[Title 5 CFR ]
[Code of Federal Regulations (annual edition) - January 1, 1997 Edition]
[From the U.S. Government Publishing Office]


          5



          Administrative Personnel



[[Page i]]

          PART 1200 TO END

          Revised as of January 1, 1997
                              6
          (Reserved)
          CONTAINING
          A CODIFICATION OF DOCUMENTS
          OF GENERAL APPLICABILITY
          AND FUTURE EFFECT

          AS OF JANUARY 1, 1997
          With Ancillaries
          Published by
          the Office of the Federal Register
          National Archives and Records
          Administration

          as a Special Edition of
          the Federal Register



[[Page ii]]

                                      




                     U.S. GOVERNMENT PRINTING OFFICE
                            WASHINGTON : 1997



               For sale by U.S. Government Printing Office
 Superintendent of Documents, Mail Stop: SSOP, Washington, DC 20402-9328



[[Page iii]]




                            Table of Contents


                                                                    Page
  Explanation.................................................     vii
  Title 5:
    Chapter II--Merit Systems Protection Board................       3
    Chapter III--Office of Management and Budget..............      81
    Chapter IV--Advisory Committee on Federal Pay.............     129
    Chapter V--The International Organizations Employees 
        Loyalty Board.........................................     139
    Chapter VI--Federal Retirement Thrift Investment Board....     145
    Chapter VII--Advisory Commission on Intergovernmental 
        Relations.............................................     255
    Chapter VIII--Office of Special Counsel...................     275
    Chapter IX--Appalachian Regional Commission...............     289
    Chapter XI--Armed Forces Retirement Home..................     291
    Chapter XIV--Federal Labor Relations Authority, General 
        Counsel of the Federal Labor Relations Authority and 
        Federal Service Impasses Panel........................     297
    Chapter XV--Office of Administration, Executive Office of 
        the President.........................................     383
    Chapter XVI--Office of Government Ethics..................     401
    Chapter XXI--Department of the Treasury...................     597
    Chapter XXII--Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation.......     607

[[Page iv]]

    Chapter XXIII--Department of Energy.......................     615
    Chapter XXIV--Federal Energy Regulatory Commission........     619
    Chapter XXVI--Department of Defense.......................     623
    Chapter XXVIII--Department of Justice.....................     627
    Chapter XXIX--Federal Communications Commission...........     631
    Chapter XXX--Farm Credit System Insurance Corporation.....     635
    Chapter XXXI--Farm Credit Administration..................     639
    Chapter XXXIII--Overseas Private Investment Corporation...     643
    Chapter XXXV--Office of Personnel Management..............     645
    Chapter XL--Interstate Commerce Commission................     649
    Chapter XLI--Commodity Futures Trading Commission.........     653
    Chapter XLII--Department of Labor.........................     657
    Chapter XLIII--National Science Foundation................     663
    Chapter XLV--Department of Health and Human Services......     669
    Chapter XLVI--Postal Rate Commission......................     677
    Chapter XLVII--Federal Trade Commission...................     681
    Chapter XLVIII--Nuclear Regulatory Commission.............     683
    Chapter L--Department of Transportation...................     687
    Chapter LII--Export-Import Bank of the United States......     691
    Chapter LIII--Department of Education.....................     695
    Chapter LIV--Environmental Protection Agency..............     699
    Chapter LVII--General Services Administration.............     703

[[Page v]]

    Chapter LVIII--Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve 
        System................................................     707
    Chapter LIX--National Aeronautics and Space Administration     713
    Chapter LX--United States Postal Service..................     717
    Chapter LXII--Equal Employment Opportunity Commission.....     721
    Chapter LXIII--Inter-American Foundation..................     725
    Chapter LXV--Department of Housing and Urban Development..     727
    Chapter LXVI--National Archives and Records Administration     733
    Chapter LXIX--Tennessee Valley Authority..................     735
    Chapter LXXI--Consumer Product Safety Commission..........     737
    Chapter LXXIV--Federal Mine Safety and Health Review 
        Commission............................................     739
    Chapter LXXVI--Federal Retirement Thrift Investment Board.     743
    Chapter LXXVII--Office of Management and Budget...........     745
  Title 6--[Reserved]
  Finding Aids:
    Table of CFR Titles and Chapters..........................     751
    Alphabetical List of Agencies Appearing in the CFR........     767
    Redesignation Tables......................................     777
    List of CFR Sections Affected.............................     785

[[Page vi]]



      



                                                                                                                
                                  ----------------------------------------------------------                    

   Cite this Code:  CFR                                                         
                                                                                                               
   To cite the regulations in this volume use title, part                       
   and section number. Thus, 5 CFR 1200.1 refers to title                      
   5, part 1200, section 1.                                                    
                                                                                                                
                                  ----------------------------------------------------------                    
                                                                                                                


[[Page vii]]

                               EXPLANATION

    The Code of Federal Regulations is a codification of the general and 
permanent rules published in the Federal Register by the Executive 
departments and agencies of the Federal Government. The Code is divided 
into 50 titles which represent broad areas subject to Federal 
regulation. Each title is divided into chapters which usually bear the 
name of the issuing agency. Each chapter is further subdivided into 
parts covering specific regulatory areas.
    Each volume of the Code is revised at least once each calendar year 
and issued on a quarterly basis approximately as follows:

Title 1 through Title 16.................................as of January 1
Title 17 through Title 27..................................as of April 1
Title 28 through Title 41...................................as of July 1
Title 42 through Title 50................................as of October 1
    The appropriate revision date is printed on the cover of each 
volume.

LEGAL STATUS

    The contents of the Federal Register are required to be judicially 
noticed (44 U.S.C. 1507). The Code of Federal Regulations is prima facie 
evidence of the text of the original documents (44 U.S.C. 1510).

HOW TO USE THE CODE OF FEDERAL REGULATIONS

    The Code of Federal Regulations is kept up to date by the individual 
issues of the Federal Register. These two publications must be used 
together to determine the latest version of any given rule.
    To determine whether a Code volume has been amended since its 
revision date (in this case, January 1, 1997), consult the ``List of CFR 
Sections Affected (LSA),'' which is issued monthly, and the ``Cumulative 
List of Parts Affected,'' which appears in the Reader Aids section of 
the daily Federal Register. These two lists will identify the Federal 
Register page number of the latest amendment of any given rule.

EFFECTIVE AND EXPIRATION DATES

    Each volume of the Code contains amendments published in the Federal 
Register since the last revision of that volume of the Code. Source 
citations for the regulations are referred to by volume number and page 
number of the Federal Register and date of publication. Publication 
dates and effective dates are usually not the same and care must be 
exercised by the user in determining the actual effective date. In 
instances where the effective date is beyond the cut-off date for the 
Code a note has been inserted to reflect the future effective date. In 
those instances where a regulation published in the Federal Register 
states a date certain for expiration, an appropriate note will be 
inserted following the text.

OMB CONTROL NUMBERS

    The Paperwork Reduction Act of 1980 (Pub. L. 96-511) requires 
Federal agencies to display an OMB control number with their information 
collection request.

[[Page viii]]

Many agencies have begun publishing numerous OMB control numbers as 
amendments to existing regulations in the CFR. These OMB numbers are 
placed as close as possible to the applicable recordkeeping or reporting 
requirements.

OBSOLETE PROVISIONS

    Provisions that become obsolete before the revision date stated on 
the cover of each volume are not carried. Code users may find the text 
of provisions in effect on a given date in the past by using the 
appropriate numerical list of sections affected. For the period before 
January 1, 1986, consult either the List of CFR Sections Affected, 1949-
1963, 1964-1972, or 1973-1985, published in seven separate volumes. For 
the period beginning January 1, 1986, a ``List of CFR Sections 
Affected'' is published at the end of each CFR volume.

CFR INDEXES AND TABULAR GUIDES

    A subject index to the Code of Federal Regulations is contained in a 
separate volume, revised annually as of January 1, entitled CFR Index 
and Finding Aids. This volume contains the Parallel Table of Statutory 
Authorities and Agency Rules (Table I), and Acts Requiring Publication 
in the Federal Register (Table II). A list of CFR titles, chapters, and 
parts and an alphabetical list of agencies publishing in the CFR are 
also included in this volume.
    An index to the text of ``Title 3--The President'' is carried within 
that volume.
    The Federal Register Index is issued monthly in cumulative form. 
This index is based on a consolidation of the ``Contents'' entries in 
the daily Federal Register.
    A List of CFR Sections Affected (LSA) is published monthly, keyed to 
the revision dates of the 50 CFR titles.

REPUBLICATION OF MATERIAL

    There are no restrictions on the republication of material appearing 
in the Code of Federal Regulations.

INQUIRIES

    For a legal interpretation or explanation of any regulation in this 
volume, contact the issuing agency. The issuing agency's name appears at 
the top of odd-numbered pages.
    For inquiries concerning CFR reference assistance, call 202-523-5227 
or write to the Director, Office of the Federal Register, National 
Archives and Records Administration, Washington, DC 20408.
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                              Richard L. Claypoole,
                                    Director,
                          Office of the Federal Register.

January 1, 1997.



[[Page ix]]



                               THIS TITLE

    Title 5--Administrative Personnel is composed of three volumes. The 
parts in these volumes are arranged in the following order: parts 1-699, 
700-1199 and part 1200-end. The first and second volumes containing 
parts 1-1199 are comprised of chapter I--Office of Personnel Management. 
The third volume containing part 1200-end is comprised of chapter II--
Merit Systems Protection Board, chapter III--Office of Management and 
Budget, chapter IV--Advisory Committee on Federal Pay, chapter V--The 
International Organizations Employees Loyalty Board, chapter VI--Federal 
Retirement Thrift Investment Board, chapter VII--Advisory Commission on 
Intergovernmental Relations, chapter VIII--Office of Special Counsel, 
chapter IX--Appalachian Regional Commission, chapter XI--Armed Forces 
Retirement Home, chapter XIV--Federal Labor Relations Authority, General 
Counsel of the Federal Labor Relations Authority and Federal Service 
Impasses Panel, chapter XV--Office of Administration, Executive Office 
of the President, chapter XVI--Office of Government Ethics, chapter 
XXI--Department of the Treasury, chapter XXII--Federal Deposit Insurance 
Corporation, chapter XXIII--Department of Energy, chapter XXIV--Federal 
Energy Regulatory Commission, chapter XXVI--Department of Defense, 
chapter XXVIII--Department of Justice, chapter XXIX--Federal 
Communications Commission, chapter XXX--Farm Credit System Insurance 
Corporation, chapter XXXI--Farm Credit Administration, chapter XXXIII--
Overseas Private Investment Corporation, chapter XXXV--Office of 
Personnel Management, chapter XL--Interstate Commerce Commission, 
chapter XLI--Commodity Futures Trading Commission, chapter XLII--
Department of Labor, chapter XLIII--National Science Foundation, chapter 
XLV--Department of Health and Human Services, chapter XLVI--Postal Rate 
Commission, chapter XLVII--Federal Trade Commission, chapter XLVIII--
Nuclear Regulatory Commission, chapter L--Department of Transportation, 
chapter LII--Export-Import Bank of the United States, chapter LIII--
Department of Education, chapter LIV--Environmental Protection Agency, 
chapter LVII--General Services Administration, chapter LVIII--Board of 
Governors of the Federal Reserve System, chapter LIX--National 
Aeronautics and Space Administration, chapter LX--United States Postal 
Service, chapter LXII--Equal Employment Opportunity Commission, chapter 
LXIII--Inter-American Foundation, chapter LXV--Department of Housing and 
Urban Development, chapter LXVI--National Archives and Records 
Administration, chapter LXIX--Tennessee Valley Authority, chapter LXXI--
Consumer Product Safety Commission, chapter LXXIV--Federal Mine Safety 
and Health Review Commission, chapter LXXVI--Federal Retirement Thrift 
Investment Board and chapter LXXVII--Office of Management and Budget. 
The contents of these volumes represent all current regulations codified 
under this title of the CFR as of January 1, 1997.

    Redesignation tables appear in the Finding Aids section of the 
volumes containing parts 700-1199 and part 1200-End.

    For this volume, Carol Conroy was the Chief Editor. The Code of 
Federal Regulations is published under the direction of Frances D. 
McDonald, assisted by Alomha S. Morris.

[[Page xi]]



 
[[Page 1]]



                   TITLE 5--ADMINISTRATIVE PERSONNEL




                  (This book contains part 1200 to End)

  --------------------------------------------------------------------

  Editorial Note: Title 5 of the United States Code was revised and 
enacted into positive law by Pub. L. 89-554, Sept. 6, 1966. New 
citations for obsolete references to sections of 5 U.S.C. appearing in 
this volume may be found in a redesignation table under Title 5, 
Government Organization and Employees, United States Code.
                                                                    Part
chapter ii--Merit Systems Protection Board..................        1200
chapter iii--Office of Management and Budget................        1300
chapter iv--Advisory Committee on Federal Pay...............        1410
chapter v--The International Organizations Employees Loyalty 
  Board.....................................................        1501
chapter vi--Federal Retirement Thrift Investment Board......        1600
chapter vii--Advisory Commission on Intergovernmental 
  Relations.................................................        1700
chapter viii--Office of Special Counsel.....................        1800
chapter ix--Appalachian Regional Commission.................        1900
chapter xi--Armed Forces Retirement Home....................        2100
chapter xiv--Federal Labor Relations Authority, General 
  Counsel of the Federal Labor Relations Authority and 
  Federal Service Impasses Panel............................        2411

  Appendix A 
  to 5 CFR 
  Chapter 
  XIV--
  Current 
  Addresses 
  and 
  Geographic 
  Jurisdictio
  ns.
  Appendix B 
  to 5 CFR 
  Chapter 
  XIV--
  Memorandum 
  Describing 
  the 
  Authority 
  and 
  Assigned 
  Responsibil
  ities of 
  the 
  General 
  Counsel of 
  the 
  Federal 
  Labor 
  Relations 
  Authority.

chapter xv--Office of Administration, Executive Office of 
  the President.............................................        2500
chapter xvi--Office of Government Ethics....................        2600
chapter xxi--Department of the Treasury.....................        3101
chapter xxii--Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation.........        3201
chapter xxiii--Department of Energy.........................        3301
chapter xxiv--Federal Energy Regulatory Commission..........        3401
chapter xxvi--Department of Defense.........................        3601

[[Page 2]]

                                                                      (2
chapter xxvii--Department of Justice........................        3801
chapter xxix--Federal Communications Commission.............        3901
chapter xxx--Farm Credit System Insurance Corporation.......        4001
chapter xxxi--Farm Credit Administration....................        4101
chapter xxxiii--Overseas Private Investment Corporation.....        4301
chapter xxxv--Office of Personnel Management................        4501
chapter xl--Interstate Commerce Commission..................        5001
chapter xli--Commodity Futures Trading Commission...........        5101
chapter xlii--Department of Labor...........................        5201
chapter xliii--National Science Foundation..................        5301
chapter xlv--Department of Health and Human Services........        5501
chapter xlvi--Postal Rate Commission........................        5601
chapter xlvii--Federal Trade Commission.....................        5701
chapter xlviii--Nuclear Regulatory Commission...............        5801
chapter l--Department of Transportation.....................        6001
chapter lii--Export-Import Bank of the United States........        6201
chapter liii--Department of Education.......................        6301
chapter liv--Environmental Protection Agency................        6401
chapter lvii--General Services Administration...............        6701
chapter lviii--Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve 
  System....................................................        6801
chapter lix--National Aeronautics and Space Administration..        6901
chapter lx--United States Postal Service....................        7001
chapter lxii--Equal Employment Opportunity Commission.......        7201
chapter lxiii--Inter-American Foundation....................        7301
chapter lxv--Department of Housing and Urban Development....        7501
chapter lxvi--National Archives and Records Administration..        7601
chapter lxix--Tennessee Valley Authority....................        7901
chapter lxxi--Consumer Product Safety Commission............        8101
chapter lxxiv--Federal Mine Safety and Health Review 
  Commission................................................        8401
chapter lxxvi--Federal Retirement Thrift Investment Board...        8601
chapter lxxvii--Office of Management and Budget.............        8701

[[Page 3]]



                CHAPTER II--MERIT SYSTEMS PROTECTION BOARD




  --------------------------------------------------------------------

                SUBCHAPTER A--ORGANIZATION AND PROCEDURES
Part                                                                Page
1200            Board organization..........................           5
1201            Practices and procedures....................           6
1202            Statutory Review Board......................          48
1203            Procedures for review of rules and 
                    regulations of the Office of Personnel 
                    Management..............................          49
1204            Availability of official information........          52
1205            Privacy Act regulations.....................          58
1206            Open meetings...............................          61
1207            Enforcement of nondiscrimination on the 
                    basis of handicap in programs or 
                    activities conducted by the Merit 
                    Systems Protection Board................          64
1208            [Reserved]
1209            Practices and procedures for appeals and 
                    stay requests of personnel actions 
                    allegedly based on whistleblowing.......          70
1210            Debt management.............................          74

[[Page 5]]



                SUBCHAPTER A--ORGANIZATION AND PROCEDURES





PART 1200--BOARD ORGANIZATION--Table of Contents




                           Subpart A--General

Sec.
1200.1  Statement of purpose.
1200.2  Board members and duties.
1200.3  How the Board members make decisions.

                     Subpart B--Offices of the Board

1200.10  Staff organization and functions.

    Source: 56 FR 41747, Aug. 23, 1991, unless otherwise noted.



                           Subpart A--General

    Authority: 5 U.S.C. 1201 et seq.



Sec. 1200.1  Statement of purpose.

    The Merit Systems Protection Board (the Board) is an independent 
Government agency that operates like a court. The Board was created to 
ensure that all Federal government agencies follow Federal merit systems 
practices. The Board does this by adjudicating Federal employee appeals 
of agency personnel actions, and by conducting special reviews and 
studies of Federal merit systems.

[56 FR 41747, Aug. 23, 1991, as amended at 59 FR 65233, Dec. 19, 1994]



Sec. 1200.2  Board members and duties.

    (a) The Board has three members whom the President appoints and the 
Senate confirms. Members of the Board serve seven-year terms.
    (b) The President appoints, with the Senate's consent, one member of 
the Board to serve as Chairman and chief executive officer of the Board. 
The President also appoints one member of the Board to serve as Vice 
Chairman. If the office of the Chairman is vacant or the Chairman cannot 
perform his or her duties, then the Vice Chairman performs the 
Chairman's duties. If both the Chairman and the Vice Chairman cannot 
perform their duties, then the remaining Board Member performs the 
Chairman's duties.

[56 FR 41747, Aug. 23, 1991, as amended at 59 FR 65233, Dec. 19, 1994]



Sec. 1200.3  How the Board members make decisions.

    (a) The three Board members make decisions in all cases by majority 
vote except in circumstances described in paragraphs (b) and (c) of this 
section or as otherwise provided by law.
    (b) When due to a vacancy, recusal or other reasons, the Board 
members are unable to decide any case by majority vote, the decision, 
recommendation or order under review shall be deemed the final decision 
or order of the Board. The Chairman of the Board may direct the issuance 
of an order consistent with this paragraph.
    (c) When due to a vacancy, recusal or other reasons, the Board 
members are unable to decide a matter in a case which does not involve a 
decision, recommendation or order, the Chairman may direct referral of 
the matter to an administrative judge or other official for final 
disposition.
    (d) Decisions and orders issued pursuant to paragraphs (b) and (c) 
of this section shall not be precedential.
    (e) This section applies only when at least two Board members are in 
office.

[59 FR 39937, Aug. 5, 1994]



                     Subpart B--Offices of the Board

    Authority: 5 U.S.C. 1204(h) and (j).



Sec. 1200.10  Staff organization and functions.

    (a) The Board's headquarters staff is organized into the following 
offices:
    (1) Office of the Administrative Law Judge and Regional Operations.
    (2) Office of Appeals Counsel.
    (3) Office of the Clerk of the Board.
    (4) Office of the General Counsel.
    (5) Office of Policy and Evaluation.
    (6) Office of Equal Employment Opportunity.
    (7) Office of Planning and Resource Management Services.

[[Page 6]]

(6
    (b) The principal functions of the Board's headquarters offices are 
as follows:
    (1) Office of the Administrative Law Judge and Regional Operations. 
The Administrative Law Judge hears Hatch Act cases, disciplinary and 
corrective action complaints brought by the Special Counsel, actions 
against administrative law judges, appeals of actions taken against MSPB 
employees, and other cases that the Board assigns. The office also 
manages the appellate functions of the MSPB regional and field offices.
    (2) Office of Appeals Counsel. The Director, Office of Appeals 
Counsel, prepares proposed decisions that recommend appropriate action 
by the Board in petition for review cases and other cases assigned by 
the Board.
    (3) Office of the Clerk of the Board. The Clerk of the Board enters 
petitions for review and original jurisdiction cases onto the Board's 
docket and monitors their processing. The Clerk of the Board also does 
the following:
    (i) Gives information on the status of cases;
    (ii) Manages the Board's records, reports, and correspondence style 
and control programs; and
    (iii) Answers requests under the Freedom of Information and Privacy 
Acts at the Board's headquarters.
    (4) Office of the General Counsel. The General Counsel provides 
legal advice to the Board and its headquarters and regional offices, 
represents the Board in court proceedings, coordinates legislative 
policy and performs congressional liaison, coordinates the Board's 
public affairs function, and plans and directs audits and 
investigations.
    (5) Office of Policy and Evaluation. The Director, Policy and 
Evaluation, conducts special reviews and studies of Federal merit 
systems, including reviews of the significant actions of the Office of 
Personnel Management.
    (6) Office of Equal Employment Opportunity. The Director, Office of 
Equal Employment Opportunity, manages the Board's equal employment 
programs.
    (7) Office of Planning and Resource Management Services. The 
Director, Office of Planning and Resource Management Services, develops 
and coordinates internal management programs and projects, conducts 
agencywide management reviews, and manages the Board's three 
administrative divisions: Financial and Administrative Management; 
Information Resources Management; and Human Resources Management.
    (c) Regional and Field Offices. The Board has six regional offices 
and five field offices located throughout the country (See Appendix II 
to 5 CFR part 1201 for a list of the regional and field offices). The 
regional and field offices enter initial appeals onto their dockets and 
decide these cases as provided for in the Board's regulations.

[59 FR 65233, Dec. 19, 1994]



PART 1201--PRACTICES AND PROCEDURES--Table of Contents




                 Subpart A--Jurisdiction and Definitions

Sec.
1201.1  General.
1201.2  Original jurisdiction.
1201.3  Appellate jurisdiction.
1201.4  General definitions.

                Subpart B--Procedures for Appellate Cases

                                 General

1201.11  Scope and policy.
1201.12  Revocation, amendment, or waiver of rules.
1201.13  Appeals by Board employees.

                   Appeal of Agency Action; Pleadings

1201.21  Notice of appeal rights.
1201.22  Filing an appeal and responses to appeals.
1201.23  Computation of time.
1201.24  Content of an appeal; right to hearing.
1201.25  Content of agency response.
1201.26  Number of pleadings, service, and response.
1201.27  Class appeals.

                 Parties, Representatives, and Witnesses

1201.31  Representatives.
1201.32  Witnesses; right to representation.
1201.33  Federal witnesses.
1201.34  Intervenors and amicus curiae.
1201.35  Substituting parties.
1201.36  Consolidating and joining appeals.
1201.37  Fees.

                                 Judges

1201.41  Judges.

[[Page 7]]

          (7
1201.42  Disqualifying a judge.
1201.43  Sanctions.

                                Hearings

1201.51  Scheduling the hearing.
1201.52  Public hearings.
1201.53  Verbatim record.
1201.54  Official record.
1201.55  Motions.
1201.56  Burden and degree of proof; affirmative defenses.
1201.57  Order of hearing.
1201.58  Closing the record.

                                Evidence

1201.61  Exclusion of evidence and testimony.
1201.62  Producing prior statements.
1201.63  Stipulations.
1201.64  Official notice.

                                Discovery

1201.71  Purpose of discovery.
1201.72  Explanation and scope of discovery.
1201.73  Discovery procedures.
1201.74  Orders for discovery.
1201.75  Taking depositions.

                                Subpoenas

1201.81  Requests for subpoenas.
1201.82  Motions to quash subpoenas.
1201.83  Serving subpoenas.
1201.84  Proof of service.
1201.85  Enforcing subpoenas.

                          Interlocutory Appeals

1201.91  Explanation.
1201.92  Criteria for certifying interlocutory appeals.
1201.93  Procedures.

                         Ex Parte Communications

1201.101  Explanation and definitions.
1201.102  Prohibition on ex parte communications.
1201.103  Placing communications in the record; sanctions.

                             Final Decisions

1201.111  Initial decision by judge.
1201.112  Jurisdiction of judge.
1201.113  Finality of decision.

          Subpart C--Petitions for Review of Initial Decisions

1201.114  Filing petition and cross petition for review.
1201.115  Contents of petition for review.
1201.116  Appellant requests for enforcement of interim relief.
1201.117  Procedures for review or reopening.
1201.118  Board reopening of case and reconsideration of initial 
          decision.
1201.119  OPM petition for reconsideration.
1201.120  Judicial review.

          Subpart D--Procedures for Original Jurisdiction Cases

                 Actions Brought by the Special Counsel

1201.121  Scope of jurisdiction; compliance with subpart B.
1201.122  Filing complaints and requests; serving documents on parties.
1201.123  Contents of complaint.
1201.124  Rights of employees.
1201.125  Answer to complaint.
1201.126  Final orders of the Board.
1201.127  Requesting stay of personnel action; protective orders.
1201.128  Administrative appeal; judicial review.
1201.129  Judge; exceptions and replies to exceptions.

                Actions Against Administrative Law Judges

1201.131  Procedures.
1201.132  Board jurisdiction.
1201.133  Filing a complaint.
1201.134  Answer to complaint.
1201.135  Judge; exceptions and replies to exceptions.
1201.136  Requirement for finding of good cause.

                Removal From the Senior Executive Service

1201.141  Right to hearing.
1201.142  Hearing procedures; referring the record.
1201.143  Appeal.

 Subpart E--Procedures for Cases Involving Allegations of Discrimination

1201.151  Scope and policy.
1201.152  Compliance with subpart B procedures.
1201.153  Contents of appeal.
1201.154  Time for filing appeal; closing record in cases involving 
          grievance decisions.
1201.155  Remand of allegations of discrimination.
1201.156  Time for processing appeals involving allegations of 
          discrimination.
1201.157  Notice of right to judicial review.

                        Review of Board Decision

1201.161  Action by the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission; 
          judicial review.
1201.162  Board action on the Commission decision; judicial review.
1201.163  Mixed cases governed by Reorganization Plan No. 1 of 1978.

                              Special Panel

1201.171  Referral of case to Special Panel.

[[Page 8]]

          (8
1201.172  Organization of Special Panel; designation of members.
1201.173  Practices and procedures of Special Panel.
1201.174  Enforcing the Special Panel decision.
1201.175  Judicial review of cases decided under 5 U.S.C. 7702.

          Subpart F--Enforcement of Final Decisions and Orders

1201.181  Authority and explanation.
1201.182  Petition for enforcement.
1201.183  Procedures for processing petitions for enforcement.

                      Subpart G--Savings Provisions

1201.191  Savings provisions.

Appendix I to Part 1201--Merit Systems Protection Board Appeal Form
Appendix II to Part 1201--Appropriate Regional or Field Office for 
          Filing Appeals
Appendix III to Part 1201--Approved Hearing Locations by Regional Office
Appendix IV to Part 1201--Sample Declaration Under 28 U.S.C. 1746

    Authority: 5 U.S.C. 1204, and 7701 unless otherwise noted.

    Source: 54 FR 53504, Dec. 29, 1989, unless otherwise noted.



                 Subpart A--Jurisdiction and Definitions



Sec. 1201.1  General.

    The Board has two types of jurisdiction, original and appellate.



Sec. 1201.2  Original jurisdiction.

    The Board's original jurisdiction includes the following cases:
    (a) Actions brought by the Special Counsel;
    (b) Requests, by persons removed from the Senior Executive Service 
for performance deficiencies, for informal hearings; and
    (c) Actions taken against administrative law judges under 5 U.S.C. 
7521.



Sec. 1201.3  Appellate jurisdiction.

    (a) Generally. The Board has jurisdiction over appeals from agency 
actions when the appeals are authorized by law, rule, or regulation. 
These include appeals from the following actions:
    (1) Reduction in grade or removal for unacceptable performance (5 
CFR part 432; 5 U.S.C. 4303(e));
    (2) Removal, reduction in grade or pay, suspension for more than 14 
days, or furlough for 30 days or less for cause that will promote the 
efficiency of the service. (5 CFR part 752, subparts C and D; 5 U.S.C. 
7512);
    (3) Removal, or suspension for more than 14 days, of a career 
appointee in the Senior Executive Service (5 CFR part 752, subparts E 
and F; 5 U.S.C. 7541-7543);
    (4) Reduction-in-force action affecting a career appointee in the 
Senior Executive Service (5 U.S.C. 3595);
    (5) Reconsideration decision sustaining a negative determination of 
competence for a general schedule employee (5 CFR 531.410; 5 U.S.C. 
5335(c));
    (6) Determinations affecting the rights or interests of an 
individual or of the United States under the Civil Service Retirement 
System or the Federal Employees' Retirement System (5 CFR parts 831, 
842, and 844; 5 U.S.C. 8347(d)(1)-(2) and 8461 (e)(1));
    (7) Disqualification of an employee or applicant because of a 
suitability determination (5 CFR 731.103(d) and 731.501);
    (8) Termination of employment during probation or the first year of 
a veterans readjustment appointment when:
    (i) The employee alleges discrimination because of partisan 
political reasons or marital status; or
    (ii) The termination was based on conditions arising before 
appointment and the employee alleges that the action is procedurally 
improper (5 CFR 315.806, 38 U.S.C. 4214(b)(1)(E));
    (9) Termination of appointment during a managerial or supervisory 
probationary period when the employee alleges discrimination because of 
partisan political affiliation or marital status (5 CFR 315.908(b));
    (10) Separation, demotion, or furlough for more than 30 days, when 
the action was effected because of a reduction in force (5 CFR 351.901);
    (11) Furlough of a career appointee in the Senior Executive Service 
(5 CFR 359.805);
    (12) Failure to restore a former employee to employment following 
military service, or following partial or fu

[[Page 9]]

ll

[[Page 9]]

recovery from a compensable injury (38 U.S.C. 4324, 5 CFR 353.211 and 
304);
    (13) Employment of another applicant when the person who wishes to 
appeal to the Board is entitled to priority employment consideration 
after a reduction-in-force action, or after partial or full recovery 
from a compensable injury (5 CFR 302.501, 5 CFR 330.209);
    (14) Failure to reinstate a former employee after service under the 
Foreign Assistance Act of 1961 (5 CFR 352.508);
    (15) Failure to re-employ a former employee after movement between 
executive agencies during an emergency (5 CFR 352.209);
    (16) Failure to re-employ a former employee after detail or transfer 
to an international organization (5 CFR 352.313);
    (17) Failure to re-employ a former employee after service under the 
Indian Self-Determination Act (5 CFR 352.707);
    (18) Failure to re-employ a former employee after service under the 
Taiwan Relations Act (5 CFR 352.807);
    (19) Employment practices administered by the Office of Personnel 
Management to examine and evaluate the qualifications of applicants for 
appointment in the competitive service (5 CFR 300.104); and
    (20) Removal of a career appointee from the Senior Executive Service 
for failure to be recertified (5 U.S.C. 3592(a)(3), 5 CFR 359.304).
    (21) Reduction-in-force action affecting a career or career 
candidate appointee in the Foreign Service (Pub. L. 103-236, sec. 
181(a)(2), to be codified at 22 U.S.C. 4011).
    (b) Appeals involving an allegation that the action was based on 
appellant's ``whistleblowing.'' Appeals of actions appealable to the 
Board under any law, rule, or regulation, in which the appellant alleges 
that the action was taken because of the appellant's ``whistleblowing'' 
[a violation of the prohibited personnel practice described in 5 U.S.C. 
2302(b)(8)), are governed by part 1209 of this title. The provisions of 
subparts B, C, E, F, and G of part 1201 apply to appeals and stay 
requests governed by part 1209 unless other specific provisions are made 
in that part.
    (c) Limitations on appellate jurisdiction, collective bargaining 
agreements, and election of procedures:
    (1) For an employee covered by a collective bargaining agreement 
under 5 U.S.C. 7121, the negotiated grievance procedures contained in 
the agreement are the exclusive procedures for resolving any action that 
could otherwise be appealed to the Board, with the following exceptions:
    (i) An appealable action involving discrimination under 5 U.S.C. 
2302(b)(1), reduction in grade or removal under 5 U.S.C. 4303, or 
adverse action under 5 U.S.C. 7512, may be raised under the Board's 
appellate procedures, or under the negotiated grievance procedures, but 
not under both;
    (ii) Any appealable action that is excluded from the application of 
the negotiated grievance procedures may be raised only under the Board's 
appellate procedures.
    (2) Choice of procedure. When an employee has an option of pursuing 
an action under the Board's appeal procedures or under negotiated 
grievance procedures, the Board considers the choice between those 
procedures to have been made when the employee timely files an appeal 
with the Board or timely files a written grievance, whichever event 
occurs first.
    (3) Review of discrimination grievances. If an employee chooses the 
negotiated grievance procedure under paragraph (c)(2) of this section 
and alleges discrimination as described at 5 U.S.C. 2302(b)(1), then the 
employee, after having obtained a final decision under the negotiated 
grievance procedure, may ask the Board to review that final decision. 
The request must be filed with the Clerk of the Board in accordance with 
Sec. 1201.154.

[54 FR 53504, Dec. 29, 1989, as amended at 56 FR 41748, Aug. 23, 1991; 
59 FR 65235, Dec. 19, 1994; 61 FR 1, Jan. 2, 1996]



Sec. 1201.4  General definitions.

    (a) Judge. Any person authorized by the Board to hold a hearing or 
to decide a case without a hearing, including an attorney-examiner, an 
administrative judge, an administrative law judge, the Board, or any 
member of the Board

[[Page 10]]

.

[[Page 10]]

    (b) Pleading. Written submission setting out claims, allegations, 
arguments, or evidence. Pleadings include briefs, motions, petitions, 
attachments, and responses.
    (c) Motion. A request that a judge take a particular action.
    (d) Appropriate regional or field office. The regional or field 
office of the Board that has jurisdiction over the area where the 
appellant's duty station was located when the agency took the action. 
Appeals of Office of Personnel Management reconsideration decisions 
concerning retirement benefits, and appeals of adverse suitability 
determinations under 5 CFR part 731, must be filed with the regional or 
field office that has jurisdiction over the area where the appellant 
lives. Appendix II of these regulations lists the geographic areas over 
which each of the Board's regional and field offices has jurisdiction. 
Appeals, however, may be transferred from one regional or field office 
to another.
    (e) Party. A person, an agency, or an intervenor, who is 
participating in a Board proceeding. This term applies to the Office of 
Personnel Management and to the Office of Special Counsel when those 
organizations are participating in a Board proceeding.
    (f) Appeal. A request for review of an agency action.
    (g) Petition for review. A request for review of an initial decision 
of a judge.
    (h) Day. Calendar day.
    (i) Service. The process of furnishing a copy of any pleading to 
Board officials, other parties, or both, either by mail, by facsimile, 
by personal delivery, or by commercial overnight delivery.
    (j) Date of service. The date on which documents are served on other 
parties.
    (k) Certificate of Service. A document certifying that a party has 
served copies of pleadings on the other parties.
    (l) Date of filing. A document that is filed with a Board office by 
personal delivery is considered filed on the date on which the Board 
office receives it. The date of filing by facsimile is the date of the 
facsimile. The date of filing by mail is determined by the postmark 
date; if no legible postmark date appears on the mailing, the submission 
is presumed to have been mailed five days (excluding days on which the 
Board is closed for business) before its receipt. The date of filing by 
commercial overnight delivery is the date the document was delivered to 
the commercial overnight delivery service.

[54 FR 53504, Dec. 29, 1989, as amended at 58 FR 36345, July 7, 1993; 59 
FR 65235, Dec. 19, 1994]



                Subpart B--Procedures for Appellate Cases

                                 General



Sec. 1201.11  Scope and policy.

    The regulations in this subpart apply to Board appellate proceedings 
except as otherwise provided in Sec. 1201.13. The regulations in this 
subpart apply also to appellate proceedings and stay requests covered by 
part 1209 unless other specific provisions are made in that part. These 
regulations also apply to original jurisdiction proceedings of the Board 
except as otherwise provided in subpart D. It is the Board's policy that 
these rules will be applied in a manner that expedites the processing of 
each case, with due regard to the rights of all parties.



Sec. 1201.12  Revocation, amendment, or waiver of rules.

    The Board may revoke, amend, or waive any of these regulations. A 
judge may, for good cause shown, waive a Board regulation unless a 
statute requires application of the regulation. The judge must give 
notice of the waiver to all parties, but is not required to give the 
parties an opportunity to respond.



Sec. 1201.13  Appeals by Board employees.

    Appeals by Board employees will be filed with the Clerk of the Board 
and will be assigned to an administrative law judge for adjudication 
under this subchapter. The Board's policy is to insulate the 
adjudication of its own employees' appeals from agency involvement as 
much as possible. Accordingly, the Board will not disturb initial 
decisions in those cases unless the party shows that there has been 
harmful procedural irregularity in the proceedings before the 
administrative law judge or a clear error of law. In addition, the 
Board, as a matter of policy, will not

[[Page 11]]

(11rule on any interlocutory appeals or motions to disqualify the 
administrative law judge assigned to those cases until the initial 
decision has been issued.

                   Appeal of Agency Action; Pleadings



Sec. 1201.21  Notice of appeal rights.

    When an agency issues a decision notice to an employee on a matter 
that is appealable to the Board, the agency must provide the employee 
with the following:
    (a) Notice of the time limits for appealing to the Board, the 
requirements of Sec. 1201.22(c), and the address of the appropriate 
Board office for filing the appeal;
    (b) A copy, or access to a copy, of the Board's regulations;
    (c) A copy of the appeal form in appendix I of this part; and
    (d) Notice of any right the employee has to file a grievance.



Sec. 1201.22  Filing an appeal and responses to appeals.

    (a) Place of filing. Appeals, and responses to those appeals, must 
be filed with the appropriate Board regional or field office. See 
Sec. 1201.4(d) of this part.
    (b) Time of filing. An appeal must be filed during the period 
beginning on the day after the effective date of the action being 
appealed and ending 30 days after the effective date. An appeal from a 
final or reconsideration decision that does not set an effective date 
must be filed within 35 days of the date of the issuance of the 
decision. (Paragraphs (a) (5), (6), (7), (12), (13), (14), (15), (16), 
(17), and (18) of Sec. 1201.3 of this part list actions covered by the 
latter rule.) A response to an appeal must be filed within 20 days of 
the date of the Board's acknowledgment order.
    (c) Timeliness of appeals. If a party does not submit an appeal 
within the time set by statute, regulation, or order of a judge, it will 
be dismissed as untimely filed unless a good reason for the delay is 
shown. The judge will provide the party an opportunity to show why the 
appeal should not be dismissed as untimely.
    (d) Method of filing. Filing must be made with the appropriate Board 
office by personal delivery, by facsimile, by mail, or by commercial 
overnight delivery.

[54 FR 53504, Dec. 29, 1989, as amended at 58 FR 36345, July 7, 1993; 59 
FR 31109, June 17, 1994; 59 FR 65235, Dec. 19, 1994]



Sec. 1201.23  Computation of time.

    In computing the number of days allowed for filing a submission, the 
first day counted is the day after the event from which the time period 
begins to run. If the date that ordinarily would be the last day for 
filing falls on a Saturday, Sunday, or Federal holiday, the filing 
period will include the first workday after that date.

    Example: If an employee receives a decision notice that is effective 
on July 1, the 30-day period for filing an appeal starts to run on July 
2. The filing ordinarily would be timely only if it is made by July 31. 
If July 31 is a Saturday, however, the last day for filing would be 
Monday, August 2.

[54 FR 53504, Dec. 29, 1989, as amended at 59 FR 31109, June 17, 1994]



Sec. 1201.24  Content of an appeal; right to hearing.

    (a) Content. Only an appellant, his or her designated 
representative, or a party properly substituted under Sec. 1201.35 may 
file an appeal. Appeals may be in any format, including letter form, but 
they must contain the following:
    (1) The name, address, and telephone number of the appellant, and 
the name and address of the agency that took the action;
    (2) A description of the action the agency took and its effective 
date;
    (3) A request for hearing if the appellant wants one;
    (4) A statement of the reasons why the appellant believes the agency 
action is wrong;
    (5) A statement of the action the appellant would like the judge to 
order;
    (6) The name, address, and telephone number of the appellant's 
representative, if the appellant has a representative;
    (7) The notice of the decision to take the action being appealed, 
along with any relevant documents;
    (8) A statement telling whether the appellant or anyone acting on 
his or her behalf has filed a grievance or a

[[Page 12]]

(12formal discrimination complaint with any agency regarding this 
matter; and
    (9) The signature of the appellant or, if the appellant has a 
representative, of the representative.
    (b) An appellant may raise a claim or defense not included in the 
appeal at any time before the end of the conference(s) held to define 
the issues in the case. An appellant may not raise a new claim or 
defense after that time, except for good cause shown. However, a claim 
or defense not included in the appeal may be excluded if a party shows 
that including it would result in undue prejudice.
    (c) Use of Board form. An appellant may comply with paragraph (a) of 
this section, and with Sec. 1201.31 of this part, by completing the form 
in Appendix I of this part.
    (d) Right to hearing. Under 5 U.S.C. 7701, an appellant has a right 
to a hearing.
    (e) Timely request. The appellant must submit any request for a 
hearing with the appeal, or within any other time period the judge sets 
for that purpose. If the appellant does not make a timely request for a 
hearing, the right to a hearing is waived.



Sec. 1201.25  Content of agency response.

    The agency response to an appeal must contain the following:
    (a) The name of the appellant and of the agency whose action the 
appellant is appealing;
    (b) A statement identifying the agency action taken against the 
appellant and stating the reasons for taking the action;
    (c) All documents contained in the agency record of the action;
    (d) Designation of and signature by the authorized agency 
representative; and
    (e) Any other documents or responses requested by the Board.



Sec. 1201.26  Number of pleadings, service, and response.

    (a) Number. The appellant must file two copies of both the appeal 
and all attachments with the appropriate Board office.
    (b) Service--(1) Service by the Board. The appropriate office of the 
Board will mail a copy of the appeal to each party to the proceeding 
other than the appellant. It will attach to each copy a service list, 
consisting of a list of the names and addresses of the parties to the 
proceeding or their designated representatives.
    (2) Service by the parties. The parties must serve on each other one 
copy of each pleading, as defined by Sec. 1201.4(b), and all documents 
submitted with it, except for the initial appeal. They may do so by 
mail, by facsimile, by personal delivery, or by commercial overnight 
delivery to each party and to each representative. A certificate of 
service stating how and when service was made must accompany each 
pleading. The parties must notify the appropriate Board office and one 
another, in writing, of any changes in the names or addresses on the 
service list.
    (c) Paper size. Pleadings and attachments must be filed on 8 1/2 by 
11-inch paper, except for good cause shown. This requirement enables the 
Board to comply with standards established for U.S. courts.

[54 FR 53504, Dec. 29, 1989; 55 FR 548, Jan. 5, 1990, as amended at 58 
FR 36345, July 7, 1993]



Sec. 1201.27  Class appeals.

    (a) Appeal. One or more employees may file an appeal as 
representatives of a class of employees. The judge will hear the case as 
a class appeal if he or she finds that a class appeal is the fairest and 
most efficient way to adjudicate the appeal and that the representative 
of the parties will adequately protect the interests of all parties. 
When a class appeal is filed, the time from the filing date until the 
judge issues his or her decision under paragraph (b) of this section is 
not counted in computing the time limit for individual members of the 
potential class to file individual appeals.
    (b) Procedure. The judge will consider the appellant's request and 
any opposition to that request, and will issue an order within 30 days 
after the appeal is filed stating whether the appeal is to be heard as a 
class appeal. If the judge denies the request, the appellants affected 
by the decision may file individual appeals within 35 days after the 
denial. Each individual appellant is responsible for either filing an 
individual appeal within the original time lim

[[Page 13]]

it,

[[Page 13]]

or keeping informed of the status of a class appeal and, if the class 
appeal is denied, filing an individual appeal within the additional 35-
day period.
    (c) Standards. In determining whether it is appropriate to treat an 
appeal as a class action, the judge will be guided but not controlled by 
the applicable provisions of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure.

[54 FR 53504, Dec. 29, 1989, as amended at 59 FR 31109, June 17, 1994]

                 Parties, Representatives, and Witnesses



Sec. 1201.31  Representatives.

    (a) A party to an appeal may be represented in any matter related to 
the appeal. The parties must designate their representatives, if any, in 
writing. Any change in representation, and any revocation of a 
designation of representative, also must be in writing. Notice of the 
change must be filed and served on the other parties in accordance with 
Sec. 1201.26 of this part.
    (b) A party may choose any representative as long as that person is 
willing and available to serve. The other party or parties may challenge 
the designation, however, on the ground that it involves a conflict of 
interest or a conflict of position. Any party who challenges the 
designation must do so by filing a motion with the judge within 15 days 
after the date of service of the notice of designation. The judge will 
rule on the motion before considering the merits of the appeal. These 
procedures apply equally to each designation of representative, 
regardless of whether the representative was the first one designated by 
a party or a subsequently designated representative. If a representative 
is disqualified, the judge will give the party whose representative was 
disqualified a reasonable time to obtain another one.
    (c) The judge, on his or her own motion, may disqualify a party's 
representative on the grounds described in paragraph (b) of this 
section.



Sec. 1201.32  Witnesses; right to representation.

    Witnesses have the right to be represented when testifying. The 
representative of a nonparty witness has no right to examine the witness 
at the hearing or otherwise participate in the development of testimony.



Sec. 1201.33  Federal witnesses.

    Every Federal agency or corporation must make its employees or 
personnel available to furnish sworn statements or to appear as 
witnesses at the hearing when ordered by the judge to do so. When 
providing those statements or appearing at the hearing, Federal employee 
witnesses will be in official duty status (i.e., entitled to pay and 
benefits including travel and per diem, where appropriate).



Sec. 1201.34  Intervenors and amicus curiae.

    (a) Explanation of Intervention. Intervenors are organizations or 
persons who want to participate in a proceeding because they believe the 
proceeding, or its outcome, may affect their rights or duties. 
Intervenors as a ``matter of right'' are those parties who have a 
statutory right to participate. ``Permissive'' intervenors are those 
parties who may be permitted to participate if the proceeding will 
affect them directly and if intervention is otherwise appropriate under 
law. A request to intervene may be made by motion filed with the judge.
    (b) Intervenors as a matter of right. (1) The Director of the Office 
of Personnel Management may intervene as a matter of right under 5 
U.S.C. 7701(d)(1). The motion to intervene must be filed at the earliest 
practicable time.
    (2)(i) Except as provided in paragraph (b)(2)(ii) of this section, 
the Special Counsel may intervene as a matter of right under 5 U.S.C. 
1212(c). The motion to intervene must be filed at the earliest 
practicable time.
    (ii) The Special Counsel may not intervene in an action brought by 
an individual under 5 U.S.C. 1221, or in an appeal brought by an 
individual under 5 U.S.C. 7701, without the consent of that individual. 
The Special Counsel must present evidence that the individual has 
consented to the intervention at the time the motion to intervene is 
filed.
    (c) Permissive intervenors. (1) Any person, organization or agency 
may, by motion, ask the judge for permission to

[[Page 14]]

intervene. The motion must explain the reason why the person, 
organization or agency should be permitted to intervene.
    (2) A motion for permission to intervene will be granted where the 
requester will be affected directly by the outcome of the proceeding. 
Any person alleged to have committed a prohibited personnel practice 
under 5 U.S.C. 2302(b) may request permission to intervene. A judge's 
denial of a motion for permissive intervention may be appealed to the 
Board under Sec. 1201.91 of this part.
    (d) Role of intervenors. Intervenors have the same rights and duties 
as parties, with the following two exceptions:
    (1) Intervenors do not have an independent right to a hearing; and
    (2) Permissive intervenors may participate only on the issues 
affecting them. The judge is responsible for determining the issues on 
which permissive intervenors may participate.
    (e) Amicus curiae. An amicus curiae is a person or organization 
that, although not a party to an appeal, gives advice or suggestions by 
filing a brief with the judge regarding an appeal. Any person or 
organization, including those who do not qualify as intervenors, may, in 
the discretion of the judge, be granted permission to file an amicus 
curiae brief.



Sec. 1201.35  Substituting parties.

    (a) If an appellant dies or is otherwise unable to pursue the 
appeal, the processing of the appeal will only be completed upon 
substitution of a proper party. Substitution will not be permitted where 
the interests of the appellant have terminated because of the 
appellant's death or other disability.
    (b) The representative or proper party must file a motion for 
substitution within 90 days after the death or other disabling event, 
except for good cause shown.
    (c) In the absence of a timely substitution of a party, the 
processing of the appeal may continue if the interests of the proper 
party will not be prejudiced.



Sec. 1201.36  Consolidating and joining appeals.

    (a) Explanation. (1) Consolidation occurs when the appeals of two or 
more parties are united for consideration because they contain identical 
or similar issues. For example, individual appeals rising from a single 
reduction in force might be consolidated.
    (2) Joinder occurs when one person has filed two or more appeals and 
they are united for consideration. For example, a judge might join an 
appeal challenging a 30-day suspension with a pending appeal challenging 
a subsequent dismissal if the same appellant filed both appeals.
    (b) Action by judge. A judge may consolidate or join cases on his or 
her own motion or on the motion of a party if doing so would:
    (1) Expedite processing of the cases; and
    (2) Not adversely affect the interests of the parties.
    (c) Any objection to a motion for consolidation or joinder must be 
filed within 10 days of the date of service of the motion.



Sec. 1201.37  Fees.

    (a) Attorney fees. Except as provided in paragraphs (a)(1) and 
(a)(2) of this section, the judge may require the agency to pay 
reasonable attorney fees if the appellant is the prevailing party and 
payment is warranted in the interest of justice.
    (1) If an appellant is the prevailing party and the decision is 
based on a finding of discrimination prohibited under 5 U.S.C. 
2302(b)(1), the motion for an attorney fee award will be considered 
under the standards of section 706(k) of the Civil Rights Act of 1964 
(42 U.S.C. 2000e-5(k)).
    (2) If an appellant is the prevailing party in an appeal and the 
decision is based on the finding of any prohibited personnel practice 
under 5 U.S.C. 2302(b), as provided by 5 U.S.C. 1221(g) the agency shall 
be liable to the appellant for payment of reasonable attorney fees and 
any other reasonable costs incurred.
    (3) Any request for payment of attorney fees must be made by motion. 
The motion must be filed with the judge within 30 days of the date on 
which an initial decision becomes final under Sec. 1201.113 of this part 
or within 35 days of the date of issuance of a final decision under 
Sec. 1201.117. The appellant must serve a copy of the motion on the

[[Page 15]]

agency. The agency may file a pleading responding to that motion within 
the time limit set by the judge. The motion must state why the appellant 
believes he or she is entitled to an award under the applicable 
statutory standard, and must be supported by evidence substantiating the 
amount of the request. That evidence must include, at a minimum:
    (i) Accurate and current time records;
    (ii) A copy of the terms of the fee agreement (if any); and
    (iii) The attorney's customary billing rate for similar work if the 
attorney has a billing practice or, in the absence of that practice, 
other evidence of the prevailing community rate that will establish a 
market value for the attorney's services. A petition for Board review of 
the judge's decision on the motion must be filed within 35 days of the 
date of that decision, and must comply with Sec. 1201.114 of this part.
    (b) Witness fees--(1) Federal employees. Employees of a Federal 
agency or corporation testifying in any Board proceeding or making a 
statement for the record will be in official duty status and will not 
receive witness fees.
    (2) Other witnesses. Other witnesses (whether appearing voluntarily 
or under subpoena) shall be paid the same fee and mileage allowances 
which are paid subpoenaed witnesses in the courts of the United States.
    (3) Payment of witness fees and travel costs. The party requesting 
the presence of a witness must pay that witness' fees. Those fees must 
be paid or offered to the witness at the time the subpoena is served, 
or, if the witness appears voluntarily, at the time of appearance. A 
Federal agency or corporation is not required to pay or offer witness 
fees in advance.

[54 FR 53504, Dec. 29, 1989, as amended at 59 FR 31109, June 17, 1994; 
59 FR 65235, Dec. 19, 1994]

                                 Judges



Sec. 1201.41  Judges.

    (a) Exercise of authority. Judges may exercise authority as provided 
in paragraphs (b) and (c) of this section on their own motion or on the 
motion of a party, as appropriate.
    (b) Authority. Judges will conduct fair and impartial hearings and 
will take all necessary action to avoid delay in all proceedings. They 
will have all powers necessary to that end unless those powers are 
otherwise limited by law. Judges' powers include, but are not limited 
to, the authority to:
    (1) Administer oaths and affirmations;
    (2) Issue subpoenas under Sec. 1201.81 of this part;
    (3) Rule on offers of proof and receive relevant evidence;
    (4) Rule on discovery motions under Sec. 1201.73 of this part;
    (5) After notice to the parties, order a hearing on his or her own 
initiative if the judge determines that a hearing is necessary:
    (i) To resolve an important issue of credibility;
    (ii) To ensure that the record on significant issues is fully 
developed; or
    (iii) To otherwise ensure a fair and just adjudication of the case;
    (6) Convene a hearing as appropriate, regulate the course of the 
hearing, maintain decorum, and exclude any disruptive persons from the 
hearing;
    (7) Exclude any person from the hearing for good reason;
    (8) Rule on all motions, witness and exhibit lists, and proposed 
findings;
    (9) Require the parties to file memoranda of law and to present oral 
argument with respect to any question of law;
    (10) Order the production of evidence and the appearance of 
witnesses whose testimony would be relevant, material, and 
nonrepetitious;
    (11) Impose sanctions as provided under Sec. 1201.43 of this part;
    (12) Hold prehearing conferences for the settlement and 
simplification of issues;
    (13) Require that all persons who can be identified from the record 
as being clearly and directly affected by a pending retirement-related 
case be notified of the appeal and of their right to request 
intervention so that their interests can be considered in the 
adjudication;
    (14) Issue any order that may be necessary to protect a witness or 
other individual from harassment and provide

[[Page 16]]

for enforcement of such order in accordance with subpart F;
    (15) Issue initial decisions; and
    (16) Determine, in decisions in which the appellant is the 
prevailing party, whether the granting of interim relief is appropriate.
    (c) Settlement--(1) Settlement discussion. The judge may initiate 
attempts to settle the appeal informally at any time. The parties may 
agree to waive the prohibitions against ex parte communications during 
settlement discussions, and they may agree to any limits on the waiver.
    (2) Agreement. If the parties agree to settle their dispute, the 
settlement agreement is the final and binding resolution of the appeal, 
and the judge will dismiss the appeal with prejudice.
    (i) If the parties offer the agreement for inclusion in the record, 
and if the judge approves the agreement, it will be made a part of the 
record, and the Board will retain jurisdiction to ensure compliance with 
the agreement.
    (ii) If the agreement is not entered into the record, the Board will 
not retain jurisdiction to ensure compliance.



Sec. 1201.42  Disqualifying a judge.

    (a) If a judge considers himself or herself disqualified, he or she 
will withdraw from the case, state on the record the reasons for doing 
so, and immediately notify the Board of the withdrawal.
    (b) A party may file a motion asking the judge to withdraw on the 
basis of personal bias or other disqualification. This motion must be 
filed as soon as the party has reason to believe there is a basis for 
disqualification. The reasons for the request must be set out in an 
affidavit or sworn statement under 28 U.S.C. 1746. (See appendix IV.)
    (c) If the judge denies the motion, the party requesting withdrawal 
may request certification of the issue to the Board as an interlocutory 
appeal under Sec. 1201.91 of this part. Failure to request certification 
is considered a waiver of the request for withdrawal.



Sec. 1201.43  Sanctions.

    The judge may impose sanctions upon the parties as necessary to 
serve the ends of justice. This authority covers, but is not limited to, 
the circumstances set forth in paragraphs (a), (b), and (c) of this 
section.
    (a) Failure to comply with an order. When a party fails to comply 
with an order, the judge may:
    (1) Draw an inference in favor of the requesting party with regard 
to the information sought;
    (2) Prohibit the party failing to comply with the order from 
introducing evidence concerning the information sought, or from 
otherwise relying upon testimony related to that information;
    (3) Permit the requesting party to introduce secondary evidence 
concerning the information sought; and
    (4) Eliminate from consideration any appropriate part of the 
pleadings or other submissions of the party that fails to comply with 
the order.
    (b) Failure to prosecute or defend appeal. If a party fails to 
prosecute or defend an appeal, the judge may dismiss the appeal with 
prejudice or rule in favor of the appellant.
    (c) Failure to make timely filing. The judge may refuse to consider 
any motion or other pleading that is not filed in a timely fashion in 
compliance with this subpart.

                                Hearings



Sec. 1201.51  Scheduling the hearing.

    (a) The hearing will be scheduled not earlier than 15 days after the 
date of the hearing notice unless the parties agree to an earlier date. 
The agency, upon request of the judge, must provide appropriate hearing 
space.
    (b) The judge may change the time, date, or place of the hearing, or 
suspend, adjourn, or continue the hearing. The change will not require 
the 15-day notice provided in paragraph (a) of this section.
    (c) Either party may file a motion for postponement of the hearing. 
The motion must be made in writing and must either be accompanied by an 
affidavit or sworn statement under 28 U.S.C. 1746. (See appendix IV.) 
The affidavit or sworn statement must describe the reasons for the 
request. The judge will grant the request for postponement only upon a 
showing of good cause.
    (d) The Board has established certain approved hearing locations, 
which are published as a Notice in the Federal

[[Page 17]]

Register. See appendix III. Parties, for good cause, may file motions 
requesting a different hearing location. Rulings on those motions will 
be based on a showing that a different location will be more 
advantageous to all parties and to the Board.



Sec. 1201.52  Public hearings.

    Hearings are open to the public. The judge may order a hearing or 
any part of a hearing closed, however, when doing so would be in the 
best interests of the appellant, a witness, the public, or any other 
person affected by the proceeding. Any order closing the hearing will 
set out the reasons for the judge's decision. Any objections to the 
order will be made a part of the record.



Sec. 1201.53  Verbatim record.

    (a) Preparation. A verbatim record of every hearing, made under the 
supervision of the judge, will be kept and will be the sole official 
record of the proceeding.
    (b) Copies. Upon request, and upon payment of costs, a copy of a 
tape recording or transcript (if one is prepared) of the hearing will be 
made available to the parties. Parties must direct requests for copies 
of tape recordings or transcripts to the official hearing reporter.
    (c) Exceptions to payment of costs. Exceptions to the payment 
requirement may be granted under extenuating circumstances for good 
cause shown. A motion for an exception must be filed with the judge. The 
reasons for the request must be set out in an affidavit or sworn 
statement under 28 U.S.C. 1746. (See appendix IV.)
    (d) Corrections. Corrections of the official transcript may be 
permitted on motion by a party or on the judge's own motion. Motions for 
corrections must be filed within 10 days after the receipt of a 
transcript. Corrections of the official transcript will be permitted 
only when errors of substance are involved and only on approval of the 
judge.



Sec. 1201.54  Official record.

    Exhibits and the verbatim record of testimony, if a hearing is held, 
together with all pleadings filed during the appellate proceedings, and 
all orders and decisions of the judge and the Board, constitute the 
exclusive and official record of the case.



Sec. 1201.55  Motions.

    (a) Form. All motions, except those made during a prehearing 
conference or a hearing, must be in writing. All motions must include a 
statement of the reasons supporting them. Written motions must be filed 
with the judge or the Board, as appropriate, and must be served upon all 
other parties in accordance with Sec. 1201.26(b)(2) of this part. A 
party filing a motion for extension of time, a motion for postponement 
of a hearing, or any other procedural motion must first contact the 
other party to determine whether there is any objection to the motion, 
and must state in the motion whether the other party has an objection.
    (b) Objection. Unless the judge provides otherwise, and unless the 
motion is one for payment of attorney fees under Sec. 1201.37(a) of this 
part, any objection to a written motion must be filed within 10 days 
from the date of service of the motion. Judges, in their discretion, may 
grant or deny motions for extensions of time to file pleadings without 
providing any opportunity to respond to the motions.
    (c) Motions for extension of time. Motions for extension of time 
will be granted only on a showing of good cause.
    (d) Motions for protective orders. A motion for an order under 5 
U.S.C. 1204(e)(1)(B) to protect a witness or other individual from 
harassment must be filed as early in the proceeding as practicable. The 
party seeking a protective order must include a concise statement of 
reasons justifying the motion, together with any relevant documentary 
evidence. An agency, other than the Office of Special Counsel, may not 
request such an order with respect to an investigation by the Special 
Counsel during the Special Counsel's investigation. An order issued 
under this paragraph may be enforced in the same manner as provided 
under subpart F for Board final decisions and orders.

[[Page 18]]



Sec. 1201.56  Burden and degree of proof; affirmative defenses.

    (a) Burden and degree of proof--(1) Agency: Under 5 U.S.C. 
7701(c)(1), and subject to the exceptions stated in paragraph (b) of 
this section, the agency action must be sustained if:
    (i) It is brought under 5 U.S.C. 3592(a)(3), 5 U.S.C. 4303 or 5 
U.S.C. 5335 and is supported by substantial evidence; or
    (ii) It is brought under any other provision of law or regulation 
and is supported by a preponderance of the evidence.
    (2) Appellant. The appellant has the burden of proof, by a 
preponderance of the evidence, with respect to:
    (i) Issues of jurisdiction;
    (ii) The timeliness of the appeal; and
    (iii) Affirmative defenses.

In appeals from reconsideration decisions of the Office of Personnel 
Management involving retirement benefits, if the appellant filed the 
application, the appellant has the burden of proving, by a preponderance 
of the evidence, entitlement to the benefits. An appellant who has 
received an overpayment from the Civil Service Retirement and Disability 
Fund has the burden of proving, by substantial evidence, eligibility for 
waiver or adjustment.
    (b) Affirmative defenses of the appellant. Under 5 U.S.C. 
7701(c)(2), the Board is required to overturn the action of the agency, 
even where the agency has met the evidentiary standard stated in 
paragraph (a) of this section, if the appellant:
    (1) Shows harmful error in the application of the agency's 
procedures in arriving at its decision;
    (2) Shows that the decision was based on any prohibited personnel 
practice described in 5 U.S.C. 2302(b); or
    (3) Shows that the decision was not in accordance with law.
    (c) Definitions. The following definitions apply to this part:
    (1) Substantial evidence. The degree of relevant evidence that a 
reasonable person, considering the record as a whole, might accept as 
adequate to support a conclusion, even though other reasonable persons 
might disagree. This is a lower standard of proof than preponderance of 
the evidence.
    (2) Preponderance of the evidence. The degree of relevant evidence 
that a reasonable person, considering the record as a whole, would 
accept as sufficient to find that a contested fact is more likely to be 
true than untrue.
    (3) Harmful error. Error by the agency in the application of its 
procedures that is likely to have caused the agency to reach a 
conclusion different from the one it would have reached in the absence 
or cure of the error. The burden is upon the appellant to show that the 
error was harmful, i.e., that it caused substantial harm or prejudice to 
his or her rights.

[54 FR 53504, Dec. 29, 1989, as amended at 56 FR 41748, Aug. 23, 1991]



Sec. 1201.57  Order of hearing.

    (a) In cases in which the agency has taken an action against an 
employee, the agency will present its case first.
    (b) The appellant will proceed first at hearings convened on the 
issues of:
    (1) Jurisdiction;
    (2) Timeliness; or
    (3) Office of Personnel Management disallowance of retirement 
benefits, when the appellant applied for those benefits.
    (c) The judge may vary the normal order of presenting evidence.



Sec. 1201.58  Closing the record.

    (a) When there is a hearing, the record ordinarily will close at the 
conclusion of the hearing. When the judge allows the parties to submit 
argument, briefs, or documents previously identified for introduction 
into evidence, however, the record will remain open for as much time as 
the judge grants for that purpose.
    (b) If the appellant waives the right to a hearing, the record will 
close on the date the judge sets as the final date for the receipt or 
filing of submissions of the parties.
    (c) Once the record closes, no additional evidence or argument will 
be accepted unless the party submitting it shows that the evidence was 
not readily available before the record closed. The judge will include 
in the record, however, any supplemental citations received from the 
parties or approved corrections of the transcript, if one has been 
prepared.

[[Page 19]]

                                Evidence



Sec. 1201.61  Exclusion of evidence and testimony.

    Any evidence and testimony that is offered in the hearing and 
excluded by the judge will be described, and that description will be 
made a part of the record.



Sec. 1201.62  Producing prior statements.

    After an individual has given evidence in a proceeding, any party 
may request a copy of any prior signed statement made by that individual 
that is relevant to the evidence given. If the party refuses to furnish 
the statement, the judge may exclude the evidence given.



Sec. 1201.63  Stipulations.

    The parties may stipulate to any matter of fact. The stipulation 
will satisfy a party's burden of proving the fact alleged.



Sec. 1201.64  Official notice.

    Official notice is the Board's or judge's recognition of certain 
facts without requiring evidence to be introduced establishing those 
facts. The judge, on his or her own motion or on the motion of a party, 
may take official notice of matters of common knowledge or matters that 
can be verified. The parties may be given an opportunity to object to 
the taking of official notice. The taking of official notice of any fact 
satisfies a party's burden of proving that fact.

                                Discovery



Sec. 1201.71  Purpose of discovery.

    Proceedings before the Board will be conducted as expeditiously as 
possible with due regard to the rights of the parties. Discovery is 
designed to enable a party to obtain relevant information needed to 
prepare the party's case. These regulations are intended to provide a 
simple method of discovery. They will be interpreted and applied so as 
to avoid delay and to facilitate adjudication of the case. Parties are 
expected to start and complete discovery with a minimum of Board 
intervention.



Sec. 1201.72  Explanation and scope of discovery.

    (a) Explanation. Discovery is the process, apart from the hearing, 
by which a party may obtain relevant information, including the 
identification of potential witnesses, from another person or a party, 
that the other person or party has not otherwise provided. Relevant 
information includes information that appears reasonably calculated to 
lead to the discovery of admissible evidence. This information is 
obtained to assist the parties in preparing and presenting their cases. 
The Federal Rules of Civil Procedure may be used as a general guide for 
discovery practices in proceedings before the Board. Those rules, 
however, are instructive rather than controlling.
    (b) Scope. Discovery covers any nonprivileged matter that is 
relevant to the issues involved in the appeal, including the existence, 
description, nature, custody, condition, and location of documents or 
other tangible things, and the identity and location of persons with 
knowledge of relevant facts. Discovery requests that are directed to 
nonparties and nonparty Federal agencies and employees are limited to 
information that appears directly material to the issues involved in the 
appeal.
    (c) Methods. Parties may use one or more of the methods provided 
under the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure. These methods include 
written interrogatories, depositions, requests for production of 
documents or things for inspection or copying, and requests for 
admission.



Sec. 1201.73  Discovery procedures.

    (a) Discovery from a party. A party seeking discovery from another 
party must start the process by serving a request for discovery on the 
representative of the other party or the party if there is no 
representative. The request for discovery must state the time limit for 
responding, as prescribed in Sec. 1201.73(d), and must specify the time 
and place of the taking of the deposition, if applicable.
    When a party directs a request for discovery to an officer or 
employee of a Federal agency that is a party, the

[[Page 20]]

agency must make the officer or employee available on official time to 
respond to the request, and must assist the officer or employee as 
necessary in providing relevant information that is available to the 
agency.
    (b) Discovery from a nonparty, including a nonparty Federal agency. 
Parties should try to obtain voluntary discovery from nonparties 
whenever possible. A party seeking discovery from a nonparty Federal 
agency or employee must start the process by serving a request for 
discovery on the nonparty Federal agency or employee. A party may begin 
discovery from other nonparties by serving a request for discovery on 
the nonparty directly. If the party seeking the information does not 
make that request, or if it does so but fails to obtain voluntary 
cooperation, it may obtain discovery from a nonparty by filing a written 
motion with the judge, showing the relevance, scope, and materiality of 
the particular information sought. If the party seeks to take a 
deposition, it should state in the motion the date, time, and place of 
the proposed deposition. An authorized official of the Board will issue 
a ruling on the motion, and will serve the ruling on the moving party. 
That official also will provide that party with a subpoena, if approved, 
that is directed to the individual or entity from which discovery is 
sought. The subpoena will specify the manner in which the party may seek 
compliance with it, and it will specify the time limit for seeking 
compliance. The party seeking the information is responsible for serving 
any Board-approved discovery request and subpoena on the individual or 
entity, or for arranging for their service.
    (c) Responses to discovery requests. (1) A party, or a Federal 
agency that is not a party, must answer a discovery request within the 
time provided under paragraph (d)(2) of this section, either by 
furnishing to the requesting party the information or testimony 
requested or agreeing to make deponents available to testify within a 
reasonable time, or by stating an objection to the particular request 
and the reasons for the objection.
    (2) If a party fails or refuses to respond in full to a discovery 
request, or if a nonparty fails or refuses to respond in full to a 
Board-approved discovery order, the requesting party may file a motion 
to compel discovery. The requesting party must file the motion with the 
judge, and must serve a copy of the motion on the other party and on any 
nonparty entity or person from whom the discovery was sought. The motion 
must be accompanied by:
    (i) A copy of the original request and a statement showing that the 
information sought is relevant and material; and
    (ii) A copy of the response to the request (including the objections 
to discovery) or, where appropriate, a statement that no response has 
been received, along with an affidavit or sworn statement under 28 
U.S.C. 1746 supporting the statement. (See appendix IV.)
    (3) The other party and any other entity or person from whom 
discovery was sought may respond to the motion to compel discovery 
within the time limits stated in paragraph (d)(4) of this section.
    (d) Time limits. (1) Parties who wish to make discovery requests or 
motions must serve their initial requests or motions within 25 days 
after the date on which the judge issues an order to the respondent 
agency to produce the agency file and response.
    (2) A party or nonparty must file a response to a discovery request 
promptly, but not later than 20 days after the date of service of the 
request or order of the judge. Any discovery requests following the 
initial request must be served within 10 days of the date of service of 
the prior response, unless the parties are otherwise directed. 
Deposition witnesses must give their testimony at the time and place 
stated in the request for deposition or in the subpoena, unless the 
parties agree on another time or place.
    (3) Any motion to depose a nonparty (along with a request for a 
subpoena) must be submitted to the judge within the time limits stated 
in paragraph (d)(1) of this section or as the judge otherwise directs.
    (4) Any motion for an order to compel discovery must be filed with 
the judge within 10 days of the date of service of objections or, if no 
response is received, within 10 days after the time limit for response 
has expired. Any

[[Page 21]]

pleading in opposition to a motion to compel discovery must be filed 
with the judge within 10 days of the date of service of the motion.
    (5) Discovery must be completed within the time the judge 
designates.



Sec. 1201.74  Orders for discovery.

    (a) Motion for an order compelling discovery. Motions for orders 
compelling discovery and motions for the appearance of nonparties must 
be filed with the judge in accordance with Sec. 1201.73(c)(2) and 
(d)(4).
    (b) Content of order. Any order issued will include, where 
appropriate:
    (1) A provision that the person to be deposed must be notified of 
the time and place of the deposition;
    (2) Any conditions or limits concerning the conduct or scope of the 
proceedings or the subject matter that may be necessary to prevent undue 
delay or to protect a party or other individual or entity from undue 
expense, embarrassment, or oppression;
    (3) Limits on the time for conducting depositions, answering written 
interrogatories, or producing documentary evidence; and
    (4) Other restrictions upon the discovery process that the judge 
sets.
    (c) Noncompliance. The judge may impose sanctions under Sec. 1201.43 
of this part for failure to comply with an order compelling discovery.



Sec. 1201.75  Taking depositions.

    Depositions may be taken by any method agreed upon by the parties. 
The person providing information is subject to penalties for intentional 
false statements.

                                Subpoenas



Sec. 1201.81  Requests for subpoenas.

    (a) Request. Parties who wish to obtain subpoenas that would require 
the attendance and testimony of witnesses, or subpoenas that would 
require the production of documents or other evidence under 5 U.S.C. 
1204(b)(2)(A), should file their motions for those subpoenas with the 
judge. Subpoenas are not ordinarily required to obtain the attendance of 
Federal employees as witnesses.
    (b) Form. Parties requesting subpoenas must file their requests, in 
writing, with the judge. Each request must identify specifically the 
books, papers, or testimony desired.
    (c) Relevance. The request must be supported by a showing that the 
evidence sought is relevant and that the scope of the request is 
reasonable.
    (d) Rulings. Any judge who does not have the authority to issue 
subpoenas will refer the request to an official with authority to rule 
on the request, with a recommendation for decision. The official to whom 
the request is referred will rule on the request promptly. Judges who 
have the authority to rule on these requests themselves will do so 
directly.



Sec. 1201.82  Motions to quash subpoenas.

    Any person to whom a subpoena is directed, or any party, may file a 
motion to quash or limit the subpoena. The motion must be filed with the 
judge, and it must include the reasons why compliance with the subpoena 
should not be required or the reasons why the subpoena's scope should be 
limited.



Sec. 1201.83  Serving subpoenas.

    (a) Any person who is at least 18 years of age and who is not a 
party to the appeal may serve a subpoena. The means prescribed by 
applicable state law are sufficient. The party who requested the 
subpoena, and to whom the subpoena has been issued, is responsible for 
serving the subpoena.
    (b) A subpoena directed to an individual outside the territorial 
jurisdiction of any court of the United States may be served in the 
manner described by the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure for service of 
a subpoena in a foreign country.



Sec. 1201.84  Proof of service.

    The person who has served the subpoena must certify that he or she 
did so:
    (a) By delivering it to the witness in person,
    (b) By registered or certified mail, or
    (c) By delivering the subpoena to a responsible person (named in the 
document certifying the delivery) at the

[[Page 22]]

residence or place of business (as appropriate) of the person for whom 
the subpoena was intended.

The document in which the party makes this certification also must 
include a statement that the prescribed fees have been paid or offered.



Sec. 1201.85  Enforcing subpoenas.

    (a) If a person who has been served with a Board subpoena fails or 
refuses to comply with its terms, the party seeking compliance may file 
a written motion for enforcement with the judge or make an oral motion 
for enforcement while on the record at a hearing. That party must 
present the document certifying that the subpoena was served and, except 
where the witness was required to appear before the judge, must submit 
an affidavit or sworn statement under 28 U.S.C. 1746 (see appendix IV) 
describing the failure or refusal to obey the subpoena. The Board, in 
accordance with 5 U.S.C. 1204(c), may then ask the appropriate United 
States district court to enforce the subpoena. If the person who has 
failed or refused to comply with a Board subpoena is located in a 
foreign country, the U.S. District Court for the District of Columbia 
will have jurisdiction to enforce compliance, to the extent that a U.S. 
court can assert jurisdiction over an individual in the foreign country.
    (b) Upon application by the Special Counsel, the Board may seek 
court enforcement of a subpoena issued by the Special Counsel in the 
same manner in which it seeks enforcement of Board subpoenas, in 
accordance with 5 U.S.C. 1212(b)(3).

                          Interlocutory Appeals



Sec. 1201.91  Explanation.

    An interlocutory appeal is an appeal to the Board of a ruling made 
by a judge during a proceeding. The judge may permit the appeal if he or 
she determines that the issue presented in it is of such importance to 
the proceeding that it requires the Board's immediate attention. Either 
party may make a motion for certification of an interlocutory appeal. In 
addition, the judge, on his or her own motion, may certify an 
interlocutory appeal to the Board. If the appeal is certified, the Board 
will decide the issue and the judge will act in accordance with the 
Board's decision.



Sec. 1201.92  Criteria for certifying interlocutory appeals.

    The judge will certify a ruling for review only if the record shows 
that:
    (a) The ruling involves an important question of law or policy about 
which there is substantial ground for difference of opinion; and
    (b) An immediate ruling will materially advance the completion of 
the proceeding, or the denial of an immediate ruling will cause undue 
harm to a party or the public.



Sec. 1201.93  Procedures.

    (a) Motion for certification. A party seeking the certification of 
an interlocutory appeal must file a motion for certification within 10 
days of the date of the ruling to be appealed. The motion must be filed 
with the judge, and must state why certification is appropriate and what 
the Board should do and why. The opposing party may file objections 
within 10 days of the date of service of the motion, or within any other 
time period that the judge may designate.
    (b) Certification and review. The judge will grant or deny a motion 
for certification within five days after receiving all pleadings or, if 
no response is filed, within 10 days after receiving the motion. If the 
judge grants the motion for certification, he or she will refer the 
record to the Board. If the judge denies the motion, the party that 
sought certification may raise the matter at issue in a petition for 
review filed after the initial decision is issued, in accordance with 
Secs. 1201.113 and 1201.114 of this part.
    (c) Stay of hearing. The judge has the authority to proceed with or 
to stay the hearing while an interlocutory appeal is pending with the 
Board. Despite this authority, however, the Board may stay a hearing on 
its own motion while an interlocutory appeal is pending with it.

[[Page 23]]

                         Ex Parte Communications



Sec. 1201.101  Explanation and definitions.

    (a) Explanation. An ex parte communication is an oral or written 
communication between a decision-making official of the Board and an 
interested party to a proceeding, when that communication is made 
without providing the other parties to the appeal with a chance to 
participate. Not all ex parte communications are prohibited. Those that 
involve the merits of the case, or those that violate rules requiring 
submissions to be in writing, are prohibited. Accordingly, interested 
parties may ask about such matters as the status of a case, when it will 
be heard, and methods of submitting evidence to the Board. Parties may 
not ask about matters such as what defense they should use or whether 
their evidence is adequate, and they may not make a submission orally if 
that submission is required to be made in writing.
    (b) Definitions for purposes of this section.
    (1) Interested party includes:
    (i) Any party or representative of a party involved in a proceeding 
before the Board; and
    (ii) Any other person who might be affected by the outcome of a 
proceeding before the Board.
    (2) Decision-making official means any judge, officer or other 
employee of the Board designated to hear and decide cases.



Sec. 1201.102  Prohibition on ex parte communications.

    Except as otherwise provided in Sec. 1201.41(c)(1) of this part, ex 
parte communications that concern the merits of any matter before the 
Board for adjudication, or that otherwise violate rules requiring 
written submissions, are prohibited from the time the persons involved 
know that the Board may consider the matter until the time the Board has 
issued a final decision on the matter.



Sec. 1201.103  Placing communications in the record; sanctions.

    (a) Any communication made in violation of Sec. 1201.102 of this 
part will be made a part of the record. If the communication was oral, a 
memorandum stating the substance of the discussion will be placed in the 
record.
    (b) If there has been a violation of Sec. 1201.102 of this part, the 
judge or the Clerk of the Board, as appropriate, will notify the parties 
in writing that the regulation has been violated, and will give the 
parties 10 days to file a response.
    (c) The following sanctions are available:
    (1) Parties. The offending party may be required to show why, in the 
interest of justice, the claim or motion should not be dismissed, 
denied, or otherwise adversely affected.
    (2) Board personnel. Offending Board personnel will be treated in 
accordance with the Board's standards of conduct.
    (3) Other persons. The Board may invoke appropriate sanctions 
against other offending parties.

                             Final Decisions



Sec. 1201.111  Initial decision by judge.

    (a) The judge will prepare an initial decision after the record 
closes, and will serve that decision on the Clerk of the Board, on the 
Director of the Office of Personnel Management, and on all parties to 
the appeal, including named parties, permissive intervenors, and 
intervenors of right.
    (b) Each initial decision will contain:
    (1) Findings of fact and conclusions of law upon all the material 
issues of fact and law presented on the record;
    (2) The reasons or bases for those findings and conclusions;
    (3) An order making final disposition of the case, including 
appropriate relief;
    (4) A statement, if the appellant is the prevailing party, as to 
whether interim relief is provided effective upon the date of the 
decision, pending the outcome of any petition for review filed by 
another party under subpart C of this part;
    (5) The date upon which the decision will become final (a date that, 
for purposes of this section, is 35 days after issuance); and
    (6) A statement of any further process available, including, as 
appropriate, a petition for enforcement under

[[Page 24]]

Sec. 1201.182 of this part, a petition for review under Sec. 1201.114, 
and a petition for judicial review.
    (c) Interim relief. Under 5 U.S.C. 7701(b)(2), if the appellant is 
the prevailing party, the initial decision will provide appropriate 
interim relief to the appellant effective upon the date of the initial 
decision and remaining in effect until the date of the final order of 
the Board on any petition for review, unless the judge determines that 
the granting of interim relief is not appropriate. The agency may 
decline to return the appellant to his or her place of employment if it 
determines that the return or presence of the appellant will be unduly 
disruptive to the work environment. However, pay and benefits must be 
provided.



Sec. 1201.112  Jurisdiction of judge.

    (a) After issuing the initial decision, the judge will retain 
jurisdiction over a case only to the extent necessary to:
    (1) Correct the transcript, when one is obtained;
    (2) Rule on motions for exception to the requirement that a party 
seeking a transcript must pay for it;
    (3) Rule on a request by the appellant for attorney fees;
    (4) Process any petition for enforcement filed under subpart F of 
this part;
    (5) Vacate an initial decision before that decision becomes final 
under Sec. 1201.113 in order to accept a settlement agreement into the 
record.
    (b) Nothing is this section affects the time limits prescribed in 
Sec. 1201.113 regarding the finality of an initial decision or the time 
allowed for filing a petition for review.

[59 FR 22125, Apr. 29, 1994]



Sec. 1201.113  Finality of decision.

    The initial decision of the judge will become final 35 days after 
issuance. Initial decisions are not precedential.
    (a) Exceptions. The initial decision will not become final if, 
within 35 days after issuance of the decision, any party files a 
petition for review, or if the Board reopens the case on its own motion.
    (b) Petition for review denied. If the Board denies all petitions 
for review, the initial decision will become final when the Board issues 
its last decision denying a petition for review.
    (c) Petition for review granted or case reopened. If the Board 
grants a petition for review or a cross petition for review, or reopens 
or dismisses a case, the decision of the Board is final if it disposes 
of the entire action.
    (d) Extensions. The Board may extend the 35-day time limit for 
filing a petition for good cause shown as specified in Sec. 1201.114 of 
this part.
    (e) Exhaustion. Administrative remedies are exhausted when a 
decision becomes final in accordance with this section.



          Subpart C--Petitions for Review of Initial Decisions



Sec. 1201.114  Filing petition and cross petition for review.

    (a) Who may file. Any party to the proceeding, the Director of the 
Office of Personnel Management (OPM), or the Special Counsel may file a 
petition for review. The Director of OPM may request review only if he 
or she believes that the decision is erroneous and will have a 
substantial impact on any civil service law, rule, or regulation under 
OPM's jurisdiction. 5 U.S.C. 7701(e)(2). All submissions to the Board 
must contain the signature of the party or of the party's designated 
representative.
    (b) Cross petition for review. If a party, the Director of OPM, or 
the Special Counsel files a timely petition for review, any other party, 
the Director of OPM, or the Special Counsel may file a timely cross 
petition for review. The Board normally will consider only issues raised 
in a timely filed petition for review or in a timely filed cross 
petition for review.
    (c) Place for filing. A petition for review, cross petition for 
review, responses to those petitions, and all motions and pleadings 
associated with them must be filed with the Clerk of the Merit Systems 
Protection Board, Washington, DC 20419, by personal delivery, by 
facsimile, by mail, or by commercial overnight delivery.
    (d) Time for filing. Any petition for review must be filed within 35 
days after the initial decision is issued. A cross petition for review 
must be filed within

[[Page 25]]

25 days of the date of service of the petition for review. Any response 
to a petition for review or to a cross petition for review must be filed 
within 25 days after the date of service of the petition or cross 
petition.
    (e) Extension of time to file. The Board will grant a motion for 
extension of time to file a petition for review, a cross petition, or a 
response only if the party submitting the motion shows good cause. 
Motions for extensions must be filed with the Clerk of the Board before 
the date on which the petition or other pleading is due. The Board, in 
its discretion, may grant or deny those motions without providing the 
other parties the opportunity to comment on them. A motion for an 
extension must be accompanied by an affidavit or sworn statement under 
28 U.S.C. 1746. (See appendix IV.) The affidavit or sworn statement must 
include a specific and detailed description of the circumstances alleged 
to constitute good cause, and it should be accompanied by any available 
documentation or other evidence supporting the matters asserted.
    (f) Late filings. Any petition for review, cross petition for 
review, or response that is filed late must be accompanied by a motion 
that shows good cause for the untimely filing, unless the Board has 
specifically granted an extension of time under paragraph (e) of this 
section, or unless a motion for extension is pending before the Board. 
The motion must be accompanied by an affidavit or sworn statement under 
28 U.S.C. 1746. (See appendix IV.) The affidavit or sworn statement must 
include:
    (1) The reasons for failing to request an extension before the 
deadline for the submission; and
    (2) A specific and detailed description of the circumstances causing 
the late filing, accompanied by supporting documentation or other 
evidence.

Any response to the motion may be included in the response to the 
petition for review, the cross petition for review, or the response to 
the cross petition for review. The response will not extend the time 
provided by paragraph (d) of this section to file a cross petition for 
review or to respond to the petition or cross petition. In the absence 
of a motion, the Board may, in its discretion, determine on the basis of 
the existing record whether there was good cause for the untimely 
filing, or it may provide the party that submitted the document with an 
opportunity to show why it should not be dismissed or excluded as 
untimely.
    (g) Intervention--(1) By Director of OPM. The Director of OPM may 
intervene in a case before the Board under the standards stated in 5 
U.S.C. 7701(d). The notice of intervention is timely if it is filed with 
the Clerk of the Board within 45 days of the date the petition for 
review was filed. If the Director requests additional time for filing a 
brief on intervention, the Board may, in its discretion, grant the 
request. A party may file a response to the Director's brief within 15 
days of the date of service of that brief. The Director must serve the 
notice of intervention and the brief on all parties.
    (2) By Special Counsel. (i) Under 5 U.S.C. 1212(c), the Special 
Counsel may intervene as a matter of right, except as provided in 
paragraph (g)(2)(ii) of this section. The notice of intervention is 
timely if it is filed with the Clerk of the Board within 45 days of the 
date the petition for review was filed. If the Special Counsel requests 
additional time for filing a brief on intervention, the Board may, in 
its discretion, grant the request. A party may file a response to the 
Special Counsel's brief within 15 days of the date of service. The 
Special Counsel must serve the notice of intervention and the brief on 
all parties.
    (ii) The Special Counsel may not intervene in an action brought by 
an individual under 5 U.S.C. 1221, or in an appeal brought by an 
individual under 5 U.S.C. 7701, without the consent of that individual. 
The Special Counsel must present evidence that the individual has 
consented to the intervention at the time the motion to intervene is 
filed.
    (3) Permissive intervenors. Any person, organization or agency, by 
motion made in a petition for review, may ask for permission to 
intervene. The motion must state in detail the reasons why the person, 
organization or agency should be permitted to intervene. A motion for 
permission to intervene will

[[Page 26]]

be granted if the requester shows that he or she will be affected 
directly by the outcome of the proceeding. Any person alleged to have 
committed a prohibited personnel practice under 5 U.S.C. 2302(b) may ask 
for permission to intervene.
    (h) Service. A party submitting a pleading must serve a copy of it 
on each party and on each representative as provided in 
Sec. 1201.26(b)(2).
    (i) Closing the record. The record closes on expiration of the 
period for filing the response to the petition for review, or to the 
cross petition for review, or to the brief on intervention, if any, or 
on any other date the Board sets for this purpose. Once the record 
closes, no additional evidence or argument will be accepted unless the 
party submitting it shows that the evidence was not readily available 
before the record closed.

[54 FR 53504, Dec. 29, 1989, as amended at 58 FR 36345, July 7, 1993]



Sec. 1201.115  Contents of petition for review.

    (a) The petition for review must state objections to the initial 
decision that are supported by references to applicable laws or 
regulations and by specific references to the record.
    (b)(1) If the appellant was the prevailing party in the initial 
decision, and the decision granted the appellant interim relief, any 
petition for review or cross petition for review filed by the agency 
must be accompanied by evidence that the agency has provided the interim 
relief required, except when the agency has made a determination as 
described in paragraph (b)(2) of this section. The agency may comply by 
submitting an SF 50 or SF 52, a letter from an agency official directing 
the appellant to return to work and informing the appellant of his or 
her reinstatement as of the date of the initial decision, or an 
affidavit or declaration specifying the manner of the agency's 
compliance. The interim relief must be effected retroactively to the 
date of the initial decision. Cancellation of the appealed action or 
relief effected retroactively to the date of the action will result in 
dismissal of the agency's petition for mootness.
    (2) Under 5 U.S.C. 7701(b)(2), if the initial decision provides 
interim relief which requires that the appellant be returned to his or 
her place of employment pending the outcome of any petition for review 
and the agency determines that the return or presence of the appellant 
will be unduly disruptive to the work environment, the agency must 
notify both the appellant and the judge in writing. The agency must also 
provide evidence of such notification to the Board at the time of filing 
a petition or cross petition for review. The evidence must show that the 
agency has provided that the appellant will receive appropriate pay, 
compensation, and all other benefits as terms and conditions of 
employment from the date of the initial decision until a final decision 
is issued.
    (3) Nothing in paragraphs (b)(1) or (b)(2) of this section shall be 
construed to require any payment of back pay for the period preceding 
the date of the judge's initial decision or attorney fees before the 
decision of the Board becomes final.
    (4) Failure of the agency to submit evidence that it has complied 
with the granting of interim relief in accordance with paragraph (b)(1) 
of this section, or that it has provided notification that interim 
relief will not be granted fully in accordance with paragraph (b)(2) of 
this section, will result in the dismissal of the agency's petition or 
cross petition for review.
    (c) If an appellant or an intervenor files a petition or cross 
petition for review of an initial decision ordering interim relief, upon 
order of the Clerk of the Board the agency must submit evidence that it 
has provided the interim relief required (or, where applicable, the 
evidence specified in paragraph (b)(2) of this section), and it must 
submit the name of the official responsible for compliance. The agency's 
failure to submit acceptable evidence of compliance with the interim 
relief order is a basis for the Board to order the withholding of the 
salary of the responsible official pursuant to 5 U.S.C. 1204(e)(2)(A) 
and 5 CFR 1201.183(c). This sanction is in addition to the dismissal of 
an agency petition or cross petition for review provided for in 
paragraph (b)(4) of this section.

[[Page 27]]

    (d) The Board, after providing the other parties with an opportunity 
to respond, may grant a petition for review when it is established that:
    (1) New and material evidence is available that, despite due 
diligence, was not available when the record closed; or
    (2) The decision of the judge is based on an erroneous 
interpretation of statute or regulation.

[54 FR 53504, Dec. 29, 1989, as amended at 59 FR 30863, June 16, 1994]



Sec. 1201.116  Appellant requests for enforcement of interim relief.

    (a) Before a final decision is issued. If the agency files a 
petition for review or a cross petition for review and has not provided 
required interim relief, the appellant may request dismissal of the 
agency's petition. Any such request must be filed with the Clerk of the 
Board within 25 days of the date of service of the agency's petition. A 
copy of the response must be served on the agency at the same time it is 
filed with the Board. The agency may respond with evidence and argument 
to the appellant's request to dismiss within 15 days of the date of 
service of the request. If the appellant files a motion to dismiss 
beyond the time limit, the Board will dismiss the motion as untimely 
unless the appellant shows that it is based on information not readily 
available before the close of the time limit.
    (b) After a final decision is issued. If the appellant is not the 
prevailing party in the final Board order, and if the appellant believes 
that the agency has not provided full interim relief, the appellant may 
file an enforcement petition with the regional office under 
Sec. 1201.182. The appellant must file this petition within 20 days of 
learning of the agency's failure to provide full interim relief. If the 
appellant prevails in the final Board order, then any interim relief 
enforcement motion filed will be treated as a motion for enforcement of 
the final decision. Petitions under this subsection will be processed 
under Sec. 1201.183.

[59 FR 30864, June 16, 1994]



Sec. 1201.117  Procedures for review or reopening.

    (a) In any case that is reopened or reviewed, the Board may:
    (1) Issue a single decision that denies or grants a petition for 
review, reopens the appeal, and decides the case;
    (2) Hear oral arguments;
    (3) Require that briefs be filed;
    (4) Remand the appeal so that the judge may take further testimony 
or evidence or make further findings or conclusions; or
    (5) Take any other action necessary for final disposition of the 
case.
    (b) The Board may affirm, reverse, modify, or vacate the decision of 
the judge, in whole or in part. Where appropriate, the Board will issue 
a final decision and order a date for compliance with that decision.

[54 FR 53504, Dec. 29, 1989. Redesignated at 59 FR 30864, June 16, 1994]



Sec. 1201.118  Board reopening of case and reconsideration of initial decision.

    The Board may reopen an appeal and reconsider a decision of a judge 
on its own motion at any time, regardless of any other provisions of 
this part.

[54 FR 53504, Dec. 29, 1989. Redesignated at 59 FR 30864, June 16, 1994]



Sec. 1201.119  OPM petition for reconsideration.

    (a) Criteria. Under 5 U.S.C. 7703(d), the Director of the Office of 
Personnel Management may file a petition for reconsideration of a Board 
final order if he or she determines:
    (1) That the Board erred in interpreting a civil service law, rule, 
or regulation affecting personnel management, and
    (2) That the Board's decision will have a substantial impact on a 
civil service law, rule, regulation, or policy directive.
    (b) Time limit. The Director must file the petition for 
reconsideration within 35 days after the date of service of the Board's 
final order.
    (c) Briefs. After the petition is filed, the Board will make the 
official record relating to the petition for reconsideration available 
to the Director for review. The Director's brief in support of the 
petition for reconsideration must

[[Page 28]]

be filed within 20 days after the Board makes the record available for 
review. Any party's opposition to the petition for reconsideration must 
be filed within 25 days from the date of service of the Director's 
brief.
    (d) Stays. If the Director of OPM files a petition for 
reconsideration, he or she also may ask the Board to stay its final 
order. An application for a stay, with a supporting memorandum, must be 
filed at the same time as the petition for reconsideration.

[54 FR 53504, Dec. 29, 1989. Redesignated at 59 FR 30864, June 16, 1994]



Sec. 1201.120  Judicial review.

    Any employee or applicant for employment who is adversely affected 
by a final order or decision of the Board under the provisions of 5 
U.S.C. 7703 may obtain judicial review in the United States Court of 
Appeals for the Federal Circuit. As Sec. 1201.175 of this part provides, 
an appropriate United States district court has jurisdiction over a 
request for judicial review of cases involving the kinds of 
discrimination issues described in 5 U.S.C. 7702.

[54 FR 53504, Dec. 29, 1989. Redesignated at 59 FR 30864, June 16, 1994]



          Subpart D--Procedures for Original Jurisdiction Cases

                 Actions Brought by the Special Counsel



Sec. 1201.121  Scope of jurisdiction; compliance with subpart B.

    (a) Scope. The Board has original jurisdiction over actions brought 
by the Special Counsel and over the Special Counsel's requests for stays 
of certain personnel actions.
    (b) Compliance with subpart B. Except as otherwise expressly 
provided by this subpart, the Special Counsel will comply with the 
regulations regarding hearing procedures that are set out in subpart B 
of this part in connection with all complaints or requests he or she 
files with the Board.



Sec. 1201.122  Filing complaints and requests; serving documents on parties.

    (a) Initial filing. The Special Counsel must file two copies of each 
complaint or request, together with numbered and tabbed exhibits or 
attachments, if any, with the Clerk of the Board. In addition, he or she 
must file with that office, for service by the Board in accordance with 
paragraph (b) of this section, a sufficient number of copies of 
complaints or requests, together with numbered and tabbed exhibits and a 
certified list of parties or their representatives. The list must show 
the last known address of each party or representative.
    (b) Service by the Board. The Board will mail copies of complaints 
and requests to the parties to the proceeding, or their representatives, 
at their last known addresses. It also will mail them any exhibits or 
attachments to the complaints and requests, along with copies of the 
pertinent regulations of the Board.
    (c) Subsequent filings and service. Each party must serve on every 
other party one copy of each of its pleadings, as defined by 
Sec. 1201.4(b). Service may be by mail, by facsimile, by commerical 
overnight delivery, or by personal delivery to each party on the service 
list previously provided by the Board. A certificate of service 
describing how and when service was made must accompany each pleading. 
All parties are responsible for notifying the Board and one another in 
writing of any changes in the names or addresses on the service list.

[54 FR 53504, Dec. 29, 1989, as amended at 59 FR 65235, Dec. 19, 1994]



Sec. 1201.123  Contents of complaint.

    (a) If the Special Counsel determines that the Board should take any 
of the actions listed below, he or she must file a written complaint 
stating with particularity any alleged violations of law or regulation, 
along with the supporting facts.
    (1) Action to require an agency to correct a prohibited personnel 
practice

[[Page 29]]

(or a pattern of prohibited personnel practices) under 5 U.S.C. 
1214(b)(4);
    (2) Action to discipline an employee under 5 U.S.C. 1215(a);
    (3) Action with respect to other matters within the jurisdiction of 
the Special Counsel under 5 U.S.C. 1216; and
    (4) Action to discipline an employee under the Federal Employees 
Flexible and Compressed Work Schedule Act, 5 U.S.C. 6101.
    (b) The Board may order the Special Counsel and the responding party 
to file briefs, memoranda, or both in any action the Special Counsel 
brings before the Board.
    (c) If the Special Counsel files a corrective action with the Board 
on behalf of an employee, former employee, or applicant for employment 
who has sought corrective action from the Board directly under 5 U.S.C. 
1214(a)(3), the Special Counsel must provide evidence that the employee, 
former employee, or applicant has consented to the Special Counsel's 
seeking corrective action. 5 U.S.C. 1214(a)(4).



Sec. 1201.124  Rights of employees.

