives. 6. Cabinet / Council of Ministers approval (if any) — decision only (without pre-decisional exchanges). 7. Date of notification, source of gazette publication, and the implementation-review schedule. 8. Any review orders or amendments issued since the original decision. 9. Monitoring / impact-assessment reports prepared so far. 10. Name, designation, and office of the nodal officer responsible for implementation. I enclose Indian Postal Order No. __________ dated __________ for Rs. 10. I declare that I am an Indian citizen. Yours faithfully, [Full Name] [Signature] [Date] [Place]
Ten powerful RTI questions for policy decisions
- Full file, chronological.
- File notings.
- Legal opinion.
- Consultation feedback summary.
- Final decision-maker's reasoning.
- Cabinet decision.
- Notification and gazette number.
- Amendments and reviews.
- Impact assessment reports.
- Nodal implementing officer.
What happens after you file
- Day 0 – 15: File located and copied; redactions proposed.
- Day 15 – 30: Reply drafted by PIO; reviewed by FAA desk.
- Day 30: Reply arrives — often a bundle of 50–200 pages.
- Day 31+: First Appeal if redactions are excessive.
- Day 60+: Second Appeal to CIC / SIC.
Responsible reading
Reading a file is a skill.
- Read the notings in sequence — junior officer → senior officer — to see how thought evolved.
- Look for divergent opinions. Policy is often a compromise.
- Identify the finance ministry's concurrence — usually the binding constraint.
- Read the statutory pre-conditions — public consultation dates, form of notice.
- Do not read a single note out of context. The file is a conversation.
Common mistakes
- Asking for “all files in the ministry”. Broad asks fail under Section 7(9).
- Treating every redaction as a cover-up. Some are valid — Section 8(1)(i) pre-decisional cabinet notes, (a) security, (b) contempt.
- Missing the 30-day appeal window.
- Publishing the file without reading it. Reading first, commentary later.
Pro tips
- Trace back from a gazette notification to the source file. The gazette shows the section; the file has the debate.
- Pair with Parliament Q&A. A minister's answer on the floor is a narrower statement; the file is the context.
- Set up a reading circle of 3–4 citizens per policy. Divide the 100-page file. Meet, discuss, publish a plain-language summary.
- Use RTI in concert with the Pre-Legislative Consultation Policy. If public consultation was promised, ask for the summary.
Exemptions to know
- Section 8(1)(a) — sovereignty, security, strategic, economic, scientific.
- Section 8(1)(b) — contempt of court.
- Section 8(1)© — privilege of Parliament / State Legislature.
- Section 8(1)(d) — commercial confidence, IPR.
- Section 8(1)(h) — investigation, arrest, prosecution.
- Section 8(1)(i) — Cabinet papers; available after decision, not before.
- Section 8(1)(j) — personal info (narrowed by 2023 DPDP Rules).
FAQs
Q1. Can RTI compel the government to reverse a policy?
No. RTI informs; it does not order policy change. But information is the first step; the rest is public debate, Parliament, courts.
Q2. Are cabinet notes off-limits?
Pre-decisional cabinet notes, yes. Post-decisional material is disclosable. Section 8(1)(i) is precise on this.
Q3. Can the PIO charge me for a 200-page file?
Yes — Rs. 2 per page, typically. Total cost rarely exceeds Rs. 500. For a serious policy debate, this is small money.
Q4. Can I publish the file I receive?
Yes — subject to defamation, copyright, and privacy law. Most RTI-extracted material is published by journalists and researchers routinely.
Q5. What if redactions are excessive?
First Appeal. Cite Section 10 — severability requires the PIO to disclose parts that can be reasonably separated from exempt portions.
Conclusion
A democracy works when the governed read the government. Not every citizen reads every file — and none need to. But some citizens reading some files, regularly and respectfully, is the oxygen of accountability.
RTI is the reading permit.
Related reading
Last reviewed: 21 April 2026. Legal position verified against Section 2(f), 4, 7, 8, 10, 19 of the RTI Act, 2005, and the CBSE v. Aditya Bandopadhyay judgment of the Supreme Court.


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