Joe Biden’s papers from his Senate days could have gone online on Dec. 31. But they didn’t. And it doesn’t seem like the documents, which could offer valuable information on his record, are going to be available to the public before the 2020 election.

Biden donated his senatorial papers, which cover the period from 1973 to 2009, to the University of Delaware in 2011. More than 1,850 boxes of archival records arrived at the school in June 2012.

Initially, the university said that the papers would be accessible no sooner than two years after Biden retired from “public office” or Dec. 31, 2019 ― with the possibility that it would be even later if processing took more time. Biden left office as vice president in January 2016, when President Donald Trump and Vice President Mike Pence were inaugurated.

But in April, the university changed its mind and pushed back the date once again.

“The records will be available no sooner than the later date of December 31, 2019, or two years after the donor retires from public life,” the university website reads.

Dec. 31, 2019, has come and gone, and the papers aren’t available. And because Biden is running for president, the university still considers him to be in “public life,” as a spokeswoman told The Washington Post in July.