    (a) When the Special Counsel files a complaint seeking corrective 
action under 5 U.S.C. 1214(b)(2)(B), the Board shall provide the 
individual alleged to have been the subject of the prohibited personnel 
practice the opportunity to make written comments.
    (b) When the Special Counsel files a complaint proposing a 
disciplinary action against an employee under 5 U.S.C. 1215(a)(1), the 
employee has the right:
    (1) To file an answer, supported by affidavits and documentary 
evidence;
    (2) To be represented;
    (3) To a hearing on the record before the Board or an administrative 
law judge;
    (4) To a written Board decision, issued at the earliest practicable 
date, in which the Board states the reasons for its conclusion; and
    (5) To a copy of any final order imposing disciplinary action.



Sec. 1201.125  Answer to complaint.

    (a) Filing and default. A party named in a Special Counsel complaint 
may file an answer with the Clerk of the Board within 35 days of the 
date of service of the complaint. If a party fails to answer, and does 
not show good cause for that failure, the failure will constitute waiver 
of the right to contest the allegations in the complaint. Unanswered 
allegations are considered admitted and will form the basis of a 
recommended or final decision as appropriate.
    (b) Content. An answer must contain a specific denial, admission, or 
explanation of each fact alleged in the complaint. If the respondent has 
no knowledge of a fact, he or she must say so. The respondent may 
include statements of fact and appropriate documentation to support each 
denial or defense. Allegations that are unanswered or admitted in the 
answer are considered true and may not be denied later.



Sec. 1201.126  Final orders of the Board.

    (a) In any action seeking correction of a prohibited personnel 
practice, the Board may order the corrective actions it considers 
appropriate after providing an opportunity for the Special Counsel, the 
agency, and the Office of Personnel Management to comment. 5 U.S.C. 
1214(b)(4)(A).
    (b)(1) Subject to the provisions of paragraph (b)(2) of this 
section, in any case involving an alleged prohibited personnel practice 
described in 5 U.S.C. 2302(b)(8), the Board will order such corrective 
action as the Board considers appropriate if the Special Counsel 
demonstrates that a disclosure described under 5 U.S.C. 2302(b)(8) was a 
contributing factor in the personnel action that was taken or will be 
taken against the individual.
    (2) Corrective action under paragraph (b)(1) of this section may not 
be ordered if the agency demonstrates by clear and convincing evidence 
that it would have taken the same personnel action in the absence of 
such disclosure. 5 U.S.C. 1214(b)(4)(B).
    (c) In any action to discipline an employee, except as provided in 
paragraphs (e) and (f) of this section, the Board may order a removal, a 
reduction in grade, a debarment (not to exceed five years), a 
suspension, a reprimand, or an assessment of civil penalty not to exceed 
$1,100. 5 U.S.C. 1215(a)(3).

[[Page 30]]

    (d) If a State or local agency fails to remove an employee whose 
removal is found to be warranted by the Board under 5 U.S.C. 1505, or if 
it reappoints such an employee within 18 months of a Board's final order 
finding that removal was warranted, the Board may order the Federal 
agency administering loans or grants to the State or local agency, to 
withhold money from the agency. The amount to be withheld will not 
exceed two years of the offending employee's pay at the rate he or she 
was being paid at the time of the violation. 5 U.S.C. 1506.
    (e) In any action to discipline an employee under the Federal 
Employees Flexible and Compressed Work Schedule Act, 5 U.S.C. 6101, a 
final order of the Board may impose disciplinary action consisting of:
    (1) Removal from Federal employment for any period of time the Board 
may prescribe;
    (2) Suspension; or
    (3) Other discipline that the Board considers appropriate.
    (f) In any action in which the Board finds that an employee has 
violated 5 U.S.C. 7324, the Board will order the employee's removal, 
unless it finds by unanimous vote that the violation does not warrant 
removal and imposes instead a penalty of not less than 30 days 
suspension without pay.

[54 FR 53504, Dec. 29, 1989, as amended at 61 FR 49049, Sept. 18, 1996]



Sec. 1201.127  Requesting stay of personnel action; protective orders.

    Under 5 U.S.C. 1214(b)(1), the Special Counsel may ask a member of 
the Board to stay any personnel action if he or she determines that 
there are reasonable grounds to believe that the action was taken or 
will be taken as a result of a prohibited personnel practice.
    (a) Content of request. The Special Counsel, or that official's 
representative, must sign each request, and must include the following 
information in the request:
    (1) The names of the parties;
    (2) The agency and officials involved;
    (3) The nature of the action to be stayed;
    (4) A concise statement of facts justifying the charge that the 
personnel action was or will be the result of a prohibited personnel 
practice; and
    (5) The laws or regulations that were violated, or that will be 
violated if the stay is not issued.
    (b) Filing and serving of request. The request for a stay must be 
filed and served on all parties in accordance with Sec. 1201.122 of this 
part.
    (c) Action on the request for stay--(1) Initial stay. Within three 
days after the filing of a request, excluding Saturdays, Sundays, and 
Federal holidays, any member of the Board will grant a request for a 
stay of 45 days under 5 U.S.C. 1214(b)(1)(A) unless the Member 
determines that, under the facts and circumstances, the requested stay 
would not be appropriate. Unless the stay is denied within the 3-day 
period, it is considered granted by operation of law.
    (2) Extension of stay. Upon the Special Counsel's request, the Board 
may extend any stay granted under 5 U.S.C. 1214(b)(1)(A) for whatever 
time it considers appropriate, but only after providing the Special 
Counsel and the agency with an opportunity to comment on the request, 
and only after the Board has concurred in the request of the Special 
Counsel. At the time he or she files a request for an extension of a 
stay under 5 U.S.C. 1214(b)(1)(B), the Special Counsel must also file a 
brief describing the facts and any relevant legal authority that the 
Board should consider. The agency must respond in accordance with any 
order of the Board.
    (3) Reports during pendency of a stay. If the Board grants an 
extension of the initial stay, the Special Counsel must report to the 
Board, at intervals specified in the order granting extension of the 
stay, regarding the status of the case. Such reports will continue to be 
required until the Special Counsel files a corrective action with the 
Board or requests termination of the stay, or until the stay expires 
according to its terms.
    (4) Termination of stay. The Board may terminate a stay at any time, 
except it may not terminate a stay:
    (i) On its own motion or on the motion of an agency without first 
providing notice and opportunity for oral or

[[Page 31]]

written comments to the Special Counsel and the individual on whose 
behalf the stay was ordered; or
    (ii) On the motion of the Special Counsel without first providing 
notice and opportunity for oral or written comments to the individual on 
whose behalf the stay was ordered.
    (d) Additional information. At any time, the Board or, where 
appropriate, a member of the Board may require the Special Counsel, the 
agency, or both to appear and present further information or explanation 
regarding a request for a stay, to file supplemental briefs or 
memoranda, or to supply factual information that the Board needs in 
order to make a decision regarding a stay.
    (e) Protective orders. The Board, during an investigation by the 
Special Counsel or during the pendency of any Special Counsel proceeding 
before the Board, may issue any order that may be necessary to protect a 
witness or other individual from harassment. The Special Counsel must 
submit any motion for a protective order to the Clerk of the Board. The 
motion must include a concise statement of the reasons justifying the 
request, together with any relevant documentary evidence. An agency, 
other than the Office of the Special Counsel, may not request a 
protective order with respect to an investigation by the Special Counsel 
during such investigation. An order issued under this paragraph may be 
enforced in the same manner as provided under subpart F for Board final 
decisions and orders.



Sec. 1201.128  Administrative appeal; judicial review.

    (a) A party in a Special Counsel complaint does not have the right 
to file an administrative appeal from an order of the Board.
    (b) An employee, former employee, or applicant for employment who is 
adversely affected by an order of the Board resulting from a corrective 
action brought by the Special Counsel may obtain judicial review of the 
order of the Board in the United States Court of Appeals for the Federal 
Circuit. 5 U.S.C. 1214(c).
    (c) An employee subject to a final order imposing disciplinary 
action under 5 U.S.C. 1215 may obtain judicial review of the order of 
the Board in the United States Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit. 
5 U.S.C. 1215(a)(4).



Sec. 1201.129  Judge; exceptions and replies to exceptions.

    (a) Except for requests for stays under 5 U.S.C. 1214(b)(1), and 
other matters specifically reserved for hearing by the Board, an action 
brought by the Special Counsel is heard by an administrative law judge, 
who will issue a recommended decision to the Board in accordance with 5 
U.S.C. 557. Unless directed otherwise, the parties must file all 
pleadings with the Clerk of the Board.
    (b) The parties may file with the Clerk of the Board any exceptions 
they may have to the recommended decision of the administrative law 
judge. Those exceptions must be filed within 35 days after the date of 
service of the recommended decision.
    (c) The parties may file replies to exceptions within 25 days after 
the date of service of the exceptions, as that date is determined by the 
certificate of service.
    (d) No additional evidence will be accepted with a party's 
exceptions or with a reply to exceptions unless the party submitting it 
shows that the evidence was not readily available before the 
administrative law judge closed the record.

                Actions Against Administrative Law Judges



Sec. 1201.131  Procedures.

    When an agency proposes an action against an administrative law 
judge, the procedures established under subpart B will apply to the 
hearing, unless these regulations expressly provide otherwise. Initial 
and subsequent pleadings, however, must be filed and served in 
accordance with Sec. 1201.122 of this subpart.



Sec. 1201.132  Board jurisdiction.

    The jurisdiction of the Board under this section is limited to 
proposals to take the following actions:
    (a) Removal;
    (b) Suspension;
    (c) Reduction in grade;
    (d) Reduction in pay; and

[[Page 32]]

    (e) Furlough of 30 days or less.



Sec. 1201.133  Filing a complaint.

    To initiate an action against an administrative law judge, an agency 
must file a complaint with the Board describing with particularity the 
facts that support the proposed action.



Sec. 1201.134  Answer to complaint.

    The administrative law judge against whom the complaint is filed may 
file an answer to the complaint. The answer must comply with the 
timeliness and other requirements of Sec. 1201.125 of this subpart.



Sec. 1201.135  Judge; exceptions and replies to exceptions.

    (a) Unless it is specifically reserved for hearing by the Board, an 
action by an employing agency against an administrative law judge will 
be heard by an administrative law judge, who will issue a recommended 
decision in accordance with 5 U.S.C. 557. All pleadings in those actions 
must be filed with the Clerk of the Board.
    (b) The parties may file with the Clerk of the Board any exceptions 
they have to the recommended decision of the administrative law judge. 
Those exceptions must be filed within 35 days after the date on which 
the administrative law judge issues the recommended decision.
    (c) The parties may file replies to exceptions within 25 days from 
the date of service of the exceptions.



Sec. 1201.136  Requirement for finding of good cause.

    The Board will authorize the agency to take a disciplinary action, 
and will specify the penalty to be imposed, only after the Board has 
made a finding of good cause as required by 5 U.S.C. 7521.

                Removal From the Senior Executive Service



Sec. 1201.141  Right to hearing.

    If an agency proposes to remove a career appointee from the Senior 
Executive Service under 5 CFR 359.502, and to place that employee in 
another civil service position, the appointee may request an informal 
hearing before an official appointed by the Board. If the appointee 
files the request with the Office of the Clerk at least 15 days before 
the effective date of the proposed removal, the request will be granted.



Sec. 1201.142  Hearing procedures; referring the record.

    The appointee, the appointee's representative, or both may appear 
and present arguments in an informal hearing before the Board or its 
designee. A verbatim record of the proceeding will be made. The 
appointee has no other procedural rights before the Board. The Board 
will refer a copy of the record to the Special Counsel, the Office of 
Personnel Management, and the employing agency for whatever action may 
be appropriate.



Sec. 1201.143  Appeal.

    There is no right under 5 U.S.C. 7703 to appeal the agency's or 
Board's actions in cases arising under Sec. 1201.141 of this part. The 
removal action will not be delayed as a result of the hearing.



 Subpart E--Procedures for Cases Involving Allegations of Discrimination



Sec. 1201.151  Scope and policy.

    (a) Scope. (1) The rules in this subpart implement 5 U.S.C. 7702. 
They apply to any case in which an employee or applicant for employment 
alleges that a personnel action appealable to the Board was based, in 
whole or in part, on prohibited discrimination.
    (2) ``Prohibited discrimination,'' as that term is used in this 
subpart, means discrimination prohibited by:
    (i) Section 717 of the Civil Rights Act of 1964, as amended (42 
U.S.C. 2000e-16(a));
    (ii) Section 6(d) of the Fair Labor Standards Act of 1938, as 
amended (29 U.S.C. 206(d));
    (iii) Section 501 of the Rehabilitation Act of 1973, as amended (29 
U.S.C. 791);
    (iv) Sections 12 and 15 of the Age Discrimination in Employment Act 
of 1967, as amended (29 U.S.C. 631, 633a); or
    (v) Any rule, regulation, or policy directive prescribed under any 
provision of law described in paragraphs (a)(2) (i) through (iv) of this 
section.
    (b) Policy. The Board's policy is to adjudicate impartially, 
thoroughly, and

[[Page 33]]

fairly all issues raised under this subpart.



Sec. 1201.152  Compliance with subpart B procedures.

    Unless this subpart expressly provides otherwise, all actions 
involving allegations of prohibited discrimination must comply with the 
regulations that are included in subpart B of this part.



Sec. 1201.153  Contents of appeal.

    (a) Contents. An appeal raising issues of prohibited discrimination 
must comply with Sec. 1201.24 of this part, with the following 
exceptions:
    (1) The appeal must state that there was discrimination in 
connection with the matter appealed, and it must state specifically how 
the agency discriminated against the appellant; and
    (2) The appeal must state whether the appellant has filed a formal 
discrimination complaint or a grievance with any agency. If he or she 
has done so, the appeal must state the date on which the appellant filed 
the complaint or grievance, and it must describe any action that the 
agency took in response to the complaint or grievance.
    (b) Use of form. Completing the form in appendix I of these 
regulations constitutes compliance with paragraph (a) of this section.



Sec. 1201.154  Time for filing appeal; closing record in cases involving grievance decisions.

    Appellants who file appeals raising issues of prohibited 
discrimination in connection with a matter otherwise appealable to the 
Board must comply with the following time limits:
    (a) Where the appellant has been subject to an action appealable to 
the Board, he or she may either file a timely complaint of 
discrimination with the agency or file an appeal with the Board within 
30 days after the effective date of the agency action being appealed.
    (b) If the appellant has filed a timely formal complaint of 
discrimination with the agency:
    (1) An appeal must be filed within 30 days after the appellant 
receives the agency resolution or final decision on the discrimination 
issue; or
    (2) If the agency has not resolved the matter or issued a final 
decision on the formal complaint within 120 days, the appellant may 
appeal the matter directly to the Board at any time after the expiration 
of 120 calendar days.
    (c) If the appellant files an appeal prematurely under this subpart, 
the judge will dismiss the appeal without prejudice to its later 
refiling under Sec. 1201.22 of this part. If holding the appeal for a 
short time would allow it to become timely, the judge may hold the 
appeal rather than dismiss it.
    (d) If the appellant has filed a grievance with the agency under its 
negotiated grievance procedure in accordance with 5 U.S.C. 7121, he or 
she may ask the Board to review the final decision under 5 U.S.C. 7702 
within 35 days of the date of issuance of that decision. The appellant 
must file the request with the Clerk of the Board, Merit Systems 
Protection Board, Washington, DC 20419. The request for review must 
contain:
    (1) A statement of the grounds on which review is requested;
    (2) References to evidence of record or rulings related to the 
issues before the Board;
    (3) Arguments in support of the stated grounds that refer 
specifically to relevant documents, and that include relevant citations 
of authority; and
    (4) Legible copies of the final grievance or arbitration decision, 
the agency decision to take the action, and other relevant documents. 
Those documents may include a transcript or tape recording of the 
hearing.
    (e) The record will close upon expiration of the period for filing 
the response to the petition for review, or to the brief on 
intervention, if any, or on any other date the Board sets for this 
purpose. Once the record closes, no additional evidence or argument will 
be accepted unless the party submitting it shows that the evidence was 
not readily available before the record closed.

[54 FR 53504, Dec. 29, 1989, as amended at 59 FR 31109, June 17, 1994]



Sec. 1201.155  Remand of allegations of discrimination.

    If the parties file a written agreement that the discrimination 
issue should be remanded to the agency for

[[Page 34]]

consideration, and if the judge determines that action would be in the 
interest of justice, the judge may take that action. The remand order 
will specify a time period within which the agency action must be 
completed. In no instance will that time period exceed 120 days. While 
the issue is pending with the agency, the judge will retain jurisdiction 
over the appeal.



Sec. 1201.156  Time for processing appeals involving allegations of discrimination.

    (a) Issue raised in appeal. When an appellant alleges prohibited 
discrimination in the appeal, the judge will decide both the issue of 
discrimination and the appealable action within 120 days after the 
appeal is filed.
    (b) Issue not raised in appeal. When an appellant has not alleged 
prohibited discrimination in the appeal, but has raised the issue later 
in the proceeding, the judge will decide both the issue of 
discrimination and the appealable action within 120 days after the issue 
is raised.
    (c) Discrimination issue remanded to agency. When the judge remands 
an issue of discrimination to the agency, adjudication will be completed 
within 120 days after the agency completes its action and returns the 
case to the Board.



Sec. 1201.157  Notice of right to judicial review.

    Any final decision of the Board under 5 U.S.C. 7702 will notify the 
appellant of his or her right, within 30 days after receiving the 
Board's final decision, to petition the Equal Employment Opportunity 
Commission to consider the Board's decision, or to file a civil action 
in an appropriate United States district court. If an appellant elects 
to waive the discrimination issue, an appeal may be filed with the 
United States Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit as stated in 
Sec. 1201.119 of this part.

                        Review of Board Decision



Sec. 1201.161  Action by the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission; judicial review.

    (a) Time limit for determination. In cases in which an appellant 
petitions the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission (Commission) for 
consideration of the Board's decision under 5 U.S.C. 7702(b)(2), the 
Commission will determine, within 30 days after the date of the 
petition, whether it will consider the decision.
    (b) Judicial review. The Board's decision will become judicially 
reviewable on:
    (1) The date on which the decision is issued, if the appellant does 
not file a petition with the Commission under 5 U.S.C. 7702(b)(1); or
    (2) The date of the Commission's decision that it will not consider 
the petition filed under 5 U.S.C. 7702(b)(2).
    (c) Commission processing and time limits. If the Commission decides 
to consider the decision of the Board, within 60 days after making its 
decision it will complete its consideration and either:
    (1) Concur in the decision of the Board; or
    (2) Issue in writing and forward to the Board for its action under 
Sec. 1201.162 of this subpart another decision, which differs from the 
decision of the Board to the extent that the Commission finds that, as a 
matter of law:
    (i) The decision of the Board constitutes an incorrect 
interpretation of any provision of any law, rule, regulation, or policy 
directive related to prohibited discrimination; or
    (ii) The evidence in the record as a whole does not support the 
decision involving that provision.
    (d) Transmittal of record. The Board will transmit a copy of its 
record to the Commission upon request.
    (e) Development of additional evidence. When asked by the Commission 
to do so, the Board or a judge will develop additional evidence 
necessary to supplement the record. This action will be completed within 
a period that will permit the Commission to make its decision within the 
statutory 60-day time limit referred to in paragraph (c) of this 
section. The Board or the judge may schedule additional proceedings if 
necessary in order to comply with the Commission's request.
    (f) Commission concurrence in Board decision. If the Commission 
concurs in the decision of the Board under 5 U.S.C. 7702(b)(3)(A), the 
appellant may

[[Page 35]]

file suit in an appropriate United States district court.



Sec. 1201.162  Board action on the Commission decision; judicial review.

    (a) Board decision. Within 30 days after receipt of a decision of 
the Commission issued under 1201.161(c)(2), the Board shall consider the 
decision and:
    (1) Concur and adopt in whole the decision of the Commission; or
    (2) To the extent that the Board finds that, as a matter of law:
    (i) The Commission decision is based on an incorrect interpretation 
of any provision of any civil service law, rule, regulation, or policy 
directive, or
    (ii) The evidence in the record as a whole does not support the 
Commission decision involving that provision, it may reaffirm the 
decision of the Board. In doing so, it may make revisions in the 
decision that it determines are appropriate.
    (b) Judicial review. If the Board concurs in or adopts the decision 
of the Commission under paragraph (a)(1) of this section, the decision 
of the Board is a judicially reviewable action.



Sec. 1201.163  Mixed cases governed by Reorganization Plan No. 1 of 1978.

    (a) Definitions--(1) Prohibited discrimination as used in this 
section means discrimination prohibited by section 717 of the Civil 
Rights Act of 1964, as amended (42 U.S.C. 2000e-16(c)); section 501 of 
the Rehabilitation Act of 1973, as amended (29 U.S.C. 791); and sections 
12 and 15 of the Age Discrimination in Employment Act of 1967, as 
amended (29 U.S.C. 631, 633a).
    (2) Initial decision as used in this section means a decision 
rendered by a judge of the MSPB pursuant to 29 CFR part 1613 or 5 CFR 
part 772 (as in effect prior to January 11, 1979) on an appeal in which 
issues of prohibited discrimination have been raised.
    (3) Preliminary decision as used in this section means: (i) An 
initial decision within the meaning of Sec. 1201.163(a)(2) which has not 
been reopened by a Board member or as to which no petition to reopen was 
filed by a party within 35 days after issuance of the decision;
    (ii) A decision by the Board itself pursuant to 29 CFR part 1613 or 
5 CFR part 772, in which issues of prohibited discrimination are 
addressed, or a decision by the Board denying all petitions to reopen.
    (b) Contents of appeal. An appeal raising issues of prohibited 
discrimination shall state there was discrimination in conjunction with 
the matter appealed and provide specific examples of how the appellant 
was discriminated against.
    (c) Procedures. (1) Appeals under 29 CFR part 1613 shall be 
processed by the Board consistent with the provisions set forth in that 
part. Such appeals shall be filed in writing with the appropriate Board 
regional or field office.
    (2) Appeals under the provisions of 5 CFR part 772 shall be 
processed as provided therein, except that under 5 CFR 772.306(b) the 
discrimination investigation shall be completed and the investigative 
file and report sent to the Board within 120 days. Except when this time 
has been extended upon a verified showing of good cause, the Board may 
impose the sanctions provided in 5 CFR 1201.43 if an agency fails to 
timely complete and file the result of such an investigation.
    (3) An initial decision on an appeal which includes issues of 
prohibited personnel discrimination shall be rendered by an employee of 
the Board, pursuant to 29 CFR part 1613 or 5 CFR part 772, on all issues 
raised in the appeal.
    (4) Unless a petition to reopen is filed with the Board or unless a 
Board member reopens on his/her own motion, within 35 days from issuance 
of an initial decision, the initial decision shall become the 
preliminary decision of the Board.
    (d) Review by Commission--(1) Time for filing. A petition to review 
the preliminary decision of the Board on issues of prohibited 
discrimination shall be filed with the Commission within 35 days after 
the initial decision of the Board becomes the preliminary decision.
    (2) Petition filed. In the event a petition for review is filed with 
the Commission, the Board decision shall become final on all issues, 
other than issues of prohibited discrimination, on the date the 
Commission's decision on these issues becomes final.

[[Page 36]]

    (3) Petition not filed. If a petition for review is not filed with 
the Commission, the decision of the Board shall become final on all 
issues. (5 U.S.C. 1204(g)).

[54 FR 53504, Dec. 29, 1989, as amended at 59 FR 65235, Dec. 19, 1994]

                              Special Panel



Sec. 1201.171  Referral of case to Special Panel.

    If the Board reaffirms its decision under Sec. 1201.162(a)(2) of 
this part with or without modification, it will certify the matter 
immediately to a Special Panel established under 5 U.S.C. 7702(d). Upon 
certification, the Board, within 5 days (excluding Saturdays, Sundays, 
and Federal holidays), will transmit the administrative record in the 
proceeding to the Chairman of the Special Panel and to the Commission. 
That record will include the following:
    (a) The factual record compiled under this section, which will 
include a transcript of any hearing;
    (b) The decisions issued by the Board and the Commission under 5 
U.S.C. 7702; and
    (c) A transcript of oral arguments made, or legal briefs filed, 
before the Board or the Commission.



Sec. 1201.172  Organization of Special Panel; designation of members.

    (a) A Special Panel is composed of:
    (1) A Chairman, appointed by the President with the advice and 
consent of the Senate, whose term is six (6) years;
    (2) One member of the Board, designated by the Chairman of the Board 
each time a Panel is convened;
    (3) One member of the Commission, designated by the Chairman of the 
Commission each time a Panel is convened.
    (b) Designation of Special Panel members--(1) Time of designation. 
Within 5 days of certification of a case to a Special Panel, the 
Chairman of Board and the Chairman of the Commission each will designate 
one member from his or her agency to serve on the Special Panel.
    (2) Manner of designation. Letters designating the Panel members 
will be served on the Chairman of the Panel and on the parties to the 
appeal.



Sec. 1201.173  Practices and procedures of Special Panel.

    (a) Scope. The rules in this subpart apply to proceedings before a 
Special Panel.
    (b) Suspension of rules. Unless a rule is required by statute, the 
Chairman of a Special Panel may suspend the rule, in the interest of 
expediting a decision or for other good cause shown, and may conduct the 
proceedings in a manner he or she directs. The Chairman may take this 
action at the request of a party, or on his or her own motion.
    (c) Time limit for proceedings. In accordance with 5 U.S.C. 
7702(d)(2)(A), the Special Panel will issue a decision within 45 days 
after a matter has been certified to it.
    (d) Administrative assistance to the Special Panel. (1) The Board 
and the Commission will provide the Panel with the administrative 
resources that the Chairman of the Special Panel determines are 
reasonable and necessary.
    (2) Assistance will include, but is not limited to, processing 
vouchers for pay and travel expenses.
    (3) The Board and the Commission are responsible for all 
administrative costs the Special Panel incurs, and, to the extent 
practicable, they will divide equally the costs of providing 
administrative assistance. If the Board and the Commission disagree on 
the manner in which costs are to be divided, the Chairman of the Special 
Panel will resolve the disagreement.
    (e) Maintaining the official record. The Board will maintain the 
official record of the appeal. It will transmit two copies of each 
submission that is filed to each member of the Special Panel in an 
expeditious manner.
    (f) Filing and service of pleadings. (1) The parties must file the 
original and six copies of each submission with the Clerk, Merit Systems 
Protection Board, 1120 Vermont Avenue, NW., Washington, DC 20419. The 
Office of the Clerk will serve one copy of each submission on the other 
parties.
    (2) A certificate of service specifying how and when service was 
made must accompany all submissions of the parties.

[[Page 37]]

    (3) Service may be made by mail or by personal delivery during the 
Board's normal business hours (8:30 a.m. to 5:00 p.m.). Because of the 
short statutory time limit for processing these cases, parties must file 
their submissions by overnight Express Mail, provided by the U.S. Postal 
Service, if they file their submissions by mail.
    (4) A submission filed by Express Mail is considered to have been 
filed on the date of the Express Mail Order. A submission that is 
delivered personally is considered to have been filed on the date the 
Office of the Clerk of the Board receives it.
    (g) Briefs and responsive pleadings. If the parties wish to submit 
written argument, they may file briefs with the Special Panel within 15 
days after the date of the Board's certification order. Because of the 
short statutory time limit for processing these cases, the Special Panel 
ordinarily will not permit responsive pleadings.
    (h) Oral argument. The parties have the right to present oral 
argument. Parties wishing to exercise this right must indicate this 
desire when they file their briefs or, if no briefs are filed, within 15 
days after the date of the Board's certification order. Upon receiving a 
request for argument, the Chairman of the Special Panel will determine 
the time and place for argument and the amount of time to be allowed 
each side, and he or she will provide this information to the parties.
    (i) Postargument submission. Because of the short statutory time 
limit for processing these cases, the parties may not file postargument 
submissions unless the Chairman of the Special Panel permits those 
submissions.
    (j) Procedural matters. Any procedural matters not addressed in 
these regulations will be resolved by written order of the Chairman of 
the Special Panel.



Sec. 1201.174  Enforcing the Special Panel decision.

    The Board, upon receipt of the decision of the Special Panel, will 
order the agency concerned to take any action appropriate to carry out 
the decision of the Panel. The Board's regulations regarding enforcement 
of a final order of the Board apply to this matter. These regulations 
are set out in subpart F of this part.



Sec. 1201.175  Judicial review of cases decided under 5 U.S.C. 7702.

    (a) Place and type of review. The appropriate United States district 
court is authorized to conduct all judicial review of cases decided 
under 5 U.S.C. 7702. Those cases include appeals from actions taken 
under the following provisions: Section 717(c) of the Civil Rights Act 
of 1964, as amended (42 U.S.C. 2000e-16(c)); section 15(c) of the Age 
Discrimination in Employment Act of 1967, as amended (29 U.S.C. 
633a(c)); and section 15(b) of the Fair Labor Standards Act of 1938, as 
amended (29 U.S.C. 216(b)).
    (b) Time for filing request. Regardless of any other provision of 
law, requests for judicial review of all cases decided under 5 U.S.C. 
7702 must be filed within 30 days after the appellant received notice of 
the judicially reviewable action.



          Subpart F--Enforcement of Final Decisions and Orders



Sec. 1201.181  Authority and explanation.

    (a) Under 5 U.S.C. 1204(a)(2), the Board has the authority to order 
any Federal agency or employee to comply with decisions and orders 
issued under its jurisdiction, and the authority to enforce compliance 
with its orders and decisions. The parties are expected to cooperate 
fully with each other so that compliance with the Board's orders and 
decisions can be accomplished promptly and in accordance with the laws, 
rules, and regulations that apply to individual cases. The Board's 
decisions and orders will contain a notice of the Board's enforcement 
authority.
    (b) In order to avoid unnecessary petitions under this subpart, the 
agency must inform the appellant promptly of the actions it takes to 
comply, and it must tell the appellant when it believes it has completed 
its compliance. The appellant must provide all necessary information 
that the agency requests in order to comply, and, if not otherwise 
notified, he or she should, from time to time, ask the agency about its 
progress.

[[Page 38]]



Sec. 1201.182  Petition for enforcement.

    (a) Appellate jurisdiction. Any party may petition the Board for 
enforcement of a final decision issued under the Board's appellate 
jurisdiction. The petition must be filed promptly with the regional or 
field office that issued the initial decision; a copy of it must be 
served on the other party or that party's representative; and it must 
describe specifically the reasons the petitioning party believes there 
is noncompliance. The petition also must include the date and results of 
any communications regarding compliance. Any petition for enforcement 
that is filed more than 30 days after the date of service of the 
agency's notice that it has complied must contain a statement and 
evidence showing good cause for the delay and a request for an extension 
of time for filing the petition.
    (b) Original jurisdiction. Any party seeking enforcement of a Board 
order issued under its original jurisdiction must file a petition for 
enforcement with the Clerk of the Board and must serve a copy of that 
petition on the other party or that party's representative. The petition 
must describe specifically the reasons why the petitioning party 
believes there is noncompliance.
    (c) Petition by an employee other than a party. Under 5 U.S.C. 
1204(e)(2)(B), any employee who is aggrieved by the failure of any other 
employee to comply with an order of the Board may petition the Board for 
enforcement. The Board will entertain a petition for enforcement from an 
aggrieved employee who is not a party only if the employee seeks and is 
granted party status as a permissive intervenor under Sec. 1201.34(c) of 
this part. The employee must file a motion to intervene at the time of 
filing the petition for enforcement. The petition and motion to 
intervene must be filed promptly with the regional or field office that 
issued the order or, if the order was issued by the Board, with the 
Clerk of the Board. The petitioner must serve a copy of the petition and 
motion to intervene on each party or the party's representative. The 
petition for enforcement must describe specifically why the petitioner 
believes there is noncompliance and in what way the petitioner is 
aggrieved by the noncompliance. The motion to intervene will be 
considered in accordance with Sec. 1201.34(c) of this part.

[54 FR 53504, Dec. 29, 1989, as amended at 59 FR 65235, Dec. 19, 1994]



Sec. 1201.183  Procedures for processing petitions for enforcement.

    (a) Initial Processing. (1) When a party has filed a petition for 
enforcement of a final decision, the alleged noncomplying party must 
file one of the following within 15 days of the date of service of the 
petition:
    (i) Evidence of compliance, including a narrative explanation of the 
calculation of back pay and other benefits, and supporting documents;
    (ii) Evidence as described in paragraph (a)(1)(i) of this section of 
the compliance actions that the party has completed, and a statement of 
the actions that are in process and the actions that remain to be taken, 
along with a reasonable schedule for full compliance; or
    (iii) A statement showing good cause for the failure to comply 
completely with the decision of the Board.

The party that filed the petition may respond to that submission within 
10 days after the date of service of the submission. The parties must 
serve copies of their pleadings on each other as required under 
Sec. 1201.26(b)(2) of this part.
    (2) If the agency is the alleged noncomplying party, it shall submit 
the name and address of the agency official charged with complying with 
the Board's order, even if the agency asserts it has fully complied. In 
the absence of this information, the Board will presume that the highest 
ranking appropriate agency official who is not appointed by the 
President by and with the consent of the Senate is charged with 
compliance.
    (3) The judge may convene a hearing if one is necessary to resolve 
matters at issue.
    (4) If the judge finds that there has been compliance or a good 
faith effort to take all actions required to be in compliance with the 
final decision, he or she will state those findings in a decision. That 
decision will be subject to the procedures for petitions for review by 
the Board under subpart C of this

[[Page 39]]

part, and subject to judicial review under Sec. 1201.119 of this part.
    (5) If the judge finds that:
    (i) The alleged noncomplying party has not taken, or has not made a 
good faith effort to take, any action required to be in compliance with 
the final decision, or
    (ii) The party has taken or made a good faith effort to take one or 
more, but not all, actions required to be in compliance with the final 
decision; he or she will issue a recommendation containing his or her 
findings, a statement of the actions required by the party to be in 
compliance with the final decision, and a recommendation that the Board 
enforce the final decision.
    (6) If a recommendation described under paragraph (a)(5) of this 
section is issued, the alleged noncomplying party must do one of the 
following:
    (i) If it decides to take the actions required by the 
recommendation, it must submit to the Clerk of the Board, within 15 days 
after the issuance of the recommendation, evidence that it has taken 
those actions.
    (ii) If it decides not to take any of the actions required by the 
recommendation, it must file a brief supporting its nonconcurrence in 
the recommendation. The brief must be filed with the Clerk of the Board 
within 30 days after the recommendation is issued and, if it is filed by 
the agency, it must identify by name, title, and grade the agency 
official responsible for the failure to take the actions required by the 
recommendation for compliance.
    (iii) If the party decides to take one or more, but not all, actions 
required by the recommendation, it must submit both evidence of the 
actions it has taken and, with respect to the actions that it has not 
taken, a brief supporting its disagreement with the recommendation. The 
evidence and brief must be filed with the Clerk of the Board within 30 
days after issuance of the recommendation and, if it is filed by the 
agency, it must contain the identifying information required by 
paragraph (a)(6)(ii) of this section.
    (7) The petitioner may file a brief that responds to the submission 
described in paragraph (a)(6) of this section, and that asks the Board 
to review any finding in the recommendation, made under paragraph 
(a)(5)(ii) of this section, that the other party is in partial 
compliance with the final decision. The petitioner must file this brief 
with the Clerk of the Board within 20 days of the date of service of the 
submission described in paragraph (a)(6) of this section.
    (b) Consideration by the Board. (1) The Board will consider the 
recommendation, along with the submissions of the parties, promptly. 
When appropriate, the Board may require the alleged noncomplying party, 
or that party's representative, to appear before the Board to show why 
sanctions should not be imposed under 5 U.S.C. 1204(a)(2) and 
1204(e)(2)(A). The Board also may require the party or its 
representative to make this showing in writing, or to make it both 
personally and in writing.
    (2) The Board may hold a hearing on an order to show cause, or it 
may issue a decision without a hearing.
    (3) The Board's final decision on the issues of compliance is 
subject to judicial review under Sec. 1201.119 of this part.
    (c) Certification to the Comptroller General. When appropriate, the 
Board may certify to the Comptroller General of the United States, under 
5 U.S.C. 1204(e)(2)(A), that no payment is to be made to a certain 
Federal employee. This order may apply to any Federal employee, other 
than a Presidential appointee subject to confirmation by the Senate, who 
is found to be in noncompliance with the Board's order.
    (d) Effect of Special Counsel's action or failure to act. Failure by 
the Special Counsel to file a complaint under 5 U.S.C. 1215(a)(1)(C) and 
subpart D of this part will not preclude the Board from taking action 
under this subpart.



                      Subpart G--Savings Provisions



Sec. 1201.191  Savings provisions.

    (a) Civil Service Reform Act of 1978 (Pub.L. 95-454)--(1) Scope. All 
executive orders, rules and regulations relating to the Federal service 
that were in effect prior to the effective date of the Civil Service 
Reform Act shall continue in effect and be applied by the

[[Page 40]]

Board in its adjudications until modified, terminated, superseded, or 
repealed by the President, Office of Personnel Management, the Merit 
Systems Protection Board, the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission, 
or the Federal Labor Relations Authority, as appropriate.
    (2) Administrative proceedings and appeals therefrom. No provision 
of the Civil Service Reform Act shall be applied by the Board in such a 
way as to affect any administrative proceeding pending at the effective 
date of such provision. ``Pending'' is considered to encompass existing 
agency proceedings, and appeals before the Board or its predecessor 
agencies, that were subject to judicial review or under judicial review 
on January 11, 1979, the date on which the Act became effective. An 
agency proceeding is considered to exist once the employee has received 
notice of the proposed action.
    (3) Explanation. Mr. X was advised of agency's intention to remove 
him for abandonment of position, effective December 29, 1978. Twenty 
days later Mr. X appealed the agency action to the Merit Systems 
Protection Board. The Merit Systems Protection Board docketed Mr. X's 
appeal as an ``old system case,'' i.e., one to which the savings clause 
applied. The appropriate regional office processed the case, applying 
the substantive laws, rules and regulations in existence prior to the 
enactment of the Act. The decision, dated February 28, 1979, informed 
Mr. X that he is entitled to judicial review if he files a timely notice 
of appeal in the appropriate United States district court or the United 
States Court of Claims under the statute of limitations applicable when 
the adverse action was taken.
    (b) Whistleblower Protection Act of 1989 (Pub. L. 101-12)--(1) 
Scope. All orders, rules, and regulations issued by the Board and the 
Special Counsel before the effective date of the Whistleblower 
Protection Act of 1989 shall continue in effect, according to their 
terms, until modified, terminated, superseded, or repealed by the Board 
or the Special Counsel, as appropriate.
    (2) Administrative proceedings and appeals therefrom. No provision 
of the Whistleblower Protection Act of 1989 shall be applied by the 
Board in such a way as to affect any administrative proceeding pending 
at the effective date of such provision. ``Pending'' is considered to 
encompass existing agency proceedings, including personnel actions that 
were proposed, threatened, or taken before July 9, 1989, the effective 
date of the Whistleblower Protection Act of 1989, and appeals before the 
Board or its predecessor agencies that were subject to judicial review 
on that date. An agency proceeding is considered to exist once the 
employee has received notice of the proposed action.

[[Page 41]]

   Appendix I to Part 1201--Merit Systems Protection Board Appeal Form
[GRAPHIC] [TIFF OMITTED] TR19DE94.001


[[Page 42]]

[GRAPHIC] [TIFF OMITTED] TR19DE94.002



[[Page 43]]

[GRAPHIC] [TIFF OMITTED] TR19DE94.003



[[Page 44]]

[GRAPHIC] [TIFF OMITTED] TR19DE94.004



[[Page 45]]

[GRAPHIC] [TIFF OMITTED] TR19DE94.005



[[Page 46]]

[GRAPHIC] [TIFF OMITTED] TR19DE94.006



[59 FR 65236, Dec. 19, 1994]

[[Page 47]]



   Appendix II to Part 1201--Appropriate Regional or Field Office for 
                             Filing Appeals

    All submissions shall be addressed to the Regional Director, if 
submitted to a regional office, or the Chief Administrative Judge, if 
submitted to a field office, Merit Systems Protection Board, at the 
addresses listed below, according to geographic region of the employing 
agency or as required by Sec. 1201.4(d) of this part. The facsimile 
numbers listed below are TDD-capable; however, calls will be answered by 
voice before being connected to the TDD. Address of Appropriate Regional 
or Field Office and Area Served:

1. Atlanta Regional Office, 401 West Peachtree Street, N.W., 10th floor, 
Atlanta, Georgia 30308-3519, Facsimile No.: (404) 730-2767, (Alabama, 
Florida, Georgia, Mississippi, South Carolina, and Tennessee).
2. Central Regional Office, 230 South Dearborn Street, 31st floor, 
Chicago, Illinois 60604-1669, Facsimile No.: (312) 886-4231, (Illinois; 
Indiana; Iowa; Kansas City, Kansas; Kentucky; Michigan; Minnesota; 
Missouri; Ohio; and Wisconsin).
2a. Dallas Field Office, 1100 Commerce Street, Room 6F20, Dallas, Texas 
75242-9979, Facsimile No.: (214) 767-0102, (Arkansas, Louisiana, 
Oklahoma, and Texas).
3. Northeastern Regional Office, U.S. Customhouse, Room 501, Second and 
Chestnut Streets, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania 19106-2987, Facsimile No.: 
(215) 597-3456, (Delaware; Maryland--except the counties of Montgomery 
and Prince George's; New Jersey--except the counties of Bergen, Essex, 
Hudson, and Union; Pennsylvania; and West Virginia).
3a. Boston Field Office, 99 Summer Street, Suite 1810, Boston, 
Massachusetts 02110-1200, Facsimile No.: (617) 424-5708, (Connecticut, 
Maine, Massachusetts, New Hampshire, Rhode Island, and Vermont).
3b. New York Field Office, 26 Federal Plaza, Room 3137-A, New York, New 
York 10278-0022, Facsimile No.: (212) 264-1417, (New Jersey--counties of 
Bergen, Essex, Hudson, and Union; New York; Puerto Rico; and Virgin 
Islands).
4. Washington Regional Office, 5203 Leesburg Pike, Suite 1109, Falls 
Church, Virginia 22041-3473, Facsimile No.: (703) 756-7112, (Maryland--
counties of Montgomery and Prince George's; North Carolina; Virginia; 
Washington, DC; and all overseas areas not otherwise covered).
5. Western Regional Office, 250 Montgomery Street, Suite 400, 4th floor, 
San Francisco, California 94104-3401, Facsimile No.: (415) 705-2945, 
(California and Nevada).
5a. Denver Field Office, 12567 West Cedar Drive, Suite 100, Lakewood, 
Colorado 80228-2009, Facsimile No.: (303) 969-5109, (Arizona, Colorado, 
Kansas--except Kansas City, Montana, Nebraska, New Mexico, North Dakota, 
South Dakota, Utah, and Wyoming).
5b. Seattle Field Office, 915 Second Avenue, Suite 1840, Seattle, 
Washington 98174-1056, Facsimile No.: (206) 220-7982, (Alaska, Hawaii, 
Idaho, Oregon, Washington, and Pacific overseas areas).

[61 FR 4586, Feb. 7, 1996]

Appendix III to Part 1201--Approved Hearing Locations By Regional Office

                         Atlanta Regional Office

Birmingham, Alabama
Huntsville, Alabama
Mobile, Alabama
Montgomery, Alabama
Jacksonville, Florida
Miami, Florida
Orlando, Florida
Pensacola, Florida
Tallahassee, Florida
Tampa/St. Petersburg, Florida
Atlanta, Georgia
Augusta, Georgia
Macon, Georgia
Savannah, Georgia
Jackson, Mississippi
Charleston, South Carolina
Columbia, South Carolina
Chattanooga, Tennessee
Knoxville, Tennessee
Memphis, Tennessee
Nashville, Tennessee

                         Central Regional Office

Chicago, Illinois
Indianapolis, Indiana
Davenport, Iowa/Rock Island, Illinois
Des Moines, Iowa
Lexington, Kentucky
Louisville, Kentucky
Detroit, Michigan
Minneapolis/St. Paul, Minnesota
Kansas City, Missouri
Springfield, Missouri
St. Louis, Missouri
Cleveland, Ohio
Cincinnati, Ohio
Columbus, Ohio
Dayton, Ohio
Milwaukee, Wisconsin

                           Dallas Field Office

Little Rock, Arkansas
Alexandria, Louisiana
New Orleans, Louisiana
Oklahoma City, Oklahoma
Tulsa, Oklahoma
Corpus Christi, Texas
Dallas, Texas
El Paso, Texas
Houston, Texas

[[Page 48]]

San Antonio, Texas
Temple, Texas
Texarkana, Texas

                      Northeastern Regional Office

Dover, Delaware
Baltimore, Maryland
Trenton, New Jersey
Harrisburg, Pennsylvania
Philadelphia, Pennsylvania
Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania
Wilkes-Barre, Pennsylvania
Charleston, West Virginia
Morgantown, West Virginia

                           Boston Field Office

Hartford, Connecticut
New Haven, Connecticut
Bangor, Maine
Portland, Maine
Boston, Massachusetts
Manchester, New Hampshire
Portsmouth, New Hampshire
Providence, Rhode Island
Burlington, Vermont

                          New York Field Office

Newark, New Jersey
Albany, New York
Buffalo, New York
New York, New York
Syracuse, New York
San Juan, Puerto Rico

                       Washington Regional Office

Washington, DC
Asheville, North Carolina
Charlotte, North Carolina
Raleigh, North Carolina
Jacksonville, North Carolina
Bailey's Crossroads, Falls Church, Virginia
Norfolk, Virginia
Richmond, Virginia
Roanoke, Virginia

                         Western Regional Office

Fresno, California
Los Angeles, California
Sacramento, California
San Diego, California
San Francisco, California
Santa Barbara, California
Las Vegas, Nevada
Reno, Nevada

                           Denver Field Office

Phoenix, Arizona
Tucson, Arizona
Denver, Colorado
Grand Junction, Colorado
Pueblo, Colorado
Wichita, Kansas
Billings, Montana
Great Falls, Montana
Missoula, Montana
Omaha, Nebraska
Albuquerque, New Mexico
Bismarck, North Dakota
Fargo, North Dakota
Rapid City, South Dakota
Sioux Falls, South Dakota
Salt Lake City, Utah
Casper, Wyoming

                          Seattle Field Office

Anchorage, Alaska
Honolulu, Hawaii
Boise, Idaho
Pocatello, Idaho
Medford, Oregon
Portland, Oregon
Seattle, Washington
Spokane, Washington
Richland, Kennewick, and Pasco, Washington

[61 FR 4586, Feb. 7, 1996]

    Appendix IV to Part 1201--Sample Declaration Under 28 U.S.C. 1746

                               Declaration

    I, ________________________, do hereby declare:
    I declare under penalty of perjury under the laws of the United 
States of America that the foregoing is true and correct.
Executed on
_______________________________________________________________________
Date

_______________________________________________________________________
Signature



PART 1202--STATUTORY REVIEW BOARD--Table of Contents




    Authority: 5 U.S.C. 1204.



Sec. 1202.1  Designating Chairman of Statutory Review Board.

    At the written request of the Department of Transportation, the 
Chairman of the Board will designate a presiding official of the Board 
to serve as the Chairman of any Board of Review established by the 
Secretary of Transportation under 5 U.S.C. 3383(b) to review certain 
actions to remove air traffic controllers.

[54 FR 28658, July 6, 1989]

[[Page 49]]



PART 1203--PROCEDURES FOR REVIEW OF RULES AND REGULATIONS OF THE OFFICE OF PERSONNEL MANAGEMENT--Table of Contents




                                 General

Sec.
1203.1  Scope; application of part 1201, subpart B.
1203.2  Definitions.

                          Procedures for Review

1203.11  Request for regulation review.
1203.12  Granting or denying the request for regulation review.
1203.13  Filing pleadings.
1203.14  Serving documents.
1203.15  Review of regulations on the Board's own motion.
1203.16  Proceedings.

                           Order of the Board

1203.21  Final order of the Board.
1203.22  Enforcement of order.

    Authority: 5 U.S.C. 1204(a), 1204(f), and 1204(h).

    Source: 54 FR 23632, June 2, 1989, unless otherwise noted.

                                 General



Sec. 1203.1  Scope; application of part 1201, subpart B.

    (a) General. This part applies to the Board's review, under 5 U.S.C. 
1204(a)(4) and 1204(f), of any rules or regulations (``regulations'') 
issued by the Office of Personnel Management (OPM). It applies to the 
Board's review of the way in which an agency implements regulations, as 
well as to its review of the validity of the regulations on their face.
    (b) Application of 5 CFR part 1201, subparts B and C. (1) Where 
appropriate, and unless the Board's regulations provide otherwise, the 
Board may apply the provisions of 5 CFR part 1201, subpart B to 
proceedings conducted under this part. It may do so on its own motion or 
on the motion of a party to these proceedings.
    (2) The following provisions of 5 CFR part 1201, subparts B and C do 
not apply to proceedings conducted under this part:
    (i) Sections 1201.21 through 1201.27 which concern petitions for 
appeal of agency actions, and the pleadings that are filed in connection 
with those petitions; and
    (ii) Sections 1201.111 through 1201.119 which concern final 
decisions of presiding officials, and petitions for Board review of 
those decisions.

[54 FR 23632, June 2, 1989, as amended at 54 FR 28658, July 6, 1989]



Sec. 1203.2  Definitions.

    (a) Invalid regulation means a regulation that has been issued by 
OPM, and that, on its face, would require an employee to commit a 
prohibited personnel practice if any agency implemented the regulation.
    (b) Invalidly implemented regulation means a regulation, issued by 
OPM, whose implementation by an agency has required an employee to 
commit a prohibited personnel practice. A valid regulation may be 
invalidly implemented.
    (c) Merit system principles are the principles stated in 5 U.S.C. 
2301(b)(1) through 2301(b)(9).
    (d) Pleadings are written submissions containing claims, 
allegations, arguments, or evidence. They include briefs, motions, 
requests for regulation review, responses, replies, and attachments that 
are submitted in connection with proceedings under this part.
    (e) Prohibited personnel practices are the impermissible actions 
described in 5 U.S.C. 2302(b)(1) through 2302(b)(11).
    (f) Regulation review means the procedure under which the Board, 
under 5 U.S.C. 1204(f), reviews regulations issued by OPM on their face, 
or reviews those regulations as they have been implemented, or both, in 
order to determine whether the regualtions require any employee to 
commit a prohibited personnel practice.
    (g) Request for regulation review means a request that the Board 
review a regulation issued by OPM.

[54 FR 23632, June 2, 1989, as amended at 54 FR 28658, July 6, 1989]

                          Procedures for Review



Sec. 1203.11  Request for regulation review.

    (a) An interested person or the Special Counsel may submit a request 
for regulation review.
    (b) Contents of request. (1) Each request for regulation review must 
include the following information:

[[Page 50]]

    (i) The name, address, and signature of the requester's 
representative or, if the requester has no representative, of the 
requester;
    (ii) A citation identifying the regulation being challenged;
    (iii) A statement (along with any relevant documents) describing in 
detail the reasons why the regulation would require an employee to 
commit a prohibited personnel practice; or the reasons why the 
implementation of the regulation requires an employee to commit a 
prohibited personnel practice;
    (iv) Specific identification of the prohibited personnel practice at 
issue; and
    (v) A description of the action the requester would like the Board 
to take.
    (2) If the prohibited personnel practice at issue is one prohibited 
by 5 U.S.C. 2302(b)(11), the request must include the following 
additional information:
    (i) Identification of the law or regulation that allegedly would be 
or has been violated, and how it would be or has been violated; and
    (ii) Identification of the merit system principles at issue and an 
explanation of the way in which the law or regulation at issue 
implements or directly concerns those principles.



Sec. 1203.12  Granting or denying the request for regulation review.

    (a) The Board, in its sole discretion, may grant or deny an 
interested person's request for regulation review. It will grant a 
request for regulation review that the Special Counsel submits. It will 
not, however, review a regulation before its effective date.
    (b) After considering the request for regulation review, the Board 
will issue an order granting or denying the request in whole or in part. 
Orders in which the Board grants the request, in whole or in part, will 
identify the agency or agencies involved, if any. They also will include 
the following:
    (1) A citation identifying the regulation being challenged;
    (2) A description of the issues to be addressed;
    (3) The docket number assigned to the proceedings; and
    (4) Instructions covering the review proceedings, including 
information regarding the time limits for filing submissions related to 
the request.

[54 FR 23632, June 2, 1989, as amended at 56 FR 41749, Aug. 23, 1991]



Sec. 1203.13   Filing pleadings.

    (a) Place to file and number of copies. One original and three 
copies of each pleading must be filed with the Office of the Clerk, U.S. 
Merit Systems Protection Board, 1120 Vermont Avenue, NW., Washington, DC 
20419. In addition, parties to a proceeding under this part must serve 
their pleadings on each other in accordance with Sec. 1203.14 of this 
part. The Office of the Clerk will make all pleadings available for 
review by the public.
    (b) Time limits. (1) A request for regulation review may be filed 
any time after the effective date of the regulation.
    (2) A response to a request for regulation review, whether the 
response supports or opposes the request, must be filed within the time 
period provided in the Board order granting the request for review.
    (3) A reply to a response may be filed within 10 days after the 
response is filed. The reply may address only those matters raised in 
the response that were not addressed in the request for regulation 
review.
    (4) Motions may be filed at any time during the regulation review. 
The filing of a motion will not delay the acting of the Board unless the 
Board orders a postponement. The Board may rule immediately on a motion 
for an extension of time or a continuance if circumstances make 
consideration of others' views regarding the motion impracticable.
    (5) Submissions opposing motions must be filed within five days 
after the opposing party receives the motion.
    (c) Additional pleadings. The Board will consider pleadings in 
addition to those mentioned above only if the Board requests them, or if 
it grants a request that it consider them.
    (d) Method and date of filing. Documents may be filed with the 
Office of the Clerk either by mail, by personal delivery, by facsimile, 
or by commercial overnight delivery. If the document was submitted by 
certified mail, it is considered to have been filed on

[[Page 51]]

the mailing date. If it was submitted by regular mail, it is presumed to 
have been filed five days before the Office of the Clerk receives it, in 
the absence of evidence contradicting that presumption. If it was 
delivered personally, it is considered to have been filed on the date 
the Office of the Clerk receives it. If it was submitted by facsimile, 
the date of the facsimile is considered to be the filing date. If it was 
submitted by commercial overnight delivery, the date of filing is the 
date it was delivered to the commercial overnight delivery service.
    (e) Extensions of time. The Board will grant a request for extension 
of time only when good cause is shown.

[54 FR 23632, June 21, 1989, as amended at 59 FR 65242, Dec. 19, 1994]



Sec. 1203.14   Serving documents.

    (a) Parties. In every case, the person requesting regulation review 
must serve a copy of the request on the Director of OPM. In addition, 
when the implementation of a regulation is being challenged, the 
requester must also serve a copy of the request on the head of the 
implementing agency. A copy of all other pleadings must be served, by 
the person submitting the pleading, on each other party to the 
proceeding.
    (b) Method of serving documents. Pleadings may be served on parties 
by mail, by personal delivery, by facsimile, or by commercial overnight 
delivery. Service by mail is accomplished by mailing the pleading to 
each party or representative, at the party's or representative's last 
known address. Service by facsimile is accomplished by transmitting the 
pleading by facsimile to each party or representative. Service by 
personal delivery or by commercial overnight delivery is accomplished by 
delivering the pleading to the business office or home of each party or 
representative and leaving it with the party or representative, or with 
a responsible person at that address. Regardless of the method of 
service, the party serving the document must submit to the Board, along 
with the pleading, a certificate of service as proof that the document 
was served on the other parties or their representatives. The 
certificate of service must list the names and addresses of the persons 
on whom the pleading was served, must state the date on which the 
pleading was served, must state the method (i.e., mail, personal 
delivery, facsimile, or commercial overnight delivery) by which service 
was accomplished, and must be signed by the person responsible for 
accomplishing service.

[54 FR 23632, June 21, 1989, as amended at 59 FR 65242, Dec. 19, 1994]



Sec. 1203.15  Review of regulations on the Board's own motion.

    The Board may, from time to time, review a regulation on its own 
motion under 5 U.S.C. 1204(f)(1)(A). When it does so, it will publish 
notice of the review in the Federal Register.

[54 FR 28658, July 6, 1989]



Sec. 1203.16   Proceedings.

    The Board has substantial discretion in conducting a regulation 
review under this part. It may conduct a review on the basis of the 
pleadings alone, or on the basis of the pleadings along with any or all 
of the following:
    (a) Additional written comments;
    (b) Oral argument;
    (c) Evidence presented at a hearing; and/or
    (d) Evidence gathered through any other appropriate procedures that 
are conducted in accordance with law.

                           Order of the Board



Sec. 1203.21   Final order of the Board.

    (a) Invalid regulation. If the Board determines that a regulation is 
invalid on its face, in whole or in part, it will require any agency 
affected by the order to stop complying with the regulation, in whole or 
in part. In addition, it may order other remedial action that it finds 
necessary.
    (b) Invalidly implemented regulation. If the Board determines that a 
regulation has been implemented invalidly, in whole or in part, it will 
require affected agencies to terminate the invalid implementation.
    (c) Corrective action. The Board may order corrective action 
necessary to ensure compliance with its order. The action it may order 
includes, but is not limited to, the following:

[[Page 52]]

    (1) Cancellation of any personnel action related to the prohibited 
personnel practice;
    (2) Rescission of any action related to the cancelled personnel 
action;
    (3) Removal of any reference, record, or document within an 
employee's official personnel folder that is related to the prohibited 
personnel practice;
    (4) Award of back pay and benefits;
    (5) Award of attorney fees;
    (6) Other remedial measures to reverse the effects of a prohibited 
personnel practice; and
    (7) The agency's submission of a verified report of its compliance 
with the Board's order.



Sec. 1203.22  Enforcement of order.

    (a) Any party may ask the Board to enforce a final order it has 
issued under this part. The request may be made by filing a petition for 
enforcement with the Office of the Clerk of the Board and by serving a 
copy of the petition on each party to the regulation review. The 
petition must include specific reasons why the petitioning party 
believes that there has been a failure to comply with the Board's order.
    (b) The Board will take all action necessary to determine whether 
there has been compliance with its final order. If it determines that 
there has been a failure to comply with the order, it will take actions 
necessary to obtain compliance.
    (c) Where appropriate, the Board may initiate the enforcement 
procedures described in 5 CFR 1201.183(c).



PART 1204--AVAILABILITY OF OFFICIAL INFORMATION--Table of Contents




                      Subpart A--Purpose and Scope

Sec.
1204.1  Purpose.
1204.2  Scope.

  Subpart B--Procedures for Disclosure of Records under the Freedom of 
                             Information Act

1204.11  Requests for access to Board records.
1204.12  Fees.
1204.13  Denials.
1204.14  Requests for access to confidential commercial information.

                           Subpart C--Appeals

1204.21  Submission.
1204.22  Decisions on appeal.

    Authority: 5 U.S.C. 552 and 1204, Pub. L. 99-570 and E.O. 12600.

    Source: 54 FR 28658, July 6, 1989, unless otherwise noted.



                      Subpart A--Purpose and Scope



Sec. 1204.1  Purpose.

    This part implements the Freedom of Information Act (FOIA), 5 U.S.C. 
552, by prescribing the procedures to follow when requesting information 
from the Board, and by stating the fees that will be charged for that 
information.



Sec. 1204.2  Scope.

    (a) For the purpose of this part, the term information has the same 
meaning as the term records in Sec. 552 of title 5, United States Code. 
All written requests for information that are not processed under part 
1205 of the Board's regulations will be processed under this part. The 
Board may continue, without complying with the provisions of this part, 
to furnish the public with the information it customarily has furnished 
in the regular course of performing its official duties, unless 
furnishing the information would violate the Privacy Act of 1974, 5 
U.S.C. 552a, or another law.
    (b) When the subject of the record, or the subject's authorized 
representative, requests a record from a Privacy Act system of records, 
as that term is defined by 5 U.S.C. 552a(a)(5), and the Board retrieves 
the record by the subject's name or other personal identifier, the Board 
will handle the request under the procedures and fees applicable in 5 
CFR part 1205. When a third party makes a request for access to those 
records, without the express written consent of the subject of the 
record, the Board will handle the request under this part.
    (c) When a party to an appeal requests a copy of a tape recording or 
transcript (if one has been prepared) of a hearing that the Board or a 
presiding official of the Board conducted under part 1201 or part 1209 
of this chapter, the Board will handle the request under 5 CFR 1201.53. 
When someone

[[Page 53]]

other than a party to the appeal makes this request, the Board will 
handle the request under this part.
    (d) In accordance with 5 U.S.C. 552(a)(2), the Board's final 
opinions and orders (including concurring and dissenting opinions), 
those statements of policy and interpretations adopted by the Board and 
that are not published in the Federal Register, and administrative staff 
manuals and instructions to staff that affect a member of the public are 
available for public inspection and copying in the Board's Headquarters 
Library, Room 828, 1120 Vermont Avenue NW., Washington, DC 20419.



  Subpart B--Procedures for Disclosure of Records Under the Freedom of 
                             Information Act



Sec. 1204.11  Requests for access to Board records.

    (a) Submission of a request. A person may request a record of the 
Board under this part by writing to the office that maintains the 
record. If the requester has reason to believe that the records in 
question are located in a regional office, the request must be submitted 
to that office. A list of the addresses of the Board's 11 regional 
offices appears in appendix II of 5 CFR part 1201. Other requests must 
be addressed to the Clerk of the Board, 1120 Vermont Avenue NW., 
Washington, DC 20419. Requests submitted under this part must be clearly 
marked ``Freedom of Information Act Request'' on both the envelope and 
the request.
    (b) Form. A request must describe the records sought in enough 
detail to enable Board personnel to locate the records with no more than 
a reasonable effort. Wherever possible, a request must include specific 
information about each record sought, such as the date, title or name, 
author, recipient, and subject matter of the record. In addition, if the 
request seeks records pertaining to cases decided by the Board, it must 
indicate the title of the case, the MSPB docket number, and the date of 
the decision.
    (c) Time limits and decisions. The Board will make a decision on a 
request within 10 workdays after the regional office or the Office of 
the Clerk receives it, except under ``unusual circumstances'' as that 
term is defined at 5 U.S.C. 552(a)(6)(B). Where ``unusual 
circumstances'' exist, the Board may extend the time period for making a 
decision on the request by no more than 10 additional working days. When 
it does so, it will provide written notification of the extension to the 
requester. If a request or an appeal is not properly labeled or is 
submitted to the wrong office, the time for processing the request will 
begin when the proper office receives it. The Clerk of the Board or the 
Director of any of the Board's regional offices may make a decision on a 
request.



Sec. 1204.12  Fees.

    (a) General. The Board will charge the requester fees for services 
provided in responding to and processing requests for information. Those 
fees will be charged according to the schedule contained in paragraph 
(d) of this section, and will recover the full allowable direct costs 
that the Board incurs. Fees may be charged for time spent searching for 
information, even if the Board fails to locate responsive records, and 
even if it determines that the information is exempt from disclosure. It 
will not charge the requester, however, if the fee for any request is 
less than $25 (the cost to the Board of processing and collecting the 
fee).
    (b) Definitions. (1) The term direct costs means those costs that an 
agency actually incurs in searching for and duplicating (and in the case 
of commercial requesters, reviewing) documents to respond to a FOIA 
request. Direct costs include, for example, the salary of the employee 
performing work (the basic rate of pay for the employee plus 16 percent 
of that rate to cover benefits) and the cost of operating duplicating 
machinery. Overhead expenses, such as costs of space and of heating or 
lighting the facility in which the records are stored, are not included 
in direct costs.
    (2) The term search includes all time spent looking for material in 
response to a request, including page-by-page or line-by-line 
identification of material within documents. Searches will be done in 
the most efficient and least expensive manner in order to minimize

[[Page 54]]

costs for both the Board and the requester. Searches may be done 
manually or by computer using existing programming.
    (3) The term duplication means the process of making a copy of a 
document necessary to respond to a FOIA request. Those copies can take 
the form of paper, microform, audio-visual materials, or machine-
readable documentation (e.g., magnetic tape or disk), among others. The 
copy provided will be in a form that is reasonably usable by requesters.
    (4) The term review includes the process of examining documents to 
determine whether any portion of them may be exempt from disclosure 
under the FOIA, when the documents have been located in response to a 
request that is for a commercial use. The term also includes processing 
any documents for disclosure, e.g., doing all that is necessary to edit 
them and otherwise prepare them for release. Review does not include 
time spent resolving general legal or policy issues regarding whether 
exemptions apply.
    (5) The term commercial use request means a request from or on 
behalf of one who seeks information for a use or purpose that furthers 
the commercial, trade, or profit interests of the requester or the 
person on whose behalf the request is made. In determining whether a 
requester properly belongs in this category, the Board will determine 
the use the requester will make of the documents requested. Moreover, 
where the Board has reasonable cause to doubt the use a requester will 
make of the records sought, or where that use is not clear from the 
request itself, the Board will seek additional clarification before 
assigning the request to a specific category.
    (6) The term educational institution means a preschool, a public or 
private elementary or secondary school, an institution of graduate 
higher education, an institution of undergraduate higher education, an 
institution of professional education, or an institution of vocational 
education that operates a program or programs of scholarly research.
    (7) The term noncommercial scientific institution means an 
institution that is not operated on a ``commercial'' basis as that term 
is used above, and that is operated solely for the purpose of conducting 
scientific research whose results are not intended to promote any 
particular product or industry.
    (8) The term representative of the news media means any person 
actively gathering news for an entity that is organized and operated to 
publish or broadcast news to the public. The term news means information 
that concerns current events or that would be of current interest to the 
public.
    (c) Categories of requesters. There are four categories of FOIA 
requesters: Commercial use requesters; educational and noncommercial 
scientific institutions; representatives of the news media; and all 
other requesters. To be included in the category of educational and 
noncommercial scientific institutions, requesters must show that the 
request is authorized by a qualifying institution and that they are 
seeking the records not for a commercial use, but in furtherance of 
scholarly or scientific research. To be included in the news media 
category, a requester must meet the definition in paragraph (b)(8) of 
this section and the request must not be made for a commercial use. To 
avoid commercial use charges, requesters must show that they should be 
included in a category or categories other than that of commercial use 
requesters. The board will determine the categories in which to place 
requesters for fee purposes. It will make these determinations based on 
information provided by the requesters and information otherwise known 
to the Board.
    (d) Charges. The Board will provide all requesters, except 
commercial use requesters as that term is defined above, the first 100 
pages (paper copies of standard agency size) of duplication and the 
first two hours of search time without charge.
    (1) When the Board receives a request:
    (i) From a commercial use requester, it will assess charges that 
recover the full direct costs for searching for the information 
requested, reviewing it for release at the initial request stage, 
reviewing it after an appeal to determine whether other exemptions not 
considered prior to the appeal apply to it, and duplicating it;

[[Page 55]]

    (ii) From an educational and noncommercial scientific institution 
or, to the extent duplication exceeds 100 pages, from a representative 
of the news media, it will assess only charges for the cost of 
duplication of the requested information;
    (iii) From all other requesters, to the extent reproduction exceeds 
100 pages and search time exceeds 2 hours, it will assess fees to 
recover the full direct cost of searching for and duplicating requested 
records.
    (2) When the Board reasonably believes that a requester or group of 
requesters is attempting to divide a request into a series of requests 
in order to evade the assessment of fees, the Board will combine the 
requests and charge fees accordingly. The Board will not combine 
multiple requests on unrelated subjects from one requester.
    (3) When the Board determines that charges for a request are likely 
to exceed $250, the Board will require the requester to provide an 
advance payment of the entire fee before continuing to process the 
request.
    (4) When a requester has an outstanding fee charge or has failed 
previously to pay a fee on time, the Board will require the requester to 
pay any outstanding amount owed, and to make an advance payment of the 
full amount of the estimated fee before the Board begins to process a 
new or pending request from that requester, and before it applies 
administrative time limits for making a determination on the new or 
pending request.
    (e) Fee schedule. (1) Fees for document searches for records will be 
charged at a rate of $3.75 for each quarter of an hour.
    (2) Fees for computer searches for records will be charged at a rate 
of 90 cents for each computer minute.
    (3) Fees for review at the initial administrative level to determine 
whether records or portions of records are exempt from disclosure, and 
for review after an appeal to determine whether the records are exempt 
on other legal grounds, will be assessed, for commercial use requests, 
at the rate of $8.50 an hour.
    (4) Fees for paper copy duplication will represent the reasonable 
direct costs to the Board of making copies, taking into account the 
salary of the operator, as well as the cost of the reproduction 
machinery. Based on these criteria, the Board has determined that the 
fee for photocopying records is 10 cents a page, the fee for duplicating 
audio tapes is $5.75 a cassette tape, the fee for computer printouts is 
10 cents a page, the fee for records produced on magnetic computer tapes 
is $21 a tape, and the fee for records produced on computer diskettes is 
$2.70 a diskette. When the Board estimates that duplication costs will 
exceed $25, it will notify the requester of the estimated amount unless 
the requester has indicated in advance a willingness to pay an equal or 
higher amount.
    (f) Fee waivers. (1) Upon request, the Clerk of the Board or 
regional director, as appropriate, will furnish information without 
charge or at reduced charges if it is established that disclosure ``is 
in the public interest because it is likely to contribute significantly 
to public understanding of the operations or activities of the 
government.'' Factors on which this decision will be based include:
    (i) The subject of the request: Whether the subject of the requested 
records concerns the operations or activities of the government;
    (ii) The informative value of the information to be disclosed: 
Whether the disclosure is likely to contribute to an understanding of 
government operations or activities;
    (iii) Whether disclosure of the requested information is likely to 
contribute to public understanding of the subject of the disclosure; and
    (iv) The significance of the contribution the disclosure would make 
to public understanding of government operations or activities.
    (2) If information is to be furnished without charge or at reduced 
rates, the requester must also establish that disclosure of the 
information is not primarily in the commercial interest of the 
requester. Factors on which this decision will be based include:
    (i) Whether the requester has a commercial interest that would be 
furthered by the requested disclosure; and, if so,

[[Page 56]]

    (ii) Whether the identified commercial interest of the requester is 
sufficiently large, in comparison with the public interest in 
disclosure, that disclosure is primarily in the commercial interest of 
the requester.
    (3) The requester has the burden of establishing eligibility for a 
waiver of fees or for reduced fees. The denial of a request for waiver 
of fees may be appealed under subpart C of this part.



Sec. 1204.13  Denials.

    A denial of a request for reduced fees or of a request for waiver of 
fees, or denial of a request for a record, in whole or in part, will be 
made in writing, will state the reasons for the denial, and will notify 
the requester of the right to appeal the denial.



Sec. 1204.14  Requests for access to confidential commercial information.

    (a) General. Confidential commercial information provided to the 
Board by a business submitter will not be disclosed in response to a 
Freedom of Information Act request except in accordance with this 
section.
    (b) Definitions. (1) The term confidential commercial information 
means records provided to the government by a submitter that arguably 
contain material exempt from release under Exemption 4 of the Freedom of 
Information Act, 5 U.S.C. 552(b)(4), because disclosure could reasonably 
be expected to cause substantial competitive harm.
    (2) The term submitter means any person or entity who provides 
confidential commercial information to the government. The term 
``submitter'' includes, but is not limited to corporations, state 
governments, and foreign governments.
    (c) Notice to business submitters. The Board will provide a business 
submitter with prompt written notice of a request encompassing its 
confidential commercial information whenever that action is required 
under paragraph (d) of this section, and except as provided in paragraph 
(h) of this section. This written notice will either describe the exact 
nature of the confidential information requested or will provide copies 
of the records or portions of records containing the commercial 
information.
    (d) When initial notice is required. (1) With respect to 
confidential commercial information submitted to the Board before 
January 1, 1988, the Board will give the business submitter notice of a 
request whenever:
    (i) The information is less than 10 years old; or
    (ii) The Board has reason to believe that disclosure of the 
information could reasonably be expected to cause substantial 
competitive harm.
    (2) With respect to confidential commercial information submitted to 
the Board on or after January 1, 1988, the Board will give notice to the 
business submitter whenever:
    (i) The business submitter has designated the information in good 
faith as commercially or financially sensitive information; or
    (ii) The Board has reason to believe that disclosure of the 
information could reasonably be expected to cause substantial 
competitive harm.
    (3) Notice of a request for commercially confidential information 
submitted before January 1, 1988, is required for a period of not more 
than 10 years after the date on which the information is submitted 
unless the business submitter requests, and provides justification for, 
a longer specific notice period. Whenever possible, the submitter's 
claim of confidentiality must be supported by a statement or 
certification, by an officer or authorized representative of the 
company, that the information in question is in fact confidential 
commercial information and has not been disclosed to the public.
    (e) Opportunity to object to disclosure. Through the notice 
described in paragraph (c) of this section, the Board will afford a 
business submitter a reasonable period within which to provide a 
detailed statement of any objection to disclosure. The statement must 
specify all grounds for withholding any of the information under any 
exemption of the Freedom of Information Act. In addition, in the case of 
Exemption 4, the statement must demonstrate why the information is 
alleged to be a trade secret, or to be commercial or financial 
information that is privileged or confidential. Information a business 
submitter provides under this paragraph

[[Page 57]]

may itself be subject to disclosure under the Freedom of Information 
Act.
    (f) Notice of intent to disclose information. The Board will 
consider carefully a business submitter's objections and specific 
grounds for claiming that the information should not be disclosed before 
determining whether to disclose confidential commercial information. 
Whenever the Board decides to disclose confidential commerical 
information over the objection of a business submitter, it will forward 
to the business submitter a written notice that includes:
    (1) A statement of the reasons for which the business submitter's 
disclosure objections were not sufficient;
    (2) A description of the confidential commercial information to be 
disclosed; and
    (3) A specified disclosure date. The Board will forward the notice 
of intent to disclose the information a reasonable number of days, as 
circumstances permit, before the specified date upon which disclosure is 
expected. It will forward a copy of the disclosure notice to the 
requester at the same time.
    (g) Notice of Freedom of Information Act lawsuit. Whenever a 
requester files a lawsuit seeking to compel disclosure of business 
information covered by paragraph (d) of this section, the Board will 
notify the business submitter promptly.
    (h) Exceptions to notice requirements. The notice requirements of 
this section do not apply when:
    (1) The Board determines that the information should not be 
disclosed;
    (2) The information lawfully has been published or otherwise made 
available to the public;
    (3) Disclosure of the information is required by law (other than 5 
U.S.C. 552); or
    (4) The disclosure is required by an agency rule that:
    (i) Was adopted pursuant to notice and public comment;
    (ii) Specifies narrow classes of records submitted to the agency 
that are to be released under the Freedom of Information Act; or
    (iii) Provides in exceptional circumstances for notice when the 
submitter provides written justification, at the time the information is 
submitted or a reasonable time thereafter, that disclosure of the 
information could reasonably be expected to cause substantial 
competitive harm.
    (5) The information requested is not designated by the submitter as 
exempt from disclosure in accordance with agency regulations promulgated 
pursuant to this section, when the submitter has an opportunity to do so 
at the time of submission of the information or a reasonable time 
thereafter, unless the agency has substantial reason to believe that 
disclosure of the information would result in competitive harm; or
    (6) The designation made by the submitter in accordance with Board 
regulations appears obviously frivolous; except that, in such case, the 
Board must provide the submitter with written notice of any final 
administrative disclosure determination within a reasonable period prior 
to the specified disclosure date.



                           Subpart C--Appeals



Sec. 1204.21  Submission.

    A person may appeal a denial by the Clerk of the Board, or by any 
regional director, of access to agency records, waiver of fees, or 
reduction of fees. The appeal must be filed with the Chairman, Merit 
Systems Protection Board, 1120 Vermont Avenue NW., Washington, DC 20419. 
Any appeal must include a copy of the initial request, a copy of the 
letter denying the request, and a statement of the reasons why the 
appellant believes the denying official erred.

[55 FR 39911, Oct. 1, 1990, as amended at 59 FR 65243, Dec. 19, 1994]



Sec. 1204.22  Decisions on appeal.

    Decisions on an appeal will be made within 20 workdays after the 
appeal is received. Each decision will be in writing and, if the denial 
of access to records is upheld, will contain the reasons for the 
decision, as well as information about the appellant's right to seek 
judicial review of the denial.

[[Page 58]]



PART 1205--PRIVACY ACT REGULATIONS--Table of Contents




                      Subpart A--General Provisions

Sec.
1205.1  Purpose.
1205.2  Policy and scope.
1205.3  Definitions.
1205.4  Disclosure of Privacy Act records.

               Subpart B--Procedures for Obtaining Records

1205.11  Access to Board records.
1205.12  Time limits and determinations.
1205.13  Identification.
1205.14  Granting access.
1205.15  Denying access.
1205.16  Fees.

                     Subpart C--Amendment of Records

1205.21  Request for amendment.
1205.22  Action on request.
1205.23  Time limits.

                           Subpart D--Appeals

1205.31  Submitting appeal.
1205.32  Decision on appeal.

    Authority: 5 U.S.C. 552a and 1204

    Source: 54 FR 28662, July 6, 1989, unless otherwise noted.



                      Subpart A--General Provisions



Sec. 1205.1  Purpose.

    This subpart implements the Privacy Act of 1974, 5 U.S.C. 552a, 
(``the Act'') by prescribing the procedures by which individuals may 
determine the existence of, seek access to, and request amendment of 
Board records concerning themselves, and by stating the requirements 
that apply to Board employees' use and dissemination of those records.



Sec. 1205.2  Policy and scope.

    The Board's policy is to apply these regulations to all records that 
can be retrieved from a system of records under the Board's control by 
using an individual's name or by using a number, symbol, or other means 
of identifying the individual. These regulations, however, do not govern 
the rights of parties in adversary proceedings before the Board to 
obtain discovery from adverse parties; those rights are governed by part 
1201 and part 1209 of this chapter. These regulations also are not 
intended to permit the alteration, either before or after the Board has 
issued a decision on an appeal, of evidence presented during the Board's 
adjudication of the appeal.



Sec. 1205.3  Definitions.

    The definitions of 5 U.S.C. 552a apply to this part. In addition, as 
used in this part:
    (a) Inquiry means a request by an individual regarding whether the 
Board has a record that pertains to that individual.
    (b) Request for access means a request by an individual to inspect 
or copy a record.
    (c) Request for amendment means a request by an individual to change 
the substance of a particular record by addition, deletion, or other 
correction.
    (d) Requester means the individual requesting access to or amendment 
of a record. The individual may be either the person to whom the 
requested record pertains, a legal guardian acting on behalf of the 
individual, or a representative designated by that individual.



Sec. 1205.4  Disclosure of Privacy Act records.

    (a) Except as provided in 5 U.S.C. 552a(b), the Board will not 
disclose any personal record information from systems of records it 
maintains to any individual other than the individual to whom the record 
pertains, or to any other agency, without the express written consent of 
the individual to whom the record pertains, or his or her agent or 
attorney.
    (b) The Board's staff will take necessary steps, in accordance with 
the law and these regulations, to protect the security and integrity of 
the records and the personal privacy interests of the subjects of the 
records.



               Subpart B--Procedures for Obtaining Records



Sec. 1205.11  Access to Board records.

    (a) Submission of request. Inquiries or requests for access to 
records must be submitted to the appropriate regional office of the 
Board, or to the Office of

[[Page 59]]

the Clerk of the Board, U.S. Merit Systems Protection Board, 1120 
Vermont Avenue NW., Washington, DC 20419. If the requester has reason to 
believe the records in question are located in a regional office, the 
request must be submitted to that office. Requests submitted to the 
region must be addressed to the regional director at the appropriate 
regional office listed in appendix II of 5 CFR part 1201.
    (b) Form. Each submission must contain the following information:
    (1) The name, address, and telephone number of the individual to 
whom the record pertains;
    (2) The name, address, and telephone number of the individual making 
the request if the requester is someone other than the person to whom 
the record pertains, such as a legal guardian or an attorney, along with 
evidence of the relationship. Evidence of the relationship may consist 
of an authenticated copy of: (i) the birth certificate of the minor 
child, and (ii) the court document appointing the individual legal 
guardian, or (iii) an agreement for representation signed by the 
individual to whom the record pertains;
    (3) Any additional information that may assist the Board in 
responding to the request, such as the name of the agency that took an 
action against an individual, or the docket number of the individual's 
case;
    (4) The date of the inquiry or request;
    (5) The inquirer's or requester's signature; and
    (6) A conspicuous indication, both on the envelope and the letter, 
that the inquiry is a ``PRIVACY ACT REQUEST''.
    (c) Identification. Each submission must comply with the 
identification requirements stated in Sec. 1205.13 of this part.
    (d) Payment. Records usually will not be released until fees have 
been received.



Sec. 1205.12  Time limits and determinations.

    (a) Board determinations. The Board will acknowledge the request and 
make a determination on it within 10 workdays after it receives the 
request, except under the unusual circumstances described below:
    (1) When the Board needs to obtain the records from other Board 
offices;
    (2) When it needs to obtain and examine a large number of records;
    (3) When it needs to consult with another agency that has a 
substantial interest in the records requested; or
    (4) When other extenuating circumstances prevent the Board from 
processing the request within the 10-day period.
    (b) Time extensions. When unusual circumstances exist, the Board may 
extend the time for making a determination on the request for no more 
than 10 additional workdays. If it does so, it will notify the requester 
of the extension.
    (c) Improper request. If a request or an appeal is not properly 
labeled, does not contain the necessary identifying information, or is 
submitted to the wrong office, the time period for processing the 
request will begin when the correct official receives the properly 
labeled request and the necessary information.
    (d) Determining officials. The Clerk of the Board or a regional 
director will make determinations on requests.



Sec. 1205.13  Identification.

    (a) In person. Each requester must present satisfactory proof of 
identity. The following items, which are listed in order of the Board's 
preference, are acceptable proof of the requester's identity when the 
request is made in person:
    (1) A document showing the requester's photograph;
    (2) A document showing the requester's signature; or
    (3) If the items described in paragraphs (a)(1) and (2) of this 
section are not available, a signed statement in which the requester 
asserts his or her identity and acknowledges understanding that 
misrepresentation of identity in order to obtain a record is a 
misdemeanor and subject to a fine of up to $5,000 under 5 U.S.C. 
552a(i)(3).
    (b) By mail. The identification of a requester making a request by 
mail must be certified by a notary public or equivalent official or 
contain other information sufficient to identify the requester. 
Sufficient information could be the date of birth of the requester

[[Page 60]]

and some item of information in the record that only the requester would 
be likely to know.
    (c) Parents of minors, legal guardians, and representatives. Parents 
of minors, legal guardians, and representatives must submit 
identification under paragraph (a) or (b) of this section. Additionally, 
they must present an authenticated copy of:
    (1) The minor's birth certificate, and
    (2) The court order of guardianship, or
    (3) The agreement of representation, where appropriate.



Sec. 1205.14  Granting access.

    (a) The Board may allow a requester to inspect records through 
either of the following methods:
    (1) It may permit the requester to inspect the records personally 
during normal business hours at a Board office or other suitable Federal 
facility closer to the requester; or
    (2) It may mail copies of the records to the requester.
    (b) A requester seeking personal access to records may be 
accompanied by another individual of the requester's choice. Under those 
circumstances, however, the requester must sign a statement authorizing 
the discussion and presentation of the record in the accompanying 
individual's presence.



Sec. 1205.15  Denying access.

    (a) Basis. In accordance with 5 U.S.C. 552a(k)(2), the Board may 
deny access to records that are of an investigatory nature and that are 
compiled for law enforcement purposes. Those requests will be denied 
only where access to them would otherwise be unavailable under Exemption 
(b)(7) of the Freedom of Information Act.
    (b) Form. All denials of access under this section will be made in 
writing and will notify the requester of the right to judicial review.



Sec. 1205.16  Fees.

    (a) No fees will be charged except for making copies of records.
    (b) Photocopies of records duplicated by the Board will be subject 
to a charge of 10 cents a page.
    (c) If the fee to be assessed for any request is less than $25 (the 
cost to the Board of processing and collecting the fee), no charge will 
be made to the requester.
    (d) Fees for duplicating audio tapes and computer records will be 
charged at a rate representing the actual costs to the Board, as those 
costs are shown below.
    (1) Audio tapes will be provided at a charge of $5.75 for each 
cassette tape.
    (2) Computer printouts will be provided at a charge of 1 cent a 
page.
    (3) Records reproduced on magnetic computer tapes will be provided 
at a charge of $21 a tape.
    (4) Records produced on computer diskettes will be provided at a 
charge of $2.70 a diskette.
    (e) If duplication costs exceed $25, the Board will notify the 
requester of the estimated amount before copying the records.
    (f) When the Board determines that charges for a request are likely 
to exceed $250, it will require the requester to pay the entire fee 
before it continues to process the request.
    (g) The Board will provide one copy of the amended parts of any 
record it amends free of charge as evidence of the amendment.



                     Subpart C--Amendment of Records



Sec. 1205.21  Request for amendment.

    A request for amendment of a record must be submitted to the 
director of the appropriate regional office, or to the Office of the 
Clerk of the Board, U.S. Merit Systems Protection Board, 1120 Vermont 
Avenue NW., Washington, DC 20419, depending on which office is 
maintaining the record. The request must be in writing, must be 
identified conspicuously on the outside of the envelope and the letter 
as a ``PRIVACY ACT REQUEST,'' and must include the following 
information:
    (a) An identification of the record to be amended;
    (b) A description of the amendment requested; and
    (c) A statement of the basis for the amendment, along with 
supporting documentation, if any.

[[Page 61]]



Sec. 1205.22  Action on request.

    (a) Amendment granted. If the Board grants the request for 
amendment, it will notify the requester and provide him or her with a 
copy of the amendment.
    (b) Amendment denied. If the Board denies the request for amendment 
in whole or in part, it will provide the requester with a written notice 
that includes the following information:
    (1) The basis for the denial; and
    (2) The procedures for appealing the denial.



Sec. 1205.23  Time limits.

    The regional director or the Board will rule on a request for 
amendment within 10 workdays of receipt of the request in the regional 
office or the Office of the Clerk except under the unusual circumstances 
described in paragraphs (a)(1) through (a)(4) of Sec. 1205.12 of this 
part.



                           Subpart D--Appeals



Sec. 1205.31  Submitting appeal.

    (a) A partial or complete denial, by the Clerk of the Board or a 
regional director, of a request for amendment may be appealed to the 
Chairman, Merit Systems Protection Board, 1120 Vermont Avenue, NW., 
Washington, DC 20419.
    (b) Any appeal must be in writing, must be clearly and conspicuously 
identified as a Privacy Act appeal on both the envelope and letter, and 
must include:
    (1) A copy of the original request for amendment of the record;
    (2) A copy of the denial; and
    (3) A statement of the reasons why the original denial should be 
overruled.

[54 FR 28662, July 6, 1989, as amended at 55 FR 39911, Oct. 1, 1990; 59 
FR 65243, Dec. 19, 1994]



Sec. 1205.32  Decision on appeal.

    (a) The Chairman will decide the appeal within 30 working days 
unless that official determines that there is good cause for extension 
of that deadline. If an appeal is improperly labeled, does not contain 
the necessary information, or is submitted to an inappropriate official, 
the time period for processing the appeal will begin when the Chairman 
receives the appeal and the necessary information.
    (b) If the request for amendment of a record is granted on appeal, 
the Chairman will direct that the amendment be made. A copy of the 
amended record will be provided to the requester.
    (c) If the request for amendment of a record is denied, the Chairman 
will notify the requester of the denial and will inform the requester 
of:
    (1) The basis for the denial;
    (2) The right to judicial review of the decision under 5 U.S.C. 
552a(g)(1)(A); and
    (3) The right to file a concise statement with the Board stating the 
reasons why the requester disagrees with the denial. This statement will 
become a part of the requester's record.

[55 FR 39911, Oct. 1, 1990, as amended at 59 FR 65243, Dec. 19, 1994]



PART 1206--OPEN MEETINGS--Table of Contents




                      Subpart A--Purpose and Policy

Sec.
1206.1  Purpose.
1206.2  Policy.
1206.3  Definitions.

                          Subpart B--Procedures

1206.4  Notice of meeting.
1206.5  Change in meeting plans after notice.
1206.6  Decision to close meeting.
1206.7  Record of meetings.
1206.8  Providing information to the public.
1206.9  Procedures for expedited closing of meetings.

                     Subpart C--Conduct of Meetings

1206.11  Meeting place.
1206.12  Role of observers.

    Authority: 5 U.S.C. 552b.

    Source: 54 FR 20367, May 11, 1989, unless otherwise noted.



                      Subpart A--Purpose and Policy



Sec. 1206.1  Purpose.

    The purpose of this part is to prescribe the procedures by which the 
Board will conduct open meetings in accordance with the Government in 
the Sunshine Act (5 U.S.C. 552b) (``the Act'').

[[Page 62]]



Sec. 1206.2  Policy.

    The Board will provide the public with the fullest practicable 
information regarding its decision-making processes, while protecting 
individuals' rights and the Board's ability to carry out its 
responsibilities. Meetings at which the Board members jointly conduct or 
dispose of official business are presumptively open to the public. The 
Board will close those meetings in whole or in part only in accordance 
with the exemptions provided under 5 U.S.C. 552b(c), and only when doing 
so is in the public interest.



Sec. 1206.3  Definitions.

    The following definitions apply to this part:
    (a) Meeting means deliberations of at least two Board members that 
determine or result in the joint conduct of official Board business.
    (b) Member means one of the members of the Merit Systems Protection 
Board.



                          Subpart B--Procedures



Sec. 1206.4  Notice of meeting.

    (a) Notice of a Board meeting will be published in the Federal 
Register at least one week before the meeting. Each notice will include 
the following information:
    (1) The time of the meeting;
    (2) The place where the meeting will be held;
    (3) The subject and agenda of the meeting;
    (4) Whether the meeting is to be open to the public or closed; and
    (5) The name and telephone number of a Board official responsible 
for receiving inquiries regarding the meeting.
    (b) The Board, by majority vote, may provide less than one week's 
notice. When it does so, however, it will provide notice of the meeting 
at the earliest practicable time.



Sec. 1206.5  Change in meeting plans after notice.

    (a) After notice of a meeting has been published, the Board may 
change the time or place of the meeting only if it announces the change 
publicly at the earliest practicable time.
    (b) After notice of a meeting has been published, the Board may not 
change either the subject matter of the meeting or the decision that the 
meeting will be open to the public or closed unless both of the 
following conditions are met:
    (1) By majority, recorded vote, the Board members determine that 
Board business requires the change and that no earlier announcement of 
the change was possible; and
    (2) Notice of the change, and of the individual Board members' vote, 
is published in the Federal Register at the earliest practicable time.



Sec. 1206.6  Decision to close meeting.

    (a) Basis. The Board, by majority vote, may decide to close a 
meeting in accordance with the provisions of 5 U.S.C. 552b(c)(1) to 
552b(c)(10) when closing the meeting is in the public interest.
    (b) General Counsel certification. For every meeting that is closed 
to the public in whole or in part, the General Counsel will certify that 
closing the meeting is proper, and will state the basis for that 
opinion.
    (c) Vote. Within one day after voting to close a meeting, the Board 
will make publicly available a record reflecting the vote of each 
member. In addition, within one day after any vote to close a portion or 
portions of a meeting to the public, the Board will make publicly 
available a full written explanation of its decision to close the 
meeting, together with a list naming all persons expected to attend the 
meeting and identifying their affiliation, unless that disclosure would 
reveal the information that the meeting was closed to protect.



Sec. 1206.7  Record of meetings.

    (a) Closed Meeting. When the Board has decided to close a meeting in 
whole or in part, it will maintain the following record:
    (1) A transcript or recording of the proceeding;
    (2) A copy of the General Counsel's certification under 
Sec. 1206.6(b) of this part;
    (3) A statement from the presiding official specifying the time and 
place of

[[Page 63]]

the meeting and naming the persons present; and
    (4) A record (which may be part of the transcript) of all votes and 
all documents considered at the meeting.
    (b) Open meeting. Transcripts or other records will be made of all 
open meetings of the Board. Those records will be made available upon 
request at a fee representing the Board's actual cost of making them 
available.

[54 FR 20367, May 11, 1989, as amended at 54 FR 28664, July 6, 1989]



Sec. 1206.8  Providing information to the public.

    Information available to the public under this part will be made 
available by the Office of the Clerk of the Board, U.S. Merit Systems 
Protection Board, 1120 Vermont Avenue, NW., Washington, DC 20419. 
Individuals or organizations with a special interest in activities of 
the Board may ask the Office of the Clerk to have them placed on a 
mailing list for receipt of information available under this part.



Sec. 1206.9  Procedures for expedited closing of meetings.

    Instead of following the procedures described in Secs. 1206.4 
through 1206.8 of this part, and in Secs. 1206.11 and 1206.12, the Board 
may expedite the closing of its meetings under the following conditions 
by using the following procedures:
    (a) Finding. (1) Most regular Board business consists of reviewing 
initial decisions in cases adjudicated after an opportunity for a 
hearing has been provided. Based on a review of this circumstance, the 
legislative history of the Civil Service Reform Act of 1978 (Pub. L. 95-
454), the Government in the Sunshine Act (5 U.S.C. 552b), and the 
Board's regulations at 5 CFR part 1201, the Board finds that a majority 
of its meetings may properly be closed to the public under 5 U.S.C. 
552b(c)(10) and 552b(d)(4).
    (2) Absent a compelling public interest to the contrary, meetings or 
portions of meetings that can be expected to be closed under these 
procedures include meetings held to consider the following: Petitions 
for review or cases that have been or may be reopened under 5 CFR 
1201.114 through 1201.117; proposals to take action against 
administrative law judges under 5 CFR 1201.131 through 1201.136; and 
actions brought by the Special Counsel under 5 CFR 1201.129.
    (b) Announcement. The Board will announce publicly, at the earliest 
practicable time, the time, place, and subject matter of meetings or 
portions of meetings that are closed under this provision.
    (c) Procedure for closing meetings under this section. At the 
beginning of a meeting or portion of a meeting that is to be closed 
under this section, the Board may, by recorded vote of two of its 
members, decide to close the meeting or a portion of it to public 
observation. The Board may take this action, however, only after it 
receives a certification by the General Counsel under Sec. 1206.6(b) of 
this part.
    (d) Record Availability. When the Board has closed a meeting or 
portion of a meeting under this paragraph, it will make the following 
available as soon as practicable:
    (1) A written record reflecting the vote of each participating 
member of the Board with respect to closing the meeting; and
    (2) The General Counsel certification under Sec. 1206.6(b).



                     Subpart C--Conduct of Meetings



Sec. 1206.11  Meeting place.

    The Board will hold open meetings in meeting rooms designated in the 
public announcements of those meetings. Whenever the number of observers 
is greater than can be accommodated in the designated meeting room, 
however, it will make alternative facilities available to the extent 
possible.



Sec. 1206.12  Role of observers.

    The public may attend open meetings for the sole purpose of 
observation. Observers may not participate in the meetings unless they 
are expressly invited to do so. They also may not create distractions 
that interfere with the conduct and disposition of Board business, and 
they may be asked to leave if they do so. Observers of meetings that are 
partially closed must leave the meeting room when they are asked to do 
so.

[[Page 64]]



PART 1207--ENFORCEMENT OF NONDISCRIMINATION ON THE BASIS OF HANDICAP IN PROGRAMS OR ACTIVITIES CONDUCTED BY THE MERIT SYSTEMS PROTECTION BOARD--Table of Contents




Sec.
1207.101  Purpose.
1207.102  Application.
1207.103  Definitions.
1207.104--1207.109  [Reserved]
1207.110  Self-evaluation.
1207.111  Notice.
1207.112--1207.129  [Reserved]
1207.130  General prohibitions against discrimination.
1207.131--1207.139  [Reserved]
1207.140  Employment.
1207.141--1207.148  [Reserved]
1207.149  Program accessibility: Discrimination prohibited.
1207.150  Program accessibility: Existing facilities.
1207.151  Program accessibility: New construction and alterations.
1207.152--1207.159  [Reserved]
1207.160  Communications.
1207.161--1207.169  [Reserved]
1207.170  Compliance procedures.
1207.171--1207.999  [Reserved]

    Authority: 29 U.S.C. 794.

    Source: 53 FR 25881 and 25885, July 8, 1988, unless otherwise noted.



Sec. 1207.101  Purpose.

    The purpose of this regulation is to effectuate section 119 of the 
Rehabilitation, Comprehensive Services, and Developmental Disabilities 
Amendments of 1978, which amended section 504 of the Rehabilitation Act 
of 1973 to prohibit discrimination on the basis of handicap in programs 
or activities conducted by Executive agencies or the United States 
Postal Service.



Sec. 1207.102  Application.

    This regulation (Secs. 1207.101-1207.170) applies to all programs or 
activities conducted by the agency, except for programs or activities 
conducted outside the United States that do not involve individuals with 
handicaps in the United States.



Sec. 1207.103  Definitions.

    For purposes of this regulation, the term--
    Assistant Attorney General means the Assistant Attorney General, 
Civil Rights Division, United States Department of Justice.
    Auxiliary aids means services or devices that enable persons with 
impaired sensory, manual, or speaking skills to have an equal 
opportunity to participate in, and enjoy the benefits of, programs or 
activities conducted by the agency. For example, auxiliary aids useful 
for persons with impaired vision include readers, Brailled materials, 
audio recordings, and other similar services and devices. Auxiliary aids 
useful for persons with impaired hearing include telephone handset 
amplifiers, telephones compatible with hearing aids, telecommunication 
devices for deaf persons (TDD's), interpreters, notetakers, written 
materials, and other similar services and devices.
    Complete complaint means a written statement that contains the 
complainant's name and address and describes the agency's alleged 
discriminatory action in sufficient detail to inform the agency of the 
nature and date of the alleged violation of section 504. It shall be 
signed by the complainant or by someone authorized to do so on his or 
her behalf. Complaints filed on behalf of classes or third parties shall 
describe or identify (by name, if possible) the alleged victims of 
discrimination.
    Facility means all or any portion of buildings, structures, 
equipment, roads, walks, parking lots, rolling stock or other 
conveyances, or other real or personal property.
    Historic preservation programs means programs conducted by the 
agency that have preservation of historic properties as a primary 
purpose.
    Historic properties means those properties that are listed or 
eligible for listing in the National Register of Historic Places or 
properties designated as historic under a statute of the appropriate 
State or local government body.
    Individual with handicaps means any person who has a physical or 
mental impairment that substantially limits one or more major life 
activities, has a record of such an impairment, or is regarded as having 
such an impairment.
    As used in this definition, the phrase:
    (1) Physical or mental impairment includes--

[[Page 65]]

    (i) Any physiological disorder or condition, cosmetic disfigurement, 
or anatomical loss affecting one or more of the following body systems: 
Neurological; musculoskeletal; special sense organs; respiratory, 
including speech organs; cardiovascular; reproductive; digestive; 
genitourinary; hemic and lymphatic; skin; and endocrine; or
    (ii) Any mental or psychological disorder, such as mental 
retardation, organic brain syndrome, emotional or mental illness, and 
specific learning disabilities. The term physical or mental impairment 
includes, but is not limited to, such diseases and conditions as 
orthopedic, visual, speech, and hearing impairments, cerebral palsy, 
epilepsy, muscular dystrophy, multiple sclerosis, cancer, heart disease, 
diabetes, mental retardation, emotional illness, and drug addiction and 
alcoholism.
    (2) Major life activities includes functions such as caring for 
one's self, performing manual tasks, walking, seeing, hearing, speaking, 
breathing, learning, and working.
    (3) Has a record of such an impairment means has a history of, or 
has been misclassified as having, a mental or physical impairment that 
substantially limits one or more major life activities.
    (4) Is regarded as having an impairment means--
    (i) Has a physical or mental impairment that does not substantially 
limit major life activities but is treated by the agency as constituting 
such a limitation;
    (ii) Has a physical or mental impairment that substantially limits 
major life activities only as a result of the attitudes of others toward 
such impairment; or
    (iii) Has none of the impairments defined in paragraph (1) of this 
definition but is treated by the agency as having such an impairment.
    Qualified individual with handicaps means--
    (1) With respect to preschool, elementary, or secondary education 
services provided by the agency, an individual with handicaps who is a 
member of a class of persons otherwise entitled by statute, regulation, 
or agency policy to receive education services from the agency;
    (2) With respect to any other agency program or activity under which 
a person is required to perform services or to achieve a level of 
accomplishment, an individual with handicaps who meets the essential 
eligibility requirements and who can achieve the purpose of the program 
or activity without modifications in the program or activity that the 
agency can demonstrate would result in a fundamental alteration in its 
nature;
    (3) With respect to any other program or activity, an individual 
with handicaps who meets the essential eligibility requirements for 
participation in, or receipt of benefits from, that program or activity; 
and
    (4) Qualified handicapped person as that term is defined for 
purposes of employment in 29 CFR 1613.702(f), which is made applicable 
to this regulation by Sec. 1207.140.
    Section 504 means section 504 of the Rehabilitation Act of 1973 
(Pub. L. 93-112, 87 Stat. 394 (29 U.S.C. 794)), as amended by the 
Rehabilitation Act Amendments of 1974 (Pub. L. 93-516, 88 Stat. 1617); 
the Rehabilitation, Comprehensive Services, and Developmental 
Disabilities Amendments of 1978 (Pub. L. 95-602, 92 Stat. 2955); and the 
Rehabilitation Act Amendments of 1986 (Pub. L. 99-506, 100 Stat. 1810). 
As used in this regulation, section 504 applies only to programs or 
activities conducted by Executive agencies and not to federally assisted 
programs.
    Substantial impairment means a significant loss of the integrity of 
finished materials, design quality, or special character resulting from 
a permanent alteration.
Secs. 1207.104--1207.109  [Reserved]



Sec. 1207.110  Self-evaluation.

    (a) The agency shall, by September 6, 1989, evaluate its current 
policies and practices, and the effects thereof, that do not or may not 
meet the requirements of this regulation and, to the extent modification 
of any such policies and practices is required, the agency shall proceed 
to make the necessary modifications.

[[Page 66]]

    (b) The agency shall provide an opportunity to interested persons, 
including individuals with handicaps or organizations representing 
individuals with handicaps, to participate in the self-evaluation 
process by submitting comments (both oral and written).
    (c) The agency shall, for at least three years following completion 
of the self-evaluation, maintain on file and make available for public 
inspection:
    (1) A description of areas examined and any problems identified; and
    (2) A description of any modifications made.



Sec. 1207.111  Notice.

    The agency shall make available to employees, applicants, 
participants, beneficiaries, and other interested persons such 
information regarding the provisions of this regulation and its 
applicability to the programs or activities conducted by the agency, and 
make such information available to them in such manner as the head of 
the agency finds necessary to apprise such persons of the protections 
against discrimination assured them by section 504 and this regulation.
Secs. 1207.112--1207.129  [Reserved]



Sec. 1207.130  General prohibitions against discrimination.

    (a) No qualified individual with handicaps shall, on the basis of 
handicap, be excluded from participation in, be denied the benefits of, 
or otherwise be subjected to discrimination under any program or 
activity conducted by the agency.
    (b)(1) The agency, in providing any aid, benefit, or service, may 
not, directly or through contractual, licensing, or other arrangements, 
on the basis of handicap--
    (i) Deny a qualified individual with handicaps the opportunity to 
participate in or benefit from the aid, benefit, or service;
    (ii) Afford a qualified individual with handicaps an opportunity to 
participate in or benefit from the aid, benefit, or service that is not 
equal to that afforded others;
    (iii) Provide a qualified individual with handicaps with an aid, 
benefit, or service that is not as effective in affording equal 
opportunity to obtain the same result, to gain the same benefit, or to 
reach the same level of achievement as that provided to others;
    (iv) Provide different or separate aid, benefits, or services to 
individuals with handicaps or to any class of individuals with handicaps 
than is provided to others unless such action is necessary to provide 
qualified individuals with handicaps with aid, benefits, or services 
that are as effective as those provided to others;
    (v) Deny a qualified individual with handicaps the opportunity to 
participate as a member of planning or advisory boards;
    (vi) Otherwise limit a qualified individual with handicaps in the 
enjoyment of any right, privilege, advantage, or opportunity enjoyed by 
others receiving the aid, benefit, or service.
    (2) The agency may not deny a qualified individual with handicaps 
the opportunity to participate in programs or activities that are not 
separate or different, despite the existence of permissibly separate or 
different programs or activities.
    (3) The agency may not, directly or through contractual or other 
arrangements, utilize criteria or methods of administration the purpose 
or effect of which would--
    (i) Subject qualified individuals with handicaps to discrimination 
on the basis of handicap; or
    (ii) Defeat or substantially impair accomplishment of the objectives 
of a program or activity with respect to individuals with handicaps.
    (4) The agency may not, in determining the site or location of a 
facility, make selections the purpose or effect of which would--
    (i) Exclude individuals with handicaps from, deny them the benefits 
of, or otherwise subject them to discrimination under any program or 
activity conducted by the agency; or
    (ii) Defeat or substantially impair the accomplishment of the 
objectives of a program or activity with respect to individuals with 
handicaps.
    (5) The agency, in the selection of procurement contractors, may not 
use criteria that subject qualified individuals with handicaps to 
discrimination on the basis of handicap.

[[Page 67]]

    (6) The agency may not administer a licensing or certification 
program in a manner that subjects qualified individuals with handicaps 
to discrimination on the basis of handicap, nor may the agency establish 
requirements for the programs or activities of licensees or certified 
entities that subject qualified individuals with handicaps to 
discrimination on the basis of handicap. However, the programs or 
activities of entities that are licensed or certified by the agency are 
not, themselves, covered by this regulation.
    (c) The exclusion of nonhandicapped persons from the benefits of a 
program limited by Federal statute or Executive order to individuals 
with handicaps or the exclusion of a specific class of individuals with 
handicaps from a program limited by Federal statute or Executive order 
to a different class of individuals with handicaps is not prohibited by 
this regulation.
    (d) The agency shall administer programs and activities in the most 
integrated setting appropriate to the needs of qualified individuals 
with handicaps.
Secs. 1207.131--1207.139  [Reserved]



Sec. 1207.140  Employment.

    No qualified individual with handicaps shall, on the basis of 
handicap, be subject to discrimination in employment under any program 
or activity conducted by the agency. The definitions, requirements, and 
procedures of section 501 of the Rehabilitation Act of 1973 (29 U.S.C. 
791), as established by the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission in 
29 CFR part 1613, shall apply to employment in federally conducted 
programs or activities.
Sec. 1207.141--1207.148  [Reserved]



Sec. 1207.149  Program accessibility: Discrimination prohibited.

    Except as otherwise provided in Sec. 1207.150, no qualified 
individual with handicaps shall, because the agency's facilities are 
inaccessible to or unusable by individuals with handicaps, be denied the 
benefits of, be excluded from participation in, or otherwise be 
subjected to discrimination under any program or activity conducted by 
the agency.



Sec. 1207.150  Program accessibility: Existing facilities.

    (a) General. The agency shall operate each program or activity so 
that the program or activity, when viewed in its entirety, is readily 
accessible to and usable by individuals with handicaps. This paragraph 
does not--
    (1) Necessarily require the agency to make each of its existing 
facilities accessible to and usable by individuals with handicaps;
    (2) In the case of historic preservation programs, require the 
agency to take any action that would result in a substantial impairment 
of significant historic features of an historic property; or
    (3) Require the agency to take any action that it can demonstrate 
would result in a fundamental alteration in the nature of a program or 
activity or in undue financial and administrative burdens. In those 
circumstances where agency personnel believe that the proposed action 
would fundamentally alter the program or activity or would result in 
undue financial and administrative burdens, the agency has the burden of 
proving that compliance with Sec. 1207.150(a) would result in such 
alteration or burdens. The decision that compliance would result in such 
alteration or burdens must be made by the agency head or his or her 
designee after considering all agency resources available for use in the 
funding and operation of the conducted program or activity, and must be 
accompanied by a written statement of the reasons for reaching that 
conclusion. If an action would result in such an alteration or such 
burdens, the agency shall take any other action that would not result in 
such an alteration or such burdens but would nevertheless ensure that 
individuals with handicaps receive the benefits and services of the 
program or activity.
    (b) Methods--(1) General. The agency may comply with the 
requirements of this section through such means as redesign of 
equipment, reassignment of services to accessible buildings, assignment 
of aides to beneficiaries, home visits, delivery of services at 
alternate accessible sites, alteration of existing facilities and 
construction of new facilities, use of accessible rolling stock,

[[Page 68]]

or any other methods that result in making its programs or activities 
readily accessible to and usable by individuals with handicaps. The 
agency is not required to make structural changes in existing facilities 
where other methods are effective in achieving compliance with this 
section. The agency, in making alterations to existing buildings, shall 
meet accessibility requirements to the extent compelled by the 
Architectural Barriers Act of 1968, as amended (42 U.S.C. 4151-4157), 
and any regulations implementing it. In choosing among available methods 
for meeting the requirements of this section, the agency shall give 
priority to those methods that offer programs and activities to 
qualified individuals with handicaps in the most integrated setting 
appropriate.
    (2) Historic preservation programs. In meeting the requirements of 
Sec. 1207.150(a) in historic preservation programs, the agency shall 
give priority to methods that provide physical access to individuals 
with handicaps. In cases where a physical alteration to an historic 
property is not required because of Sec. 1207.150(a) (2) or (3), 
alternative methods of achieving program accessibility include--
    (i) Using audio-visual materials and devices to depict those 
portions of an historic property that cannot otherwise be made 
accessible;
    (ii) Assigning persons to guide individuals with handicaps into or 
through portions of historic properties that cannot otherwise be made 
accessible; or
    (iii) Adopting other innovative methods.
    (c) Time period for compliance. The agency shall comply with the 
obligations established under this section by November 7, 1988, except 
that where structural changes in facilities are undertaken, such changes 
shall be made by September 6, 1991, but in any event as expeditiously as 
possible.
    (d) Transition plan. In the event that structural changes to 
facilities will be undertaken to achieve program accessibility, the 
agency shall develop, by March 6, 1989, a transition plan setting forth 
the steps necessary to complete such changes. The agency shall provide 
an opportunity to interested persons, including individuals with 
handicaps or organizations representing individuals with handicaps, to 
participate in the development of the transition plan by submitting 
comments (both oral and written). A copy of the transition plan shall be 
made available for public inspection. The plan shall, at a minimum--
    (1) Identify physical obstacles in the agency's facilities that 
limit the accessibility of its programs or activities to individuals 
with handicaps;
    (2) Describe in detail the methods that will be used to make the 
facilities accessible;
    (3) Specify the schedule for taking the steps necessary to achieve 
compliance with this section and, if the time period of the transition 
plan is longer than one year, identify steps that will be taken during 
each year of the transition period; and
    (4) Indicate the official responsible for implementation of the 
plan.



Sec. 1207.151   Program accessibility: New construction and alterations.

    Each building or part of a building that is constructed or altered 
by, on behalf of, or for the use of the agency shall be designed, 
constructed, or altered so as to be readily accessible to and usable by 
individuals with handicaps. The definitions, requirements, and standards 
of the Architectural Barriers Act (42 U.S.C. 4151-4157), as established 
in 41 CFR 101-19.600 to 101-19.607, apply to buildings covered by this 
section.
Secs. 1207.152--1207.159  [Reserved]



Sec. 1207.160  Communications.

    (a) The agency shall take appropriate steps to ensure effective 
communication with applicants, participants, personnel of other Federal 
entities, and members of the public.
    (1) The agency shall furnish appropriate auxiliary aids where 
necessary to afford an individual with handicaps an equal opportunity to 
participate in, and enjoy the benefits of, a program or activity 
conducted by the agency.
    (i) In determining what type of auxiliary aid is necessary, the 
agency shall

[[Page 69]]

give primary consideration to the requests of the individual with 
handicaps.
    (ii) The agency need not provide individually prescribed devices, 
readers for personal use or study, or other devices of a personal 
nature.
    (2) Where the agency communicates with applicants and beneficiaries 
by telephone, telecommunication devices for deaf persons (TDD's) or 
equally effective telecommunication systems shall be used to communicate 
with persons with impaired hearing.
    (b) The agency shall ensure that interested persons, including 
persons with impaired vision or hearing, can obtain information as to 
the existence and location of accessible services, activities, and 
facilities.
    (c) The agency shall provide signage at a primary entrance to each 
of its inaccessible facilities, directing users to a location at which 
they can obtain information about accessible facilities. The 
international symbol for accessibility shall be used at each primary 
entrance of an accessible facility.
    (d) This section does not require the agency to take any action that 
it can demonstrate would result in a fundamental alteration in the 
nature of a program or activity or in undue financial and administrative 
burdens. In those circumstances where agency personnel believe that the 
proposed action would fundamentally alter the program or activity or 
would result in undue financial and administrative burdens, the agency 
has the burden of proving that compliance with Sec. 1207.160 would 
result in such alteration or burdens. The decision that compliance would 
result in such alteration or burdens must be made by the agency head or 
his or her designee after considering all agency resources available for 
use in the funding and operation of the conducted program or activity 
and must be accompanied by a written statement of the reasons for 
reaching that conclusion. If an action required to comply with this 
section would result in such an alteration or such burdens, the agency 
shall take any other action that would not result in such an alteration 
or such burdens but would nevertheless ensure that, to the maximum 
extent possible, individuals with handicaps receive the benefits and 
services of the program or activity.
Secs. 1207.161--1207.169  [Reserved]



Sec. 1207.170  Compliance procedures.

    (a) Except as provided in paragraph (b) of this section, this 
section applies to all allegations of discrimination on the basis of 
handicap in programs and activities conducted by the agency.
    (b) The agency shall process complaints alleging violations of 
section 504 with respect to employment according to the procedures 
established by the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission in 29 CFR 
part 1613 pursuant to section 501 of the Rehabilitation Act of 1973 (29 
U.S.C. 791).
    (c) The Equal Employment Officer shall be responsible for 
coordinating implementation of this section. Complaints may be sent to 
the Equal Employment Office, Merit Systems Protection Board, 1120 
Vermont Avenue, NW., Room 908, Washington, DC 20419.
    (d) The agency shall accept and investigate all complete complaints 
for which it has jurisdiction. All complete complaints must be filed 
within 180 days of the alleged act of discrimination. The agency may 
extend this time period for good cause.
    (e) If the agency receives a complaint over which it does not have 
jurisdiction, it shall promptly notify the complainant and shall make 
reasonable efforts to refer the complaint to the appropriate Government 
entity.
    (f) The agency shall notify the Architectural and Transportation 
Barriers Compliance Board upon receipt of any complaint alleging that a 
building or facility that is subject to the Architectural Barriers Act 
of 1968, as amended (42 U.S.C. 4151-4157), is not readily accessible to 
and usable by individuals with handicaps.
    (g) Within 180 days of the receipt of a complete complaint for which 
it has jurisdiction, the agency shall notify the complainant of the 
results of the investigation in a letter containing--
    (1) Findings of fact and conclusions of law;
    (2) A description of a remedy for each violation found; and
    (3) A notice of the right to appeal.

[[Page 70]]

    (h) Appeals of the findings of fact and conclusions of law or 
remedies must be filed by the complainant within 90 days of receipt from 
the agency of the letter required by Sec. 1207.170(g). The agency may 
extend this time for good cause.
    (i) Timely appeals shall be accepted and processed by the head of 
the agency.
    (j) The head of the agency shall notify the complainant of the 
results of the appeal within 60 days of the receipt of the request. If 
the head of the agency determines that additional information is needed 
from the complainant, he or she shall have 60 days from the date of 
receipt of the additional information to make his or her determination 
on the appeal.
    (k) The time limits cited in paragraphs (g) and (j) of this section 
may be extended with the permission of the Assistant Attorney General.
    (l) The agency may delegate its authority for conducting complaint 
investigations to other Federal agencies, except that the authority for 
making the final determination may not be delegated to another agency.

[53 FR 25881 and 25885, July 8, 1988, as amended at 53 FR 25881, July 8, 
1988]
Secs. 1207.171--1207.999  [Reserved]



PART 1208--[RESERVED]






PART 1209--PRACTICES AND PROCEDURES FOR APPEALS AND STAY REQUESTS OF PERSONNEL ACTIONS ALLEGEDLY BASED ON WHISTLEBLOWING--Table of Contents




                 Subpart A--Jurisdiction and Definitions

Sec.
1209.1  Scope.
1209.2  Jurisdiction.
1209.3  Application of 5 CFR part 1201.
1209.4  Definitions.

                           Subpart B--Appeals

1209.5  Time of filing.
1209.6  Content of appeal; right to hearing.
1209.7  Burden and degree of proof.

                        Subpart C--Stay Requests

1209.8  Filing a request for a stay.
1209.9  Content of stay request and response.
1209.10  Hearing and order ruling on stay request.
1209.11  Duration of stay; interim compliance.

            Subpart D--Reports on Applications for Transfers

1209.12  Filing of agency reports.

    Authority: 5 U.S.C. 1204, 1221, 2302(b)(8), and 7701.

    Source: 55 FR 28592, July 12, 1990, unless otherwise noted.



                 Subpart A--Jurisdiction and Definitions



Sec. 1209.1  Scope.

    This part governs any appeal or stay request filed with the Board by 
an employee, former employee, or applicant for employment where the 
appellant alleges that a personnel action defined in 5 U.S.C. 2302(a)(2) 
was threatened, proposed, taken, or not taken because of the appellant's 
whistleblowing activities. Included are individual right of action 
appeals authorized by 5 U.S.C. 1221(a), appeals of otherwise appealable 
actions allegedly based on the appellant's whistleblowing activities, 
and requests for stays of personnel actions allegedly based on 
whistleblowing.



Sec. 1209.2  Jurisdiction.

    (a) Under 5 U.S.C. 1214(a)(3), an employee, former employee, or 
applicant for employment may appeal to the Board from agency personnel 
actions alleged to have been threatened, proposed, taken, or not taken 
because of the appellant's whistleblowing activities.
    (b) The Board exercises jurisdiction over:
    (1) Individual right of action appeals. These are authorized by 5 
U.S.C. 1221(a) with respect to personnel actions listed in 
Sec. 1209.4(a) of this part that are allegedly threatened, proposed, 
taken, or not taken because of the appellant's whistleblowing 
activities. If the action is not otherwise directly appealable to the 
Board, the appellant must seek corrective action from the Special 
Counsel before appealing to the Board.

    Example: Agency A gives Mr. X a performance evaluation under 5 
U.S.C. chapter 43 that rates him as ``minimally satisfactory.'' Mr. X 
believes that the agency has rated him

[[Page 71]]

``minimally satisfactory'' because of his whistleblowing activities. 
Because a performance evaluation is not an otherwise appealable action, 
Mr. X must seek corrective action from the Special Counsel before 
appealing to the Board or before seeking a stay of the evaluation. If 
Mr. X appeals the evaluation to the Board after the Special Counsel 
proceeding is terminated or exhausted, his appeal is an individual right 
of action appeal.

    (2) Otherwise appealable action appeals. These are appeals to the 
Board under laws, rules, or regulations other than 5 U.S.C. 1221(a) that 
include an allegation that the action was based on the appellant's 
whistleblowing activities. The appellant may choose either to seek 
corrective action from the Special Counsel before appealing to the Board 
or to appeal directly to the Board. (Examples of such otherwise 
appealable actions are listed in 5 CFR 1201.3 (a)(1) through (a)(19).)

    Example: Agency B removes Ms. Y for alleged misconduct under 5 
U.S.C. 7513. Ms. Y believes that the agency removed her because of her 
whistleblowing activities. Because the removal action is appealable to 
the Board under some law, rule or regulation other than 5 U.S.C. 
1221(a), Ms. Y may choose to file an appeal with the Board without first 
seeking corrective action from the Special Counsel or to seek corrective 
action from the Special Counsel and then appeal to the Board.

    (3) Stays. Where the appellant alleges that a personnel action was 
or will be based on whistleblowing, the Board may, upon the appellant's 
request, order an agency to suspend that action.



Sec. 1209.3  Application of 5 CFR part 1201.

    Except as expressly provided in this part, the Board will apply 
subparts A, B, C, E, F, and G of 5 CFR part 1201 to appeals and stay 
requests governed by this part.



Sec. 1209.4  Definitions.

    (a) Personnel action means, as to individuals and agencies covered 
by 5 U.S.C. 2302:
    (1) An appointment;
    (2) A promotion;
    (3) An adverse action under chapter 75 of title 5, United States 
Code or other disciplinary or corrective action;
    (4) A detail, transfer, or reassignment;
    (5) A reinstatement;
    (6) A restoration;
    (7) A reemployment;
    (8) A performance evaluation under chapter 43 of title 5, United 
States Code;
    (9) A decision concerning pay, benefits, or awards, or concerning 
education or training if the education or training may reasonably be 
expected to lead to an appointment, promotion, performance evaluation, 
or other personnel action; or
    (10) A significant change in duties or responsibilities that is 
inconsistent with the employee's salary or grade level.
    (b) Whistleblowing is the disclosure of information by an employee, 
former employee, or applicant that the individual reasonably believes 
evidences a violation of law, rule, or regulation, gross mismanagement, 
gross waste of funds, abuse of authority, or substantial and specific 
danger to public health or safety. It does not include a disclosure that 
is specifically prohibited by law or required by Executive order to be 
kept secret in the interest of national defense or foreign affairs, 
unless such information is disclosed to the Special Counsel, the 
Inspector General of an agency, or an employee designated by the head of 
the agency to receive it.
    (c) Contributing factor means any disclosure that affects an 
agency's decision to threaten, propose, take, or not take a personnel 
action with respect to the individual making the disclosure.
    (d) Clear and convincing evidence is that measure or degree of proof 
that produces in the mind of the trier of fact a firm belief as to the 
allegations sought to be established. It is a higher standard than 
``preponderance of the evidence'' as defined in 5 CFR 1201.56(c)(2).



                           Subpart B--Appeals



Sec. 1209.5  Time of filing.

    (a) Individual right of action appeals. The appellant must seek 
corrective action from the Special Counsel before appealing to the 
Board. Where the appellant has sought corrective action, the time limit 
for filing an appeal with the Board is governed by 5 U.S.C.

[[Page 72]]

1214(a)(3). Under that section, an appeal must be filed:
    (1) No later than 65 days after the date of issuance of the Office 
of Special Counsel's written notification to the appellant that it was 
terminating its investigation of the appellant's allegations; or,
    (2) If the Office of Special Counsel has not notified the appellant 
that it will seek corrective action on the appellant's behalf within 120 
days of the date of filing of the request for corrective action, at any 
time after the expiration of 120 days.
    (b) Otherwise appealable action appeals. The appellant may choose 
either to seek corrective action from the Special Counsel before 
appealing to the Board or to file the appeal directly with the Board. If 
the appellant seeks corrective action from the Special Counsel, the time 
limit for appealing is governed by paragraph (a) of this section. If the 
appellant appeals directly to the Board, the time limit for filing is 
governed by 5 CFR 1201.22(b).
    (c) Appeals after a stay request. Where an appellant has filed a 
request for a stay with the Board without first filing an appeal of the 
action, the appeal must be filed within 30 days after the date of the 
order ruling on the stay request. Failure to timely file the appeal will 
result in the termination of any stay that has been granted unless a 
good reason for the delay is shown.

[55 FR 28592, July 12, 1990, as amended at 59 FR 31110, June 17, 1994]



Sec. 1209.6  Content of appeal; right to hearing.

    (a) Content. Only an appellant, his or her designated 
representative, or a party properly substituted under 5 CFR 1201.35 may 
file an appeal. Appeals may be in any format, including letter form, but 
must contain the following:
    (1) The nine (9) items or types of information required in 5 CFR 
1201.24 (a)(1) through (a)(9);
    (2) Where the appellant first sought corrective action from the 
Special Counsel, evidence that the appeal is timely filed;
    (3) The name(s) and position(s) held by the employee(s) who took the 
action(s), and a chronology of facts concerning the action(s);
    (4) A description of the appellant's disclosure evidencing 
whistleblowing as defined in Sec. 1209.4(b) of this part; and
    (5) Evidence or argument that:
    (i) The appellant was or will be subject to a personnel action as 
defined in Sec. 1209.4(a) of this part, or that the agency has 
threatened to take or not to take such a personnel action, together with 
specific indications giving rise to the appellant's apprehensions; and
    (ii) The personnel action was or will be based wholly or in part on 
the appellant's whistleblowing, as described in Sec. 1209.4(b) of this 
part.
    (b) Right to hearing. An appellant has a right to a hearing.
    (c) Timely request. The appellant must submit any request for a 
hearing with the appeal, or within any other time period the judge sets 
for that purpose. If the appellant does not make a timely request for a 
hearing, the right to a hearing is waived.



Sec. 1209.7  Burden and degree of proof.

    (a) Subject to the exception stated in paragraph (b) of this 
section, in any case involving a prohibited personnel practice described 
in 5 U.S.C. 2302(b)(8), the Board will order appropriate corrective 
action if the appellant shows by a preponderance of the evidence that a 
disclosure described under 5 U.S.C. 2302(b)(8) was a contributing factor 
in the personnel action that was threatened, proposed, taken, or not 
taken against the appellant.
    (b) However, even where the appellant meets the burden stated in 
paragraph (a) of this section, the Board will not order corrective 
action if the agency shows by clear and convincing evidence that it 
would have threatened, proposed, taken, or not taken the same personnel 
action in the absence of the disclosure.



                        Subpart C--Stay Requests



Sec. 1209.8  Filing a request for a stay.

    (a) Time of filing. An appellant may request a stay of a personnel 
action allegedly based on whistleblowing at any time after the appellant 
becomes eligible to file an appeal with the Board under Sec. 1209.5 of 
this part, but no later than the time limit set for the close of 
discovery in the appeal. It may be filed

[[Page 73]]

prior to, simultaneous with, or after the filing of an appeal.
    (b) Place of filing. Requests must be filed with the appropriate 
Board regional or field office as set forth in 5 CFR 1201.4(d).
    (c) Service of stay request. A stay request must be simultaneously 
served upon the Board's regional or field office and upon the agency's 
local servicing personnel office or the agency's designated 
representative, if any. A certificate of service stating how and when 
service was made must accompany the stay request.
    (d) Method of filing. A stay request must be filed with the 
appropriate Board regional or field office by personal delivery, by 
facsimile, by mail, or by commercial overnight delivery.

[55 FR 28592, July 12, 1990, as amended at 58 FR 36345, July 7, 1993, 59 
FR 65243, Dec. 19, 1994]



Sec. 1209.9  Content of stay request and response.

    (a) Only an appellant, his or her designated representative, or a 
party properly substituted under 5 CFR 1201.35 may file a stay request. 
The request may be in any format, and must contain the following:
    (1) The name, address, and telephone number of the appellant, and 
the name and address of the acting agency;
    (2) The name, address, and telephone number of the appellant's 
representative, if any;
    (3) The signature of the appellant or, if the appellant has a 
representative, of the representative;
    (4) A chronology of facts, including a description of the 
appellant's disclosure and the action that the agency has taken or 
intends to take;
    (5) Where the appellant first sought corrective action from the 
Special Counsel, evidence that the stay request is timely filed;
    (6) Evidence and/or argument showing that:
    (i) The action threatened, proposed, taken, or not taken is a 
personnel action, as defined in Sec. 1209.4(a) of this part;
    (ii) The action complained of was based on whistleblowing, as 
defined in Sec. 1209.4(b) of this part; and
    (iii) There is a substantial likelihood that the appellant will 
prevail on the merits of the appeal;
    (7) Evidence and/or argument addressing how long the stay should 
remain in effect; and
    (8) Any documentary evidence that supports the stay request.
    (b) An appellant may provide evidence and/or argument addressing the 
question of whether a stay would impose extreme hardship on the agency.
    (c) Agency response. (1) The agency's response to the stay request 
must be received by the appropriate Board regional or field office 
within five days (excluding Saturdays, Sundays, and Federal holidays) of 
the date of service of the stay request on the agency.
    (2) The agency's response must contain the following:
    (i) Evidence and/or argument addressing whether there is a 
substantial likelihood that the appellant will prevail on the merits of 
the appeal;
    (ii) Evidence and/or argument addressing whether the grant of a stay 
would result in extreme hardship to the agency; and
    (iii) Any documentation relevant to the agency's position on these 
issues.

[55 FR 28592, July 12, 1990, as amended at 59 FR 65243, Dec. 19, 1994]



Sec. 1209.10  Hearing and order ruling on stay request.

    (a) Hearing. The judge may hold a hearing on the stay request.
    (b) Order ruling on stay request. (1) The judge must rule upon the 
stay request within 10 days (excluding Saturdays, Sundays, and Federal 
holidays) after the request is received by the appropriate Board 
regional or field office.
    (2) The judge's ruling on the stay request must set forth the 
factual and legal bases for the decision. The judge must decide whether 
there is a substantial likelihood that the appellant will prevail on the 
merits of the appeal, and whether the stay would result in extreme 
hardship to the agency.
    (3) If the judge grants a stay, the order must specify the effective 
date and duration of the stay.

[55 FR 28592, July 12, 1990, as amended at 59 FR 65243, Dec. 19, 1994]

[[Page 74]]



Sec. 1209.11  Duration of stay; interim compliance.

    (a) Duration of stay. A stay becomes effective on the date specified 
in the judge's order. The stay will remain in effect for the time period 
set forth in the order or until the Board issues a final decision on the 
appeal of the underlying personnel action that was stayed, or until the 
Board vacates or modifies the stay, whichever occurs first.
    (b) Interim compliance. An agency must immediately comply with an 
order granting a stay request. Although the order granting a stay 
request is not a final order, petitions for enforcement of such orders 
are governed by 5 CFR part 1201, subpart F.



            Subpart D--Reports on Applications for Transfers



Sec. 1209.12  Filing of agency reports.

    When an employee who has applied for a transfer to another position 
in an Executive agency under 5 U.S.C. 3352 asks the agency head to 
review a rejection of his or her application for transfer, the agency 
head must complete the review and provide a written statement of 
findings to the employee and the Clerk of the Board within 30 days after 
receiving the request.



PART 1210--DEBT MANAGEMENT--Table of Contents




                        Subpart A--Salary Offset

Sec.
1210.1  Purpose and scope.
1210.2  Definitions.
1210.3  Applicability.
1210.4  Notice requirements.
1210.5  Hearing.
1210.6  Written decision.
1210.7  Coordinating offset with another Federal agency.
1210.8  Procedures for salary offset.
1210.9  Refunds.
1210.10  Statute of limitations.
1210.11  Nonwaiver of rights.
1210.12  Interest, penalties, and administrative costs.

                      Subpart B--Claims Collection

1210.21  Purpose and scope.
1210.22  Definitions.
1210.23  Other remedies.
1210.24  Claims involving criminal activity or misconduct.
1210.25  Collection.
1210.26  Notices to debtor.
1210.27  Interest, penalties, and administrative costs.
1210.28  Administrative offset.
1210.29  Use of credit reporting agencies.
1210.30  Collection services.
1210.31  Referral to the Department of Justice or the General Accounting 
          Office.
1210.32  Compromise, suspension and termination.
1210.33  Omissions not a defense.

    Source: 54 FR 50603, Dec. 8, 1989, unless otherwise noted.



                        Subpart A--Salary Offset

    Authority: 5 U.S.C. 5514, Executive Order 11809 (redesignated 
Executive Order 12107), and 5 CFR 550 subpart K.



Sec. 1210.1  Purpose and scope.

    (a) This regulation provides procedures for the collection by 
administrative offset of a Federal employee's salary without his/her 
consent to satisfy certain debts owed to the Federal Government. These 
regulations apply to all Federal employees who owe debts to the MSPB and 
to current employees of the MSPB who owe debts to other Federal 
agencies. This regulation does not apply when the employee consents to 
recovery from his/her current pay account.
    (b) This regulation does not apply to debts or claims arising under:
    (1) The Internal Revenue Code of 1954, as amended, 26 U.S.C. 1 et 
seq.;
    (2) The Social Security Act, 42 U.S.C. 301 et seq.;
    (3) The tariff laws of the United States; or
    (4) Any case where a collection of a debt by salary offset is 
explicitly provided for or prohibited by another statute.
    (c) This regulation does not apply to any adjustment to pay arising 
out of an employee's selection of coverage or a change in coverage under 
a Federal benefits program requiring periodic deductions from pay if the 
amount to be recovered was accumulated over four pay periods or less.

[[Page 75]]

    (d) This regulation does not preclude the compromise, suspension, or 
termination of collection action where appropriate under the standards 
implementing the Federal Claims Collection Act, 31 U.S.C. 3711 et seq. 4 
CFR parts 101 through 105; 5 CFR part 1210.
    (e) This regulation does not preclude an employee from requesting 
waiver of an overpayment under 5 U.S.C. 5584, 10 U.S.C. 2774 or 32 
U.S.C. 716 or in any way questioning the amount of validity of the debt 
by submitting a subsequent claim to the General Accounting Office. This 
regulation does not preclude an employee from requesting a waiver 
pursuant to other statutory provisions applicable to the particular debt 
being collected.
    (f) Matters not addressed in these regulations should be reviewed in 
accordance with the Federal Claims Collection Standards at 4 CFR 101.1 
et seq.



Sec. 1210.2  Definitions.

    (a) Agency. An executive agency as is defined at 5 U.S.C. 105 
including the U.S. Postal Service, the U.S. Postal Commission, a 
military department as defined at 5 U.S.C. 102, an agency or court in 
the judicial branch, an agency of the legislative branch including the 
U.S. Senate and House of Representatives and other independent 
establishments that are entities of the Federal government.
    (b) Chairman. The Chairman of the MSPB or the Chairman's designee.
    (c) Creditor agency. The agency to which the debt is owed.
    (d) Debt. An amount owed to the United States from sources which 
include loans insured or guaranteed by the United States and all other 
amounts due the United States from fees, leases, rents, royalties, 
services, sales or real or personal property, overpayments, penalties, 
damages, interests, fines, forfeitures (except those arising under the 
Uniform Code of Military Justice), and all other similar sources.
    (e) Disposable pay. The amount that remains from an employee's 
Federal pay after required deductions for social security, Federal, 
state or local income tax, health insurance premiums, retirement 
contributions, life insurance premiums, Federal employment taxes, and 
any other deductions that are required to be withheld by law.
    (f) Hearing official. An individual responsible for conducting any 
hearing with respect to the existence or amount of a debt claimed, and 
who renders a decision on the basis of such hearing. A hearing official 
may not be under the supervision or control of the Chairman of the MSPB.
    (g) Paying Agency. The agency that employs the individual who owes 
the debt and authorizes the payment of his/her current pay.
    (h) Salary offset. An administrative offset to collect a debt 
pursuant to 5 U.S.C. 5514 by deduction(s) at one or more officially 
established pay intervals from the current pay account of an employee 
without his/her consent.



Sec. 1210.3  Applicability.

    (a) These regulations are to be followed when:
    (1) The MSPB is owed a debt by an individual currently employed by 
another Federal agency;
    (2) The MSPB is owed a debt by an individual who is a current 
employee of the MSPB; or
    (3) The MSPB employs an individual who owes a debt to another 
Federal agency.



Sec. 1210.4  Notice requirements.

    (a) Deductions shall not be made unless the employee is provided 
with written notice signed by the Chairman of the debt at least 30 days 
before salary offset commences.
    (b) The written notice shall contain:
    (1) A statement that the debt is owed and an explanation of its 
nature, and amount;
    (2) The agency's intention to collect the debt by deducting from the 
employee's current disposable pay account;
    (3) The amount, frequency proposed beginning date, and duration of 
the intended deduction(s);
    (4) An explanation of interest, penalties, and administrative 
charges, including a statement that such charges will be assessed unless 
excused in accordance with the Federal Claims Collections Standards at 4 
CFR 101.1 et seq.;

[[Page 76]]

    (5) The employee's right to inspect, request, or receive a copy of 
government records relating to the debt;
    (6) The opportunity to establish a written schedule for the 
voluntary repayment of the debt;
    (7) The right to a hearing conducted by an impartial hearing 
official;
    (8) The methods and time period for petitioning for hearings;
    (9) A statement that the timely filing of a petition for a hearing 
will stay the commencement of collection proceedings;
    (10) A statement that a final decision on the hearing will be issued 
not later than 60 days after the filing of the petition requesting the 
hearing unless the employee requests and the hearing official grants a 
delay in the proceedings;
    (11) A statement that knowingly false or frivolous statements, 
representations, or evidence may subject the employee to appropriate 
disciplinary procedures;
    (12) A statement of other rights and remedies available to the 
employee under statutes or regulations governing the program for which 
the collection is being made; and
    (13) Unless there are contractual or statutory provisions to the 
contrary, a statement that amounts paid on or deducted for the debt 
which are later waived or found not owed to the United States will be 
promptly refunded to the employee.



Sec. 1210.5  Hearing.

    (a) Request for hearing. (1) An employee must file a petition for a 
hearing in accordance with the instructions outlined in the agency's 
notice to offset.
    (2) A hearing may be requested by filing a written petition 
addressed to the Chairman of the MSPB stating why the employee disputes 
the existence or amount of the debt. The petition for a hearing must be 
received by the Chairman no later than fifteen (15) calendar days after 
the date of the notice to offset unless the employee can show good cause 
for failing to meet the deadline date.
    (b) Hearing procedures. (1) The hearing will be presided over by an 
impartial hearing official.
    (2) The hearing shall conform to procedures contained in the Federal 
Claims Collection Standards 4 CFR 102.3(c). The burden shall be on the 
employee to demonstrate that the existence or the amount of the debt is 
in error.



Sec. 1210.6  Written decision.

    (a) The hearing official shall issue a written opinion no later than 
60 days after the hearing.
    (b) The written opinion will include: A statement of the facts 
presented to demonstrate the nature and origin of the alleged debt; the 
hearing official's analysis, findings and conclusions; the amount and 
validity of the debt, and the repayment schedule.



Sec. 1210.7  Coordinating offset with another Federal agency.

    (a) The MSPB as the creditor agency. (1) When the Chairman 
determines that an employee of a Federal agency owes a delinquent debt 
to the MSPB, the Chairman shall as appropriate:
    (i) Arrange for a hearing upon the proper petitioning by the 
employee;
    (ii) Certify in writing that the employee owes the debt, the amount 
and basis of the debt, the date on which payment is due, the date the 
Government's right to collect the debt accrued, and that MSPB 
regulations for salary offset have been approved by the Office of 
Personnel Management;
    (iii) Advise the paying agency of the amount or percentage of 
disposable pay to be collected in each installment, if collection is to 
be made in installments;
    (iv) Advise the paying agency of the actions taken under 5 U.S.C. 
5514(b) and provide the dates on which action was taken unless the 
employee has consented to salary offset in writing or signed a statement 
acknowledging receipt of procedures required by law. The written consent 
or acknowledgment must be sent to the paying agency;
    (v) If the employee is in the process of separating, MSPB must 
submit its debt claim to the paying agency as provided in this part. The 
paying agency must certify any amounts already collected, notify the 
employee, and send a copy of the certification and notice of

[[Page 77]]

the employee's separation to the creditor agency. If the paying agency 
is aware that the employee is entitled to Civil Service Retirement and 
Disability Fund or similar payments, it must certify to the agency 
responsible for making such payments the amount of the debt and that the 
provisions of this part have been followed; and
    (vi) If the employee has already separated and all payments due from 
the paying agency have been paid, the Chairman may request unless 
otherwise prohibited, that money payable to the employee from the Civil 
Service Retirement and Disability Fund or other similar funds be 
collected by administrative offset.
    (b) MSPB as the paying agency. (1) Upon receipt of a properly 
certified debt claim from another agency, deductions will be scheduled 
to begin at the next established pay interval. The employee must receive 
written notice that the MSPB has received a certified debt claim from 
the creditor agency, the amount of the debt, the date salary offset will 
begin, and the amount of the deduction(s). The MSPB shall not review the 
merits of the creditor agency's determination of the validity or the 
amount of the certified claim.
    (2) If the employee transfers to another agency after the creditor 
agency has submitted its debt claim to the MSPB and before the debt is 
collected completely, the MSPB must certify the total amount collected. 
One copy of the certification must be furnished to the employee. A copy 
must be furnished the creditor agency with notice of the employee's 
transfer.



Sec. 1210.8  Procedures for salary offset.

    (a) Deductions to liquidate an employee's debt will be by the method 
and in the amount stated in the Chairman's notice of intention to offset 
as provided in Sec. 1210.4. Debts will be collected in one lump sum 
where possible. If the employee is financially unable to pay in one lump 
sum, collection must be made in installments.
    (b) Debts will be collected by deduction at officially established 
pay intervals from an employee's current pay account unless alternative 
arrangements for repayment are made.
    (c) Installment deductions will be made over a period not greater 
than the anticipated period of employment. The size of installment 
deductions must bear a reasonable relationship to the size of the debt 
and the employee's ability to pay. The deduction for the pay intervals 
for any period must not exceed 15 percent of disposable pay unless the 
employee has agreed in writing to a deduction of a greater amount.
    (d) Unliquidated debts may be offset against any financial payment 
due to a separated employee including but not limited to final salary 
payment or leave in accordance with 31 U.S.C. 3716.



Sec. 1210.9  Refunds.

    (a) The MSPB will refund promptly any amounts deducted to satisfy 
debts owed to the MSPB when the debt is waived, found not owed to the 
MSPB, or when directed by an administrative or judicial order.
    (b) The creditor agency will promptly return any amounts deducted by 
MSPB to satisfy debts owed to the creditor agency when the debt is 
waived, found not owed, or when directed by an administrative or 
judicial order.
    (c) Unless required by law, refunds under this subsection shall not 
bear interest.



Sec. 1210.10  Statute of limitations.

    If a debt has been outstanding for more than 10 years after the 
agency's right to collect the debt first accrued, the agency may not 
collect by salary offset unless facts material to the Government's right 
to collect were not known and could not reasonably have been known by 
the official or officials who were charged with the responsibility for 
discovery and collection of such debts.



Sec. 1210.11  Nonwaiver of rights.

    An employee's involuntary payment of all or any part of a debt 
collected under these regulations will not be construed as a waiver of 
any rights that employee may have under 5 U.S.C. 5514 or any other 
provision of contract law unless there are statutes or contract(s) to 
the contrary.

[[Page 78]]



Sec. 1210.12  Interest, penalties, and administrative costs.

    Charges may be assessed for interest, penalties, and administrative 
costs in accordance with the Federal Claims Collection Standards, 4 CFR 
102.13. Dated: July 24, 1987.



                      Subpart B--Claims Collection

    Authority: The authority for this part is the Federal Claims 
Collection Act of 1966, as amended, 31 U.S.C. 3711 and 3716-3719; the 
Federal Claims Collection Standards at 4 CFR parts 101-105, as amended 
by 49 FR 8889, 5 U.S.C. 552a, and Office of Management and Budget 
Circular A-129.



Sec. 1210.21  Purpose and scope.

    This part prescribes standards and procedures for officers and 
employees of the MSPB who are responsible for the collection and 
disposition of debts owed to the United States. The activities covered 
include: Collecting claims in any amount; compromising claims, or 
suspending or terminating the collection of claims that do not exceed 
$20,000 exclusive of interest and charges; and referring debts that 
cannot be disposed of by the MSPB to the Department of Justice or to the 
General Accounting Office for further administrative action or 
litigation.



Sec. 1210.22  Definitions.

    (a) Claim or debt. An amount or property owed to the United States 
which includes, but is not limited to: Overpayments to program 
beneficiaries; overpayments to contractors and grantees, including 
overpayments arising from audit disallowances; excessive cash advances 
to grantees and contractors; and civil penalties and assessments. A debt 
is overdue or delinquent if it is not paid by the due date specified in 
the initial notice of the debt (see Sec. 1210.26) or if the debtor fails 
to satisfy his or her obligation under a repayment agreement.
    (b) Debtor. An individual, organization, group, association, 
partnership, or corporation indebted to the United States, or the person 
or entity with legal responsibility for assuming the debtor's 
obligation.
    (c) MSPB. The Merit Systems Protection Board.
    (d) Administrative offset. Satisfying a debt by withholding money 
payable by the United States to or held by the United States for a 
debtor.



Sec. 1210.23  Other remedies.

    The remedies and sanctions available to the MSPB under this part are 
not intended to be exclusive. The Chairman of the MSPB or his designee 
may impose other appropriate sanctions upon a debtor for prolonged or 
repeated failure to pay a debt. For example, the Chairman or his 
designee may place the debtor's name on a list of debarred, suspended, 
or ineligible contractors. In such cases the debtor will be advised of 
the MSPB's action.



Sec. 1210.24  Claims involving criminal activity or misconduct.

    (a) A debtor whose indebtedness involves criminal activity such as 
fraud, embezzlement, theft, or misuse of government funds or property is 
subject to punishment by fine or imprisonment as well as to a civil 
claim by the United States for compensation for the misappropriated 
funds. The MSPB will refer these cases to the appropriate law 
enforcement agency for prosecution.
    (b) Debts involving fraud, false claims, or misrepresentation shall 
not be compromised, terminated, suspended, or otherwise disposed of 
under this rule. Only the Department of Justice is authorized to 
compromise, terminate, suspend, or otherwise dispose of such debts.



Sec. 1210.25  Collection.

    (a) The MSPB will take aggressive action to collect debts and reduce 
delinquencies. Collection efforts shall include sending to the debtor's 
last known address a total of three progressively stronger written 
demands for payment at not more than 30 day intervals. When necessary to 
protect the Government's interest, written demand may be preceded by 
other appropriate action, including immediate referral for litigation. 
Other contact with the debtor or his or her representative or guarantor 
by telephone, in person and/or in writing may be appropriate to demand 
prompt payment, to discuss the debtor's position regarding the 
existence, amount and repayment of the

[[Page 79]]

debt, and to inform the debtor of his or her rights and effect of 
nonpayment or delayed payment. A debtor who disputes a debt must 
promptly provide available supporting evidence.
    (b) If a debtor is involved in insolvency proceedings, the debt will 
be referred to the appropriate United States Attorney to file a claim. 
The United States may have a priority over other creditors under 31 
U.S.C. 3713.



Sec. 1210.26  Notices to debtor.

    The first written demand for payment must inform the debtor of the 
following:
    (a) The amount and nature of the debt;
    (b) The date payment is due, which will generally be 30 days from 
the date the notice was mailed;
    (c) The assessment of interest under Sec. 1210.27 from the date the 
notice was mailed if payment is not received within the 30 days;
    (d) The right to dispute the debt;
    (e) The office, address and telephone number that the debtor should 
contact to discuss repayment and reconsideration of the debt; and
    (f) The sanctions available to the MSPB to collect a delinquent debt 
including, but not limited to, referral of the debt to a credit 
reporting agency, a private collection bureau, or the Department of 
Justice for litigation.



Sec. 1210.27  Interest, penalties, and administrative costs.

    (a) Interest will accrue on all debts from the date when the first 
notice of the debt and the interest requirement is mailed to the last 
known address or hand-delivered to the debtor if the debt is not paid 
within 30 days from the date the first notice was mailed. The MSPB will 
charge an annual rate of interest that is equal to the average 
investment rate for the Treasury tax and loan accounts on September 30 
of each year, rounded to the nearest whole per centum. This rate, which 
represents the current value of funds to the United States Treasury, may 
be revised quarterly by the Secretary of the Treasury and is published 
by the Secretary of the Treasury annually or quarterly in the Federal 
Register and the Treasury Financial Manual Bulletins.
    (b) The rate of interest initially assessed will remain fixed for 
the duration of the indebtedness, except that if a debtor defaults on a 
repayment agreement interest may be set at the Treasury rate in effect 
on the date a new agreement is executed.
    (c) The MSPB shall charge debtors for administrative costs incurred 
in handling overdue debts.
    (d) Interest will not be charged on administrative costs.
    (e) The MSPB shall assess a penalty charge, not to exceed 6 percent 
per year on debts which have been delinquent for more than 90 days. This 
change shall accrue from the date that the debt became delinquent.
    (f) The Chairman or his designee may waive in whole or in part the 
collection of interest and administrative and penalty charges if 
determined that collection would be against equity or not in the best 
interests of the United States. The MSPB shall waive the collection of 
interest on the debt or any part of the debt which is paid within 30 
days after the date on which interest began to accrue.



Sec. 1210.28  Administrative offset.

    (a) The MSPB may collect debts owed by administrative offset if:
    (1) The debt is certain in amount;
    (2) Efforts to obtain direct payment have been, or would most likely 
be unsuccessful, or the MSPB and the debtor agree to the offset;
    (3) Offset is cost effective or has significant deterrent value; and
    (4) Offset is best suited to further and protect the Government's 
interest.
    (b) The MSPB may offset a debt owed to another Federal agency from 
amounts due or payable by the MSPB to the debtor or request another 
Federal agency to offset a debt owed to the MSPB;
    (c) Prior to initiating administrative offset, the MSPB will send 
the debtor written notice of the following:
    (1) The nature and amount of the debt and the agency's intention to 
collect the debt by offset 30 days from the date the notice was mailed 
if neither payment nor a satisfactory response is received by that date;

[[Page 80]]

    (2) The debtor's right to an opportunity to submit a good faith 
alternative repayment schedule to inspect and copy agency records 
pertaining to the debt, to request a review of the determination of 
indebtedness; and to enter into a written agreement to repay the debt; 
and
    (3) The applicable interest.
    (d) The MSPB may effect an administrative offset against a payment 
to be made to a debtor prior to the completion of the procedures 
required by paragraph (c) of this section if:
    (1) Failure of offset would substantially prejudice the Government's 
ability to collect the debt; and
    (2) The time before the payment is to be made does not reasonably 
permit completion of those procedures.



Sec. 1210.29  Use of credit reporting agencies.

    (a) The MSPB may report delinquent accounts to credit reporting 
agencies consistent with the notice requirements contained in the 
Sec. 1210.26. Individual debtors must be given at least 60 days written 
notice that the debt is overdue and will be reported to a credit 
reporting agency.
    (b) Debts may be reported to consumer or commercial reporting 
agencies. Consumer reporting agencies are defined in 31 U.S.C. 
3701(a)(3) pursuant to 5 U.S.C. 552a(b)(12) and 31 U.S.C. 3711(f). The 
MSPB may disclose only an individual's name, address, Social Security 
number, and the nature, amount, status and history of the debt and the 
program under which the claim arose.



Sec. 1210.30  Collection services.

    (a) The MSPB may contract for collection services to recover 
outstanding debts. The MSPB may refer delinquent debts to private 
collection agencies listed on the schedule compiled by the General 
Services Administration. In such contracts, the MSPB will retain the 
authority to resolve disputes, compromise claims, terminate or suspend 
collection, and refer the matter to the Department of Justice or the 
General Accounting Office.
    (b) The contractor shall be subject to the disclosure provisions of 
the Privacy Act of 1974, as amended (5 U.S.C. 552a(m)), and to 
applicable Federal and state laws and regulations pertaining to debt 
collection practices, including the Fair Debt Collection Practices Act, 
15 U.S.C. 1692. The contractor shall be strictly accountable for all 
amounts collected.
    (c) The contractor shall be required to provide to the MSPB any data 
contained in its files relating to the debt account upon agency request 
or upon returning an account to the MSPB for referral to the Department 
of Justice for litigation.



Sec. 1210.31  Referral to the Department of Justice or the General Accounting Office.

    Debts over $600 but less than $100,000 which the MSPB determines can 
neither be collected nor otherwise disposed of will be referred for 
litigation to the United States Attorney in whose judicial district the 
debtor is located. Claims for amounts exceeding $100,000 shall be 
referred for litigation to the Commercial Litigation Branch, Civil 
Division of the Department of Justice.



Sec. 1210.32  Compromise, suspension and termination.

    (a) The Chairman of the MSPB or his designee may compromise, suspend 
or terminate the collection of debts where the outstanding principal is 
not greater than $20,000. MSPB procedures for writing off outstanding 
accounts are available to the public.
    (b) The Chairman of the MSPB may compromise, suspend or terminate 
collection of debts where the outstanding principal is greater than 
$20,000 only with the approval of, or by referral to the United States 
Attorney or the Department of Justice.
    (c) The Chairman of the MSPB will refer to the General Accounting 
Office (GAO) debts arising from GAO audit exceptions.



Sec. 1210.33  Omissions not a defense.

    Failure to comply with any provisions of this rule may not serve as 
a defense to any debtor.

[[Page 81]]



               CHAPTER III--OFFICE OF MANAGEMENT AND BUDGET




  --------------------------------------------------------------------

                 SUBCHAPTER A--ADMINISTRATIVE PROCEDURES
Part                                                                Page
1300            Standards of conduct........................          82
1302            Privacy Act procedures......................          82
1303            Public information provisions of the 
                    Administrative Procedures Act...........          88
1304            Post employment conflict of interest........          95
                      SUBCHAPTER B--OMB DIRECTIVES
1310            OMB and Federal management circulars........          99
1312            Classification, downgrading, 
                    declassification and safeguarding of 
                    national security information...........         101
1320            Controlling paperwork burdens on the public.         106

[[Page 82]]



                 SUBCHAPTER A--ADMINISTRATIVE PROCEDURES





PART 1300--STANDARDS OF CONDUCT--Table of Contents




    Authority: 5 U.S.C. 7301.



Sec. 1300.1  Cross-reference to employees ethical conduct standards and financial disclosure regulations.

    Employees of the Office of Management and Budget are subject to the 
executive branch-wide standards of ethical conduct at 5 CFR part 2635, 
OMB's regulations at 5 CFR part 8701 which supplement the executive 
branch-wide standards, and the executive branch-wide financial 
disclosure regulations at 5 CFR part 2634.

[60 FR 12397, Mar. 7, 1995]



PART 1302--PRIVACY ACT PROCEDURES--Table of Contents




Sec.
1302.1  Rules for determining if an individual is the subject of a 
          record.
1302.2  Requests for access.
1302.3  Access to the accounting of disclosures from records.
1302.4  Requests to amend records.
1302.5  Request for review.
1302.6  Schedule of fees.

    Authority: Pub. L. 93-579, 88 Stat. 1896, 5 USC 552a(f).

    Source: 41 FR 38491, Sept. 10, 1976, unless otherwise noted.



Sec. 1302.1   Rules for determining if an individual is the subject of a record.

    (a) Individuals desiring to know if a specific system of records 
maintained by the Office of Management and Budget contains a record 
pertaining to them should address their inquiries to the Assistant to 
the Director for Administration, Office of Management and Budget, 
Washington, DC 20503. The written inquiry should contain a specific 
reference to the system of records maintained by OMB listed in the OMB 
Notices of Systems of Records or it should describe the type of record 
in sufficient detail to reasonably identify the system of records. 
Notice of OMB systems of records subject to the Privacy Act will be made 
in the Federal Register and copies of the notices will be available upon 
request to the Assistant to the Director for Administration when so 
published. A compilation of such notices will also be made and published 
by the Office of Federal Register, in accordance with section 5 U.S.C. 
552a(f).
    (b) At a minimum, the request should also contain sufficient 
information to identify the requester in order to allow OMB to determine 
if there is a record pertaining to that individual in a particular 
system of records. In instances when the information is insufficient to 
insure disclosure to the individual to whom the information pertains, in 
view of the sensitivity of the information, OMB reserves the right to 
ask the requester for additional identifying information.
    (c) Ordinarily the requester will be informed whether the named 
system of records contains a record pertaining to the requester within 
10 days of receipt of such a request (excluding Saturdays, Sundays, and 
legal Federal holidays). Such a response will also contain or reference 
the procedures which must be followed by the individual making the 
request in order to gain access to the record.
    (d) Whenever a response cannot be made within the 10 days, the 
Assistant to the Director for Administration will inform the requester 
of the reasons for the delay and the date by which a response may be 
anticipated.



Sec. 1302.2   Requests for access.

    (a) Requirement for written requests. Individuals desiring to gain 
access to a record pertaining to them in a system of records maintained 
by OMB must submit their request in writing in accordance with the 
procedures set forth in paragraph (b) of this section. Due to security 
measures in effect in both the Old and New Executive Office Buildings, 
requests made in person (walk-ins) cannot be accepted, except that 
individuals who are employed by the Office of Management and Budget may 
make their request on a regularly scheduled workday (Monday through

[[Page 83]]

Friday, excluding legal Federal holidays) between the hours of 9:00 a.m. 
and 5:30 p.m. Such requests for access by individuals employed by OMB 
need not be made in writing.
    (b) Procedures--(1) Content of the Request. (i) The request for 
access to a record in a system of records shall be addressed to the 
Assistant to the Director for Administration, at the address cited 
above, and shall name the system of records or contain a description (as 
concise as possible) of such system of records. The request should state 
that the request is pursuant to the Privacy Act of 1974. In the absence 
of specifying solely the Privacy Act of 1974 and, if the request may be 
processed under both the Freedom of Information Act and the Privacy Act 
and the request specifies both or neither act, the procedures under the 
Privacy Act of 1974 will be employed. The individual will be advised 
that the procedures of the Privacy Act will be utilized, of the 
existence and the general effect of the Freedom of Information Act, and 
the difference between procedures under the two acts (e.g. fees, time 
limits, access). The request should contain necessary information to 
verify the identity of the requester (see Sec. 1302.2(b)(2)(vi), of this 
part) . In addition, the requester should include any other information 
which may assist in the rapid identification of the record for which 
access is being requested (e.g., maiden name, dates of employment, etc.) 
as well as any other identifying information contained in and required 
by the OMB Notice of Systems of Records.
    (ii) If the request for access follows a prior request under 
Sec. 1302.1, of this part, the same identifying information need not be 
included in the request for access if a reference is made to that prior 
correspondence, or a copy of the OMB response to that request is 
attached.
    (iii) If the individual specifically desires a copy of the record, 
the request should so specify.
    (2) OMB action on request. A request for access will ordinarily be 
answered within 10 days, except when the Assistant to the Director for 
Administration determines that access cannot be afforded in that time, 
in which case the requester will be informed of the reason for the delay 
and an estimated date by which the request will be answered. Normally, 
access will be granted within 30 days from the date the request was 
received by the Office of Management and Budget. At a minimum, the 
answer to the request for access shall include the following:
    (i) A statement that there is a record as requested or a statement 
that there is not a record in the system of records maintained by OMB;
    (ii) A statement as to whether access will be granted only by 
providing a copy of the record through the mail; or the address of the 
location and the date and time at which the record may be examined. In 
the event the requester is unable to meet the specified date and time, 
alternative arrangements may be made with the official specified in 
Sec. 1302.2(b)(1) of this part;
    (iii) A statement, when appropriate, that examination in person will 
be the sole means of granting access only when the Assistant to the 
Director for Administration has determined that it would not unduly 
impede the requester's right of access;
    (iv) The amount of fees charged, if any (see Sec. 1302.6 of this 
part). (Fees are applicable only to requests for copies.);
    (v) The name, title, and telephone number of the OMB official having 
operational control over the record; and
    (vi) The documentation required by OMB to verify the identity of the 
requester. At a minimum, OMB's verification standards include the 
following:
    (A) Current or former OMB employees. Current or former OMB employees 
requesting access to a record pertaining to them in a system of records 
maintained by OMB may, in addition to the other requirements of this 
section, and at the sole discretion of the official having operational 
control over the record, have his or her identity verified by visual 
observation. If the current or former OMB employee cannot be so 
identified by the official having operational control over the records, 
identification documentation will be required. Employee identification 
cards, annuitant identification, driver licenses, or the ``employee 
copy'' of any official personnel document in the

[[Page 84]]

record are examples of acceptable identification validation.
    (B) Other than current or former OMB employees. Individuals other 
than current or former OMB employees requesting access to a record 
pertaining to them in a system of records maintained by OMB must produce 
identification documentation of the type described herein, prior to 
being granted access. The extent of the identification documentation 
required will depend on the type of record to be accessed. In most 
cases, identification verification will be accomplished by the 
presentation of two forms of identification. Any additional requirements 
are specified in the system notices published pursuant to 5 U.S.C. 
552a(e)(4).
    (C) Access granted by mail. For records to be accessed by mail, the 
Assistant to the Director for Administration shall, to the extent 
possible, establish identity by a comparison of signatures in situations 
where the data in the record is not so sensitive that unauthorized 
access could cause harm or embarrassment to the individual to whom they 
pertain. No identification documentation will be required for the 
disclosure to the requester of information required to be made available 
to the public by 5 U.S.C. 552. When, in the opinion of the Assistant to 
the Director for Administration, the granting of access through the mail 
could reasonably be expected to result in harm or embarrassment if 
disclosed to a person other than the individual to whom the record 
pertains, a notarized statement of identity or some similar assurance of 
identity will be required.
    (D) Unavailability of identification documentation. If an individual 
is unable to produce adequate identification documentation the 
individual will be required to sign a statement asserting identity and 
acknowledging that knowingly or willfully seeking or obtaining access to 
records about another person under false pretenses may result in a fine 
of up to $5,000. In addition, depending upon the sensitivity of the 
records sought to be accessed, the official having operational control 
over the records may require such further reasonable assurances as may 
be considered appropriate; e.g., statements of other individuals who can 
attest to the identity of the requester. No verification of identity 
will be required of individuals seeking access to records which are 
otherwise available to any person under 5 U.S.C. 552, Freedom of 
Information Act.
    (E) Access by the parent of a minor, or legal guardian. A parent of 
a minor, upon presenting suitable personal identification, may access on 
behalf of the minor any record pertaining to the minor maintained by OMB 
in a system of records. A legal guardian may similarly act on behalf of 
an individual declared to be incompetent due to physical or mental 
incapacity or age by a court of competent jurisdiction, absent a court 
order or consent, a parent or legal guardian has no absolute right to 
have access to a record about a child. Minors are not precluded from 
exercising on their own behalf rights given to them by the Privacy Act.
    (F) Granting access when accompanied by another individual. When an 
individual requesting access to his or her record in a system of records 
maintained by OMB wishes to be accompanied by another individual during 
the course of the examination of the record, the individual making the 
request shall submit to the official having operational control of the 
record, a signed statement authorizing that person access to the record.
    (G) Denial of access for inadequate identification documentation. If 
the official having operation control over the records in a system of 
records maintained by OMB determines that an individual seeking access 
has not provided sufficient identification documentation to permit 
access, the official shall consult with the Assistant to the Director 
for Administration prior to finally denying the individual access.
    (H) Review of decision to deny access. Whenever the Assistant to the 
Director for Administration determines, in accordance with the 
procedures herein, that access cannot be granted, the response will also 
include a statement of the procedures to obtain a review of the decision 
to deny in accordance with Sec. 1302.5 of this part.
    (vii) Exceptions. Nothing in these regulations shall be construed to 
entitle an individual the right to access to any

[[Page 85]]

information compiled in reasonable anticipation of a civil action or 
proceedings. The mere fact that records in a system of records are 
frequently the subject of litigation does not bring those systems of 
records within the scope of this provision. This provision is not 
intended to preclude access by an individual to records which are 
available to that individual under other processes such as the Freedom 
of Information Act or the rules of civil procedure.



Sec. 1302.3   Access to the accounting of disclosures from records.

    Rules governing the granting of access to the accounting of 
disclosures are the same as those for granting access to the records 
(including verification of identity) outlined in Sec. 1302.2, of this 
part.



Sec. 1302.4   Requests to amend records.

    (a) Requirement for written requests. Individuals desiring to amend 
a record that pertain to them in a system of records maintained by OMB, 
must submit their request in writing in accordance with the procedures 
set forth herein unless this requirement is waived by the official 
having responsibility for the system of records. Records not subject to 
the Privacy Act of 1974 will not be amended in accordance with these 
provisions. However, individuals who believe that such records are 
inaccurate may bring this to the attention of OMB.
    (b) Procedures. (1) (i) The request to amend a record in a system of 
records shall be addressed to the Assistant to the Director for 
Administration. Included in the request shall be the name of the system 
and a brief description of the record proposed for amendment. In the 
event the request to amend the record is the result of the individual's 
having gained access to the record in accordance with the provisions 
concerning access to records as set forth above, copies of previous 
correspondence between the requester and OMB will serve in lieu of a 
separate description of the record.
    (ii) When the individual's identity has been previously verified 
pursuant to Sec. 1302.2(b)(2)(vi) herein, further verification of 
identity is not required as long as the communication does not suggest 
that a need for verification is present. If the individual's identity 
has not been previously verified, OMB may require identification 
validation as described in Sec. 1302.2(b)(2)(vi). Individuals desiring 
assistance in the preparation of a request to amend a record should 
contact the Assistant to the Director for Administration at the address 
cited above.
    (iii) The exact portion of the record the individual seeks to have 
amended should be clearly indicated. If possible, the proposed 
alternative language should also be set forth, or at a minimum, the 
facts which the individual believes are not accurate, relevant, timely, 
or complete should be set forth with such particularity as to permit OMB 
not only to understand the individual's basis for the request, but also 
to make an appropriate amendment to the record.
    (iv) The request must also set forth the reasons why the individual 
believes his record is not accurate, relevant, timely, or complete. In 
order to avoid the retention by OMB of personal information merely to 
permit verification of records, the burden of persuading OMB to amend a 
record will be upon the individual. The individual must furnish 
sufficient facts to persuade the official in charge of the system of the 
inaccuracy, irrelevancy, timeliness, or incompleteness of the record.
    (v) Incomplete or inaccurate requests will not be rejected 
categorically. The individual will be asked to clarify the request as 
needed.
    (2) OMB action on the request. To the extent possible, a decision 
upon a request to amend a record will be made within 10 days, excluding 
Saturdays, Sundays, and legal Federal holidays. The response reflecting 
the decision upon a request for amendment will include the following:
    (i) The decision of the Office of Management and Budget whether to 
grant in whole, or deny any part of the request to amend the record.
    (ii) The reasons for the determination for any portion of the 
request which is denied.
    (iii) The name and address of the official with whom an appeal of 
the denial may be lodged.

[[Page 86]]

    (iv) The name and address of the official designated to assist, as 
necessary, and upon request of, the individual making the request in the 
preparation of the appeal.
    (v) A description of the review of the appeal within OMB (see 
Sec. 1302.5 of this part).
    (vi) A description of any other procedures which may be required of 
the individual in order to process the appeal.

If the nature of the request or the system of records precludes a 
decision within 10 days, the individual making the request will be 
informed within 10 days of the expected date for a decision. Such a 
decision will be issued as soon as it is reasonably possible, normally 
within 30 days from the receipt of the request (excluding Saturdays, 
Sundays, and legal Federal holidays) unless unusual circumstances 
preclude completing action within that time. If the expected completion 
date for the decision indicated cannot be met, the individual will be 
advised of that delay and of a revised date when the decision may be 
expected to be completed.



Sec. 1302.5   Request for review.

    (a) Individuals wishing to request a review of the decision by OMB 
with regard to an initial request to access or amend a record in 
accordance with the provisions of Secs. 1302.2 and 1302.4 of this part, 
should submit the request for review in writing and, to the extent 
possible, include the information specified in Sec. 1302.5(b), below. 
Individuals desiring assistance in the preparation of their request for 
review should contact the Assistant to the Director for Administration 
at the address provided herein.
    (b) The request for review should contain a brief description of the 
record involved or in lieu thereof, copies of the correspondence from 
OMB in which the request to access or to amend was denied and also the 
reasons why the requester believes that access should be granted or the 
disputed information amended. The request for review should make 
reference to the information furnished by the individual in support of 
his claim and the reasons as required by Secs. 1302.2 and 1302.4 of this 
part set forth by OMB in its decision denying access or amendment. 
Appeals filed without a complete statement by the requester setting 
forth the reasons for the review will, of course, be processed. However, 
in order to make the appellate process as meaningful as possible, the 
requester's disagreement should be set forth in an understandable 
manner. In order to avoid the unnecessary retention of personal 
information, OMB reserves the right to dispose of the material 
concerning the request to access or amend a record if no request for 
review in accordance with this section is received by OMB within 180 
days of the mailing by OMB of its decision upon an initial request. A 
request for review received after the 180 day period may, at the 
discretion of the Assistant to the Director for Administration, be 
treated as an initial request to access or amend a record.
    (c) The request for review should be addressed to the Assistant to 
the Director for Administration.
    (d) Upon receipt of a request for review, the Assistant to the 
Director for Administration will convene a review group composed of the 
Assistant to the Director for Administration, the General Counsel, or 
their designees, and the official having operational control over the 
record. This group will review the basis for the requested review and 
will develop a recommended course of action to the Deputy Director. If 
at any time additional information is required from the requester, the 
Assistant to the Director for Administration is authorized to acquire it 
or authorize its acquisition from the requester.
    (e) The Office of Management and Budget has established an internal 
Committee on Freedom of Information and Privacy (hereinafter referred to 
as the Committee). The Committee is composed of:
    (1) Deputy Director;
    (2) Assistant to the Director for Administration;
    (3) General Counsel;
    (4) Assistant Director for Budget Review;
    (5) Assistant Director for Legislative Reference;
    (6) Assistant to the Director for Public Affairs;
    (7) Deputy Associate Director for Information Systems;

[[Page 87]]

    (8) Deputy Associate Director for Statistical Policy;
    (9) Deputy Associate Director for National Security;
    (10) Budget and Management Officer;
    (11) Personnel Officer.
    (f) The Committee, when directed by the Assistant to the Director 
for Administration, will review the Office's administration of the 
Freedom of Information and Privacy Acts and make recommendations for the 
improvement thereto. In addition, the Committee, upon the request of the 
Deputy Director, may evaluate a request for review or appeal and 
recommend a decision to the Deputy Director, who has the final authority 
regarding appeals.
    (g) The Deputy Director will inform the requester in writing of the 
decision on the request for review within 20 days (excluding Saturdays, 
Sundays, and legal Federal holidays) from the date of receipt by OMB of 
the individual's request for review unless the Deputy Director extends 
the 20 day period for good cause. The extension and the reasons therefor 
will be sent by OMB to the requester within the initial 20 day period. 
Such extensions should not be routine and should not normally exceed an 
additional thirty days. If the decision does not grant in full the 
request for amendment, the notice of the decision will provide a 
description of the steps the individual may take to obtain judicial 
review of such a decision, a statement that the individual may file a 
concise statement with OMB setting forth the individual's reasons for 
his disagreement with the decision and the procedures for filing such a 
statement of disagreement. The Assistant to the Director for 
Administration has the authority to determine the ``conciseness'' of the 
statement, taking into account the scope of the disagreement and the 
complexity of the issues. Upon the filing of a proper concise statement 
by the individual, any subsequent disclosure of the information in 
dispute will be clearly noted so that the fact that the record is 
disputed is apparent, a copy of the concise statement furnished and a 
concise statement by OMB setting forth its reasons for not making the 
requested changes, if OMB chooses to file such a statement. A notation 
of a dispute is required to be made only if an individual informs the 
agency of his disagreement with OMB's determination in accordance with 
Sec. 1302.5 (a), (b) and (c). A copy of the individual's statement, and 
if it chooses, OMB's statement will be sent to any prior transferee of 
the disputed information who is listed on the accounting required by 5 
U.S.C. 552a(c). If the reviewing official determines that the record 
should be amended in accordance with the individual's request, OMB will 
promptly correct the record, advise the individual, and inform previous 
recipients if an accounting of the disclosure was made pursuant to 5 
U.S.C. 552(a)(c). The notification of correction pertains to information 
actually disclosed.



Sec. 1302.6   Schedule of fees.

    (a) Prohibitions against charging fees. Individuals will not be 
charged for:
    (1) The search and review of the record,
    (2) Any copies of the record produced as a necessary part of the 
process of making the record available for access, or
    (3) Any copies of the requested record when it has been determined 
that access can only be accomplished by providing a copy of the record 
through the mail.
    (b) Waiver. The Assistant to the Director for Administration may at 
no charge, provide copies of a record if it is determined the production 
of the copies is in the interest of the Government.
    (c) Fee schedule and method of payment. Fees will be charged as 
provided below except as provided in paragraphs (a) and (b) of this 
section.
    (1) Duplication of records. Records will be duplicated at a rate of 
$.10 per page for all copying of 4 pages or more. There is not charge 
for duplication 3 or fewer pages.
    (2) Where it is anticipated that the fees chargeable under this 
section will amount to more than $25.00, the requester shall be promptly 
notified of the amount of the anticipated fee or such portion thereof as 
can readily be estimated. In instances where the estimated fees will 
greatly exceed $25.00, an advance deposit may be required. The notice or 
request for an advance

[[Page 88]]

deposit shall extend an offer to the requester to consult with Office 
personnel in order to reformulate the request in a manner which will 
reduce the fees, yet still meet the needs of the requester.
    (3) Fees should be paid in full prior to issuance of requested 
copies. In the event the requester is in arrears for previous requests 
copies will not be provided for any subsequent request until the arrears 
have been paid in full.
    (4) Remittances shall be in the form either of a personal check or 
bank draft drawn on a bank in the United States, or a postal money 
order. Remittances shall be made payable to the order of the Treasury of 
the United States and mailed or delivered to the Assistant to the 
Director for Administration, Office of Management and Budget, 
Washington, DC 20503.
    (5) A receipt for fees paid will be given upon request.



PART 1303--PUBLIC INFORMATION PROVISIONS OF THE ADMINISTRATIVE PROCEDURES ACT--Table of Contents




                              Organization

Sec.
1303.1  General.
1303.2  Authority and functions.
1303.3  Organization.

                               Procedures

1303.10  Methods of operation.

                       Availability of Information

1303.20  Inspection, copying, and exceptions.

                   Charges for Search and Reproduction

1303.30  Definitions.
1303.40  Fees to be charged--general.
1303.50  Fees to be charged--categories of requesters.
1303.60  Miscellaneous fee provisions.
1303.70  Waiver or reduction of charges.

    Authority: 5 U.S.C. 552, as amended by Pub. L. 93-502 and Pub. L. 
99-570.

    Source: 47 FR 33483, Aug. 3, 1982, unless otherwise noted.

                              Organization



Sec. 1303.1  General

    This information is furnished for the guidance of the public and in 
compliance with the requirements of section 552 of title 5, United 
States Code, as amended.



Sec. 1303.2  Authority and functions.

    (a) The Office of Management and Budget was established in the 
Executive Office of the President pursuant to Part I of Reorganization 
Plan No. 2 of 1970 (35 FR 7959), effective July 1, 1970. That plan 
transferred to the President all functions vested by law in the Bureau 
of the Budget, or its Director, and designated the Bureau of the Budget 
as the Office of Management and Budget. By Executive Order No. 11541 of 
July 1, 1970 (35 FR 10737), the President delegated all functions 
transferred to him by part I of the Plan to the Director of the Office 
of Management and Budget.
    (b) The principal statutory functions of the Office of Management 
and Budget are contained in the Budget and Accounting Act of 1921 (42 
Stat. 20, 31 U.S.C. 1-25); the Government Corporation Control Act (59 
Stat. 597, 31 U.S.C. 841-869); the Budget and Accounting Procedures Act 
of 1950 (65 Stat. 832), the Congressional Budget and Impoundment Control 
Act of 1974 (Pub. L. 93-344), the Office of Federal Procurement Policy 
Act (Pub. L. 93-400), the Privacy Act of 1974 (Pub. L. 93-579), and the 
Paperwork Reduction Act of 1980 (Pub. L. 96-511).
    (c) The functions of the Office of Management and Budget are carried 
out pursuant to the provisions of the statutes cited above and the 
provisions of various Executive orders--principally, Executive Order No. 
8248 of September 8, 1939 (CFR Cum. Supp., p. 576), outlining certain 
functions to be performed by the Bureau of the Budget for the President, 
and Executive Order No. 11239 of June 28, 1965 (3 CFR Supp., p. 146), as 
amended, delegating certain functions of the President to the Director 
of the Bureau of the Budget, and, Executive Order No. 12991 on Federal 
Regulation. Under the terms of Executive Order No. 11541 of July 1, 
1970, the assignments and delegations made in the earlier orders are to 
be considered as assignments to the Office of Management and Budget and 
its Director.



Sec. 1303.3  Organization.

    The central organization of the Office of Management and Budget 
consists of:

[[Page 89]]

    (a) The Office of the Director, which includes the Director and the 
Deputy Director and their principal assistants, including the Deputy 
Assistant Director for Administration.
    (b) The Administrator of the Office of Federal Procurement Policy.
    (c) The Administrator of the Office of Information and Regulatory 
Affairs.
    (d) Two Associate and Assistant Directors with Government-wide 
management responsibilities in specialized areas as follows:
    (1) Legislative Reference.
    (2) Management.
    (e) Five program and budget Associate and Assistant Directors, as 
follows:
    (1) Budget Review.
    (2) National Security and International Affairs.
    (3) Human Resources, Veterans, and Labor.
    (4) Economics and Government.
    (5) Natural Resources, Energy, and Science.
    (f) The Office has no field organization.
    (g) Units of the Office of Management and Budget are presently 
located in the Old Executive Office Building, 17th Street and 
Pennsylvania Avenue, NW., and in the New Executive Office Building, 17th 
and H Streets, NW., Washington, DC 20503. Regular office hours are from 
9 a.m. to 5:30 p.m., Monday through Friday. Both buildings are under 
security control. Persons desiring to visit offices or employees of the 
Office of Management and Budget in either building will usually find it 
easier to do so if they write or telephone in advance for an 
appointment.

                               Procedures



Sec. 1303.10  Methods of operation.

    (a) The Office of Management and Budget maintains current indexes 
which identify information pertaining to matters issued, adopted, or 
promulgated after July 4, 1967, that are within the scope of 5 U.S.C. 
552(a)(2). These indexes are updated quarterly and are published in the 
Federal Register. They are also available for public inspection and 
copying at the Office's Publication Office, Room G-236, New Executive 
Office Building, 17th and H Streets, NW., Washington, DC 20503. The 
indexes may be examined between the hours of 9:00 a.m. and 5:30 p.m. on 
any day, except Saturdays, Sundays, and legal public holidays.
    (b) The Deputy Assistant Director for Administration is responsible 
for acting on all initial requests. Individuals wishing to obtain any 
information listed on the indexes should address their request in 
writing to the Deputy Assistant Director for Administration, Office of 
Management and Budget, Washington, DC 20503, Phone 395-7250. Requests 
for information shall be as specific as possible.
    (c) Upon receipt of any request for information or records, the 
Deputy Assistant Director for Administration will determine within 10 
days (excepting Saturdays, Sundays and legal public holidays) whether it 
is appropriate to grant the request and will immediately provide written 
notification to the person making the request. If the request is denied, 
the written notification to the person making the request shall include 
the names of the individuals who participated in the determination and a 
notice that an appeal may be lodged including the format and content of 
any such appeal within the Office of Management and Budget. (Receipt of 
a request as used herein means the date the request is received in the 
office of the Deputy Assistant Director for Administration.)
    (d) Appeals shall be set forth in writing and addressed to the 
Deputy Assistant Director for Administration at the address specified in 
paragraph (b) of this section. The appeal shall include a statement 
explaining the basis for the appeal. Determinations of appeals will be 
set forth in writing and signed by the Deputy Director, or his designee, 
within 20 days (excepting Saturdays, Sundays, and legal public 
holidays). If, on appeal, the denial is in whole or in part upheld, the 
written determination will also contain a notification of the provisions 
for judicial review and the names of the persons who participated in the 
determination.
    (e) In unusual circumstances, the time limits prescribed in 
paragraphs (c) and (d) of this section may be extended for not more than 
10 working days (excepting Saturdays, Sundays, or legal public 
holidays). Extensions may

[[Page 90]]

be granted by the Deputy Assistant Director for Administration. The 
extension period may be split between the initial request and the appeal 
but in no instance may the total period exceed 10 working days. 
Extensions will be by written notice to the persons making the request 
and will set forth the reasons for the extension and the date the 
determination is expected. As used herein, but only to the extent 
reasonably necessary to the proper processing of the particular request, 
the term ``unusual circumstances'' means:
    (1) The need to search for and collect the requested records from 
establishments that are separated from the office processing the 
request;
    (2) The need to search for, collect, and examine a voluminous amount 
of separate and distinct records which are demanded in a single request; 
or
    (3) The need for consultation, which shall be conducted with all 
practical speed, with another agency having a substantial interest in 
the determination of the request or among two or more components of the 
agency which have a substantial subject matter interest therein.

                       Availability of Information



Sec. 1303.20  Inspection, copying, and exceptions.

    (a) When a request for information has been approved pursuant to 
Sec. 1303.10 above, the person making the request may make an 
appointment to inspect or copy the materials requested during regular 
business hours by writing or telephoning the Deputy Assistant Director 
for Administration at the address or telephone number listed in 
Sec. 1303.10(c). Such materials may be copied manually without charge, 
and reasonable facilities will be made available for that purpose. Also, 
copies of individual pages of such materials will be made available at 
the price per page specified in Sec. 1303.30(a); however, the right is 
reserved to limit to a reasonable quantity the copies of such materials 
which may be made available in this manner when copies also are offered 
for sale by the Superintendent of Documents.
    (b) Certain functional units of the Office of Management and Budget 
solely advise and assist the President, and therefore these units are 
not covered by 5 U.S.C. 552. However, the Director or the Deputy 
Director, acting on his behalf, may determine that a record which falls 
in one of the following categories shall be made available. These units 
carry out activities that provide advice and assistance to the President 
with regard to:
    (1) The formulation and preparation of the Federal Budget.
    (2) The processing and enrolled bills and determinations of the 
relationships of pending and proposed legislation to the program of the 
President.
    (3) The compensation of Federal employees.
    (4) The establishment and organization of new agencies and the 
reorganization of existing programs and agencies, and
    (5) The preparation of Executive Orders and Proclamations.
    (c) Except to the extent that the Director or Deputy Director, 
acting on his behalf, determines that a record which falls within one of 
the following categories shall be made available, this section shall not 
apply to matters that are:
    (1)(i) Specifically authorized under criteria established by an 
Executive Order to be kept secret in the interest of the national 
defense or foreign policy, and (ii) are in fact properly classified 
pursuant to such Executive Order.
    (2) Related solely to the internal personnel rules and practices of 
the Office.
    (3) Specifically exempted from disclosure by statute, provided that 
such statute (i) requires that the matters be withheld from the public 
in such a manner as to leave no discretion on the issues, or (ii) 
establishes particular criteria for withholding or refers to particular 
types of matter to be withheld.
    (4) Trade secrets and commercial or financial information obtained 
from a person and privileged or confidential.
    (5) Interagency or intraagency memorandums or letters which would 
not be available by law to a party other than an agency in litigation 
with the Office.
    (6) Personnel and medical files and similar files, the disclosure of 
which would constitute a clearly unwarranted invasion of personal 
privacy.

[[Page 91]]

    (7) Records or information compiled for law enforcement purposes, 
but only to the extent that the production of such law enforcement 
records or information:
    (i) Could reasonably be expected to interfere with enforcement 
proceedings;
    (ii) Would deprive a person of a right to a fair trial or an 
impartial adjudication;
    (iii) Could reasonably be expected to constitute an unwarranted 
invasion of personal privacy;
    (iv) Could reasonably be expected to disclose the identity of a 
confidential source, including a State, local, or foreign agency or 
authority or any private institution that furnished information on a 
confidential basis, and, in the case of a record or information compiled 
by a criminal law enforcement authority in the course of a criminal 
investigation, or by an agency conducting a lawful national security 
intelligence investigation, information furnished by a confidential 
source;
    (v) Would disclose techniques and procedures for law information 
investigations or prosecutions, or would disclose guidelines for law 
enforcement investigations or prosecutions if such disclosure could 
reasonably be expected to risk circumvention of the law; or
    (vi) Could reasonably be expected to endanger the life or physical 
safety of any individual.
    (8) Contained in or related to examination, operating, or condition 
reports prepared by, on behalf of, or for the regulation or supervision 
of financial institutions; or
    (9) Geological and geophysical information and data, including maps, 
concerning wells.

[47 FR 33483, Aug. 3, 1982, as amended at 52 FR 49152, Dec. 30, 1987]

                   Charges for Search and Reproduction



Sec. 1303.30  Definitions.

    For the purpose of these regulations:
    (a) All the terms defined in the Freedom of Information Act apply.
    (b) A statute specifically providing for setting the level of fees 
for particular types of records (5 U.S.C. 552(a)(4)(A)(vi)) means any 
statute that specifically requires a government agency, such as the 
Government Printing Office (GPO) or the National Technical Information 
Service (NTIS), to set the level of fees for particular types of 
records, in order to:
    (1) Serve both the general public and private sector organizations 
by conveniently making available government information;
    (2) Ensure that groups and individuals pay the cost of publications 
and other services that are for their special use so that these costs 
are not borne by the general taxpaying public;
    (3) Operate an information dissemination activity on a self-
sustaining basis to the maximum extent possible; or
    (4) Return revenue to the Treasury for defraying, wholly or in part, 
appropriated funds used to pay the cost of disseminating government 
information.

Statutes, such as the User Fee Statute, which only provide a general 
discussion of fees without explicitly requiring that an agency set and 
collect fees for particular documents do not supersede the Freedom of 
Information Act under section (a)(4)(A)(vi) of that statute.
    (c) The term direct costs means those expenditures that OMB actually 
incurs in searching for and duplicating (and in the case of commercial 
requesters, reviewing) documents to respond to a FOIA request. Direct 
costs include, for example, the salary of the employee performing work 
(the basic rate of pay for the employee plus 16 percent of that rate to 
cover benefits) and the cost of operating duplicating machinery. Not 
included in direct costs are overhead expenses such as costs of space, 
and heating or lighting the facility in which the records are stored.
    (d) The term search includes all time spent looking for material 
that is responsive to a request, including page-by-page or line-by-line 
identification of material within documents. OMB employees should ensure 
that searching for material is done in the most efficient and least 
expensive manner so as to minimize costs for both the agency and the 
requester. For example, employees should not engage in line-by-line 
search when merely duplicating an

[[Page 92]]

entire document would prove the less expensive and quicker method of 
complying with a request. Search should be distinguished, moreover, from 
review of material in order to determine whether the material is exempt 
from disclosure (see paragraph (f) of this section). Searches may be 
done manually or by computer using existing programming.
    (e) The term duplication refers to the process of making a copy of a 
document necessary to respond to a FOIA request. Such copies can take 
the form of paper copy, microform, audio-visual materials, or machine 
readable documentation (e.g., magnetic tape or disk), among others. The 
copy provided must be in a form that is reasonably usable by requesters.
    (f) The term review refers to the process of examining documents 
located in response to a request that is for a commercial use (see 
paragraph (g) of this section) to determine whether any portion of any 
document located is permitted to be withheld. It also includes 
processing any documents for disclosure, e.g., doing all that is 
necessary to excise them and otherwise prepare them for release. Review 
does not include time spent resolving general legal or policy issues 
regarding the application of exemptions.
    (g) The term  `commercial use' request refers to a request from or 
on behalf of one who seeks information for a use or purpose that 
furthers the commercial, trade, or profit interests of the requester or 
the person on whose behalf the request is made. In determining whether a 
requester properly belongs in this category, OMB must determine the use 
to which a requester will put the documents requested. Moreover, where 
an OMB employee has reasonable cause to doubt the use to which a 
requester will put the records sought, or where that use is not clear 
from the request itself, the employee should seek additional 
clarification before assigning the request to a specific category.
    (h) The term educational institution refers to a preschool, a public 
or private elementary or secondary school, an institution of graduate 
higher education, an institution of undergraduate higher education, an 
institution of professional education, or an institution of vocational 
education, that operates a program or programs of scholarly research.
    (i) The term non-commercial scientific institution refers to an 
institution that is not operated on a commercial basis (as that term is 
referenced in paragraph (g) of this section), and that is operated 
solely for the purpose of conducting scientific research the results of 
which are not intended to promote any particular product or industry.
    (j) The term representative of the news media refers to any peson 
actively gathering news for an entity that is organized and operated to 
publish or broadcast news to the public. The term news means information 
that is about current events or that would be of current interest to the 
public. Examples of news media entities include television or radio 
stations broadcasting to the public at large, and publishers of 
periodicals (but only in those instances when they can qualify as 
disseminators of news) who make their products available for purchase or 
subscription by the general public. These examples are not intended to 
be all-inclusive. Moreover, as traditional methods of news delivery 
evolve (e.g., electronic dissemination of newspapers through 
telecommunications services), such alternative media would be included 
in this category. In the case of freelance journalists, they may be 
regarded as working for a news organization if they can demonstrate a 
solid basis for expecting publication through that organization, even 
though not actually employed by it. A publication contract would be the 
clearest proof, but OMB may also look to the past publication record of 
a requester in making this determination.

[52 FR 49153, Dec. 30, 1987]



Sec. 1303.40  Fees to be charged--general.

    OMB should charge fees that recoup the full allowable direct costs 
it incurs. Moreover, it shall use the most efficient and least costly 
methods to comply with requests for documents made under the FOIA. When 
documents that would be responsive to a request are maintained for 
distribution by agencies operating statutory-based fee schedule programs 
(see definition in Sections

[[Page 93]]

1303.30(b)), such as the NTIS, OMB should inform requesters of the steps 
necessary to obtain records from those sources.
    (a) Manual searches for records. OMB will charge at the salary 
rate(s) (i.e., basic pay plus 16 percent) of the employee(s) making the 
search.
    (b) Computer searches for records. OMB will charge at the actual 
direct cost of providing the service. This will include the cost of 
operating the central processing unit (CPU) for that portion of 
operating time that is directly attributable to searching for records 
responsive to a FOIA request and operator/programmer salary 
apportionable to the search.
    (c) Review of records. Only requesters who are seeking documents for 
commercial use may be charged for time spent reviewing records to 
determine whether they are exempt from mandatory disclosure. Charges may 
be assessed only for the initial review; i.e., the review undertaken the 
first time OMB analyzes the applicability of a specific exemption to a 
particular record or portion of a record. Records or portions of records 
withheld in full under an exemption that is subsequently determined not 
to apply may be reviewed again to determine the applicability of other 
exemptions not previously considered. The costs for such a subsequent 
review is assessable.
    (d) Duplication of records. Records will be duplicated at a rate of 
$.15 per page. For copies prepared by computer, such as tapes or 
printouts, OMB shall charge the actual cost, including operator time, of 
production of the tape or printout. For other methods of reproduction or 
duplication, OMB will charge the actual direct costs of producing the 
document(s). If OMB estimates that duplication charges are likely to 
exceed $25, it shall notify the requester of the estimated amount of 
fees, unless the requester has indicated in advance his willingness to 
pay fees as high as those anticipated. Such a notice shall offer a 
requester the opportunity to confer with agency personnel with the 
object of reformulating the request to meet his or her needs at a lower 
cost.
    (e) Other charges. OMB will recover the full costs of providing 
services such as those enumerated below when it elects to provide them:
    (1) Certifying that records are true copies;
    (2) Sending records by special methods such as express mail.
    (f) Remittances shall be in the form either of a personal check or 
bank draft drawn on a bank in the United States, or a postal money 
order. Remittances shall be made payable to the order of the Treasury of 
the United States and mailed or delivered to the Deputy Assistant 
Director for Administration, Office of Management and Budget, 
Washington, DC 20503.
    (g) A receipt for fees paid will be given upon request. Refund of 
fees paid for services actually rendered will not be made.
    (h) Restrictions on assessing fees. With the exception of requesters 
seeking documents for a commercial use, OMB will provide the first 100 
pages of duplication and the first two hours of search time without 
charge. Moreover, OMB will not charge fees to any requester, including 
commercial use requesters, if the cost of collecting a fee would be 
equal to or greater than the fee itself.
    (1) The elements to be considered in determining the ``cost of 
collecting a fee'' are the administrative costs of receiving and 
recording a requester's remittance, and processing the fee for deposit 
in the Treasury Department's special account.
    (2) For purposes of these restrictions on assessment of fees, the 
word ``pages'' refers to paper copies of ``8\1/2\  x  11'' or ``11  x  
14.'' Thus, requesters are not entitled to 100 microfiche or 100 
computer disks, for example. A microfiche containing the equivalent of 
100 pages or 100 pages of computer printout, does meet the terms of the 
restriction.
    (3) Similarly, the term ``search time'' in this context has as its 
basis, manual search. To apply this term to searches made by computer, 
OMB will determine the hourly cost of operating the central processing 
unit and the operator's hourly salary plus 16 percent. When the cost of 
search (including the operator time and the cost of operating the 
computer to process a request) equals the equivalent dollar amount of 
two hours of the salary of the person

[[Page 94]]

performing the search, i.e., the operator, OMB will begin assessing 
charges for computer search.

[52 FR 49153, Dec. 30, 1987]



Sec. 1303.50  Fees to be charged--categories of requesters.

    There are four categories of FOIA requesters: commercial use 
requesters; educational and non-commercial scientific institutions; 
representatives of the news media; and all other requesters. The 
specific levels of fees for each of these categories are:
    (a) Commercial use requesters. When OMB receive a request for 
documents for commercial use, it will assess charges that recover the 
full direct costs of searching for, reviewing for release, and 
duplicating the record sought. Requesters must reasonably describe the 
records sought. Commercial use requesters are not entitled to two hours 
of free search time nor 100 free pages of reproduction of documents. OMB 
may recover the cost of searching for and reviewing records even if 
there is ultimately no disclosure of records (see Sec. 1303.60(b)).
    (b) Educational and non-commercial scientific institution 
requesters. OMB shall provide documents to requesters in this category 
for the cost of reproduction alone, excluding charges for the first 100 
pages. To be eligible for inclusion in this category, requesters must 
show that the request is being made as authorized by and under the 
auspices of a qualifying institution and that the records are not sought 
for a commercial use, but are sought in furtherance of scholarly (if the 
request is from an educational institution) or scientific (if the 
request is from a non-commercial scientific institution) research. 
Requesters must reasonably describe the records sought.
    (c) Requesters who are representatives of the news media. OMB shall 
provide documents to requesters in this category for the cost of 
reproduction alone, excluding charges for the first 100 pages. To be 
eligible for inclusion in this category, a requester must meet the 
criteria in Sec. 1303.10(j), and his or her request must not be made for 
a commercial use. In reference to this class of requester, a request for 
records supporting the news dissemination function of the requester 
shall not be considered to be a request that is for a commercial use. 
Requesters must reasonably describe the records sought.
    (d) All other requesters. OMB shall charge requesters who do not fit 
into any of the categories above fees that recover the full reasonable 
direct cost of searching for and reproducing records that are responsive 
to the request, except that the first 100 pages of reproduction and the 
first two hours of search time shall be furnished without charge. 
Moreover, requests for records about the requesters filed in OMB's 
systems of records will continue to be treated under the fee provisions 
of the Privacy Act of 1974 which permit fees only for reproduction. 
Requesters must reasonably describe the records sought.

[52 FR 49154, Dec. 30, 1987]



Sec. 1303.60  Miscellaneous fee provisions.

    (a) Charging interest--notice and rate. OMB may begin assessing 
interest charges on an unpaid bill starting on the 31st day following 
the day on which the billing was sent. The fact that the fee has been 
received by OMB within the thirty day grace period, even if not 
processed, will suffice to stay the accrual of interest. Interest will 
be at the rate prescribed in section 3717 of title 31 of the United 
States Code and will accrue from the date of the billing.
    (b) Charges for unsuccessful search. OMB may assess charges for time 
spent searching, even if it fails to locate the records or if records 
located are determined to be exempt from disclosure. If OMB estimates 
that search charges are likely to exceed $25, it shall notify the 
requester of the estimated amount of fees, unless the requester has 
indicated in advance his willingness to pay fees as high as those 
anticipated. Such a notice shall offer the requester the opportunity to 
confer with agency personnel with the object of reformulating the 
request to meet his or her needs at a lower cost.
    (c) Aggregating requests. A requester may not file multiple requests 
at the same time, each seeking portions of a document or documents, 
solely in order to avoid payment of fees. When OMB reasonably believes 
that a requester or,

[[Page 95]]

on rare occasions, a group of requesters acting in concert, is 
attempting to break a request down into a series of requests for the 
purpose of evading the assessment of fees, OMB may aggregate any such 
requests and charge accordingly. One element to be considered in 
determining whether a belief would be reasonable is the time period over 
which the requests have occurred.
    (d) Advance payments. OMB may not require a requester to make an 
advance payment, i.e., payment before work is commenced or continued on 
a request, unless:
    (1) OMB estimates or determines that allowable charges that a 
requester may be required to pay are likely to exceed $250. Then, OMB 
will notify the requester of the likely cost and obtain satisfactory 
assurance of full payment where the requester has a history of prompt 
payment of FOIA fees, or require an advance payment of an amount up to 
the full estimated charges in the case of requesters with no history of 
payment; or
    (2) A requester has previously failed to pay a fee charged in a 
timely fashion (i.e., within 30 days of the date of the billing). Then, 
OMB may require the requester to pay the full amount owed plus any 
applicable interest as provided above or demonstrate that he or she has, 
in fact, paid the fee, and to make an advance payment of the full amount 
of the estimated fee before the agency begins to process a new request 
or a pending request from that requester.
    When OMB acts under paragraph (d) (1) or (2) of this section, the 
administrative time limits prescribed in the FOIA, 5 U.S.C. 552(a)(6) 
(i.e., 10 working days from receipt of initial requests and 20 working 
days from receipt of appeals from initial denial, plus permissible 
extensions of these time limits) will begin only after OMB has received 
fee payments described above.
    (e) Effect of the Debt Collection Act of 1982 (Pub. L. 97-365). OMB 
should comply with provisions of the Debt Collection Act, including 
disclosure to consumer reporting agencies and use of collection 
agencies, where appropriate, to encourage repayment.

[52 FR 49154, Dec. 30, 1987]



Sec. 1303.70  Waiver or reduction of charges.

    Fees otherwise chargeable in connection with a request for 
disclosure of a record shall be waived or reduced where it is determined 
that disclosure is in the public interest because it is likely to 
contribute significantly to public understanding of the operations or 
activities of the Government and is not primarily in the commercial 
interest of the requester.

[52 FR 49155, Dec. 30, 1987]



PART 1304--POST EMPLOYMENT CONFLICT OF INTEREST--Table of Contents




Sec.
1304.4601  Purpose.
1304.4604  Definitions.
1304.4605  Post-employment restrictions.
1304.4606  Exemptions.
1304.4607  Advice to former Government employees.
1304.4608  Administrative Enforcement Procedures (18 U.S.C. 207(j); 5 
          CFR 737.27).

    Authority: Title V, Section 501(a), Pub. L. 95-521, as amended, 92 
Stat. 1864; and Sections 1 and 2, Pub. L. 96-28, 93 Stat. 76 [18 U.S.C. 
207]; 5 CFR 737.

    Source: 45 FR 84007, Dec. 22, 1980, unless otherwise noted.



Sec. 1304.4601  Purpose.

    (a) This section sets forth OMB's policy and procedures under the 
Ethics in Government Act of 1978, 18 U.S.C. 207, and the Office of 
Personnel Management's implementing regulations, 5 CFR part 737, for 
determining violations of restrictions on post-employment activities and 
for exercising OMB's administrative enforcement authority.
    (b) These regulations bar certain acts by former Government 
employees which may reasonably give the appearance of making unfair use 
of prior Government employment and affiliations. OMB acts on the premise 
that it has the primary responsibility for the enforcement of 
restrictions on post-employment activities and that criminal enforcement 
by the Department of Justice should be undertaken only in cases 
involving aggravated circumstances.
    (c) These regulations do not incorporate possible additional 
restrictions

[[Page 96]]

contained in a professional code of conduct to which an employee may 
also be subject.
    (d) Any person who holds a Government position after June 30, 1979, 
is subject to the restrictions under this section; except that the new 
provisions applicable to Senior employees designated by the Director of 
the Office of Government Ethics are effective February 28, 1980.



Sec. 1304.4604  Definitions.

    (a) Government Employee includes any officer or employee of the 
Executive Branch, those appointed or detailed under 5 U.S.C. 3374, and 
Special Government Employees. It does not include an individual 
performing services for the United States as an independent contractor 
under a personal service contract.
    (b) Former Government Employee means one who was, and no longer is, 
a Government employee.
    (c) Special Government Employee means an officer or employee of an 
agency who is retained, designated, appointed, or employed to perform 
temporary duties on a full-time or intermittent basis for not more than 
130 days during any period of 365 consecutive days. This applies whether 
the Special Government Employee is compensated or not.
    (d) Senior Employee means an employee or officer as designated in 
the statute or by the Director of the Office of Government Ethics. The 
Director of the Office of Government Ethics has designated civilians who 
have significant decision-making or supervisory responsibility and are 
paid at or equivalent to GS-17 or above as Senior Employees. Civilians 
paid at the Executive level are automatically designated by statute as 
Senior Employees. (A list of Senior Employee positions is found at 5 CFR 
737.33.)



Sec. 1304.4605  Post-employment restrictions.

    (a) General Restrictions Applicable to All Former Government 
Employees:
    (1) Permanent Bar. A former Government employee is restricted from 
acting as a representative before an agency as to a particular matter 
involving a specific party if the employee participated personally and 
substantially in that matter as a Government employee. The government 
employee is also restricted from making any oral or written 
communication to an agency with the intent to influence on behalf of 
another person as to a particular matter involving a specific party if 
the former Government employee participated personally and substantially 
in that matter as a Government employee.
    (2) Two-Year Bar. (i) A former Government employee is restricted for 
two years from acting as a representative before an agency as to a 
particular matter involving a specific party if the employee had 
official responsibility for that matter. The former Government employee 
is also restricted for two years from making any oral or written 
communication to any agency with the intent to influence on behalf of 
another person as to a particular matter involving a specific party if 
the employee had official responsibility for that matter.
    (ii) In order to be a matter for which the former Government 
employee had official responsibility, the matter must actually have been 
pending under the employee's responsibility within the period of one 
year prior to the termination of such responsibility.
    (iii) The statutory two-year restriction period is measured from the 
date when the employee's responsibility for a particular matter ends, 
not from the termination of Government service.
    (b) Restrictions Applicable Only to Former Senior Employees:
    (1) Two-Year Bar on Assisting in Representing. (i) A former Senior 
Employee is restricted for two years from assisting in representing 
another person by personal appearance before an agency as to a 
particular matter involving a specific party if the former Senior 
Employee participated personally and substantially in that matter as a 
Government employee.
    (ii) The statutory two-year period is measured from the date of 
termination of employment in the position that was held by the Senior 
Employee when he participated personally and substantially in the matter 
involved.
    (2) One-Year Bar on Attempts to Influence Former Agency. (i) A 
former Senior

[[Page 97]]

Employee is restricted for one year from any transactions with the 
former agency on a particular matter with the intent to influence the 
agency, regardless of the former Senior Employee's prior involvement in 
that matter.
    (ii) This restriction is aimed at the possible use of personal 
influence based on past Government affiliations in order to facilitate 
transaction of business. Therefore, it includes matters which first 
arise after a Senior Employee leaves Government service.
    (iii) The restriction applies whether the former Senior Employee is 
representing another or representing himself, either by appearance 
before an agency or through communication with that agency.
    (c) OFPP is a separate agency for purposes of the foregoing 
restrictions on post-employment activities.



Sec. 1304.4606  Exemptions.

    (a) General. (1) Communications made solely to furnish scientific or 
technological information are exempt from these prohibitions.
    (2) A former Government employee may be exempted from the 
restrictions on post-employment practices if the Deputy Director of OMB, 
in consultation with the Director of the Office of Government Ethics, 
executes a certification that is published in the Federal Register. The 
certification shall state that the former Government employee has 
outstanding qualifications in a scientific, technological or other 
technical discipline; is acting with respect to a particular matter 
which requires such qualifications; and the national interest would be 
served by his participation.
    (b) Specific. The one-year bar shall not apply to a former Senior 
Employee's representation on new matters if the former Senior Employee 
is:
    (1) An elected State or local government official, who is acting on 
behalf of such government; or
    (2) Regularly employed by or acting on behalf of an agency or 
instrumentality of a State or local government; an accredited, degree-
granting institution of higher education; or a non-profit hospital or 
medical research organization.



Sec. 1304.4607  Advice to former Government employees.

    The Office of General Counsel, OMB, has the responsibility for 
providing assistance promptly to former Government employees who seek 
advice on specific problems.



Sec. 1304.4608  Administrative Enforcement Procedures (18 U.S.C. 207(j); 5 CFR 737.27).

    (a) Whenever an allegation is made that a former Government employee 
has violated 18 U.S.C. 207(a), (b) or (c) or any of the regulations 
promulgated thereunder by the Office of Government Ethics or by OMB, the 
allegation and any supporting evidence shall be transmitted through the 
Office of General Counsel to the Deputy Director, OMB.
    (b) Allegations and evidence shall be safeguarded so as to protect 
the privacy of former employees prior to a determination of sufficient 
cause to initiate an administrative disciplinary proceeding.
    (c) If review by the Office of General Counsel, OMB, shows that the 
information concerning a possible violation does not appear to be 
frivolous, the Deputy Director, OMB, shall expeditiously provide all 
relevant evidence, any appropriate comments, and copies of applicable 
agency regulations to the director, Office of Government Ethics, and to 
the Criminal Division, Department of Justice. Unless the Department of 
Justice informs OMB that it does not intend to initiate criminal 
prosecution, OMB shall coordinate any investigation or administrative 
action with the Department of Justice in order to avoid prejudicing 
criminal proceedings.
    (d) After appropriate review and recommendation by the Office of 
General Counsel, if the Deputy Director, OMB, determines that there is 
reasonable cause to believe that there has been a violation, the Deputy 
Director may direct the Office of General Counsel to initiate an 
administrative disciplinary proceeding and may designate an individual 
to represent OMB in the proceeding.

[[Page 98]]

    (e) Notice. The Office of General Counsel shall provide the former 
Government employee with adequate notice of its intention to institute a 
proceeding and with an opportunity for a hearing. The notice must 
include a statement of allegations, and the basis thereof, in sufficient 
detail to enable the former Government employee to prepare an adequate 
defense; notification of the right to a hearing; and an explanation of 
the method by which a hearing may be requested.
    (f) Hearing. A hearing may be obtained by submitting a written 
request to the Office of General Counsel.
    (g) Examiner. The presiding official at the proceedings shall be the 
hearing examiner, who is delegated authority by the Director, OMB, to 
make an initial decision. The hearing examiner shall be an attorney in 
the Office of General Counsel designated by the General Counsel. The 
hearing examiner shall be impartial and shall not have participated in 
any manner in the decision to initiate the proceedings.
    (h) Time, Date and Place. The hearing shall be conducted at a 
reasonable time, date, and place. The hearing examiner shall give due 
regard in setting the hearing date to the former Government employee's 
need for adequate time to properly prepare a defense and for an 
expeditious resolution of allegations that may be damaging to his 
reputation.
    (i) Hearing Rights. The hearing shall include, as a minimum, the 
right to represent oneself or to be represented by counsel; the right to 
introduce and examine witnesses and to submit physical evidence; the 
right to confront and cross-examine adverse witnesses; the right to 
present oral argument; and, on request, the right to have a transcript 
or recording of the proceedings.
    (j) Burden of Proof. OMB has the burden of proof and must establish 
substantial evidence of a violation.
    (k) Decision. The hearing examiner shall make a decision based 
exclusively on matters of record in the proceedings. All findings of 
fact and conclusions of law relevant to the matters at issue shall be 
set forth in the decision.
    (l) Appeal within OMB. Within 30 days of the date of the hearing 
examiner's decision, either party may appeal the decision to the 
Director. The Director shall make a decision on the appeal based solely 
on the record of the proceedings or on those portions of the record 
agreed to by the parties to limit the issues. If the Director modifies 
or reverses the hearing examiner's decision, he shall specify the 
findings of fact and conclusions of law that are different from those of 
the hearing examiner.
    (m) Administrative Sanctions. Administrative sanctions may be taken 
if the former Government employee fails to request a hearing after 
receipt of adequate notice or if a final administrative determination of 
a violation of 18 U.S.C. 207 (a), (b) or (c) or regulations promulgated 
thereunder has been made. The Director may prohibit the former 
Government employee from appearance or communication with OMB on behalf 
of another for a period not to exceed five years (5 CFR 737.27(a)(9)(i)) 
or take other appropriate disciplinary action (5 CFR 737.27(a)(9)(ii)).
    (n) Judicial Review. Any person found by an OMB administrative 
decision to have participated in a violation of 18 U.S.C. 207 (a), (b) 
or (c) or regulations promulgated thereunder may seek judicial review of 
the administrative decision.

[[Page 99]]



                      SUBCHAPTER B--OMB DIRECTIVES





PART 1310--OMB AND FEDERAL MANAGEMENT CIRCULARS--Table of Contents




Sec.
1310.1  Policy guidelines.
1310.3  Availability of circulars.
1310.5  List of current circulars.

    Authority: EO 11541, 35 FR 10737, 3 CFR, 1966-1970 Comp., p. 939.

    Source: 44 FR 37913, June 29, 1979. Redesignated at 44 FR 60286, 
Oct. 19, 1979, unless otherwise noted.



Sec. 1310.1  Policy guidelines.

    In carrying out its responsibilities, the Office of Management and 
Budget issues policy guidelines to Federal agencies to promote 
efficiency and uniformity in Government activities. These guidelines are 
normally in the form of circulars.



Sec. 1310.3  Availability of circulars.

    We believe, for public awareness purposes, that publishing the 
following list of current circulars is worthwhile. Copies of individual 
circulars may be obtained by writing to the Office of Administration, 
Publications Unit, Room G-236, New Executive Office Building, 
Washington, DC 20503, or by calling 202-395-4660.

    Editorial Note: The address and telephone number listed above have 
been changed to: Executive Office of the President Publications Service, 
725 17th Street NW, Suite G-2200, Washington DC 20503; 202-395-7332.



Sec. 1310.5  List of current circulars.

    (a) This index arranges the current OMB Circulars and Federal 
Management Circulars under OMB jurisdiction by key words in the titles 
of the directives and by a limited number of broader captions. Those 
Circular Nos. preceded with 73-, 74-, and 75- designate FMC's.
    (b) This list includes all circulars in effect as of July 1, 1979.

                                                                        
                                                                Circular
                            Subject                              No. A- 
                                                                        
Accounting and financial affairs:                                       
  Foreign currency control....................................        20
  Object classification.......................................        12
Acquisition of major systems..................................       109
Advisory committee management.................................        63
Airfields, land uses at Federal...............................      75-2
Allowance(s):                                                           
  For uniforms................................................        30
Antarctica, planning U.S. program for.........................        51
Annual budget, preparation of (See Budget and appropriations)           
Apportionments and reports on budget status...................        34
Appropriations (See Budget and appropriations)                          
Assistance (See Federal assistance & grant coordination)                
Audiovisual activities........................................       114
Audit of Federal operations and programs......................        73
Automatic data processing (See Data)                                    
Budget and appropriations:                                              
  Annual preparation & submission of..........................        11
  Appropriations & authorizations to President................        31
  Apportionments & reports on status..........................        34
  Deferred costs & benefits, evaluating.......................        94
  Object classifications for budget estimates.................        12
  Responsibilities with respect to budget.....................        10
  Zero-Base...................................................       115
Catalog of Federal Domestic Assistance........................        89
Ceilings, employment (See Employment)                                   
Charges:                                                                
  For rental quarters.........................................        45
  User........................................................        25
Civilian employment (See Employment)                                    
Classification, uniform by objects............................        12
College and university grants:                                          
  Research....................................................      73-7
  Uniform administrative requirements for.....................       110
Commercial products & services, acquiring.....................        76
Committees, management of advisory............................        63
Construction of family housing................................        18
Contracts:                                                              
  Awards, Government-wide procedures for processing preaward            
   protests...................................................      74-3
  Use of management and operating.............................        49
Control:                                                                
  Of foreign currencies.......................................        20
  Of litigation...............................................        99
Cooperation & coordination:                                             
  Indirect cost rates and audit at educational institutions...      73-6
  Information systems coordination--State & local government..        90
  Intergovernmental Cooperation Act, 1968.....................        97
  Legislation, recommendations on.............................        19
  Meterological services......................................        62
  Programs & projects, federally assisted.....................        95
  Surveying & mapping.........................................        16
  Water data, collecting......................................        67
Cost(s):                                                                
  Evaluating deferred costs & benefits, discount rates &                
   procedures.................................................        94
  Lease or purchase of real property..........................       104
  Principles:                                                           
    Applicable to grants and contracts with State and local             
     governments..............................................      74-4
    For educational institutions..............................        21
    Sharing on Federal research...............................      73-3
  Training, responsibility for planning.......................        48
Credit programs, legislation on...............................        70
Currencies, foreign (See International Affairs)                         
Data:                                                                   
  ADP:                                                                  
    Activity administration & management......................        71
    Cooperating with State & local gov't......................        90

[[Page 100]]

                                                                        
Decentralizing Federal activities.............................        60
Deferred costs & benefits, evaluating.........................        94
Deferred pay days.............................................        36
Directives, the OMB system....................................         1
Educational institutions:                                               
  Coordinating indirect cost rates and audit at...............      73-6
  Cost principles for.........................................        21
Employment:                                                             
  Ceilings & position management..............................        64
Environment:                                                            
  Pollution at existing Federal facilities....................       106
  Water data, coordination in collecting......................        67
Equipment (ADP) (See Data)                                              
Executive Action on General Accounting Office reports.........        50
Family housing (See Housing)                                            
Federal:                                                                
  Assistance (See Federal assistance & grant coordination)....          
  Credit programs, legislation on.............................        70
  Employees health services...................................        72
  Employees Uniform Allowance Act.............................        30
  Monitoring outlays..........................................       112
  Outlays by geographic location..............................        84
  Reports Act, clearance of plans & reports...................        40
  Research, cost sharing on...................................      73-3
  Standard Regions............................................       105
Federal assistance & grant coordination:                                
  Catalog Federal Domestic Assistance.........................        89
  Federal outlays by geographic location......................        84
  Information systems coordination with State & local                   
   government.................................................        90
  Intergovermental Cooperation Act, 1968......................        97
  Jointly funded to State and local governments and nonprofit           
   organizations..............................................       111
  Programs & projects evaluation..............................        95
Foreign grants & credits (See International Affairs)                    
Fund Control..................................................        34
General Accounting Office reports, executive branch action....        50
Geographic location, Federal outlays by.......................        84
Government periodicals, approval for printing.................         3
Grants:                                                                 
  College and university research.............................      73-7
  With institutions of higher education, hospitals and other            
   nonprofit organizations....................................       110
Grants-in-aid to State and local governments, administrative            
 requirements.................................................       102
Health services for Federal employees.........................        72
Hospitals, uniform administrative requirements for grants with       110
Housing:                                                                
  Construction of family housing..............................        18
  Rental quarters, charges for................................        45
Industrial products & services, acquiring.....................        76
Information systems (See Data)                                          
Improvement and the use of Evaluation.........................       117
Intergovernmental Cooperation Act, 1968.......................        97
Intergovernmental policy (See Federal assistance)                       
International Affairs:                                                  
  Foreign currency control of.................................        20
  Surveying & mapping boundaries..............................        16
Jointly funded assistance to State and local governments and            
 nonprofit organizations......................................       111
Land uses at Federal Airfields................................      75-2
Legislation:                                                            
  Direction & control of litigation...........................        99
  Federal credit programs.....................................        70
  Proposed, coordinating & clearing...........................        19
Litigation, direction & control of............................        99
Maintenance of records about individuals, responsibilities for       108
Major system acquisitions.....................................       109
Management:                                                             
  ADP (See Data)                                                        
  Advisory committee management...............................        63
  Contract use................................................        49
  Directives system for OMB...................................         1
  Federal activities, decentralization........................        60
  Federal audiovisual activities..............................       114
  General Accounting Office reports, action on................        50
  Improvement program.........................................       117
  Periodicals, approval of....................................         3
  Personnel (See Personnel management)........................          
  Uniform classification by object............................        12
Manpower:                                                               
  ADP:                                                                  
    Activities, administering & managing......................        71
  Position & ceiling management...............................        64
Mapping activities, coordination of...........................        16
Meteorological services, coordination of......................        62
National Capital, decentralizing from.........................        60
Natural resources and environment, water data, acquisition of.        67
Nonprofit organizations:                                                
  Administrative requirements for grants......................       110
  Jointly funded assistance...................................       111
Objects classification........................................        12
Organization and management (See Management)                            
Outlays by geographic location................................        84
Outlays, monitoring Federal...................................       112
Pay days, deferred............................................        36
Payments:                                                               
  Allowances to employees (See Allowances)                              
  Reductions incident to training.............................        48
Pending legislation, coordinating & clearing..................        19
Periodicals, approval for printing............................         3
Personnel management:                                                   
  Allowances to employees:                                              
    Uniforms..................................................        30
  Health services for Federal employees.......................        72
  Pay days, deferred..........................................        36
  Payments to personnel, erroneous............................        14
  Positions & ceilings........................................        64
  Rental quarters and other facilities........................        45
Planning, U.S. program for Antarctica.........................        51
Plans & reports, clearance under Federal Reports Act..........        40
Pollution, reporting requirements.............................       106
Position management & employment ceilings.....................        64
President, appropriations & authorizations to.................        31
Printing periodicals, approval for............................         3
Privacy Act of 1974...........................................       108
Procurement:                                                            
  Contracts, management & operating...........................        49
  Products & services, acquiring..............................        76
Property & services:                                                    
  Commercial products & services, acquisition of..............        76
  Family housing, construction of.............................        18
  Lease or purchase of real property..........................       104
  Real property...............................................       104
  Rental quarters.............................................        45
  Specialized/technical services to State & local government..        97
  User charges................................................        25
Proposed legislation, coordinating & clearing.................        19
Purchasing activities, operational effectiveness of                     
 decentralizing...............................................      74-6
Quarters, rental charges......................................        45
Rates, discount for deferred costs & benefits.................        94
Real property (See Property & services)                                 
Records about individuals, maintenance of.....................       108
Regions, Standard Federal.....................................       105
Report(s):                                                              
  Budget status, instructions.................................        34
  Clearance of, under Reports Act.............................        40

[[Page 101]]

                                                                        
  General Accounting Office, executive action on..............        50
  Outlays by geographic areas.................................        84
  Resources for Evaluation and Management Improvement.........       117
  Water data acquisition......................................        67
Science & technology:                                                   
  Antarctica program..........................................        51
  Meteorological services, coordination of....................        62
  Surveying & mapping, coordination of........................        16
Services (See Property & services)                                      
Standard Federal Regions......................................       105
State & local government:                                               
  Cooperation on information systems..........................        90
  Jointly funded assistance...................................       111
  Review of programs & projects...............................        95
  Services to, rules & regulations............................        97
Statistics and public reports:                                          
  Information, statistical:                                             
    Federal Reports Act.......................................        40
    Geographic location of Federal outlays....................        84
Supply support systems........................................      75-1
Surveying activities, coordination of.........................        16
Systems (See Data)                                                      
Training:                                                               
  Reductions of payments to employees.........................        48
  Responsibilities for planning...............................        48
Transactions, foreign (See International Affairs)                       
Transportation & travel, reductions of payments incident to             
 training.....................................................        48
Uniforms, Federal Employees Allowance Act.....................        30
United States program for Antarctica..........................        51
University and college grants:                                          
  Administrative requirements for.............................       110
  Research....................................................      73-7
Urban Community Impact Analyses...............................       116
User charges..................................................        25
Water data collection.........................................        67
                                                                        



PART 1312--CLASSIFICATION, DOWNGRADING, DECLASSIFICATION AND SAFEGUARDING OF NATIONAL SECURITY INFORMATION--Table of Contents




      Subpart A--National Security Information--Classification and 
                            Declassification

Sec.
1312.1  Purpose and authority.
1312.2  Responsibilities.
1312.3  Classification requirements.
1312.4  Classification designations.
1312.5  Authority to classify.
1312.6  Duration of classification.
1312.7  Derivative classification.
1312.8  Standard identification and markings.
1312.9  Downgrading and declassification.
1312.10  Systematic review guidelines.
1312.11  Challenges to classifications.
1312.12  Security Program Review Committee.

     Subpart B--Control and Accountability of Classified Information

1312.21  Purpose.
1312.22  Responsibilities.
1312.23  Responsibilities.
1312.24  Access to classified information.
1312.25  Access by historical researchers and former Presidential 
          appointees.

              Subpart C--Mandatory Declassification Review

1312.31  General.
1312.32  Responsibility.
1312.33  Information in the custody of OMB.
1312.34  Information classified by another agency.
1312.35  Appeal procedure.
1312.36  Fees.

    Authority: Executive Order 12356, 47 FR 14874, 3 CFR, 1982 Comp., p. 
166 as implemented by Information Security Oversight Office Directive 
No. 1, 47 FR 27836, June 25, 1982.

    Source: 44 FR 64783, Nov. 8, 1979, unless otherwise noted.



      Subpart A--National Security Information--Classification and 
                            Declassification



Sec. 1312.1  Purpose and authority.

    This part prescribes the procedures for the classification and 
declassification of national security information in the possession of 
the Office of Management and Budget (OMB). It is issued under authority 
of Executive Order 12356 (47 FR 14874, 3 CFR 1982 Comp., p. 166) as 
implemented by Information Security Oversight Office Directive No. 1 (47 
FR 27836, June 25, 1982) and is applicable to all OMB employees.

[44 FR 64783, Nov. 8, 1979, as amended by 55 FR 28745, July 13, 1990]



Sec. 1312.2  Responsibilities.

    The effectiveness of the classification and declassification program 
in OMB depends entirely on the amount of attention paid to it by 
supervisors and their staffs in those offices that possess or produce 
classified material. Officials who originate classified material are 
responsible for the proper assignment of a classification to that 
material and for a decision as to its declassification or downgrading. 
Officials who produce documents containing classified information must 
determine the source of the classification for that information and must 
insure that proper identity of that source is shown on the document.

[[Page 102]]

Custodians of classified material are responsible for its safekeeping 
and for insuring that such material is adequately marked as to current 
classification.
    (a) Security Officer. Under the general direction of the Assistant 
to the Director for Administration, the Security Officer will supervise 
the administration of this section and will develop programs to assist 
in compliance with the Order. Specifically, he will: (1) Promote the 
correct understanding of this part by all employees and conduct initial 
briefings about security procedures and policies for new employees; (2) 
issue and keep current such classification guides and guidelines for 
review for declassification as are required by the Order; (3) conduct 
periodic reviews of classified documents produced and of areas where 
classified materials are stored, and provide assistance and guidance 
where necessary, and, (4) maintain a current listing of all officials 
who have been designated in writing to have Top Secret, Secret and 
Confidential original classification authority.
    (b) Heads of offices and division. The head of each division or 
major organizational unit is responsible for the administration of the 
part within his or her area. Appropriate internal guidance should be 
issued to cover special or unusual conditions within an office.



Sec. 1312.3  Classification requirements.

    U.S. Citizens must be kept informed about the activities of the 
Government. However, in the interest of our national security, certain 
official information must be subject to constraints on its dissemination 
or release. This information is classified in order to provide this 
protection. Information may not be considered for classification unless 
it concerns (a) military plans, weapons or operation, (b) foreign 
government information, (c) intelligence activities, sources, or 
methods, (d) foreign relations or foreign activities of the United 
States, (e) scientific, technological, or economic matters relating to 
the national security, (f) United States Government programs for 
safeguarding nuclear material or facilities, or, (g) other categories of 
information which are related to national security and which require 
protection against unauthorized disclosure as determined by the 
President, by a person designated by the President, or by an agency 
head. Even though information is determined to meet one or more of the 
criteria above, it may not be considered for classification unless an 
original classification authority determines that its unauthorized 
disclosure reasonably could be expected to cause at least identifiable 
damage to the national security.



Sec. 1312.4  Classification designations.

    Except as provided in the Atomic Energy Act of 1954, the Order 
provides the only basis for classifying information. Information which 
meets the test for classification may be classified only in one of the 
following three designations. If there is reasonable doubt which 
designation is appropriate, or whether the information should be 
classified at all, the less restrictive designation should be used or 
the information should not be classified.
    (a) TOP SECRET. This classification shall be applied only to 
information the unauthorized disclosure of which could reasonably be 
expected to cause exceptionally grave damage to the national security.
    (b) SECRET. This classification shall be applied only to information 
the unauthorized disclosure of which could reasonably be expected to 
cause serious damage to the national security, and,
    (c) CONFIDENTIAL. This classification shall be applied only to 
information the unauthorized disclosure of which could reasonably be 
expected to cause identifiable damage to the national security.



Sec. 1312.5  Authority to classify.

    The authority to originally classify information or material under 
these regulations shall be limited to those officials concerned with 
matters of national security. The officials listed below are granted 
authority by the Director, OMB, to assign original classifications as 
indicated to information or material that is originated by OMB staff, 
and relating to the national security of the United States:

    (a) Top Secret and below:
    (1) Deputy Director.

[[Page 103]]

    (2) Executive Associate Director.
    (3) Associate Director for National Security and International 
Affairs (AD/NSIA).
    (4) Associate Director for Natural Resources, Energy and Science 
(AD/NRES).
    (5) Deputy Associate Director for National Security (DAD/NS).
    (b) Secret and below:
    (1) Deputy Associate Director for International Affairs (DAD/IA).
    (2) Deputy Associate Director for Special Studies, National 
Security, and International Affairs (DAD/SS/NSIA).
    (3) Deputy Associate Director for Energy and Science (DAD/ES).
    (4) Deputy Associate Director for Special Studies, Natural 
Resources, Energy and Science (DAD/SS/NRES).
    (c) Confidential: Deputy Division Chief for National Security.
    (d) Classification authority is not delegated to those persons who 
only reproduce, extract, or summarize classified information, or who 
only apply classification markings derived from source material or by a 
classification guide.

[44 FR 64783, Nov. 8, 1979, as amended at 55 FR 28745, July 13, 1990]



Sec. 1312.6  Duration of classification.

    Except for information qualifying for extended classification under 
OMB classification guides, each OMB original classification authority 
shall, at the time a document is classified, set a date or event for 
declassification no more than six years later. This date or event shall 
be shown on the face of the document. Only officials with original top 
secret classification authority may classify information for more than 
six years from the date of original classification. When material is 
thus extended beyond six years, the reason for the extension, and a date 
or event for declassification (or review for declassification) shall 
appear on the face of the document. This date or event shall be as early 
as national security permits, but shall be not more than 20 years from 
the date of original classification, except that foreign government 
information may be protected up to 30 years from date of original 
classification as provided in section 1-402 of the Order.



Sec. 1312.7  Derivative classification.

    A ``derivative classification'' means that the information is in 
substance, the same information that is currently classified, usually by 
another agency or classification authority. The application of 
derivative classification markings is the responsibility of the person 
who incorporates, restates, paraphrases, or generate in new form 
information that is already classified, or who applies such markings in 
accordance with instructions from an authorized classifier or 
classification guide. So far as it is practicable, persons applying 
derivative classifications will, through checks with originators or 
other appropriate inquiries, determine whether such incorporation, 
paraphrasing, or restating, has removed the basis for classification, in 
which case the document may be assigned a lower classification or may be 
issued in unclassified form.



Sec. 1312.8  Standard identification and markings.

    At the time classified material is produced, the following markings 
will be made as indicated:
    (a) The office of origin and the date of the document will be placed 
on the cover or first page.
    (b) The overall classification of the document will be stamped, 
marked, or permanently affixed at the top and bottom of the cover or 
first page.
    (c) The overall classification of individual pages will be marked or 
stamped at the top and bottom of each page containing classified 
information.
    (d) The classification of individual portions of the document, using 
the abbreviation, (TS), (S), (C), or (U), will be typed or marked at the 
end of each paragraph or section of the document.
    (e) The identity of the original classifier of the information, 
unless also the signer of the document, will be shown on the 
``classified by'' line. (See paragraph (h) of this section, for marking 
derivatively classified information.)
    (f) The date or event for declassification or for review for 
declassification will be indicated on the line intended for that 
purpose.
    (g) Downgrading markings, if applicable, will be placed immediately

[[Page 104]]

below the date or event for review for declassification line.
    (h) If the document is derivatively classified, enter the identity 
of the original classifier on the ``classified by'' line, and continue 
the original classifier's guidance as to declassification. When the 
classification is derived from more than one source, the term ``multiple 
sources'' may be used, and the most distant date for review or 
declassification will be shown. These sources will be identified on the 
last page of the document, if feasible, but will always be listed on the 
official file copy of the document.
    (i) Transmittal documents will be stamped to indicate the highest 
classification of the information transmitted, and the classification of 
the transmittal document standing alone.
    (j) The classification data for material other than documents will 
be affixed by tagging, stamping, recording, or other means, to insure 
that recipients are aware of the requirement for the protection of the 
information.
    (k) Additional markings required:
    (1) Restricted Data, or Formerly Restricted Data, will be identified 
by such markings as may be prescribed by the Department of Energy.
    (2) Documents revealing intelligence sources or methods will be 
identified by the notation, ``Warning Notice--Intelligence Sources and 
Methods Involved.''
    (3) Limitations on dissemination and/or reproduction, as determined 
by the originator, will be noted in the text of the document, or on its 
cover sheet.



Sec. 1312.9  Downgrading and declassification.

    Classified information originated by OMB offices will be downgraded 
or declassified as soon as it no longer qualifies for continued 
protection under the provisions of the Order. Authority to downgrade or 
declassify OMB-originated information is granted to those authorized to 
classify, (see Sec. 1312.5). Additionally, the Assistant to the Director 
for Administration and the Security Officer are authorized to exercise 
downgrading and declassification actions up to and including the Top 
Secret level.
    (a) Transferred material. Information which was originated by an 
agency that no longer exists, or that was received by OMB in conjunction 
with a transfer of functions, is deemed to be OMB-originated material. 
Information which has been transferred to another agency for storage 
purposes remains the responsibility of OMB.
    (b) Periodic review of classified material. Each office possessing 
classified information will review that material on an annual basis, or 
in conjunction with the transfer of files to non-current record storage, 
and take action to downgrade or declassify all material no longer 
qualifying for continued protection at that level. All material 
transferred to non-current record storage must be properly marked with 
correct downgrading or declassification instructions.



Sec. 1312.10  Systematic review guidelines.

    The Security Officer will prepare and keep current such guidelines 
as are required by the Order for the downgrading and declassification of 
OMB originated material that is 20 years old or older.



Sec. 1312.11  Challenges to classifications.

    OMB employees are encouraged to familiarize themselves with the 
provisions of the Order and with this part. Employees are also 
encouraged to question or to challenge those classifications they 
believe to be improper, unnecessary, or for an inappropriate time. Such 
questions or challenges will normally be addressed to the originator of 
the information, unless the challenger desires to remain anonymous, in 
which case the challenge should be addressed to the Security Program 
Review Committee.



Sec. 1312.12  Security Program Review Committee.

    The Assistant to the Director for Administration will chair the OMB 
Security Program Review Committee, which will act on suggestions and 
complaints about the OMB security program. This committee will also 
respond to challenges to classifications (see Sec. 1312.11) when direct 
negotiations with the originator were not desired, or were 
unsatisfactory or non-productive.

[[Page 105]]

Responses to such appeals will be made within 30 days of receipt.



     Subpart B--Control and Accountability of Classified Information



Sec. 1312.21  Purpose.

    This part prescribes procedures for the receipt, accountability, 
transmission, and access to classified information within the Office of 
Management and Budget.



Sec. 1312.22  Responsibilities.

    The effective direction by supervisors and the alert performance of 
duty by employees will do much to assure the adequate security of 
classified information in the possession of OMB offices. Each employee 
has a responsibility to protect and account for all classified 
information that he or she knows of within his or her area of 
responsibility. Such information will be made available only to those 
who have official need to know, and who have been granted the 
appropriate security clearance by competent authority. Particular care 
must be taken not to discuss classified information over unprotected 
communications circuits (to include intercom or closed-circuit TV), at 
non-official functions, or at any time that it might be revealed to 
unauthorized persons. Classified information will not be entered into 
any computer system available to OMB offices.



Sec. 1312.23  Responsibilities.

    (a) The Security Officer will supervise the administration of this 
part, to include:
    (1) Promoting a correct understanding of this Section and conducting 
initial briefings about security procedures for all new employees.
    (2) Providing for periodic inspections of office areas and reviews 
of produced documents to assure full compliance with OMB regulations and 
procedures.
    (3) Taking prompt action to investigate alleged violations of 
security, and recommending appropriate administrative actions with 
respect to violators.
    (4) Supervising the annual inventories of Top Secret material.
    (5) Insuring that containers used to store classified information 
meet approved security standards and that combinations to security 
containers are changed as required.
    (b) Head of offices or division within OMB are responsible for the 
administration of this part within their areas, including the 
maintenance of the prescribed control and accountability records for 
classified information and the establishment of internal procedures to 
insure that classified material is properly safeguarded at all times.



Sec. 1312.24  Access to classified information.

    Classified information may be made available to a person only when 
the possessor of the information establishes that access is essential to 
the accomplishment of official government duties, and that the proposed 
recipient possesses a security clearance granted by competent authority.



Sec. 1312.25  Access by historical researchers and former Presidential appointees.

    The procedure of classification requirements may be waived for 
persons who are engaged in historical research projects, or who 
previously have occupied policy-making positions to which they were 
appointed by the President. In these instances, the Security Officer 
will make a determination as to the trustworthiness of the requestor, 
and will obtain written agreement from the requestor to safeguard the 
information to which access is given. He will also obtain written 
consent to the review by OMB of notes and manuscripts for the purpose of 
determining that no classified information is contained therein. Upon 
the completion of these steps, the material to be researched will be 
reviewed by the division of primary interest to insure that access is 
granted only to material over which OMB has classification jurisdiction. 
Former Presidential appointees will be granted access only to that 
information that he or she originated, reviewed, signed, or received 
while serving as a Presidential appointee.

[[Page 106]]



              Subpart C--Mandatory Declassification Review



Sec. 1312.31  General.

    Other government agencies and individual members of the public 
frequently request that classified information in OMB files be reviewed 
for possible declassification and release. This part prescribes the 
procedures for such review and subsequent release or denial.



Sec. 1312.32  Responsibility.

    Requests for mandatory review of national security information must 
be in writing and addressed to the Security Officer, Office of 
Management and Budget, Executive Office of the President, Washington, DC 
20503. The Office of Management and Budget Security Officer will 
acknowledge receipt of and monitor all such requests. When a request 
does not reasonably describe the information sought, the requestor will 
be notified that unless additional information is provided or the scope 
of the information is narrowed, no further action will be taken.

[55 FR 28745, July 13, 1990]



Sec. 1312.33  Information in the custody of OMB.

    Information contained in OMB files and under the exclusive 
declassification jurisdiction of OMB will be reviewed by the Assistant 
to the Director for Administration and/or the office of primary interest 
in the information, to determine whether, under the declassification 
provisions of Section 3-3 of the Order, the requested information may be 
declassified. If so, the information will be made available to the 
requestor unless withholding is otherwise warranted under applicable 
law. If the information may not be released in whole or in part, the 
requestor shall be given a brief statement as to the reasons for denial, 
a notice of the right to appeal the determination to the Director, 
Office of Management and Budget, and a notice that such an appeal must 
be filed within 60 days in order to be considered.



Sec. 1312.34  Information classified by another agency.

    When a request is received for information that was classified by 
another agency, the Assistant to the Director for Administration will 
forward the request, along with any other related materials, to the 
appropriate agency for review and determination as to release. 
Recommendations as to release or denial may be made, if appropriate. The 
requestor will be notified of the referral, unless the receiving agency 
objects on the grounds that its association with the information 
requires protection.



Sec. 1312.35  Appeal procedure.

    Appeals received as a result of a denial will be routed to the 
Deputy Director, who will take action as necessary to determine whether 
any part of the information may be declassified and if so, notify the 
requestor of his determination and make available that information that 
is declassified and otherwide releasable. If continued classification in 
whole is required, the requestor shall be notified by the Director of 
the reasons therefor.



Sec. 1312.36  Fees.

    There will normally be no fees charged for the mandatory review of 
classified material for declassification under this part.



PART 1320--CONTROLLING PAPERWORK BURDENS ON THE PUBLIC--Table of Contents




Sec.
1320.1  Purpose.
1320.2  Effect.
1320.3  Definitions.
1320.4  Coverage.
1320.5  General requirements.
1320.6  Public protection.
1320.7  Agency head and Senior Official responsibilities.
1320.8  Agency collection of information responsibilities.
1320.9  Agency certifications for proposed collections of information.
1320.10  Clearance of collections of information, other than those 
          contained in proposed rules or in current rules.
1320.11  Clearance of collections of information in proposed rules.
1320.12  Clearance of collections of information in current rules.
1320.13  Emergency processing.

[[Page 107]]

1320.14  Public access.
1320.15  Independent regulatory agency override authority.
1320.16  Delegation of approval authority.
1320.17  Information collection budget.
1320.18  Other authority.
Appendix A to Part 1320--Agencies With Delegated Review and Approval 
          Authority

    Authority: 31 U.S.C. Sec. 1111 and 44 U.S.C. Chs. 21, 25, 27, 29, 
31, 35.

    Source: 60 FR 44984, Aug. 29, 1995, unless otherwise noted.



Sec. 1320.1  Purpose.

    The purpose of this part is to implement the provisions of the 
Paperwork Reduction Act of 1995 (44 U.S.C. chapter 35)(the Act) 
concerning collections of information. It is issued under the authority 
of section 3516 of the Act, which provides that ``The Director shall 
promulgate rules, regulations, or procedures necessary to exercise the 
authority provided by this chapter.'' It is designed to reduce, minimize 
and control burdens and maximize the practical utility and public 
benefit of the information created, collected, disclosed, maintained, 
used, shared and disseminated by or for the Federal government.



Sec. 1320.2  Effect.

    (a) Except as provided in paragraph (b) of this section, this part 
takes effect on October 1, 1995.
    (b)(1) In the case of a collection of information for which there is 
in effect on September 30, 1995, a control number issued by the Office 
of Management and Budget under 44 U.S.C. Chapter 35, the provisions of 
this Part shall take effect beginning on the earlier of:
    (i) The date of the first extension of approval for or modification 
of that collection of information after September 30, 1995; or
    (ii) The date of the expiration of the OMB control number after 
September 30, 1995.
    (2) Prior to such extension of approval, modification, or 
expiration, the collection of information shall be subject to 5 CFR part 
1320, as in effect on September 30, 1995.



Sec. 1320.3  Definitions.

    For purposes of implementing the Act and this Part, the following 
terms are defined as follows:
    (a) Agency means any executive department, military department, 
Government corporation, Government controlled corporation, or other 
establishment in the executive branch of the government, or any 
independent regulatory agency, but does not include:
    (1) The General Accounting Office;
    (2) Federal Election Commission;
    (3) The governments of the District of Columbia and the territories 
and possessions of the United States, and their various subdivisions; or
    (4) Government-owned contractor-operated facilities, including 
laboratories engaged in national defense research and production 
activities.
    (b)(1) Burden means the total time, effort, or financial resources 
expended by persons to generate, maintain, retain, or disclose or 
provide information to or for a Federal agency, including:
    (i) Reviewing instructions;
    (ii) Developing, acquiring, installing, and utilizing technology and 
systems for the purpose of collecting, validating, and verifying 
information;
    (iii) Developing, acquiring, installing, and utilizing technology 
and systems for the purpose of processing and maintaining information;
    (iv) Developing, acquiring, installing, and utilizing technology and 
systems for the purpose of disclosing and providing information;
    (v) Adjusting the existing ways to comply with any previously 
applicable instructions and requirements;
    (vi) Training personnel to be able to respond to a collection of 
information;
    (vii) Searching data sources;
    (viii) Completing and reviewing the collection of information; and
    (ix) Transmitting, or otherwise disclosing the information.
    (2) The time, effort, and financial resources necessary to comply 
with a collection of information that would be incurred by persons in 
the normal course of their activities (e.g., in compiling and 
maintaining business records) will be excluded from the ``burden'' if 
the agency demonstrates that the reporting, recordkeeping, or

[[Page 108]]

disclosure activities needed to comply are usual and customary.
    (3) A collection of information conducted or sponsored by a Federal 
agency that is also conducted or sponsored by a unit of State, local, or 
tribal government is presumed to impose a Federal burden except to the 
extent that the agency shows that such State, local, or tribal 
requirement would be imposed even in the absence of a Federal 
requirement.
    (c) Collection of information means, except as provided in 
Sec. 1320.4, the obtaining, causing to be obtained, soliciting, or 
requiring the disclosure to an agency, third parties or the public of 
information by or for an agency by means of identical questions posed 
to, or identical reporting, recordkeeping, or disclosure requirements 
imposed on, ten or more persons, whether such collection of information 
is mandatory, voluntary, or required to obtain or retain a benefit. 
``Collection of information'' includes any requirement or request for 
persons to obtain, maintain, retain, report, or publicly disclose 
information. As used in this Part, ``collection of information'' refers 
to the act of collecting or disclosing information, to the information 
to be collected or disclosed, to a plan and/or an instrument calling for 
the collection or disclosure of information, or any of these, as 
appropriate.
    (1) A ``collection of information'' may be in any form or format, 
including the use of report forms; application forms; schedules; 
questionnaires; surveys; reporting or recordkeeping requirements; 
contracts; agreements; policy statements; plans; rules or regulations; 
planning requirements; circulars; directives; instructions; bulletins; 
requests for proposal or other procurement requirements; interview 
guides; oral communications; posting, notification, labeling, or similar 
disclosure requirements; telegraphic or telephonic requests; automated, 
electronic, mechanical, or other technological collection techniques; 
standard questionnaires used to monitor compliance with agency 
requirements; or any other techniques or technological methods used to 
monitor compliance with agency requirements. A ``collection of 
information'' may implicitly or explicitly include related collection of 
information requirements.
    (2) Requirements by an agency for a person to obtain or compile 
information for the purpose of disclosure to members of the public or 
the public at large, through posting, notification, labeling or similar 
disclosure requirements constitute the ``collection of information'' 
whenever the same requirement to obtain or compile information would be 
a ``collection of information'' if the information were directly 
provided to the agency. The public disclosure of information originally 
supplied by the Federal government to the recipient for the purpose of 
disclosure to the public is not included within this definition.
    (3) ``Collection of information'' includes questions posed to 
agencies, instrumentalities, or employees of the United States, if the 
results are to be used for general statistical purposes, that is, if the 
results are to be used for statistical compilations of general public 
interest, including compilations showing the status or implementation of 
Federal activities and programs.
    (4) As used in paragraph (c) of this section, ``ten or more 
persons'' refers to the persons to whom a collection of information is 
addressed by the agency within any 12-month period, and to any 
independent entities to which the initial addressee may reasonably be 
expected to transmit the collection of information during that period, 
including independent State, territorial, tribal or local entities and 
separately incorporated subsidiaries or affiliates. For the purposes of 
this definition of ``ten or more persons,'' ``persons'' does not include 
employees of the respondent acting within the scope of their employment, 
contractors engaged by a respondent for the purpose of complying with 
the collection of information, or current employees of the Federal 
government (including military reservists and members of the National 
Guard while on active duty) when acting within the scope of their 
employment, but it does include retired and other former Federal 
employees.
    (i) Any recordkeeping, reporting, or disclosure requirement 
contained in a rule of general applicability is deemed to involve ten or 
more persons.

[[Page 109]]

    (ii) Any collection of information addressed to all or a substantial 
majority of an industry is presumed to involve ten or more persons.
    (d) Conduct or Sponsor. A Federal agency is considered to ``conduct 
or sponsor'' a collection of information if the agency collects the 
information, causes another agency to collect the information, contracts 
or enters into a cooperative agreement with a person to collect the 
information, or requires a person to provide information to another 
person, or in similar ways causes another agency, contractor, partner in 
a cooperative agreement, or person to obtain, solicit, or require the 
disclosure to third parties or the public of information by or for an 
agency. A collection of information undertaken by a recipient of a 
Federal grant is considered to be ``conducted or sponsored'' by an 
agency only if:
    (1) The recipient of a grant is conducting the collection of 
information at the specific request of the agency; or
    (2) The terms and conditions of the grant require specific approval 
by the agency of the collection of information or collection procedures.
    (e) Director means the Director of OMB, or his or her designee.
    (f) Display means:
    (1) In the case of forms, questionnaires, instructions, and other 
written collections of information sent or made available to potential 
respondents (other than in an electronic format), to place the currently 
valid OMB control number on the front page of the collection of 
information;
    (2) In the case of forms, questionnaires, instructions, and other 
written collections of information sent or made available to potential 
respondents in an electronic format, to place the currently valid OMB 
control number in the instructions, near the title of the electronic 
collection instrument, or, for on-line applications, on the first screen 
viewed by the respondent;
    (3) In the case of collections of information published in 
regulations, guidelines, and other issuances in the Federal Register, to 
publish the currently valid OMB control number in the Federal Register 
(for example, in the case of a collection of information in a 
regulation, by publishing the OMB control number in the preamble or the 
regulatory text for the final rule, in a technical amendment to the 
final rule, or in a separate notice announcing OMB approval of the 
collection of information). In the case of a collection of information 
published in an issuance that is also included in the Code of Federal 
Regulations, publication of the currently valid control number in the 
Code of Federal Regulations constitutes an alternative means of 
``display.'' In the case of a collection of information published in an 
issuance that is also included in the Code of Federal Regulations, OMB 
recommends for ease of future reference that, even where an agency has 
already ``displayed'' the OMB control number by publishing it in the 
Federal Register as a separate notice or in the preamble for the final 
rule (rather than in the regulatory text for the final rule or in a 
technical amendment to the final rule), the agency also place the 
currently valid control number in a table or codified section to be 
included in the Code of Federal Regulations. For placement of OMB 
control numbers in the Code of Federal Regulations, see 1 CFR 21.35.
    (4) In other cases, and where OMB determines in advance in writing 
that special circumstances exist, to use other means to inform potential 
respondents of the OMB control number.
    (g) Independent regulatory agency means the Board of Governors of 
the Federal Reserve System, the Commodity Futures Trading Commission, 
the Consumer Product Safety Commission, the Federal Communications 
Commission, the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation, the Federal 
Energy Regulatory Commission, the Federal Housing Finance Board, the 
Federal Maritime Commission, the Federal Trade Commission, the 
Interstate Commerce Commission, the Mine Enforcement Safety and Health 
Review Commission, the National Labor Relations Board, the Nuclear 
Regulatory Commission, the Occupational Safety and Health Review 
Commission, the Postal Rate Commission, the Securities and Exchange 
Commission, and any other similar agency designated by statute as a 
Federal independent regulatory agency or commission.

[[Page 110]]

    (h) Information means any statement or estimate of fact or opinion, 
regardless of form or format, whether in numerical, graphic, or 
narrative form, and whether oral or maintained on paper, electronic or 
other media. ``Information'' does not generally include items in the 
following categories; however, OMB may determine that any specific item 
constitutes ``information'':
    (1) Affidavits, oaths, affirmations, certifications, receipts, 
changes of address, consents, or acknowledgments; provided that they 
entail no burden other than that necessary to identify the respondent, 
the date, the respondent's address, and the nature of the instrument (by 
contrast, a certification would likely involve the collection of 
``information'' if an agency conducted or sponsored it as a substitute 
for a collection of information to collect evidence of, or to monitor, 
compliance with regulatory standards, because such a certification would 
generally entail burden in addition to that necessary to identify the 
respondent, the date, the respondent's address, and the nature of the 
instrument);
    (2) Samples of products or of any other physical objects;
    (3) Facts or opinions obtained through direct observation by an 
employee or agent of the sponsoring agency or through nonstandardized 
oral communication in connection with such direct observations;
    (4) Facts or opinions submitted in response to general solicitations 
of comments from the public, published in the Federal Register or other 
publications, regardless of the form or format thereof, provided that no 
person is required to supply specific information pertaining to the 
commenter, other than that necessary for self-identification, as a 
condition of the agency's full consideration of the comment;
    (5) Facts or opinions obtained initially or in follow-on requests, 
from individuals (including individuals in control groups) under 
treatment or clinical examination in connection with research on or 
prophylaxis to prevent a clinical disorder, direct treatment of that 
disorder, or the interpretation of biological analyses of body fluids, 
tissues, or other specimens, or the identification or classification of 
such specimens;
    (6) A request for facts or opinions addressed to a single person;
    (7) Examinations designed to test the aptitude, abilities, or 
knowledge of the persons tested and the collection of information for 
identification or classification in connection with such examinations;
    (8) Facts or opinions obtained or solicited at or in connection with 
public hearings or meetings;
    (9) Facts or opinions obtained or solicited through nonstandardized 
follow-up questions designed to clarify responses to approved 
collections of information; and
    (10) Like items so designated by OMB.
    (i) OMB refers to the Office of Management and Budget.
    (j) Penalty includes the imposition by an agency or court of a fine 
or other punishment; a judgment for monetary damages or equitable 
relief; or the revocation, suspension, reduction, or denial of a 
license, privilege, right, grant, or benefit.
    (k) Person means an individual, partnership, association, 
corporation (including operations of government-owned contractor-
operated facilities), business trust, or legal representative, an 
organized group of individuals, a State, territorial, tribal, or local 
government or branch thereof, or a political subdivision of a State, 
territory, tribal, or local government or a branch of a political 
subdivision;
    (l) Practical utility means the actual, not merely the theoretical 
or potential, usefulness of information to or for an agency, taking into 
account its accuracy, validity, adequacy, and reliability, and the 
agency's ability to process the information it collects (or a person's 
ability to receive and process that which is disclosed, in the case of a 
third-party or public disclosure) in a useful and timely fashion. In 
determining whether information will have ``practical utility,'' OMB 
will take into account whether the agency demonstrates actual timely use 
for the information either to carry out its functions or make it 
available to third-parties or the public, either directly or by

[[Page 111]]

means of a third-party or public posting, notification, labeling, or 
similar disclosure requirement, for the use of persons who have an 
interest in entities or transactions over which the agency has 
jurisdiction. In the case of recordkeeping requirements or general 
purpose statistics (see Sec. 1320.3(c)(3)), ``practical utility'' means 
that actual uses can be demonstrated.
    (m) Recordkeeping requirement means a requirement imposed by or for 
an agency on persons to maintain specified records, including a 
requirement to:
    (1) Retain such records;
    (2) Notify third parties, the Federal government, or the public of 
the existence of such records;
    (3) Disclose such records to third parties, the Federal government, 
or the public; or
    (4) Report to third parties, the Federal government, or the public 
regarding such records.



Sec. 1320.4  Coverage.

    (a) The requirements of this part apply to all agencies as defined 
in Sec. 1320.3(a) and to all collections of information conducted or 
sponsored by those agencies, as defined in Sec. 1320.3 (c) and (d), 
wherever conducted or sponsored, but, except as provided in paragraph 
(b) of this section, shall not apply to collections of information:
    (1) During the conduct of a Federal criminal investigation or 
prosecution, or during the disposition of a particular criminal matter;
    (2) During the conduct of a civil action to which the United States 
or any official or agency thereof is a party, or during the conduct of 
an administrative action, investigation, or audit involving an agency 
against specific individuals or entities;
    (3) By compulsory process pursuant to the Antitrust Civil Process 
Act and section 13 of the Federal Trade Commission Improvements Act of 
1980; or
    (4) During the conduct of intelligence activities as defined in 
section 3.4(e) of Executive Order No. 12333, issued December 4, 1981, or 
successor orders, or during the conduct of cryptologic activities that 
are communications security activities.
    (b) The requirements of this Part apply to the collection of 
information during the conduct of general investigations or audits 
(other than information collected in an antitrust investigation to the 
extent provided in paragraph (a)(3) of this section) undertaken with 
reference to a category of individuals or entities such as a class of 
licensees or an entire industry.
    (c) The exception in paragraph (a)(2) of this section applies during 
the entire course of the investigation, audit, or action, whether before 
or after formal charges or complaints are filed or formal administrative 
action is initiated, but only after a case file or equivalent is opened 
with respect to a particular party. In accordance with paragraph (b) of 
this section, collections of information prepared or undertaken with 
reference to a category of individuals or entities, such as a class of 
licensees or an industry, do not fall within this exception.



Sec. 1320.5  General requirements.

    (a) An agency shall not conduct or sponsor a collection of 
information unless, in advance of the adoption or revision of the 
collection of information--
    (1) The agency has--
    (i) Conducted the review required in Sec. 1320.8;
    (ii) Evaluated the public comments received under Sec. 1320.8(d) and 
Sec. 1320.11;
    (iii) Submitted to the Director, in accordance with such procedures 
and in such form as OMB may specify,
    (A) The certification required under Sec. 1320.9,
    (B) The proposed collection of information in accordance with 
Sec. 1320.10, Sec. 1320.11, or Sec. 1320.12, as appropriate,
    (C) An explanation for the decision that it would not be 
appropriate, under Sec. 1320.8(b)(1), for a proposed collection of 
information to display an expiration date;
    (D) An explanation for a decision to provide for any payment or gift 
to respondents, other than remuneration of contractors or grantees;
    (E) A statement indicating whether (and if so, to what extent) the 
proposed collection of information involves the use of automated, 
electronic, mechanical, or other technological collection

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techniques or other forms of information technology, e.g., permitting 
electronic submission of responses, and an explanation for the decision;
    (F) A summary of the public comments received under Sec. 1320.8(d), 
including actions taken by the agency in response to the comments, and 
the date and page of the publication in the Federal Register of the 
notice therefor; and
    (G) Copies of pertinent statutory authority, regulations, and such 
related supporting materials as OMB may request; and
    (iv) Published, except as provided in Sec. 1320.13(d), a notice in 
the Federal Register--
    (A) Stating that the agency has made such submission; and
    (B) Setting forth--
    (1) A title for the collection of information;
    (2) A summary of the collection of information;
    (3) A brief description of the need for the information and proposed 
use of the information;
    (4) A description of the likely respondents, including the estimated 
number of likely respondents, and proposed frequency of response to the 
collection of information;
    (5) An estimate of the total annual reporting and recordkeeping 
burden that will result from the collection of information;
    (6) Notice that comments may be submitted to OMB; and
    (7) The time period within which the agency is requesting OMB to 
approve or disapprove the collection of information if, at the time of 
submittal of a collection of information for OMB review under 
Sec. 1320.10, Sec. 1320.11 or Sec. 1320.12, the agency plans to request 
or has requested OMB to conduct its review on an emergency basis under 
Sec. 1320.13; and
    (2) OMB has approved the proposed collection of information, OMB's 
approval has been inferred under Sec. 1320.10(c), Sec. 1320.11(i), or 
Sec. 1320.12(e), or OMB's disapproval has been voided by an independent 
regulatory agency under Sec. 1320.15; and
    (3) The agency has obtained from the Director a control number to be 
displayed upon the collection of information.
    (b) In addition to the requirements in paragraph (a) of this 
section, an agency shall not conduct or sponsor a collection of 
information unless:
    (1) The collection of information displays a currently valid OMB 
control number; and
    (2)(i) The agency informs the potential persons who are to respond 
to the collection of information that such persons are not required to 
respond to the collection of information unless it displays a currently 
valid OMB control number.
    (ii) An agency shall provide the information described in paragraph 
(b)(2)(i) of this section in a manner that is reasonably calculated to 
inform the public.
    (A) In the case of forms, questionnaires, instructions, and other 
written collections of information sent or made available to potential 
respondents (other than in an electronic format), the information 
described in paragraph (b)(2)(i) of this section is provided ``in a 
manner that is reasonably calculated to inform the public'' if the 
agency includes it either on the form, questionnaire or other collection 
of information, or in the instructions for such collection.
    (B) In the case of forms, questionnaires, instructions, and other 
written collections of information sent or made available to potential 
respondents in an electronic format, the information described in 
paragraph (b)(2)(i) of this section is provided ``in a manner that is 
reasonably calculated to inform the public'' if the agency places the 
currently valid OMB control number in the instructions, near the title 
of the electronic collection instrument, or, for on-line applications, 
on the first screen viewed by the respondent.
    (C) In the case of collections of information published in 
regulations, guidelines, and other issuances in the Federal Register, 
the information described in paragraph (b)(2)(i) of this section is 
provided ``in a manner that is reasonably calculated to inform the 
public'' if the agency publishes such information in the Federal 
Register (for example, in the case of a collection of information in a 
regulation, by publishing such information in the preamble or the 
regulatory text, or in a

[[Page 113]]

technical amendment to the regulation, or in a separate notice 
announcing OMB approval of the collection of information). In the case 
of a collection of information published in an issuance that is also 
included in the Code of Federal Regulations, publication of such 
information in the Code of Federal Regulations constitutes an 
alternative means of providing it ``in a manner that is reasonably 
calculated to inform the public.'' In the case of a collection of 
information published in an issuance that is also included in the Code 
of Federal Regulations, OMB recommends for ease of future reference 
that, even where an agency has already provided such information ``in a 
manner that is reasonably calculated to inform the public'' by 
publishing it in the Federal Register as a separate notice or in the 
preamble for the final rule (rather than in the regulatory text for the 
final rule or in a technical amendment to the final rule), the agency 
also publish such information along with a table or codified section of 
OMB control numbers to be included in the Code of Federal Regulations 
(see Sec. 1320.3(f)(3)).
    (D) In other cases, and where OMB determines in advance in writing 
that special circumstances exist, to use other means that are reasonably 
calculated to inform the public of the information described in 
paragraph (b)(2)(i) of this section.
    (c)(1) Agencies shall submit all collections of information, other 
than those contained in proposed rules published for public comment in 
the Federal Register or in current regulations that were published as 
final rules in the Federal Register, in accordance with the requirements 
in Sec. 1320.10. Agencies shall submit collections of information 
contained in interim final rules or direct final rules in accordance 
with the requirements of Sec. 1320.10.
    (2) Agencies shall submit collections of information contained in 
proposed rules published for public comment in the Federal Register in 
accordance with the requirements in Sec. 1320.11.
    (3) Agencies shall submit collections of information contained in 
current regulations that were published as final rules in the Federal 
Register in accordance with the requirements in Sec. 1320.12.
    (4) Special rules for emergency processing of collections of 
information are set forth in Sec. 1320.13.
    (5) For purposes of time limits for OMB review of collections of 
information, any submission properly submitted and received by OMB after 
12:00 noon will be deemed to have been received on the following 
business day.
    (d)(1) To obtain OMB approval of a collection of information, an 
agency shall demonstrate that it has taken every reasonable step to 
ensure that the proposed collection of information:
    (i) Is the least burdensome necessary for the proper performance of 
the agency's functions to comply with legal requirements and achieve 
program objectives;
    (ii) Is not duplicative of information otherwise accessible to the 
agency; and
    (iii) Has practical utility. The agency shall also seek to minimize 
the cost to itself of collecting, processing, and using the information, 
but shall not do so by means of shifting disproportionate costs or 
burdens onto the public.
    (2) Unless the agency is able to demonstrate, in its submission for 
OMB clearance, that such characteristic of the collection of information 
is necessary to satisfy statutory requirements or other substantial 
need, OMB will not approve a collection of information--
    (i) Requiring respondents to report information to the agency more 
often than quarterly;
    (ii) Requiring respondents to prepare a written response to a 
collection of information in fewer than 30 days after receipt of it;
    (iii) Requiring respondents to submit more than an original and two 
copies of any document;
    (iv) Requiring respondents to retain records, other than health, 
medical, government contract, grant-in-aid, or tax records, for more 
than three years;
    (v) In connection with a statistical survey, that is not designed to 
produce valid and reliable results that can be generalized to the 
universe of study;
    (vi) Requiring the use of a statistical data classification that has 
not been reviewed and approved by OMB;

[[Page 114]]

    (vii) That includes a pledge of confidentiality that is not 
supported by authority established in statute or regulation, that is not 
supported by disclosure and data security policies that are consistent 
with the pledge, or which unnecessarily impedes sharing of data with 
other agencies for compatible confidential use; or
    (viii) Requiring respondents to submit proprietary, trade secret, or 
other confidential information unless the agency can demonstrate that it 
has instituted procedures to protect the information's confidentiality 
to the extent permitted by law.
    (e) OMB shall determine whether the collection of information, as 
submitted by the agency, is necessary for the proper performance of the 
agency's functions. In making this determination, OMB will take into 
account the criteria set forth in paragraph (d) of this section, and 
will consider whether the burden of the collection of information is 
justified by its practical utility. In addition:
    (1) OMB will consider necessary any collection of information 
specifically mandated by statute or court order, but will independently 
assess any collection of information to the extent that the agency 
exercises discretion in its implementation; and
    (2) OMB will consider necessary any collection of information 
specifically required by an agency rule approved or not acted upon by 
OMB under Sec. 1320.11 or Sec. 1320.12, but will independently assess 
any such collection of information to the extent that it deviates from 
the specifications of the rule.
    (f) Except as provided in Sec. 1320.15, to the extent that OMB 
determines that all or any portion of a collection of information is 
unnecessary, for any reason, the agency shall not engage in such 
collection or portion thereof. OMB will reconsider its disapproval of a 
collection of information upon the request of the agency head or Senior 
Official only if the sponsoring agency is able to provide significant 
new or additional information relevant to the original decision.
    (g) An agency may not make a substantive or material modification to 
a collection of information after such collection of information has 
been approved by OMB, unless the modification has been submitted to OMB 
for review and approval under this Part.
    (h) An agency should consult with OMB before using currently 
approved forms or other collections of information after the expiration 
date printed thereon (in those cases where the actual form being used 
contains an expiration date that would expire before the end of the use 
of the form).



Sec. 1320.6  Public protection.

    (a) Notwithstanding any other provision of law, no person shall be 
subject to any penalty for failing to comply with a collection of 
information that is subject to the requirements of this part if:
    (1) The collection of information does not display, in accordance 
with Sec. 1320.3(f) and Sec. 1320.5(b)(1), a currently valid OMB control 
number assigned by the Director in accordance with the Act; or
    (2) The agency fails to inform the potential person who is to 
respond to the collection of information, in accordance with 
Sec. 1320.5(b)(2), that such person is not required to respond to the 
collection of information unless it displays a currently valid OMB 
control number.
    (b) The protection provided by paragraph (a) of this section may be 
raised in the form of a complete defense, bar, or otherwise to the 
imposition of such penalty at any time during the agency administrative 
process in which such penalty may be imposed or in any judicial action 
applicable thereto.
    (c) Whenever an agency has imposed a collection of information as a 
means for proving or satisfying a condition for the receipt of a benefit 
or the avoidance of a penalty, and the collection of information does 
not display a currently valid OMB control number or inform the potential 
persons who are to respond to the collection of information, as 
prescribed in Sec. 1320.5(b), the agency shall not treat a person's 
failure to comply, in and of itself, as grounds for withholding the 
benefit or imposing the penalty. The agency shall instead permit 
respondents to prove or satisfy the legal conditions in any other 
reasonable manner.

[[Page 115]]

    (1) If OMB disapproves the whole of such a collection of information 
(and the disapproval is not overridden under Sec. 1320.15), the agency 
shall grant the benefit to (or not impose the penalty on) otherwise 
qualified persons without requesting further proof concerning the 
condition.
    (2) If OMB instructs an agency to make a substantive or material 
change to such a collection of information (and the instruction is not 
overridden under Sec. 1320.15), the agency shall permit respondents to 
prove or satisfy the condition by complying with the collection of 
information as so changed.
    (d) Whenever a member of the public is protected from imposition of 
a penalty under this section for failure to comply with a collection of 
information, such penalty may not be imposed by an agency directly, by 
an agency through judicial process, or by any other person through 
administrative or judicial process.
    (e) The protection provided by paragraph (a) of this section does 
not preclude the imposition of a penalty on a person for failing to 
comply with a collection of information that is imposed on the person by 
statute--e.g., 26 U.S.C. Sec. 6011(a) (statutory requirement for person 
to file a tax return), 42 U.S.C. Sec. 6938(c) (statutory requirement for 
person to provide notification before exporting hazardous waste).



Sec. 1320.7  Agency head and Senior Official responsibilities.

    (a) Except as provided in paragraph (b) of this section, each agency 
head shall designate a Senior Official to carry out the responsibilities 
of the agency under the Act and this part. The Senior Official shall 
report directly to the head of the agency and shall have the authority, 
subject to that of the agency head, to carry out the responsibilities of 
the agency under the Act and this part.
    (b) An agency head may retain full undelegated review authority for 
any component of the agency which by statute is required to be 
independent of any agency official below the agency head. For each 
component for which responsibility under the Act is not delegated to the 
Senior Official, the agency head shall be responsible for the 
performance of those functions.
    (c) The Senior Official shall head an office responsible for 
ensuring agency compliance with and prompt, efficient, and effective 
implementation of the information policies and information resources 
management responsibilities established under the Act, including the 
reduction of information collection burdens on the public.
    (d) With respect to the collection of information and the control of 
paperwork, the Senior Official shall establish a process within such 
office that is sufficiently independent of program responsibility to 
evaluate fairly whether proposed collections of information should be 
approved under this Part.
    (e) Agency submissions of collections of information for OMB review, 
and the accompanying certifications under Sec. 1320.9, may be made only 
by the agency head or the Senior Official, or their designee.



Sec. 1320.8  Agency collection of information responsibilities.

    The office established under Sec. 1320.7 shall review each 
collection of information before submission to OMB for review under this 
part.
    (a) This review shall include:
    (1) An evaluation of the need for the collection of information, 
which shall include, in the case of an existing collection of 
information, an evaluation of the continued need for such collection;
    (2) A functional description of the information to be collected;
    (3) A plan for the collection of information;
    (4) A specific, objectively supported estimate of burden, which 
shall include, in the case of an existing collection of information, an 
evaluation of the burden that has been imposed by such collection;
    (5) An evaluation of whether (and if so, to what extent) the burden 
on respondents can be reduced by use of automated, electronic, 
mechanical, or other technological collection techniques or other forms 
of information technology, e.g., permitting electronic submission of 
responses;

[[Page 116]]

    (6) A test of the collection of information through a pilot program, 
if appropriate; and
    (7) A plan for the efficient and effective management and use of the 
information to be collected, including necessary resources.
    (b) Such office shall ensure that each collection of information:
    (1) Is inventoried, displays a currently valid OMB control number, 
and, if appropriate, an expiration date;
    (2) Is reviewed by OMB in accordance with the clearance requirements 
of 44 U.S.C. Sec. 3507; and
    (3) Informs and provides reasonable notice to the potential persons 
to whom the collection of information is addressed of--
    (i) The reasons the information is planned to be and/or has been 
collected;
    (ii) The way such information is planned to be and/or has been used 
to further the proper performance of the functions of the agency;
    (iii) An estimate, to the extent practicable, of the average burden 
of the collection (together with a request that the public direct to the 
agency any comments concerning the accuracy of this burden estimate and 
any suggestions for reducing this burden);
    (iv) Whether responses to the collection of information are 
voluntary, required to obtain or retain a benefit (citing authority), or 
mandatory (citing authority);
    (v) The nature and extent of confidentiality to be provided, if any 
(citing authority); and
    (vi) The fact that an agency may not conduct or sponsor, and a 
person is not required to respond to, a collection of information unless 
it displays a currently valid OMB control number.
    (c)(1) An agency shall provide the information described in 
paragraphs (b)(3)(i) through (v) of this section as follows:
    (i) In the case of forms, questionnaires, instructions, and other 
written collections of information sent or made available to potential 
respondents (except in an electronic format), such information can be 
included either on the form, questionnaire or other collection of 
information, as part of the instructions for such collection, or in a 
cover letter or memorandum that accompanies the collection of 
information.
    (ii) In the case of forms, questionnaires, instructions, and other 
written collections of information sent or made available to potential 
respondents in an electronic format, such information can be included 
either in the instructions, near the title of the electronic collection 
instrument, or, for on-line applications, on the first screen viewed by 
the respondent;
    (iii) In the case of collections of information published in 
regulations, guidelines, and other issuances in the Federal Register, 
such information can be published in the Federal Register (for example, 
in the case of a collection of information in a regulation, by 
publishing such information in the preamble or the regulatory text to 
the final rule, or in a technical amendment to the final rule, or in a 
separate notice announcing OMB approval of the collection of 
information).
    (iv) In other cases, and where OMB determines in advance in writing 
that special circumstances exist, agencies may use other means to inform 
potential respondents.
    (2) An agency shall provide the information described in paragraph 
(b)(3)(vi) of this section in a manner that is reasonably calculated to 
inform the public (see Sec. 1320.5(b)(2)(ii)).
    (d)(1) Before an agency submits a collection of information to OMB 
for approval, and except as provided in paragraphs (d)(3) and (d)(4) of 
this section, the agency shall provide 60-day notice in the Federal 
Register, and otherwise consult with members of the public and affected 
agencies concerning each proposed collection of information, to solicit 
comment to:
    (i) Evaluate whether the proposed collection of information is 
necessary for the proper performance of the functions of the agency, 
including whether the information will have practical utility;
    (ii) Evaluate the accuracy of the agency's estimate of the burden of 
the proposed collection of information, including the validity of the 
methodology and assumptions used;
    (iii) Enhance the quality, utility, and clarity of the information 
to be collected; and

[[Page 117]]

    (iv) Minimize the burden of the collection of information on those 
who are to respond, including through the use of appropriate automated, 
electronic, mechanical, or other technological collection techniques or 
other forms of information technology, e.g., permitting electronic 
submission of responses.
    (2) If the agency does not publish a copy of the proposed collection 
of information, together with the related instructions, as part of the 
Federal Register notice, the agency should--
    (i) Provide more than 60-day notice to permit timely receipt, by 
interested members of the public, of a copy of the proposed collection 
of information and related instructions; or
    (ii) Explain how and from whom an interested member of the public 
can request and obtain a copy without charge, including, if applicable, 
how the public can gain access to the collection of information and 
related instructions electronically on demand.
    (3) The agency need not separately seek such public comment for any 
proposed collection of information contained in a proposed rule to be 
reviewed under Sec. 1320.11, if the agency provides notice and comment 
through the notice of proposed rulemaking for the proposed rule and such 
notice specifically includes the solicitation of comments for the same 
purposes as are listed under paragraph (d)(1) of this section.
    (4) The agency need not seek or may shorten the time allowed for 
such public comment if OMB grants an exemption from such requirement for 
emergency processing under Sec. 1320.13.



Sec. 1320.9  Agency certifications for proposed collections of information.

    As part of the agency submission to OMB of a proposed collection of 
information, the agency (through the head of the agency, the Senior 
Official, or their designee) shall certify (and provide a record 
supporting such certification) that the proposed collection of 
information--
    (a) Is necessary for the proper performance of the functions of the 
agency, including that the information to be collected will have 
practical utility;
    (b) Is not unnecessarily duplicative of information otherwise 
reasonably accessible to the agency;
    (c) Reduces to the extent practicable and appropriate the burden on 
persons who shall provide information to or for the agency, including 
with respect to small entities, as defined in the Regulatory Flexibility 
Act (5 U.S.C. 601(6)), the use of such techniques as:
    (1) Establishing differing compliance or reporting requirements or 
timetables that take into account the resources available to those who 
are to respond;
    (2) The clarification, consolidation, or simplification of 
compliance and reporting requirements; or
    (3) An exemption from coverage of the collection of information, or 
any part thereof;
    (d) Is written using plain, coherent, and unambiguous terminology 
and is understandable to those who are to respond;
    (e) Is to be implemented in ways consistent and compatible, to the 
maximum extent practicable, with the existing reporting and 
recordkeeping practices of those who are to respond;
    (f) Indicates for each recordkeeping requirement the length of time 
persons are required to maintain the records specified;
    (g) Informs potential respondents of the information called for 
under Sec. 1320.8(b)(3);
    (h) Has been developed by an office that has planned and allocated 
resources for the efficient and effective management and use of the 
information to be collected, including the processing of the information 
in a manner which shall enhance, where appropriate, the utility of the 
information to agencies and the public;
    (i) Uses effective and efficient statistical survey methodology 
appropriate to the purpose for which the information is to be collected; 
and
    (j) To the maximum extent practicable, uses appropriate information 
technology to reduce burden and improve data quality, agency efficiency 
and responsiveness to the public.

[[Page 118]]



Sec. 1320.10  Clearance of collections of information, other than those contained in proposed rules or in current rules.

    Agencies shall submit all collections of information, other than 
those contained either in proposed rules published for public comment in 
the Federal Register (which are submitted under Sec. 1320.11) or in 
current rules that were published as final rules in the Federal Register 
(which are submitted under Sec. 1320.12), in accordance with the 
following requirements:
    (a) On or before the date of submission to OMB, the agency shall, in 
accordance with the requirements in Sec. 1320.5(a)(1)(iv), forward a 
notice to the Federal Register stating that OMB approval is being 
sought. The notice shall direct requests for information, including 
copies of the proposed collection of information and supporting 
documentation, to the agency, and shall request that comments be 
submitted to OMB within 30 days of the notice's publication. The notice 
shall direct comments to the Office of Information and Regulatory 
Affairs of OMB, Attention: Desk Officer for [name of agency]. A copy of 
the notice submitted to the Federal Register, together with the date of 
expected publication, shall be included in the agency's submission to 
OMB.
    (b) Within 60 days after receipt of the proposed collection of 
information or publication of the notice under paragraph (a) of this 
section, whichever is later, OMB shall notify the agency involved of its 
decision to approve, to instruct the agency to make a substantive or 
material change to, or to disapprove, the collection of information, and 
shall make such decision publicly available. OMB shall provide at least 
30 days for public comment after receipt of the proposed collection of 
information before making its decision, except as provided under 
Sec. 1320.13. Upon approval of a collection of information, OMB shall 
assign an OMB control number and, if appropriate, an expiration date. 
OMB shall not approve any collection of information for a period longer 
than three years.
    (c) If OMB fails to notify the agency of its approval, instruction 
to make substantive or material change, or disapproval within the 60-day 
period, the agency may request, and OMB shall assign without further 
delay, an OMB control number that shall be valid for not more than one 
year.
    (d) As provided in Sec. 1320.5(b) and Sec. 1320.6(a), an agency may 
not conduct or sponsor a collection of information unless the collection 
of information displays a currently valid OMB control number and the 
agency informs potential persons who are to respond to the collection of 
information that such persons are not required to respond to the 
collection of information unless it displays a currently valid OMB 
control number.
    (e)(1) In the case of a collection of information not contained in a 
published current rule which has been approved by OMB and has a 
currently valid OMB control number, the agency shall:
    (i) Conduct the review established under Sec. 1320.8, including the 
seeking of public comment under Sec. 1320.8(d); and
    (ii) After having made a reasonable effort to seek public comment, 
but no later than 60 days before the expiration date of the OMB control 
number for the currently approved collection of information, submit the 
collection of information for review and approval under this part, which 
shall include an explanation of how the agency has used the information 
that it has collected.
    (2) The agency may continue to conduct or sponsor the collection of 
information while the submission is pending at OMB.
    (f) Prior to the expiration of OMB's approval of a collection of 
information, OMB may decide on its own initiative, after consultation 
with the agency, to review the collection of information. Such decisions 
will be made only when relevant circumstances have changed or the burden 
estimates provided by the agency at the time of initial submission were 
materially in error. Upon notification by OMB of its decision to review 
the collection of information, the agency shall submit it to OMB for 
review under this part.
    (g) For good cause, after consultation with the agency, OMB may stay 
the effectiveness of its prior approval of any collection of information 
that is not specifically required by agency rule; in

[[Page 119]]

such case, the agency shall cease conducting or sponsoring such 
collection of information while the submission is pending, and shall 
publish a notice in the Federal Register to that effect.



Sec. 1320.11  Clearance of collections of information in proposed rules.

    Agencies shall submit collections of information contained in 
proposed rules published for public comment in the Federal Register in 
accordance with the following requirements:
    (a) The agency shall include, in accordance with the requirements in 
Sec. 1320.5(a)(1)(iv) and Sec. 1320.8(d)(1) and (3), in the preamble to 
the Notice of Proposed Rulemaking a statement that the collections of 
information contained in the proposed rule, and identified as such, have 
been submitted to OMB for review under section 3507(d) of the Act. The 
notice shall direct comments to the Office of Information and Regulatory 
Affairs of OMB, Attention: Desk Officer for [name of agency].
    (b) All such submissions shall be made to OMB not later than the day 
on which the Notice of Proposed Rulemaking is published in the Federal 
Register, in such form and in accordance with such procedures as OMB may 
direct. Such submissions shall include a copy of the proposed regulation 
and preamble.
    (c) Within 60 days of publication of the proposed rule, but subject 
to paragraph (e) of this section, OMB may file public comments on 
collection of information provisions. The OMB comments shall be in the 
form of an OMB Notice of Action, which shall be sent to the Senior 
Official or agency head, or their designee, and which shall be made a 
part of the agency's rulemaking record.
    (d) If an agency submission is not in compliance with paragraph (b) 
of this section, OMB may, subject to paragraph (e) of this section, 
disapprove the collection of information in the proposed rule within 60 
days of receipt of the submission. If an agency fails to submit a 
collection of information subject to this section, OMB may, subject to 
paragraph (e) of this section, disapprove it at any time.
    (e) OMB shall provide at least 30 days after receipt of the proposed 
collection of information before submitting its comments or making its 
decision, except as provided under Sec. 1320.13.
    (f) When the final rule is published in the Federal Register, the 
agency shall explain how any collection of information contained in the 
final rule responds to any comments received from OMB or the public. The 
agency shall include an identification and explanation of any 
modifications made in the rule, or explain why it rejected the comments. 
If requested by OMB, the agency shall include OMB's comments in the 
preamble to the final rule.
    (g) If OMB has not filed public comments under paragraph (c) of this 
section, or has approved without conditions the collection of 
information contained in a rule before the final rule is published in 
the Federal Register, OMB may assign an OMB control number prior to 
publication of the final rule.
    (h) On or before the date of publication of the final rule, the 
agency shall submit the final rule to OMB, unless it has been approved 
under paragraph (g) of this section (and not substantively or materially 
modified by the agency after approval). Not later than 60 days after 
publication, but subject to paragraph (e) of this section, OMB shall 
approve, instruct the agency to make a substantive or material change 
to, or disapprove, the collection of information contained in the final 
rule. Any such instruction to change or disapprove may be based on one 
or more of the following reasons, as determined by OMB:
    (1) The agency has failed to comply with paragraph (b) of this 
section;
    (2) The agency had substantially modified the collection of 
information contained in the final rule from that contained in the 
proposed rule without providing OMB with notice of the change and 
sufficient information to make a determination concerning the modified 
collection of information at least 60 days before publication of the 
final rule; or
    (3) In cases in which OMB had filed public comments under paragraph 
(c) of this section, the agency's response to such comments was 
unreasonable, and the collection of information is unnecessary for the 
proper performance of the agency's functions.

[[Page 120]]

    (i) After making such decision to approve, to instruct the agency to 
make a substantive or material change to, or disapprove, the collection 
of information, OMB shall so notify the agency. If OMB approves the 
collection of information or if it has not acted upon the submission 
within the time limits of this section, the agency may request, and OMB 
shall assign an OMB control number. If OMB disapproves or instructs the 
agency to make substantive or material change to the collection of 
information, it shall make the reasons for its decision publicly 
available.
    (j) OMB shall not approve any collection of information under this 
section for a period longer than three years. Approval of such 
collection of information will be for the full three-year period, unless 
OMB determines that there are special circumstances requiring approval 
for a shorter period.
    (k) After receipt of notification of OMB's approval, instruction to 
make a substantive or material change to, disapproval of a collection of 
information, or failure to act, the agency shall publish a notice in the 
Federal Register to inform the public of OMB's decision.
    (l) As provided in Sec. 1320.5(b) and Sec. 1320.6(a), an agency may 
not conduct or sponsor a collection of information unless the collection 
of information displays a currently valid OMB control number and the 
agency informs potential persons who are to respond to the collection of 
information that such persons are not required to respond to the 
collection of information unless it displays a currently valid OMB 
control number.



Sec. 1320.12  Clearance of collections of information in current rules.

    Agencies shall submit collections of information contained in 
current rules that were published as final rules in the Federal Register 
in accordance with the following procedures:
    (a) In the case of a collection of information contained in a 
published current rule which has been approved by OMB and has a 
currently valid OMB control number, the agency shall:
    (1) Conduct the review established under Sec. 1320.8, including the 
seeking of public comment under Sec. 1320.8(d); and
    (2) After having made a reasonable effort to seek public comment, 
but no later than 60 days before the expiration date of the OMB control 
number for the currently approved collection of information, submit the 
collection of information for review and approval under this part, which 
shall include an explanation of how the agency has used the information 
that it has collected.
    (b)(1) In the case of a collection of information contained in a 
published current rule that was not required to be submitted for OMB 
review under the Paperwork Reduction Act at the time the collection of 
information was made part of the rule, but which collection of 
information is now subject to the Act and this part, the agency shall:
    (i) Conduct the review established under Sec. 1320.8, including the 
seeking of public comment under Sec. 1320.(8)(d); and
    (ii) After having made a reasonable effort to seek public comment, 
submit the collection of information for review and approval under this 
part, which shall include an explanation of how the agency has used the 
information that it has collected.
    (2) The agency may continue to conduct or sponsor the collection of 
information while the submission is pending at OMB. In the case of a 
collection of information not previously approved, approval shall be 
granted for such period, which shall not exceed 60 days, unless extended 
by the Director for an additional 60 days, and an OMB control number 
assigned. Upon assignment of the OMB control number, and in accordance 
with Sec. 1320.3(f) and Sec. 1320.5(b), the agency shall display the 
number and inform the potential persons who are to respond to the 
collection of information that such persons are not required to respond 
to the collection of information unless it displays a currently valid 
OMB control number.
    (c) On or before the day of submission to OMB under paragraphs (a) 
or (b) of this section, the agency shall, in accordance with the 
requirements set forth in Sec. 1320.5(a)(1)(iv), forward a notice to the 
Federal Register stating that OMB review is being sought. The notice 
shall direct requests for copies of the collection of information and 
supporting documentation to the agency, and shall request that comments 
be

[[Page 121]]

submitted to OMB within 30 days of the notice's publication. The notice 
shall direct comments to the Office of Information and Regulatory 
Affairs of OMB, Attention: Desk Officer for [name of agency]. A copy of 
the notice submitted to the Federal Register, together with the date of 
expected publication, shall be included in the agency's submission to 
OMB.
    (d) Within 60 days after receipt of the collection of information or 
publication of the notice under paragraph (c) of this section, whichever 
is later, OMB shall notify the agency involved of its decision to 
approve, to instruct the agency to make a substantive or material change 
to, or to disapprove, the collection of information, and shall make such 
decision publicly available. OMB shall provide at least 30 days for 
public comment after receipt of the proposed collection of information 
before making its decision, except as provided under Sec. 1320.13.
    (e)(1) Upon approval of a collection of information, OMB shall 
assign an OMB control number and an expiration date. OMB shall not 
approve any collection of information for a period longer than three 
years. Approval of any collection of information submitted under this 
section will be for the full three-year period, unless OMB determines 
that there are special circumstances requiring approval for a shorter 
period.
    (2) If OMB fails to notify the agency of its approval, instruction 
to make substantive or material change, or disapproval within the 60-day 
period, the agency may request, and OMB shall assign without further 
delay, an OMB control number that shall be valid for not more than one 
year.
    (3) As provided in Sec. 1320.5(b) and Sec. 1320.6(a), an agency may 
not conduct or sponsor a collection of information unless the collection 
of information displays a currently valid OMB control number and the 
agency informs potential persons who are to respond to the collection of 
information that such persons are not required to respond to the 
collection of information unless it displays a currently valid OMB 
control number.
    (f)(1) If OMB disapproves a collection of information contained in 
an existing rule, or instructs the agency to make a substantive or 
material change to a collection of information contained in an existing 
rule, OMB shall:
    (i) Publish an explanation thereof in the Federal Register; and
    (ii) Instruct the agency to undertake a rulemaking within a 
reasonable time limited to consideration of changes to the collection of 
information contained in the rule and thereafter to submit the 
collection of information for approval or disapproval under Sec. 1320.10 
or Sec. 1320.11, as appropriate; and
    (iii) Extend the existing approval of the collection of information 
(including an interim approval granted under paragraph (b) of this 
section) for the duration of the period required for consideration of 
proposed changes, including that required for OMB approval or 
disapproval of the collection of information under Sec. 1320.10 or 
Sec. 1320.11, as appropriate.
    (2) Thereafter, the agency shall, within a reasonable period of time 
not to exceed 120 days, undertake such procedures as are necessary in 
compliance with the Administrative Procedure Act and other applicable 
law to amend or rescind the collection of information, and shall notify 
the public through the Federal Register. Such notice shall identify the 
proposed changes in the collections of information and shall solicit 
public comment on retention, change, or rescission of such collections 
of information. If the agency employs notice and comment rulemaking 
procedures for amendment or rescission of the collection of information, 
publication of the above in the Federal Register and submission to OMB 
shall initiate OMB clearance procedures under section 3507(d) of the Act 
and Sec. 1320.11. All procedures shall be completed within a reasonable 
period of time to be determined by OMB in consultation with the agency.
    (g) OMB may disapprove, in whole or in part, any collection of 
information subject to the procedures of this section, if the agency:
    (1) Has refused within a reasonable time to comply with an OMB 
instruction to submit the collection of information for review;
    (2) Has refused within a reasonable time to initiate procedures to 
change the collection of information; or

[[Page 122]]

    (3) Has refused within a reasonable time to publish a final rule 
continuing the collection of information, with such changes as may be 
appropriate, or otherwise complete the procedures for amendment or 
rescission of the collection of information.
    (h)(1) Upon disapproval by OMB of a collection of information 
subject to this section, except as provided in paragraph (f)(1)(iii) of 
this section, the OMB control number assigned to such collection of 
information shall immediately expire, and no agency shall conduct or 
sponsor such collection of information. Any such disapproval shall 
constitute disapproval of the collection of information contained in the 
Notice of Proposed Rulemaking or other submissions, and also of the 
preexisting information collection instruments directed at the same 
collection of information and therefore constituting essentially the 
same collection of information.
    (2) The failure to display a currently valid OMB control number for 
a collection of information contained in a current rule, or the failure 
to inform the potential persons who are to respond to the collection of 
information that such persons are not required to respond to the 
collection of information unless it displays a currently valid OMB 
control number, does not, as a legal matter, rescind or amend the rule; 
however, such absence will alert the public that either the agency has 
failed to comply with applicable legal requirements for the collection 
of information or the collection of information has been disapproved, 
and that therefore the portion of the rule containing the collection of 
information has no legal force and effect and the public protection 
provisions of 44 U.S.C. 3512 apply.
    (i) Prior to the expiration of OMB's approval of a collection of 
information in a current rule, OMB may decide on its own initiative, 
after consultation with the agency, to review the collection of 
information. Such decisions will be made only when relevant 
circumstances have changed or the burden estimates provided by the 
agency at the time of initial submission were materially in error. Upon 
notification by OMB of its decision to review the collection of 
information, the agency shall submit it to OMB for review under this 
Part.



Sec. 1320.13  Emergency processing.

    An agency head or the Senior Official, or their designee, may 
request OMB to authorize emergency processing of submissions of 
collections of information.
    (a) Any such request shall be accompanied by a written determination 
that:
    (1) The collection of information:
    (i) Is needed prior to the expiration of time periods established 
under this Part; and
    (ii) Is essential to the mission of the agency; and
    (2) The agency cannot reasonably comply with the normal clearance 
procedures under this part because:
    (i) Public harm is reasonably likely to result if normal clearance 
procedures are followed;
    (ii) An unanticipated event has occurred; or
    (iii) The use of normal clearance procedures is reasonably likely to 
prevent or disrupt the collection of information or is reasonably likely 
to cause a statutory or court ordered deadline to be missed.
    (b) The agency shall state the time period within which OMB should 
approve or disapprove the collection of information.
    (c) The agency shall submit information indicating that it has taken 
all practicable steps to consult with interested agencies and members of 
the public in order to minimize the burden of the collection of 
information.
    (d) The agency shall set forth in the Federal Register notice 
prescribed by Sec. 1320.5(a)(1)(iv), unless waived or modified under 
this section, a statement that it is requesting emergency processing, 
and the time period stated under paragraph (b) of this section.
    (e) OMB shall approve or disapprove each such submission within the 
time period stated under paragraph (b) of this section, provided that 
such time period is consistent with the purposes of this Act.
    (f) If OMB approves the collection of information, it shall assign a 
control number valid for a maximum of 90 days after receipt of the 
agency submission.

[[Page 123]]



Sec. 1320.14  Public access.

    (a) In order to enable the public to participate in and provide 
comments during the clearance process, OMB will ordinarily make its 
paperwork docket files available for public inspection during normal 
business hours. Notwithstanding other provisions of this Part, and to 
the extent permitted by law, requirements to publish public notices or 
to provide materials to the public may be modified or waived by the 
Director to the extent that such public participation in the approval 
process would defeat the purpose of the collection of information; 
jeopardize the confidentiality of proprietary, trade secret, or other 
confidential information; violate State or Federal law; or substantially 
interfere with an agency's ability to perform its statutory obligations.
    (b) Agencies shall provide copies of the material submitted to OMB 
for review promptly upon request by any person.
    (c) Any person may request OMB to review any collection of 
information conducted by or for an agency to determine, if, under this 
Act and this part, a person shall maintain, provide, or disclose the 
information to or for the agency. Unless the request is frivolous, OMB 
shall, in coordination with the agency responsible for the collection of 
information:
    (1) Respond to the request within 60 days after receiving the 
request, unless such period is extended by OMB to a specified date and 
the person making the request is given notice of such extension; and
    (2) Take appropriate remedial action, if necessary.



Sec. 1320.15  Independent regulatory agency override authority.

    (a) An independent regulatory agency which is administered by two or 
more members of a commission, board, or similar body, may by majority 
vote void:
    (1) Any disapproval, instruction to such agency to make material or 
substantive change to, or stay of the effectiveness of OMB approval of, 
any collection of information of such agency; or
    (2) An exercise of authority under Sec. 1320.10(g) concerning such 
agency.
    (b) The agency shall certify each vote to void such OMB action to 
OMB, and explain the reasons for such vote. OMB shall without further 
delay assign an OMB control number to such collection of information, 
valid for the length of time requested by the agency, up to three years, 
to any collection of information as to which this vote is exercised. No 
override shall become effective until the independent regulatory agency, 
as provided in Sec. 1320.5(b) and Sec. 1320.6(2), has displayed the OMB 
control number and informed the potential persons who are to respond to 
the collection of information that such persons are not required to 
respond to the collection of information unless it displays a currently 
valid OMB control number.



Sec. 1320.16  Delegation of approval authority.

    (a) OMB may, after complying with the notice and comment procedures 
of the Administrative Procedure Act, delegate OMB review of some or all 
of an agency's collections of information to the Senior Official, or to 
the agency head with respect to those components of the agency for which 
he or she has not delegated authority.
    (b) No delegation of review authority shall be made unless the 
agency demonstrates to OMB that the Senior Official or agency head to 
whom the authority would be delegate:
    (1) Is sufficiently independent of program responsibility to 
evaluate fairly whether proposed collections of information should be 
approved;
    (2) Has sufficient resources to carry out this responsibility 
effectively; and
    (3) Has established an agency review process that demonstrates the 
prompt, efficient, and effective performance of collection of 
information review responsibilities.
    (c) OMB may limit, condition, or rescind, in whole or in part, at 
any time, such delegations of authority, and reserves the right to 
review any individual collection of information, or part thereof, 
conducted or sponsored by an agency, at any time.
    (d) Subject to the provisions of this part, and in accordance with 
the terms

[[Page 124]]

and conditions of each delegation as specified in appendix A to this 
part, OMB delegates review and approval authority to the following 
agencies:
    (1) Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System; and
    (2) Managing Director of the Federal Communications Commission.



Sec. 1320.17  Information collection budget.

    Each agency's Senior Official, or agency head in the case of any 
agency for which the agency head has not delegated responsibility under 
the Act for any component of the agency to the Senior Official, shall 
develop and submit to OMB, in such form, at such time, and in accordance 
with such procedures as OMB may prescribe, an annual comprehensive 
budget for all collections of information from the public to be 
conducted in the succeeding twelve months. For good cause, OMB may 
exempt any agency from this requirement.



Sec. 1320.18  Other authority.

    (a) OMB shall determine whether any collection of information or 
other matter is within the scope of the Act, or this Part.
    (b) In appropriate cases, after consultation with the agency, OMB 
may initiate a rulemaking proceeding to determine whether an agency's 
collection of information is consistent with statutory standards. Such 
proceedings shall be in accordance with the informal rulemaking 
procedures of the Administrative Procedure Act.
    (c) Each agency is responsible for complying with the information 
policies, principles, standards, and guidelines prescribed by OMB under 
this Act.
    (d) To the extent permitted by law, OMB may waive any requirements 
contained in this part.
    (e) Nothing in this part shall be interpreted to limit the authority 
of OMB under this Act, or any other law. Nothing in this part or this 
Act shall be interpreted as increasing or decreasing the authority of 
OMB with respect to the substantive policies and programs of the 
agencies.

  Appendix A to Part 1320--Agencies With Delegated Review and Approval 
                                Authority

1. The Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System

    (a) Authority to review and approve collection of information 
requests, collection of information requirements, and collections of 
information in current rules is delegated to the Board of Governors of 
the Federal Reserve System.
    (1) This delegation does not include review and approval authority 
over any new collection of information or any modification to an 
existing collection of information that:
    (i) Is proposed to be collected as a result of a requirement or 
other mandate of the Federal Financial Institutions Examination Council, 
or other Federal executive branch entities with authority to require the 
Board to conduct or sponsor a collection of information.
    (ii) Is objected to by another Federal agency on the grounds that 
agency requires information currently collected by the Board, that the 
currently collected information is being deleted from the collection, 
and the deletion will have a serious adverse impact on the agency's 
program, provided that such objection is certified to OMB by the head of 
the Federal agency involved, with a copy to the Board, before the end of 
the comment period specified by the Board on the Federal Register 
notices specified in paragraph (1)(3)(i) of this section 1.
    (iii) Would cause the burden of the information collections 
conducted or sponsored by the Board to exceed by the end of the fiscal 
year the Information Collection Budget allowance set by the Board and 
OMB for the fiscal year-end.
    (2) The Board may ask that OMB review and approve collections of 
information covered by this delegation.
    (3) In exercising delegated authority, the Board will:
    (i) Provide the public, to the extent possible and appropriate, with 
reasonable opportunity to comment on collections of information under 
review prior to taking final action approving the collection. Reasonable 
opportunity for public comment will include publishing a notice in the 
Federal Register informing the public of the proposed collection of 
information, announcing the beginning of a 60-day public comment period, 
and the availability of copies of the ``clearance package,'' to provide 
the public with the opportunity to comment. Such Federal Register 
notices shall also advise the public that they may also send a copy of 
their comments to the Federal Reserve Board and to the OMB/OIRA Desk 
Officer.
    (A) Should the Board determine that a new collection of information 
or a change in an

[[Page 125]]

existing collection must be instituted quickly and that public 
participation in the approval process would defeat the purpose of the 
collection or substantially interfere with the Board's ability to 
perform its statutory obligation, the Board may temporarily approve of 
the collection of information for a period not to exceed 90 days without 
providing opportunity for public comment.
    (B) At the earliest practical date after approving the temporary 
extension to the collection of information, the Board will publish a 
Federal Register notice informing the public of its approval of the 
collection of information and indicating why immediate action was 
necessary. In such cases, the Board will conduct a normal delegated 
review and publish a notice in the Federal Register soliciting public 
comment on the intention to extend the collection of information for a 
period not to exceed three years.
    (ii) Provide the OMB/OIRA Desk Officer for the Federal Reserve Board 
with a copy of the Board's Federal Register notice not later than the 
day the Board files the notice with the Office of the Federal Register.
    (iii) Assure that approved collections of information are reviewed 
not less frequently than once every three years, and that such reviews 
are normally conducted before the expiration date of the prior approval. 
Where the review has not been completed prior to the expiration date, 
the Board may extend the report, for up to three months, without public 
notice in order to complete the review and consequent revisions, if any. 
There may also be other circumstances in which the Board determines that 
a three-month extension without public notice is appropriate.
    (iv) Take every reasonable step to conduct the review established 
under 5 CFR 1320.8, including the seeking of public comment under 5 CFR 
1320.8(d). In determining whether to approve a collection of 
information, the Board will consider all comments received from the 
public and other agencies. The Board will not approve a collection of 
information that it determines does not satisfy the guidelines set forth 
in 5 CFR 1320.5(d)(2), unless it determines that departure from these 
guidelines is necessary to satisfy statutory requirements or other 
substantial need.
    (v)(A) Assure that each approved collection of information displays, 
as required by 5 CFR 1320.6, a currently valid OMB control number and 
the fact that a person is not required to respond to a collection of 
information unless it displays a currently valid OMB control number.
    (B) Assure that all collections of information, except those 
contained in regulations, display the expiration date of the approval, 
or, in case the expiration date has been omitted, explain the decision 
that it would not be appropriate, under 5 CFR 1320.5(a)(1)(iii)(C), for 
a proposed collection of information to display an expiration date.
    (C) Assure that each collection of information, as required by 5 CFR 
1320.8(b)(3), informs and provides fair notice to the potential 
respondents of why the information is being collected; the way in which 
such information is to be used; the estimated burden; whether responses 
are voluntary, required to obtain or retain a benefit, or mandatory; the 
confidentiality to be provided; and the fact that an agency may not 
conduct or sponsor, and the respondent is not required to respond to, a 
collection of information unless it displays a currently valid OMB 
control number.
    (vi) Assure that each approved collection of information, together 
with a completed form OMB 83-I, a supporting statement, a copy of each 
comment received from the public and other agencies in response to the 
Board's Federal Register notice or a summary of these comments, the 
certification required by 5 CFR 1320.9, and a certification that the 
Board has approved of the collection of information in accordance with 
the provisions of this delegation is transmitted to OMB for 
incorporation into OMB's public docket files. Such transmittal shall be 
made as soon as practical after the Board has taken final action 
approving the collection. However, no collection of information may be 
instituted until the Board has delivered this transmittal to OMB.
    (b) OMB will:
    (1) Provide the Board in advance with a block of control numbers 
which the Board will assign in sequential order to and display on, new 
collections of information.
    (2) Provide a written notice of action to the Board indicating that 
the Board approvals of collections of information that have been 
received by OMB and incorporated into OMB's public docket files and an 
inventory of currently approved collections of information.
    (3) Review any collection of information referred by the Board in 
accordance with the provisions of section 1(a)(2) of this Appendix.
    (c) OMB may review the Board's paperwork review process under the 
delegation. The Board will cooperate in carrying out such a review. The 
Board will respond to any recommendations resulting from such review 
and, if it finds the recommendations to be appropriate, will either 
accept the recommendations or propose an alternative approach to achieve 
the intended purpose.
    (d) This delegation may, as provided by 5 CFR 1320.16(c), be 
limited, conditioned, or rescinded, in whole or in part at any time. OMB 
will exercise this authority only in unusual circumstances and, in those 
rare instances, will do so, subject to the provisions of 5 CFR 
1320.10(f) and 1320.10(g), prior to the expiration of the time period 
set for public

[[Page 126]]

comment in the Board's Federal Register notices and generally only if:
    (1) Prior to the commencement of a Board review (e.g., during the 
review for the Information Collection Budget). OMB has notified the 
Board that it intends to review a specific new proposal for the 
collection of information or the continued use (with or without 
modification) of an existing collection;
    (2) There is substantial public objection to a proposed information 
collection: or
    (3) OMB determines that a substantially inadequate and inappropriate 
lead time has been provided between the final announcement date of the 
proposed requirement and the first date when the information is to be 
submitted or disclosed. When OMB exercises this authority it will 
consider that the period of its review began the date that OMB received 
the Federal Register notice provided for in section 1(a)(3)(i) of this 
Appendix.
    (e) Where OMB conducts a review of a Board information collection 
proposal under section 1(a)(1), 1(a)(2), or 1(d) of this Appendix, the 
provisions of 5 CFR 1320.13 continue to apply.

2. The Managing Director of the Federal Communications Commission

    (a) Authority to review and approve currently valid (OMB-approved) 
collections of information, including collections of information 
contained in existing rules, that have a total annual burden of 5,000 
hours or less and a burden of less than 500 hours per respondent is 
delegated to the Managing Director of the Federal Communications 
Commission.
    (1) This delegation does not include review and approval authority 
over any new collection of information, any collections whose approval 
has lapsed, any substantive or material modification to existing 
collections, any reauthorization of information collections employing 
statistical methods, or any information collections that exceed a total 
annual burden of 5,000 hours or an estimated burden of 500 hours per 
respondent.
    (2) The Managing Director may ask that OMB review and approve 
collections of information covered by the delegation.
    (3) In exercising delegated authority, the Managing Director will:
    (i) Provide the public, to the extent possible and appropriate, with 
reasonable opportunity to comment on collections of information under 
review prior to taking final action on reauthorizing an existing 
collection. Reasonable opportunity for public comment will include 
publishing a notice in the Federal Register and an FCC Public Notice 
informing the public that a collection of information is being extended 
and announcing the beginning of a 60-day comment period, notifying the 
public of the ``intent to extend an information collection,'' and 
providing the public with the opportunity to comment on the need for the 
information, its practicality, the accuracy of the agency's burden 
estimate, and on ways to minimize burden, including the use of 
automated, electronic, mechanical, or other technological collection 
techniques or other forms of information technology, e.g., permitting 
electronic submission of responses. Such notices shall advise the public 
that they may also send a copy of their comments to the OMB/Office of 
Information and Regulatory Affairs desk officer for the Commission.
    (A) Should the Managing Director determine that a collection of 
information that falls within the scope of this delegation must be 
reauthorized quickly and that public participation in the 
reauthorization process interferes with the Commission's ability to 
perform its statutory obligation, the Managing Director may temporarily 
reauthorize the extension of an information collection, for a period not 
to exceed 90 days, without providing opportunity for public comment.
    (B) At the earliest practical date after granting this temporary 
extension to an information collection, the Managing Director will 
conduct a normal delegated review and publish a Federal Register notice 
soliciting public comment on its intention to extend the collection of 
information for a period not to exceed three years.
    (ii) Assure that approved collections of information are reviewed 
not less frequently than once every three years and that such reviews 
are conducted before the expiration date of the prior approval. When the 
review is not completed prior to the expiration date, the Managing 
Director will submit the lapsed information collection to OMB for review 
and reauthorization.
    (iii) Assure that each reauthorized collection of information 
displays an OMB control number and, except for those contained in 
regulations or specifically designated by OMB, displays the expiration 
date of the approval.
    (iv) Inform and provide fair notice to the potential respondents, as 
required by 5 CFR 1320.8(b)(3), of why the information is being 
collected; the way in which such information is to be used; the 
estimated burden; whether responses are voluntary, required, required to 
obtain or retain a benefit, or mandatory; the confidentiality to be 
provided; and the fact that an agency may not conduct or sponsor, and 
the respondent is not required to respond to, a collection of 
information unless it displays a currently valid OMB control number.
    (v) Transmit to OMB for incorporation into OMB's public docket 
files, a report of delegated approval certifying that the Managing 
Director has reauthorized each collection of

[[Page 127]]

information in accordance with the provisions of this delegation. The 
Managing Director shall also make the certification required by 5 CFR 
1320.9, e.g., that the approved collection of information reduces to the 
extent practicable and appropriate, the burden on respondents, 
including, for small business, local government, and other small 
entities, the use of the techniques outlined in the Regulatory 
Flexibility Act. Such transmittals shall be made no later than 15 days 
after the Managing Director has taken final action reauthorizing the 
extension of an information collection.
    (vi) Ensure that the personnel in the Commission's functional 
bureaus and offices responsible for managing information collections 
receive periodic training on procedures related to meeting the 
requirements of this part and the Act.
    (b) OMB will:
    (1) Provide notice to the Commission acknowledging receipt of the 
report of delegated approval and its incorporation into OMB's public 
docket files and inventory of currently approved collections of 
information.
    (2) Act upon any request by the Commission to review a collection of 
information referred by the Commission in accordance with the provisions 
of section 2(a)(2) of this appendix.
    (3) Periodically assess, at its discretion, the Commission's 
paperwork review process as administered under the delegation. The 
Managing Director will cooperate in carrying out such an assessment. The 
Managing Director will respond to any recommendations resulting from 
such a review and, if it finds the recommendations to be appropriate, 
will either accept the recommendation or propose an alternative approach 
to achieve the intended purpose.
    (c) This delegation may, as provided by 5 CFR 1320.16(c), be 
limited, conditioned, or rescinded, in whole or in part at any time. OMB 
will exercise this authority only in unusual circumstances.


[[Page 129]]



              CHAPTER IV--ADVISORY COMMITTEE ON FEDERAL PAY




  --------------------------------------------------------------------
Part                                                                Page
1410            Rules and regulations to implement the 
                    Privacy Act of 1974.....................         130
1411            Enforcement of nondiscrimination on the 
                    basis of handicap in programs or 
                    activities conducted by Advisory 
                    Committee on Federal Pay................         132

[[Page 130]]



PART 1410--RULES AND REGULATIONS TO IMPLEMENT THE PRIVACY ACT OF 1974--Table of Contents




Sec.
1410.1  Purpose and scope.
1410.2  Definitions.
1410.3  Procedures for access of an individual to his or her own records 
          in a record system.
1410.4  Times, places and requirements for the identification of the 
          individual making a request.
1410.5  Grant to an individual of access to his or her own records.
1410.6  Access to the accounting of disclosures from records.
1410.7  Request for correction or amendment to the record.
1410.8  Agency review of request for correction or amendment of the 
          record.
1410.9  Appeal of an initial adverse agency determination on correction 
          or amendment of the record.
1410.10  Disclosure of record to a person other than the individual to 
          whom the record pertains.
1410.11  Fees.

    Authority: Pub. L. 93-579; 5 U.S.C. 552a.

    Source: 42 FR 2299, Jan. 11, 1977, unless otherwise noted.



Sec. 1410.1  Purpose and scope.

    The purposes of these regulations are to:
    (a) Establish a procedure by which an individual can determine if 
the Advisory Committee on Federal Pay (hereafter known as the Committee) 
maintains a system of records which includes a record pertaining to the 
individual; and
    (b) Establish a procedure by which an individual can gain access to 
a record pertaining to him or her for the purpose of review, amendment 
and/or correction.



Sec. 1410.2  Definitions.

    For the purpose of these regulations--
    (a) The term individual means a citizen of the United States or an 
alien lawfully admitted for permanent residence;
    (b) The term maintain includes maintain, collect, use or 
disseminate;
    (c) The term record means any item, collection or grouping of 
information about an individual that is maintained by the Committee, 
including but not limited to, his or her employment history, payroll 
information, and financial transactions and that contains his or her 
name, or the identifying number, symbol, or other identifying particular 
assigned to the individual, such as social security number;
    (d) The term system of records means a group of any records under 
the control of the Committee from which information is retrieved by the 
name of the individual or by some identifying number, symbol, or other 
identifying particular assigned to the individual; and
    (e) The term routine use means, with respect to the disclosure of a 
record, the use of such record for a purpose which is compatible with 
the purpose for which it was collected.



Sec. 1410.3  Procedures for access of an individual to his or her own records in a record system.

    An individual shall submit a request to the Administrative Assistant 
of the Committee, Suite 205, 1730 K Street NW., Washington, DC 20006, in 
person or in writing, to determine if a system of records named by the 
individual contains a record pertaining to the individual, or if the 
Committee maintains any systems of records which pertain to the 
individual. The individual shall submit a request to the Administrative 
Assistant of the Committee which states the individual's desire to 
review his or her record. Individuals who require assistance in 
identifying systems of record, or in preparing requests identifying 
systems of record for access, or who need assistance in requesting 
amendments, may address such requests to the Administrative Assistant of 
the Committee, Suite 205, 1730 K Street NW., Washington, DC 20006.



Sec. 1410.4  Times, places and requirements for the identification of the individual making a request.

    An individual making a request to the Administrative Assistant of 
the Committee pursuant to Sec. 1410.3 shall present the request at the 
Committee offices, Suite 205, 1730 K Street NW., Washington, DC 20006, 
on any business day between the hours of 8:15 a.m. and 4:45 p.m., or in 
writing. The individual submitting the request should present

[[Page 131]]

himself or herself at the Committee's offices with a form of 
identification which will permit the Committee to verify that the 
individual is the same individual as contained in the record requested, 
such as a valid driver's permit, employee identification card, or 
Medicare card, or a signed statement from the individual asserting his 
or her identity and stipulating that he or she understands that 
knowingly or willfully seeking or obtaining access to records about 
another individual under false pretenses is punishable by a fine of up 
to $5,000. If the individual seeks access by mail, the Committee will 
require similar identification as required of those persons requesting 
access to records in person, or by identifying data such as name, date 
of birth, or system personal identifier (if known to the individual). 
Requests for access to systems of record will be acknowledged within ten 
days of receipt. The acknowledgement will indicate whether or not access 
can be granted and, if so, that it will be within a 30-day period 
unless, for good cause shown, the Committee is unable to do so.



Sec. 1410.5  Grant to an individual of access to his or her own records.

    Upon verification of identity either in person or in written form to 
the Administrative Assistant of the Committee, Suite 205, 1730 K Street 
NW., Washington, DC 20006, and in accordance with the identification 
provisions of Sec. 1410.4, the Committee shall grant access to the 
individual the information contained in the record which pertains to 
that individual. The individual may be accompanied for the purpose by a 
person of his or her choosing. Upon request of the individual to whom 
the record pertains, all information in the accounting of disclosures 
will be made available. If, for any unforeseen circumstances, or in an 
unusual situation when it may be necessary to deny a person access, the 
individual will be advised of the reasons therefor, and his or her right 
to judicial review under 5 U.S.C. 552a(f)(4).



Sec. 1410.6  Access to the accounting of disclosures from records.

    The Privacy Act requires that with some limited exceptions 
individuals may request access to a list of those to whom records about 
them have been disclosed. Individuals seeking access to the accounting 
of disclosures from records pertaining to them should follow the same 
procedures as established above for access to the records themselves 
(see Secs. 1410.3, 1410.4, 1410.5).



Sec. 1410.7  Request for correction or amendment to the record.

    The individual should submit a request to the Administrative 
Assistant of the Committee which states the individual's desire to 
correct or to amend his or her record. This request is to be made in 
accord with the provisions of Sec. 1410.4.



Sec. 1410.8  Agency review of request for correction or amendment of the record.

    Within ten working days of the receipt of the request to correct or 
to amend the record, the Administrative Assistant of the Committee will 
acknowledge in writing such receipt and promptly either--
    (a) Make any correction or amendment or any portion thereof which 
the individual believes is not accurate, relevant, timely, or complete; 
or
    (b) Inform the individual of his or her refusal to correct or to 
amend the record in accordance with the request, the reason for the 
refusal, and the procedures established by the Committee for the 
individual to request a review of that refusal. Corrections or 
amendments will be sent to prior recipients of the record in question, 
to the extent that the Committee has an accounting of the disclosure of 
the record of that information.



Sec. 1410.9  Appeal of an initial adverse agency determination on correction or amendment of the record.

    An individual who disagrees with the refusal of the Administrative 
Assistant of the Committee to correct or to amend his or her record may 
submit a request for a review of such refusal to the Chairman of the 
Advisory Committee on Federal Pay, Suite 205, 1730 K Street NW., 
Washington, DC 20006. The Chairman will, not later than thirty working 
days from the date on which the individual requests such review,

[[Page 132]]

complete such review and make a final determination unless, for good 
cause shown, the Chairman extends such thirty day period. If, after his 
or her review, the Chairman also refuses to correct or to amend the 
record in accordance with the request, the individual may file with the 
Committee a concise statement setting forth the reasons for his or her 
disagreement with the refusal of the Committee and may seek judicial 
review of the Chairman's determination under 5 U.S.C. 552a(g)(1)(A). A 
copy of the corrected record or statement of dispute will be provided to 
prior recipients of the information in question, to the extent that the 
Committee has an accounting of the disclosure of that information.



Sec. 1410.10  Disclosure of record to a person other than the individual to whom the record pertains.

    The Committee will not disclose a record to any individual other 
than to the individual to whom the record pertains without receiving the 
prior written consent of the individual to whom the record pertains, 
except as required or permitted under 5 U.S.C. 552a(b).



Sec. 1410.11  Fees.

    If an individual requests copies of his or her record, he or she 
shall be charged ten cents per page for any copying charges in excess of 
$25. In cases of indigency, the Committee may waive such fees. In cases 
where copying charges exceed $25, advance payment will be required.



PART 1411--ENFORCEMENT OF NONDISCRIMINATION ON THE BASIS OF HANDICAP IN PROGRAMS OR ACTIVITIES CONDUCTED BY ADVISORY COMMITTEE ON FEDERAL PAY--Table of Contents




Sec.
1411.101  Purpose.
1411.102  Application.
1411.103  Definitions.
1411.104--1411.109  [Reserved]
1411.110  Self-evaluation.
1411.111  Notice.
1411.112--1411.129  [Reserved]
1411.130  General prohibitions against discrimination.
1411.131--1411.139  [Reserved]
1411.140  Employment.
1411.141--1411.148  [Reserved]
1411.149  Program accessibility: Discrimination prohibited.
1411.150  Program accessibility: Existing facilities.
1411.151  Program accessibility: New construction and alterations.
1411.152--1411.159  [Reserved]
1411.160  Communications.
1411.161--1411.169  [Reserved]
1411.170  Compliance procedures.
1411.171--1411.999  [Reserved]

    Authority: 29 U.S.C. 794.

    Source: 51 FR 4573, 4579, Feb. 5, 1986, unless otherwise noted.



Sec. 1411.101  Purpose.

    This part effectuates section 119 of the Rehabilitation, 
Comprehensive Services, and Developmental Disabilities Amendments of 
1978, which amended section 504 of the Rehabilitation Act of 1973 to 
prohibit discrimination on the basis of handicap in programs or 
activities conducted by Executive agencies or the United States Postal 
Service.



Sec. 1411.102  Application.

    This part applies to all programs or activities conducted by the 
agency.



Sec. 1411.103  Definitions.

    For purposes of this part, the term--
    Assistant Attorney General means the Assistant Attorney General, 
Civil Rights Division, United States Department of Justice.
    Auxiliary aids means services or devices that enable persons with 
impaired sensory, manual, or speaking skills to have an equal 
opportunity to participate in, and enjoy the benefits of, programs or 
activities conducted by the agency. For example, auxiliary aids useful 
for persons with impaired vision include readers, Brailled materials, 
audio recordings, telecommunications devices and other similar services 
and devices. Auxiliary aids useful for persons with impaired hearing 
include telephone handset amplifiers, telephones compatible with hearing 
aids, telecommunication devices for deaf persons (TDD's), interpreters, 
notetakers, written materials, and other similar services and devices.
    Complete complaint means a written statement that contains the 
complainant's name and address and describes

[[Page 133]]

the agency's alleged discriminatory action in sufficient detail to 
inform the agency of the nature and date of the alleged violation of 
section 504. It shall be signed by the complainant or by someone 
authorized to do so on his or her behalf. Complaints filed on behalf of 
classes or third parties shall describe or identify (by name, if 
possible) the alleged victims of discrimination.
    Facility means all or any portion of buildings, structures, 
equipment, roads, walks, parking lots, rolling stock or other 
conveyances, or other real or personal property.
    Handicapped person means any person who has a physical or mental 
impairment that substantially limits one or more major life activities, 
has a record of such an impairment, or is regarded as having such an 
impairment.
    As used in this definition, the phrase:
    (l) Physical or mental impairment includes--
    (i) Any physiological disorder or condition, cosmetic disfigurement, 
or anatomical loss affecting one of more of the following body systems: 
Neurological; musculoskeletal; special sense organs; respiratory, 
including speech organs; cardiovascular; reproductive; digestive; 
genitourinary; hemic and lymphatic; skin; and endocrine; or
    (ii) Any mental or psychological disorder, such as mental 
retardation, organic brain syndrome, emotional or mental illness, and 
specific learning disabilities. The term physical or mental impairment 
includes, but is not limited to, such diseases and conditions as 
orthopedic, visual, speech, and hearing impairments, cerebral palsy, 
epilepsy, muscular dystrophy, multiple sclerosis, cancer, heart disease, 
diabetes, mental retardation, emotional illness, and drug addition and 
alcholism.
    (2) Major life activities includes functions such as caring for 
one's self, performing manual tasks, walking, seeing, hearing, speaking, 
breathing, learning, and working.
    (3) Has a record of such an impairment means has a history of, or 
has been misclassified as having, a mental or physical impairment that 
substantially limits one or more major life activities.
    (4) Is regarded as having an impairment means--
    (i) Has a physical or mental impairment that does not substantially 
limit major life activities but is treated by the agency as constituting 
such a limitation;
    (ii) Has a physical or mental impairment that substantially limits 
major life activities only as a result of the attitudes of others toward 
such impairment; or
    (iii) Has none of the impairments defined in paragraph (1) of this 
definition but is treated by the agency as having such an impairment.
    Qualified handicapped person means--
    (1) With respect to any agency program or activity under which a 
person is required to perform services or to achieve a level of 
accomplishment, a handicapped person who meets the essential eligibility 
requirements and who can achieve the purpose of the program or activity 
without modifications in the program or activity that the agency can 
demonstrate would result in a fundamental alteration in its nature; or
    (2) With respect to any other program or activity, a handicapped 
person who meets the essential eligibility requirements for 
participation in, or receipt of benefits from, that program or activity.
    (3) Qualified handicapped person is defined for purposes of 
employment in 29 CFR 1613.702(f), which is made applicable to this part 
by Sec. 1411.140.
    Section 504 means section 504 of the Rehabilitation Act of 1973 
(Pub. L. 93-112, 87 Stat. 394 (29 U.S.C. 794)), as amended by the 
Rehabilitation Act Amendments of 1974 (Pub. L. 93-516, 88 Stat. 1617), 
and the Rehabilitation, Comprehensive Services, and Developmental 
Disabilities Amendments of 1978 (Pub. L. 95-602, 92 Stat. 2955). As used 
in this part, section 504 applies only to programs or activities 
conducted by Executive agencies and not to federally assisted programs.

[51 FR 4573, 4579, Feb. 5, 1986; 51 FR 7543, Mar. 5, 1986]
Secs. 1411.104--1411.109  [Reserved]



Sec. 1411.110  Self-evaluation.

    (a) The agency shall, by April 9, 1987, evaluate its current 
policies and practices, and the effects thereof, that do

[[Page 134]]

not or may not meet the requirements of this part, and, to the extent 
modification of any such policies and practices is required, the agency 
shall proceed to make the necessary modifications.
    (b) The agency shall provide an opportunity to interested persons, 
including handicapped persons or organizations representing handicapped 
persons, to participate in the self-evaluation process by submitting 
comments (both oral and written).
    (c) The agency shall, until three years following the completion of 
the self-evaluation, maintain on file and make available for public 
inspections:
    (1) A description of areas examined and any problems identified, and
    (2) A description of any modifications made.



Sec. 1411.111  Notice.

    The agency shall make available to employees, applicants, 
participants, beneficiaries, and other interested persons such 
information regarding the provisions of this part and its applicability 
to the programs or activities conducted by the agency, and make such 
information available to them in such manner as the head of the agency 
finds necessary to apprise such persons of the protections against 
discrimination assured them by section 504 and this regulation.
Secs. 1411.112--1411.129  [Reserved]



Sec. 1411.130  General prohibitions against discrimination.

    (a) No qualified handicapped person shall, on the basis of handicap, 
be excluded from participation in, be denied the benefits of, or 
otherwise be subjected to discrimination under any program or activity 
conducted by the agency.
    (b)(1) The agency, in providing any aid, benefit, or service, may 
not, directly or through contractual, licensing, or other arrangements, 
on the basis of handicap--
    (i) Deny a qualified handicapped person the opportunity to 
participate in or benefit from the aid, benefit, or service;
    (ii) Afford a qualfied handicapped person an opportunity to 
participate in or benefit from the aid, benefit, or service that is not 
equal to that afforded others;
    (iii) Provide a qualified handicapped person with an aid, benefit, 
or service that is not as effective in affording equal opportunity to 
obtain the same result, to gain the same benefit, or to reach the same 
level of achievement as that provided to others;
    (iv) Provide different or separate aid, benefits, or services to 
handicapped persons or to any class of handicapped persons than is 
provided to others unless such action is necessary to provide qualified 
handicapped persons with aid, benefits, or services that are as 
effective as those provided to others;
    (v) Deny a qualified handicapped person the opportunity to 
participate as a member of planning or advisory boards; or
    (vi) Otherwise limit a qualified handicapped person in the enjoyment 
of any right, privilege, advantage, or opportunity enjoyed by others 
receiving the aid, benefit, or service.
    (2) The agency may not deny a qualified handicapped person the 
opportunity to participate in programs or activities that are not 
separate or different, despite the existence of permissibly separate or 
different programs or activities.
    (3) The agency may not, directly or through contractual or other 
arrangements, utilize criteria or methods of administration the purpose 
or effect of which would--
    (i) Subject qualified handicapped persons to discrimination on the 
basis of handicap; or
    (ii) Defeat or substantially impair accomplishment of the objectives 
of a program or activity with respect to handicapped persons.
    (4) The agency may not, in determining the site or location of a 
facility, make selections the purpose or effect of which would--
    (i) Exclude handicapped persons from, deny them the benefits of, or 
otherwise subject them to discrimination under any program or activity 
conducted by the agency; or
    (ii) Defeat or substantially impair the accomplishment of the 
objectives of a program or activity with respect to handicapped persons.

[[Page 135]]

    (5) The agency, in the selection of procurement contractors, may not 
use criteria that subject qualified handicapped persons to 
discrimination on the basis of handicap.
    (c) The exclusion of nonhandicapped persons from the benefits of a 
program limited by Federal statute or Executive order to handicapped 
persons or the exclusion of a specific class of handicapped persons from 
a program limited by Federal statute or Executive order to a different 
class of handicapped persons is not prohibited by this part.
    (d) The agency shall administer programs and activities in the most 
integrated setting appropriate to the needs of qualified handicapped 
persons.
Secs. 1411.131--1411.139  [Reserved]



Sec. 1411.140  Employment.

    No qualified handicapped person shall, on the basis of handicap, be 
subjected to discrimination in employment under any program or activity 
conducted by the agency. The definitions, requirements, and procedures 
of section 501 of the Rehabilitation Act of 1973 (29 U.S.C. 791), as 
established by the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission in 29 CFR 
part 1613, shall apply to employment in federally conducted programs or 
activities.
Secs. 1411.141--1411.148  [Reserved]



Sec. 1411.149  Program accessibility: Discrimination prohibited.

    Except as otherwise provided in Sec. 1411.150, no qualified 
handicapped person shall, because the agency's facilities are 
inaccessible to or unusable by handicapped persons, be denied the 
benefits of, be excluded from participation in, or otherwise be 
subjected to discrimination under any program or activity conducted by 
the agency.



Sec. 1411.150  Program accessibility: Existing facilities.

    (a) General. The agency shall operate each program or activity so 
that the program or activity, when viewed in its entirety, is readily 
accessible to and usable by handicapped persons. This paragraph does 
not--
    (1) Necessarily require the agency to make each of its existing 
facilities accessible to and usable by handicapped persons; or
    (2) Require the agency to take any action that it can demonstrate 
would result in a fundamental alteration in the nature of a program or 
activity or in undue financial and administrative burdens. In those 
circumstances where agency personnel believe that the proposed action 
would fundamentally alter the program or activity or would result in 
undue financial and administrative burdens, the agency has the burden of 
proving that compliance with Sec. 1411.150(a) would result in such 
alteration or burdens. The decision that compliance would result in such 
alteration or burdens must be made by the agency head or his or her 
designee after considering all agency resources available for use in the 
funding and operation of the conducted program or activity, and must be 
accompanied by a written statement of the reasons for reaching that 
conclusion. If an action would result in such an alteration or such 
burdens, the agency shall take any other action that would not result in 
such an alteration or such burdens but would nevertheless ensure that 
handicapped persons receive the benefits and services of the program or 
activity.
    (b) Methods. The agency may comply with the requirements of this 
section through such means as redesign of equipment, reassignment of 
services to accessible buildings, assignment of aides to beneficiaries, 
home visits, delivery of services at alternate accessible sites, 
alteration of existing facilities and construction of new facilities, 
use of accessible rolling stock, or any other methods that result in 
making its programs or activities readily accessible to and usable by 
handicapped persons. The agency is nor required to make structural 
changes in existing facilities where other methods are effective in 
achieving compliance with this section. The agency, in making 
alterations to existing buildings, shall meet accessibility requirements 
to the extent compelled by the Architectural Barriers Act of 1968, as 
amended (42 U.S.C. 4151-4157), and any regulations implementing it. In 
choosing among available methods for meeting the requirements of this 
section, the agency

[[Page 136]]

shall give priority to those methods that offer programs and activities 
to qualified handicapped persons in the most integrated setting 
appropriate.
    (c) Time period for compliance. The agency shall comply with the 
obligations established under this section by June 6, 1986, except that 
where structural changes in facilities are undertaken, such changes 
shall be made by April 7, 1989, but in any event as expeditiously as 
possible.
    (d) Transition plan. In the event that structural changes to 
facilities will be undertaken to achieve program accessibility, the 
agency shall develop, by October 7, 1986, a transition plan setting 
forth the steps necessary to complete such changes. The agency shall 
provide an opportunity to interested persons, including handicapped 
persons or organizations representing handicapped persons, to 
participate in the development of the transition plan by submitting 
comments (both oral and written). A copy of the transition plan shall be 
made available for public inspection. The plan shall, at a minimum--
    (1) Identify physical obstacles in the agency's facilities that 
limit the accessibility of its programs or activities to handicapped 
persons;
    (2) Describe in detail the methods that will be used to make the 
facilities accessible;
    (3) Specify the schedule for taking the steps necessary to achieve 
compliance with this section and, if the time period of the transition 
plan is longer than one year, identify steps that will be taken during 
each year of the transition period; and
    (4) Indicate the official responsible for implementation of the 
plan.

[51 FR 4573, 4579, Feb. 5, 1986; 51 FR 7543, Mar. 5, 1986]



Sec. 1411.151  Program accessibility: New construction and alterations.

    Each building or part of a building that is constructed or altered 
by, on behalf of, or for the use of the agency shall be designed, 
constructed, or altered so as to be readily accessible to and usable by 
handicapped persons. The definitions, requirements, and standards of the 
Architectural Barriers Act (42 U.S.C. 4151-4157), as established in 41 
CFR 101-19.600 to 101-19.607, apply to buildings covered by this 
section.
Secs. 1411.152--1411.159  [Reserved]



Sec. 1411.160  Communications.

    (a) The agency shall take appropriate steps to ensure effective 
communication with applicants, participants, personnel of other Federal 
entities, and members of the public.
    (1) The agency shall furnish appropriate auxiliary aids where 
necessary to afford a handicapped person an equal opportunity to 
participate in, and enjoy the benefits of, a program or activity 
conducted by the agency.
    (i) In determining what type of auxiliary aid is necessary, the 
agency shall give primary consideration to the requests of the 
handicapped person.
    (ii) The agency need not provide individually prescribed devices, 
readers for personal use or study, or other devices of a personal 
nature.
    (2) Where the agency communicates with applicants and beneficiaries 
by telephone, telecommunication devices for deaf persons (TDD's) or 
equally effective telecommunication systems shall be used.
    (b) The agency shall ensure that interested persons, including 
persons with impaired vision or hearing, can obtain information as to 
the existence and location of accessible services, activities, and 
facilities.
    (c) The agency shall provide signage at a primary entrance to each 
of its inaccessible facilities, directing users to a location at which 
they can obtain information about accessible facilities. The 
international symbol for accessibility shall be used at each primary 
entrance of an accessible facility.
    (d) This section does not require the agency to take any action that 
it can demonstrate would result in a fundamental alteration in the 
nature of a program or activity or in undue financial and administrative 
burdens. In those circumstances where agency personnel believe that the 
proposed action would fundamentally alter the program or activity or 
would result in undue financial and administrative burdens, the agency 
has the burden of proving that compliance with Sec. 1411.160 would 
result in such alteration or burdens.

[[Page 137]]

The decision that compliance would result in such alteration or burdens 
must be made by the agency head or his or her designee after considering 
all agency resources available for use in the funding and operation of 
the conducted program or activity, and must be accompanied by a written 
statement of the reasons for reaching that conclusion. If an action 
required to comply with this section would result in such an alteration 
or such burdens, the agency shall take any other action that would not 
result in such an alteration or such burdens but would nevertheless 
ensure that, to the maximum extent possible, handicapped persons receive 
the benefits and services of the program or activity.
Secs. 1411.161--1411.169  [Reserved]



Sec. 1411.170  Compliance procedures.

    (a) Except as provided in paragraph (b) of this section, this 
section applies to all allegations of discrimination on the basis of 
handicap in programs or activities conducted by the agency.
    (b) The agency shall process complaints alleging violations of 
section 504 with respect to employment according to the procedures 
established by the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission in 29 CFR 
part 1613 pursuant to section 501 of the Rehabilitation Act of 1973 (29 
U.S.C. 791).
    (c) The Executive Director shall be responsible for coordinating 
implementation of this section. Complaints may be sent to Executive 
Director, Advisory Committee on Federal Pay, 1730 K Street, NW., Suite 
205, Washington, DC 20006.
    (d) The agency shall accept and investigate all complete complaints 
for which it has jurisdiction. All complete complaints must be filed 
within 180 days of the alleged act of discrimination. The agency may 
extend this time period for good cause.
    (e) If the agency receives a complaint over which it does not have 
jurisdiction, it shall promptly notify the complainant and shall make 
reasonable efforts to refer the complaint to the appropriate government 
entity.
    (f) The agency shall notify the Architectural and Transportation 
Barriers Compliance Board upon receipt of any complaint alleging that a 
building or facility that is subject to the Architectural Barriers Act 
of 1968, as amended (42 U.S.C. 4151-4157), or section 502 of the 
Rehabilitation Act of 1973, as amended (29 U.S.C. 792), is not readily 
accessible to and usable by handicapped persons.
    (g) Within 180 days of the receipt of a complete complaint for which 
it has jurisdiction, the agency shall notify the complainant of the 
results of the investigation in a letter containing--
    (1) Findings of fact and conclusions of law;
    (2) A description of a remedy for each violation found;
    (3) A notice of the right to appeal.
    (h) Appeals of the findings of fact and conclusions of law or 
remedies must be filed by the complainant within 90 days of receipt from 
the agency of the letter required by Sec. 1411.170(g). The agency may 
extend this time for good cause.
    (i) Timely appeals shall be accepted and processed by the head of 
the agency.
    (j) The head of the agency shall notify the complainant of the 
results of the appeal within 60 days of the receipt of the request. If 
the head of the agency determines that additional information is needed 
from the complainant, he or she shall have 60 days from the date of 
receipt of the additional information to make his or her determination 
on the appeal.
    (k) The time limits cited in paragraphs (g) and (j) of this section 
may be extended with the permission of the Assistant Attorney General.
    (l) The agency may delegate its authority for conducting complaint 
investigations to other Federal agencies, except that the authority for 
making the final determination may not be delegated to another agency.

[51 FR 4573, 4579, Feb. 5, 1986, as amended at 51 FR 4573, Feb. 5, 1986]
Secs. 1411.171--1411.999  [Reserved]

[[Page 139]]



   CHAPTER V--THE INTERNATIONAL ORGANIZATIONS EMPLOYEES LOYALTY BOARD




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Part                                                                Page
1501            Operations of the International 
                    Organizations Employees Loyalty Board...         140

[[Page 140]]



PART 1501--OPERATIONS OF THE INTERNATIONAL ORGANIZATIONS EMPLOYEES LOYALTY BOARD--Table of Contents




Sec.
1501.1  Name.
1501.2  Officers.
1501.3  Duties of officers.
1501.4  Hearings.
1501.5  Panels of the Board.
1501.6  Quorum.
1501.7  Authority and responsibility of the Board.
1501.8  Grounds for determinations of the Board.
1501.9  Cases reviewable by the Board.
1501.10  Consideration of reports of investigation.
1501.11  Consideration of complete file before hearing.
1501.12  Obtaining further information.
1501.13  Conduct of hearings.
1501.14  Decision of the Board.
1501.15  Transmission of Determination to the Secretary of State.
1501.16  Notification of individual concerned.

    Authority: E.O. 10422, as amended; 3 CFR, 1949-1953 Comp., p. 921.

    Source: 18 FR 6371, Oct. 7, 1953, unless otherwise noted.



Sec. 1501.1   Name.

    This Board shall be known as the International Organizations 
Employees Loyalty Board, and any reference to the ``Board'' in this part 
shall mean such International Organizations Employees Loyalty Board.



Sec. 1501.2   Officers.

    The officers of the Board shall consist of a chairman, a vice-
chairman to be designated by the chairman, and an executive secretary to 
be appointed by the Board.



Sec. 1501.3   Duties of officers.

    (a) The Chairman. The chairman shall perform all the duties usually 
pertaining to the office of chairman, including presiding at Board 
meetings, supervising the administrative work of the Board, and 
conducting its correspondence. He shall be authorized to call special 
meetings of the Board, when in his judgment, such meetings are necessary 
and shall call such meetings at the written request of three members of 
the Board. The time and place of such meetings shall be fixed by the 
chairman. The chairman shall constitute such panels of the Board as may 
be necessary or desirable to render advisory determinations and to 
conduct hearings, and he is authorized to appoint such committees as 
from time to time may be required to handle the work of the Board. The 
chairman may request the vice-chairman to assume the duties of the 
chairman in the event of the absence of the chairman or his inability to 
act.
    (b) The Vice-Chairman. The duties of the vice-chairman, when acting 
in the place of the chairman, shall be the same as the duties of the 
chairman.
    (c) The Executive-Secretary. The executive-secretary shall perform 
all of the duties customarily performed by an executive-secretary. He 
shall have immediate charge of the administrative duties of the Board 
under the direction of the chairman and shall have general 
responsibility for advising and assisting the Board members and 
exercising executive direction over the staff.



Sec. 1501.4   Hearings.

    No adverse determination shall be made without the opportunity for a 
hearing.



Sec. 1501.5   Panels of the Board.

    All hearings shall be held by panels of the Board, the 
determinations of which shall be the determinations of the Board. Such 
panels of the Board shall consist of not less than three members 
designated by the chairman. The chairman shall designate the Board 
member who shall be the presiding member and it shall be the duty of 
such presiding member to make due report to the Board of all acts and 
proceedings of the said panel.



Sec. 1501.6   Quorum.

    A majority of all the members of the Board shall constitute a quorum 
of the Board. Minutes shall be kept of the transactions of the Board in 
its meetings.



Sec. 1501.7   Authority and responsibility of the Board.

    The Board shall have the authority and responsibility to make rules 
and regulations, not inconsistent with the

[[Page 141]]

provisions of Executive Order 10422, as amended, for the execution of 
its functions and for making available to the Secretary General of the 
United Nations and the executive heads of other public international 
organizations certain information concerning United States citizens 
employed or being considered for employment by the United Nations or 
other public international organizations of which the United States is a 
member.



Sec. 1501.8   Grounds for determinations of the Board.

    (a) Standard. The standard to be used by the Board in making any 
advisory determination relating to the loyalty of a United States 
citizen who is an employee of, or is being considered for employment in, 
a public international organization of which the United States is a 
member, shall be whether or not on all the evidence there is a 
reasonable doubt as to the loyalty of the person involved to the 
Government of the United States.
    (b) Activities and associations. Among the activities and 
associations of the employee or person being considered for employment 
which may be considered in connection with a determination of disloyalty 
may be one or more of the following:
    (1) Sabotage, espionage, or attempts or preparations therefor, or 
knowingly associating with spies or saboteurs.
    (2) Treason or sedition or advocacy thereof.
    (3) Advocacy of revolution or force or violence to alter the 
constitutional form of government of the United States.
    (4) Intentional, unauthorized disclosure to any person, under 
circumstances which may indicate disloyalty to the United States, of 
United States documents or United States information of a confidential 
or non-public character obtained by the person making the disclosure as 
a result of his previous employment by the Government of the United 
States or otherwise.
    (5) Performing or attempting to perform his duties, or otherwise 
acting, while an employee of the United States Government during a 
previous period, so as to serve the interests of another government in 
preference to the interests of the United States.
    (6) Membership in, or affiliation or sympathetic association with, 
any foreign or domestic organization, association, movement, or group or 
combination of persons, designated by the Attorney General as 
totalitarian, fascist, communist, or subversive, or as having adopted a 
policy of advocating or approving the commission of acts of force or 
violence to deny other persons their rights under the Constitution of 
the United States, or as seeking to alter the form of government of the 
United States by unconstitutional means.



Sec. 1501.9   Cases reviewable by the Board.

    All cases in which an investigation has been made under Executive 
Order 10422, as amended, shall be referred to and reviewed by the Board 
in accordance with the Executive Order and the rules and regulations of 
the Board.



Sec. 1501.10   Consideration of reports of investigation.

    (a) In all cases the Board shall consider the reports of 
investigation in the light of the standard as set forth in Sec. 1501.8 
and shall determine whether such reports warrant a finding favorable to 
the individual or appear to call for further processing of the case with 
a view to a possible unfavorable determination.
    (b) If the Board reaches a favorable conclusion in a case involving 
a question of loyalty, it shall make a determination that on all the 
evidence there is not a reasonable doubt as to the individual's loyalty.
    (c) If the Board determines that the reports do not warrant a 
finding favorable to the individual, or the Board determines that the 
evidence is of such a nature that a hearing may be required before a 
final decision is made, the Board shall send by registered mail, or in 
such other manner as the Board in a particular case may decide, a 
written interrogatory to the individual. Such interrogatory shall state 
the nature of the evidence against him, setting forth with particularity 
the facts and circumstances involved, in as much detail as security 
conditions permit, in order

[[Page 142]]

to enable him to submit his answer, defense or explanation and to submit 
affidavits. It will also inform the applicant or employee, of his 
opportunity to reply to the interrogatory in writing, under oath or 
affirmation, within ten (10) calendar days of the date of receipt by him 
of the interrogatory or such longer time as the Board in specific cases 
may prescribe, and of his opportunity for a hearing on the issues before 
the Board or a panel of the Board, including his right to appear 
personally at such hearing, to be represented by counsel of a 
representative of his own choosing, to present evidence in his own 
behalf, and to cross-examine witnesses offered in support of the 
derogatory information.



Sec. 1501.11   Consideration of complete file before hearing.

    (a) Following delivery to the applicant or employee of the 
interrogatory and after expiration of the time limit for filing an 
answer to the interrogatory, the Board shall proceed to consider the 
case on the complete file, including the answer, if any, to the 
interrogatory.
    (b) If, upon such consideration, the Board concludes that a finding 
favorable to the individual may be made, no hearing shall be required.
    (c) If, upon such consideration, the Board concludes that a 
determination favorable to the individual cannot be made on the basis of 
the information in the file, it shall set a time and place for a hearing 
and shall give notice thereof to the individual.



Sec. 1501.12   Obtaining further information.

    At any stage in its review and consideration of a case, if the Board 
deems it advisable or necessary to obtain information or clarification 
of any matter, the Board may request further investigation, or submit a 
written questionnaire to the individual whose case is before the Board, 
or request such individual to furnish information in an oral interview.



Sec. 1501.13   Conduct of hearings.

    (a) Not less than three members of a panel of the Board shall be 
present at all hearings. The Board shall conduct its hearings in such 
manner as to protect from disclosure information affecting the national 
security. The chairman of the panel shall preside and be responsible for 
the maintenance of decorum and order in the hearing.
    (b) Attendance at hearings shall be limited to the applicant or 
employee, his attorney or representative, the panel of the Board 
assigned to the case, Board members, Board staff employees participating 
in the case, the witness who is testifying, and such other persons as in 
the opinion of the panel are required for the proper presentation of the 
case. Representation for an applicant or employee shall be limited to 
one attorney or representative and one bona fide assistant, both 
representing the applicant or employee only.
    (c) Hearings shall begin with the reading of the interrogatory. The 
applicant or employee shall thereupon be informed of his right to 
participate in the hearing, to be represented by counsel, to present 
witnesses and other evidence in his behalf, and to cross-examine 
witnesses offered in support of the derogatory information.
    (d) Testimony shall be given under oath or affirmation.
    (e) Strict legal rules of evidence shall not be applied at the 
hearings, but reasonable bounds shall be maintained as to competency, 
relevancy, and materiality and due allowance shall be made for the 
effect of any nondisclosure to the individual of information or the 
absence of any opportunity to cross-examine persons who supplied 
information but who do not appear and testify. Both the Government and 
the applicant or employee may introduce such evidence as the panel may 
deem proper in the particular case.
    (f) A complete verbatim stenographic transcript shall be made of the 
hearing, and the transcript shall constitute a permanent part of the 
record.
    (g) Applicants and employees must pay their own travel and 
subsistence expenses incident to attendance at hearings, except that the 
Board may authorize the payment of travel and subsistence expenses to 
applicants or employees when the hearing is held at a place other than 
the place outside the continental limits of the United States where the 
employee works, or

[[Page 143]]

the applicant resides, and such payment is considered in the interest of 
good administration and funds are available for this purpose.

[18 FR 6371, Oct. 7, 1953, as amended at 21 FR 5249, July 14, 1956]



Sec. 1501.14   Decision of the Board.

    After the employee or person being considered for employment has 
been given a hearing, the Board shall promptly make its decision. The 
determination of the Board shall be in writing and shall be signed by 
the members of the panel. It shall state the action taken, together with 
the reasons therefor, and shall be made a permanent part of the file in 
every case.



Sec. 1501.15   Transmission of Determination to the Secretary of State.

    The Board shall transmit its determination in each case to the 
Secretary of State for transmission to the Secretary General of the 
United Nations, or the executive head of any other public international 
organization concerned. In each case in which the Board determines that, 
on all the evidence, there is a reasonable doubt as to the loyalty of 
the person involved to the Government of the United States, it shall 
also transmit a statement of the reasons for the Board's determination 
in as much detail as the Board deems that security considerations 
permit.



Sec. 1501.16   Notification of individual concerned.

    A copy of the determination of the Board, but not of the statement 
of reasons, shall be furnished in each case to the person who is the 
subject thereof.

[[Page 145]]



        CHAPTER VI--FEDERAL RETIREMENT THRIFT INVESTMENT BOARD




  --------------------------------------------------------------------
Part                                                                Page
1600            Employee elections to contribute to the 
                    Thrift Savings Plan.....................         146
1601            Participants' choices of investment funds...         151
1603            Vesting.....................................         157
1605            Correction of administrative errors.........         158
1606            Lost earnings attributable to employing 
                    agency errors...........................         168
1620            Continuation of eligibility.................         177
1630            Privacy Act regulations.....................         197
1631            Availability of records.....................         204
1632            Rules regarding public observation of 
                    meetings................................         214
1633            Standards of conduct........................         218
1636            Enforcement of nondiscrimination on the 
                    basis of handicap in programs or 
                    activities conducted by the Federal 
                    Retirement Thrift Investment Board......         218
1640            Periodic participant statements.............         224
1645            Allocation of earnings......................         226
1650            Methods of withdrawing funds from the Thrift 
                    Savings Plan............................         228
1653            Domestic relations orders affecting Thrift 
                    Savings Plan accounts...................         237
1655            Loan program................................         245
1690            Miscellaneous regulations...................         253

[[Page 146]]



PART 1600--EMPLOYEE ELECTIONS TO CONTRIBUTE TO THE THRIFT SAVINGS PLAN--Table of Contents




                           Subpart A--General

Sec.
1600.1  Definitions.

                          Subpart B--Elections

1600.2  Periods for making elections.
1600.3  Eligibility of a Federal Employees' Retirement System employee 
          to make an election.
1600.4  Types of elections.
1600.5  Termination of contributions.
1600.6  Method of election.
1600.7  Effective dates of elections.

                   Subpart C--Program of Contributions

1600.8  General.
1600.9  Contributions in whole numbers.
1600.10  Maximum contributions.
1600.11  Required reductions of contribution rates.

          Subpart D--Civil Service Retirement System Employees

1600.12  Election period for Civil Service Retirement System employees 
          who transfer to the Federal Employees' Retirement System.
1600.13  Contributions by Civil Service Retirement System employees.

Subpart E--Elections by Certain Senior Officials Who Were Brought Under 
   Social Security Coverage on January 1, 1984 Pursuant to the Social 
                     Security Act Amendments of 1983

1600.14  Officials covered by Social Security who elected full CSRS 
          coverage.
1600.15  Officials covered by Social Security who elected to have no 
          other retirement coverage.
1600.16  Officials who elected interim CSRS and Social Security 
          coverage.

                        Subpart F--Miscellaneous

1600.17  CSRS employees who are appointed without a break in service to 
          a position mandatorily covered by Social Security and who are 
          consequently covered by either FERS or the CSRS offset system.
1600.18  Reemployed participants who had previously terminated TSP 
          contributions.

    Authority: 5 U.S.C. 8351, 8432(b)(1)(A), 8474(b)(5) and (c)(1).

    Source: 52 FR 45802, Dec. 2, 1987, unless otherwise noted.



                           Subpart A--General



Sec. 1600.1  Definitions.

    Terms used in this part shall have the following meanings:
    Act means the Federal Employees' Retirement System Act of 1986, as 
amended.
    Basic pay means basic pay as defined in 5 U.S.C. 8331(3), and it is 
the rate of pay used in computing any amount the individual is required 
to contribute to the Civil Service Retirement and Disability Fund as a 
condition for participating in the Civil Service Retirement System or 
the Federal Employees' Retirement System, as the case may be.
    Board means the Federal Retirement Thrift Investment Board 
established pursuant to 5 U.S.C. 8472.
    CSRS means the civil service retirement system established by 
Subchapter III of Chapter 83 of Title 5, United States Code.
    CSRS employee means employee as defined in 5 U.S.C. 8331(1) or 
Member as defined in 5 U.S.C. 8331(2).
    Election period means the last calendar month of an open season and 
is the earliest period in which an election during that open season to 
make or change a contribution can become effective.
    Employee or FERS employee means employee as defined in 5 U.S.C. 
8401(11) or Member as defined in 5 U.S.C. 8401(20).
    Employing agency means the agency which is responsible for making 
contributions to the Thrift Savings Plan on behalf of a FERS employee or 
a CSRS employee.
    Executive Director means the Executive Director of the Federal 
Retirement Thrift Investment Board, as defined in 5 U.S.C. 8401(13) and 
as further described in 5 U.S.C. 8474.
    FERS means the Federal employees' retirement system established by 
chapter 84 of title 5, United States Code.
    Highly compensated employee means an employee with annual basic pay 
of more than $50,000. This amount is subject to adjustment from time to 
time in accordance with applicable tax laws and regulations.

[[Page 147]]

    Open season means the period during which employees may make an 
election with respect to the Thrift Savings Plan.
    Thrift Savings Plan means the activity established pursuant to 
subchapter III of Pub. L. No. 99-335 (June 6, 1986), the Federal 
Employees' Retirement System Act of 1986.

[52 FR 45802, Dec. 2, 1987, as amended at 61 FR 58754, Nov. 18, 1996]



                          Subpart B--Elections



Sec. 1600.2   Periods for making elections.

    (a) Initial open seasons. The first open season will commence on 
February 15, 1987 and end on April 30, 1987. The period April 1, 1987 
through April 30, 1987 is a designated election period pursuant to 5 
U.S.C. 8432(b)(4)(A). The second open season will commence on May 15, 
1987 and end on July 31, 1987. The period July 1, 1987 through July 31, 
1987 is a designated election period pursuant to section 6001(c)(2) of 
Pub. L. 99-509 (Oct. 21, 1986), the Omnibus Budget Reconciliation Act of 
1986.
    (b) Subsequent open season. An open season will begin on November 15 
of each year and end on January 31 of the following year and another 
open season will begin on May 15 of each year and end on July 31 of the 
same year. If the last day of an open season falls on a Saturday, 
Sunday, or legal holiday, the open season shall be extended through the 
next business day.
    (c) Number of elections. Except for an election to terminate, an 
employee may make only one election during an open season.
    (d) Belated elections. When an employing agency determines that an 
employee was unable, for reasons beyond the employee's control, to make 
an election within the time limits prescribed by these regulations, that 
agency may accept the employee's election within 30 calendar days after 
it advises the employee of that determination. Such election shall 
become effective not later than the first pay period beginning after the 
date that the agency accepts the employee's election form.

[52 FR 45802, Dec. 2, 1987, as amended at 59 FR 55331, Nov. 7, 1994]



Sec. 1600.3  Eligibility of a Federal Employees' Retirement System employee to make an election.

    (a) Each employee who was an employee on January 1, 1987 and 
continues as an employee without a break in service from January 1, 1987 
through April 1, 1987 may make an election during the open season which 
begins on February 15, 1987 and ends on April 30, 1987.
    (b) Except as provided in paragraph (c) of this section, each 
employee who is not eligible by virtue of paragraph (a) of this section 
to make an election during the open season beginning on February 15, 
1987 shall not be eligible to make an election until the second open 
season (determined in accordance with paragraph (d) of this section) 
beginning after such employee's date of commencement of service as an 
employee.
    (c) Any employee who is reemployed by the federal government and 
who, during a previous period of service, had become eligible to 
participate in the Thrift Saving Plan under the foregoing paragraphs (a) 
or (b) of this section shall be eligible during the first open season 
(determined in accordance with paragraph (d) of this section) beginning 
after the date of reemployment to make an election.
    (d) For an employee employed or reemployed during any open season, 
but whose employment or reemployment during such open season is prior to 
the election period occurring during the last calendar month of such 
open season, the open season during which the employee was employed or 
reemployed shall be considered the first open season.

[52 FR 45802, Dec. 2, 1987, as amended at 53 FR 23379, June 22, 1988]



Sec. 1600.4  Types of elections.

    (a) Contribution. During an open season, an eligible employee may 
elect any one of the following:
    (1) To make contributions;
    (2) To change the amount of existing contributions; or
    (3) To terminate contributions.
    (b) Investment choices. Contributions made for pay periods beginning 
in 1987

[[Page 148]]

will be invested only in the Government Securities Investment Fund 
established by 5 U.S.C. 8438(b)(1)(A). Subsequent contributions may be 
invested in accordance with regulations which will provide contributing 
employees the option of investing limited amounts in the Fixed Income 
Investment Fund and the Common Stock Index Investment Fund established 
by 5 U.S.C. 8438 (b)(1)(B), (b)(1)(C), and (b)(2).



Sec. 1600.5  Termination of contributions.

    Notwithstanding Secs. 1600.4 and 1600.6, an employee may elect to 
terminate contributions to the Thrift Savings Plan at any time. If an 
employee makes an election to terminate during an open season, the 
employee, if otherwise eligible, may make an election to resume 
contributions during the next open season. If the election to terminate 
contributions is not made during an open season, the employee may not 
make an election to resume contributions until the second open season 
beginning after such election to terminate.



Sec. 1600.6  Method of election.

    Each employee shall make an election, as described in Sec. 1600.4 or 
Sec. 1600.5, by completing and submitting to the employing agency an 
original or facsimile of Form No. TSP 1, entitled ``Election Form,'' at 
any time during the open season. This form must be accepted by the 
employing agency, as evidenced by the signature of the responsible 
agency official on the election form, before an election can become 
effective.



Sec. 1600.7  Effective dates of elections.

    For each employee whose election form is accepted by the employing 
agency during the portion of an open season which precedes a prescribed 
election period, the election, except for an election to terminate 
contributions, shall become effective as of the first day of the first 
pay period beginning on or after the first day of the election period. 
Elections accepted by the employing agency during the last calendar 
month of the open season (i.e., the election period) shall become 
effective no later than the first day of the first pay period beginning 
after the date on which the employing agency accepts the election form. 
An election to terminate contributions to the Thrift Savings Plan, 
whenever made shall become effective as of the last day of the pay 
period in which the employing agency accepts the election form.



                   Subpart C--Program of Contributions



Sec. 1600.8  General.

    Once an employee's election to make contributions to the Thrift 
Savings Plan becomes effective, the employing agency shall, for the pay 
period the election becomes effective and for each subsequent pay period 
until a new election becomes effective, deduct from the employee's basic 
pay the percentage of basic pay or the whole dollar amount elected by 
the employee not to exceed the applicable maximum contribution set forth 
in Sec. 1600.10. If the employee's elected whole dollar amount exceeds 
the amount of pay available for such deduction, no deduction will be 
made for that pay period.



Sec. 1600.9  Contributions in whole numbers.

    Except in the case of a 7.5 percent contribution made by a CSRS 
employee as described in Sec. 1600.10(b) of this part, contributions may 
be made only in whole percentage amounts or whole dollar amounts.



Sec. 1600.10  Maximum contributions.

    (a) FERS employees. Except as provided in paragraph (c) of this 
section, for the period starting with the first pay period beginning on 
or after April 1, 1987 and ending with the last pay period beginning on 
or before September 30, 1987, the maximum FERS employee contribution is 
15 percent of basic pay. Starting with the first pay period beginning on 
or after October 1, 1987, the maximum FERS employee contribution is 10 
percent of basic pay.
    (b) CSRS employees. For the period starting with the first pay 
period beginning on or after April 1, 1987 and ending with the last pay 
period beginning on or before September 30, 1987, the maximum CSRS 
employee contribution is 7.5 percent of basic pay.

[[Page 149]]

Starting with the first pay period beginning on or after October 1, 
1987, the maximum CSRS employee contribution is 5 percent of basic pay.
    (c) CSRS employees who transfer to FERS. The maximum employee 
contribution for CSRS employees who have transferred to FERS and have 
elected to participate in the Thrift Savings Plan, as described in 
Sec. 1600.12, is 10 percent of basic pay.
    (d) Section 402(g) of the Internal Revenue Code places a ceiling on 
the amount which an employee may save on a tax-deferred basis through 
plans such as the Thrift Savings Plan. Employee contributions to the 
Thrift Savings Plan may be restricted or refunded to conform with this 
limit.

[52 FR 45802, Dec. 2, 1987, as amended at 53 FR 23379, June 22, 1988]



Sec. 1600.11  Required reductions of contribution rates.

    The employing agency shall reduce the contribution of any FERS 
employee or CSRS employee whose elected contribution exceeds the 
applicable maximum percentage set forth in Sec. 1600.10 (a) or (b). For 
any FERS employee or CSRS employee covered by this section who has 
elected to contribute a percentage of basic pay, the employing agency 
shall automatically reduce the contribution rate to the applicable 
maximum percentage. For any FERS employee or CSRS employee covered by 
this section who has elected to contribute a whole dollar amount, the 
employing agency shall reduce the whole dollar amount to the highest 
whole dollar amount which does not exceed the applicable maximum 
percentage.



          Subpart D--Civil Service Retirement System Employees



Sec. 1600.12  Election period for Civil Service Retirement System employees who transfer to the Federal Employees' Retirement System.

    (a) General. Section 8432(b)(3) of the Act authorizes the Executive 
Director to provide a reasonable period following the election by an 
eligible CSRS employee to transfer to FERS for that employee to make an 
election to contribute to the Thrift Savings Plan.
    (b) Individual election period. Notwithstanding Sec. 1600.2(c), each 
CSRS employee who transfers to FERS may make an election to contribute 
to the Thrift Savings Plan at the same time the individual elects to 
become subject to FERS and for 30 calendar days after the effective date 
of such election. The election options set forth in Sec. 1600.4 shall be 
available to each such individual, and elections shall be made by the 
method described in Sec. 1600.6. An election to contribute to the Thrift 
Savings Plan shall become effective no later than the first day of the 
first pay period following the acceptance of the election form by the 
employing agency. Such individual shall be subject to all provisions of 
this part except as limited by Sec. 1600.10(c).
    (c) Beginning upon the effective date of the employee's election to 
transfer to FERS, until the employee makes an election to contribute to 
the Thrift Savings Plan under paragraph (b) of this section, the rate of 
contribution as a CSRS employee will be considered to be the rate of 
contribution as a FERS employee. The preceding sentence shall not apply 
where the CSRS employee's contribution rate was 7.5%. In such case, 
until the employee elects otherwise, the employee's FERS contribution 
rate shall be 7%.



Sec. 1600.13  Contributions by Civil Service Retirement System employees.

    (a) General. 5 U.S.C. 8351 permits CSRS employees to elect to 
contribute to the Thrift Savings Plan for investment in the Government 
Securities Investment Fund only. The initial open season for CSRS 
employees who were employees as of March 31, 1987 shall be February 15, 
1987 through April 30, 1987. The next open season for such employees 
with no intervening break in employment shall be May 15, 1987 through 
July 31, 1987. An election made during an open season by a CSRS employee 
shall become effective as described in Sec. 1600.7.
    (b) Election upon reemployment. A CSRS employee reemployed on or 
after April 1, 1987, who was not previously eligible to contribute to 
the Thrift Savings Plan, may make an election to contribute as described 
in Sec. 1600.4(a)(1)

[[Page 150]]

during the second open season (determined in accordance with paragraph 
(d) of this section) beginning after the date of the employee's 
reemployment.
    (c) A CSRS employee reemployed on or after April 1, 1987 who was 
previously eligible to contribute to the Thrift Savings Plan may make an 
election to contribute as described in Sec. 1600.4(a)(1) during the 
first open season (determined in accordance with paragraph (d) of this 
section) beginning after the date of the employee's reemployment.
    (d) For a CSRS employee employed or reemployed during any open 
season, but whose employment or reemployment during such open season is 
prior to the election period occurring during the last calendar month of 
such open season, the open season during which the employee is employed 
or reemployed shall be considered the first open season.
    (e) Applicability of other sections. All sections in subparts A 
through C shall apply to CSRS employees except for Secs. 1600.3, 
1600.4(b), and 1600.10 (a) and (c), or where otherwise specifically 
stated.

[52 FR 45802, Dec. 2, 1987, as amended at 53 FR 23379, June 22, 1988]



Subpart E--Elections by Certain Senior Officials Who Were Brought Under 
  Social Security Coverage on January 1, 1984, Pursuant to the Social 
                     Security Act Amendments of 1983



Sec. 1600.14  Officials covered by Social Security who elected full CSRS coverage.

    Officials who elected full coverage by both the CSRS and Social 
Security systems have the option pursuant to 5 CFR 846.201, to transfer 
to FERS. Alternatively, such officials may elect CSRS offset coverage or 
may elect to continue full CSRS coverage. If such officials transfer to 
FERS, they may make an election to participate in the Thrift Savings 
Plan under the rules and conditions described in Sec. 1600.12. If such 
officials elect either full or offset CSRS coverage, they may not make 
any special election to participate in the Thrift Savings Plan as a 
result of such election and they will continue to be treated as CSRS 
employees under this part.



Sec. 1600.15  Officials covered by Social Security who elected to have no other retirement coverage.

    Officials who have only Social Security coverage have the option 
pursuant to 5 CFR 846.201 to transfer to FERS. Alternatively, such 
officials may elect CSRS offset coverage or may elect to continue to 
have no retirement coverage other than Social Security. If such 
officials transfer to FERS, they may make an election to participate in 
the Thrift Savings Plan under the rules and conditions described in 
Sec. 1600.12. If such officials elect coverage under the CSRS offset 
system, they may make an election to participate in the Thrift Savings 
Plan as a CSRS employee at the same time as the election to become 
subject to the CSRS offset system, or within 30 calendar days after the 
effective date of such election. If such officials continue coverage 
under Social Security only, they may not participate in the Thrift 
Savings Plan.



Sec. 1600.16  Officials who elected interim CSRS and Social Security coverage.

    Officials who elected interim CSRS and Social Security coverage have 
the option pursuant to 5 CFR 846.201 to transfer to FERS. Alternatively, 
such officials may elect CSRS offset coverage. If such officials 
transfer to FERS, they may make an election to participate in the Thrift 
Savings Plan under the rules and conditions described in Sec. 1600.12. 
If such officials elect coverage under the CSRS offset provisions, they 
may not make any special election to participate in the Thrift Savings 
Plan as a result of such election and they will continue to be treated 
as CSRS employees under this part.

[[Page 151]]



                        Subpart F--Miscellaneous



Sec. 1600.17  CSRS employees who are appointed without a break in service to a position mandatorily covered by Social Security and who are consequently covered 
          by either FERS or the CSRS offset system.

    (a) CSRS employees who are appointed to a position mandatorily 
covered by Social Security, who are consequently required by law to 
become subject to FERS as a result of such appointment, and who do not 
have a break in employment of more than three calendar days between 
their old and new positions, will be eligible to make a new election to 
participate as a FERS employee in the Thrift Savings Plan under this 
part, under the rules and conditions described in Sec. 1600.12.
    (b) CSRS employees who are appointed to a position mandatorily 
covered by Social Security, who are required by law to become subject to 
the CSRS offset system as a result of such appointment, and who do not 
have a break in employment of more than three calendar days between the 
old and new positions will be eligible to participate as an employee 
under CSRS offset in this new position. They may not make any special 
election to participate in the Thrift Savings Plan as a result of such 
appointment. These officials shall continue to be treated as CSRS 
employees under this part.



Sec. 1600.18  Reemployed participants who had previously terminated TSP contributions.

    An employee reemployed by an agency after terminating contributions 
to the Thrift Savings Plan pursuant to Sec. 1600.5 shall be eligible to 
contribute to the Thrift Savings Plan under the provisions of 
Sec. 1600.3(c) (in the case of FERS employees) and Sec. 1600.13(c) (in 
the case of CSRS employees).



PART 1601--PARTICIPANTS' CHOICES OF INVESTMENT FUNDS--Table of Contents




                         Subpart A--Definitions

Sec.
1601.1  Definitions.

                 Subpart B--Investing New Contributions

1601.2  Investing new contributions in the TSP investment funds.
1601.3  Erroneous investment of contributions.

                     Subpart C--Interfund Transfers

1601.4  Eligibility to redistribute money among the three investment 
          funds.
1601.5  Methods of requesting an interfund transfer.
1601.6  Timing and effective dates of interfund transfers.
1601.7  Error correction.

    Authority: 5 U.S.C. 8351, 8438, 8474 (b)(5) and (c)(1).

    Source: 56 FR 594, Jan. 7, 1991, unless otherwise noted.



                         Subpart A--Definitions



Sec. 1601.1  Definitions.

    Account balance means the amount of money in a participant's Thrift 
Savings Plan account as of the effective date of an interfund transfer;
    Acknowledgment of risk means an acknowledgment that any investment 
in the C Fund or the F Fund is made at the participant's risk, that the 
participant is not protected by the United States Government or the 
Board against any loss on the investment, and that neither the United 
States Government nor the Board guarantees any return on the investment.
    Agency Automatic (1%) Contributions means any contributions made 
under 5 U.S.C. 8432(c)(1) or 5 U.S.C. 8432(c)(3);
    Agency Matching Contributions means any contributions made under 5 
U.S.C. 8432(c)(2);
    Allocation election means an election by a participant of the 
percentages of new contributions to his or her account that are to be 
invested in the C Fund, F Fund and/or G Fund;
    Board means the Federal Retirement Thrift Investment Board.
    C Fund means the Common Stock Index Investment Fund established 
under 5 U.S.C. 8438(b)(1)(C);
    Calendar year means the period from and including January 1 through 
and including December 31 of any year;
    CSRS means the Civil Service Retirement System established by 
subchapter III of chapter 83 of title 5,

[[Page 152]]

U.S.C., and any equivalent Federal Government retirement plans;
    CSRS employee or CSRS participant means any employee or participant 
covered by CSRS or an equivalent Federal Government retirement plan, 
including employees authorized to contribute to the Thrift Savings Plan 
under 5 U.S.C. 8351, 5 U.S.C. 8440a, or 5 U.S.C. 8440b.
    Election period means the last calendar month of an open season and 
is the earliest period in which a choice to make or change an election 
(other than an election to terminate contributions) during that open 
season can become effective;
    Election Form means Form TSP-1;
    Employee Contributions means any contributions made pursuant to 5 
U.S.C. 8432(a), 5 U.S.C. 8351, 5 U.S.C. 8440a, or 5 U.S.C. 8440b.
    Employer Contributions means Agency Automatic (1%) Contributions and 
Agency Matching Contributions;
    FERS means the Federal Employees' Retirement System established by 
chapter 84 of title 5, U.S.C., and any equivalent Federal Government 
retirement plans;
    FERS employee or FERS participant means any employee or participant 
covered by FERS or an equivalent Federal Government retirement plan;
    F Fund means the Fixed Income Investment Fund established under 5 
U.S.C. 8438(b)(1)(B);
    G Fund means the Government Securities Investment Fund established 
under 5 U.S.C. 8438(b)(1)(A);
    Interfund transfer means the redistribution of a participant's 
existing account balance among the three investment funds;
    Interfund Transfer Request means submission of a properly completed 
Interfund Transfer Request (Form TSP-30) or proper entry of an interfund 
transfer through use of the ThriftLine.
    Investment fund means the C Fund, the F Fund, or the G Fund;
    Open season means the period during which employees may choose to 
begin making contributions to the Thrift Savings Plan, to change or 
discontinue (without losing the right to recommence contributions the 
next open season) the amount of Employee Contributions currently being 
contributed to the Thrift Savings Plan, or to allocate new Employee and 
Employer Contributions to the Thrift Savings Plan among the investment 
funds;
    Participant means any person with an account in the Thrift Savings 
Fund or who would have an account but for an employing agency error;
    Source of contributions means Employee Contributions, Agency 
Automatic (1%) Contributions, or Agency Matching Contributions;
    Thrift Savings Fund or Fund means the Fund described in 5 U.S.C. 
8437;
    Thrift Savings Plan, TSP, or Plan means the Federal Retirement 
Thrift Savings Plan established by the Federal Employees' Retirement 
System Act of 1986, codified in pertinent part at 5 U.S.C. 8431 et seq.
    ThriftLine means the automated voice response system by which TSP 
participants may, among other things, make interfund transfer requests 
by telephone.
    TSP recordkeeper means the entity that is engaged by the Board to 
perform recordkeeping services for the Thrift Savings Plan. As of the 
date of publication of this part 1606, the TSP recordkeeper is the 
National Finance Center, Office of Finance and Management, United States 
Department of Agriculture, located in New Orleans, Louisiana.

[56 FR 594, Jan. 7, 1991, as amended at 60 FR 36633, July 17, 1995]



                 Subpart B--Investing New Contributions



Sec. 1601.2  Investing new contributions in the TSP investment funds.

    (a) Removal of investment restrictions. Pursuant to section 3 of the 
Thrift Savings Plan Technical Amendments Act of 1990 (TSPTAA), Public 
Law 101-335, beginning with the first full pay period starting on or 
after January 1, 1991, all FERS and CSRS participants may invest all or 
any portion of their new Employee Contributions in the C Fund, the F 
Fund, and/or the G Fund. FERS participants may also invest their new 
Agency Automatic (1%) Contributions and Agency Matching Contributions in 
the C Fund, the F Fund, and/or the G Fund.

[[Page 153]]

    (b) Allocation elections. Each participant may indicate his or her 
choice of investment funds by completing an Election Form (TSP-1). The 
Election Form must be accepted by the employing agency in accordance 
with this part and with regulations then governing employee elections to 
contribute to the Thrift Savings Plan (5 CFR part 1600) and will be 
processed as provided in those regulations. The following rules apply to 
allocation elections:
    (1) The percentages elected by a participant for investment of new 
contributions in the C Fund, F Fund and/or G Fund must be applied to 
Employee Contributions, Agency Automatic (1%) Contributions, and Agency 
Matching Contributions. Different percentage elections may not be made 
for different sources of contributions;
    (2) Contributions may be directed to be invested in the C Fund, F 
Fund and/or G Fund only as a percentage of contributions to the TSP each 
pay period, and the allocation percentages may only be in 5 percent 
increments. The sum of the percentages elected for the three investment 
funds must equal 100%;
    (3) Except in the case of a CSRS participant who has submitted an 
Election Form which contains an election to terminate contributions, an 
allocation election must be made on every Election Form in order for 
that Election Form to be accepted by the employing agency;
    (4) In order to be accepted by the employing agency, an Election 
Form submitted by a FERS participant must:
    (i) Contain an election to contribute a whole dollar amount or a 
percentage of basic pay each pay period; or
    (ii) Contain an election to terminate Employee Contributions; or
    (iii) Indicate that the participant has not been making Employee 
Contributions and that the participant is not choosing to start making 
Employee Contributions on that Election Form;
    (5) In order to be accepted by the employing agency, an Election 
Form submitted by a CSRS employee must:
    (i) Contain an election to contribute a whole dollar amount or a 
percentage of basic pay each pay period; or
    (ii) Contain an election to terminate Employee Contributions;
    (6) Any participant who elects to invest any contributions in the C 
Fund and/or F Fund must sign the acknowledgement on the Election Form 
that the investment is made at the participant's risk, that the 
participant is not protected by the United States Government or the 
Board against any loss on the investment, and that neither the United 
States Government nor the Board guarantees any return on the investment. 
If the acknowledgement of risk section of the Election Form is not 
signed when required, the Election Form will not be accepted;
    (7) If an Election Form completed by a participant does not comply 
with all of the provisions of paragraphs (b)(1) through (b)(6) of this 
section, the Election Form will have no effect and must be returned to 
the participant by the employing agency. Except as provided in paragraph 
(c) of this section, no changes in the investment of new contributions 
will be made effective unless a properly completed Election Form is 
accepted in accordance with this Part and the regulations governing 
employee elections to contribute to the Thrift Savings Plan (5 CFR part 
1600) .
    (8) An election to terminate Employee Contributions must, in 
accordance with 5 CFR 1600.7, be made effective so that the Employee 
Contributions will be terminated with respect to basic pay earned in the 
pay period following the pay period in which the employing agency 
accepts the Election Form. In the case of termination by a FERS 
participant, the allocation election on the Election Form must be made 
effective with respect to Agency Automatic (1%) Contributions for the 
pay period following the pay period in which the employing agency 
accepted the Election Form.
    (9) All Agency Automatic (1%) Contributions made on behalf of FERS 
participants who do not have an allocation election in effect must be 
reported by the employing agency for investment in the G Fund;
    (10) Except as provided in paragraph (c) of this section, once an 
Election Form becomes effective, it remains effective until superseded 
by a subsequent Election Form or until the employee separates from 
service.

[[Page 154]]

    (c) Transition rule. Beginning with the first full pay period 
starting on or after January 1, 1991, all new contributions to any 
participant's account which are made pursuant to an Election Form that 
was made effective prior to the first full pay period starting on or 
after January 1, 1991, must be reported by the employing agency for 
investment in the G Fund unless the participant has made a different 
allocation election during the open season commencing November 15, 1990 
and ending on January 31, 1991, which is effective as of the first full 
pay period starting on or after January 1, 1991. Where contributions to 
a participant's account are invested in the G Fund pursuant to this 
paragraph, new contributions to the participant's account must continue 
to be reported by the employing agency for investment in the G Fund 
unless and until a new allocation election is made effective. For open 
seasons subsequent to the open season commencing November 15, 1990 and 
ending on January 31, 1991, a participant who does not wish to change 
his or her current allocation election does not need to submit a new 
Election Form.
    (d) Contributions for pre-1987 service. Any other provision of this 
section notwithstanding, any Agency Automatic (1%) Contributions made 
pursuant to 5 U.S.C. 8432(c)(3) must be reported by the employing agency 
for investment in the G Fund, regardless of any allocation election that 
may be in effect at the time the contribution is made.



Sec. 1601.3  Erroneous investment of contributions.

    Where employing agency errors have caused money to be invested in an 
incorrect investment fund, correction of such error must be accomplished 
exclusively through the procedures described in 5 CFR part 1606.



                     Subpart C--Interfund Transfers



Sec. 1601.4  Eligibility to redistribute money among the three investment funds.

    (a) Subpart C of this part applies only to redistributing 
participants' existing account balances among the C Fund, F Fund, and G 
Fund. Subpart C of this part does not apply to participants' choice of 
the investment funds in which new contributions are to be invested; 
those choices are covered in subpart B of this part.
    (b) Removal of investment restrictions. Pursuant to section 3 of the 
Thrift Savings Plan Technical Amendments Act of 1990 (TSPTAA), Public 
Law 101-335, starting December 31, 1990 FERS and CSRS participants may, 
in accordance with this part, invest all or any portion of their account 
balances in the C Fund, F Fund, or G Fund. Interfund transfer elections 
will be applied to participants' Employee Contributions, Agency 
Automatic (1%) Contributions, Agency Matching Contributions, and 
earnings attributable to all three sources of contributions.

[56 FR 594, Jan. 7, 1991, as amended at 60 FR 47837, Sept. 14, 1995]



Sec. 1601.5  Methods of requesting an interfund transfer.

    (a) To make an interfund transfer, participants may either submit to 
the TSP recordkeeper a properly completed Interfund Transfer Request 
(Form TSP-30), or may enter the interfund transfer request over the 
telephone by using the ThriftLine. Forms TSP-30 generated prior to 
October 1990, which were preprinted with a participant's name and 
address, described restrictions on the amounts which could be invested 
in the C Fund and the F Fund, and specified an effective date for the 
interfund transfer, are obsolete forms. They will be rejected by the TSP 
recordkeeper if submitted to make an interfund transfer request. 
Similarly, Form TSP-30-S, which was designed for use only by certain 
FERS participants to make interfund transfers effective as of the end of 
December 1990, are obsolete forms which will be rejected by the TSP 
recordkeeper if submitted to make an interfund transfer request.
    (b) To make an interfund transfer request, a participant must 
designate the percentages of his or her account balance that are to be 
invested in the C Fund, the F Fund, and/or the G Fund. The percentages 
selected by the participant must be in multiples of 5 percent and must 
total 100 percent. An interfund transfer request has no effect

[[Page 155]]

on contributions made by a participant after the effective date of the 
interfund transfer (as determined in accordance with Sec. 1601.6); such 
subsequent contributions will continue to be allocated among the 
investment funds in accordance with the participant's election under 
subpart B of this part.
    (c) The percentages elected by the participant will be applied to 
the participant's account balance attributable to each source of 
contributions as of the effective date of the interfund transfer, as 
determined in accordance with Sec. 1601.6.
    (d) Participants who have at any time in the past invested any 
portion of their TSP accounts in the C Fund or the F Fund are eligible 
to make interfund transfer requests using the ThriftLine since they 
must, at some previous time, have submitted an Acknowledgment of Risk; 
such participants need not, if using Form TSP-30 to make a written 
interfund transfer request, complete the section of the form that 
contains the acknowledgment of risk. Participants who have not at any 
time in the past invested any portion of their TSP accounts in the C 
Fund or the F Fund are not eligible to make interfund transfers using 
the ThriftLine until a properly completed Acknowledgment of Risk for 
ThriftLine Interfund Transfer (Form TSP-32) has been received by the TSP 
recordkeeper. Participants who have not at any time in the past invested 
any portion of their TSP accounts in the C Fund or the F Fund must 
complete the Acknowledgment of Risk section of Form TSP-30 if they make 
a written interfund transfer request, unless a properly completed Form 
TSP-32 has been received by the TSP recordkeeper.
    (e) An Interfund Transfer Request (Form TSP-30) that has been 
submitted to the TSP recordkeeper will not be processed and will have no 
effect, if:
    (1) It is not signed and dated, or otherwise is not properly 
completed in accordance with the instructions on the form; or
    (2) In the case of a participant who has not previously invested any 
portion of his or her TSP account in the C Fund or the F Fund and for 
whom a properly completed Form TSP-32 has not been received by the TSP 
recordkeeper, the acknowledgment of risk section of the Form TSP-30 is 
not signed; or
    (3) The participant is not otherwise eligible to make an interfund 
transfer (e.g., because he or she is scheduled for a withdrawal of the 
entire account balance).
    (f) If a Form TSP-30 is rejected, the form will have no effect. The 
participant will be provided with a brief written statement of the 
reason the form was rejected.

[60 FR 36633, July 17, 1995]



Sec. 1601.6  Timing and effective dates of interfund transfers.

    (a) Annual limit. A participant may have no more than twelve 
interfund transfers made effective during any calendar year, one in each 
calendar month.
    (b) Effective dates. Interfund transfer requests received by the TSP 
recordkeeper (whether by Form TSP-30 or on the ThriftLine) on or before 
the 15th day of a month (or, if the 15th day is not a business day, by 
the next business day) shall be effective as of the end of the month 
during which the interfund transfer request was received. Interfund 
transfer requests received by the TSP recordkeeper after the 15th day of 
a month (or, if applicable, by the next business day) will be effective 
as of the end of the month following the month during which the 
interfund transfer request was received. Account balances that are real-
located among the investment funds effective as of the end of any month 
will reflect the effects of all other account activity posted to the 
account effective during or as of the end of that month.
    (c) Multiple interfund transfer requests. (1) If two or more 
properly completed interfund transfer requests with different dates (as 
determined by paragraph (c)(3) of this section) are received for the 
same participant after the 15th day of one month (or, if applicable, 
after the next business day), but on or before the 15th day of the next 
month (or, if applicable, the next business day), the interfund transfer 
request with the latest date (as determined by paragraph (c)(3) of this 
section) will be made effective and the earlier

[[Page 156]]

interfund transfer request(s) will be superseded.
    (2) If two or more properly completed interfund transfer requests 
with the same dates are received for the same participant after the 15th 
day of one month (or, if applicable, after the next business day), but 
on or before the 15th day of the next month (or, if applicable, the next 
business day), the following rules shall apply:
    (i) If one or more of the interfund transfer requests was submitted 
using the ThriftLine and one or more was made on Form TSP-30, the 
request(s) made on the ThriftLine will supersede the request(s) made on 
Form TSP-30;
    (ii) If more than one of the interfund transfer requests were made 
on the ThriftLine, the request entered at the latest time of day will 
supersede the earlier request(s); and
    (iii) If more than one of the interfund transfer requests were 
submitted using Form TSP-30, all such forms will be rejected, unless 
they all contain identical percentage allocations among the TSP 
investment funds, in which case one will be accepted.
    (3) For purposes of determining the date of an interfund transfer 
request:
    (i) The date of an interfund transfer request made on the ThriftLine 
is the date of its telephone entry;
    (ii) The date of an interfund transfer request made on Form TSP-30 
is the signature date set forth on the form by the participant; and
    (iii) Central time will be used for determining the date on which a 
transaction is entered on the ThriftLine.
    (d) Cancellation of interfund transfer requests. Interfund transfer 
requests may be canceled either in writing or by entering the 
cancellation of the ThriftLine.
    (1) Cancellation by letter. A participant may cancel an interfund 
transfer request by submitting a letter to the TSP recordkeeper 
requesting cancellation. To be accepted, the cancellation letter must be 
signed and dated and must contain the participant's name, Social 
Security number, and date of birth. To be effective, the cancellation 
letter must be received on or before the 15th day of the month as of the 
end of which the interfund transfer is to be effective (or, if 
applicable, by the next business day). Unless the letter states 
unambiguously the specific interfund transfer request it seeks to 
cancel, the written cancellation will apply to any interfund transfer 
request with a date (as determined under paragraph (c)(3) of this 
section) before the date of the cancellation letter. If the date of a 
cancellation letter is the same as the date of an interfund transfer 
request and the request was made on Form TSP-30, the Form TSP-30 will be 
canceled; if the request was made on the ThriftLine it will only be 
canceled if the written cancellation specifies the date of the 
ThriftLine request to be canceled.
    (2) Cancellation on the ThriftLine. (i) An interfund transfer 
request may also be canceled by entering the cancellation on the 
ThriftLine on or before the 15th day of the month (or, if applicable, 
the next business day) as of the end of which the interfund transfer is 
to be effective. A cancellation entered on the ThriftLine will apply to 
a pending interfund transfer request entered on the ThriftLine before 
the entry of the cancellation. A cancellation entered on the ThriftLine 
can only apply to interfund transfer requests submitted on Forms TSP-30 
that were:
    (A) Dated on or before the date of the cancellation; and
    (B) Received and entered into the TSP recordkeeping system before 
the cancellation is attempted on the ThriftLine.
    (ii) The Board cannot guarantee that the TSP recordkeeper will enter 
Forms TSP-30 into the TSP recordkeeping system before the 15th day of 
the month, regardless of the date the Form TSP-30 may have been 
received. Thus, participants cannot rely on the ThriftLine to cancel an 
interfund transfer request that was submitted on Form TSP-30, and 
participants are discouraged from attempting to do so. The Board is not 
responsible for any consequences of a participant's inability to cancel 
on the ThriftLine an interfund transfer request submitted on Form TSP-
30.

[60 FR 36633, July 17, 1995]



Sec. 1601.7  Error correction.

    Errors in processing interfund transfers will be corrected in 
accordance

[[Page 157]]

with the Error Correction Regulations found at 5 CFR part 1605.



PART 1603--VESTING--Table of Contents




Sec.
1603.1  Definitions.
1603.2  Vested portions of individual account.
1603.3  Service requirements.

    Authority: 5 U.S.C. 8432(g), 8432b(h)(1), 8474(b)(5), and 
8474(c)(1).

    Source: 52 FR 29835, Aug. 12, 1987, unless otherwise noted.



Sec. 1603.1  Definitions.

    Terms used in this part shall have the following meaning:
    Administrative expenses means expenses of the Federal Retirement 
Thrift Investment Board payable under the provisions of 5 U.S.C. 8437.
    Basic 1% contribution means any government contribution made on 
behalf of a FERS employee pursuant to 5 U.S.C. 8432(c)(1), plus net 
earnings attributable to that contribution.
    CSRS employee means employee as defined in 5 U.S.C. 8331(1) or 
``Member'' as defined in 5 U.S.C. 8331(2).
    FERS employee means employee as defined in 5 U.S.C. 8401(11) or 
``Member'' as defined in 5 U.S.C. 8401(20).
    Individual account means the total of all sums contributed on behalf 
of an employee pursuant to 5 U.S.C. 8351 or 8432, plus net earnings.
    Net earnings means earnings minus applicable administrative 
expenses.
    Separation from government service means any separation of more than 
30 days and includes separation resulting from the death of the 
employee.
    Service for purposes of TSP vesting means: (1) Any non-military 
service which is creditable under either 5 U.S.C. 8411 or subchapter III 
of chapter 83 of title 5, U.S.C., determined without regard to any time 
limitations, any deposit or redeposit requirements contained in those 
statutory provisions after performing the service involved, or any 
requirement that the individual give notice in writing to the official 
by whom that individual is paid of that individual's desire to become 
subject to the retirement system established by either chapter 83 or 
chapter 84 of title 5, United States Code; or (2) Any military service 
creditable under the provisions of 5 U.S.C. 8432b(h)(1) and the 
regulations issued at subpart H of part 1620 of this chapter.
    Vested means those amounts in an individual account which are 
nonforfeitable upon the employee's separation from government service.
    Year of service means one full calendar year of service.

[52 FR 29835, Aug. 12, 1987, as amended at 56 FR 600, Jan. 7, 1991; 60 
FR 24535, May 9, 1995]



Sec. 1603.2  Vested portions of individual account.

    (a) All amounts in a CSRS employee's individual account are 
immediately vested.
    (b) Except as provided in paragraph (c) of this section, all amounts 
in a FERS employee's individual account are immediately vested.
    (c) The basic 1% contribution shall be forfeited upon separation 
from government service if the separation begins before the employee 
meets the applicable service requirements, as set forth in Sec. 1603.3.



Sec. 1603.3  Service requirements.

    (a) Except as provided in paragraph (b) of this section, all FERS 
employees shall be vested in their basic 1% contribution upon completing 
three years of service.
    (b) FERS employees shall be vested in their basic 1% contribution 
upon completing two years of service if, upon separation from government 
service, they are serving in one of the following positions:
    (1) A position in the Senior Executive Service as a non-career 
appointee (as defined in 5 U.S.C. 3132(a)(7));
    (2) Positions listed in 5 U.S.C. 5312, 5313, 5314, 5315 or 5316;
    (3) A position placed in level IV or level V of the Executive 
Schedule, pursuant to 5 U.S.C. 5317;
    (4) A position in the Executive Branch which is excepted from the 
competitive service by the Office of Personnel Management because of the 
confidential and policy-determining character of the position; or
    (5) A Member of Congress or a Congressional employee.

[52 FR 29835, Aug. 12, 1987, as amended at 60 FR 24535, May 9, 1995]

[[Page 158]]



PART 1605--CORRECTION OF ADMINISTRATIVE ERRORS--Table of Contents




                         Subpart A--Definitions

Sec.
1605.1  Definitions.

                   Subpart B--Employing Agency Errors

1605.2  Makeup of missed or insufficient contributions.
1605.3  Removal of erroneous contributions.
1605.4  Back pay awards and other retroactive pay adjustments.
1605.5  Misclassification of retirement coverage.
1605.6  Procedures for claims against employing agencies; time 
          limitations.

               Subpart C--Board or TSP Recordkeeper Errors

1605.7  Plan-paid lost earnings and other corrections.
1605.8  Claims for correction of Board or TSP Recordkeeper errors; time 
          limitations.

                   Subpart D--Miscellaneous Provisions

1605.9  Miscellaneous provisions.

    Authority: 5 U.S.C. 8351 and 8474.

    Source: 61 FR 68472, Dec. 27, 1996, unless otherwise noted.



                         Subpart A--Definitions



Sec. 1605.1  Definitions.

    The following definitions apply for purposes of this part:
    Account or TSP account means a participant's account in the Thrift 
Savings Plan;
    Agency automatic (1%) contributions means any contributions made 
under 5 U.S.C. 8432 (c)(1) or (c)(3);
    Agency contributions means agency automatic (1%) contributions and 
agency matching contributions;
    Agency matching contributions means any contributions made under 5 
U.S.C. 8432(c)(2);
    Basic pay means basic pay as defined in 5 U.S.C. 8331(3), and it is 
the rate of pay used in computing any amount the individual is required 
to contribute to the Civil Service Retirement and Disability Fund as a 
condition for participating in the CSRS or the FERS, as the case may be;
    Board means the Federal Retirement Thrift Investment Board;
    Board error means any act or omission by the Board that is not in 
accordance with applicable statutes, regulations, or administrative 
procedures made available to employing agencies and/or TSP participants 
(including, but not limited to, TSP communications materials and other 
publications);
    C Fund means the Common Stock Index Investment Fund established 
under 5 U.S.C. 8438(b)(1)(C);
    CSRS means the Civil Service Retirement System established by 
Subchapter III of chapter 83 of title 5, U.S.C., and any equivalent 
Federal Government retirement plan;
    CSRS employee or CSRS participant means any employee, member, or 
participant covered by CSRS, including employees authorized to 
contribute to the Thrift Savings Plan under 5 U.S.C. 8351, or 5 U.S.C. 
8440a through 8440d;
    Employee contributions means any contributions to the Thrift Savings 
Plan made under 5 U.S.C. 8432(a), 5 U.S.C. 8351 or 5 U.S.C. 8440a 
through 8440d;
    Employer contributions means agency automatic (1%) contributions and 
agency matching contributions;
    Employing agency means any entity that provides or has provided pay 
to an individual, thereby incurring responsibility for submitting to the 
Thrift Savings Fund contributions made by or on behalf of that 
individual; any entity responsible for submitting TSP loan payments on 
behalf of an individual; or any other entity that has employed an 
individual and has provided information that affects or has affected 
that individual's TSP account;
    Employing agency error means any act or omission by an employing 
agency that is not in accordance with all applicable statutes, 
regulations, or administrative procedures, including internal procedures 
promulgated by the employing agency and TSP procedures provided to 
employing agencies by the Board or TSP recordkeeper;
    Executive Director means the Executive Director of the Board under 5 
U.S.C. 8474;
    F Fund means the Fixed Income Investment Fund established under 5 
U.S.C. 8438(b)(1)(B);

[[Page 159]]

    FERS means the Federal Employees' Retirement System established by 
chapter 84 of title 5, U.S.C., and any equivalent Federal Government 
retirement plans;
    FERS employee or FERS participant means any employee, member, or 
participant covered by FERS;
    G Fund means the Government Securities Investment Fund established 
under 5 U.S.C. 8438(b)(1)(A);
    Interfund transfer means the movement of all or a portion of a 
participant's existing account balance among the TSP investment funds;
    Investment fund means the C Fund, the F Fund, the G Fund, and any 
other TSP investment funds created subsequent to December 27, 1996.
    Investment fund election means a choice by a participant concerning 
how TSP contributions shall be allocated among the TSP investment funds;
    Lost earnings record means a data record containing information 
enabling the TSP system to compute lost earnings and to determine the 
investment fund in which money would have been invested had an error not 
occurred;
    Makeup contributions means employee or employer contributions that 
are made for an earlier period during which they would have been made 
but for an employing agency error;
    Negative adjustment record means a data record submitted by an 
employing agency to remove money from a participant's account;
    Open season means the period during which participants may choose to 
begin making contributions to the TSP, to change or discontinue the 
amount currently being contributed to the TSP (without losing the right 
to recommence contributions the next open season), or to allocate 
prospective contributions to the TSP among the investment funds;
    Participant means any person with an account in the TSP, or who 
would have an account in the TSP but for an employing agency error;
    Recordkeeper error means any act or omission by the TSP recordkeeper 
that is not in accordance with applicable statutes, regulations, or 
administrative procedures made available to employing agencies and/or 
TSP participants (including, but not limited to, TSP communications 
materials and other publications);
    Source of contributions means either employee contributions, agency 
automatic (1%) contributions, or agency matching contributions;
    Thrift Savings Plan, TSP, or Plan means the Federal Retirement 
Thrift Savings Plan established by the Federal Employees' Retirement 
System Act of 1986 (FERSA), Pub. L. 99-335, 100 Stat. 514, which has 
been codified, as amended, primarily at 5 U.S.C. 8401-8479; and
    TSP Recordkeeper means the entity that is engaged by the Board to 
perform recordkeeping services for the TSP. As of the effective date of 
these regulations, the TSP recordkeeper is the National Finance Center, 
Office of the Chief Financial Officer, United States Department of 
Agriculture, located in New Orleans, Louisiana.



                   Subpart B--Employing Agency Errors



Sec. 1605.2  Makeup of missed or insufficient contributions.

    (a) Applicability. This section applies whenever, as the result of 
an employing agency error, a participant does not receive all of the 
contributions to his or her account to which the participant is 
entitled. This includes, but is not limited to, situations in which an 
employing agency error prevents a participant from making an election to 
contribute to the TSP, the employing agency erroneously fails to 
implement a contribution election properly submitted by a participant, 
the employing agency fails to make agency automatic (1%) contributions 
or agency matching contributions that it is required to make, or the 
employing agency erroneously contributes less to the TSP than it would 
have contributed had the error not occurred. The corrections required by 
this section must be made in accordance with this part and procedures 
provided to employing agencies, from time to time, by the Board or the 
TSP recordkeeper in bulletins or other guidance. It is the 
responsibility of the employing agency to determine whether it has made 
an error that entitles a participant to correction under this section.

[[Page 160]]

    (b) Missed employer contributions. If an employing agency has failed 
to make agency automatic (1%) contributions that are required to be made 
under 5 U.S.C. 8432(c)(1)(A), agency matching contributions that are 
required to be made under 5 U.S.C. 8432(c)(2) based on employee 
contributions that have been made, or contributions required to be made 
under 5 U.S.C. 8432(c)(3), then:
    (1) The employing agency must promptly submit, in a lump sum, all 
such missed contributions to the TSP record keeper on behalf of the 
affected participant. Makeup contributions must be allocated by the 
employing agency among the TSP investment fund(s) using the 
participant's current investment fund election at the time the makeup 
contributions are made. If no such election is on file, the 
contributions will be reported by the employing agency for investment in 
the G Fund.
    (2) If applicable, the employing agency must also submit any lost 
earnings records required under 5 CFR Part 1606.
    (c) Missed employee contributions. Within 30 days of receiving 
information from his or her employing agency that indicates that the 
employing agency acknowledges that an error has occurred that has caused 
less employee contributions to be made to the participant's account than 
would have been made had the error not occurred, a participant may elect 
to establish a schedule of makeup contributions to replace the missed 
contributions through future payroll deductions, in addition to any 
regular TSP contributions that the participant is entitled to make. The 
following rules apply to makeup contributions:
    (1) The schedule of makeup contributions elected by the participant 
must establish the amount of contributions to be made each pay period 
over the duration of the schedule. The contribution amount per pay 
period may vary during the course of the schedule, but the amounts to be 
contributed should be established when the schedule is created. The 
schedule may not exceed four times the number of pay periods over which 
the errors occurred.
    (2) The employing agency may, but need not, set a ceiling on the 
length of the schedule of makeup contributions which is less than four 
times the number of pay periods over which the errors being corrected 
occurred. The ceiling may not, however, be less than twice the number of 
pay periods over which the errors being corrected occurred.
    (3) The employing agency must implement the schedule of makeup 
contributions as soon as practicable after the participant has made an 
election to implement a makeup schedule.
    (4) Makeup contributions will not be considered in applying the 
maximum amount per pay period that a participant is permitted to 
contribute to the TSP (e.g., 5% of basic pay for CSRS participants, 10% 
of basic pay for FERS participants), but will be included for purposes 
of applying the annual limits contained in 26 U.S.C. 402(g)(1) and 26 
U.S.C. 415.
    (5) A participant's regular TSP contributions will always take 
precedence over makeup contributions. Thus, when establishing a schedule 
of makeup contributions, the employing agency must review any schedule 
proposed by the affected participant as well as the participant's 
current TSP contribution election, to determine whether the makeup 
contributions, when combined with regular TSP contributions, are 
expected to exceed the annual limits contained in 26 U.S.C. 402(g)(1) 
and 415. If so, the participant may elect to have the schedule of makeup 
contributions established in such a manner that the payments will, at an 
appropriate time, be suspended until the makeup contributions can be 
made within the annual limits. In any event, a schedule of makeup 
contributions may be suspended at any time in order to avoid a situation 
in which the participant is unable to make regular TSP contributions 
because of the annual limits. Similarly, a schedule of makeup 
contributions may be suspended if a participant has insufficient net pay 
to permit the makeup contributions. If a schedule of makeup 
contributions is suspended because of the annual limits or because of 
insufficient net pay, the period of suspension will not be counted 
against the maximum number of pay periods the participant has to 
complete the schedule of makeup contributions.

[[Page 161]]

    (6) A participant may elect to terminate a schedule of makeup 
contributions at any time, but may not elect to make partial payments 
under the schedule. Any such termination is irrevocable. If a 
participant separates from employment that makes the participant 
eligible to contribute to the TSP, the participant may elect to 
accelerate the payment schedule by a lump sum contribution from his or 
her final paycheck. No contributions may be made other than by payroll 
deduction from pay that constitutes basic pay.
    (7) To the extent a participant makes up missed employee 
contributions, the employing agency must contribute any agency matching 
contributions that would have been made had the employing agency error 
that caused the missed employee contributions not been made. The agency 
matching contributions must be made in installments over the course of 
the schedule of makeup contributions. The participant may not receive 
matching contributions associated with any employee contributions that 
are not made up. If the makeup contributions are suspended in accordance 
with paragraph (c)(5) of this section, the payment of agency matching 
contributions must also be suspended.
    (8) Makeup contributions must be reported by the employing agency 
for investment among the TSP investment fund(s) using the participant's 
current investment fund election at the time the makeup contributions 
are made. If no such election is on file, the contributions must be 
reported by the employing agency for investment in the G Fund.
    (9) Where a participant has transferred to a different employing 
agency from the one at which the participant was employed at the time of 
the missed contributions, it remains the responsibility of the former 
employing agency to determine whether an employing agency error is 
responsible for the missed contributions. If it is determined that such 
an error has occurred, the current agency must take any necessary steps 
to correct the error. The current agency may seek reimbursement from the 
former agency of any amount that would have been paid by the former 
agency had the error not occurred.
    (10) Makeup employee contributions may be made only by payroll 
deduction from pay that constitutes basic pay. Contributions by check, 
money order, cash, or other form of payment, directly from the 
participant to the TSP, or from the participant to the employing agency 
for deposit to the TSP, are not permitted.
    (11) If applicable, the employing agency must submit any lost 
earnings records required under 5 CFR Part 1606.



Sec. 1605.3  Removal of erroneous contributions.

    (a) Applicability. This section applies whenever, as a result of an 
employing agency error, a TSP account contains money that should not 
have been contributed to the account and which, therefore, must be 
removed from the account. This includes, but is not limited to, 
situations in which, because of an employing agency error, employee 
contributions in excess of those elected by a participant are 
contributed to the participant's account, employee contributions (and 
any associated agency matching contributions) are made on behalf of a 
participant who did not elect to have any contributions made, excess 
employer contributions are made to a participant's account, or employee 
contributions are made in excess of the amount permissible because of an 
improper retirement classification that is subsequently corrected (e.g., 
a CSRS employee is permitted to make contributions in excess of 5% of 
basic pay during a temporary misclassification as FERS).
    (b) Negative adjustment records. (1) In order to remove money from a 
participant's account, the employing agency must submit, for each pay 
date involved, a negative adjustment record indicating the amount of the 
contribution being removed, the pay date for which it was made, the 
source(s) of the contributions involved (i.e., employee contributions, 
agency automatic (1%) contributions or agency matching contributions), 
and the investment fund or funds to which the erroneous contribution was 
made. A negative adjustment record may be for all or a part of the 
contributions made for the applicable

[[Page 162]]

pay date, investment fund and source of contributions, but for each 
investment fund and source of contributions the negative adjustment may 
not exceed the amount of contributions made for that pay date.
    (2) Negative adjustment records must be submitted in accordance with 
this part and with procedures provided to employing agencies from time 
to time by the Board or the TSP recordkeeper in bulletins or other 
guidance. Negative adjustment records must also include any additional 
information required in any such bulletins or other guidance.
    (c) Processing negative adjustment records. Negative adjustment 
records will be processed in accordance with the following rules:
    (1) Negative adjustment records received and accepted by the TSP 
recordkeeper by the second-to-last business day of a month will be 
processed effective as of the end of that month. Negative adjustment 
records accepted by the TSP recordkeeper on the last business day of a 
month will be processed effective as of the end of the following month.
    (2) When negative adjustment records are processed, the TSP 
recordkeeper will determine separately, for each pay date and source of 
contributions involved, the amount of any investment gains or losses on 
the money the agency seeks to remove from the account and the investment 
fund or funds in which that money is currently invested. In making these 
determinations, investment gains and losses from the different TSP 
investment funds will be netted against each other. Investment gains and 
losses for different sources of contributions will be treated 
separately; gains and losses for different sources of contributions will 
not be netted against each other. The TSP recordkeeper will take into 
consideration any interfund transfers made effective on or after the 
date on which the erroneous contribution was processed.
    (3)(i) Multiple negative adjustment records in the same processing 
cycle will be processed in the order of the applicable pay dates, 
starting with the earliest pay date.
    (ii) If the participant's account does not have sufficient funds in 
the applicable source of contributions to pay the amount of a negative 
adjustment, the adjustment to that source of contributions will not be 
processed. Funds may not be taken from another source of contributions 
to cover the negative adjustment. The employing agency may, at a later 
date, resubmit the record that was not processed. It will be processed 
if, at that time, there are sufficient funds for the applicable source 
of contributions.
    (iii) If there are sufficient funds in the applicable source of 
contributions to pay the amount required by a negative adjustment 
record, but any of the investment funds does not have sufficient money 
to pay the portion that is attributable to that investment fund (e.g., 
because of a loan), then the amount required will be removed from the 
other investment fund(s), pro rata, based on the participant's total 
account balance in each investment fund for that source of 
contributions.
    (d) Employee contributions. The following rules apply to removal of 
employee contributions from a participant's account:
    (1) If there is a net investment gain on the erroneous employee 
contribution made for a pay date, then the full amount of the erroneous 
contribution will be returned to the employing agency. Subject to 
Sec. 1605.9(a), the investment earnings on the erroneous contribution 
will remain in the participant's account.
    (2) If there is a net investment loss on the erroneous employee 
contribution made for a pay date, then the employing agency will receive 
only the amount of the erroneous contribution reduced by the investment 
loss. However, the investment loss does not affect the employing 
agency's obligation to refund to the participant the full amount of the 
erroneous contribution.
    (3) If an employing agency removes erroneous employee contributions 
from a participant's account, it must also remove, under paragraph (e) 
of this section, any associated agency matching contributions.
    (e) Employer contributions. The following rules apply to removal of 
employer

[[Page 163]]

contributions from a participant's account:
    (1) Employer contributions will only be returned to the employing 
agency if the negative adjustment record submitted to remove the 
contributions is processed within one year of the date the contribution 
was processed. If more than one year has elapsed when the negative 
adjustment record is processed, the amount of the employer contribution 
plus (or minus) any investment gains (or losses) will be removed from 
the participant's account and used to offset TSP administrative expenses 
rather than returned to the employing agency. The employing agency's 
obligation to submit negative adjustment records to remove erroneous 
contributions from a participant's account is not affected by whether 
the contribution has been in the account for more or less than one year 
at the time the negative adjustment record is to be processed.
    (2) Subject to paragraph (e)(1) of this section, if there is a net 
investment gain within a source of contributions for an erroneous 
employer contribution, then the employing agency will receive the full 
amount of the negative adjustment submitted. The earnings attributable 
to the erroneous contributions in the applicable source of contributions 
will be removed from the participant's account and used to offset TSP 
administrative expenses.
    (3) Subject to paragraph (e)(1) of this section, if there is a net 
investment loss within a source of contributions for an erroneous 
employer contribution, then the employing agency will receive only the 
amount of the erroneous contribution reduced by the investment loss.



Sec. 1605.4  Back pay awards and other retroactive pay adjustments.

    (a) Participant not employed. The following rules apply to 
participants who receive a back pay award or other retroactive pay 
adjustment for a period during which the participant was separated from 
Government employment:
    (1) If the participant is reinstated to Government employment, then 
immediately upon reinstatement the employing agency must give the 
participant the opportunity to submit a contribution election form (Form 
TSP-1) to make current contributions. The effective date of the form 
will be the first day of the first full pay period in the most recent 
TSP election period. If the participant is reinstated during a TSP open 
season but before the election period, he or she can also submit an 
election form that will become effective the first day of the first full 
pay period in the following election period.
    (2) The participant must be given the following options for electing 
makeup contributions:
    (i) If the participant had a valid contribution election form (Form 
TSP-1) on file when he or she separated, upon the participant's 
reinstatement to Government employment that election form will be 
reinstated for purposes of makeup contributions, unless a new contri 
bution election form is submitted to terminate all makeup contributions 
or those contributions that would have been made from the date of 
separation through the end of the open season that occurred immediately 
after the separation.
    (ii) Instead of making contributions for the period of separation 
under the reinstated contribution election form, the participant may 
submit a new election form for any open season that occurred during the 
period of separation. However, the investment allocation on each Form 
TSP-1 for the period of separation must be the same as the investment 
allocation on the current Form TSP-1.
    (3) Lost earnings will be calculated and credited to the 
participant's account, in accordance with 5 CFR Part 1606, using the 
rates of return for the G Fund, unless the participant submitted one or 
more interfund transfer requests during the period of separation. In the 
case of interfund transfer requests, the earnings will be calculated 
using the G Fund rates of return until the first interfund transfer was 
processed. The contribution that is subject to lost earnings will be 
moved to the investment fund(s) the participant requested and lost 
earnings will be calculated based on the earnings for that fund(s). The 
amount of lost earnings calculated will be posted to the investment 
fund(s) to which the contribution was moved by the interfund transfer. 
If

[[Page 164]]

there were no interfund transfers processed during the lost earnings 
calculation period, the amount of lost earnings calculated will be 
posted to the employee's G Fund account.
    (b) Participant employed. The following rules apply to participants 
who receive a back pay award or other retroactive pay adjustment for a 
period during which the participant was not separated from Government 
employment:
    (1) The participant will only be entitled to makeup contributions 
for the period covered by the back pay award or retroactive pay 
adjustment if, for that period, the participant had designated a 
percentage of basic pay to be contributed to the TSP or had designated a 
dollar amount of contributions each pay period which had to be reduced 
(because of an applicable 5% or 10% limit on contributions per pay 
period) as a result of the reduction in pay that is made up by the back 
pay award or other retroactive pay adjustment.
    (2) The employing agency must compute the amount of additional 
employee contributions that would have been contributed to the 
participant's account had the action leading to the back pay award or 
other retroactive pay adjustment not occurred. The employing agency must 
also compute the amount of agency matching contributions and agency 
automatic (1%) contributions that would have been payable had that 
action not occurred.
    (c)(1) Makeup employee contributions required under paragraphs (a) 
and (b) of this section must be computed prior to payment of the award 
of back pay or other retroactive pay adjustment. The makeup employee 
contributions must be deducted from the payment of the back pay award or 
other retroactive pay adjustment and contributed to the TSP, unless the 
payment of such contributions will cause the participant to exceed the 
annual contribution limits contained in 26 U.S.C. 402(g)(1) or 26 U.S.C. 
415 (taking into consideration the expected regular TSP contributions 
the participant will make during the year in which the back pay award or 
other retroactive pay adjustment is paid). To the extent TSP 
contributions from the back pay award or other retroactive pay 
adjustment would cause the participant to exceed the elective deferral 
limits contained in 26 U.S.C. 402(g) or 415, such contributions may be 
carried forward into subsequent years and made (along with attributable 
agency matching contributions) pursuant to a schedule of makeup 
contributions established under the rules set forth in Sec. 1605.3(c).
    (2)(i) If employee contributions are deducted from a back pay award 
or other retroactive pay adjustment, the employing agency will be 
responsible for contributing the associated agency matching 
contributions at the same time the employee contributions are made. 
Regardless of whether a participant elects makeup employee 
contributions, the employing agency must make, in a lump sum payment, 
all appropriate agency automatic (1%) contributions associated with the 
back pay award or other retroactive pay adjustment.
    (ii) Any makeup contributions (both employee and employer) 
associated with a back pay award or other retroactive pay adjustment 
must be reported by the employing agency for investment among the TSP 
investment fund(s) using the participant's investment fund election in 
effect at the time the makeup contributions are made. If no such 
election is on file, the contributions must be reported by the employing 
agency for investment in the G Fund.
    (d) The employing agency must pay any lost earnings on TSP 
contributions derived from back pay awards or other retroactive pay 
adjustments that are required to be paid under 5 CFR Part 1606.
    (e) If a participant has withdrawn his or her TSP account other than 
by purchasing an annuity, and the separation from Government employment 
upon which the withdrawal was based is reversed, resulting in 
reinstatement of the participant without a break in service, then the 
participant will have the option, which must be exercised by notice to 
the Board within 90 days of reinstatement, to restore to his or her TSP 
account the amount withdrawn. The right to restore the withdrawn funds 
will expire if the notice is not provided to the Board within 90 days of 
reinstatement. No earnings will be paid on any restored funds.

[[Page 165]]



Sec. 1605.5  Misclassification of retirement coverage.

    (a) If a CSRS participant is misclassified by an employing agency as 
a FERS participant, when the mis-classification is corrected--
    (1) The employing agency must, under Sec. 1605.3, remove all 
employee contributions that exceeded 5% of basic pay for the pay 
period(s) involved, and refund to the participant the amount 
contributed. In addition, the employing agency must submit negative 
adjustment records to remove all employer contributions made to the 
participant's account during the period of misclassification that have 
been in the account for less than one year. The participant may choose 
whether or not he or she wishes to have the remainder of the employee 
contributions made during the period of misclassification removed from 
his or her account and refunded to the participant; and
    (2) If the participant's account at any time contains no employer 
contributions that have been in the account for less than one year, the 
TSP recordkeeper will remove from the account any employer contributions 
that have been in the account for one year or more (and associated 
earnings), and will use such amounts to offset TSP administrative 
expenses.
    (b) If a FERS participant is misclassified as a CSRS participant, 
when the misclassification is corrected he or she may not elect to have 
the contributions made while classified as CSRS removed from his or her 
account. The employing agency must make in a lump sum payment, pursuant 
to Sec. 1605.2(b)(1), the appropriate agency automatic (1%) 
contributions and agency matching contributions on the employee 
contributions that were made while the participant was misclassified as 
CSRS. The participant may also elect to make, under Sec. 1605.2(c), 
additional contributions that he or she would have been eligible to make 
as a FERS participant during the period of misclassification. If such 
contributions are made, the employing agency must also submit any 
associated agency matching contributions and any lost earnings records 
required under 5 CFR Part 1606.



Sec. 1605.6  Procedures for claims against employing agencies; time limitations.

    (a) Agency procedures. Each employing agency must establish 
procedures for participants to submit claims for correction under this 
subpart. Each employing agency's procedures must include the following:
    (1) The employing agency will provide the participant with a 
decision on any claim within 30 days of receipt of the claim unless the 
employing agency provides the participant with good cause for requiring 
a longer period to decide the claim. Any decision to deny a claim in 
whole or in part must be in writing and must include the reasons for the 
denial (including citations to any applicable statutes, regulations or 
procedures), a description of any additional material that would enable 
the participant to perfect his or her claim, and a statement of the 
steps to be taken to appeal the denial.
    (2) The employing agency must permit a participant at least 30 days 
to appeal the employing agency's denial of all or any part of his or her 
claim for correction under this subpart. The appeal must be in writing 
and addressed to the agency official designated in the initial denial 
decision or in procedures promulgated by the agency. The participant may 
include with his or her appeal any documentation or comments that the 
participant deems relevant to the claim.
    (3) The employing agency must issue a written decision on a timely 
filed appeal within 30 days of receipt of the appeal unless the 
employing agency provides the participant with good cause for taking a 
longer period to decide the appeal. The employing agency decision must 
include the reasons for the decision, as well as citations to any 
applicable statutes, regulations, or procedures.
    (4) If the agency decision on the appeal is not issued in a timely 
manner, or if the appeal is denied in whole or in part, the participant 
will be deemed to have exhausted his or her administrative remedy and 
will be eligible to file suit against the employing agency under 5 
U.S.C. 8477. There is no administrative appeal to the Board of a final 
agency decision.

[[Page 166]]

    (b) Time limit for filing claims. (1)(i) Upon discovery of 
administrative errors, employing agencies are required to promptly 
correct those errors under this subpart, regardless of whether a claim 
for correction is received from the affected participant. If an error 
has not been corrected by the employing agency, the affected participant 
may file a claim for correction with his or her employing agency. The 
claim must be filed within one year of the earlier of:
    (A) Receipt of a pay stub, earnings and leave statement, or other 
document reflecting the error; or
    (B) The close of the first TSP election period following the 
participant's receipt of a TSP Participant Statement reflecting the 
error.
    (ii) For purposes of paragraphs (b)(1)(i)(A) and (b)(1)(i)(B) of 
this section, in the case of a participant who has been improperly 
classified as to retirement coverage, the receipt of a document 
indicating the participant's retirement code classification is not, in 
and of itself, sufficient to notify the participant that his or her 
retirement classification is incorrect. However, receipt of a document 
indicating a change in retirement code classification, in addition to a 
written notice to the participant that the change may have implications 
for his or her TSP account, may be deemed by an employing agency to be 
sufficient to advise the participant that his or her retirement 
classification had been incorrect prior to the change. The one-year time 
limit will not commence with respect to retirement coverage 
misclassification errors unless and until the participant receives a 
written notice of the error that specifically mentions the TSP.
    (2) If a participant fails to file a claim for correction of an 
administrative error in a timely manner (or fails to appeal a denial of 
a claim in a timely manner) under paragraph (b)(1) of this section, the 
agency may still correct any administrative error that is brought to or 
comes to its attention.



               Subpart C--Board or TSP Recordkeeper Errors



Sec. 1605.7  Plan-paid lost earnings and other corrections.

    (a) Plan-paid lost earnings. (1) Subject to paragraph (a)(2) of this 
section, if, because of an error committed by the Board or the TSP 
recordkeeper, a participant's account does not receive credit for 
earnings (which may be positive or negative) that it would have received 
had the error not occurred, the account will be credited with the 
difference between the earnings (if any) it actually received and the 
earnings it would have received had the error not occurred. The errors 
that warrant crediting of lost earnings under this paragraph (a) 
include, but are not limited to:
    (i) Board or TSP recordkeeper delay in crediting contributions or 
other monies to a participant's account;
    (ii) Improper issuance of a loan or withdrawal payment to a 
participant or beneficiary which requires the money to be restored to 
the participant's account; and
    (iii) Investment of all or part of a participant's account in the 
wrong TSP investment fund(s) (e.g., improper processing or failure to 
process an interfund transfer request).
    (2) A participant's TSP account will not be credited with earnings 
under paragraph (a)(1) of this section if, during the period the 
participant's account received credit for less earnings than it would 
have received but for the Board or recordkeeper error, the participant 
had the use of the money on which the earnings would have accrued.
    (3) In the case of an error described in paragraph (a)(1)(iii) of 
this section, the affected participant will, upon discovery of the 
error, be given a choice whether or not to have the error corrected. If 
the participant chooses correction, the account will be placed in the 
position it would have attained had the error not occurred, including 
crediting of earnings (positive or negative as the case may be) that 
would have accrued had the error not occurred and

[[Page 167]]

reallocation of the account balance among the investment funds in the 
proportions that would have existed had the error not occurred.
    (4) Where the participant continued to have a TSP account, or would 
have continued to have a TSP account but for the Board or TSP 
recordkeeper error, earnings under paragraph (a)(1) of this section will 
be computed for the relevant period based upon the investment funds in 
which the affected monies would have been invested had the error not 
occurred. If the period for which lost earnings are paid is a period for 
which the participant did not, and should not, have had an account in 
the TSP, then the earnings will be computed using the G Fund rate of 
return for the relevant period.
    (b) Reversal of loan distributions. If, because of Board or TSP 
recordkeeper error, a TSP loan is declared a taxable distribution under 
circumstances that make such declaration inconsistent with FERSA, 5 CFR 
Part 1655, with the provisions of the documents (including instructions) 
signed by or provided to the participant in connection with the 
application for or issuance of the loan, or with other procedures 
established by the Board or TSP recordkeeper in connection with the TSP 
loan program, the taxable distribution will be reversed. The participant 
will be provided an opportunity to reinstate or repay in full the 
outstanding balance on the loan.
    (c) Other corrections. The Executive Director may, in his discretion 
and consistent with the requirements of applicable law, correct any 
other errors not specifically addressed in this section or provide any 
other relief to a participant, including payment of lost earnings from 
the TSP, if the Executive Director determines that the correction or 
relief would serve the interests of justice, fairness, and equity among 
the participants of the TSP.



Sec. 1605.8  Claims for correction of Board or TSP Recordkeeper errors; time limitations.

    (a) Filing claims. Claims for correction under this subpart may be 
submitted initially either to the TSP recordkeeper or the Board. The 
claim must be in writing and may be from the affected participant or 
beneficiary or from a representative of the participant or beneficiary. 
The written claim must state the basis for the claim.
    (b) Processing claims. (1) If the initial claim is submitted to the 
TSP recordkeeper, the TSP recordkeeper may either respond directly to 
the participant or the person making the claim on behalf of the 
participant, or may forward the letter to the Board for response. The 
decision whether the TSP recordkeeper should respond directly or forward 
the claim to the Board will be made in accordance with guidance and 
procedures established by the Board or, if no such specific guidance is 
available, in consultation with the Board's staff. If the TSP 
recordkeeper responds to a participant's claim, and all or any part of 
the participant's claim is denied, the participant may request review by 
the Board within 90 days of the date of the recordkeeper's response.
    (2) If the Board denies all or any part of a participant's claim 
(whether upon review of a TSP recordkeeper denial or upon an initial 
review by the Board), the participant will be deemed to have exhausted 
his or her administrative remedy and may file suit under 5 U.S.C. 8477. 
If the participant does not submit to the Board a request for review of 
a claim denial by the TSP Recordkeeper within the 90 days permitted 
under paragraph (b)(1) of this section, the participant shall not be 
deemed to have exhausted his or her administrative remedy.
    (c) Time limits for filing claims. (1)(i) Upon discovery of errors 
subject to correction under this subpart, the Board or TSP recordkeeper 
will promptly correct such errors in accordance with this subpart, 
regardless of whether a claim for correction is received from the 
affected participant. If an error has not been corrected by the Board or 
TSP recordkeeper, the affected participant must file a claim for 
correction within one year of the earlier of:
    (A) His or her receipt of a pay stub, earnings and leave statement, 
or other document reflecting the error; or
    (B) The close of the first TSP election period following the 
participant's receipt of a TSP Participant Statement reflecting the 
error.

[[Page 168]]

    (ii) For purposes of paragraphs (c)(1)(i)(A) and (c)(1)(i)(B) of 
this section, in the case of a participant whose retirement coverage has 
been improperly classified, the receipt of a document indicating the 
participant's retirement code classification is not, in and of itself, 
sufficient to notify the participant that his or her retirement code 
classification is incorrect.
    (2) If a participant fails in a timely manner to file a claim for 
correction (or fails in a timely manner to request reconsideration of a 
claim) under paragraph (c)(1) of this section, the Board or TSP 
recordkeeper may still correct any administrative error that is brought 
to or comes to its attention.



                   Subpart D--Miscellaneous Provisions



Sec. 1605.9  Miscellaneous provisions.

    (a)(1) If all employee contributions are removed from a 
participant's account under the rules set forth in this part, but 
earnings on any of those employee contributions or other residual 
amounts are left in the account, the earnings will remain in the account 
unless the participant was ineligible to have an account in the TSP at 
the time the earnings were credited to the account and remains 
ineligible. In that case, the earnings will be removed from the account 
and used to offset TSP administrative expenses. If earnings remain in 
the account under this paragraph (a), they will be subject to withdrawal 
from the participant's account upon separation from Federal employment 
under the same withdrawal rules as apply to any other money in a 
participant's account.
    (2) If any residual earnings on employer contributions remain in a 
participant's account after all employer have been removed from the 
account, those residual earnings will be removed from the account and 
used to offset TSP administrative expenses.
    (b) If a participant fails to participate in the TSP due to 
circumstances beyond his or her control but not due to circumstances 
attributable to employing agency, Board, or TSP recordkeeper error, the 
participant will be entitled to elect to participate effective not later 
than the first pay period after the participant submits a contribution 
election form (Form TSP-1), regardless of whether the form is submitted 
during an election period. Such belated elections will be permitted on a 
prospective basis only; no makeup contributions will be permitted under 
this part.
    (c) If TSP contributions are invested in the wrong investment 
fund(s) because of employing agency error, that error may be corrected 
only in accordance with 5 CFR 1606.7. Such errors may not be corrected 
under this part.
    (d)(1) The address for the TSP recordkeeper is: National Finance 
Center, TSP Service Office, Post Office Box 61500, New Orleans, LA 
70161-1500.
    (2) The address for the Board is: Federal Retirement Thrift 
Investment Board, 1250 H Street, N.W., Washington, DC 20005.



PART 1606--LOST EARNINGS ATTRIBUTABLE TO EMPLOYING AGENCY ERRORS--Table of Contents




                      Subpart A--General Provisions

Sec.
1606.1  Purpose.
1606.2  Definitions.
1606.3  General rule.
1606.4  Applicability.

     Subpart B--Lost Earnings Attributable to Delayed or Erroneous 
                              Contributions

1606.5  Failure to timely make or deduct TSP contributions when 
          participant received pay.
1606.6  Agency delay in paying employee.
1606.7  Contribution to incorrect investment fund.
1606.8  Late payroll submissions.

   Subpart C--Lost Earnings Not Attributable to Delayed or Erroneous 
                              Contributions

1606.9  Loan allotments.
1606.10  Miscellaneous lost earnings.

                    Subpart D--Lost Earnings Records

1606.11  Agency submission of lost earnings records.
1606.12  Agency responsibility.

               Subpart E--Processing Lost Earnings Records

1606.13  Calculation and crediting of lost earnings.

[[Page 169]]

             Subpart F--Participant Claims for Lost Earnings

1606.14  Employing agency procedures.
1606.15  Time limits on participant claims.

    Authority: 5 U.S.C. 8432a, 8474 (b)(5) and (c)(1).

    Source: 56 FR 606, Jan. 7, 1991, unless otherwise noted.



                      Subpart A--General Provisions



Sec. 1606.1  Purpose.

    The purpose of this part 1606 is to implement section 2 of the 
Thrift Savings Plan Technical Amendments Act of 1990 (TSPTAA), Public 
Law 101-335, enacted July 17, 1990. The TSPTAA amended chapter 84 of 
title 5, United States Code by inserting section 8432a, authorizing the 
Executive Director to prescribe regulations pursuant to which employing 
agencies shall be required to pay to the Thrift Savings Fund amounts 
representing lost earnings caused by employing agency errors relating to 
the Thrift Savings Plan (TSP) described in subchapter III of chapter 84.



Sec. 1606.2  Definitions.

    The following definitions apply for purposes of this part:
    Agency Automatic (1%) Contributions means any contributions made 
under 5 U.S.C. 8432(c)(1);
    Agency Matching Contributions means any contributions made under 5 
U.S.C. 8432(c)(2);
    Board means the Federal Retirement Thrift Investment Board;
    C Fund means the Common Stock Index Investment Fund established 
under 5 U.S.C. 8438(b)(1)(C);
    CSRS means the Civil Service Retirement System established by 
Subchapter III of chapter 83 of title 5, U.S.C., and any equivalent 
Federal Government retirement plan;
    CSRS employee or CSRS participant means any employee, member, or 
participant covered by CSRS or an equivalent Federal Government 
retirement plan, including employees authorized to contribute to the 
Thrift Savings Plan under 5 U.S.C. 8351, under 5 U.S.C. 8440a, or under 
5 U.S.C. 8440b.
    Employee Contributions means any contributions made under 5 U.S.C. 
8432(a), under 5 U.S.C. 8351, under 5 U.S.C. 8440a(a), or under 5 U.S.C. 
8440b(a);
    Employer Contributions means Agency Automatic (1%) Contributions and 
Agency Matching Contributions;
    Employing agency means any entity that provides or has provided pay 
to an employee or member, thereby incurring responsibility for 
submitting to the Thrift Savings Fund contributions or loan payments 
made by or on behalf of that employee or member, or any other entity 
that has employed an employee or member and has provided information 
that affects or has affected that employee's or member's TSP account;
    Employing agency error means any act or omission by an employing 
agency that is not in accordance with all applicable statutes, 
regulations, or administrative procedures, including TSP procedures 
provided to employing agencies by the Board or TSP recordkeeper;
    FERS means the Federal Employees' Retirement System established by 
chapter 84 of title 5, U.S.C., and any equivalent Federal Government 
retirement plan;
    FERS employee or FERS participant means any employee, member, or 
participant covered by FERS or an equivalent Federal Government 
retirement plan;
    F Fund means the Fixed Income Investment Fund established under 5 
U.S.C. 8438(b)(1)(B);
    G Fund means the Government Securities Investment Fund established 
under 5 U.S.C. 8438(b)(1)(A);
    Interfund transfer means the movement of all or a portion of a 
participant's existing account balance among the three TSP investment 
funds;
    Investment fund means the C Fund, the F Fund, or the G Fund;
    Loan allotment means TSP loan payments that are deducted from a 
participant's paycheck to be deposited to that participant's TSP 
account;
    Lost earnings record means a data record containing information 
enabling the TSP system to compute lost earnings and to determine the 
investment fund in which money would be invested had an error not 
occurred;

[[Page 170]]

    Negative adjustment record means a data record submitted by an 
employing agency indicating money to be removed from a participant's 
account;
    Open season means the period during which participants may choose to 
begin making contributions to the Thrift Savings Plan, to change or 
discontinue (without losing the right to recommence contributions the 
next open season) the amount currently being contributed to the Thrift 
Savings Plan, or to allocate prospective contributions to the Thrift 
Savings Plan among the investment funds;
    Participant means any person with an account in the Thrift Savings 
Fund, or who would have an account in the Thrift Savings Fund but for an 
employing agency error;
    Payment record means a data record submitted by an employing agency 
indicating contributions to be deposited to a participant's account;
    Payroll submission means an entire submission of one or more TSP 
payment records (whether submitted on magnetic tape, diskette, or paper 
forms such as Form TSP-5, Employee Data/Payment/Adjustment Record Input 
Form), accompanied by a Form TSP-2, Certification of Transfer of Funds 
and Journal Voucher;
    Received, with respect to TSP records or information provided by an 
employing agency, means receipt by the TSP recordkeeper of records or 
information that can be accepted and processed. For purposes of this 
definition, TSP records that are received by the TSP recordkeeper, but 
subsequently are deleted by the TSP recordkeeper because an error in the 
data prevented the record from processing, will not be deemed to have 
been received by the TSP recordkeeper;
    Source of contributions means either Employee Contributions, Agency 
Automatic (1%) Contributions, or Agency Matching Contributions;
    Submission or submitted means a transfer of data which has been 
received by the TSP recordkeeper;
    Thrift Savings Fund or Fund means the Fund described in 5 U.S.C. 
8437;
    Thrift Savings Plan, TSP, or Plan means the Federal Retirement 
Thrift Savings Plan established by the Federal Employees' Retirement 
System Act of 1986, codified in pertinent part at 5 U.S.C. 8431 et seq.;
    Timely, with respect to loan allotments or TSP contributions other 
than those made pursuant to 5 U.S.C. 8432(c)(1) (B) or (C), means 
receipt of TSP payment records or loan allotments by the TSP 
recordkeeper no later than 12 days after the end of the pay period for 
which the contribution should have been made. With respect to TSP 
contributions made pursuant to 5 U.S.C. 8432(c)(1)(B) and (C), timely 
means receipt of TSP payment records by the TSP recordkeeper on or 
before April 16, 1987;
    TSP Recordkeeper means the entity that is engaged by the Board to 
perform recordkeeping services for the Thrift Savings Plan. As of the 
date of publication of this part 1606, the TSP recordkeeper is the 
National Finance Center, Office of Finance and Management, United States 
Department of Agriculture, located in New Orleans, Louisiana.



Sec. 1606.3  General rule.

    Except as otherwise provided, employing agencies shall pay to the 
Thrift Savings Fund any amount, computed by the TSP recordkeeper in a 
manner consistent with this part 1606, that is required to restore to 
the TSP account of the participant or participants involved earnings 
lost as a result of an employing agency error. Where lost earnings are 
required, the employing agency must, in accordance with this part 1606 
and any instructions provided by the Board or the TSP recordkeeper, 
submit to the TSP recordkeeper all information and certification that is 
required to enable the TSP recordkeeper to compute the amount of lost 
earnings payable by the employing agency, and to charge that amount to 
the appropriate employing agency.



Sec. 1606.4  Applicability.

    (a) In general. Except as otherwise provided, the provisions of this 
part 1606 apply in any case where, due to employing agency error, the 
Thrift Savings Fund has not invested or had the use of money that would 
have been invested in the Thrift Savings Fund had the employing agency 
error not occurred, or where the money would have

[[Page 171]]

been invested in a different investment fund had the error not occurred.
    (b) Back pay awards and other retroactive pay adjustments. The 
application of this part 1606, as described in paragraph (a) of this 
section, includes TSP contributions derived from payments associated 
with back pay awards or other retroactive pay adjustments that are based 
on a determination that the employing agency paid a participant less 
than the full amount of basic pay to which the participant was entitled.
    (c) Timing of errors. This part 1606 applies regardless of whether 
the employing agency error that caused the effects described in 
paragraph (a) of this section occurred prior to, at, or after the 
inception of the TSP.
    (d) De minimis rules. Notwithstanding paragraphs (a) through (c) of 
this section or any other provision of this part 1606:
    (1) Lost earnings shall not be payable where the amount of money for 
a source of contributions in a participant's account that is not 
invested in the Thrift Savings Fund due to an employing agency error, or 
that is invested in the wrong investment fund due to an employing agency 
error, is less than one dollar ($1.00) for that source of contributions. 
Where the employing agency error caused delayed or erroneous 
contributions for more than one pay period, this paragraph shall apply 
separately to each pay period involved.
    (2) Where the employing agency error caused delay in submission of 
TSP payment records or loan allotments, lost earnings shall not be 
payable unless the belated contributions or loan allotments were 
received by the TSP recordkeeper more than 30 days after the pay date 
associated with the pay period for which the contributions or loan 
allotments would have been submitted had the employing agency error not 
occurred.
    (3) For employing agency errors not covered by paragarph (d)(2) of 
this section, lost earnings shall not be payable unless, as the result 
of an employing agency error, money was not invested in the Thrift 
Savings Fund for a period extending more than 30 days after the date it 
would have been invested had the error not occurred.
    (4) The 30-day requirements contained in paragraphs (d)(2) and 
(d)(3) of this section do not apply where, due to employing agency 
error, money in a participant's account has been invested in an 
incorrect investment fund.
    (e) Contributions for pre-1987 service. This part does not apply to 
errors involving employing agency delay in submitting contributions 
required by 5 U.S.C. 8432(c)(3).
    (f) Contributions for service in January through March 1987. 
Notwithstanding any other provision of this section, lost earnings shall 
be payable with respect to contributions made pursuant to 5 U.S.C. 
8432(c)(1) (B) or (C) if the payment records containing those 
contributions were received by the TSP recordkeeper after April 30, 
1987.



     Subpart B--Lost Earnings Attributable to Delayed or Erroneous 
                              Contributions



Sec. 1606.5  Failure to timely make or deduct TSP contributions when participant received pay.

    (a) If a participant receives pay, but as the result of an employing 
agency error all or any part of the Agency Automatic (1%) Contributions 
associated with that pay to which the participant is entitled are not 
timely received by the TSP recordkeeper, then the belated contributions 
shall be subject to lost earnings. In such cases:
    (1) The employing agency must, for each pay period involved, submit 
to the TSP recordkeeper a lost earnings record indicating the pay date 
for which the belated contribution would have been made had the error 
not occurred, the investment fund to which the belated contribution 
would have been deposited had the error not occurred, the amount of the 
belated contribution, and the pay date for which the belated 
contribution was actually made. If the belated contribution was actually 
deposited to an investment fund different from the investment fund to 
which it would have been deposited had the contribution been timely 
submitted, then the employing agency must submit an additional lost 
earnings record indicating the amount of the belated contribution, the 
pay date for which it was actually made,

[[Page 172]]

the investment fund to which it would have been deposited had the error 
not occurred, and the investment fund to which it was actually 
deposited;
    (2) The TSP recordkeeper shall compute the amount of lost earnings 
associated with each lost earnings record submitted by the employing 
agency pursuant to paragraph (a)(1) of this section, and shall also 
determine the investment fund or funds in which the belated 
contributions and associated earnings would currently be invested had 
the error not occurred. In performing the computation of lost earnings 
and determining the appropriate investment fund or funds, the TSP 
recordkeeper must take into consideration any interfund transfers made 
effective on or after the pay date for which the belated contribution 
would have been made if the error had not occurred, and which were made 
effective prior to the end of the month preceding the month during which 
the lost earnings record is processed. With respect to the period prior 
to December 31, 1990, the TSP recordkeeper shall also take into account 
the investment restrictions that were effective under 5 U.S.C. 8438 
prior to the effective date of section 3 of the TSPTAA.
    (3) Where the lost earnings computed in accordance with paragraph 
(a)(2) of this section are positive, the TSP recordkeeper shall charge 
the amount of lost earnings computed to the appropriate employing agency 
and shall credit that amount to the TSP account of the participant 
involved. If the lost earnings computed are negative, the amount 
computed will be removed from the participant's account and used to 
offset TSP administrative expenses;
    (4) The TSP recordkeeper shall adjust the participant's account to 
reflect the investment funds in which the belated contributions and 
associated earnings would currently be invested if the error had not 
occurred, as determined in accordance with paragraph (a)(2) of this 
section.
    (b) If a participant receives pay from which Employee Contributions 
were properly deducted, but as the result of an employing agency error 
all or any part of the associated Agency Matching Contributions to which 
the participant is entitled were not timely received by the TSP 
recordkeeper, then the belated contributions will be subject to lost 
earnings. In such cases, the procedures described in paragraphs (a)(1) 
through (a)(4) of this section will apply to the belated Agency Matching 
Contributions.
    (c) If a participant receives pay from which Employee Contributions 
were properly deducted, but as the result of an employing agency error 
all or any part of those Employee Contributions were not timely received 
by the TSP recordkeeper, the belated contributions will be subject to 
lost earnings. In such cases, the procedures described in paragraphs 
(a)(1) through (a)(4) of this section will apply to the belated Employee 
Contributions.
    (d) If a participant receives pay from which Employee Contributions 
should have been deducted, but as the result of employing agency error 
all or any part of those deductions were not made, then even if the 
participant makes up those Employee Contributions pursuant to part 1605, 
the belated Employee Contributions shall not be subject to lost 
earnings. However, where the participant does make up the Employee 
Contributions pursuant to part 1605, the Agency Matching Contributions 
associated with those belated Employee Contributions (which must be made 
in accordance with part 1605) will be subject to lost earnings. With 
respect to such belated Agency Matching Contributions the procedures 
described in paragraphs (a)(1) through (a)(4) of this section shall 
apply.



Sec. 1606.6  Agency delay in paying employee.

    Where, as the result of an employing agency error, a participant 
does not timely receive all or any part of the basic pay to which he or 
she is entitled, and as a result of that delay in receiving pay all or 
any part of the Employee Contributions, Agency Automatic (1%) 
Contributions, or Agency Matching Contributions are not submitted when 
they would have been had the employing agency error not occurred, all 
such belated Employee Contributions, Agency Automatic (1%) 
Contributions, and Agency Matching Contributions shall

[[Page 173]]

be subject to lost earnings. The procedures described in paragraphs 
(a)(1) through (a)(4) of Sec. 1606.5 shall apply to all such belated 
contributions.



Sec. 1606.7  Contributions to incorrect investment fund.

    (a) Where, as the result of an employing agency error, money was 
deposited to a participant's TSP account in an incorrect investment 
fund(s), the erroneous contribution shall be subject to lost earnings. 
In such cases:
    (1) The employing agency must submit a lost earnings record 
indicating the amount of the contributions submitted to the incorrect 
investment fund(s), the pay date for which it was submitted, the 
investment fund(s) to which it would have been deposited had the 
employing agency error not occurred, and the investment fund(s) to which 
it was actually deposited. If the employing agency has, prior to January 
1, 1991 or in contravention of paragraph (b) of this section, removed 
the contribution from the incorrect investment fund(s) using a negative 
adjustment record and redeposited the money to the investment fund(s) in 
which it would have been invested had the error not occurred, the 
employing agency must also indicate on the lost earnings record when 
these actions were taken.
    (2) The TSP recordkeeper shall compute the amount of lost earnings 
associated with each lost earnings record submitted by the employing 
agency pursuant to paragraph (a)(1) of this section, and shall also 
determine the investment fund or funds in which erroneously invested 
contributions and associated earnings would currently be invested had 
the error not occurred. In computing lost earnings and determining the 
appropriate investment fund or funds, the TSP recordkeeper shall take 
into consideration any interfund transfers that were made effective on 
or subsequent to the date erroneous contribution was made, and that were 
made effective prior to the end of the month preceding the month during 
which the lost earnings record is processed. With respect to the period 
prior to December 31, 1990, the TSP recordkeeper shall also take into 
account the investment restrictions that were effective under 5 U.S.C. 
8438 prior to the effective date of section 3 of the TSPTAA;
    (3) Where the lost earnings computed in accordance with paragraph 
(a)(2) of this section are positive, the TSP recordkeeper shall charge 
the amount of lost earnings computed to the appropriate employing agency 
and shall credit that amount to the account of the participant involved. 
If the lost earnings computed are negative, the amount computed shall be 
removed from the participant's account and used to offset TSP 
administrative expenses;
    (4) The TSP recordkeeper shall adjust the participant's account to 
reflect the investment funds in which the erroneous contributions and 
associated earnings would currently be invested had the error not 
occurred, as determined in accordance with paragraph (a)(2) of this 
section.
    (b) The provisions of part 1605 notwithstanding, effective January 
1, 1991, where employing agency error had caused money to be deposited 
to a TSP account in an incorrect investment fund, the employing agency 
may not remove the erroneously invested money from the incorrect 
investment fund(s) using a negative adjustment record and redeposit the 
money in the investment fund(s) in which it would have been invested had 
the error not occurred. Rather, the correction must be accomplished 
solely through the procedures described in paragraph (a) of this 
section.



Sec. 1606.8  Late payroll submissions.

    (a) Payroll submissions received on or after January 1, 1991. All 
contributions on payment records contained in a payroll submission 
received from an employing agency by the TSP Recordkeeper on or after 
January 1, 1991 and more than 30 days after the pay date associated with 
the payroll submission (as reported on Form TSP-2, Certification of 
Transfer of Funds and Journal Voucher), shall be subject to lost 
earnings, as follows:
    (1) The TSP Recordkeeper shall generate a lost earnings record for 
each payment record contained in the late payroll submission. The lost 
earnings

[[Page 174]]

records generated by the TSP Recordkeeper shall reflect that the 
contributions on the payment records should have been made on the pay 
date associated with the payroll submission, that the contributions 
should have been deposited to the investment funds(s) indicated on the 
payment records, and that the contributions were actually made on the 
date the late payroll submission was processed.
    (2) The procedures applicable to lost earnings records submitted by 
employing agencies set forth in paragraphs (a)(2) through (a)(4) of 
Sec. 1606.5, shall be applied to lost earnings records generated by the 
TSP Recordkeeper pursuant to paragraph (a)(1) of this section.
    (b) Payroll submissions received before January 1, 1991. All 
contributions on payment records contained in a payroll submission 
received from an employing agency by the TSP Recordkeeper before January 
1, 1991 but more than 30 days after the pay date associated with the 
payroll submission (as reported on Form TSP-2, Certification of Transfer 
of Funds and Journal Voucher), shall be subject to lost earnings, as 
follows:
    (1) The employing agency shall, pursuant to instructions provided to 
employing agencies by the Board, submit to the TSP recordkeeper 
authorization for lost earnings to be computed on all contributions on 
the payment records contained in the payroll submission;
    (2) The procedures set forth in paragraphs (a)(1) and (a)(2) of this 
section shall apply.



   Subpart C--Lost Earnings Not Attributable to Delayed or Erroneous 
                              Contributions



Sec. 1606.9  Loan allotments.

    (a) Loan allotments deducted from a participant's pay but not timely 
received by the TSP recordkeeper due to employing agency error shall be 
subject to lost earnings. In such cases:
    (1) The employing agency must submit a lost earnings record 
indicating the amount of the loan allotment, the pay date for which the 
loan allotment was actually submitted, and the pay date for which the 
loan allotment should have been submitted;
    (2) The TSP recordkeeper shall compute lost earnings on the belated 
loan allotment using the G Fund rates of return for each month of the 
calculation;
    (3) The amount of lost earnings calculated shall be deposited in the 
participant's account pro rata among the three investment funds on the 
basis of the balances of the three investment funds in the participant's 
account as of the end of the second month preceding the month during 
which the lost earnings record is processed.
    (b) Loan allotments not deducted from a participant's pay due to 
employing agency error will not be subject to lost earnings.



Sec. 1606.10  Miscellaneous lost earnings.

    Where lost earnings result from employing agency errors not 
specifically covered by this subpart or subpart B, the employing agency 
must consult with the Board or TSP Recordkeeper to determine the manner 
in which the employing agency shall submit lost earnings records or 
other data necessary to facilitate the payment of lost earnings.



                    Subpart D--Lost Earnings Records



Sec. 1606.11  Agency submission of lost earnings records.

    (a) All lost earnings records required to be submitted pursuant to 
this part must be submitted to the TSP Recordkeeper in the manner and 
format prescribed in instructions provided to employing agencies by the 
Board or TSP recordkeeper.
    (b) Where this part requires submission of lost earnings records, 
the employing agency must submit a separate lost earnings record for 
each pay period affected by the error. A lost earnings record may 
include all three sources of contributions, or it may include loan 
allotments, but may not include both loan allotments and contributions.
    (c) Where this part requires the employing agency to indicate on a 
lost earnings record the investment fund to which a contribution would 
have been deposited had an employing agency error not occurred, that 
determination must be made solely on the basis of a properly completed 
allocation election on a Form TSP-1 that was accepted by the employing 
agency before the date the contribution should have been made, and that 
was still in effect as of

[[Page 175]]

that date. Where no such allocation election was in effect as of the 
date the contribution would have been made had the error not occurred, 
the lost earnings record submitted by the employing agency must indicate 
that the contributions should have been made to the G Fund. Under no 
circumstances may a participant or employing agency choose, after the 
date a contribution should have been made or the date that it was made 
to an erroneous investment fund, the investment fund to which the 
contribution would have been made had the employing error not occurred.
    (d) With respect to employing agency errors that cause money not to 
be invested in the Thrift Savings Fund, lost earnings records may not be 
submitted until the money to which the lost earnings relate has been 
invested in the Thrift Savings Fund. Where the employing agency error 
involved delayed TSP contributions, not lost earnings shall be payable 
unless and until the associated payment records are submitted in 
accordance with the provisions of 5 CFR part 1605. Lost earnings records 
and the delayed payment records to which they relate may be submitted 
simultaneously;
    (e) Where an employing agency erroneously submits a lost earnings 
record that is processed by the TSP recordkeeper, the employing agency 
must subsequently submit a lost earnings record indicating that the 
previous lost earnings transaction should be reversed.



Sec. 1606.12  Agency responsibility.

    (a) The employing agency whose error caused the delayed or erroneous 
investment of money in the Thrift Savings Fund shall, in a manner 
consistent with paragraph (b) of this section, be ultimately responsible 
for payment of any lost earnings resulting from that error.
    (b) The employing agency that submitted payment records or loan 
allotments that are subject to lost earnings shall be responsible for 
submitting lost earnings records relating to those submissions, and any 
lost earnings calculated shall be charged to that employing agency. 
Where another employing agency committed the error that caused the 
delayed or erroneous submission by the first employing agency, the 
employing agency that was charged for the lost earnings may seek 
reimbursement from the other employing agency.



               Subpart E--Processing Lost Earnings Records



Sec. 1606.13  Calculation and crediting of lost earnings.

    (a) Lost earnings records submitted or generated pursuant to this 
part shall be processed by the TSP recordkeeper during a mid-month 
processing cycle;
    (b) Lost earnings records received, edited, and accepted by the TSP 
recordkeeper by the next-to-last business day of a month shall be 
processed in the next month's mid-month processing cycle. Lost earnings 
records that are received, edited, and accepted on the last business day 
of a month shall be processed in the second mid-month processing cycle 
following acceptance;
    (c) In calculating lost earnings for a participant's account 
attributable to any lost earnings record, investment gains and losses 
calculated in different investment funds but within one source of 
contributions shall be offset against each other to obtain a net 
investment gain or loss for that source of contributions. Gains and 
losses for different sources of contributions shall not be offset 
against each other;
    (d) Where the de minimis rule of paragraph (d)(1) of Sec. 1606.3 of 
this part is met with regard to delayed contributions or loan 
allotments, the calculation of lost earnings shall commence with the pay 
date for the pay period for which the contributions would have been made 
had the employing agency error not occurred. With regard to lost 
earnings not related to delayed contributions or loan allotments, lost 
earnings shall commence with the month during which the employing agency 
error caused the failure to invest in the Thrift Savings Fund money that 
would have been invested had the employing agency error not occurred, or 
with the month that the money was invested in an incorrect investment 
fund. Lost earnings calculations shall conclude as of the end of the 
month

[[Page 176]]

prior to the month during which the lost earnings records are processed;
    (e) Negative lost earnings. Notwithstanding any other provision of 
this part, where the net lost earnings computed in accordance with this 
part on any lost earnings record are less than zero within a source of 
contributions, the employing agency account shall not be charged or 
credited with respect to that source of contributions. The amount of the 
negative lost earnings shall be removed from the participant's account 
and applied against TSP administrative expenses;
    (f) With respect to the period prior to December 31, 1990, in 
calculating lost earnings or determining the investment fund in which 
money would have been invested had an employing agency error not 
occurred, the TSP recordkeeper shall take into account the investment 
restrictions that were effective under 5 U.S.C. 8438 prior to the 
effective date of section 3 of the TSPTAA.
    (g) In calculating lost earnings or determining the investment fund 
in which money would have been invested had an employing agency error 
not occurred, the TSP recordkeeper shall take into account interfund 
transfers processed on or subsequent to the date the error affected the 
participant's account, and which were effective prior to the end of the 
month preceding the month during which the lost earnings record is 
processed.



             Subpart F--Participant Claims For Lost Earnings



Sec. 1606.14  Employing agency procedures.

    (a) Each employing agency must provide procedures for participants 
to file claims for lost earnings under this part. The employing agency 
procedures must include the following provisions:
    (1) The employing agency shall review each claim and provide the 
participant with a decision within 30 days of its receipt of the 
participant's written claim. The employing agency's decision to deny a 
claim in whole or in part shall be in writing and shall contain the 
following information--
    (i) The employing agency's determination on the claim and the 
reasons for it, including any appropriate references to applicable 
statutes or regulations;
    (ii) A description of any additional material or information which, 
if provided to the employing agency, would enable the employing agency 
to grant the participant's claim; and
    (iii) A description of the steps the participant must take if he or 
she wishes to appeal and initial denial of the claim, including the name 
and title of the employing agency official to whom the appeal may be 
taken;
    (2) Within 30 days of receipt of the employing agency decision 
denying the claim, a participant may appeal the employing agency 
decision. The appeal must be in writing and must be addressed to the 
employing agency official designated in the initial employing agency 
decision. The appeal may contain any documents and comments that the 
employee deems relevant to the claim;
    (3) The employing agency must take a decision on the participant's 
appeal not later than 30 days after it receives the appeal. The agency's 
decision on the appeal must be written in an understandable manner and 
must include the reasons for the decision as well as any appropriate 
references to applicable statutes and regulations. If the decision on 
the employee's appeal is not made within this 30-day time period, or if 
the appeal is denied in whole or in part, the participant will have 
exhausted his or her administrative remedy and will be eligible to file 
suit against the employing agency in the appropriate Federal district 
court pursuant to 5 U.S.C. 8477. There is no administrative appeal to 
the Board of an agency final decision.
    (b) Where it is determined that lost earnings resulted from an 
employing agency error, nothing in this part shall be deemed to preclude 
an employing agency from paying lost earnings in the absence of a claim 
from the employee.



Sec. 1606.15  Time limits on participant claims.

    (a) Participant claims for lost earnings pursuant to Sec. 1606.14 of 
this part must be filed within one year of the later of:

[[Page 177]]

    (1) January 1, 1991, or
    (2) The participant's receipt of the earliest of the TSP Participant 
Statement, TSP Loan Statement, employing agency earnings and leave 
statement, or any other document that indicates that the employing 
agency error has affected the participant's TSP account;
    (b) Nothing in this section changes the provision of paragraph (d) 
of Sec. 1606.11 that no lost earnings shall be payable with respect to 
delayed contributions unless and until the contributions are submitted 
to the TSP recordkeeper in accordance with 5 CFR part 1605, nor does 
anything in this section extend any time limits for correcting 
contributions under 5 CFR part 1605. Thus, notwithstanding paragraph (a) 
of this section, if a participant is unable to have contributions 
corrected due to time limits contained in 5 CFR part 1605, no lost 
earnings shall be payable with respect to those contributions.



PART 1620--CONTINUATION OF ELIGIBILITY--Table of Contents




                  Subpart A--House Cafeteria Employees

Sec.
1620.1  Continuation of eligibility to participate in the Thrift Savings 
          Plan.

           Subpart B--Cooperative Extension Service Employees

1620.10  Scope.
1620.11  Definitions.
1620.12  Contributions by employing authority.
1620.13  Prior employer contributions.
1620.14  Deadline for employing authority to begin employee 
          contributions.
1620.15  Initial election period for employees.
1620.16  Computing percentage of basic pay.
1620.17  Retroactive employer and employee contributions.
1620.18  Payment to the recordkeeper; notice.
1620.19  Other regulations.

Subpart C--Union Employees and Intergovernmental Personnel Act Employees

1620.30  Scope.
1620.31  Definitions.
1620.32  Contributions by employing authority.
1620.33  Deadline for employing authority to begin employee 
          contributions.
1620.34  Initial election period for employees.
1620.35  Computing percentage of basic pay.
1620.36  Employee make-up contributions.
1620.37  Make-up contributions by employing authority.
1620.38  Payment to the recordkeeper.
1620.39  Notices.
1620.40  Other regulations.

      Subpart D--Certain Civil Service Retirement System Employees

1620.50  Scope.
1620.51  Definitions.
1620.52  Deadline for employing authority to begin employee 
          contributions; notice to Board.
1620.53  Initial election period for employees.
1620.54  Retroactive employee contributions.
1620.55  Computing percentage of basic pay.
1620.56  Payment to the recordkeeper.
1620.57  Other regulations.

              Subpart E--Bankruptcy Judges and Magistrates

1620.70  Scope.
1620.71  Definitions.
1620.72  Plan contributions after choosing judges' annuity.
1620.73  Election of Plan benefits after choosing judges' annuity.
1620.74  Spousal rights.
1620.75  Offset of judges' annuity.

               Subpart F--Article III Justices and Judges

1620.80  Scope.
1620.81  Definitions.
1620.82  Periods for making or changing contributions.
1620.83  Contributions to the plan.
1620.84  Election of Plan benefits.
1620.85  Spousal rights.

                Subpart G--Nonappropriated Fund Employees

1620.90  Scope.
1620.91  Definitions.
1620.92  Employees who move to a NAF instrumentality on or after August 
          10, 1996.
1620.93  Employees who moved to a NAF instrumentality prior to August 
          10, 1996, but after December 31, 1965.
1620.94  Employees who move from a NAF Instrumentality to a Federal 
          Government agency.
1620.95  Payment of TSP contributions.
1620.96  Loan payments.
1620.97  Transmission of information.
1620.98  Notices.
1620.99  Other regulations.

                       Subpart H--Military Service

1620.100  Scope.
1620.101  Definitions.

[[Page 178]]

1620.102  Processing contribution elections.
1620.103  Processing lost earnings.
1620.104  Agency payments to recordkeeper; agency ultimately chargeable.
1620.105  Restoring forfeited Agency Automatic (1%) Contributions.
1620.106  Returning withdrawals.
1620.107  Agency responsibilities.

   Subpart I--Certain Employees of the District of Columbia Financial 
           Responsibility and Management Assistance Authority.

1620.110  Scope.
1620.111  Definitions.
1620.112  Eligibility requirements.
1620.113  Notice to an employee of his or her right to participate in 
          the TSP.
1620.114  Employee contributions.
1620.115  Employer contributions.
1620.116  TSP contributions.
1620.117  TSP loan payments.
1620.118  Failure to participate or delay in participation.
1620.119  Other regulations.

    Authority: 5 U.S.C. 8474 and 8432b; Pub. L. 99-591, 100 Stat. 3341; 
Pub. L. 100-238, 101 Stat. 1744; Pub. L. 100-659, 102 Stat. 3910; Pub. 
L. 101-508, 104 Stat. 1388; Pub. L. 104-106, 110 Stat. 186; Pub. L. 104-
134, 110 Stat. 1321.



                  Subpart A--House Cafeteria Employees



Sec. 1620.1  Continuation of eligibility to participate in the Thrift Savings Plan.

    (a) Scope. When the food service operations of the House of 
Representatives were transferred to a private contractor, Congressional 
food service employees were provided the opportunity by Pub. L. 99-591 
to elect to continue their retirement coverage under subchapter III of 
chapter 83 and chapter 84 of title 5, United States Code. These 
regulations govern participation by these employees in the Thrift 
Savings Plan. They apply to employees who made that election pursuant to 
paragraph (b) of this section prior to becoming employed by the private 
contractor. They apply to the incumbent contractor and to any successor 
contractors that hold the contract to provide food service to the U.S. 
House of Representatives.
    (b) Eligibility requirements. In order to be eligible to participate 
in the Thrift Savings Plan, an individual must:
    (1) Have been a Congressional employee (as defined in section 2107 
of title 5, United States Code), other than an employee of the Architect 
of the Capitol, engaged in providing food service operations for the 
House of Representatives under the administrative control of the 
Architect of the Capitol;
    (2) Have been subject to subchapter III of chapter 83 of title 5, 
United States Code, or chapter 84 of such title;
    (3) Have elected to remain covered under Federal service retirement 
provisions no later than January 2, 1987;
    (4) Have made the transition from Congressional employee to private 
contractor employee without a break in service; and
    (5) Continue to be employed to provide food services to the U.S. 
House of Representatives without a break in service. A ``break in 
service'' means a separation from employment of at least three calendar 
days.
    (c) Employee deductions. An employee who elects to continue coverage 
under title 5 retirement provisions and who desires to participate in 
the Thrift Savings Plan shall be governed by the Federal Retirement 
Thrift Investment Board regulations located in title 5, Code of Federal 
Regulations, part 1600. Employee participation will be through 
deductions from his or her basic pay and the employer will, in 
accordance with procedures established by the Board, pay into the Thrift 
Savings Fund the amounts deducted from the employee's pay.
    (d) Employer contributions. For employees covered by the Federal 
Employees' Retirement System, the employer providing food services under 
the contract shall, in accordance with procedures established by the 
Board, pay into the Thrift Savings Fund amounts equal to the agency 
contributions which would be required if the employee were a 
Congressional employee covered by the Federal Employees Retirement 
System.

[52 FR 26293, July 14, 1987]



           Subpart B--Cooperative Extension Service Employees

    Source: 53 FR 10038, Mar. 28, 1988, unless otherwise noted.

[[Page 179]]



Sec. 1620.10  Scope.

    This subpart applies to any individual participating in the Civil 
Service Retirement System or the Federal Employees' Retirement System 
who has been appointed or otherwise assigned to one of the cooperative 
extension services, as defined by section 1404(5) of the National 
Agricultural Research, Extension, and Teaching Policy Act of 1977 (7 
U.S.C. 3103(5)).



Sec. 1620.11  Definitions.

    (a) As used in this subpart, the term employing authority means that 
organization within a State which employs an individual covered by 
Sec. 1620.10 of this part and which has authority to make personnel 
compensation decisions for such employees.
    (b) As used in this subpart, the term participating means paying 
contributions to the basic annuity under either the Civil Service 
Retirement System or the Federal Employees' Retirement System.



Sec. 1620.12  Contributions by employing authority.

    (a) An employing authority, at its sole discretion, may choose to 
make employer contributions for individuals in its employ who are 
participating in the Federal Employees' Retirement System as if that 
authority were the individual's employing Federal agency under the 
provisions of 5 U.S.C. 8432(c).
    (b) If an employing authority chooses to make employer 
contributions, such contributions may be made for any period of eligible 
service since January 1, 1984. These contributions consist of the 
automatic one percent contribution (5 U.S.C. 8432(c)(1)(A)) and the 
employer matching contribution (5 U.S.C. 8432(c)(2)), as well as 
contributions for periods of eligible service after April 1, 1987 and 
contributions for eligible service prior to April 1, 1987 (5 U.S.C. 
8432(c)(1)(B) and (C), and 8432(c)(3)).
    (c) An employing authority may only commence employer contributions 
or terminate employer contributions during a Thrift Savings Plan 
election period. The employing authority must provide all affected 
employees with a notice of this decision to commence or terminate 
employer contributions at least 45 days before the beginning of the 
applicable election period.
    (d) An employing authority that has chosen to make employer 
contributions must treat all of its employees who are eligible to 
receive employer contributions in the same manner.
    (e) The employing authority must not make any employer contributions 
on behalf of individuals who are subject to the Civil Service Retirement 
System.



Sec. 1620.13  Prior employer contributions.

    Any employing authority that has made employer contributions before 
the publication date of this subpart will not be deemed to have chosen 
to make these contributions by virtue of these payments. However, if 
such an authority fails to choose to make employer contributions, 
contributions previously made on behalf of an eligible employee may not 
be retrieved.



Sec. 1620.14  Deadline for employing authority to begin employee contributions.

    An employing authority must allow employees participating in the 
Federal Employees' Retirement System or the Civil Service Retirement 
System to make contributions to the Thrift Savings Plan no later than 
the pay period following its acceptance of the employee's election form.



Sec. 1620.15  Initial election period for employees.

    Employees who are participating in the Civil Service Retirement 
System or the Federal Employees' Retirement System must be permitted to 
file an election form with the employing authority identifying the 
amount, if any, of their contribution to the Thrift Savings Plan at any 
time within 60 days of the date of publication of this subpart. Any 
employee who was eligible to participate in a prior election period, but 
was denied the opportunity to do so, must be given the opportunity to 
make any election which he or she could have otherwise made in 1987 or 
1988.

[[Page 180]]



Sec. 1620.16  Computing percentage of basic pay.

    When the employing authority computes a percentage of basic pay to 
determine the amount to be contributed to the Thrift Savings Fund, the 
rate of basic pay to be used must be the same as that used in computing 
any amount the individual is otherwise required to contribute to the 
Civil Service Retirement and Disability Fund as a condition for 
participating in the Civil Service Retirement System or the Federal 
Employees' Retirement System, as the case may be.



Sec. 1620.17  Retroactive employer and employee contributions.

    (a) Retroactive employer contributions. An employing authority that 
has chosen to make employer contributions may make the employer 
contributions described in Sec. 1620.12(b) on behalf of employees 
participating in the Federal Employees' Retirement System to the extent 
that neither the employing authority nor the Federal Government has 
already made these contributions. The employing authority must make 
these retroactive employer contributions in accordance with the 
procedure described in Sec. 1620.37 of this part.
    (b) Retroactive employee contributions. Employees participating in 
the Civil Service Retirement System or the Federal Employees' Retirement 
System shall be allowed to make, on a retroactive basis, all employee 
contributions for eligible periods of service with the employing 
authority unless these employees have already had the opportunity to 
make contributions for these periods of service. Retroactive employee 
contributions shall be made in accordance with the procedures described 
in Sec. 1620.36 of this part.



Sec. 1620.18  Payment to the recordkeeper; notice.

    (a) Payment. Employing authorities will make applicable employer 
contributions, if any, and employee contributions (deducted from the 
employee's actual pay) to the Board's Recordkeeper. At this time, the 
Recordkeeper is the National Finance Center, Department of Agriculture, 
New Orleans, Louisiana.
    (b) Notice. Within 30 days from the date of the publication of this 
part, the Department of Agriculture must notify each employing authority 
concerning the applicability of these regulations to employees covered 
by Sec. 1620.10 of this part.



Sec. 1620.19   Other regulations.

    Employing authorities and individuals covered by Sec. 1620.10 of 
this part are governed by the regulations in chapter VI, title 5, Code 
of Federal Regulations to the extent that those regulations are not 
inconsistent with this subpart.



Subpart C--Union Employees and Intergovernmental Personnel Act Employees

    Source: 53 FR 10039, Mar. 28, 1988, unless otherwise noted.



Sec. 1620.30   Scope.

    This subpart applies to any individual participating in the Civil 
Service Retirement System or the Federal Employees' Retirement System 
who--
    (a) Has entered on approved leave without pay to serve as a full-
time officer or employee of an organization composed primarily of 
employees as defined by section 8331(1) or 8401(11) of title 5, United 
States Code; or
    (b) Has been assigned, on an approved leave without pay basis, from 
a Federal agency to a State or local government under subchapter VI of 
chapter 33, title 5, United States Code.



Sec. 1620.31   Definitions.

    As used in this subpart, the terms--
    (a) Employing authority means any entity that employs an individual 
covered by Sec. 1620.30 of this part and which has authority to make 
personnel compensation decisions for such employees; and
    (b) Participating means that the employee (or employing authority on 
behalf of the employee) is paying contributions to the basic annuity 
under either the Civil Service Retirement System or the Federal 
Employees' Retirement System.

[[Page 181]]



Sec. 1620.32   Contributions by employing authority.

    (a) An employing authority, at its sole discretion, may choose to 
make employer contributions for individuals in its employ who are 
participating in the Federal Employees' Retirement System as if that 
authority were the individual's employing Federal agency under the 
provisions of 5 U.S.C. 8432(c).
    (b) If an employing authority chooses to make employer 
contributions, such contributions may be made for any period of eligible 
service since January 1, 1984. These contributions consist of the 
automatic one percent contribution (5 U.S.C. 8432(c)(1)(A)) and the 
employer matching contribution (5 U.S.C. 8432(c)(2)) as well as 
contributions for periods of eligible service dating from April 1, 1987 
and contributions for eligible service prior to April 1, 1987 (5 U.S.C. 
8432(c)(1) (B) and (C), and 8432(c)(3)).
    (c) An employing authority may only commence employer contributions 
or terminate employer contributions during a Thrift Savings Plan 
election period. The employing authority must provide all affected 
employees with a notice of this decision to commence or terminate 
employer contributions at least 45 days before the beginning of the 
applicable election period.
    (d) An employing authority that has chosen to make employer 
contributions must treat all of its employees who are eligible to 
receive employer contributions in the same manner. If an employing 
authority chooses to provide employer make-up contributions, it must 
provide those contributions on behalf of an employee who has returned to 
his or her agency of record or transferred to another Federal agency 
without a break in service to the extent that they relate to his or her 
past service with such authority.



Sec. 1620.33   Deadline for employing authority to begin employee contributions.

    An employing authority must allow an employee participating in the 
Civil Service Retirement System or the Federal Employees' Retirement 
System to begin making contributions no later than the pay period 
following its acceptance of the employee's election form.



Sec. 1620.34   Initial election period for employees.

    Employees who are participating in the Civil Service Retirement 
System or the Federal Employees' Retirement System must be permitted to 
file an election form with the employing authority identifying the 
amount, if any, of their contribution to the Thrift Savings Plan at any 
time from the publication date of these regulations through June 30, 
1988. Any employee who was eligible to participate in a prior election 
period, but was denied the opportunity to do so, must be given the 
opportunity to make any election which he or she could have otherwise 
made in 1987 or 1988.

[53 FR 10039, Mar. 28, 1988, as amended by 53 FR 17685, May 18, 1988]



Sec. 1620.35   Computing percentage of basic pay.

    When the employing authority computes a percentage of basic pay to 
determine the amount to be contributed to the Thrift Savings Fund, the 
rate of basic pay to be used must be the same as that used in computing 
any amount that the individual involved is otherwise required to 
contribute to the Civil Service Retirement and Disability Fund as a 
condition for participating in the Civil Service Retirement System or 
the Federal Employees' Retirement System, as the case may be.



Sec. 1620.36   Employee make-up contributions.

    (a) If the employee chooses, the employing authority must compute 
the amount of employee contributions for which the employee would have 
been eligible to make after April 1, 1987, from the employee's net 
payable salary according to a schedule of equal payments that the 
employee has agreed to. The employee must make this election within 30 
days of the date that he or she is notified by the employing authority 
of the opportunity to schedule make-up payments, or forfeit the 
opportunity to do so. The employing authority may set a ceiling on the 
number of pay periods over which the

[[Page 182]]

make-up payments may be made; however, this ceiling may not be less than 
two times the number of pay periods in which the payments could have 
been made. The payment schedule must begin no later than the pay period 
following the date of the agreed-upon schedule and it may not contain 
more than four times the number of pay periods in which the payments 
could have been made.
    (b) If the agreed-upon payment schedule cannot be met because the 
employee has insufficient net pay or because the employee has reached an 
annual ceiling for tax-deferred contributions under 26 U.S.C. 402(g) or 
415, the payment schedule will be suspended until the employee is again 
able to make full payments through payroll deductions. Pay periods that 
are prescribed in the payment schedule, and for which an employee is 
unable to make payments because of insufficient net pay or a ceiling on 
tax-deferred contributions, will not be counted against the maximum 
number of pay periods applicable to the schedule and the maximum number 
of applicable pay periods must be extended accordingly. Employees may 
not make partial payments under a payment schedule.
    (c) If an employee chooses to contribute the make-up amount, he or 
she may terminate that decision and that termination shall be 
irrevocable. If an employee separates from employment in such a way as 
to become ineligible to participate in the Thrift Savings Plan, the 
employee may terminate the retroactive contribution or accelerate the 
contribution by lump sum payment from the final salary payment (not 
including any lump sum annual leave payment). If the employee dies, the 
retroactive contribution of the deceased employee will be terminated as 
of the final salary payment.
    (d) The retroactive payment amount is not subject to the maximum pay 
period contribution limitations; however, these amounts must be included 
when determining amounts subject to annual ceilings on contributions 
under 26 U.S.C. 402(g) or 415.
    (e) In the event an employee does not have sufficient net pay to 
make all of the Thrift Savings Plan deductions, the employee's regular 
Thrift Savings Plan deduction shall take precedence over the employee's 
payment schedule contribution.



Sec. 1620.37  Make-up contributions by employing authority.

    Make-up contributions by the employing authority are not subject to 
the limitations on maximum pay period contributions; however, these 
amounts must be included when determining amounts subject to any 
applicable annual ceiling described in 26 U.S.C. 415.



Sec. 1620.38  Payment to the recordkeeper.

    The employing authority is responsible for transmitting employer and 
employee contributions to the employee's Federal agency of record. 
Employee contributions will be deducted from the employee's actual pay. 
The employee's agency of record is responsible for transmitting the 
employer and employee contributions to the Board's Recordkeeper. The 
employee's election form (TSP-1) will be filed in the employee's 
official personnel folder.



Sec. 1620.39  Notices.

    (a) Federal agencies who are employers of record of any individuals 
covered by Sec. 1620.30 of this part must notify employing authorities 
and affected employees of the application of these regulations no later 
than 30 days from their publication date.
    (b) Each employing authority must notify the Board no later than 60 
days from the publication date of these regulations that it employs 
individuals covered by Sec. 1620.30 of this part. Entities which become 
employing authorities after the publication date of these regulations 
must provide the Board with this notice within 60 days of employing an 
individual covered by Sec. 1620.30 of this part.



Sec. 1620.40  Other regulations.

    Employing authorities and individuals covered by Sec. 1620.30 of 
this part are governed by the regulations in chapter

[[Page 183]]

VI, title 5, Code of Federal Regulations, to the extent that those 
regulations are not inconsistent with this subpart.



      Subpart D--Certain Civil Service Retirement System Employees

    Source: 53 FR 10041, Mar. 28, 1988, unless otherwise noted.



Sec. 1620.50  Scope.

    This subpart applies to any individual who is participating in the 
Civil Service Retirement System as a result of a provision of law 
described in section 8347(o) of title 5, United States Code.



Sec. 1620.51  Definitions.

    As used in this subpart the terms--
    (a) Employing authority means that organization that employs an 
individual covered by Sec. 1620.50 of this part and which has authority 
to make personnel compensation decisions for such employees; and
    (b) Participating means paying contributions to the basic annuity 
under the Civil Service Retirement System.



Sec. 1620.52  Deadline for employing authority to begin employee contributions; notice to Board.

    An employing authority must begin making contributions from an 
employee covered by Sec. 1620.50 of this part no later than the pay 
period following its acceptance of the employee's election form. These 
contributions must be made to the Board's Recordkeeper. The employing 
authority must notify the Board no later than 60 days from the 
publication date of these regulations that it employs individuals 
covered by Sec. 1620.50 of this part.



Sec. 1620.53  Initial election period for employees.

    Employees who are covered by Sec. 1620.50 of this part must be 
permitted to file an election form with the employing authority 
identifying the amount, if any, of their contribution to the Thrift 
Savings Plan at any time before the expiration of 60 days after the 
publication date of this subpart. Any employee who was eligible to 
participate in a prior election period, but was denied the opportunity 
to do so, must be given the opportunity to make any election which he or 
she could have otherwise made in 1987 or 1988.



Sec. 1620.54  Retroactive employee contributions.

    Employees participating in the Civil Service Retirement System shall 
be allowed to make, on a retroactive basis, all employee contributions 
for eligible periods of service with the employing authority unless 
these employees have already had the opportunity to make contributions 
to the Thrift Savings Plan for these periods of service. Retroactive 
employee contributions shall be made in accordance with the procedures 
described in Sec. 1620.36 of this part.



Sec. 1620.55  Computing percentage of basic pay.

    When the employing authority computes a percentage of basic pay to 
determine the amount to be contributed to the Thrift Savings Fund, the 
rate of basic pay to be used must be the same as that used in computing 
any amount that the individual involved is otherwise required to 
contribute to the Civil Service Retirement and Disability Fund as a 
condition for participating in the Civil Service Retirement System.



Sec. 1620.56  Payment to the recordkeeper.

    Employing authorities will make applicable employee contributions 
(deducted from the employee's actual pay) to the Board's Recordkeeper. 
At this time, the Recordkeeper is the National Finance Center, 
Department of Agriculture, New Orleans, Louisiana.



Sec. 1620.57  Other regulations.

    Employing authorities and individuals covered by Sec. 1620.50 of 
this part are governed by the regulations in chapter VI, title 5, Code 
of Federal Regulations, to the extent that those regulations are not 
inconsistent with this subpart.



              Subpart E--Bankruptcy Judges and Magistrates

    Source: 54 FR 32786, Aug. 10, 1989, unless otherwise noted.

[[Page 184]]



Sec. 1620.70  Scope.

    This subpart applies to any bankruptcy judge or magistrate who has 
chosen to receive an annuity under 28 U.S.C. 377 or section 2(c) of the 
Retirement and Survivors' Annuities for Bankruptcy Judges and 
Magistrates Act of 1988, Public Law 100-659. Such a bankruptcy judge or 
magistrate may participate in the Plan only as allowed in the following 
regulations. A bankruptcy judge or magistrate who is not covered by 28 
U.S.C. 377 or section 2(c) of the Act may participate in the Plan as 
allowed under either 5 U.S.C. 8351, if a CSRS employee, or 5 U.S.C. 
8430-8440, 8471-8479, if a FERS employee.



Sec. 1620.71  Definitions.

    As used in this subpart, these terms have the following meanings:
    Account balance means the total amount of money in an individual 
account;
    Act means the Retirement and Survivors' Annuities for Bankruptcy 
Judges and Magistrates Act of 1988, Public Law 100-659;
    Bankruptcy judge or judge means an individual described in 28 U.S.C. 
377(h)(1), as added by the Act;
    C Fund means the Common Stock Index Investment Fund established 
under 5 U.S.C. 8438(b)(1)(C);
    CSRS means the Civil Service Retirement System established by 
subchapter III of chapter 83 of title 5, U.S.C., and any equivalent 
Government retirement plan;
    CSRS employee means any employee covered by CSRS or any equivalent 
Government retirement plan;
    Employee contributions means any contributions made under 5 U.S.C. 
8432(a) or 5 U.S.C. 8351(a);
    Employer contributions means Government basic contributions and 
Government matching contributions;
    FERS means the Federal Employees' Retirement System established by 
chapter 84 of title 5, U.S.C., and any equivalent Government retirement 
plan;
    FERS employee means any employee covered by FERS or any equivalent 
Government retirement plan;
    F Fund means the Fixed Income Investment Fund established under 5 
U.S.C. 8438(b)(1)(B);
    G Fund means the Government Securities Investment Fund established 
under 5 U.S.C. 8438(b)(1)(A);
    Government basic contributions means any contributions made under 5 
U.S.C. 8432(c)(1) or 5 U.S.C. 8432(c)(3);
    Government matching contributions means any contributions made under 
5 U.S.C. 8432(c)(2);
    Investment Fund means the G Fund, the F Fund, or the C Fund;
    Judges' annuity means an annuity under 28 U.S.C. 377 or section 2(c) 
of the Retirement and Survivors' Annuities for Bankruptcy Judges and 
Magistrates Act of 1988, Public Law 100-659;
    Magistrate means an individual appointed pursuant to 28 U.S.C. 631;
    Participant means any person with an individual account in the 
Thrift Savings Fund;
    Recordkeeper means the organization designated by the Board as the 
Plan's recordkeeper;
    Thrift Savings Fund or Fund means the Fund described in 5 U.S.C. 
8437;
    Thrift Savings Plan or Plan means the Federal Retirement Thrift 
Savings Plan established by the Federal Employees' Retirement System Act 
of 1986, codified in pertinent part at 5 U.S.C 8431-8440, 8471-8479.



Sec. 1620.72  Plan contributions after choosing judges' annuity.

    (a) A judge or magistrate who has chosen to receive a judges' 
annuity is entitled to contribute to the Plan. Except as otherwise 
provided in this subpart, these judges and magistrates are covered by 
the same rules and regulations as apply to CSRS participants in the 
Plan.
    (b)(1) Judges and magistrates who have chosen to receive a judges' 
annuity may elect to contribute up to 5 percent of their basic pay per 
period to the Plan. Basic pay has the same meaning as under 5 U.S.C. 
8331(3). Amounts received under a judges' annuity are not basic pay, and 
no Plan contributions may be made from those annuity payments.
    (2) Retirement under 28 U.S.C. 377, including removal from office 
under section 377(d) on the ground of mental or physical disability, is 
a separation from service.

[[Page 185]]

    (c) A judge or magistrate who has chosen to receive a judges' 
annuity is not entitled to receive employer contributions under 5 U.S.C. 
8432(c). This limitation does not apply retroactively or in any other 
way cause a judge or magistrate who previously was eligible to receive 
employer contributions under 5 U.S.C. 8432(c) to forfeit those 
contributions. However, as indicated in Sec. 1620.76 below, the judge or 
magistrate may receive a reduced annuity under 28 U.S.C. 377 or section 
2(c) of the Act as a result of such contributions.

[54 FR 32786, Aug. 10, 1989, as amended at 59 FR 1889, Jan. 13, 1994; 61 
FR 58755, Nov. 18, 1996]



Sec. 1620.73  Election of Plan benefits after choosing judges' annuity.

    (a) A judge or magistrate who has chosen to receive a judges' 
annuity and who separates after age 65 entitled to an immediate annuity 
under either section 28 U.S.C. 377 or section 2(c) of the Act, or who 
separates at any age entitled to a disability annuity under 28 U.S.C. 
377(d), may elect to receive his or her Plan account as provided in 5 
U.S.C. 8433(b).
    (b) A judge or magistrate who has chosen to receive a judges' 
annuity and who separates before reaching age 65, but who is entitled to 
receive an annuity under 28 U.S.C. 377(c) or section 2(c) of the Act 
upon reaching age 65, may elect to receive his or her Plan account as 
provided in 5 U.S.C. 8433(c). However, the period described in section 
8433(c)(3) will be the period that begins on or after the date on which 
the judge's or magistrate's annuity under 28 U.S.C. 377 or section 2(c) 
of the Act commences.
    (c) A judge or magistrate who has chosen to receive a judges' 
annuity and who separates before becoming eligible under 28 U.S.C. 377 
or section 2(c) of the Act for an immediate annuity or an annuity upon 
reaching 65 is required to transfer his or her Plan account balance to 
an eligible retirement plan as defined in 26 U.S.C. 402(a)(5)(E)(iv).

[54 FR 32786, Aug. 10, 1989. Redesignated at 59 FR 1889, Jan. 13, 1994]



Sec. 1620.74  Spousal rights.

    (a) A spouse or former spouse of a judge or magistrate who is a Plan 
participate and who has not chosen a judges' annuity retains the rights 
provided under 5 U.S.C. 8351, if the judge or magistrate is a CSRS 
employee, or under 5 U.S.C. 8435 and 8467, if the judge or magistrate is 
a FERS employee.
    (b) A spouse or former spouse of a judge or magistrate who is a Plan 
participant and who has chosen a judges' annuity is entitled to whatever 
rights are provided under 5 U.S.C. 8435 and 8467 with respect to the 
judge's or magistrate's entire Plan account. Section 5 U.S.C. 8351 does 
not apply to a spouse or former spouse of a judge or magistrate who has 
chosen a judges' annuity, even if the judge or magistrate was a CSRS 
employee before choosing a judges' annuity.

[54 FR 32786, Aug. 10, 1989. Redesignated at 59 FR 1889, Jan. 13, 1994]



Sec. 1620.75  Offset of judges' annuity.

    Under rules to be established by the Administrative Office of the 
United States Courts, the annuity received by a judge or magistrate 
under 28 U.S.C. 377 or section 2(c) of the Act will be reduced by the 
amount of employer contributions to the Plan made on behalf of the judge 
or magistrate.

[54 FR 32786, Aug. 10, 1989. Redesignated at 59 FR 1889, Jan. 13, 1994]



               Subpart F--Article III Justices and Judges

    Source: 54 FR 32787, Aug. 10, 1989, unless otherwise noted.



Sec. 1620.80  Scope.

    This subpart applies to any justice or judge of the United States, 
as defined in 28 U.S.C. 451.



Sec. 1620.81  Definitions.

    As used in this subpart, these terms have the following meanings:
    Account balance means the total amount of money in an individual 
account;
    Act means the Federal Employees Health Benefits Amendments Act of 
1988, Public Law 100-654 (November 14, 1988);

[[Page 186]]

    C Fund means the Common Stock Index Investment Fund established 
under 5 U.S.C. 8438(b)(1)(C);
    CSRS means the Civil Service Retirement System established by 
subchapter III of chapter 83 of title 5, U.S.C., and any equivalent 
Government retirement plan;
    CSRS employee means any employee covered by CSRS or any equivalent 
Government retirement plan;
    Election period means the last calendar month of an open season and 
is the earliest period in which an election to make or change a 
contribution during that open season can become effective;
    Employee contributions means any contributions made under 5 U.S.C. 
8432(a) or 5 U.S.C. 8351(a);
    Employer contributions means Government basic contributions and 
Government matching contributions;
    FERS means the Federal Employees' Retirement System established by 
Chapter 84 of Title 5, U.S.C., and any equivalent Government retirement 
plan;
    FERS employee means any employee covered by FERS or any equivalent 
Government retirement plan;
    F Fund means the Fixed Income Investment Fund established under 5 
U.S.C. 8438(b)(1)(B);
    G Fund means the Government Securities Investment Fund established 
under 5 U.S.C. 8438(b)(1)(A);
    Government basic contributions means any contributions made under 5 
U.S.C. 8432(c)(1) or 5 U.S.C. 8432(c)(3);
    Government matching contributions means any contributions made under 
5 U.S.C. 8432(c)(2);
    Investment Fund means the G Fund, the F Fund, or the C Fund;
    Judge means a judge of the United States, as defined in 28 U.S.C. 
451;
    Justice means a justice of the United States, as defined in 28 
U.S.C. 451;
    Open season means the period during which participants may elect to 
begin making contributions to the Thrift Savings Plan, or change the 
rate of contributions, or discontinue (without losing the right to 
recommence contributions the next open season) the amount currently 
being contributed to the Thrift Savings Plan;
    Participant means any person with an individual account in the 
Thrift Savings Fund;
    Recordkeeper means the organization designated by the Board as the 
Plan's recordkeeper;
    Thrift Savings Fund or Fund means the Fund described in 5 U.S.C. 
8437;
    Thrift Savings Plan or Plan means the Federal Retirement Thrift 
Savings Plan established by the Federal Employees' Retirement System Act 
of 1986, codified in pertinent part at 5 U.S.C. 8431-8440, 8471-8479.



Sec. 1620.82  Periods for making or changing contributions.

    (a) Initial Election Period. Any justice or judge who is receiving 
basic pay may elect to make contributions to the Plan during a special 
election period beginning on November 15, 1988 and continuing through 
January 13, 1989, which is the 60-day period immediately following the 
effective date of the Act. Any properly completed election forms that 
are accepted by the payroll office during this 60-day period will be 
effective no later than the next pay period beginning after the date of 
acceptance.
    (b) Subsequent Election Periods. For every election period that 
begins after the beginning date of the initial election period described 
in paragraph (a) of this action, including the election period from 
January 1, 1989 through January 31, 1989, justices and judges are 
subject to the provisions of 5 U.S.C. 8432(b) and part 1600 of 5 CFR, 
and may choose to stop, start, or change their rate of contribution to 
the Plan in accordance with those provisions and applicable regulations. 
Accordingly, justices and judges who are appointed after January 13, 
1989, and who were not previously eligible to make contributions to the 
Plan, must wait until the second election period after they are 
appointed to make contributions to the Plan.



Sec. 1620.83  Contributions to the Plan.

    (a) Pursuant to section 401 of the Act, justices and judges may 
contribute an amount up to 5 percent of basic pay per pay period to the 
Plan. For purposes of these contributions, ``basic pay'' has the same 
meaning as that contained in

[[Page 187]]

5 U.S.C. 8331(3). Salary or annuity payments received under 28 U.S.C. 
371 (a), (b), and 372(a), are not ``basic pay.''
    (b) A justice or judge contributing to the TSP is not entitled to 
receive employer contributions under 5 U.S.C. 8432(c). However, any 
employer contributions previously made on behalf of a justice or judge 
while he or she served as a FERS employee will remain identified as 
employer contributions for recordkeeping purposes.

[54 FR 23787, Aug. 10, 1989, as amended at 59 FR 1889, Jan. 13, 1994; 61 
FR 58755, Nov. 18, 1996]



Sec. 1620.84  Election of Plan benefits.

    (a) A justice or judge who retires under section 371 (a) or (b) or 
section 372(a) of title 28, may elect to receive his or her Plan account 
as provided in 5 U.S.C. 8433(b).
    (b) A justice or judge who resigns or separates before having met 
the age and service requirements listed in section 371(c) of title 28 is 
required to transfer his or her Plan account balance to an eligible 
retirement plan as defined in 26 U.S.C. 402(a)(5)(E)(iv).

[54 FR 23787, Aug. 10, 1989. Redesignated at 59 FR 1890, Jan. 13, 1994]



Sec. 1620.85  Spousal rights.

    For purposes of amounts held in the Plan, a spouse or former spouse 
of a justice or judge who is a Plan participant is entitled to the 
rights provided under 5 U.S.C. 8351(b)(7).

[54 FR 23787, Aug. 10, 1989. Redesignated at 59 FR 1890, Jan. 13, 1994]



                Subpart G--Nonappropriated Fund Employees

    Source: 61 FR 41486, Aug. 9, 1996, unless otherwise noted.



Sec. 1620.90  Scope.

    This subpart applies to any employee of a Nonappropriated Fund (NAF) 
instrumentality of the Department of Defense (DOD) or the U.S. Coast 
Guard who elects to be covered by the Civil Service Retirement System 
(CSRS) or the Federal Employees' Retirement System (FERS) and to any 
employee in a CSRS or FERS covered position who elects to be covered by 
a retirement plan established for employees of a NAF instrumentality 
pursuant to the Portability of Benefits for Nonappropriated Fund 
Employees Act of 1990, Pub. L. 101-508, 104 Stat. 1388, 1388-335 to 
1388-341 (codified largely at 5 U.S.C. 8347(p)(1) and 8461(n)(1) 
(1994)), as amended by section 1043 of the National Defense 
Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 1996, Pub. L. 104-106, 110 Stat. 186, 
434-439.



Sec. 1620.91  Definitions.

    As used in this subpart, the terms--
    Basic pay means the pay from the NAF instrumentality used to compute 
the amount the individual is required to contribute to the Civil Service 
Retirement and Disability Fund as a condition for participating in CSRS 
or FERS, as the case may be.
    Covered by means paying contributions to the Civil Service 
Retirement and Disability Fund under either CSRS or FERS.
    Move means moving from a position covered by CSRS or FERS to a NAF 
instrumentality of the DOD or Coast Guard, or vice versa, without a 
break in service of more than 1 year.
    Thrift Savings Plan (TSP) election means a request by an employee to 
start contributing to the TSP, to terminate contributions to the TSP, to 
change the amount of contributions made to the TSP each pay period, or 
to change the allocation of future TSP contributions among the 
investment funds and made effective pursuant to 5 CFR part 1600.



Sec. 1620.92  Employees who move to a NAF instrumentality on or after August 10, 1996.

    (a) Any Thrift Savings Plan (TSP) elections:
    (1) Made during a previous employment by an employee who moves to a 
NAF instrumentality on or after August 10, 1996, and who elects to 
continue to be covered by CSRS or FERS; and
    (2) Which is still in effect as of the date of the move shall be 
implemented by the NAF instrumentality and shall begin with the date of 
the move.
    (b) If an employee who moves to a NAF instrumentality on or after 
August 10, 1996, does not have a current

[[Page 188]]

election to contribute to the TSP, he or she shall be permitted to make 
such an election during the first TSP Open Season, as described in 5 CFR 
1600.2, during which he or she is eligible to do so under 5 U.S.C. 8432.
    (c) An employee who moves to a NAF instrumentality on or after 
August 10, 1996, and who elects to continue to be covered by CSRS or 
FERS must be permitted during the appropriate Open Seasons to elect 
under 5 U.S.C. 8351(b)(2) or 8432(a), as applicable, to make future 
contributions to the Thrift Savings Fund from his or her basic pay.
    (d) For an employee who moves to a NAF instrumentality on or after 
August 10, 1996, and who elects to continue to be covered by FERS, the 
NAF instrumentality must also contribute each pay period to the Thrift 
Savings Fund in accordance with Board procedures on behalf of such 
employee any amounts which the employee is eligible to receive under 5 
U.S.C. 8432(c).
    (e) In the case of an employee who moves to a NAF instrumentality on 
or after August 10, 1996, and who elects to continue to be covered by 
CSRS or FERS, any TSP contributions described in 5 U.S.C. 8351(b)(2) or 
8432(a), as applicable, for which such employee is eligible and which 
are not made in accordance with this section because the employee moves 
to the NAF instrumentality but does not make an immediate election to be 
covered by CSRS or FERS, shall be made up according to the error 
correction procedures contained in 5 CFR part 1605.



Sec. 1620.93  Employees who moved to a NAF instrumentality prior to August 10, 1996, but after December 31, 1965.

    (a) Future TSP contributions. (1) Employee Contributions. An 
employee who moved to a NAF instrumentality prior to August 10, 1996, 
but after December 31, 1965, and who elects to be covered by CSRS or 
FERS as of the date of such move may elect to make any future 
contributions to the TSP in accordance with 5 U.S.C. 8351(b)(2) or 
8432(a), as applicable, within 30 days of the date of his or her 
election to be covered by CSRS or FERS. Such contributions shall begin 
being deducted from the employee's pay no later than the pay period 
following the election to contribute to the TSP. Any TSP election which 
may have been in effect at the time of the employee's move will not be 
effective for any future contributions.
    (2) Agency Automatic (1%) Contributions. If an employee who moved to 
a NAF instrumentality prior to August 10, 1996, but after December 31, 
1965, elects to be covered by FERS, the NAF instrumentality must also 
contribute each pay period to the Thrift Savings Fund on behalf of such 
employee any amounts which the employee is eligible to receive under 5 
U.S.C. 8432(c)(1), beginning no later than the pay period following the 
employee's election to be covered by FERS.
    (3) Agency Matching Contributions. If an employee who moved to a NAF 
instrumentality prior to August 10, 1996, but after December 31, 1965, 
elects to be covered by FERS and also elects to make contributions to 
the TSP pursuant to paragraph (a)(1) of this section, the NAF 
instrumentality must also contribute each pay period to the Thrift 
Savings Fund on behalf of such employee any amounts which the employee 
is eligible to receive under 5 U.S.C. 8432(c)(2), beginning at the same 
time as the employee's contributions are made pursuant to paragraph 
(a)(l) of this section.
    (b) Retroactive TSP Contributions. (1) Without regard to any 
election to contribute to the TSP under paragraph (a)(l) of this 
section, the NAF instrumentality shall take the following actions with 
respect to an employee who moved to a NAF instrumentality prior to 
August 10, 1996, but after December 31, 1965, and who elects to be 
covered by CSRS or FERS as of the date of the move:
    (i) Agency Automatic (1%) Make-up Contributions. The NAF 
instrumentality shall, within 30 days of the date of the employee's 
election to be covered by FERS, contribute to the Thrift Savings Fund an 
amount representing the Agency Automatic (1%) Contribution for all pay 
periods during which the employee would have been eligible to receive 
the Agency Automatic (1%) Contribution under 5 U.S.C. 8432, beginning 
with the date of the move and

[[Page 189]]

ending with the date that Agency Automatic (1%) Contributions begin 
under paragraph (a)(2) of this section. Lost earnings will not be paid 
on these contributions unless they are not made by the NAF 
instrumentality within the time frames required by these regulations.
    (ii) Employee Make-up Contributions. (A) Within 60 days of the 
election to be covered by FERS, an employee who moved to a NAF 
instrumentality prior to August 10, 1996, but after December 31, 1965, 
and who elects to be covered by FERS, may make an election regarding 
Employee Make-up Contributions. The employee may elect to contribute all 
or a percentage of the amount of Employee Contributions which the 
employee would have been eligible to make under 5 U.S.C. 8432 between 
the date of the move and the date Employee Contributions begin under 
paragraph (a)(1) of this section or, if no such election is made under 
paragraph (a)(1) of this section, the date that Agency Automatic (1%) 
Contributions begin under paragraph (a)(2) of this section.
    (B) Within 60 days of the election to be covered under CSRS, an 
employee who moved to an NAF instrumentality prior to August 10, 1996, 
but after December 31, 1965, and who elects to be covered by CSRS, may 
make an election regarding make-up contributions. The employee may elect 
to contribute all or a percentage of the amount of Employee 
Contributions which the employee would have been eligible to make under 
5 U.S.C. 8351 between the date of the move and the date Employee 
Contributions begin under paragraph (a)(1) of this section or, if no 
such election is made under paragraph (a)(1) of this section, the pay 
period following the date the election to be covered by CSRS is made.
    (C) Deductions made from the employee's pay pursuant to an 
employee's election under paragraph (b)(1)(ii) (A) or (B) of this 
section, as appropriate, shall be made according to a schedule that 
meets the requirements of paragraphs (b) (2) and (3) of this section.
    (iii) Agency Matching Make-up Contributions. The NAF instrumentality 
must pay to the Thrift Savings Fund any Matching Contributions 
attributable to Employee Contributions made under paragraph 
(b)(1)(ii)(A) of this section that the NAF instrumentality would have 
been required to make under 5 U.S.C. 8432(c), at the same time that such 
Employee Contributions are contributed to the Fund.
    (2) The NAF instrumentality may set a ceiling on the number of pay 
periods over which the contributions referred to in paragraph (b)(1)(ii) 
of this section may be made; however, this ceiling may not be less than 
two times the number of pay periods in which the payments could have 
been made. The payment schedule must begin no later than the pay period 
following the date the employee elects such schedule and it may not 
contain more than four times the number of pay periods in which the 
payment could have been made. When setting the number of payments, the 
employee's remaining period of employment with the Federal Government 
should be considered to ensure that the employee will have sufficient 
time to make up these contributions.
    (3) If the agreed-upon payment schedule cannot be met because the 
employee has insufficient net pay or because the employee has reached an 
annual ceiling for tax-deferred contributions under 26 U.S.C. 402(g) or 
415, the payment schedule will be suspended until the employee is again 
able to make full payments through payroll deductions. Pay periods for 
which an employee is unable to make payments because of insufficient net 
pay or a ceiling on tax-deferred contributions, will not be counted 
against the maximum number of pay periods applicable to the schedule and 
the maximum number of applicable pay periods must be extended 
accordingly.
    (4) If an employee chooses to contribute the make-up amount, he or 
she may subsequently terminate that decision at any time and that 
termination shall be irrevocable. If an employee separates from Federal 
or covered NAF employment, the employee may accelerate the contribution 
by lump sum payment from the final salary payment. If the employee dies, 
the retroactive contributions of the deceased employee will be 
terminated as of the final salary payment.

[[Page 190]]

    (5) The make-up payment amount is not subject to the maximum pay 
period contribution limitations; however, these amounts must be included 
when determining amounts subject to annual ceilings on contributions 
under 26 U.S.C. 402(g) or 415.
    (6) In the event an employee does not have sufficient net pay to 
make all of the TSP deductions, the employee's regular TSP deduction 
shall take precedence over the employee's payment schedule contribution.
    (7) Make-up contributions shall be reported for investment by the 
NAF instrumentality when contributed, according to the employee's 
election for current TSP contributions. If the employee is not making 
current contributions, the retroactive contributions shall be invested 
according to an election form (TSP-1-NAF) filed specifically for that 
purpose.
    (c) An employee who is covered by a NAF retirement plan is not 
eligible to participate in the TSP. Any TSP contributions relating to a 
period for which an employee elects retroactive NAF retirement coverage 
shall be removed from the TSP as required by the regulations at 5 CFR 
part 1605.
    (d) A TSP election made by an employee of a NAF instrumentality who 
elected to be covered by CSRS or FERS prior to August 10, 1996, which 
was properly implemented by the NAF instrumentality because it was valid 
under then-effective regulations, is effective under the regulations in 
this subpart.



Sec. 1620.94  Employees who move from a NAF instrumentality to a Federal Government agency.

    (a) An employee of a NAF instrumentality who moves from a NAF 
instrumentality to a Federal Government agency and who elects to be 
covered by a NAF retirement system is not eligible to participate in the 
TSP. Any TSP contributions relating to a period for which an employee 
elects retroactive NAF retirement coverage shall be removed from the TSP 
as required by the regulations at 5 CFR part 1605.
    (b) An employee of a NAF instrumentality who moves from a NAF 
instrumentality to a Federal Government agency and who elects to be 
covered by CSRS or FERS will become eligible to participate in the TSP 
as follows:
    (1) If the employee was previously eligible to participate in the 
TSP under a prior period of Federal Government service, the employee 
will be eligible to participate in the TSP the first Open Season (as 
determined in accordance with 5 CFR 1600.3(d)) beginning after the 
effective date of the CSRS and FERS coverage.
    (2) If the employee was not previously eligible to participate in 
the TSP, the employee will be eligible to contribute to the TSP in the 
second Open Season (as determined in accordance with 5 CFR 1600.3(d)) 
beginning after the effective date of the CSRS or FERS coverage.



Sec. 1620.95  Payment of TSP contributions.

    The NAF instrumentality shall deduct any Employee Contributions 
authorized under this section from the pay of the employee each pay 
period and shall remit such amounts to the Thrift Savings Fund in 
accordance with this subpart and Board procedures. The NAF 
instrumentality shall contribute any future Agency Automatic (1%) 
Contributions and Agency Matching Contributions to the Thrift Savings 
Fund each pay period in accordance with this subpart and Board 
procedures. The NAF instrumentality shall contribute make-up 
contributions to the Thrift Savings Fund in accordance with this subpart 
and Board procedures.



Sec. 1620.96  Loan payments.

    NAF instrumentalities shall deduct and transmit TSP loan payments 
for employees who elect to be covered by CSRS or FERS to the 
recordkeeper in accordance with 5 CFR part 1655 and Board procedures. 
Loan payments may not be deducted and transmitted for employees who 
elect to be covered by the NAF retirement system. Such employees will be 
considered to have separated from Government service and must prepay 
their loans or a taxable distribution will be declared.



Sec. 1620.97  Transmission of information.

    Any employee who moves to a NAF instrumentality shall be reported by

[[Page 191]]

the losing Federal Government employing agency to the TSP recordkeeper 
as having transferred to a NAF instrumentality of the DOD or Coast Guard 
rather than as having separated from Government service. If the employee 
subsequently elects not to be covered by CSRS or FERS, the NAF 
instrumentality must submit an Employee Data Record to report the 
employee as having separated from Federal Government service as of the 
date of the move.



Sec. 1620.98  Notices.

    All NAF instrumentalities employing any individuals covered by 
Sec. 1620.90 must notify affected employees of the application of the 
regulations in this subpart as soon as practicable.



Sec. 1620.99  Other regulations.

    NAF instrumentalities and individuals covered by Sec. 1620.90 are 
governed by the regulations in this chapter, to the extent that the 
regulations in this chapter are not inconsistent with this subpart.



                       Subpart H--Military Service

    Source: 60 FR 19990, Apr. 21, 1995, unless otherwise noted.



Sec. 1620.100  Scope.

    (a) General. To be covered by this subpart, an employee must have:
    (1) Been separated from Federal civilian service or entered leave-
without-pay status in order to perform military service;
    (2) Been reemployed; and
    (3) Become eligible to seek reemployment by virtue of a release from 
military service, discharge from hospitalization, or other similar event 
that occurred on or after August 2, 1990.
    (b) Other rules. Except as provided in this part, the rules 
governing contributions to the TSP set forth in 5 CFR part 1600 will 
apply to persons reemployed under this subpart.



Sec. 1620.101  Definitions.

    As used in this subpart:
    (a) Basic pay has one of two meanings:
    (1) For the portion of the retroactive period when an employee did 
not receive a Federal civilian salary, the rate of basic pay is that 
which would have been payable to the employee if the employee had 
remained continuously employed in the position which he or she last held 
before separating (or entering leave-without-pay status) to perform 
military service;
    (2) For the portion of the retroactive period that occurs after the 
employee is reemployed, his or her actual basic pay will be used to 
calculate contributions.
    (b) Current contributions means those contributions that are made 
prospectively for any pay period after the employee has been reemployed.
    (c) Employee means any Federal employee whose release from military 
service, discharge from hospitalization, or other similar event making 
the individual eligible to seek restoration or reemployment under 38 
U.S.C. chapter 43 occurs on or after August 2, 1990.
    (d) Leave-without-pay means a temporary nonpay status and absence 
from duty (including military furlough) to perform military service.
    (e) Recordkeeper means the organization designated by the Federal 
Retirement Thrift Investment Board as the Thrift Savings Plan's 
recordkeeper.
    (f) Reemployed or reemployment means reemployed in (or restored to) 
a position pursuant to 38 U.S.C. chapter 43, which is subject to 5 
U.S.C. chapter 84 or which entitles the employee to contribute to the 
Thrift Savings Plan pursuant to 5 U.S.C. 8351.
    (g) Retroactive period means the period for which an employee is 
entitled to make up missed Employee Contributions and to receive 
retroactive Agency Automatic (1%) Contributions and Agency Matching 
Contributions.
    (1) Beginning of retroactive period. For an employee who was 
eligible to make contributions when military service began, the 
retroactive period begins on the date following the effective date of 
separation or, in the case of leave-without-pay, the date the employee 
enters leave-without-pay status. For an employee who was not eligible to 
make contributions when military service began, the retroactive period 
begins on the first day of the first pay period in

[[Page 192]]

the election period during which the employee would have been eligible 
to make contributions had the employee remained in Federal civilian 
service.
    (2) End of retroactive period. The retroactive period ends on the 
earlier of the following two dates: the date before the first day of the 
first election period during which a contribution election could have 
been made effective after reemployment, or the last day of the pay 
period before the pay period during which routine current contributions 
are begun after the employee is reemployed (or restored). If an employee 
who was making contributions when he or she separated elects not to make 
routine current contributions, the ending date of the retroactive period 
is the last day of the pay period during which the employee elects to 
terminate contributions.
    (h) Separation or separated means the period an employee was 
separated from Federal civilian service (or entered a leave-without-pay 
status) in order to perform military service.



Sec. 1620.102  Processing contribution elections.

    (a) Current contribution elections. Immediately upon reemployment, 
an employee's agency will give an eligible employee the opportunity to 
submit a contribution election form (Form TSP-1) to make current 
contributions. The effective date of the current Form TSP-1 will be the 
first day of the first full pay period in the most recent TSP election 
period. If the employee is reemployed during a TSP Open Season but 
before the election period, he or she can also submit an election form 
that will become effective the first day of the first full pay period in 
the following election period.
    (b) Retroactive contribution elections. (1) An employee has the 
following options for making retroactive contributions:
    (i) If the employee had a valid contribution election form (Form 
TSP-1) on file when he or she separated, that election form will be 
reinstated for purposes of retroactive contributions upon the employee's 
reemployment, unless a new contribution election form is submitted to 
terminate all retroactive contributions or those contributions that 
would have been made from the date of separation through the end of the 
Open Season that occurred immediately after the separation.
    (ii) Instead of making the contributions for the retroactive period 
under the reinstated contribution election form, the employee may submit 
a new election form for any Open Season that occurred during the 
retroactive period. However, the allocation election on each Form TSP-1 
for the retroactive period must be the same as the allocation election 
on the current Form TSP-1.
    (2) An employee who terminated contributions within two months 
before entering military service will be eligible to make a retroactive 
contribution election effective for the first Open Season that occurs 
after the effective date that the contributions were terminated. This 
election may be made even if the termination was made outside of an Open 
Season.
    (3) Employees may not make any retroactive contributions that will 
cause them to exceed the Internal Revenue Service's elective deferral 
limit. If an employee's current contributions, when added to the make-up 
contributions, will exceed the annual elective deferral limit, the 
employing agency must suspend the make-up contributions in accordance 
with 5 CFR 1605.2(b)(2)(ii).



Sec. 1620.103  Processing lost earnings.

    (a) Agency Automatic (1%) Contributions. Subject to the de minimis 
rules in 5 CFR part 1606, employing agencies are required to pay lost 
earnings on the Agency Automatic (1%) Contributions that are made for 
the retroactive period.
    (b) Agency Matching Contributions. Subject to the de minimis rules 
in 5 CFR part 1606, employing agencies are required to pay lost earnings 
for the agency contributions that match make-up Employee Contributions.
    (c) Make-up Employee Contributions. Employing agencies may not pay 
lost earnings for make-up Employee Contributions associated with the 
retroactive period.

[[Page 193]]

    (d) Lost earnings calculation. Lost earnings will be calculated on 
all retroactive agency contributions using the rates of return for the 
Government Securities Investment Fund (G Fund), unless the employee 
submitted one or more interfund transfer requests during the period of 
separation. In the case of interfund transfer requests, the earnings 
will be calculated using the G Fund rates of return until the first 
interfund transfer was processed. The contribution that is subject to 
lost earnings will be moved to the investment fund(s) the employee 
requested and lost earnings will be calculated based on the earnings for 
that fund(s). The amount of lost earnings calculated will be posted to 
the investment fund(s) to which the contribution was moved. If there 
were no interfund transfers processed during the lost earnings 
calculation period, the amount of lost earnings calculated will be 
posted to the employee's G Fund account.



Sec. 1620.104  Agency payments to recordkeeper; agency ultimately chargeable.

    (a) Agency making payments to recordkeeper. The current employing 
agency will always be the agency responsible for making payments to the 
recordkeeper for all contributions (both employee and agency) and lost 
earnings, regardless of whether some of that expense is ultimately 
chargeable to a prior employing agency.
    (b) Agency ultimately chargeable with expense. The agency ultimately 
chargeable with the expense of agency contributions and lost earnings 
attributable to the retroactive period is ordinarily the agency that 
reemployed the employee. However, if an employee changed agencies during 
the period between the date of reemployment and October 13, 1994, the 
employing agency as of October 13, 1994, is the agency ultimately 
chargeable with the expense.
    (c) Reimbursement by agency ultimately chargeable with expense. If 
the agency that made the payments to the recordkeeper for agency 
contributions and lost earnings is not the agency ultimately chargeable 
with that expense, the agency that made the payments to the recordkeeper 
may, but is not required to, obtain reimbursement from the agency 
ultimately chargeable with the expense.



Sec. 1620.105  Restoring forfeited Agency Automatic (1%) Contributions.

    If an employee's Agency Automatic (1%) Contributions were forfeited 
because the employee was not vested when he or she separated to perform 
military service, the employee must notify the employing agency that a 
forfeiture occurred. Employing agencies will submit a written request to 
the recordkeeper to restore any Agency Automatic (1%) Contributions that 
were forfeited from an employee's account because he or she was not 
vested at the time the employee separated to perform military service.



Sec. 1620.106  Returning withdrawals.

    (a) General. Employees who are subject to the TSP automatic cashout 
provisions (employees whose account balances were $3,500 or less) and 
employees who separated without eligibility for retirement benefits and 
prior to March 1995 withdrew amounts greater than $3,500, may elect to 
have the separation for military service treated as if it had never 
occurred. These employees will be allowed to return amounts to the 
Thrift Savings Plan that represent the full amount of the withdrawal. 
Eligible employees must notify the recordkeeper by April 21, 1996, or 
one year from the date of reemployment, whichever is later, of their 
intent to return the withdrawn funds.
    (b) Documentation. An eligible employee who elects to return the 
full amount of a withdrawal under this section must provide 
documentation of reemployment to the recordkeeper. The recordkeeper will 
notify the employee of the amount of funds to be returned and the 
deadline for making that payment. The employee must provide the funds in 
a single payment to the recordkeeper within 90 days after the 
recordkeeper sends the employee the notice advising of the amount and 
procedures for returning the funds.
    (c) Earnings. Employees will not receive retroactive earnings on any 
amounts withdrawn that they later return to their accounts.

[[Page 194]]

    (d) Taxable distribution reversed. Employees who return withdrawn 
funds under this section may be eligible to have a taxable distribution 
associated with a loan reversed. At the time the recordkeeper notifies 
the employee of the amount required to return the withdrawn funds, it 
will notify the employee whether he or she is eligible to have a taxable 
distribution reversed.



Sec. 1620.107  Agency responsibilities.

    (a) General. Each employing agency must establish procedures for 
implementing these regulations. These procedures must at a minimum, 
require agency personnel to identify and notify eligible employees 
concerning their options under these regulations and tell them the time 
period within which those options must be exercised. For employees who 
are reemployed on or after August 2, 1990, and before April 21, 1995, 
the agency must perform these functions by June 20, 1995. For employees 
who are reemployed on or after April 21, 1995, employing agencies must 
perform these functions within 60 days of the employee's reemployment. 
An employee must submit a written request to the employing agency to 
make up Employee Contributions for the retroactive period on or before 
April 21, 1996, or one year from the date the employee was reemployed, 
whichever is later, or forfeit the right to make up these contributions.
    (b) Agency records; procedure for reimbursement. The agency that is 
making the payments to the recordkeeper for all contributions (both 
employee and agency) and lost earnings will obtain from prior employing 
agencies whatever information is necessary in order to make accurate 
payments. If a prior employing agency is ultimately chargeable under 
Sec. 1620.104(b) for all or part of the expense of agency contributions 
and lost earnings, the agency making the payments to the recordkeeper 
will determine the procedure to follow in order to collect amounts owed 
to it by the agency ultimately chargeable with the expense.
    (c) Payment schedule; matching contributions report. Agencies will, 
with the employee's consent, prepare a payment schedule for making 
retroactive Employee Contributions. In addition, the employing agencies 
will calculate the Agency Matching Contributions that will be reported 
for investment to the recordkeeper in equal installments for each pay 
period covered by the payment schedule. The employing agency may impose 
limits on the maximum amount of time during which an employee may make 
up the missed contributions. This maximum amount of time may be no less 
than two times and no more than four times the number of pay periods 
that were covered by the period of missed contributions. An employee may 
decide to terminate the make-up contributions; however, such a decision 
is irrevocable.
    (d) Agency Automatic (1%) Contributions. Employing agencies must 
calculate the Agency Automatic (1%) Contributions for all reemployed 
FERS employees, report these contributions to the recordkeeper, and 
submit lost earnings records to cover the retroactive period by June 20, 
1995, or 60 days from the date of reemployment, whichever is later.
    (e) Forfeiture restoration. When notified by an employee that a 
forfeiture of the Agency Automatic (1%) Contributions occurred after the 
employee separated to perform military service, the employing agency 
must submit a written request to the recordkeeper to restore these 
funds.
    (f) Thrift Savings Plan Service Computation Date. The agencies must 
review the Thrift Savings Plan Service Computation Date for all 
reemployed Federal Employees' Retirement System employees for purposes 
of crediting military service performed during the separation period. If 
the period of military service has not been credited, the agency must 
submit a corrected Thrift Savings Plan Service Computation Date to the 
recordkeeper.



   Subpart I--Certain Employees of the District of Columbia Financial 
           Responsibility and Management Assistance Authority

    Source: 61 FR 2873, Jan. 29, 1996, unless otherwise noted.

[[Page 195]]



Sec. 1620.110  Scope.

    The District of Columbia Financial Responsibility and Management 
Assistance Authority (Authority) was established by the District of 
Columbia Financial Responsibility and Management Assistance Act of 1995, 
Pub. L. 104-8, 109 Stat. 97, which was amended by the Omnibus 
Consolidated Rescissions and Appropriations Act of 1996, section 153, 
Pub. L. 104-134, 110 Stat. 1321. Although the Authority is an agency of 
the District of Columbia Government, certain of its employees may elect 
Federal Employees' Retirement System (FERS) or Civil Service Retirement 
System (CSRS) coverage. This subpart governs participation in the Thrift 
Savings Plan (TSP) by employees of the Authority who elect to be covered 
by FERS or CSRS.

[61 FR 55202, Oct. 25, 1996]



Sec. 1620.111  Definitions.

    As used in this subpart:
    Authority means the District of Columbia Financial Responsibility 
and Management Authority.
    Basic pay means basic pay as defined in 5 U.S.C. 8331(3), and it is 
the rate of pay used in computing any amount the individual is otherwise 
required to contribute to the Civil Service Retirement and Disability 
Fund as a condition for participating in the Civil Service Retirement 
System or the Federal Employees' Retirement System, as the case may be.
    CSRS means the Civil Service Retirement System established by 
subchapter III of chapter 83 of title 5, United States Code, or any 
equivalent Government retirement plan.
    Election period means the last calendar month of an open season and 
is the period in which an election to make or change contributions 
during that open season can first become effective.
    FERS means the Federal Employees' Retirement System established by 
chapter 84 of title 5, United States Code, and any equivalent retirement 
system.
    Open season means the period during which employees may make an 
election with respect to their contributions to the Thrift Savings Plan.
    Recordkeeper means the organization under contract to the Board to 
perform recordkeeping services. This currently is the National Finance 
Center, United States Department of Agriculture, P.O. Box 61500, New 
Orleans, Louisiana 70161- 1500.
    Retirement election means an election by an eligible employee of the 
Authority to remain covered by either CSRS or FERS.
    Thrift Savings Plan (TSP) election means a request by an eligible 
employee to start contributing to the TSP, to terminate contributions to 
the TSP, to change the amount of contributions made to the TSP each pay 
period (including a request to terminate contributions), or to change 
the allocation of TSP contributions among the TSP investment funds, as 
described at 5 CFR 1600.4. A TSP election must be made on Form TSP-1, 
Thrift Savings Plan Election Form.

[61 FR 2873, Jan. 29, 1996, as amended at 61 FR 55202, Oct. 25, 1996]



Sec. 1620.112  Eligibility requirements.

    To be eligible to participate in the TSP, an employee of the 
Authority must be covered by FERS or CSRS pursuant to the District of 
Columbia Financial Responsibility and Management Assistance Act of 1995, 
as amended.

[61 FR 55202, Oct. 25, 1996]



Sec. 1620.113  Notice to an employee of his or her right to participate in the TSP.

    The Authority must notify an employee of his or her right to 
participate in the TSP at the time the employee is required to be 
notified of his or her right to elect to be covered under FERS or CSRS.



Sec. 1620.114  Employee contributions.

    (a) An employee of the Authority who is separated from Federal 
service for less than 31 full calendar days before commencing employment 
with the Authority and who is covered by FERS or CSRS will be eligible 
to contribute to the TSP as though he or she had transferred to the 
Authority from the losing Federal agency, i.e., as though

[[Page 196]]

the employee did not have a TSP separation as defined by the TSP.
    (b) An employee of the Authority who is separated from Federal 
service for 31 or more full calendar days before commencing employment 
with the Authority and who is covered by FERS or CSRS will be eligible 
to contribute to the TSP as follows:
    (1) If the employee was previously eligible to participate in the 
TSP, the employee will be eligible to contribute to the TSP in the first 
open season (as determined in accordance with paragraph (d) of this 
section) beginning after the date the employee commences employment with 
the Authority.
    (2) If the employee was not previously eligible to participate in 
the TSP, the employee will be eligible to contribute to the TSP in the 
second open season (as determined in accordance with paragraph (d) of 
this section) beginning after the date the employee commences employment 
with the Authority.
    (c) An employee of the Authority with no period of prior Federal 
service who elects to be covered by FERS will be eligible to contribute 
to the TSP in the second open season (as determined in accordance with 
paragraph (d) of this section) beginning after the effective date of the 
FERS coverage.
    (d) If an employee of the Authority who is described in paragraphs 
(b) and (c) of this section is employed by the Authority during an open 
season but before the election period (the last calendar month of the 
open season), that open season will be considered the employee's first 
open season.
    (e) TSP employee contributions from employees of the Authority are 
subject to the limits described at 5 CFR part 1600, subpart C.

[61 FR 55202, Oct. 25, 1996]



Sec. 1620.115  Employer contributions.

    (a) If an eligible employee of the Authority elects to be covered by 
FERS, the Authority must contribute on the employee's behalf each pay 
period to the Thrift Savings Fund, in accordance with Board procedures, 
an amount equal to 1 percent of the employee's basic pay paid to such 
employee for that period of service, as required by 5 U.S.C. 
8432(c)(1)(A), beginning:
    (1) Immediately upon employment with the Authority if the employee 
separated from Federal service less than 31 full calendar days before 
commencing employment with the Authority and was eligible to participate 
in the TSP when he or she separated from Federal service; or
    (2) With the first pay period in which the employee is eligible to 
contribute to the TSP (as determined in accordance with Sec. 1620.114 of 
this subpart) for all other FERS employees of the Authority.
    (b) If a FERS employee of the Authority elects to participate in the 
TSP under Sec. 1620.114 of this subpart, the Authority must contribute 
on behalf of such employee each pay period to the Thrift Savings Fund, 
in accordance with Board procedures, any matching contributions which he 
or she is eligible to receive under 5 U.S.C. 8432(c).



Sec. 1620.116  TSP contributions.

    The Authority is responsible for transmitting, in accordance with 
Board procedures, any employee and employer contributions that are 
required by this subpart to the Board's Recordkeeper.



Sec. 1620.117  TSP loan payments.

    The Authority shall deduct and transmit TSP loan payments for 
employees in accordance with 5 CFR part 1655 and Board procedures. An 
employee of the Authority who separates from Federal service with an 
outstanding TSP loan and who elects to be covered under FERS or CSRS 
must notify the recordkeeper that he or she has commenced employment 
with the Authority.



Sec. 1620.118  Failure to participate or delay in participation.

    If an employee of the Authority who elects to be covered by FERS or 
CSRS fails to participate or is delayed in participating in the TSP 
because of a delay in the implementation of the Act, the employee may 
request that retroactive corrective action be taken in accordance with 5 
CFR part 1605, as though the delay were attributable to employing agency 
error. Lost earnings

[[Page 197]]

shall be payable pursuant to 5 CFR part 1606 due to delay described in 
this section, as though the delay were attributable to employing agency 
error.

[61 FR 55202, Oct. 25, 1996]



Sec. 1620.119  Other regulations.

    The Authority and individuals covered by Sec. 1620.110 of this 
subpart are governed by the regulations in 5 CFR chapter VI, to the 
extent the regulations in 5 CFR chapter VI are not inconsistent with 
this subpart.



PART 1630--PRIVACY ACT REGULATIONS--Table of Contents




Sec.
1630.1  Purpose and scope.
1630.2  Definitions.
1630.3  Publication of systems of records maintained.
1630.4  Request for notification and access.
1630.5  Granting access to a designated individual.
1630.6  Action on request.
1630.7  Identification requirements.
1630.8  Access of others to records about an individual.
1630.9  Access to the history (accounting) of disclosures from records.
1630.10  Denials of access.
1630.11  Requirements for requests to amend records.
1630.12  Action on request to amend a record.
1630.13  Procedures for review of determination to deny access to or 
          amendment of records.
1630.14  Appeals process.
1630.15  Exemptions.
1630.16  Fees.
1630.17  Federal agency requests.
1630.18  Penalties.

    Authority: 5 U.S.C. 552a.

    Source: 55 FR 18852, May 7, 1990, unless otherwise noted.



Sec. 1630.1  Purpose and scope.

    These regulations implement the Privacy Act of 1974, 5 USC 552a. The 
regulations apply to all records maintained by the Federal Retirement 
Thrift Investment Board that are contained in a system of records and 
that contain information about an individual. The regulations establish 
procedures that (a) authorize an individual's access to records 
maintained about him or her; (b) limit the access of other persons to 
those records; and (c) permit an individual to request the amendment or 
correction of records about him or her.



Sec. 1630.2  Definitions.

    For the purposes of this part--
    (a) Agency means agency as defined in 5 USC 552(e);
    (b) Board means the Federal Retirement Thrift Investment Board;
    (c) Individual means a citizen of the United States or an alien 
lawfully admitted for permanent residence;
    (d) Maintain means to collect, use, or distribute;
    (e) Record means any item, collection, or grouping of information 
about an individual that is maintained by the Board, including but not 
limited to education, financial transactions, medical history, and 
criminal or employment history and that contains the individual's name, 
identifying number, symbol, or other identifying particular assigned to 
the individual, such as a finger or voice print or a photograph;
    (f) Routine use means, with respect to the disclosure of a record, 
the use of that record for a purpose which is compatible with the 
purpose for which it was collected;
    (g) System manager means the official of the Board who is 
responsible for the maintenance, collection, use, distribution, or 
disposal of information contained in a system of records;
    (h) System of records means a group of any records under the control 
of the Board from which information is retrieved by the name of the 
individual or other identifying particular assigned to the individual;
    (i) Statistical record means a record in a system of records 
maintained for statistical research or reporting purposes only and not 
used in whole or in part in making any determination about an 
identifiable individual, except as provided by 13 U.S.C. 8;
    (j) Subject individual means the individual by whose name or other 
identifying particular a record is maintained or retrieved;
    (k) TSP means the Thrift Savings Plan which is administered by the 
Board pursuant to 5 U.S.C. 8351 and chapter 84 (subchapters III and 
VII);
    (l) TSP records means those records maintained by the Thrift Savings 
Plan Service Office;

[[Page 198]]

    (m) VRS (Voice Response System) means the fully automated telephone 
information system for TSP account records;
    (n) Work days as used in calculating the date when a response is 
due, includes those days when the Board is open for the conduct of 
Government business and does not include Saturdays, Sundays and Federal 
holidays.



Sec. 1630.3  Publication of systems of records maintained.

    (a) Prior to the establishment or revision of a system of records, 
the Board will publish in the Federal Register notice of any new or 
intended use of the information in a system or proposed system and 
provide interested persons with a period within which to comment on the 
new or revised system. Technical or typographical corrections are not 
considered to be revisions of a system.
    (b) When a system of records is established or revised, the Board 
will publish in the Federal Register a notice about the system. The 
notice shall include:
    (1) The system name,
    (2) The system location,
    (3) The categories of individuals covered by the system,
    (4) The categories of records in the system,
    (5) The Board's authority to maintain the system,
    (6) The routine uses of the system,
    (7) The Board's policies and practices for maintenance of the 
system,
    (8) The system manager,
    (9) The procedures for notification, access to and correction of 
records in the system, and
    (10) The sources of information for the system.



Sec. 1630.4  Request for notification and access.

    (a) TSP records. (1) A participant in the Thrift Savings Plan is a 
subject of System of Records FRTIB-1. A participant shall make his or 
her inquiry in accordance with the chart set forth below. The address of 
the Thrift Savings Plan Service Office is: National Finance Center, P.O. 
Box 61500, New Orleans, LA, 70161-1500. (Telephone No. 504-255-6000). 
Telephone inquiries are subject to the verification procedures set forth 
in Sec. 1630.7. A written inquiry shall include the participant's name, 
Social Security number, and date of birth.

------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                     If you are a        If you are a   
          If you want:             former employee:    current employee:
------------------------------------------------------------------------
To make inquiry as to whether     Call or write TSP   Call or write your
 you are a subject of this         Service Office.     employing agency 
 system of records.                                    in accordance    
                                                       with agency      
                                                       system of records
                                                       on personnel or  
                                                       payroll records. 
Access..........................  Call or write TSP   Call or write your
                                   Service Office.     employing agency 
                                                       regarding        
                                                       personnel and    
                                                       payroll records  
                                                       (agency's and    
                                                       participant's    
                                                       contributions,   
                                                       earnings, loan   
                                                       repayments and   
                                                       adjustments to   
                                                       contributions).  
                                                      Call or write to  
                                                       the TSP Service  
                                                       Office regarding 
                                                       loan status and  
                                                       interfund        
                                                       transfers.       
Disclosure history of your TSP    Write TSP Service   Write TSP Service 
 account (disclosures to           Office.             Office.          
 entities other than your                                               
 employing agency or the Board                                          
 or auditors see Sec.  1630.4                                           
 (a)(3)).                                                               
------------------------------------------------------------------------

    (2) A Privacy Act request which is incorrectly submitted to the 
Board will not be considered received until received by the TSP Service 
Office. The Board will submit such a Privacy Act request to the TSP 
Service Office within three workdays. A Privacy Act request which is 
incorrectly submitted to the TSP Service Office will not be considered 
received until received by the employing agency. The TSP Service Office 
will submit such a Privacy Act request to the employing agency within 
three workdays.
    (3) No disclosure history will be made when the Board contracts for 
an audit of TSP financial statements (which includes the review and 
sampling of TSP account balances).
    (4) No disclosure history will be made when the Department of Labor 
or the General Accounting Office audits TSP financial statements (which 
includes

[[Page 199]]

the review and sampling of TSP account balances) in accordance with 
their responsibilities under chapter 84 of title 5 of the U.S. Code. 
Rather, a requester will be advised that these agencies have statutory 
obligations to audit TSP activities and that in the course of such 
audits they randomly sample individual TSP accounts to test for account 
accuracy.
    (b) Non-TSP Board records. An individual who wishes to know if a 
specific system of records maintained by the Board contains a record 
pertaining to him or her, or who wishes access to such records, shall 
address a written request to the Privacy Act Officer, Federal Retirement 
Thrift Investment Board, 1250 H Street, NW., Washington, DC 20005. The 
request letter should contain the complete name and identifying number 
of the pertinent system as published in the annual Federal Register 
notice describing the Board's Systems of Records; the full name and 
address of the subject individual; the subject's Social Security number 
if a Board employee; a brief description of the nature, time, place, and 
circumstances of the individual's prior association with the Board; and 
any other information the individual believes would help the Privacy Act 
Officer determine whether the information about the individual is 
included in the system of records. In instances where the information is 
insufficient to ensure disclosure to the subject individual to whom the 
record pertains, the Board reserves the right to ask the requester for 
additional identifying information. The words ``PRIVACY ACT REQUEST'' 
should be printed on both the letter and the envelope.

[55 FR 18852, May 7, 1990, as amended at 59 FR 55331, Nov. 7, 1994]



Sec. 1630.5  Granting access to a designated individual.

    (a) An individual who wishes to have a person of his or her choosing 
review a record or obtain a copy of a record from the Board shall submit 
a signed statement authorizing the disclosure of his or her record 
before the record will be disclosed. The authorization shall be 
maintained with the record.
    (b) The Board will honor any Privacy Act request (e.g., a request to 
have access or to amend a record) which is accompanied by a valid power 
of attorney from the subject of the record.

[55 FR 18852, May 7, 1990, as amended at 59 FR 26409, May 20, 1994]



Sec. 1630.6  Action on request.

    (a) For TSP records, the Head, TSP Service Office, or designee, and 
for non-TSP records, the Privacy Act Officer will answer or acknowledge 
the inquiry within 10 work days of the date it is received by the Board. 
When the answer cannot be made within 10 work days, the Head, TSP 
Service Office or Privacy Act Officer will provide the requester with 
the date when a response may be expected and, whenever possible, the 
specific reasons for the delay.
    (b) At a minimum, the acknowledgement to a request for access shall 
include:
    (1) When and where the records will be available;
    (2) Name, title and telephone number of the official who will make 
the records available;
    (3) Whether access will be granted only by providing a copy of the 
record through the mail, or only by examination of the record in person 
if the Privacy Act Officer after consulting with the appropriate system 
manager has determined the requester's access would not be unduly 
impeded;
    (4) Fee, if any, charged for copies (See Sec. 1630.16); and
    (5) If necessary, documentation required to verify the identity of 
the requester (See Sec. 1630.7).



Sec. 1630.7  Identification requirements.

    (a) In person. An individual should be prepared to identify himself 
or herself by signature, i.e., to note by signature the date of access, 
Social Security number, and to produce one photographic form of 
identification (driver's license, employee identification, annuitant 
card, passport, etc.). If an individual is unable to produce adequate 
identification, the individual must sign a statement asserting his or 
her identity and acknowledging that knowingly or willfully seeking or 
obtaining access to records about another person under false pretenses 
may result in a fine of up to $5,000 (see Sec. 1630.18). In addition, 
depending upon the sensitivity of the

[[Page 200]]

records, the Privacy Act Officer after consulting with the appropriate 
system manager may require further reasonable assurances, such as 
statements of other individuals who can attest to the identity of the 
requester.
    (b) In writing. An individual shall provide his or her name, date of 
birth, and Social Security number and shall sign the request. If a 
request for access is granted by mail and, in the opinion of the Privacy 
Act Officer after consulting with the appropriate system manager, the 
disclosure of the records through the mail may result in harm or 
embarrassment (if a person other than the subject individual were to 
receive the records), a notarized statement of identity or some other 
similar assurance of identity will be required.
    (c) By telephone. (1) Telephone identification procedures apply only 
to requests from participants for information in system of records 
FRTIB-1, Thrift Savings Plan Records.
    (2) A participant shall identify himself or herself by providing to 
the Head, TSP Service Office, or designee, the following: Name, Social 
Security number and Personal Identification Number (PIN). If the PIN has 
been lost or is unavailable, the participant must provide his or her 
date of birth and current or former employing agency. If the Head, TSP 
Service Office, or designee, determines that any of the particulars 
provided by telephone are incorrect, the requester will be required to 
submit a request in writing.
    (3) A participant calling the automated TSP Voice Response System 
must provide Social Security number and PIN.



Sec. 1630.8  Access of others to records about an individual.

    (a) The Privacy Act provides for access to records in systems of 
records in those situations enumerated in 5 U.S.C. 552a(b) and are set 
forth in paragraph (b) of this section. Access by executors, 
administrators, personal representatives, beneficiaries and former 
spouses to TSP records may be authorized if there is compliance with a 
routine use under paragraph (b)(3) of this section.
    (b) No official or employee of the Board, or any contractor of the 
Board or other Federal agency operating a Board system of records under 
an interagency agreement, shall disclose any record to any person or to 
another agency without the express written consent of the subject 
individual, unless the disclosure is:
    (1) To officers or employees (including contract employees) of the 
Board who need the information to perform their official duties;
    (2) Pursuant to the requirements of the Freedom of Information Act, 
5 U.S.C. 552;
    (3) For a routine use that has been published in a notice in the 
Federal Register (routine uses for the Board's systems of records are 
published separately in the Federal Register and are available from the 
Board's Privacy Act Officer);
    (4) To the Bureau of the Census for uses under title 13 of the 
United States Code;
    (5) To a person or agency which has given the Board advance written 
notice of the purpose of the request and certification that the record 
will be used only for statistical purposes. (In addition to deleting 
personal identifying information from records released for statistical 
purposes, the Privacy Act Officer shall ensure that the identity of the 
individual cannot reasonably be deduced by combining various statistical 
records);
    (6) To the National Archives of the United States if a record has 
sufficient historical or other value to warrant its continued 
preservation by the United States Government, or for evaluation by the 
Archivist of the United States or the designee of the Archivist to 
determine whether the record has such value;
    (7) In response to a written request that identifies the record and 
the purpose of the request made by another agency or instrumentality of 
any Government jurisdiction within or under the control of the United 
States for civil or criminal law enforcement activity, if that activity 
is authorized by law;
    (8) To a person pursuant to a showing of compelling circumstances 
affecting the health or safety of an individual, if upon such disclosure 
a notification is transmitted to the last known address of the subject 
individual;

[[Page 201]]

    (9) To either House of Congress, or to a Congressional committee or 
subcommittee if the subject matter is within its jurisdiction;
    (10) To the Comptroller General, or an authorized representative, in 
the course of the performance of the duties of the General Accounting 
Office;
    (11) Pursuant to the order of a court of competent jurisdiction; or
    (12) To a consumer reporting agency in accordance with section 
3711(f) of Title 31.



Sec. 1630.9  Access to the history (accounting) of disclosures from records.

    Rules governing access to the accounting of disclosures are the same 
as those for granting access to the records as set forth in Sec. 1630.4.



Sec. 1630.10  Denials of access.

    (a) The Privacy Act Officer or the Head, TSP Service Office, or 
designee, for records covered by system FRTIB-1, may deny an individual 
access to his or her record if:
    (1) In the opinion of the Privacy Act Officer or the Head, TSP 
Service Office, or designee, the individual seeking access has not 
provided proper identification to permit access; or
    (2) The Board has published rules in the Federal Register exempting 
the pertinent system of records from the access requirement.
    (b) If access is denied, the requester shall be informed of the 
reasons for denial and the procedures for obtaining a review of the 
denial.



Sec. 1630.11  Requirements for requests to amend records.

    (a) TSP records. (1) A participant in the TSP who wants to correct 
or amend a TSP record pertaining to him or her shall submit a written 
request in accordance with the following chart:

------------------------------------------------------------------------
          If you want to request amendment of a TSP record and          
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                   You are a former    You are a current
     The type of record is:         employee, write     employee, write 
                                          to:                 to:       
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Personnel or personal records     TSP Service Office  Your employing    
 (e.g., age, address or Social                         agency.          
 Security number).                                                      
Agency's and participant's        Your former         Your employing    
 contributions, loan repayments    employing agency.   agency.          
 and adjustments to                                                     
 contributions.                                                         
Earnings, interfund transfers     TSP Service Office  TSP Service       
 and loan prepayments.                                 Office.          
------------------------------------------------------------------------

    (2) The address of the TSP Service Office is listed in 
Sec. 1630.4(a).
    (3) Requests for amendments which are claims for money because of 
administrative error will be processed in accordance with the procedures 
set forth for agencies and the Board (including the TSP Service Office 
which is the Board's recordkeeper) in the Board's Error Correction 
regulations found at 5 CFR part l605. Sections 1630.12(b)-1630.14 of 
this part do not apply to such money claim amendments to TSP records as 
the Error Correction regulations are an equivalent substitute. Non-money 
claim TSP record appeals are covered by Secs. 1630.12-1630.14, or if 
covered by the above chart the employing, or former employing, agency's 
Privacy Act procedures.
    (4) Corrections to TSP account records which are made by the Board, 
its recordkeeper or the employing agency or the former employing agency 
on its own motion because of a detected administrative error will be 
effected without reference to Privacy Act procedures.
    (5) A participant in the TSP who is currently employed by a Federal 
agency should be aware that the employing agency provides to the Board 
personal and payroll records on the participant, such as his or her date 
of birth, Social Security number, retirement code, address, loan 
repayments, the amount of participant's contribution, amount of the 
Government's contribution, if the participant is covered by the Federal 
Employees' Retirement System Act (FERSA, 5 U.S.C. Chapter 84), and 
adjustments to contributions. Requests submitted to the Board, or its 
recordkeeper, to correct information provided by the employing Federal 
agency will be referred to the employing agency. The reason for this 
referral is that

[[Page 202]]

the Board receives information periodically for the TSP accounts; if the 
employing agency does not resolve the alleged error, the Board will 
continue to receive the uncorrected information periodically regardless 
of a one-time Board correction. The employing agency also has custody of 
the election and beneficiary forms (which are maintained in the Official 
Personnel Folder). Hence, requests for correction of records described 
herein shall be made to the employing agency.
    (b) Non-TSP records. (1) Any other individual who wants to correct 
or amend a record pertaining to him or her shall submit a written 
request to the Board's Privacy Act Officer whose address is listed in 
Sec. 1630.4. The words ``Privacy Act--Request to Amend Record'' should 
be written on the letter and the envelope.
    (2) The request for amendment or correction of the record should, if 
possible, state the exact name of the system of records as published in 
the Federal Register; a precise description of the record proposed for 
amendment; a brief statement describing the information the requester 
believes to be inaccurate or incomplete, and why; and the amendment or 
correction desired. If the request to amend the record is the result of 
the individual's having gained access to the record in accordance with 
Secs. 1630.4, 1630.5, 1630.6 or Sec. 1630.7, copies of previous 
correspondence between the requester and the Board should be attached, 
if possible.
    (3) If the individual's identity has not been previously verified, 
the Board may require documentation of identification as described in 
Sec. 1630.7.



Sec. 1630.12  Action on request to amend a record.

    (a) For TSP records, the Head, TSP Service Office, will acknowledge 
a request for amendment of a record, which is to be decided by that 
office in accordance with the chart in Sec. 1630.11, within 10 work 
days. Requests received by the TSP Service Office which are to be 
decided by the current or former employing agency will be sent to that 
agency by the Head, TSP Service Office, within 3 work days of the date 
of receipt. A copy of the transmittal letter will be sent to the 
requester.
    (b) For non-TSP records, the Privacy Act Officer will acknowledge a 
request for amendment of a record within 10 work days of the date the 
Board receives it. If a decision cannot be made within this time, the 
requester will be informed by mail of the reasons for the delay and the 
date when a reply can be expected, normally within 30 work days from 
receipt of the request.
    (c) The final response will include the decision whether to grant or 
deny the request. If the request is denied, the response will include:
    (1) The reasons for the decision;
    (2) The name and address of the official to whom an appeal should be 
directed;
    (3) The name and address of the official designated to assist the 
individual in preparing the appeal;
    (4) A description of the appeal process with the Board; and
    (5) A description of any other procedures which may be required of 
the individual in order to process the appeal.



Sec. 1630.13  Procedures for review of determination to deny access to or amendment of records.

    (a) Individuals who disagree with the refusal to grant them access 
to or to amend a record about them should submit a written request for 
review to the Executive Director, Federal Retirement Thrift Investment 
Board, 1250 H Street, NW., Washington, DC 20005. The words ``PRIVACY 
ACT--APPEAL'' should be written on the letter and the envelope. 
Individuals who need assistance preparing their appeal should contact 
the Board's Privacy Act Officer.
    (b) The appeal letter must be received by the Board within 30 
calendar days from the date the requester received the notice of denial. 
At a minimum, the appeal letter should identify:
    (1) The records involved;
    (2) The date of the initial request for access to or amendment of 
the record;
    (3) The date of the Board's denial of that request; and
    (4) The reasons supporting the request for reversal of the Board's 
decision.

Copies of previous correspondence from the Board denying the request to 
access or amend the record should also be attached, if possible.

[[Page 203]]

    (c) The Board reserves the right to dispose of correspondence 
concerning the request to access or amend a record if no request for 
review of the Board's decision is received within 180 days of the 
decision date. Therefore, a request for review received after 180 days 
may, at the discretion of the Privacy Act Officer, be treated as an 
initial request to access or amend a record.

[55 FR 18852, May 7, 1990, as amended at 59 FR 55331, Nov. 7, 1994]



Sec. 1630.14  Appeals process.

    (a) Within 20 work days of receiving the request for review, the 
Executive Director, after consultation with the General Counsel, will 
make a final determination on the appeal. If a final decision cannot be 
made in 20 work days, the Privacy Act Officer will inform the requester 
of the reasons for the delay and the date on which a final decision can 
be expected. Such extensions are unusual, and should not exceed an 
additional 30 work days.
    (b) If the original request was for access and the initial 
determination is reversed, the procedures in Sec. 1630.7 will be 
followed. If the initial determination is upheld, the requester will be 
so informed and advised of the right to judicial review pursuant to 5 
U.S.C. 552a(g).
    (c) If the initial denial of a request to amend a record is 
reversed, the Board will correct the record as requested and inform the 
individual of the correction. If the original decision is upheld, the 
requester will be informed and notified in writing of the right to 
judicial review pursuant to 5 U.S.C. 552a(g) and the right to file a 
concise statement of disagreement with the Executive Director. The 
statement of disagreement should include an explanation of why the 
requester believes the record is inaccurate, irrelevant, untimely, or 
incomplete. The Executive Director shall maintain the statement of 
disagreement with the disputed record, and shall include a copy of the 
statement of disagreement to any person or agency to whom the record has 
been disclosed, if the disclosure was made pursuant to Sec. 1630.9.



Sec. 1630.15  Exemptions.

    (a) Pursuant to subsection (k) of the Privacy Act, 5 U.S.C. 552a, 
the Board may exempt certain portions of records within designated 
systems of records from the requirements of the Privacy Act, (including 
access to and review of such records pursuant to this part) if such 
portions are:
    (1) Subject to the provisions of section 552(b)(1) of the Freedom of 
Information Act, 5 U.S.C. 552;
    (2) Investigatory material compiled for law enforcement purposes, 
other than material within the scope of subsection (j)(2) of the Privacy 
Act, 5 U.S.C. 552a: Provided, however, that if any individual is denied 
any right, privilege, or benefit that he would otherwise be entitled by 
Federal law, or for which he would otherwise be eligible, as a result of 
the maintenance of such material, such material shall be provided to 
such individual, except to the extent that the disclosure of such 
material would reveal the identity of a source who furnished information 
to the Government under an express promise that the identity of the 
source would be held in confidence, or, prior to the effective date of 
the Privacy Act, 5 U.S.C. 552a, under an implied promise that the 
identity of the source would be held in confidence;
    (3) Maintained in connection with providing protective services to 
the President of the United States or other individuals pursuant to 
section 3056 of title 18 of the United States Code;
    (4) Required by statute to be maintained and used solely as 
statistical records;
    (5) Investigatory material compiled solely for the purpose of 
determining suitability, eligibility, or qualifications for Federal 
civilian employment, military service, Federal contracts, or access to 
classified information, but only to the extent that the disclosures of 
such material would reveal the identity of a source who furnished 
information to the Government under an express promise that the identity 
of the source would be held in confidence, or, prior to the effective 
date of the Privacy Act, 5 U.S.C. 552a, under an implied promise that 
the identity of the source would be held in confidence;

[[Page 204]]

    (6) Test or examination material used solely to determine individual 
qualifications for appointment or promotion in the Federal service, the 
disclosure of which would compromise the objectivity or fairness of the 
testing or examination process; or
    (7) Evaluation material used to determine potential for promotion in 
the armed services, but only to the extent that the disclosure of such 
material be held in confidence, or, prior to the effective date of the 
Privacy Act, 5 U.S.C. 552a, under an implied promise that the identity 
of the source would be held in confidence.
    (b) Those designated systems of records which are exempt from the 
requirements of this part or any other requirements of the Privacy Act, 
5 U.S.C. 552a, will be indicated in the notice of designated systems of 
records published by the Board.
    (c) Nothing in this part will allow an individual access to any 
information compiled in reasonable anticipation of a civil action or 
proceeding.



Sec. 1630.16  Fees.

    (a) Individuals will not be charged for:
    (1) The search and review of the record; and
    (2) Copies of ten (10) or fewer pages of a requested record.
    (b) Records of more than 10 pages will be photocopied for 15 cents a 
page. If the record is larger than 8\1/2\  x  14 inches, the fee will be 
the cost of reproducing the record through Government or commercial 
sources.
    (c) Fees must be paid in full before requested records are 
disclosed. Payment shall be by personal check or money order payable to 
the Federal Retirement Thrift Investment Board, and mailed or delivered 
to the Head, TSP Service Office or to the Privacy Act Officer, depending 
upon the nature of the request, at the address listed in Sec. 1630.4.
    (d) The Head, TSP Service Office or the Privacy Act Officer may 
waive the fee if:
    (1) The cost of collecting the fee exceeds the amount collected; or
    (2) The production of the copies at no charge is in the best 
interest of the Board.
    (e) A receipt will be furnished on request.



Sec. 1630.17  Federal agency requests.

    Employing agencies needing automated data processing services from 
the Board in order to reconcile agency TSP records for TSP purposes may 
be charged rates based upon the factors of:
    (a) Fair market value;
    (b) Cost to the TSP; and
    (c) Interests of the participants and beneficiaries.



Sec. 1630.18  Penalties.

    (a) Title 18, U.S.C. 1001, Crimes and Criminal Procedures, makes it 
a criminal offense, subject to a maximum fine of $10,000 or imprisonment 
for not more than five years, or both, to knowingly and willfully make 
or cause to be made any false or fraudulent statements or representation 
in any matter within the jurisdiction of any agency of the United 
States. Section (i)(3) of the Privacy Act, 5 U.S.C. 552a(i)(3), makes it 
a misdemeanor, subject to a maximum fine of $5,000 to knowingly and 
willfully request or obtain any record concerning an individual under 
false pretenses. Sections (i) (1) and (2) of 5 U.S.C. 552a provide 
penalties for violations by agency employees of the Privacy Act or 
regulations established thereunder.
    (b) [Reserved]



PART 1631--AVAILABILITY OF RECORDS--Table of Contents




  Subpart A--Production or Disclosure of Records Under the Freedom of 
                      Information Act, 5 U.S.C. 552

Sec.
1631.1  Definitions.
1631.2  Purpose and scope.
1631.3  Organization and functions.
1631.4  Public reference facilities and current index.
1631.5  Records of other agencies.
1631.6  How to request records--form and content.
1631.7  Initial determination.
1631.8  Prompt response.
1631.9  Responses--form and content.
1631.10  Appeals to the General Counsel from initial denials.
1631.11  Fees to be charged--categories of requesters.
1631.12  Waiver or reduction of fees.

[[Page 205]]

1631.13  Prepayment of fees over $250.
1631.14  Fee schedule.
1631.15  Information to be disclosed.
1631.16  Exemptions.
1631.17  Deletion of exempted information.
1631.18  Annual report.

 Subpart B--Production in Response to Subpoenas or Demands of Courts or 
                            Other Authorities

1631.30  Purpose and scope.
1631.31  Production prohibited unless approved by the Executive 
          Director.
1631.32  Procedure in the event of a demand for disclosure.
1631.33  Procedure in the event of an adverse ruling.

    Authority: 5 U.S.C. 552, as amended by Pub. L. 93-502 and Pub. L. 
99-570.

    Source: 55 FR 41052, Oct. 9, 1990, unless otherwise noted.



  Subpart A--Production or Disclosure of Records Under the Freedom of 
                      Information Act, 5 U.S.C. 552



Sec. 1631.1  Definitions.

    (a) Board means the Federal Retirement Thrift Investment Board.
    (b) Agency means agency as defined in 5 U.S.C. 552(e).
    (c) Executive Director means the Executive Director of the Federal 
Retirement Thrift Investment Board, as defined in 5 U.S.C. 8401(13) and 
as further described in 5 U.S.C. 8474.
    (d) FOIA means Freedom of Information Act, 5 U.S.C. 552, as amended.
    (e) FOIA Officer means the Board's Director of Administration or his 
or her designee.
    (f) General Counsel means the General Counsel of the Federal 
Retirement Thrift Investment Board.
    (g) Working days or workdays means those days when the Board is open 
for the conduct of Government business, and does not include Saturdays, 
Sundays, and Federal holidays.
    (h) Requester means a person making a FOIA request.
    (i) Submitter means any person or entity which provides confidential 
commercial information to the Board. The term includes, but is not 
limited to, corporations, state governments, and foreign governments.



Sec. 1631.2  Purpose and scope.

    This subpart contains the regulations of the Federal Retirement 
Thrift Investment Board, implementing 5 U.S.C. 552. The regulations of 
this subpart describe the procedures by which records may be obtained 
from all organizational units within the Board and from its 
recordkeeper. Official records of the Board, except those already 
published in bulk by the Board, available pursuant to the requirements 
of 5 U.S.C. 552 shall be furnished to members of the public only as 
prescribed by this subpart. To the extent that it is not prohibited by 
other laws the Board also will make available records which it is 
authorized to withhold under 5 U.S.C. 552 whenever it determines that 
such disclosure is in the interest of the Thrift Savings Plan.



Sec. 1631.3  Organization and functions.

    (a) The Federal Retirement Thrift Investment Board was established 
by the Federal Employees' Retirement System Act of 1986 (Pub. L. 99-335, 
5 U.S.C. 8401 et seq.). Its primary function is to manage and invest the 
Thrift Savings Fund for the exclusive benefit of its participants (e.g., 
participating Federal employees, Federal judges, and Members of 
Congress). The Board is responsible for investment of the assets of the 
Thrift Savings Fund and the management of the Thrift Savings Plan. The 
Board consists of:
    (1) The five part-time members who serve on the Board;
    (2) The Office of the Executive Director;
    (3) The Office of Investments;
    (4) The Office of the General Counsel;
    (5) The Office of Benefits and Program Analysis;
    (6) The Office of Accounting;
    (7) The Office of Administration;
    (8) The Office of External Affairs;
    (9) The Office of Automated Systems; and
    (10) The Office of Communications.
    (b) The Board has no field organization; however, it provides for 
its recordkeeping responsibility by contract or interagency agreement. 
The recordkeeper may be located outside of the Washington, DC area. 
Thrift Savings Plan records maintained for the Board by its recordkeeper 
are Board records

[[Page 206]]

subject to these regulations. Board offices are presently located at 
1250 H Street, NW., Washington, DC 20005.

[55 FR 41052, Oct. 9, 1990, as amended at 59 FR 55331, Nov. 7, 1994]



Sec. 1631.4  Public reference facilities and current index.

    (a) The Board maintains a public reading area located in Room 4308, 
1250 H Street, NW., Washington, DC. Reading area office hours are from 
9:00 A.M. to 5:00 P.M., Monday through Friday. In the reading area, the 
Board makes available for public inspection and copying all of the 
material required by 5 U.S.C. 552(a)(2), including all documents 
published by the Board in the Federal Register which are currently in 
effect.
    (b) The FOIA Officer shall maintain an index of Board regulations, 
directives, bulletins, and published materials.
    (c) The FOIA officer shall also maintain a file open to the public, 
which shall contain copies of all grants or denials of FOIA requests, 
appeals, and appeal decisions by the General Counsel. The materials 
shall be filed by chronological number of request within each calendar 
year, indexed according to the exceptions asserted, and, to the extent 
feasible, indexed according to the type of records requested.

[55 FR 41052, Oct. 9, 1990, as amended at 59 FR 55331, 55332, Nov. 7, 
1994]



Sec. 1631.5  Records of other agencies.

    Requests for records that originated in another agency and that are 
in the custody of the Board may, in appropriate circumstances, be 
referred to that agency for consultation or processing, and the person 
submitting the request shall be so notified.



Sec. 1631.6  How to request records--form and content.

    (a) A request made under the FOIA must be submitted in writing, 
addressed to: FOIA Officer, Federal Retirement Thrift Investment Board, 
1250 H Street, NW., Washington, DC 20005. The words ``FOIA Request'' 
should be clearly marked on both the letter and the envelope.
    (b) Each request must reasonably describe the record(s) sought, 
including, when known: Entity/individual originating the record, date, 
subject matter, type of document, location, and any other pertinent 
information which would assist in promptly locating the record(s). Each 
request should also describe the type of entity the requester is for fee 
purposes. See Sec. 1631.11.
    (c) When a request is not considered reasonably descriptive, or 
requires the production of voluminous records, or places an 
extraordinary burden on the Board, seriously interfering with its normal 
functioning to the detriment of the Thrift Savings Plan, the Board may 
require the person or agent making the FOIA request to confer with a 
Board representative in order to attempt to verify, and, if possible, 
narrow the scope of the request.
    (d) Upon initial receipt of the FOIA request, the FOIA Officer will 
determine which official or officials within the Board shall have the 
primary responsibility for collecting and reviewing the requested 
information and drafting a proposed response.
    (e) Any Board employee or official who receives a FOIA request shall 
promptly forward it to the FOIA Officer, at the above address. Any Board 
employee or official who receives an oral request made under the FOIA 
shall inform the person making the request of the provisions of this 
subpart requiring a written request according to the procedures set out 
herein.

[55 FR 41052, Oct. 9, 1990, as amended at 59 FR 55331, Nov. 7, 1994]



Sec. 1631.7  Initial determination.

    The FOIA Officer shall have the authority to approve or deny 
requests received pursuant to these regulations. The decision of the 
FOIA Officer shall be final, subject only to administrative review as 
provided in Sec. 1631.10.



Sec. 1631.8  Prompt response.

    (a) When the FOIA Officer receives a request which he or she, in 
good faith, believes is not reasonably descriptive, he or she will so 
advise the requester within five workdays. The time limit for processing 
such a request will not begin until receipt of a request which

[[Page 207]]

reasonably describes the records being sought.
    (b) The FOIA Officer shall either approve or deny a reasonably 
descriptive request for records within 10 working days after receipt of 
the request unless additional time is required for one of the following 
reasons:
    (1) It is necessary to search for and collect the requested records 
from other establishments that are separate from the office processing 
the request (e.g., the recordkeeper);
    (2) It is necessary to search for, collect, and appropriately 
examine a voluminous amount of separate and distinct records which are 
demanded in a single request; or
    (3) It is necessary to consult with another agency having a 
substantial interest in the determination of the request or to consult 
with two or more components of the Board having a substantial subject 
matter interest therein.
    (c) When additional time is required for one of the reasons stated 
in paragraph (b) of this section, the FOIA Officer shall acknowledge 
receipt of the request within the 10 workday period and include a brief 
explanation of the reason for the delay, indicating the date by which a 
determination will be forthcoming. An extended deadline adopted for one 
of the reasons set forth above may not exceed 10 additional workdays.



Sec. 1631.9  Responses--form and content.

    (a) When a requested record has been identified and is available, 
the FOIA officer shall notify the person making the request as to where 
and when the record is available for inspection or that copies will be 
made available. The notification shall also advise the person making the 
request of any fees assessed under Sec. 1631.13 of this part.
    (b) A denial or partial denial of a request for a record shall be in 
writing signed by the FOIA Officer and shall include:
    (1) The name and title of the person making the determination;
    (2) A statement of fees assessed, if any; and
    (3) A reference to the specific exemption under the FOIA authorizing 
the withholding of the record, and a brief explanation of how the 
exemption applies to the record withheld; or
    (4) If appropriate, a statement that, after diligent effort, the 
requested records have not been found or have not been adequately 
examined during the time allowed by Sec. 1631.8, and that the denial 
will be reconsidered as soon as the search or examination is complete; 
and
    (5) A statement that the denial may be appealed to the General 
Counsel within 30 calendar days of receipt of the denial or partial 
denial.
    (c) If, after diligent effort, existing requested records have not 
been found, or are known to have been destroyed or otherwise disposed 
of, the FOIA Officer shall so notify the requester.



Sec. 1631.10  Appeals to the General Counsel from initial denials.

    (a) When the FOIA Officer has denied a request for records in whole 
or in part, the person making the request may, within 30 calendar days 
of receipt of the response of the FOIA Officer, appeal the denial to the 
General Counsel. The appeal must be in writing, addressed to the General 
Counsel, Federal Retirement Thrift Investment Board, 1250 H Street NW., 
Washington, DC 20005 and clearly labeled as a ``Freedom of Information 
Act Appeal.''
    (b) The General Counsel will act upon the appeal within 20 workdays 
of its receipts. The General Counsel may extend the 20 workday period of 
time by any number of workdays which could have been claimed and 
consumed by the FOIA Officer under Sec. 1631.8 but which were not 
claimed or consumed in making the initial determination.
    (c) The General Counsel shall decide the appeal in writing and send 
it to the requester.
    (d) If the decision is in favor of the person making the request, 
the General Counsel shall order the subject records be promptly made 
available to the person making the request.
    (e) A denial in whole or in part of a request on appeal shall set 
forth the exemption relied on and a brief explanation of how the 
exemption applies to the records withheld and the reasons for asserting 
it, if different from that described by the FOIA Officer under 
Sec. 1631.9. The denial shall state that the

[[Page 208]]

person making the request may, if dissatisfied with the decision on 
appeal, file a civil action in Federal court in the district in which 
the person resides or has his principal place of business, in the 
district where the records are located, or in the District of Columbia.
    (f) No personal appearance, oral argument, or hearing will 
ordinarily be permitted in connection with an appeal to the Board.
    (g) On appeal, the General Counsel may reduce any fees previously 
assessed.

[55 FR 41052, Oct. 9, 1990, as amended at 59 FR 55331, Nov. 7, 1994]



Sec. 1631.11  Fees to be charged--categories of requesters.

    (a) There are four categories of FOIA requesters; commercial use 
requesters; representatives of news media; educational and noncommercial 
scientific institutions; and all other requesters. The Freedom of 
Information Reform Act of 1986 prescribes specific levels of fees for 
each of these categories:
    (1) When records are being requested for commercial use, the fee 
policy of the Board is to levy full allowable direct cost of searching 
for, reviewing for release, and duplicating the records sought. 
Commercial users are not entitled to two hours of free search time, nor 
100 free pages of reproduction of documents, nor waiver or reduction of 
fees, based on an assertion that disclosure would be in the public 
interest. The full allowable direct cost of searching for, and 
reviewing, records will be charged even if there is ultimately no 
disclosure of records. Commercial use is defined as a use that furthers 
the commercial trade or profit interests of the requester or person on 
whose behalf the request is made. In determining whether a requester 
falls within the commercial use category, the Board will look to the use 
to which a requester will put the documents requested.
    (2) When records are being requested by representatives of the news 
media, the fee policy of the Board is to levy reproduction charges only, 
excluding charges for the first 100 pages. The phrase ``representatives 
of the news media'' refers to any person actively gathering news for an 
entity that is organized and operated to publish or broadcast news to 
the public. The term ``news'' means information that is about current 
events or that would be of current interest to the public. Examples of 
news media entities include television or radio stations broadcasting to 
the public at large, and publishers of periodicals (but only in those 
instances where they can qualify as disseminators of news) who make 
their products available for purchase or subscription by the general 
public. These examples are not intended to be all-inclusive. As 
traditional methods of news delivery evolve (e.g. electronic 
dissemination of newspapers through telecommunications services), such 
alternative media would be included in this category. In the case of 
freelance journalists, they may be regarded as working for a news 
organization if they can demonstrate a solid basis for expecting 
publication through that organization, even though not actually employed 
by it. A publication contract would be the clearest proof, but the Board 
may also look to the past publication record of a requester in making 
this determination.
    (3) When records are being requested by an educational or 
noncommercial scientific institution whose purpose is scholarly or 
scientific research, the fee policy of the Board is to levy reproduction 
charges only, excluding charges for the first 100 pages. The term 
``educational institution'' refers to a preschool, a public or private 
elementary or secondary school, an institution of undergraduate higher 
education, an institution of graduate higher education, an institution 
of professional education, and an institution of vocational education, 
which operates a program or programs of scholarly research. The term 
``noncommercial scientific institution'' refers to an institution that 
is not operated on a commercial basis as that term is defined under 
paragraph (a)(1) of this section and which is operated solely for the 
purpose of conducting scientific research, the results of which are not 
intended to promote any particular product or industry. To be eligible 
for inclusion in this category, a requester must show that the request 
is being made under the auspices of a qualifying institution and that 
the

[[Page 209]]

records are not sought for a commercial use, but are sought in 
furtherance of scholarly (if the request is from an educational 
institution) or scientific (if the request is from a noncommercial 
scientific institution) research.
    (4) For any other request which does not meet the criteria contained 
in paragraphs (a) (1) through (3) of this section, the fee policy of the 
Board is to levy full reasonable direct cost of searching for and 
duplicating the records sought, except that the first 100 pages of 
reproduction and the first two hours of search time will be furnished 
without charge. If computer search time is required, the first two hours 
of computer search time will be based on the hourly cost of operating 
the central processing unit and the operator's hourly salary plus 16 
percent. When the cost of the computer search, including the operator 
time and the cost of operating the computer to process the request, 
equals the equivalent dollar amount of two hours of the salary of the 
person performing the search, i.e., the operator, the Board shall begin 
assessing charges for computer search. Requests from individuals 
requesting records about themselves filed in the Board's systems of 
records shall continue to be treated under the provisions of the Privacy 
Act of 1974, which permit fees only for reproduction. The Board's fee 
schedule is set out in Sec. 1631.14 of this part.
    (b) Except for requests that are for a commercial use, the Board may 
not charge for the first two hours of search time or for the first 100 
pages of reproduction. However, a requestor may not file multiple 
requests at the same time, each seeking portions of a document or 
documents, solely in order to avoid payment of fees. When the Board 
believes that a requester or, on rare occasions, a group of requesters 
acting in concert, is attempting to break a request down into a series 
of requests for the purpose of evading the assessment of fees, the Board 
may aggregate any such requests and charge accordingly. For example, it 
would be reasonable to presume that multiple requests of this type made 
within a 30 calendar day period had been made to avoid fees. For 
requests made over a long period, however, the Board must have a 
reasonable basis for determining that aggregation is warranted in such 
cases. Before aggregating requests from more than one requester, the 
Board must have a reasonable basis on which to conclude that the 
requesters are acting in concert and are acting specifically to avoid 
payment of fees. In no case may the Board aggregate multiple requests on 
unrelated subjects from one requester.
    (c) In accordance with the prohibition of section (4)(A)(iv) of the 
Freedom of Information Act, as amended, the Board shall not charge fees 
to any requester, including commercial use requesters, if the cost of 
collecting a fee would be equal to or greater than the fee itself.
    (1) For commercial use requesters, if the direct cost of searching 
for, reviewing for release, and duplicating the records sought would not 
exceed $25, the Board shall not charge the requester any costs.
    (2) For requests from representatives of news media or educational 
and noncommercial scientific institutions, excluding the first 100 pages 
which are provided at no charge, if the duplication cost would not 
exceed $25, the Board shall not charge the requester any costs.
    (3) For all other requests not falling within the category of 
commercial use requests, representatives of news media, or educational 
and noncommercial scientific institutions, if the direct cost of 
searching for and duplicating the records sought, excluding the first 
two hours of search time and first 100 pages which are free of charge, 
would not exceed $25, the Board shall not charge the requester any 
costs.



Sec. 1631.12  Waiver or reduction of fees.

    (a) The Board may waive all fees or levy a reduced fee when 
disclosure of the information requested is deemed to be in the public 
interest because it is likely to contribute significantly to public 
understanding of the operations or activities of the Board or Federal 
Government and is not primarily in the commercial interest of the 
requester. In making its decision on waiving or reducing fees, the Board 
will consider the following factors:

[[Page 210]]

    (1) Whether the subject of the requested records concerns the 
operations or activities of the Board or the Government,
    (2) Whether the disclosure is likely to contribute to an 
understanding of Government operations or activities (including those of 
the Board),
    (3) Whether the disclosure is likely to contribute significantly to 
public understanding of TSP or Government operations or activities,
    (4) Whether the requester has a commercial interest that would be 
furthered by the requested disclosure, and
    (5) Whether the magnitude of the identified commercial interest of 
the requester is sufficiently large, in comparison with the public 
interest in disclosure, that disclosure is primarily in the commercial 
interest of the requester.
    (b) A fee waiver request must indicate the existence and magnitude 
of any commercial interest that the requester has in the records that 
are the subject of the request.



Sec. 1631.13  Prepayment of fees over $250.

    (a) When the Board estimates or determines that allowable charges 
that a requester may be required to pay are likely to exceed $250.00, 
the Board may require a requester to make an advance payment of the 
entire fee before continuing to process the request.
    (b) When a requester has previously failed to pay a fee charged in a 
timely fashion (i.e., within 30 calendar days of the date of the 
billing), the Board may require the requester to pay the full amount 
owed plus any applicable interest as provided in Sec. 1631.14(d), and to 
make an advance payment of the full amount of the estimated fee before 
the agency begins to process a new request or a pending request from 
that requester.
    (c) When the Board acts under paragraph (a) or (b) of this section, 
the administrative time limits prescribed in subsection (a)(6) of the 
FOIA (i.e., 10 working days from the receipt of initial requests and 20 
working days from receipt of appeals from initial denial, plus 
permissible extensions of these time limits) will begin only after the 
Board has received fee payments under paragraph (a) or (b) of this 
section.



Sec. 1631.14  Fee schedule.

    (a) Manual searches for records. The Board will charge at the salary 
rate(s) plus 16 percent (to cover benefits) of the employee(s) 
conducting the search. The Board may assess charges for time spend 
searching, even if the Board fails to locate the records or if records 
located are determined to be exempt from disclosure.
    (b) Computer searches for records. The Board will charge the actual 
direct cost of providing the service. This will include the cost of 
operating the central processing unit (CPU) for that portion of 
operating time that is directly attributable to searching for records 
responsive to a FOIA request and operator/programmer salary, plus 16 
percent, apportionable to the search. The Board may assess charges for 
time spent searching, even if the Board fails to locate the records or 
if records located are determined to be exempt from disclosure.
    (c) Duplication costs. (1) For copies of documents reproduced on a 
standard office copying machine in sizes up to 8\1/2\  x  14 inches, the 
charge will be $.15 per page.
    (2) The fee for reproducing copies of records over 8\1/2\  x  14 
inches, or whose physical characteristics do not permit reproduction by 
routine electrostatic copying, shall be the direct cost of reproducing 
the records through Government or commercial sources. If the Board 
estimates that the allowable duplication charges are likely to exceed 
$25, it shall notify the requester of the estimated amount of fees, 
unless the requester had indicated in advance his/her willingness to pay 
fees as those anticipated. Such a notice shall offer a requester the 
opportunity to confer with agency personnel with the objective of 
reformulating the request to meet his/her needs at a lower cost.
    (3) For copies prepared by computer, such as tapes or printouts, the 
Board shall charge the actual cost, including operator time, of 
producing the tape or printout. If the Board estimates that the 
allowable duplication charges are likely to exceed $25, it shall notify 
the requester of the estimated amount of

[[Page 211]]

fees, unless the requester has indicated in advance his/her willingness 
to pay fees as high as those anticipated. Such a notice shall offer a 
requester the opportunity to confer with agency personnel with the 
objective of reformulating the request to meet his/her needs at a lower 
cost.
    (4) For other methods of reproduction or duplication, the Board 
shall charge the actual direct costs of producing the document(s). If 
the Board estimates that the allowable duplication charges are likely to 
exceed $25, it shall notify the requester of the estimated amount of 
fees, unless the requester has indicated in advance his/her willingness 
to pay fees as high as those anticipated. Such a notice shall offer a 
requester the opportunity to confer with agency personnel with the 
objective of reformulating the request to meet his/her needs at a lower 
cost.
    (d) Interest may be charged to those requesters who fail to pay fees 
charged. The Board may begin assessing interest charges on the amount 
billed starting on the 31st calendar day following the day on which the 
billing was sent. Interest will be at the rate prescribed in section 
3717 of title 31 of the United States Code, and it will accrue from the 
date of the billing.
    (e) The Board shall use the most efficient and least costly methods 
to comply with requests for documents made under the FOIA. The Board may 
choose to contract with private sector services to locate, reproduce, 
and disseminate records in response to FOIA requests when that is the 
most efficient and least costly method. When documents responsive to a 
request are maintained for distribution by agencies operating statutory-
based fee schedule programs, such as, but not limited to, the Government 
Printing Office or the National Technical Information Service, the Board 
will inform requesters of the steps necessary to obtain records from 
those sources.



Sec. 1631.15  Information to be disclosed.

    (a) In general, all records of the Board are available to the 
public, as required by the Freedom of Information Act. However, the 
Board claims the right, where it is applicable, to withhold material 
under the provisions specified in the Freedom of Information Act as 
amended (5 U.S.C. 552(b)).
    (b) Records from non-U.S. Government source. (1) Board personnel 
will generally consider two exemptions in the FOIA in deciding whether 
to withhold from disclosure material from a non-U.S. Government source.
    Exemption 4 permits withholding of ``trade secrets and commercial or 
financial information obtained from a person as privileged or 
confidential.'' Exemption 6 permits withholding certain information, the 
disclosure of which ``would constitute a clearly unwarranted invasion of 
personal privacy.''
    (2)(i) Exemption 4. Commencing January 1, 1988, the submitter of 
confidential commercial information must, at the time the information is 
submitted to the Board or within 30 calendar days of such submission, 
designate any information the disclosure of which the submitter claims 
could reasonably be expected to cause substantial competitive harm. The 
submitter as part of its submission, must explain the rationale for the 
designation of the information as commercial and confidential.
    (ii) Confidential commercial information means records provided to 
the Board by a submitter that arguably contains material exempt from 
release under Exemption 4 of the FOIA, 5 U.S.C. 552(b)(4), because 
disclosure could reasonably be expected to cause substantial competitive 
harm.
    (iii) After January 1, 1988, a submitter who does not designate 
portions of a submission as confidential commercial information waives 
that basis for nondisclosure unless the Board determines that it has 
substantial reason to believe that disclosure of the requested records 
would result in substantial harm to the competitive position of the 
submitter.
    (3) When the Board determines that it has substantial reason to 
believe that disclosure of the requested records would result in 
substantial competitive harm to the submitter, and has no designation 
from the submitter, it shall notify the submitter of the following:
    (i) That a FOIA request has been received seeking the record,
    (ii) That disclosure of the record may be required,

[[Page 212]]

    (iii) That disclosure of the record could result in competitive harm 
to the submitter,
    (iv) That the submitter has a period of seven workdays from date of 
notice within which it or a designee may object to the disclosure its 
records, and
    (v) That a detailed explanation should be submitted setting forth 
all grounds as to why the disclosure would result in substantial 
competitive harm, such as, the general custom or usage in the business 
of the information in the record, the number and situation of the 
persons who have access to the record, the type and degree of risk of 
financial injury that release would cause, and the length of time the 
record needs to be kept confidential.
    (4) In exceptional circumstances, the Board may extend by seven 
workdays the time for a submitter's response for good cause.
    (5) The Board shall give careful consideration to all specified 
grounds for nondisclosure prior to making an administrative 
determination on the issue of competitive harm.
    (6) Should the Board determine to disclose the requested records, it 
shall provide written notice to the submitter, explaining briefly why 
the submitter's objections were not sustained and setting forth the date 
for disclosure, which date may be less than 10 calendar days after the 
date of the letter to the submitter.
    (7) A submitter who provided records to the Board prior to January 
1, 1988, and did not designate which records contain confidential 
commercial information, shall be notified as provided in 
Sec. 1631.15(b)(3). After making such notification, the Board will 
follow the procedures set forth in Sec. 1631.15(b)(4)-(6).
    (8) The Board will, as a general rule, look favorably upon 
recommendations for withholding information about ideas, methods, and 
processes that are unique; about equipment, materials, or systems that 
are potentially patentable; or about a unique use of equipment which is 
specifically outlined.
    (9) The Board will not withhold information that is known through 
custom or usage in the relevant trade, business, or profession, or 
information that is generally known to any reasonably educated person. 
Self-evident statements or reviews of the general state of the art will 
not ordinarily be withheld.
    (10) The Board will withhold all cost data submitted, except the 
total estimated costs from each year of a contract. It will release 
these total estimated costs and ordinarily release explanatory material 
and headings associated with the cost data, withholding only the figures 
themselves. If a contractor believes that some of the explanatory 
material should be withheld, that material must be identified and a 
justification be presented as to why it should not be released.
    (11) Exemption 6. This exemption is not a blanket exemption for all 
personal information submitted by a non-U.S. Government source. The 
Board will balance the need to keep a person's private affairs from 
unnecessary public scrutiny with the public's right to information on 
Board records. As a general practice, the Board will release information 
about any person named in a contract itself or about any person who 
signed a contract as well as information given in a proposal about any 
officer of a corporation submitting that proposal. Depending upon the 
circumstances, the Board may release most information in resumes 
concerning employees, including education and experience. Efforts will 
be made to identify information that should be deleted and offerors are 
urged to point out such material for guidance. Any information in the 
proposal, such as the names of staff persons, which might, if released, 
constitute an unwarranted invasion of personal privacy if released 
should be identified and a justification for non-release provided in 
order to receive proper consideration.



Sec. 1631.16  Exemptions.

    The Freedom of Information Act exempts from all of its publication 
and disclosure requirements nine categories of records which are 
described in 5 U.S.C. 552(b). These categories include such matters as 
national defense and foreign policy information, investigatory files, 
internal procedures and communications, materials exempted from 
disclosure by other statutes, information given in confidence and 
matters involving personal privacy.

[[Page 213]]



Sec. 1631.17  Deletion of exempted information.

    Where requested records contain matters which are exempted under 5 
U.S.C. 552(b) but which matters are reasonably segregable from the 
remainder of the records, they shall be disclosed by the Board with 
deletions. To each such record, the Board shall attach a written 
justification for making deletions. A single such justification shall 
suffice for deletions made in a group of similar or related records.



Sec. 1631.18  Annual report.

    The Executive Director shall submit annually, on or before March 1, 
a Freedom of Information report covering the preceding calendar year to 
the Speaker of the House of Representatives and the President of the 
Senate. The report shall include those matters required by 5 U.S.C. 
552(d).



 Subpart B--Production in Response to Subpoenas or Demands of Courts or 
                            Other Authorities



Sec. 1631.30  Purpose and scope.

    This subpart contains the regulations of the Board concerning 
procedures to be followed when a subpoena, order, or other demand 
(hereinafter in this subpart referred to as a ``demand'') of a court or 
other authority is issued for the production or disclosure of:
    (a) Any material contained in the files of the Board;
    (b) Any information relating to materials contained in the files of 
the Board; or
    (c) Any information or material acquired by an employee of the Board 
as a part of the performance of his or her official duties or because of 
his or her official status.



Sec. 1631.31  Production prohibited unless approved by the Executive Director.

    No employee or former employee of the Board shall, in response to a 
demand of a court or other authority, produce any material contained in 
the files of the Board or disclose any information or produce any 
material acquired as part of the performance of his or her official 
status without the prior approval of the Executive Director or his or 
her designee.



Sec. 1631.32  Procedure in the event of a demand for disclosure.

    (a) Whenever a demand is made upon an employee or former employee of 
the Board for the production of material or the disclosure of 
information described in Sec. 1631.31, he or she shall immediately 
notify the Executive Director or his or her designee. If possible, the 
Executive Director or his or her designee shall be notified before the 
employee or former employee concerned replies to or appears before the 
court or other authority.
    (b) If response to the demand is required before instructions from 
the Executive Director or his or her designee are received, an attorney 
designated for that purpose by the Board shall appear with the employee 
or former employee upon whom the demand has been made and shall furnish 
the court or other authority with a copy of the regulations contained in 
this part and inform the court or other authority that the demand has 
been or is being, as the case may be, referred for prompt consideration 
by the Executive Director or his or her designee. The court or other 
authority shall be requested respectfully to stay the demand pending 
receipt of the requested instructions from the Executive Director.



Sec. 1631.33  Procedure in the event of an adverse ruling.

    If the court or other authority declines to stay the effect of the 
demand in response to a request made in accordance with Sec. 1631.32(b) 
pending receipt of instructions from the Executive Director, or his or 
her designee, or if the court or other authority rules that the demand 
must be complied with irrespective of the instructions from the 
Executive Director not to produce the material or disclose the 
information sought, the employee or former employee upon whom the demand 
has been made shall respectfully decline to comply with the demand. 
[United States ex. rel. Touhy v. Ragen, 340 U.S. 462 (1951)].

[[Page 214]]



PART 1632--RULES REGARDING PUBLIC OBSERVATION OF MEETINGS--Table of Contents




Sec.
1632.1  Purpose and scope.
1632.2  Definitions.
1632.3  Conduct of agency business.
1632.4  Meetings open to public observation.
1632.5  Exemptions.
1632.6  Public announcement of meetings.
1632.7  Meetings closed to public observation.
1632.8  Changes with respect to publicly announced meeting.
1632.9  Certification of General Counsel.
1632.10  Transcripts, recordings, and minutes.
1632.11  Procedures for inspection and obtaining copies of 
          transcriptions and minutes.

    Authority: 5 U.S.C. 552b and 5 U.S.C. 8474.

    Source: 53 FR 36777, Sept. 22, 1988, unless otherwise noted.



Sec. 1632.1  Purpose and scope.

    This part is issued by the Federal Retirement Thrift Investment 
Board (Board) under section 552b of title 5 of the United States Code, 
the Government in the Sunshine Act, to carry out the policy of the Act 
that the public is entitled to the fullest practicable information 
regarding the decision making processes of the Board while at the same 
time preserving the rights of individuals and the ability of the Board 
to carry out its responsibilities. These regulations fulfill the 
requirement of subsection (g) of the Act that each agency subject to the 
provisions of the Act shall promulgate regulations to implement the open 
meeting requirements of subsections (b) through (f) of the Act.



Sec. 1632.2  Definitions.

    For purposes of this part, the following definitions shall apply:
    (a) The term Act means the Government in the Sunshine Act, 5 U.S.C. 
552b.
    (b) The term Board means the Federal Retirement Thrift Investment 
Board and subdivisions thereof.
    (c) The term meeting means the deliberations of at least the number 
of individual agency members required to take action on behalf of the 
Board where such deliberations determine or result in the joint conduct 
or disposition of official Board business. However, this term does not 
include--
    (1) Deliberations required or permitted by subsection (d) or (e) of 
the Act (relating to decisions to close all or a portion of a meeting, 
or to decisions on the timing or content of an announcement of a 
meeting), or
    (2) The conduct or disposition of official agency business by 
circulating written material to individual members.
    (d) The term number of individual agency members required to take 
action on behalf of the agency means three members.
    (e) The term member means a member of the Board appointed under 
section 101 of the Federal Employees' Retirement System Act of 1986, 5 
U.S.C. 8472.
    (f) The term public observation means that the public shall have the 
right to listen and observe but not the right to participate in the 
meeting or to record any of the meeting by means of cameras or 
electronic or other recording devices unless approval in advance is 
obtained from the Secretary of the Board.



Sec. 1632.3  Conduct of agency business.

    Members shall not jointly conduct or dispose of official Board 
business other than in accordance with this part.



Sec. 1632.4  Meetings open to public observation.

    (a) Except as provided in Sec. 1632.5 of this part, every portion of 
every meeting of the agency shall be open to public observation.
    (b) The Freedom of Information Act, 5 U.S.C. 552, and the Board's 
implementing regulations, 5 CFR part 1611, shall govern the availability 
to the public of copies of documents considered in connection with the 
Board's discussion of agenda items for a meeting that is open to public 
observation.
    (c) The Board will maintain mailing lists of names and addresses of 
all persons who wish to receive copies of agency announcements of 
meetings open to public observation. Requests for announcements may be 
made by telephoning or by writing to the Office

[[Page 215]]

of External Affairs, Federal Retirement Thrift Investment Board, 1250 H 
Street NW., Washington, DC 20005.

[53 FR 36777, Sept. 22, 1988, as amended at 59 FR 55331, Nov. 7, 1994]



Sec. 1632.5  Exemptions.

    (a) Except in a case where the Board finds that the public interest 
requires otherwise, the Board may close a meeting or a portion or 
portions of a meeting under the procedures specified in Sec. 1632.7 or 
Sec. 1632.8 of this part, and withhold information under the provisions 
of Secs. 1632.6, 1632.7, 1632.8, or 1632.11 of this part, where the 
Board properly determines that such meeting or portion of its meeting or 
the disclosure of such information is likely to:
    (1) Disclose matters that are:
    (i) Specifically authorized under criteria established by an 
Executive Order to be kept secret in the interests of national defense 
or foreign policy, and
    (ii) In fact properly classified pursuant to such Executive Order;
    (2) Relate solely to internal personnel rules and practices;
    (3) Disclose matters specifically exempted from disclosure by 
statute (other than section 552 of title 5 of the United States Code), 
provided that such statute:
    (i) Requires that the matters be withheld from the public in such a 
manner as to leave no discretion on the issue, or
    (ii) Established particular criteria for withholding or refers to 
particular types of matters to be withheld;
    (4) Disclose trade secrets and commercial or financial information 
obtained from a person and privileged or confidential;
    (5) Involve accusing any person of a crime, or formally censuring 
any person;
    (6) Disclose information of a personal nature where disclosure would 
constitute a clearly unwarranted invasion of personal privacy;
    (7) Disclose investigatory records compiled for law enforcement 
purposes, or information which if written would be contained in such 
records, but only to the extent that the production of such records or 
information would:
    (i) Interfere with enforcement proceedings,
    (ii) Deprive a person of a right to a fair trial or an impartial 
adjudication,
    (iii) Constitute an unwarranted invasion of personal privacy,
    (iv) Disclose the identity of a confidential source and, in the case 
of a record compiled by a criminal law enforcement authority in the 
course of a criminal investigation, or by a Federal agency conducting a 
lawful national security intelligence investigation, confidential 
information furnished only by the confidential source,
    (v) Disclose investigative techniques and procedures, or
    (vi) Endanger the life or physical safety of law enforcement 
personnel;
    (8) Disclose information contained in or related to examination, 
operating, or condition reports prepared by or on behalf of, or for the 
use of the Board or other Federal agency responsible for the regulation 
or supervision of financial institutions;
    (9) Disclose information the premature disclosure of which would:
    (i) Be likely to (A) lead to significant speculation in currencies, 
securities, or commodities, or (B) significantly endanger the stability 
of any financial institution; or
    (ii) Be likely to significantly frustrate implementation of a 
proposed action except that paragraph (a)(9)(ii) of this section shall 
not apply in any instance where the Board has already disclosed to the 
public the content or nature of its proposed action, or where the Board 
is required by law to make such disclosure on its own initiative prior 
to taking final action on such proposal; or
    (10) Specifically concern the issuance of a subpoena, participation 
in a civil action or proceeding, an action in a foreign court or 
international tribunal, or an arbitration, or the initiation, conduct, 
or disposition of a particular case of formal agency adjudication 
pursuant to the procedures in section 554 of title 5 of the United 
States Code or otherwise involving a determination on the record after 
opportunity for a hearing.
    (b) [Reserved]

[[Page 216]]



Sec. 1632.6  Public announcement of meetings.

    (a) Except as otherwise provided by the Act, public announcement of 
meetings open to public observation and meetings to be partially or 
completely closed to public observation pursuant to Sec. 1632.7 of this 
part will be made at least one week in advance of the meeting. Except to 
the extent such information is determined to be exempt from disclosure 
under Sec. 1632.5 of this part, each such public announcement will state 
the time, place and subject matter of the meeting, whether it is to be 
open or closed to the public, and the name and phone number of the 
official designated to respond to requests for information about the 
meeting.
    (b) If a majority of the members of the Board determines by a 
recorded vote that Board business requires that a meeting covered by 
paragraph (a) of this section be called at a date earlier than that 
specified in paragraph (a) of this section, the Board shall make a 
public announcement of the information specified in paragraph (a) of 
this section at the earliest practicable time.
    (c) Changes in the subject matter of a publicly announced meeting, 
or in the determination to open or close a publicly announced meeting or 
any portion of a publicly announced meeting to public observation, or in 
the time or place of a publicly announced meeting made in accordance 
with the procedures specified in Sec. 1632.9 of this part, will be 
publicly announced at the earliest practicable time.
    (d) Public announcements required by this section will be posted at 
the Board's External Affairs Office and may be made available by other 
means or at other locations as may be desirable.
    (e) Immediately following each public announcement required by this 
section, notice of the time, place and subject matter of a meeting, 
whether the meeting is open or closed, any change in one of the 
preceding announcements and the name and telephone number of the 
official designated by the Board to respond to requests about the 
meeting, shall also be submitted for publication in the Federal 
Register.



Sec. 1632.7  Meetings closed to public observation.

    (a) A meeting or a portion of a meeting will be closed to public 
observation, or information as to such meeting or portion of a meeting 
will be withheld, only by recorded vote of a majority of the Members of 
the Board when it is determined that the meeting or the portion of the 
meeting or the withholding of information qualifies for exemption under 
Sec. 1632.5. Votes by proxy are not allowed.
    (b) Except as provided in paragraph (c) of this section, a separate 
vote of the Members of the Board will be taken with respect to the 
closing or the withholding of information as to each meeting or portion 
thereof which is proposed to be closed to public observation or with 
respect to which information is proposed to be withheld pursuant to this 
section.
    (c) A single vote may be taken with respect to a series of meetings, 
a portion or portions of which are proposed to be closed to public 
observation or with respect to any information concerning such series of 
meetings proposed to be withheld, so long as each meeting or portion 
thereof in such series involves the same particular matters and is 
scheduled to be held no more than thirty days after the initial meeting 
in such series.
    (d) Whenever any person's interests may be directly affected by a 
portion of the meeting for any of the reasons referred to in exemption 
(a)(5), (a)(6) or (a)(7) of Sec. 1632.5 of this part, such person may 
request in writing to the Secretary of the Board that such portion of 
the meeting be closed to public observation. The Secretary, or in his or 
her absence, the Acting Secretary of the Board, shall transmit the 
request to the members and upon the request of any one of them a 
recorded vote shall be taken whether to close such meeting to public 
observation.
    (e) Within one day of any vote taken pursuant to paragraphs (a) 
through (d) of this section, the agency will make publicly available at 
the Board's External Affairs Office a written copy of such vote 
reflecting the vote of each member on the question. If a meeting or a 
portion of a meeting is to be closed

[[Page 217]]

to public observation, the Board, within one day of the vote taken 
pursuant to paragraphs (a) through (d) of this section, will make 
publicly available at the Board's External Affairs Office a full written 
explanation of its action closing the meeting or portion of the meeting 
together with a list of all persons expected to attend the meeting and 
their affiliation, except to the extent such information is determined 
by the Board to be exempt from disclosure under subsection (c) of the 
Act and Sec. 1632.5 of this part.
    (f) Any person may request in writing to the Secretary of the Board 
that an announced closed meeting, or portion of the meeting, be held 
open to public observation. The Secretary, or in his or her absence, the 
Acting Secretary of the Board, will transmit the request to the members 
of the Board and upon the request of any member a recorded vote will be 
taken whether to open such meeting to public observation.



Sec. 1632.8  Changes with respect to publicly announced meetings.

    The subject matter of a meeting or the determination to open or 
close a meeting or a portion of a meeting to public observation may be 
changed following public announcement under Sec. 1632.6 only if a 
majority of the Members of the Board determines by a recorded vote that 
that agency business so requires and that no earlier announcement of the 
change was possible. Public announcement of such change and the vote of 
each member upon such change will be made pursuant to Sec. 1632.6(c). 
Changes in time, including postponements and cancellations of a publicly 
announced meeting or portion of a meeting or changes in the place of a 
publicly announced meeting will be publicly announced pursuant to 
Sec. 1632.6(c) by the Secretary of the Board or, in the Secretary's 
absence, the Acting Secretary of the Board.



Sec. 1632.9  Certification of General Counsel.

    Before every meeting or portion of a meeting closed to public 
observation under Sec. 1632.7 of this part, the General Counsel, or in 
the General Counsel's absence, the Acting General Counsel, shall 
publicly certify whether or not in his or her opinion the meeting may be 
closed to public observation and shall state each relevant exemptive 
provision. A copy of such certification, together with a statement from 
the presiding officer of the meeting setting forth the time and place of 
the meeting and the persons present, will be retained for the time 
prescribed in Sec. 1632.10(d).



Sec. 1632.10  Transcripts, recordings, and minutes.

    (a) The Board will maintain a complete transcript or electronic 
recording or transcription thereof adequate to record fully the 
proceedings of each meeting or portion of a meeting closed to public 
observation pursuant to exemption (a)(1), (a)(2), (a)(3), (a)(5), 
(a)(6), (a)(7), or (a)(9)(ii) of Sec. 1632.5 of this part. 
Transcriptions of recordings will disclose the identity of each speaker.
    (b) The Board will maintain either such a transcript, recording or 
transcription thereof, or a set of minutes that will fully and clearly 
describe all matters discussed and provide a full and accurate summary 
of any actions taken and the reasons therefor, including a description 
of each of the views expressed on any item and the record of any roll 
call vote (reflecting the vote of each member on the question), for 
meetings or portions of meetings closed to public observation pursuant 
to exemptions (a)(8), (a)(9)(i)(A) or (a)(10) of Sec. 1632.5 of this 
part. The minutes will identify all documents considered in connection 
with any action taken.
    (c) Transcripts, recordings or transcriptions thereof, or minutes 
will promptly be made available to the public in the External Affairs 
Office except for such item or items of such discussion or testimony as 
may be determined to contain information that may be withheld under 
subsection (c) of the Act and Sec. 1632.5 of this part. These documents, 
disclosing the identity of each speaker, shall be furnished to any 
person at the actual cost of duplication or transcription.

[[Page 218]]

    (d) A complete verbatim copy of the transcript, a complete copy of 
the minutes, or a complete electronic recording or verbatim copy of a 
transcription thereof of each meeting or portion of a meeting closed to 
public observation will be maintained for a period of at least two 
years, or one year after the conclusion of any Board proceeding with 
respect to which the meeting or portion thereof was held, whichever 
occurs later.



Sec. 1632.11  Procedures for inspection and obtaining copies of transcriptions and minutes.

    (a) Any person may inspect or copy a transcript, a recording or 
transcription, or minutes described in Sec. 1632.10(c) of this part.
    (b) Requests for copies of transcripts, recordings or transcriptions 
of recordings, or minutes described in Sec. 1632.10(c) of this part 
shall specify the meeting or the portion of meeting desired and shall be 
submitted in writing to the Secretary of the Board, Federal Retirement 
Thrift Investment Board, 1250 H Street NW., Washington, DC 20005. Copies 
of documents identified in minutes may be made available to the public 
upon request under the provisions of 5 CFR part 1630 (the Board's 
Freedom of Information Act regulations).

[53 FR 36777, Sept. 22, 1988, as amended at 59 FR 55331, Nov. 7, 1994]



PART 1633--STANDARDS OF CONDUCT--Table of Contents




    Authority: 5 U.S.C. 7301.



Sec. 1633.1  Cross-reference to employee ethical conduct standards and financial disclosure regulations.

    Employees of the Federal Retirement Thrift Investment Board (Board) 
are subject to the executive branch-wide Standards of Ethical conduct at 
5 CFR part 2635, the Board regulations at 5 CFR part 8601 which 
supplement the executive branch-wide standards, and the executive 
branch-wide financial disclosure regulations at 5 CFR part 2634.
[59 FR 50817, Oct. 6, 1994]



PART 1636--ENFORCEMENT OF NONDISCRIMINATION ON THE BASIS OF HANDICAP IN PROGRAMS OR ACTIVITIES CONDUCTED BY THE FEDERAL RETIREMENT THRIFT INVESTMENT BOARD--Table of Contents




Sec.
1636.101  Purpose.
1636.102  Application.
1636.103  Definitions.
1636.104--1636.109  [Reserved]
1636.110  Self-evaluation.
1636.111  Notice.
1636.112--1636.129  [Reserved]
1636.130  General prohibitions against discrimination.
1636.131--1636.139  [Reserved]
1636.140  Employment.
1636.141--1636.148  [Reserved]
1636.149  Program accessibility: Discrimination prohibited.
1636.150  Program accessibility: Existing facilities.
1636.151  Program accessibility: New construction and alterations.
1636.152--1636.159  [Reserved]
1636.160  Communications.
1636.161--1636.169  [Reserved]
1636.170  Compliance procedures.
1636.171--1636.999  [Reserved]

    Authority: 29 U.S.C. 794.

    Source: 58 FR 57696, 57699, Oct. 26, 1993, unless otherwise noted.



Sec. 1636.101  Purpose.

    The purpose of this part is to effectuate section 119 of the 
Rehabilitation, Comprehensive Services, and Developmental Disabilities 
Amendments of 1978, which amended section 504 of the Rehabilitation Act 
of 1973 to prohibit discrimination on the basis of handicap in programs 
or activities conducted by Executive agencies or the United States 
Postal Service.



Sec. 1636.102  Application.

    This part (Secs. 1636.101--1636.170) applies to all programs or 
activities conducted by the agency, except for programs or activities 
conducted outside the United States that do not involve individuals with 
handicaps in the United States.



Sec. 1636.103  Definitions.

    For purposes of this part, the term--
    Assistant Attorney General means the Assistant Attorney General, 
Civil

[[Page 219]]

Rights Division, United States Department of Justice.
    Auxiliary aids means services or devices that enable persons with 
impaired sensory, manual, or speaking skills to have an equal 
opportunity to participate in, and enjoy the benefits of, programs or 
activities conducted by the agency. For example, auxiliary aids useful 
for persons with impaired vision include readers, Brailled materials, 
audio recordings, and other similar services and devices. Auxiliary aids 
useful for persons with impaired hearing include telephone handset 
amplifiers, telephones compatible with hearing aids, telecommunication 
devices for deaf persons (TTD's), interpreters, notetakers, written 
materials, and other similar services and devices.
    Complete complaint means a written statement that contains the 
complainant's name and address and describes the agency's alleged 
discriminatory action in sufficient detail to inform the agency of the 
nature and date of the alleged violation of section 504. It shall be 
signed by the complainant or by someone authorized to do so on his or 
her behalf. Complaints filed on behalf of classes or third parties shall 
describe or identify (by name, if possible) the alleged victims of 
discrimination.
    Facility means all or any portion of buildings, structures, 
equipment, roads, walks, parking lots, rolling stock or other 
conveyances, or other real or personal property.
    Historic preservation programs means programs conducted by the 
agency that have preservation of historic properties as a primary 
purpose.
    Historic properties means those properties that are listed or 
eligible for listing in the National Register of Historic Places or 
properties designated as historic under a statute of the appropriate 
State or local government body.
    Individual with handicaps means any person who has a physical or 
mental impairment that substantially limits one or more major life 
activities, has a record of such an impairment, or is regarded as having 
such an impairment. As used in this definition, the phrase:
    (1) Physical or mental impairment includes--
    (i) Any physiological disorder or condition, cosmetic disfigurement, 
or anatomical loss affecting one or more of the following body systems: 
Neurological; musculoskeletal; special sense organs; respiratory, 
including speech organs; cardiovascular; reproductive; digestive; 
genitourinary; hemic and lymphatic; skin; and endocrine; or
    (ii) Any mental or psychological disorder, such as mental 
retardation, organic brain syndrome, emotional or mental illness, and 
specific learning disabilities. The term ``physical or mental 
impairment'' includes, but is not limited to, such diseases and 
conditions as orthopedic, visual, speech, and hearing impairments, 
cerebral palsy, epilepsy, muscular dystrophy, multiple sclerosis, 
cancer, heart disease, diabetes, mental retardation, emotional illness, 
HIV disease (whether symptomatic or asymptomatic), and drug addiction 
and alcoholism.
    (2) Major life activities include functions such as caring for one's 
self, performing manual tasks, walking, seeing, hearing, speaking, 
breathing, learning, and working.
    (3) Has a record of such an impairment means has a history of, or 
has been misclassified as having, a mental or physical impairment that 
substantially limits one or more major life activities.
    (4) Is regarded as having an impairment means--
    (i) Has a physical or mental impairment that does not substantially 
limit major life activities but is treated by the agency as constituting 
such a limitation;
    (ii) Has a physical or mental impairment that substantially limits 
major life activities only as a result of the attitudes of others toward 
such impairment; or
    (iii) Has none of the impairments defined in paragraph (1) of this 
definition but is treated by the agency as having such an impairment.
    Qualified individual with handicaps means--
    (1) With respect to preschool, elementary, or secondary education 
services provided by the agency, an individual with handicaps who is a 
member of a class of persons otherwise entitled by statute, regulation, 
or agency policy to receive education services from the agency;

[[Page 220]]

    (2) With respect to any other agency program or activity under which 
a person is required to perform services or to achieve a level of 
accomplishment, an individual with handicaps who meets the essential 
eligibility requirements and who can achieve the purpose of the program 
or activity without modifications in the program or activity that the 
agency can demonstrate would result in a fundamental alteration in its 
nature;
    (3) With respect to any other program or activity, an individual 
with handicaps who meets the essential eligibility requirements for 
participation in, or receipt of benefits from, that program or activity; 
and
    (4) Qualified handicapped person as that term is defined for 
purposes of employment in 29 CFR 1614.203(a)(6), which is made 
applicable to this part by Sec. 1636.140.
    Section 504 means section 504 of the Rehabilitation Act of 1973 
(Pub. L. 93--112, 87 Stat. 394 (29 U.S.C. 794)), as amended. As used in 
this part, section 504 applies only to programs or activities conducted 
by Executive agencies and not to federally assisted programs.
    Substantial impairment means a significant loss of the integrity of 
finished materials, design quality, or special character resulting from 
a permanent alteration.
Secs. 1636.104--1636.109  [Reserved]



Sec. 1636.110  Self-evaluation.

    (a) The agency shall, by November 28, 1994, evaluate its current 
policies and practices, and the effects thereof, that do not or may not 
meet the requirements of this part and, to the extent modification of 
any such policies and practices is required, the agency shall proceed to 
make the necessary modifications.
    (b) The agency shall provide an opportunity to interested persons, 
including individuals with handicaps or organizations representing 
individuals with handicaps, to participate in the self-evaluation 
process by submitting comments (both oral and written).
    (c) The agency shall, for at least three years following completion 
of the self-evaluation, maintain on file and make available for public 
inspection:
    (1) A description of areas examined and any problems identified; and
    (2) A description of any modifications made.



Sec. 1636.111  Notice.

    The agency shall make available to employees, applicants, 
participants, beneficiaries, and other interested persons such 
information regarding the provisions of this part and its applicability 
to the programs or activities conducted by the agency, and make such 
information available to them in such manner as the head of the agency 
finds necessary to apprise such persons of the protections against 
discrimination assured them by section 504 and this part.
Secs. 1636.112--1636.129  [Reserved]



Sec. 1636.130  General prohibitions against discrimination.

    (a) No qualified individual with handicaps shall, on the basis of 
handicap, be excluded from participation in, be denied the benefits of, 
or otherwise be subjected to discrimination under any program or 
activity conducted by the agency.
    (b)(1) The agency, in providing any aid, benefit, or service, may 
not, directly or through contractual, licensing, or other arrangements, 
on the basis of handicap--
    (i) Deny a qualified individual with handicaps the opportunity to 
participate in or benefit from the aid, benefit, or service;
    (ii) Afford a qualified individual with handicaps an opportunity to 
participate in or benefit from the aid, benefit, or service that is not 
equal to that afforded others;
    (iii) Provide a qualified individual with handicaps with an aid, 
benefit, or service that is not as effective in according equal 
opportunity to obtain the same result, to gain the same benefit, or to 
reach the same level of achievement as that provided to others;
    (iv) Provide different or separate aid, benefits, or services to 
individuals with handicaps or to any class of individuals with handicaps 
than is provided to others unless such action is necessary to provide 
qualified individuals with

[[Page 221]]

handicaps with aid, benefits, or services that are as effective as those 
provided to others;
    (v) Deny a qualified individual with handicaps the opportunity to 
participate as a member of planning or advisory boards;
    (vi) Otherwise limit a qualified individual with handicaps in the 
enjoyment of any right, privilege, advantage, or opportunity enjoyed by 
others receiving the aid, benefit, or service.
    (2) The agency may not deny a qualified individual with handicaps 
the opportunity to participate in programs or activities that are no 
separate or different, despite the existence of permissibly separate or 
different programs or activities.
    (3) The agency may not, directly or through contractual or other 
arrangements, utilize criteria or methods of administration the purpose 
or effect of which would--
    (i) Subject qualified individuals with handicaps to discrimination 
on the basis of handicap; or
    (ii) Defeat or substantially impair accomplishment of the objectives 
of a program or activity with respect to individuals with handicaps.
    (4) The agency may not, in determining the site or location of a 
facility, make selections the purpose or effect of which would--
    (i) Exclude individuals with handicaps from, deny them the benefits 
of, or otherwise subject them to discrimination under any program or 
activity conducted by the agency; or
    (ii) Defeat or substantially impair the accomplishment of the 
objectives of a program or activity with respect to individuals with 
handicaps.
    (5) The agency, in the selection of procurement contractors, may not 
use criteria that subject qualified individuals with handicaps to 
discrimination on the basis of handicap.
    (6) The agency may not administer a licensing or certification 
program in a manner that subjects qualified individuals with handicaps 
to discrimination on the basis of handicap, nor may the agency establish 
requirements for the programs or activities of licensees or certified 
entities that subject qualified individuals with handicaps to 
discrimination on the basis of handicap. However, the programs or 
activities of entities that are licensed or certified by the agency are 
not, themselves, covered by this part.
    (c) The exclusion of nonhandicapped persons from the benefits of a 
program limited by Federal statute or Executive order to individuals 
with handicaps or the exclusion of a specific class of individuals with 
handicaps from a program limited by Federal statute or Executive order 
to a different class of individuals with handicaps is not prohibited by 
this part.
    (d) The agency shall administer programs and activities in the most 
integrated setting appropriate to the needs of qualified individuals 
with handicaps.
Secs. 1636.131--1636.139  [Reserved]



Sec. 1636.140  Employment.

    No qualified individual with handicaps shall, on the basis of 
handicap, be subjected to discrimination in employment under any program 
or activity conducted by the agency. The definitions, requirements, and 
procedures of section 501 of the Rehabilitation Act of 1973 (29 U.S.C. 
791), as established by the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission in 
29 CFR part 1614, shall apply to employment in federally conducted 
programs or activities.
Secs. 1636.141--1636.148  [Reserved]



Sec. 1636.149  Program accessibility: Discrimination prohibited.

    Except as otherwise provided in Sec. 1636.150, no qualified 
individual with handicaps shall, because the agency's facilities are 
inaccessible to or unusable by individuals with handicaps, be denied the 
benefits of, be excluded from participation in, or otherwise be 
subjected to discrimination under any program or activity conducted by 
the agency.



Sec. 1636.150  Program accessibility: Existing facilities.

    (a) General. The agency shall operate each program or activity so 
that the program or activity, when viewed in its entirety, is readily 
accessible to and usable by individuals with handicaps. This paragraph 
does not--

[[Page 222]]

    (1) Necessarily require the agency to make each of its existing 
facilities accessible to and usable by individuals with handicaps;
    (2) In the case of historic preservation programs, require the 
agency to take any action that would result in a substantial impairment 
of significant historic features of an historic property; or
    (3) Require the agency to take any action that it can demonstrate 
would result in a fundamental alteration in the nature of a program or 
activity or in undue financial and administrative burdens. In those 
circumstances where agency personnel believe that the proposed action 
would fundamentally alter the program or activity or would result in 
undue financial and administrative burdens, the agency has the burden of 
proving that compliance with Sec. 1636.150(a) would result in such 
alteration or burdens. The decision that compliance would result in such 
alteration or burdens must be made by the agency head or his or her 
designee after considering all agency resources available for use in the 
funding and operation of the conducted program or activity, and must be 
accompanied by a written statement of the reasons for reaching that 
conclusion. If an action would result in such an alteration or such 
burdens, the agency shall take any other action that result in such an 
alteration or such burdens but would nevertheless ensure that 
individuals with handicaps receive the benefits and services of the 
program or activity.
    (b) Methods--(1) General. The agency may comply with the 
requirements of this section through such means as redesign of 
equipment, reassignment of services to accessible buildings, assignment 
of aides to beneficiaries, home visits, delivery of services at 
alternate accessible sites, alteration of existing facilities and 
construction of new facilities, use of accessible rolling stock, or any 
other methods that result in making its programs or activities readily 
accessible to and usable by individuals with handicaps. The agency is 
not required to make structural changes in existing facilities where 
other methods are effective in achieving compliance with this section. 
The agency, in making alterations to existing buildings, shall meet 
accessibility requirements to the extent compelled by the Architectural 
Barriers Act of 1968, as amended (42 U.S.C. 4151--4157), and any 
regulations implementing it. In choosing among available methods for 
meeting the requirements of this section, the agency shall give priority 
to those methods that offer programs and activities to qualified 
individuals with handicaps in the most integrated setting appropriate.
    (2) Historic preservation programs. In meeting the requirements of 
Sec. 1636.150(a) in historic preservation programs, the agency shall 
give priority to methods that provide physical access to individuals 
with handicaps. In cases where a physical alteration to an historic 
property is not required because of Sec. 1636.150(a)(2) or (a)(3), 
alternative methods of achieving program accessibility include--
    (i) Using audio-visual materials and devices to depict those 
portions of an historic property that cannot otherwise be made 
accessible;
    (ii) Assigning persons to guide individuals with handicaps into or 
through portions of historic properties that cannot otherwise be made 
accessible; or
    (iii) Adopting other innovative methods.
    (c) Time period for compliance. The agency shall comply with the 
obligations established under this section by January 24, 1994, except 
that where structural changes in facilities are undertaken, such changes 
shall be made by November 26, 1996, but in any event as expeditiously as 
possible.
    (d) Transition plan. In the event that structural changes to 
facilities will be undertaken to achieve program accessibility, the 
agency shall develop, by May 26, 1994, a transition plan setting forth 
the steps necessary to complete such changes. The agency shall provide 
an opportunity to interested persons, including individuals with 
handicaps or organizations representing individuals with handicaps, to 
participate in the development of the transition plan by submitting 
comments (both oral and written). A copy of the transition plan shall be 
made available for public inspection. The plan shall, at a minimum--

[[Page 223]]

    (1) Identify physical obstacles in the agency's facilities that 
limit the accessibility of its programs or activities to individuals 
with handicaps;
    (2) Describe in detail the methods that will be used to make the 
facilities accessible;
    (3) Specify the schedule for taking the steps necessary to achieve 
compliance with this section and, if the time period of the transition 
plan is longer than one year, identify steps that will be taken during 
each year of the transition period; and
    (4) Indicate the official responsible for implementation of the 
plan.



Sec. 1636.151  Program accessibility: New construction and alterations.

    Each building or part of a building that is constructed or altered 
by, on behalf of, or for the use of the agency shall be designed, 
constructed, or altered so as to be readily accessible to and usable by 
individuals with handicaps. The definitions, requirements, and standards 
of the Architectural Barriers Act (42 U.S.C. 4151--4157), as established 
in 41 CFR 101--19.600 to 101--19.607, apply to buildings covered by this 
section.
Secs. 1636.152--1636.159  [Reserved]



Sec. 1636.160  Communications.

    (a) The agency shall take appropriate steps to ensure effective 
communication with applicants, participants, personnel of other Federal 
entities, and members of the public.
    (1) The agency shall furnish appropriate auxiliary aids where 
necessary to afford an individual with handicaps an equal opportunity to 
participate in, and enjoy the benefits of, a program or activity 
conducted by the agency.
    (i) In determining what type of auxiliary aid is necessary, the 
agency shall give primary consideration to the requests of the 
individual with handicaps.
    (ii) The agency need not provide individually prescribed devices, 
readers for personal use or study, or other devices of a personal 
nature.
    (2) Where the agency communicates with applicants and beneficiaries 
by telephone, telecommunication devices for deaf persons (TDD's) or 
equally effective telecommunication systems shall be used to communicate 
with persons with impaired hearing.
    (b) The agency shall ensure that interested persons, including 
persons with impaired vision or hearing, can obtain information as to 
the existence and location of accessible services, activities, and 
facilities.
    (c) The agency shall provide signage at a primary entrance to each 
of its inaccessible facilities, directing users to a location at which 
they can obtain information about accessible facilities. The 
international symbol for accessibility shall be used at each primary 
entrance of an accessible facility.
    (d) This section does not require the agency to take any action that 
it can demonstrate would result in a fundamental alteration in the 
nature of a program or activity or in undue financial and administrative 
burdens. In those circumstances where agency personnel believe that the 
proposed action would fundamentally alter the program or activity or 
would result in undue financial and administrative burdens, the agency 
has the burden of proving that compliance with Sec. 1636.160 would 
result in such alteration or burdens. The decision that compliance would 
result in such alteration or burdens must be made by the agency head or 
his or her designee after considering all agency resources available for 
use in the funding and operation of the conducted program or activity 
and must be accompanied by a written statement of the reasons for 
reaching that conclusion. If an action required to comply with this 
section would result in such an alteration or such burdens, the agency 
shall take any other action that would not result in such an alteration 
or such burdens but would nevertheless ensure that, to the maximum 
extent possible, individuals with handicaps receive the benefits and 
services of the program or activity.
Secs. 1636.161--1636.169  [Reserved]



Sec. 1636.170  Compliance procedures.

    (a) Except as provided in paragraph (b) of this section, this 
section applies to all allegations of discrimination on the basis of 
handicap in programs and activities conducted by the agency.

[[Page 224]]

    (b) The agency shall process complaints alleging violations of 
section 504 with respect to employment according to the procedures 
established by the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission in 29 CFR 
part 1614 pursuant to section 501 of the Rehabilitation Act of 1973 (29 
U.S.C. 791).
    (c) The Assistant General Counsel (Administration) shall be 
responsible for coordinating implementation of this section. Complaints 
may be sent to the Executive Director.
    (d) The agency shall accept and investigate all complete complaints 
for which it has jurisdiction. All complete complaints must be filed 
within 180 days of the alleged act of discrimination. The agency may 
extend this time period for good cause.
    (e) If the agency receives a complaint over which it does not have 
jurisdiction, it shall promptly notify the complainant and shall make 
reasonable efforts to refer the complaint to the appropriate Government 
entity.
    (f) The agency shall notify the Architectural and Transportation 
Barriers Compliance Board upon receipt of any complaint alleging that a 
building or facility that is subject to the Architectural Barriers Act 
of 1968, as amended (42 U.S.C. 4151-4157), is not readily accessible to 
and usable by individuals with handicaps.
    (g) Within 180 days of the receipt of a complete complaint for which 
it has jurisdiction, the agency shall notify the complainant of the 
results of the investigation in a letter containing--
    (1) Findings of fact and conclusions of law;
    (2) A description of a remedy for each violation found; and
    (3) A notice of the right to appeal.
    (h) Appeals of the findings of fact and conclusions of law or 
remedies must be filed by the complainant within 90 days of receipt from 
the agency of the letter required by Sec. 1636.170(g). The agency may 
extend this time for good cause.
    (i) Timely appeals shall be accepted and processed by the head of 
the agency.
    (j) The head of the agency shall notify the complainant of the 
results of the appeal within 60 days of the receipt of the request. If 
the head of the agency determines that additional information is needed 
from the complainant, he or she shall have 60 days from the date of 
receipt of the additional information to make his or her determination 
on the appeal.
    (k) The time limits cited in paragraphs (g) and (j) of this section 
may be extended with the permission of the Assistant Attorney General.
    (l) The agency may delegate its authority for conducting complaint 
investigations to other Federal agencies, except that the authority for 
making the final determination may not be delegated to another agency.

[58 FR 57696, 57699, Oct. 26, 1993, as amended at 58 FR 57697, Oct. 26, 
1993]
Secs. 1636.171--1636.999  [Reserved]



PART 1640--PERIODIC PARTICIPANT STATEMENTS--Table of Contents




Sec.
1640.1  Definitions.
1640.2  Duty to provide information.
1640.3  Statement of individual account.
1640.4  Account transactions.
1640.5  Investment fund information.
1640.6  Method of providing information.

    Authority: 5 U.S.C. 8439 (c)(1) and (c)(2), 5 U.S.C. 8474 (b)(5) and 
(c)(1).

    Source: 52 FR 20371, June 1, 1987, unless otherwise noted.



Sec. 1640.1  Definitions.

    As used in this Subpart:
    Board means the Federal Retirement Thrift Investment Board, 
established pursuant to 5 U.S.C. 8472;
    C Fund means the Common Stock Index Investment Fund established 
pursuant to 5 U.S.C. 8438(b)(1)(C);
    Employee contribution means any contribution made pursuant to 5 
U.S.C. 8432(a) or 5 U.S.C. 8351(a);
    Employer basic contribution means any contribution made pursuant to 
5 U.S.C. 8432(c)(1) or 5 U.S.C. 8432(c)(3);
    Employer matching contribution means any contribution made pursuant 
to 5 U.S.C. 8432(c)(2);
    Executive Director means the Executive Director of the Board, as 
defined in 5 U.S.C. 8401(11) and as further described in 5 U.S.C. 8474.
    F Fund means the Fixed Income Investment Fund established pursuant 
to 5 U.S.C. 8438(b)(1)(B);

[[Page 225]]

    G Fund means the Government Securities Investment Fund established 
pursuant to 5 U.S.C. 8438(b)(1)(A);
    Individual account means the account established for a participant 
in the Thrift Savings Fund pursuant to 5 U.S.C. 8439(a);
    Investment fund means either the G Fund, the F Fund, or the C Fund, 
or all three collectively;
    Open season means the period during which participants may make an 
election with respect to the Thrift Savings Plan.
    Participant means any person with an individual account in the 
Thrift Savings Fund.
    Source, when used in reference to contributions, means any one of 
the three types of contributions which are made to the Fund on behalf of 
participants--employee contributions, employer basic contributions, or 
employer matching contributions.
    Thrift Savings Fund means the Fund described in 5 U.S.C. 8437;
    Thrift Savings Plan or Plan means the Federal Retirement Thrift 
Savings Plan established under subchapter III of the Federal Employees' 
Retirement System Act of 1986, 5 U.S.C. 8431, et seq.
    Thrift Savings Plan Service Office means the office established by 
the Board to service separated participants.



Sec. 1640.2  Duty to provide information.

    At least once every six months, and not later than thirty (30) days 
prior to a period established by the Executive Director pursuant to 5 
U.S.C. 8432(b)(1) in which participants may make effective elections 
concerning contributions to or investments in the Plan, the Executive 
Director shall provide the information prescribed in Secs. 1640.3 and 
1640.5.



Sec. 1640.3  Statement of individual account.

    The Executive Director shall furnish each participant with the 
following information concerning that participant's individual account:
    (a) Name and social security number under which the account is 
established;
    (b) Beginning and ending dates of the period covered by the 
statement;
    (c) As of the opening of business on the beginning date and the 
close of business on the ending date of the period covered by the 
statement:
    (1) The balance of the account;
    (2) The amounts of principal and earnings in the G Fund, the F Fund, 
and the C Fund by source of contribution;
    (d) An itemization of all transactions affecting the account which 
occurred during the period covered by the statement, made in accordance 
with section 1640.4; and
    (e) Any other information which the Executive Director determines 
should be included in the statement.



Sec. 1640.4  Account transactions.

    (a) Types of transactions contained in statement. Where relevant, 
the following transactions shall be reported in each individual account 
statement:
    (1) Contributions;
    (2) Earnings posted;
    (3) Withdrawals;
    (4) Forfeitures;
    (5) Loan activity;
    (6) Transfers between investment funds;
    (7) Adjustments to prior transactions; and
    (8) Any other transaction which the Executive Director deems to 
affect the status of the individual account.
    (b) Information concerning each transaction. Where relevant, the 
statement shall contain the following information concerning each 
transaction identified in paragraph (a) of this section:
    (1) Type of transaction;
    (2) Pay date of the pay period in which the transaction was 
reflected in the participant's salary payment;
    (3) Investment fund affected;
    (4) Date the transaction was processed;
    (5) Source of contribution;
    (6) Amount of the transaction; and
    (7) Any other information which the Executive Director deems 
relevant.



Sec. 1640.5  Investment fund information.

    For each open season, the Executive Director shall furnish each 
participant with a statement concerning each of the investment funds. 
This statement shall contain the following information concerning each 
investment fund:

[[Page 226]]

    (a) A summary description of the type of investments to be made by 
the particular investment fund, written in a manner designed to 
facilitate informed decision-making by the participant; and
    (b) An evaluation of the performance history of the type of 
investments to be made by the particular investment fund covering the 
five year period preceding the date of the evaluation.

For the May 15, 1987 through July 31, 1987 open season, the statement 
described in this section shall only be provided for the G Fund.



Sec. 1640.6  Method of providing information.

    (a) Individual account statement. The information concerning each 
participant's individual account described in Sec. 1640.3 shall be sent 
to the participant at the participant's last known address, by first 
class mail, at least three business days before the date when such 
statement must be furnished under Sec. 1640.2 It shall be the 
participant's responsibility to provide his or her current address to 
the employing office or, in the case of separated employees, to the 
Thrift Savings Plan Service Office.
    (b) Investment information. The investment information described in 
Sec. 1640.5 shall be furnished to each participant either by mailing the 
information to the participant by the method described in paragraph (a) 
of this section, or by including such information in material published 
by the Board to be distributed in any manner reasonably designed to 
reach the participant, including distribution through the participant's 
employing office or, in the case of separated employees, through the 
Thrift Savings Plan Service Office.



PART 1645--ALLOCATION OF EARNINGS--Table of Contents




Sec.
1645.1  Definitions.
1645.2  Posting of receipts.
1645.3  Calculation of net earnings for each investment fund.
1645.4  Administrative expenses attributable to each investment fund.
1645.5  Basis for allocation of earnings.
1645.6  Earnings allocation for individual accounts.
1645.7  Posting of earnings to individual accounts.

    Authority: 5 U.S.C. 8439(a)(3) and 5 U.S.C. 8474.

    Source: 53 FR 15621, May 2, 1988, unless otherwise noted.



Sec. 1645.1  Definitions.

    As used in this part, the following terms have the following 
meanings:
    Accrued means accounted for during a valuation period, whether or 
not actually paid or received during that period.
    Administrative expenses means the expenses authorized by 5 U.S.C. 
8437(c)(3).
    Agency automatic (1%) contributions means contributions made 
pursuant to 5 U.S.C. 8432(c)(1) or 5 U.S.C. 8432(c)(3).
    Agency matching contributions means contributions made pursuant to 5 
U.S.C. 8432(c)(2).
    Allocation means any pro rata distribution of amounts.
    Allocation date means the last day of each calendar month.
    Basis means the portion of an account or Investment Fund upon which 
the allocation of earnings is based.
    Board means the Federal Retirement Thrift Investment Board 
established pursuant to 5 U.S.C. 8472.
    C Fund means the Common Stock Index Investment Fund established 
pursuant to 5 U.S.C. 8438(b)(1)(C).
    Employee contributions means any contributions made pursuant to 5 
U.S.C. 8432(a) or 5 U.S.C. 8351(a).
    Employer contributions means agency automatic (1%) contributions and 
agency matching contributions.
    F Fund means the Fixed Income Investment Fund established pursuant 
to 5 U.S.C. 8438(b)(1)(B).
    Forfeitures means amounts forfeited pursuant to 5 U.S.C. 8432(g)(2) 
and other nonstatutory forfeited amounts, net of restored forfeited 
amounts.
    G Fund means the Government Securities Investment Fund established 
pursuant to 5 U.S.C. 8438(b)(1)(A).
    Individual account means the account established for a participant 
in the Thrift Savings Fund pursuant to 5 U.S.C. 8439(a)(2).
    Investment Fund means the G Fund, the F Fund, or the C Fund.
    Month-end account balance means the value, as of the allocation 
date, of the

[[Page 227]]

funds for each source of contributions in each investment fund, 
including all earnings, and any forfeiture, restored forfeited amount, 
adjustment, earnings correction, loan, withdrawal, or interfund transfer 
transactions posted as of the allocation date.
    Posting means the process of crediting or debiting amounts to an 
individual account.
    Recordkeeper means the organization designated by the Board as the 
Thrift Savings Plan's recordkeeper.
    Source means the origin of any one of the three types of 
contributions that are made to the Fund on behalf of participants--
employee contributions, agency automatic (1%) contributions, or agency 
matching contributions.
    Thrift Savings Fund or Fund means the Fund described in 5 U.S.C. 
8437.
    Valuation period means the calendar month during which earnings 
accrue.

[53 FR 15621, May 2, 1988, as amended at 61 FR 58973, Nov. 20, 1996]



Sec. 1645.2   Posting of receipts.

    Agency and employee contributions and loan repayments will be posted 
by source and by investment fund to the appropriate individual account 
on the day they are processed by the recordkeeper.

[61 FR 58974, Nov. 20, 1996]



Sec. 1645.3  Calculation of net earnings for each investment fund.

    (a) For each valuation period, net earnings will be calculated 
separately for each investment fund.
    (b) Net earnings for each investment fund will equal:
    (1) The sum of the following items, if any, accrued during the 
current valuation period:
    (i) Interest on money of that investment fund which is invested with 
the G Fund;
    (ii) Interest on other short-term investments of the investment 
fund;
    (iii) Income (such as dividends and interest) on other investments 
of the investment fund; and
    (iv) Capital gain or loss on investments of the investment fund, net 
of transaction costs.
    (2) Minus the accrued administrative expenses of the investment 
fund, determined in accordance with Sec. 1645.4.
    (c) The net earnings for each investment fund resulting from 
paragraph (b) of this section will be adjusted by residual net earnings 
from the previous valuation period for that investment fund, as 
described in Sec. 1645.6(b), to produce the earnings available for 
allocation to the participant accounts in the respective investment fund 
for the current valuation period.

[53 FR 15621, May 2, 1988, as amended at 61 FR 58974, Nov. 20, 1996]



Sec. 1645.4   Administrative expenses attributable to each investment fund.

    A portion of administrative expenses accrued during each valuation 
period will be charged to each investment fund. The investment funds' 
respective portions will be determined as follows:
    (a) Investment managers' fees and other accrued administrative 
expenses attributable only to the C or F Fund will be charged to the C 
or F Fund, respectively;
    (b) All other accrued administrative expenses will be reduced by 
forfeitures and earnings on forfeitures accrued during the valuation 
period;
    (c) The amount of accrued administrative expenses not covered by 
forfeitures under paragraph (b) of this section will be charged on a pro 
rata basis to the investment funds, based on the respective investment 
fund balances on the last day of the prior valuation period.

[61 FR 58974, Nov. 20, 1996]



Sec. 1645.5  Basis for allocation of earnings.

    (a) Individual account basis. Except for the amounts described in 
paragraph (b) of this section, the individual account basis on the 
earnings allocation date for each source of contributions in each 
investment fund equals:
    (1) The month-end account balance as of the previous allocation 
date; plus
    (2) One-half of contributions posted to the individual account 
during the current valuation period (except for contributions referred 
to in paragraph (b) of this section); plus

[[Page 228]]

    (3) One-half of all loan repayments posted to the individual account 
during the current valuation period.
    (b) Inclusion of retroactive contributions. The individual account 
basis for agency automatic (1%) contributions will also include all 
amounts attributable to retroactive contributions that are made to the 
individual account pursuant to 5 U.S.C. 8432(c)(3) and that are 
processed by the recordkeeper during the current valuation period.
    (c) Computation of fund basis. For each valuation period, the total 
fund basis for each investment fund will be the sum of all individual 
account bases for all sources of contributions in that investment fund, 
calculated as described in paragraphs (a) and (b) of this section.

[61 FR 58974, Nov. 20, 1996]



Sec. 1645.6  Earnings allocation for individual accounts.

    (a) Computation of earnings for each individual account. Earnings 
for each source of contributions for each investment fund will be 
allocated to each individual account separately. The total net earnings 
for each investment fund (as computed under Sec. 1645.3) will be divided 
by the total fund basis for that investment fund (as computed under 
Sec. 1645.5(c)). The resulting number (the ``allocation factor'') will 
be multiplied by the individual account basis for the respective source 
of contributions in that investment fund (as computed under 
Sec. 1645.5(a)), to determine the individual account earnings for the 
valuation period attributable to that source of contributions in that 
investment fund. The earnings of the individual account for each source 
of contributions in each investment fund, when added together, will 
constitute the earnings for that individual account during the valuation 
period.
    (b) Residual net earnings. Amounts allocated to individual accounts 
may not exceed the total amount of earnings available to be allocated. 
To avoid allocating excessive amounts, computation of earnings for 
individual accounts described in paragraph (a) of this section will not 
include fractions of a cent. Residual net earnings attributable to 
unallocated fractions of a cent will be allocated with the earnings for 
the following valuation period.

[61 FR 58974, Nov. 20, 1996]



Sec. 1645.7  Posting of earnings to individual accounts.

    For each source of contributions for each investment fund, the 
amount of earnings computed for each individual account in a valuation 
period, as described in Sec. 1645.6, will be posted to the individual 
account as of the allocation date.

[61 FR 58974, Nov. 20, 1996]



PART 1650--METHODS OF WITHDRAWING FUNDS FROM THE THRIFT SAVINGS PLAN--Table of Contents




                           Subpart A--General

1650.1  Definitions.
1650.2  Eligibility.
1650.3  Separation from Government employment.
1650.4  Rehired employees.
1650.5  Outstanding loans.
1650.6  Frozen accounts.
1650.7  Monthly cycle for withdrawal payments.

                      Subpart B--Withdrawal Options

1650.8  Single payment.
1650.9  Monthly payments.
1650.10  Annuities.
1650.11  Transfer of withdrawal payments.
1650.12  Deferred withdrawal elections.
1650.13  Required date for making withdrawal election.
1650.14  Changes and cancellation of withdrawal election.

           Subpart C--Procedures for Withdrawing TSP Accounts

1650.15  Information to be provided by agency.
1650.16  Accounts of more than $3,500.
1650.17  Accounts of $3,500 or less.

                        Subpart D--Spousal Rights

1650.18  Spouses of FERS participants.
1650.19  Spouses of CSRS participants.
1650.20  Spousal rights when participant changes withdrawal election.
1650.21  Executive Director's exception to requirement to notify the 
          spouse.
1650.22  Executive Director's exception to the requirement to obtain the 
          spouse's signature.


[[Page 229]]


    Authority: 5 U.S.C. 8351, 8433, 8434, 8435, 8467(b)(5), and 
8474(c)(1).

    Source: 60 FR 9603, Feb. 21, 1995, unless otherwise noted.



                           Subpart A--General



Sec. 1659.1  Definitions.

    As used in this part:
    Account balance means, unless otherwise specified, the 
nonforfeitable valued account balance of a TSP participant as of the 
most recent month end prior to the date a withdrawal occurs.
    Board means the Federal Retirement Thrift Investment Board, 
established pursuant to 5 U.S.C. 8472.
    CSRS means the Civil Service Retirement System established by 5 
U.S.C. chapter 83, subchapter III, or any equivalent retirement system.
    FERS means the Federal Employees' Retirement System established by 5 
U.S.C. chapter 84, or any equivalent retirement system.
    Participant means any person with an account in the Thrift Savings 
Plan.
    Spouse means the person to whom a TSP participant is married on the 
date he or she signs forms requesting spouse information to be submitted 
to the TSP, including a spouse from whom the participant is legally 
separated, and including a person with whom a participant is living in a 
relationship that constitutes a common-law marriage in the jurisdiction 
in which they live.
    Thrift Savings Plan, TSP, or Plan means the Federal Retirement 
Thrift Savings Plan, established under subchapters III and VII of the 
Federal Employees' Retirement System Act of 1986, 5 U.S.C. 8431 et seq.
    Thrift Savings Plan Service Office means the office established by 
the Board to service separated TSP participants. This office's current 
address is: Thrift Savings Plan Service Office, National Finance Center, 
P.O. Box 61500, New Orleans, Louisiana 70161-1500.



Sec. 1650.2  Eligibility.

    A participant who separates from Government employment, as described 
in Sec. 1650.3, is eligible to withdraw his or her account by one of the 
withdrawal methods described in subpart B of this part, subject to the 
rules relating to spouses' rights (set forth in subpart D of this part), 
minimum distributions, and domestic relations orders. A participant 
cannot choose a withdrawal method while he or she is employed by the 
Government.



Sec. 1650.3  Separation from Government employment.

    For purposes of this part, a separation from Government employment 
occurs when a participant ceases employment with the Federal Government 
or the U.S. Postal Service (or with any other employer from a position 
that is deemed to be Government employment for purposes of participating 
in the TSP) for at least 31 full calendar days.



Sec. 1650.4  Rehired employees.

    (a) A participant who is reemployed in a position in which he or she 
can participate in the TSP on or before the 31st full calendar day after 
the date of separation is not eligible to withdraw his or her TSP 
account. In order to be eligible to withdraw his or her TSP account, a 
participant must state on Form TSP-70 (Withdrawal Request) that he or 
she is separated and expects the separation to last at least 31 full 
calendar days. If a participant is scheduled for an automatic cashout, 
as described in Sec. 1650.17, the cashout will be canceled if the 
participant states to the TSP that he or she has been reemployed or 
expects to be reemployed within 31 full calendar days.
    (b) A participant who is reemployed after 31 full calendar days 
after his or her date of separation in a position in which the 
participant is eligible to participate in the TSP may withdraw the 
portion of his or her account balance attributable to the earlier period 
of employment. However, if the amount in the account attributable to the 
first period of employment is greater than $3,500, the participant must 
submit, prior to the date of his or her reemployment, a properly 
completed withdrawal form (TSP-70) choosing a withdrawal option that 
results in an immediate withdrawal. A reemployed participant may not 
make a deferred withdrawal election, as described in

[[Page 230]]

Sec. 1650.12, or an election of monthly payments, as described in 
Sec. 1650.9. If a reemployed participant is already receiving monthly 
withdrawal payments, such payments will stop.



Sec. 1650.5  Outstanding loans.

    A participant is not entitled to withdraw his or her account balance 
until any loan outstanding at the time of separation has either been 
repaid in full or declared to be a taxable distribution.



Sec. 1650.6  Frozen accounts.

    A participant may not withdraw any portion of his or her account 
balance if the account is frozen as a result of a retirement benefits 
court order or a child support or alimony enforcement order or as a 
result of a freeze placed on the account by the Board for another 
reason.



Sec. 1650.7  Monthly cycle for withdrawal payments.

    The value of a TSP account is determined at approximately mid-month, 
as of the end of the preceding month, after earnings are allocated to 
the account. TSP transactions that require valued account balances, such 
as withdrawals, can only occur after the value of an account has been 
determined. Because of this, withdrawal payments are generally made once 
a month, during what is known as the ``mid-month processing cycle.''



                      Subpart B--Withdrawal Options



Sec. 1650.8  Single payment.

    A participant can withdraw his or her entire account in a single 
payment.



Sec. 1650.9  Monthly payments.

    (a) A participant can withdraw his or her account balance in two or 
more substantially equal monthly payments, to be calculated under one of 
the following methods:
    (1) A fixed monthly payment amount. The amount must be at least $25 
per month and must satisfy any minimum distribution requirements. 
Payments will be made each month until the account is expended. If the 
last scheduled payment would be less than the chosen amount, it will be 
combined and paid with the previous payment;
    (2) A fixed number of monthly payments. The participant's month-end 
account balance for the month preceding the month of the first payment 
will be divided by the number of payments chosen in order to determine 
the monthly amount. If that amount is less than $25, the election is 
rejected. The payment must also meet any minimum distribution 
requirements. In January of each subsequent year, the TSP will divide 
the December 31 account balance from the prior year by the remaining 
number of payments in order to determine that year's monthly payments. 
If the monthly payment amount is less than $25, it will be increased to 
$25. This process will be repeated each year until the account is 
expended; or
    (3) A monthly payment amount calculated using the factors set forth 
in Internal Revenue Service expected return multiple table V, 26 CFR 
1.72-9. There is no $25 minimum monthly payment under this method. In 
the year payments begin, the monthly payment amount is calculated by 
dividing the month-end account balance for the month preceding the month 
of the first payment by the factor from table V based upon the 
participant's age as of his or her birthday in that year. This amount is 
then divided by 12 to yield the monthly payment amount. In subsequent 
years, the monthly payment amount is recalculated each January by 
dividing the December 31 account balance from the previous year by the 
factor from Table V based upon the participant's age as of his or her 
birthday in the year payments will be made. That amount is divided by 12 
to yield the monthly payment account.
    (b) A participant who chooses to receive monthly payments calculated 
using one of the three methods set forth in paragraph (a) of this 
section cannot change the method after payments begin. Also, except as 
provided in paragraph (c) of this section, the participant cannot change 
the number of payments or the payment amount after payments begin.

[[Page 231]]

    (c) A participant receiving monthly payments can choose to receive 
the remainder of his or her account balance in a final single payment.
    (d) A participant receiving monthly payments may invest his or her 
account balance as provided in 5 CFR part 1601.



Sec. 1650.10  Annuities.

    (a) A participant can withdraw his or her entire account balance in 
the form of a life annuity. The participant's account balance must be 
$3,500 or more in order for the TSP to purchase an annuity. If a 
participant chooses this method, the TSP will be sent forms asking him 
or her to choose an annuity method, name a beneficiary (if required), 
and provide any necessary spousal waiver or spousal information. Upon 
receipt of the required information, the TSP will purchase the annuity 
from the TSP's annuity vendor using the participant's entire account 
balance, except for any amount necessary to satisfy minimum distribution 
requirements. The first annuity payment will be made approximately 30 
calendar days after the purchase of the annuity. The annuity will 
provide a payment for life to the participant and, if applicable, the 
participant's survivor, in accordance with the type of annuity chosen.
    (b) The following types of annuities are available to participants:
    (1) A single life annuity with level payments. This annuity is based 
upon the life expentancy of the participant at the time of purchase and 
provides monthly payments to the participant as long as the participant 
lives.
    (2) A joint life annuity for the participant and his or her spouse 
with level payments. This annuity is based upon the combined life 
expectancies of the participant and the spouse and provides monthly 
payments to the participant, as long as both the participant and spouse 
are alive, and monthly payments to the survivor, as long as he or she is 
alive.
    (3) Either a single life or joint life annuity (as described in 
paragraph (b)(1) or (b)(2) of this section) where the amount of the 
monthly payment can increase each year on the anniversary date of the 
first annuity payment. The amount of the increase is based on the 
average annual change in the Consumer Price Index for Urban Wage Earners 
and Clerical Workers as measured between the period of July through 
September in the second calendar year preceding the anniversary date and 
July through September in the calendar year preceding the anniversary 
date. For example, if the anniversary date of an increasing annuity 
occurs in November of 1995, the amount of the increase will be 
calculated based upon the change in the index between the July-September 
period in 1993 and the July-September period in 1994. Monthly payments 
cannot decrease, nor can they increase more than 3 percent each year. If 
this option is chosen in conjunction with a joint life annuity with the 
spouse, the annual increase continues to apply to benefits received by 
the survivor.
    (4) A joint life annuity, with level payments, for the participant 
and another person who either is a former spouse or has an insurable 
interest in the participant. This annuity is based upon the combined 
life expectancies of the participant and the other person. It provides 
monthly payments to the participant as long as both the participant and 
the joint annuitant are alive, and monthly payments to the survivor as 
long as he or she is alive. Increasing payments cannot be chosen for a 
joint annuity with a person other than the spouse.
    (i) A person has an ``insurable interest'' in a participant if the 
person is financially dependent on the participant and could reasonably 
expect to derive financial benefit from the participant's continued 
life.
    (ii) A relative (whether blood or adopted, but not by marriage) who 
is closer than a first cousin will be presumed to have an insurable 
interest in the participant.
    (iii) A participant can establish that a person not described in 
paragraph (b)(4)(ii) of this section has an insurable interest in him or 
her by submitting with the annuity request an affidavit from a person 
other than the participant or the joint annuitant demonstrating that the 
designated joint annuitant has an insurable interest (as

[[Page 232]]

defined in paragraph (b)(4)(i) of this section) in the participant.
    (c) Participants who choose a joint life annuity (with either a 
spouse or a person with an insurable interest) must choose either a 50 
percent or a 100 percent survivor benefit. A 50 percent survivor benefit 
provides a monthly payment to the survivor which is 50 percent of the 
payment made when both the participant and the joint annuitant are 
alive. A 100 percent survivor benefit provides a monthly payment to the 
survivor which is the same amount as the payment made when both the 
participant and the survivor are alive. Either the 50 percent or the 100 
percent survivor benefit may be combined with any joint life annuity 
option, except that the 100 percent survivor benefit can be combined 
with a joint annuity with a person other than the spouse (or a former 
spouse, if required by a retirement benefits court order) only if the 
joint annuitant is not more than 10 years younger than the participant.
    (d) The following mutually exclusive features can be combined with 
certain types of annuities, as indicated:
    (1) Cash refund. This feature provides that, if the participant (and 
joint annuitant, if applicable) dies before an amount equal to the 
balance used to purchase the annuity has been paid out, the difference 
between the balance used to purchase the annuity and the sum of monthly 
payments already made will be paid to the named beneficiaries. The 
participant (or the joint annuitant, if the participant is deceased) may 
name or change the beneficiaries. This feature can be combined with any 
other annuity option.
    (2) Ten-year certain. This feature provides that, if the participant 
dies before annuity payments have been made for 10 years (120 payments), 
monthly payments will continue to be made to the beneficiaries selected 
by the participant until 120 payments have been made. This feature can 
be combined with any single life annuity option, but cannot be selected 
in conjunction with any joint life annuity option.
    (e) The Board can, from time to time, establish other types of 
annuities, other levels of survivor benefits, and other annuity 
features.
    (f) The Board can, from time to time, eliminate a type of annuity 
(except for those annuities described in paragraph (b) of this section), 
a survivor benefit level, or an annuity feature. However, if the Board 
does so, it must continue to allow participants to purchase annuities of 
the eliminated type or containing the eliminated feature for 5 years 
after the date the decision to eliminate the annuity type or feature is 
announced in the Federal Register.
    (g) Once an annuity has been purchased, the type of annuity, any 
annuity features, and the identity of the joint annuitant cannot be 
changed, and the annuity cannot be terminated.



Sec. 1650.11  Transfer of withdrawal payments.

    (a) At the participant's request, the TSP will transfer directly to 
an eligible retirement plan all or part of any withdrawal that is an 
``eligible rollover distribution,'' as defined in 26 U.S.C. 402(c)(4). A 
withdrawal method that is not an eligible rollover distribution cannot 
be transferred.
    (b) The following TSP withdrawal methods are considered eligible 
rollover distributions:
    (1) A single payment, as described in Sec. 1650.8;
    (2) Monthly payments, as described in Sec. 1650.9, where payments 
are expected to last less than 10 years at the time they begin, 
according to the following rules:
    (i) If the participant elects a number of monthly payments, the 
number of payments must be fewer than 120;
    (ii) If the participant elects a monthly payment amount, the amount, 
when divided into the participant's account balance as of the end of the 
month prior to the first payment, must yield a number less than 85.
    (3) A final single payment, as described in Sec. 1650.9(c).
    (c) The following withdrawal methods are not eligible rollover 
distributions:
    (1) Any annuity purchased by the TSP.
    (2) Any monthly payment that does not meet the rules set forth in 
paragraph (b)(2) of this section, including any monthly payment computed 
based

[[Page 233]]

on the Internal Revenue Service expected return multiple table V (see 
Sec. 1650.9(a)(3)).
    (3) Any minimum distribution payment or any portion of another 
payment which represents a minimum distribution payment.
    (d) An eligible retirement plan is a plan defined in 26 U.S.C. 
402(c)(8). There are three types of eligible retirement plans: an 
Individual Retirement Arrangement (IRA) (which can be either an 
individual retirement account or an individual retirement annuity), a 
plan qualified under 26 U.S.C. 401(a), and a plan described in 26 U.S.C. 
403(a). An IRA or other eligible retirement plan must be maintained in 
the United States, which means one of the 50 states or the District of 
Columbia.



Sec. 1650.12  Deferred withdrawal elections.

    (a) Subject to paragraph (b) of this section, a participant who 
separates from Government employment and elects to withdraw his or her 
account under one of the methods provided in Secs. 1650.8, 1650.9, or 
1650.10 may specify a future date (which shall be a month and year) for 
payment of the withdrawal.
    (b) The future date chosen under this section cannot be later than 
March of the year following the year in which the participant becomes 
age 70\1/2\. If that date has already passed when the participant makes 
an election, the participant cannot choose a future date.
    (c) If the withdrawal method chosen for future payment is a single 
payment or monthly payments (and the date specified for payment is more 
than four months in the future on the date the election form is 
processed), the participant will be notified before the date chosen that 
such payments are scheduled to begin. If the payments are eligible 
rollover distributions, the participant may choose to transfer all or 
part of the payments to an Individual Retirement Arrangement (IRA) or 
another eligible retirement plan.
    (d) If the withdrawal method chosen for future payment is an annuity 
(and the date specified for payment is more than four months in the 
future on the date the election form is processed), the participant will 
be notified before the date chosen. At that time, the participant will 
be sent information asking him or her to choose an annuity method, name 
a beneficiary (if the cash refund or 10-year certain feature is chosen), 
and provide any necessary spousal waiver or spousal information.



Sec. 1650.13  Required date for making withdrawal election.

    (a) A participant who separates from Government employment need not 
elect one of the withdrawal methods provided in Secs. 1650.8, 1650.9, or 
1650.10 until February 1 of the year following the latest of these 
dates:
    (1) The date upon which the participant becomes age 65;
    (2) The date that is 10 years after the effective date of the first 
TSP contribution made by or on behalf of the participant (but not 
earlier than April 1, 1987); or
    (3) The date the participant separated from Government employment.
    (b) A separated participant may make a withdrawal election before 
the date described in paragraph (a) of this section, but is not required 
to do so.
    (c) A participant will fulfill the requirements of paragraph (a) of 
this section by making a deferred withdrawal election (as described in 
Sec. 1650.12) by the required date, provided that the date described in 
Sec. 1650.12(b) has not already occurred.
    (d) If a participant does not make an election by the date required 
by this section, the TSP will purchase an annuity for the participant in 
accordance with the following rules:
    (1) If a participant is covered by the Federal Employees' Retirement 
System (FERS) and is married on the date an election is required by this 
section, the TSP will purchase a joint life annuity with his or her 
spouse with a 50 percent survivor benefit, level payments, and no cash 
refund feature.
    (2) If the participant is covered by the Civil Service Retirement 
System (CSRS) or the participant is not married on the date an election 
is required by this section, the TSP will purchase a single life annuity 
with no other features.
    (3) If the participant fails to provide the TSP with adequate 
information to purchase one of the annuities described

[[Page 234]]

in either paragraph (d)(1) or (d)(2) of this section, as appropriate, by 
the date an election is required by this section, and such information 
cannot be obtained by the TSP from other sources, the participant's 
account will be forfeited. If the TSP is later provided with the 
required information, the TSP will purchase an annuity in accordance 
with this section, using the amount forfeited. No earnings will be 
credited to this amount after the date of forfeiture.



Sec. 1650.14  Changes and cancellation of withdrawal election.

    (a) Basic rule. Subject to paragraphs (b) and (c) of this section 
and the rules relating to spouses' rights, a participant who has 
separated from Government employment can change his or her withdrawal 
election to any other withdrawal election or can cancel his or her 
withdrawal election if the change or cancellation can be processed 
before the withdrawal election is scheduled for disbursement.
    (b) Cutoff dates. For participants who have any part of their 
accounts invested in the Common Stock Index Investment Fund (C Fund) or 
the Fixed Income Index Investment Fund (F Fund), a withdrawal payment 
that has been approved is scheduled on the second-to-last business day 
of the month preceding the month the withdrawal payment is to be made. 
For participants whose accounts are invested entirely in the Government 
Securities Investment Fund (G Fund), a withdrawal payment that has been 
approved is scheduled by the close of business on the day before the 
mid-month processing cycle in which payments are made.
    (c) Special Rule for C and F Fund Participants. Participants who 
have any part of their accounts invested in the C or F Funds may also 
change to another withdrawal method if the requested change can be 
processed before the close of business on the day before the mid-month 
processing cycle in which payment will be made, and provided that under 
the new withdrawal method the amounts they have invested in the C or F 
Funds will still be withdrawn as originally scheduled from those Funds 
during the mid-month processing cycle.
    (d) Example for participants whose accounts are invested in the C or 
F Funds. This example illustrates the operation of the rules set forth 
in paragraphs (b) and (c) of this section for participants who have a 
portion of their accounts invested in the C or F Funds.

    Example 1. Assume that such a participant wishes to withdraw the 
account by purchasing a single life annuity at the earliest possible 
date. The participant is married and has obtained the necessary waiver 
from her spouse for the purchase. All necessary forms have been 
submitted by the middle of April; thus, on the second-to-last business 
day in April, the annuity will be scheduled to be purchased in the May 
mid-month processing cycle. However, in late April, the participant 
decides that she would rather receive the account in a single payment. 
The participant must submit a new Form TSP-70 electing the new 
withdrawal method. (She does not need a new spousal waiver, since her 
spouse already waived his right to a survivor benefit.) In this case, 
the participant will be able to change to a single payment if her 
properly completed Form TSP-70 is received and processed by the TSP 
recordkeeper by the close of business on the day before the May mid-
month processing cycle. If that occurs, she will receive the single 
payment in May, instead of having the annuity purchased then.
    If, on the other hand, the participant wished to cancel her annuity 
purchase and leave her money in the Plan (or to change to a deferred 
withdrawal option), the TSP recordkeeper would have to be able to 
process her cancellation or change no later than the second-to-last 
business day in April. If that did not occur, the annuity purchase would 
proceed in May.



           Subpart C--Procedures for Withdrawing TSP Accounts



Sec. 1650.15  Information to be provided by agency.

    (a) Information to be provided to the TSP. When a TSP participant 
separates from Government employment, his or her employing agency must 
report the separation (including the date of separation) to the TSP 
recordkeeper. Until the TSP recordkeeper receives this information from 
the employing agency, it cannot process a withdrawal for the 
participant. A withdrawal cannot occur until at least 30 full calendar 
days have elapsed after the date of separation.
    (b) Information to be provided to the participant. When a TSP 
participant

[[Page 235]]

separates from Government employment, his or her employing agency must 
furnish the participant with the most recent copies of the TSP 
withdrawal booklet, withdrawal forms, and tax notice. The employing 
agency is also responsible for counseling participants concerning TSP 
withdrawals.



Sec. 1650.16  Accounts of more than $3,500.

    A participant whose account balance is more than $3,500 must submit 
a properly completed withdrawal election on Form TSP-70, Withdrawal 
Request, and any other form required by the TSP, in order to elect a 
withdrawal of his or her account balance.



Sec. 1650.17  Accounts of $3,500 or less.

    (a) Unless he or she has already submitted a complete withdrawal 
election and can be scheduled for payment, a participant whose account 
balance is $3,500 or less as of the month end following receipt of 
separation information from the employing agency will be sent a notice 
informing him or her that the account balance will be paid directly to 
the participant automatically in the third mid-month cycle following the 
date of the notice if the account balance is still $3,500 or less on the 
date of payment. The notice will inform the participant that he or she 
can:
    (1) Choose to transfer all or part of this payment to an Individual 
Retirement Arrangement (IRA) or other eligible retirement plan;
    (2) Choose another withdrawal method (as described in subpart B of 
this part);
    (3) Choose to have the payment made directly to him or her as soon 
as possible; or
    (4) Choose to leave his or her money in the Plan.
    (b) If the participant does not take one of the actions described in 
paragraph (b) of this section, payment will be made as scheduled.
    (c) No spousal rights attach to any withdrawals made to a 
participant whose account balance is $3,500 or less.
    (d) If a participant's account balance is $3,500 or less after 
separation but later increases to more than $3,500, this section will 
cease to apply to that participant.
    (e) This section does not apply to accounts containing a balance of 
less than $5.00.



                        Subpart D--Spousal Rights



Sec. 1650.18  Spouses of FERS participants.

    (a) A married participant covered by FERS whose account balance 
exceeds $3,500 must choose to withdraw his or her TSP account by having 
the TSP purchase a joint and survivor annuity with the spouse. The 
annuity chosen must have level payments, a 50% survivor benefit, and no 
cash refund. A married FERS participant may only choose another 
withdrawal election, a different type of annuity, or different annuity 
features if the spouse waives his or her right to the required annuity.
    (b) A spouse can waive his or her right to the annuity required in 
paragraph (a) of this section only by signing Form TSP-70, Withdrawal 
Election, or Form TSP 11-C, Spouse Information and Waiver, in the 
appropriate place. Once a form containing a waiver is filed with the TSP 
Service Office, the spouse's waiver is irrevocable.
    (c) A married participant covered by FERS whose account balance is 
$3,500 or less is not required to choose the annuity identified in 
paragraph (a) of this section and does not need to obtain a waiver from 
his or her spouse to make any withdrawal election.



Sec. 1650.19  Spouses of CSRS participants.

    (a) The spouse of a married participant covered by CSRS whose 
account balance exceeds $3500 must be sent notice of the participant's 
withdrawal of his or her account balance prior to the participant's 
withdrawal.
    (b) The TSP Service Office will send the notice required in 
paragraph (a) of this section by first class mail to the last address of 
the spouse on file. The participant is responsible for providing the TSP 
Service Office with the spouse's correct address.
    (c) The spouse of a married participant covered by CSRS whose 
account balance is $3500 or less is not entitled to the notice 
prescribed in paragraph (a) of this section.

[[Page 236]]



Sec. 1650.20  Spousal rights when participant changes withdrawal election.

    (a) A married participant covered by FERS who has made a withdrawal 
election and who wants to change to another withdrawal election other 
than the annuity required in section 1650.17(a) must obtain a waiver 
from the spouse to which he or she is married on the date the new 
withdrawal form is signed, unless:
    (1) That spouse previously signed a waiver of the required annuity 
in connection with another withdrawal election made by the participant; 
or
    (2) The participant was granted an exception, under the procedures 
set forth in Sec. 1650.22, to the requirement to obtain that spouse's 
signature for a withdrawal election made by the participant within one 
year of the date the form requesting the change is processed by the TSP.
    (b) The spouse of a married participant covered by CSRS who has made 
a withdrawal election and who wants to change to another withdrawal 
election must be notified again prior to the withdrawal, unless the 
participant was granted an exception, under the procedures set forth in 
Sec. 1650.21, to the spouse notice requirement within one year of the 
date the form requesting the change is processed by the TSP.



Sec. 1650.21  Executive Director's exception to requirement to notify the spouse.

    (a) Wherever in the regulations in this subpart it is required that 
the Executive Director give notice of an action to the spouse of a 
participant, an exception to this requirement may be granted in cases in 
which the participant establishes to the satisfaction of the Executive 
Director that the spouse's whereabouts cannot be determined. A request 
for an exception based on whereabouts unknown must be submitted to the 
Executive Director on Form TSP-16, Exception to Spousal Requirements, 
accompanied by one of the following:
    (1) A judicial determination (court order) which states that the 
spouse's whereabouts cannot be determined;
    (2) A police or Governmental agency determination that is signed by 
the appropriate department or division head which states that the 
spouse's whereabouts cannot be determined; or
    (3) Statements by the participant and two other persons.
    (i) Each statement must be signed and dated and must state the 
following:

    I understand that a false statement or willful misrepresentation is 
punishable under Federal Law (18 U.S.C. 1001) by a fine or imprisonment 
or both.

    (ii) The participant's statement must give the full name of his or 
her spouse, declare the inability to locate the spouse, and state the 
efforts made to locate the spouse. Negative statements such as ``I have 
not seen or heard from him/her'' or ``I have had no contact with him/
her'' are not sufficient. Examples of attempting to locate the spouse 
include checking with relatives and mutual friends or using telephone 
directories or directory assistance for the city of last known address.
    (iii) The statements from two other persons must support the 
participant's statement that the participant does not know the 
whereabouts of his or her spouse.
    (b) A withdrawal election received within one year of an approved 
exception may be processed so long as the spouse named on the form is 
the spouse for whom the exception has been approved.
    (c) The requirements for establishing an exception for a withdrawal 
and the one-year period of validity of an approved exception apply to 
exceptions for loans under 5 CFR 1655.18.



Sec. 1650.22  Executive Director's exception to the requirement to obtain the spouse's signature.

    (a) In this subpart, if the spouse's signature is required, the 
Executive Director may grant an exception to this requirement if the 
participant can show that:
    (1) The spouse's whereabouts cannot be determined in accordance with 
the provisions of Sec. 1650.21; or
    (2) Due to exceptional circumstances, requiring the spouse's 
signature would otherwise be inappropriate.
    (i) An exception to the spousal signature requirement may be granted 
based on exceptional circumstances only

[[Page 237]]

when the participant presents a judicial determination (court order) or 
a governmental agency determination signed by the appropriate department 
or division head. A court order or a determination must contain a 
finding or a recitation of such exceptional circumstances regarding the 
spouse as would warrant an exception to the signature requirement.
    (ii) Exceptional circumstances is narrowly construed and includes 
such circumstances as when a court order:
    (A) Indicates that the spouse and the participant have been 
maintaining separate residences with no financial relationship for three 
or more years;
    (B) Indicates that the spouse abandoned the participant, but for 
religious or similarly compelling reasons, the parties chose not to 
divorce; or
    (C) Expressly states that the participant may obtain a loan from his 
or her Thrift Savings Plan account or withdraw his or her Thrift Savings 
Plan account balance notwithstanding the absence of the spouse's 
signature.
    (b) A withdrawal election received within one year of an approved 
exception may be processed so long as the spouse named on the form is 
the spouse for whom the exception has been approved.
    (c) The requirements for establishing an exception for a withdrawal 
and the one-year period of validity of an approved exception apply to 
exceptions for loans under 5 CFR 1655.18.



PART 1653--DOMESTIC RELATIONS ORDERS AFFECTING THRIFT SAVINGS PLAN ACCOUNTS--Table of Contents




               Subpart A--Retirement Benefits Court Orders

Sec.
1653.1  Purpose.
1653.2  Qualifying retirement benefits court orders.
1653.3  Processing retirement benefits court orders.
1653.4  Calculating entitlement under a retirement benefits court order.
1653.5  Procedures for payment pursuant to retirement benefits court 
          orders.

 Subpart B--Legal Process for the Enforcement of a Participant's Legal 
      Obligations to Provide Child Support or Make Alimony Payments

1653.20  Purpose and scope.
1653.21  Definitions.
1653.22  Service of legal process.
1653.23  Requirements for ``qualifying'' legal process.
1653.24  Processing legal process.
1653.25  Payment pursuant to qualifying legal process.

    Authority: 5 U.S.C. 8435, 8436(b), 8437(e)(3), 8467, 8474(b)(5) and 
8474(c)(1).

    Source: 60 FR 13609, Mar. 13, 1995, unless otherwise noted.



               Subpart A--Retirement Benefits Court Orders



Sec. 1653.1  Purpose.

    This subpart contains regulations prescribing the Board's procedures 
for processing retirement benefits court orders.



Sec. 1653.2  Qualifying retirement benefits court orders.

    (a) The TSP will only honor the terms of a retirement benefits court 
order that is qualifying under paragraph (b) of this section.
    (b) A retirement benefits court order must meet each of the 
following requirements to be considered qualifying:
    (1) The court order must be a court decree of divorce, of annulment, 
or of legal separation, or any court order or court-approved property 
settlement agreement incident to a decree of divorce, of annulment, or 
of legal separation. Orders may be issued at any stage of a divorce, 
annulment, or legal separation proceeding. Orders issued prior to a 
final decree, such as orders for the purpose of preserving the status 
quo pending the final resolution of the proceeding, are referred to as 
``preliminary'' court orders, and will be considered ``incident to'' a 
final decree, notwithstanding that a final decree has not yet been, and 
may not be, issued. Orders issued subsequent to a final decree, such as 
orders for the purpose of amending such decree, are referred to as 
``subsequent'' court orders, and will also be considered ``incident to'' 
such decree. However, any subsequent court order that requires the 
return of

[[Page 238]]

money properly paid pursuant to an earlier court order will not 
constitute a qualifying order.

    (2) The court order must ``expressly relate'' to the Thrift Savings 
Plan account of a current TSP participant. This means that:
    (i) The order must on its face specifically describe the TSP in such 
a way that it cannot be confused with other Federal Government 
retirement benefits or non-Federal retirement benefits; and
    (ii) The order must be written in terms appropriate to a defined 
contribution plan rather than a defined benefit plan. For example, it 
should generally refer to the individual participant's ``account'' or 
``account balance'' rather than a ``benefit formula'' or the 
participant's ``eventual benefits.''
    (3) If the court order awards an amount to be paid from the 
participant's TSP account, the award must be for:
    (i) A specific dollar amount;
    (ii) A stated percentage or stated fraction of the account;
    (iii) A portion of the account to be calculated by applying a 
formula that yields a mathematically possible result. Any variables in 
the formula must have values that are readily ascertainable from the 
face of the order or from Government employment records; or
    (iv) A survivor annuity as provided in 5 U.S.C. 8435(e).
    (4) Court orders that make awards from the TSP may only provide for 
payments:
    (i) To spouses or former spouses of the participant;
    (ii) As fees for attorneys for spouses or former spouses of the 
participant;
    (iii) To dependent children or other dependents of the participant;
    (iv) As fees for attorneys for dependent children or other 
dependents of the participant;
    (c) The following retirement benefits court orders will be 
considered non-qualifying:
    (1) Orders relating to a TSP account that contains only nonvested 
money, unless the money will become vested within 90 days of the date of 
receipt of the order if the participant remains in Federal service;
    (2)(i) Orders that award an amount to be paid at a future specified 
date or upon the occurrence of a future specified event, unless:
    (A) The amount of the entitlement can be currently calculated; and
    (B) The award provides for the payment of interest or earnings from 
the date of calculation to the specified date or event for payment.
    (ii) If an order meets the requirements of paragraphs (c)(2)(i) (A) 
and (B), a current payment will be made in accordance with the 
procedures set forth in Sec. 1653.5, rather than a payment at the future 
date stated in the order.
    (d) For purposes of paragraph (c)(2) of this section, orders that 
require only that the amount of the award be calculated on the date of 
payment, without stating a future date or event for payment, will not be 
considered as awarding an amount to be paid at a future date or upon the 
occurrence of a future event. In such cases, the date of payment will be 
determined in accordance with the procedures set forth in Sec. 1653.5, 
and the amount of the entitlement will be determined in accordance with 
Sec. 1653.4 using that date of payment.
    (e) Definition. For purposes of this Part, the term ``former 
spouse'' shall have the same meaning as set forth in 5 U.S.C. 8401(12).



Sec. 1653.3  Processing retirement benefits court orders.

    (a) Board's review of retirement benefits court orders is governed 
solely by the Federal Employees' Retirement System Act (FERSA), 5 U.S.C. 
Chapter 84, and by the terms of this part. The Board will honor 
retirement benefits court orders properly issued by a court of any 
state, the District of Columbia, the Commonwealth of Puerto Rico, Guam, 
the Northern Mariana Islands, or the Virgin Islands, and any Indian 
court as defined by 25 U.S.C. 1301(3). However, those courts have no 
jurisdiction over the Board and the Board cannot be made a party to the 
underlying domestic relations proceedings.
    (b) Retirement benefits court orders should be submitted to the 
Board's recordkeeper at the following address:

[[Page 239]]

Thrift Savings Plan Service Office, National Finance Center, P.O. Box 
61500, New Orleans, Louisiana 70161-1500. Receipt by the recordkeeper 
will be considered receipt by the Board.
    (c) Upon receipt of a document that purports to be a qualifying 
retirement benefits court order, including preliminary and subsequent 
court orders, the participant's account will be frozen. After the 
account is frozen, no withdrawals or loans will be allowed until the 
account is unfrozen. All other account activity, including 
contributions, adjustments, and interfund transfers, will be permitted.
    (d) The following documents will not be treated as purporting to be 
qualifying retirement benefits court orders. Therefore accounts of 
participants to whom such orders relate will not be frozen and these 
documents will not be reviewed by the Board:
    (1) A document that does not indicate on its face (or accompany a 
document that establishes) that it has been issued or approved by a 
court;
    (2) A court order relating to a TSP account that has been closed;
    (3) A court order dated prior to June 6, 1986;
    (4) A court order that fails to award all or any part of the TSP 
account to anyone other than the participant;
    (5) A court order that does not mention retirement benefits.
    (e) After the participant's account is frozen, the document will be 
reviewed initially to determine if it is a complete original or copy of 
a retirement benefits court order.
    (f) If it is determined that the document is not complete, a 
complete document will be requested. If it is not received within 30 
days of the date of such request, the account will be unfrozen and no 
further action will be taken with respect to the document.
    (g) Upon receipt of a complete order that is either an original or a 
copy of a retirement benefits court order, the Board will review the 
order and will determine whether it is a qualifying order as described 
in Sec. 1653.2 and, if it awards an amount to be paid from a 
participant's TSP account, the amount of the entitlement. The Board will 
advise all parties in writing of its decision.
    (h) The Board's decision will contain the following information:
    (1) The Board's determination regarding whether the court order is 
qualifying;
    (2) A statement of the applicable statute or regulations;
    (3) If the order is determined to be qualifying, a statement 
regarding the effect that compliance with the court order will have on 
the participant's TSP account; and
    (4) If the order requires payment, a description of the method by 
which the entitlement under the court order was calculated and the 
circumstances under which payment will be made.
    (i) The Board's decision will be final. There is no administrative 
appeal from the decision.
    (j) An account frozen under this section will be unfrozen as 
follows:
    (1) If a complete document has not been received within 30 days from 
the date of a request described in paragraph (f) of this section, upon 
expiration of the 30-day period;
    (2) If the order is a preliminary order or other order precluding 
payment from the account, as soon as practicable after receipt of a 
certified copy or original court order vacating or superseding such 
order (unless the order vacating or superseding the preliminary order 
itself warrants placing a freeze on the account);
    (3) If the order is valid to award a payment from the TSP account of 
a participant under this part, upon payment; and
    (4) If the Board determines that the order is not a qualifying order 
under this part, 45 days after issuance of the Board's decision. The 45-
day period will be terminated if both parties submit a written request 
for such a termination to the Board.
    (k)(1) the Board will hold in abeyance the processing of a court 
order payment pursuant to a previously approved qualifying court order 
if the Board is advised by one of the parties that the underlying court 
order is on appeal in the state court system and that the effect of the 
filing of such an appeal under state law or procedures is to stay the 
effect of the order.
    (i) Proper documentation of the appeal and citations to legal 
authority

[[Page 240]]

which address the effect of the filing of such an appeal must be 
provided.
    (ii) The parties will be notified that the processing of the court 
order is being held in abeyance and the account will remain frozen for 
loans and withdrawal.
    (iii) In the absence of proper documentation and appropriate legal 
authority, the Board will presume that the provisions relating to the 
TSP in the court order remain valid and will proceed with the payment 
process.
    (2) The Board must be notified in writing by one of the parties of 
the disposition of the appeal in order for the freeze to be removed from 
the account or for a payment to be made. The notification must include a 
statement regarding the effect of the disposition on the provisions of 
the original order relating to the TSP and a copy of the resulting 
document from the court must be provided.
    (l) Multiple court orders pending before the Board will be processed 
in accordance with the procedures set forth in this part in the 
following order:
    (1) As between conflicting qualifying court orders relating to the 
same spouse or former spouse, the Board will process only the court 
order bearing the latest date entered by the clerk of the court. If any 
order does not have a date entered, then the date the order was filed by 
the clerk shall be used; if there is no date entered or date filed, then 
the date the order was signed by the judge shall be used.
    (2) As between conflicting qualifying court orders relating to two 
or more former spouses, the Board will process the orders in the order 
of the dates entered by the clerk of the court, starting with the order 
bearing the earliest date, and continuing until the account is 
exhausted. If any order does not have a date entered, then the date the 
order was filed by the clerk shall be used; if there is no date entered 
or date filed, then the date the order was signed by the judge shall be 
used.



Sec. 1653.4  Calculating entitlement under a retirement benefits court order.

    (a) If the court order awards a percentage or fraction of the 
account as of a specific date or event, the amount of the entitlement 
will be calculated based upon the balance of the account as of the end 
of the month on or immediately preceding the date or event, plus any 
transactions posted after the date or event, but before payment, that 
are effective on or before the month-end date used for calculating the 
entitlement. For purposes of computing the amount of an entitlement, any 
loan amount outstanding as of the month-end date used for calculating 
the entitlement shall be treated as included in the account balance, 
unless the court order provides otherwise.
    (b) If the court order awards a percentage or fraction of an account 
but does not contain a specific date as of which to apply the percentage 
or fraction to the account, the amount of the entitlement will be 
calculated as described in paragraph (a) of this section, using the 
account balance as of the end of the month on or immediately prior to 
the date the order was entered by the clerk of the court or, if the 
order does not show a date entered, the date the order was filed by the 
clerk of the court or, if the order does not contain a date entered or a 
date filed, the date signed by the judge.
    (c) If the court order awards a specific dollar amount, the amount 
of the entitlement will be the lesser of:
    (1) The amount the order awards; or
    (2) The amount in the account as of the end of the month on or 
before the date specified in the order (or, if no date is specified, the 
date the order was entered by the clerk of the court or, if the order 
does not show a date entered, the date the order was filed by the clerk 
of the court, or, if the order does not contain a date entered or a date 
filed, the date signed by the judge) plus any transactions posted after 
the date or event, but before payment, that are effective on or before 
the month-end date used for calculating the entitlement. For purposes of 
computing the amount of entitlement, any loan amount outstanding as of 
the month-end date used for calculating the entitlement shall be treated 
as included in the account balance, unless the court order provides 
otherwise.
    (d) Unless the court order specifically provides otherwise, the 
entitlement calculated under this section will not be credited with 
interest or earnings. If

[[Page 241]]

interest or earnings are awarded, the Board will use the monthly rates 
of return credited to the account unless the court order specifies a 
different rate. The TSP monthly rates of return may be either positive 
or negative. Interest or earnings will be calculated beginning with the 
month following the month-end valuation date used for calculating the 
entitlement and ending with the month prior to the month of payment.
    (e) All entitlement will be calculated initially under this section 
including both vested and nonvested amounts in the participant's 
account. If at the time of payment the non-vested portion of the account 
has not become vested or has been forfeited, the entitlement will be 
recalculated using only the participant's vested account balance.



Sec. 1653.5  Procedures for payment pursuant to retirement benefits court orders.

    (a) If a qualifying court order creates an entitlement to a portion 
of a TSP account under this part, payment will be made after the Board's 
decision has been issued and the 30-day tax withholding notification 
period has ended. The taxpayer may receive the payment sooner by waiving 
the tax notification period.
    (b) A payment made pursuant to a qualifying court order will be made 
only to the person(s) specified in the court order. If payment is to be 
made to the spouse or former spouse of the participant, he or she may 
request that the TSP transfer all or a portion of his or her payment to 
an Individual Retirement Arrangement (IRA) or other eligible retirement 
plan. Such a request must be made by filing the TSP form ``Spouse 
Election to Transfer to IRA or Other Eligible Retirement Plan'', which 
must be received before payment.
    (c) In no case may a payment made pursuant to a qualifying court 
order exceed the participant's vested account balance, excluding any 
outstanding loan amount as of the end of the month preceding the date of 
payment. If the entitlement calculated pursuant to this subpart exceeds 
the participant's vested account balance (excluding any outstanding loan 
amount), then only the vested amount in the account (excluding the 
outstanding loan balance) will be paid.
    (d) The entire amount of an entitlement created by a qualifying 
court order must be disbursed at one time. A series of payments will not 
be made even if the court order provides for such a method of payment. A 
payment pursuant to a court order extinguishes all further rights to any 
payment under that order even if the entire amount of the entitlement 
could not be paid. Any further award must be contained in a separate 
court order.
    (e) Payment cannot be made jointly to more than one person. If 
payment is to be made to more than one person, the order must separately 
indicate the amount to be paid to each.
    (f) In order to make a payment pursuant to a retirement benefits 
court order, the Board's recordkeeper must be provided with the full 
name, mailing address, and Social Security number of the payee, even if 
the payment is being mailed to another address.
    (g) If the payee dies before a payment is made pursuant to a 
qualifying retirement benefits court order, payment will be made to the 
estate of the payee, unless otherwise specified by the court order. If 
the participant dies before payment is made pursuant to a qualifying 
retirement benefits order entered before the participant's death, the 
order will be honored as long as it is submitted to the Board before 
payment of the account, regardless of whether the order was received by 
the Board before the participant's death.
    (h) If the parties to a divorce or annulment are remarried, or a 
legal separation is terminated, a new court order will be required to 
prevent payment pursuant to a previously submitted qualifying retirement 
benefits court order.
    (i) Payment to a person (including the estate of the payee) pursuant 
to a qualifying retirement benefits court order made in accordance with 
this subpart bars recovery by any other person pursuant to that order.
    (j) Payments pursuant to qualifying court orders will be paid pro 
rata from the TSP investment funds, based on the balance in each fund on 
the date as

[[Page 242]]

of which the payment is made. The Board will not honor provisions of 
court orders that require payment to be made from specific investment 
funds.

[60 FR 13609, Mar. 13. 1995, as amended at 61 FR 18912, Apr. 29, 1996]



 Subpart B--Legal Process for the Enforcement of a Participant's Legal 
      Obligations to Provide Child Support or Make Alimony Payments

    Source: 60 FR 45624, Aug. 31, 1995, unless otherwise noted.



Sec. 1653.20  Purpose and scope.

    This subpart contains regulations prescribing the Board's procedures 
for responding to legal process for the enforcement of a participant's 
legal obligations to make alimony or child support payments, as required 
by 5 U.S.C. 8437(e)(3).



Sec. 1653.21  Definitions.

    As used in this subpart:
    Alimony means the payment of funds for the support and maintenance 
of a spouse or former spouse. Alimony includes separate maintenance, 
alimony pendente lite, maintenance, and spousal support. Alimony also 
can include attorney's fees, interest, and court costs, but only if 
these items are expressly made recoverable by qualifying legal process 
as described in Sec. 1653.23.
    Child support means payment of funds for the support and maintenance 
of a child or children. Child support includes payments to provide for 
health care, education, recreation, clothing, or to meet other specific 
needs of such a child or children. Child support also can include 
attorney's fees, interest, and court costs, but only if these items are 
expressly made recoverable by qualifying legal process as described in 
Sec. 1653.23.
    Legal obligation means an obligation to pay alimony or child 
support, or both, that is currently enforceable under appropriate State 
or local law. A ``legal obligation'' may include currently payable, as 
well as past due, alimony or child support. However, ``legal 
obligation'' does not mean any future obligation to make alimony or 
child support payments.



Sec. 1653.22  Service of legal process.

    The Thrift Savings Plan will only review legal process for the 
enforcement of a participant's legal obligations to provide child 
support or make alimony payments upon receipt of that process. Receipt 
by an employing agency or any other office of the government shall not 
constitute receipt by the Thrift Savings Plan. Legal process should be 
submitted to the Thrift Savings Plan Recordkeeper at the following 
address: TSP Service Office, National Finance Center, P.O. Box 61500, 
New Orleans, LA 70161-1500. Receipt by the recordkeeper will be 
considered receipt by the Thrift Savings Plan.



Sec. 1653.23  Requirements for ``qualifying'' legal process.

    (a) The TSP will only honor legal process if it meets each 
requirement of paragraph (b) of this section and one of the requirements 
of paragraph (c) of this section.
    (b) Legal process must meet each of the following requirements in 
order to be qualifying:
    (1) The legal process must be a writ, order, summons, or other 
similar process in the nature of a garnishment that is issued by:
    (i) a court or competent jurisdiction within any State, the District 
of Columbia, territory, or possession of the United States, or an Indian 
court; or
    (ii) a court of competent jurisdiction in any foreign country with 
which the United States has entered into an agreement which requires the 
United States to honor such process; or
    (iii) an authorized official pursuant to an order of such a court of 
competent jurisdiction or pursuant to State or local law; or
    (iv) A State agency authorized to issue income withholding notices 
pursuant to State or local law or pursuant to the requirements of 42 
U.S.C. 666(b).
    (2) The legal process must ``expressly relate'' to the Thrift 
Savings Plan account of a current participant. This means that it must 
express a clear intent to deal with the TSP as distinct

[[Page 243]]

from other Federal Government retirement benefits or non-Federal 
retirement benefits.
    (3) The legal process must demonstrate that its purpose is to 
enforce a current legal obligation of the participant to provide child 
support or make alimony payments.
    (c) In addition to the requirements of paragraph (b) of this 
section, legal process also must meet one of the following requirements:
    (1) The legal process must require the Board to pay a stated dollar 
amount from a participant's TSP account; or
    (2) The legal process must require the Board to freeze the 
participant's account in anticipation of an order to pay over the 
account.
    (d) The TSP will presume the competence or authority of any of the 
entities described in paragraph (b)(1) of this section if presented with 
a document from that entity that appears regular on its face.
    (e) Notwithstanding paragraphs (a), (b), (c) and (d) of this 
section, the following legal process will be considered nonqualifying:
    (1) Legal process relating to a TSP account that contains only non-
vested money, unless the money will become vested within 90 days of the 
date of receipt of the order if the participant were to remain in 
Federal service;
    (2) Legal process that requires an amount to be paid at the future 
date; or
    (3) Legal process that requires a series of payments.



Sec. 1653.24  Processing legal process.

    (a) Upon receipt of a document which purports to be qualifying legal 
process, the participant's account will be frozen. After an account is 
frozen, no withdrawal or loans will be allowed until the account is 
unfrozen. All other account activity, including contributions, 
adjustments, and interfund transfers, will be permitted.
    (b) The following documents will not be treated as purporting to be 
qualifying legal process. Therefore, accounts of participants to whom 
such orders relate will not be frozen and these documents will not be 
reviewed by the Board:
    (1) A document that pertains to a TSP account that has been closed.
    (2) A document that does not indicate that it relates either to the 
TSP or to the participant's retirement benefits.
    (3) A document that does not appear to have been issued by a proper 
authority as described in Sec. 1653.23(b)(1).
    (c) The Board will review a document that purports to be qualifying 
legal process to determine whether it is complete.
    (d) If the Board determines that the document is incomplete, it will 
request a complete copy of the document from the party that submitted 
the document. If a complete copy is not received by the Board within 30 
days of the Board's request, the participant's account will be unfrozen 
and no further action will be taken by the Board with respect to the 
document.
    (e) Upon receipt of a complete document, the Board will review it to 
determine whether it is qualifying legal process.
    (f) The Board will advise the submitting party and the TSP 
participant of the determination. The Board's decision letter will 
contain the following information:
    (1) A statement of the applicable statute and regulations.
    (2) A decision regarding whether the document is qualifying legal 
process, as defined in Sec. 1653.23 (b) and (c).
    (3) If the document is determined to be qualifying legal process, 
the effect that compliance with the terms of the document will have on 
the participant's account.
    (4) If the order requires payment, the amount that will be paid 
pursuant to the qualifying legal process; and to whom the payment will 
be made.
    (5) If the order requires payment, tax reporting and withholding 
information will be sent to the party as to whom the payment will be 
reported to the Internal Revenue Service as income.
    (g) The Board's decision constitutes the final administrative action 
by the Board. There is no appeal right within the Board.
    (h) An account frozen under this section will be unfrozen:
    (1) If a complete document has not been received within 30 days from 
the

[[Page 244]]

date of a request described in paragraph (d) of this section, upon the 
expiration of the 30-day period;
    (2) If the account was frozen pursuant to legal process requiring 
the Board to Freeze the participant's account in anticipation of an 
order to pay over the account, the account will be unfrozen upon the 
occurrence of any one of the following events:
    (i) As soon as practicable after receipt of a complete copy of an 
order vacating or superseding such order (unless the order vacating or 
superseding the preliminary order itself warrants placing a freeze on 
the account); or
    (ii) Upon payment pursuant to the order to pay over the account, if 
the Board determines that the order is qualifying; or
    (iii) As soon as practicable after the Board issues a decision 
letter informing the parties that the order to pay over the account is 
not qualifying legal process requiring payment from the participant's 
account; or
    (3) If the account was frozen upon receipt of a document that 
purports to be legal process requiring payment from the participant's 
account, the account will be unfrozen upon the occurrence of any one of 
the following events:
    (i) Upon payment pursuant to the document, if the Board determines 
that the document is qualifying legal process requiring payment from the 
participant's account; or
    (ii) As soon as practicable after the Board issues its decision 
letter informing the parties that the document is not qualifying legal 
process requiring payment from the participant's account.



Sec. 1653.25  Payment pursuant to qualifying legal process.

    (a) Payment will be made pursuant to qualifying legal process after 
the Board's decision has been issued and the 30-day tax withholding 
notification period has ended. The taxpayer may receive the payment 
sooner by waiving the tax notification period.
    (b) A payment made pursuant to qualifying legal process will be made 
only to the persons or entities specified in the process. If payment is 
to be made to the spouse or former spouse of the participant, he or she 
may request that the TSP transfer all or a portion of his or her payment 
to an Individual Retirement Arrangement (IRA) or other eligible 
retirement plan. Such a request must be made by filing Form TSP-13-S, 
``Spouse Election to Transfer to IRA or Other Eligible Retirement 
Plan'', which must be received before payment.
    (c) In no case may a payment made pursuant to qualifying legal 
process exceed the participant's vested account balance, excluding any 
outstanding loan amount as of the end of the month preceding the date of 
payment. If the amount to be paid exceeds the participant's vested 
account balance (excluding any outstanding loan amount), then only the 
vested amount in the account (excluding the outstanding loan balance) 
will be paid.
    (d) The entire amount to be paid pursuant to qualifying legal 
process must be disbursed at one time. A series of payments will not be 
made even if the process provides for such a method of payment. A 
payment made pursuant to qualifying legal process extinguishes all 
further rights to any payment under that legal process even if the 
entire amount specified could not be paid. Any further payment must be 
made pursuant to separate legal process.
    (e) Multiple legal processes pending before the Board will be 
honored as follows:
    (1) As between conflicting legal processes relating to the same 
spouse, same former spouse, or same children of the participant, the 
Board will pay only the legal process bearing the latest date of 
issuance.
    (2) As between conflicting legal processes relating to two or more 
former spouses or to different children of the participant, the Board 
will pay the legal processes in the order of their dates of issuance 
starting with the legal process bearing the earliest date and continuing 
until the account is exhausted.
    (f) Payment cannot be made jointly to more than one person. If 
payment is to be made to more than one person, the legal process must 
separately indicate the amount to be paid to each.
    (g) In order to make payment pursuant to a qualifying legal process, 
the TSP recordkeeper must be provided

[[Page 245]]

with the full name and mailing address of the payee, even if the payment 
is being mailed to another address. In addition, if the payee is a 
spouse or former spouse of the participant, the payee must provide his 
or her Social Security number.
    (h) If the payee dies before a payment is made pursuant to a 
qualifying legal process, payment will be made to the estate of the 
payee, unless otherwise specified by the legal process. If the 
participant dies before payment is made pursuant to qualifying legal 
process, the process will be honored as long as it is received by the 
TSP before payment of the account, regardless of whether the order was 
received before the participant's death.
    (i) A payment made pursuant to qualifying legal process in 
accordance with this subpart bars recovery by any other person or entity 
pursuant to that qualifying legal process.
    (j) Payments made pursuant to qualifying legal process will be paid 
pro rata from the TSP investment funds in which the participant is 
invested, on the date as of which the payment is made. The TSP will not 
honor provisions of legal process that require payment to be made from 
specific investment funds.
    (k) Unless the qualifying legal process specifically provides, 
interest or earnings will not be paid on the amount paid to a party or 
parties pursuant to the qualifying legal process.

[60 FR 45624, Aug. 31, 1995, as amended at 61 FR 18912, Apr. 29, 1996]



PART 1655--LOAN PROGRAM--Table of Contents




Sec.
1655.1  Definitions.
1655.2  Eligibility for loans.
1655.3  Information concerning the cost of the loan.
1655.4  Number of loans.
1655.5  Loan repayment period.
1655.6  Amount of loan.
1655.7  Interest rate.
1655.8  Quarterly loan statements.
1655.9  Effect of loans on individual account.
1655.10  Loan application.
1655.11  Loan Agreement/Promissory Note.
1655.12  Loan approval.
1655.13  Distributions.
1655.14  Loan payments.
1655.15  Incorrect payments.
1655.16  Reamortization.
1655.17  Prepayment.
1655.18  Spousal rights.
1655.19  Court orders.
1655.20  Loans for the purchase of a primary residence.

    Authority: 5 U.S.C. 8433(g) and 8474.

    Source: 55 FR 979, Jan. 10, 1990, unless otherwise noted.



Sec. 1655.1  Definitions.

    Account or Individual Account means the account established for a 
participant in the Thrift Savings Plan under 5 U.S.C. 8439(a).
    Agency means the entity employing a participant with an account in 
the Thrift Savings Plan.
    Amortization means the reduction in a loan by periodic payments of 
principal and interest according to a schedule of payments.
    Board means the Federal Retirement Thrift Investment Board.
    C Fund means the Common Stock Index Investment Fund established 
under 5 U.S.C. 8438(b)(1)(C).
    CSRS means the Civil Service Retirement System established by 
subchapter III of chapter 83 of title 5, United States Code or any 
equivalent retirement system.
    Date of Application means the date on which the recordkeeper 
receives the loan application.
    Days means calendar days except when otherwise stated.
    Employee Contributions means any contributions made under 5 U.S.C. 
8432(a), 5 U.S.C. 8351(a), 5 U.S.C. 8440a or the second 5 U.S.C. 8440a.
    FERS means the Federal Employees' Retirement System established by 
chapter 84 of Title 5, United States Code or any equivalent retirement 
system.
    F Fund means the Fixed Income Investment Fund established under 5 
U.S.C. 8438(b)(1)(B).
    G Fund means the Government Securities Investment Fund established 
under 5 U.S.C. 8438(b)(1)(A).
    G Fund Rate means the interest rate computed under 5 U.S.C. 
8438(f)(2).
    Interim Account Balance means the unvalued account balance of a 
participant's account on the last business day of the month.
    Loan Issue Date means the date on which the recordkeeper authorizes 
a

[[Page 246]]

check for the loan principal amount to be issued.
    Loan Process Date means the date the loan application is processed 
by the recordkeeper. This is the date that is printed on the Loan 
Agreement/Promissory Note.
    Loan Repayment Period means the number of scheduled payments 
required to repay a loan in full.
    Monthly Processing Cycle means the process, beginning on the evening 
of the fourth business day of the month, by which the recordkeeper 
allocates the amount of earnings to be credited to participant accounts 
in the Plan and authorizes disbursements from the Plan.
    Participant means a person with an individual account in the Thrift 
Savings Fund.
    Principal or Principal Amount means the amount borrowed by a 
participant from his or her individual account, or, after 
reamortization, the amount financed.
    Recordkeeper means the organization designated by the Board as the 
Thrift Savings Plan's recordkeeper.
    Required Reamortization means the mandatory recalculation of 
periodic payments of principal and interest, made to reduce a loan, at 
the demand of the Plan.
    Taxable Distribution means the reporting to the Internal Revenue 
Service as taxable income the amount of outstanding principal and 
interest on a loan upon failure by the participant to repay the loan in 
full according to the terms of the Loan Agreement/Promissory Note.
    Thrift Savings Fund or Fund means the Fund described in 5 U.S.C. 
8437.
    Thrift Savings Plan or Plan means the Federal Retirement Thrift 
Savings Plan established under subchapter III of the Federal Employees' 
Retirement System Act of 1986, 5 U.S.C. 843l, et seq.
    Valuation Date means the date as of which earnings are allocated to 
individual accounts. For any month, this date is the last day of the 
month.
    Vested Account Balance means that portion of the individual account 
which is not subject to forfeiture under 5 U.S.C. 8432(g).
    Voluntary Reamortization means the recalculation of periodic 
payments of principal and interest, made to reduce a loan, at the 
request of a participant.

[55 FR 979, Jan. 10, 1990, as amended at 61 FR 58755, Nov. 18, 1996]



Sec. 1655.2  Eligibility for loans.

    Only a participant who is in pay status with his or her agency and 
who has at least $1,000 in employee contributions and attributable 
earnings in his or her account may receive a loan, subject to the other 
terms and conditions set forth in this part. A participant who is 
separated from Government service may not receive a loan. Persons who 
are eligible to contribute to the Thrift Savings Plan under 5 CFR part 
1620 are also eligible to apply for a loan.

[55 FR 979, Jan. 10, 1990, as amended at 61 FR 58755, Nov. 18, 1996]



Sec. 1655.3  Information concerning the cost of the loan.

    Before a loan is issued, the recordkeeper will provide the 
participant written information concerning the cost of the loan relative 
to other sources of financing, as well as the lifetime cost of the loan, 
including the difference in earnings rates between the funds offered by 
the Thrift Savings Fund and any other effect of the loan on the 
participant's final account balance.

[61 FR 58755, Nov. 18, 1996]



Sec. 1655.4  Number of loans.

    A participant may have no more than two loans outstanding at any 
time. Only one of the two loans may be a loan for the purchase of a 
primary residence.

[61 FR 58755, Nov. 18, 1996]



Sec. 1655.5  Loan repayment period.

    (a) Minimum. The minimum loan repayment period of any loan is one 
year of scheduled payments.
    (b) Maximum. The maximum loan repayment period of a loan for the 
purchase of a primary residence is 15 years of scheduled payments. The 
maximum loan repayment period of any other loan is 4 years of scheduled 
payments.

[[Page 247]]



Sec. 1655.6  Amount of loan.

    (a) Minimum amount. The initial principal amount of any loan may not 
be less than $1,000.
    (b) Maximum amount. The principal amount of a new or reamortized 
loan, when added to any outstanding loan principal, may not exceed any 
of the following:
    (1) The portion of the participant's individual account balance that 
is attributable to employee contributions and earnings (including any 
outstanding loan principal).
    (2) $50,000 minus the excess of the highest outstanding loan 
principal of the participant during the preceding year over the current 
outstanding loan principal.
    (3) The greater of \1/2\ of the participant's vested account balance 
(including any outstanding loan principal), or $10,000.
    (c) Subject to the requirement of paragraph (a), a participant may 
request a loan for the maximum allowable amount as calculated in 
paragraph (b).



Sec. 1655.7  Interest rate.

    (a) Except as provided in paragraph (b) of this section, loans will 
bear interest at the G Fund rate in effect on the date the application 
is received by the recordkeeper (date of application). The interest rate 
per payment is calculated by dividing this G Fund rate by the number of 
loan payments/pay periods scheduled in a period of 12 consecutive 
months.
    (b) If the date of application occurs before the G Fund rate has 
been determined for that month, the loan will bear interest at the G 
Fund rate in effect during the month preceding the date of application.
    (c) The interest rate calculated under this section remains fixed 
until the loan is repaid.



Sec. 1655.8  Quarterly loan statements.

    Each participant with an outstanding loan or loans will receive 
quarterly loan statements that will describe the activity relating to 
each of his or her outstanding loans during the period covered.



Sec. 1655.9  Effect of loans on individual account.

    (a) For purposes of earnings allocation, the amount borrowed will be 
removed from the participant's account as of the last valuation date 
prior to the loan issue date. As provided in part 1645, the account will 
receive no earnings on the amount borrowed for the month in which the 
loan issue date occurs.
    (b) The removal of the principal for earnings allocation purposes 
described in paragraph (a) of this section will be prorated according to 
the investment of the portion of the account represented by employee 
contributions and attributable earnings in the G Fund, the C Fund, and 
in the F Fund as of the most recent valuation date.
    (c) Loan payments, including both principal and interest, will be 
credited to the individual account of the participant repaying the loan 
for the month in which the loan payment is processed by the 
recordkeeper. The loan payments (principal and interest) will be 
credited pro rata to the G Fund, the C Fund, and the F Fund based upon 
the proportions of the interim account balances of the G Fund, the C 
Fund, and the F Fund balances in the borrower's account on the last day 
of the month prior to the month in which the loan payment is processed. 
Earnings on loan payments will be credited as described in 5 CFR part 
1645.

[55 FR 979, Jan. 10, 1990, as amended at 61 FR 58755, Nov. 18, 1996]



Sec. 1655.10  Loan application.

    (a) A participant may apply for a loan by sending a completed and 
signed application to the recordkeeper.
    (b) The participant must sign and date the application. By signing 
the application, the participant swears that the statements made in the 
application are true. An unsigned application will not be processed by 
the recordkeeper.
    (c) The application must contain the following information:
    (1) The participant's name, Social Security number, date of birth, 
current address, and pay cycle;
    (2) A statement as to whether the loan is for the purchase of a 
primary residence as described in Sec. 1655.20;

[[Page 248]]

    (3) The amount requested and the loan repayment period;
    (4) Marital status of the participant and, if married, the name and 
address of the participant's spouse; and
    (5) Any other information that the Executive Director may from time 
to time prescribe.

[55 FR 979, Jan. 10, 1990, as amended at 61 FR 58755, Nov. 18, 1996]



Sec. 1655.11  Loan Agreement/Promissory Note.

    (a) Upon determining that the application meets the requirements of 
this part, the recordkeeper will send the participant a Loan Agreement/
Promissory Note which will reflect the terms and conditions of the loan 
and the date it was prepared (loan process date).
    (b) By signing the Loan Agreement/Promissory Note, the participant 
is bound to follow all of its terms and conditions and certifies, to the 
best of his or her knowledge, under penalty of perjury, to the truth of 
all statements made and documentation given with the Loan Agreement/
Promissory Note.
    (c) The recordkeeper must receive the completed Loan Agreement/
Promissory Note (including any required supporting documentation) within 
45 calendar days of the loan process date or the loan agreement will be 
cancelled. If the 45th day falls on a Saturday, Sunday, or Federal 
holiday, the deadline will be the next business day.
    (d) The signed Loan Agreement/Promissory Note must be accompanied 
by:
    (1) A completed and signed discretionary payroll allotment form 
authorizing deductions of all amounts due under the Loan Agreement/
Promissory Note, which deduction the participant agrees to maintain 
through his or her employing agency;
    (2) In the case of a loan for the purchase of a primary residence, 
supporting materials that document the purchase of the residence and the 
amount requested. This information is described in Sec. 1655.20; and
    (3) Any other information that the Executive Director shall from 
time to time require.

[55 FR 979, Jan. 10, 1990, as amended at 61 FR 58755, Nov. 18, 1996]



Sec. 1655.12  Loan approval.

    (a) The application will be reviewed by the recordkeeper and will be 
accepted only if it conforms with the requirements of this part. Upon 
receipt of the application, the recordkeeper will determine whether:
    (1) The participant is qualified to apply for a loan under 
Sec. 1655.2 and has provided all required information;
    (2) The participant already has the maximum number of loans 
outstanding, or if the application is for a residential loan, the 
participant already has a residential loan outstanding;
    (3) The participant already has a pending loan application;
    (4) The requested loan exceeds the maximum amounts set forth in 
Sec. 1655.6(b), or is less than the minimum amount set forth in 
Sec. 1655.6(a). If the loan application process date occurs during a 
month before the monthly processing cycle, the maximum and minimum 
amounts will be determined using the interim account balance at the end 
of the prior month. If the loan application process date occurs after 
the monthly processing cycle but before the end of the month, the 
maximum and minimum amounts will be determined using the most recent 
valued account balance;
    (5) The applicant is covered by a retirement system that is eligible 
to participate in the Thrift Savings Plan;
    (6) A CSRS participant who is married but does not know the 
whereabouts of his or her spouse has been granted an exception to the 
spousal requirement as described in Sec. 1655.18; and
    (7) The participant has received a taxable loan distribution (as 
described in Sec. 1655.13) from the Thrift Savings Plan within the 12 
consecutive month period preceding the date of application, except as a 
result of a failure to repay the loan upon the participant's separation 
from service or confirmed non-pay status for a period exceeding one 
year.
    (b) Failure by the applicant to comply with any of the requirements 
of this part will result in rejection of the loan application.
    (c) If the recordkeeper accepts the loan application, a Loan 
Agreement/Promissory Note will be sent to the applicant, as provided in 
Sec. 1655.11. When

[[Page 249]]

the completed Loan Agreement/Promissory Note is returned by the 
applicant, along with documentation, if required to be submitted under 
Secs. 1655.11(d) and 1655.20, the loan will be initially approved or 
denied by the recordkeeper based upon the requirements of this part, 
including the following conditions:
    (1) The participant has signed a promise to pay the loan and a 
statement that the information provided to the recordkeeper is true and 
complete to the best of the participant's knowledge;
    (2) Processing of the loan would not be prohibited by Sec. 1655.19 
relating to court orders;
    (3) A FERS participant's spouse has consented to the loan or, if the 
spouse's whereabouts are unknown or exceptional circumstances make it 
inappropriate to secure the spouse's consent, an exception to the 
spousal requirement described in Sec. 1655.18 has been granted;
    (4) The completed Loan Agreement/Promissory Note was received by the 
recordkeeper within 45 days of the date it was prepared;
    (5) The participant has completed and signed a loan payment 
allotment form; and
    (6) Any other conditions that the Executive Director may from time 
to time prescribe.
    (d) The loan issue date will occur within 60 days of the date the 
loan is initially approved unless the recordkeeper determines that:
    (1) A court order would prohibit the loan for the reasons described 
in Sec. 1655.19;
    (2) The participant's employing agency has reported the death, 
retirement, or separation of the participant;
    (3) The participant's account balance on the loan issue date does 
not contain sufficient employee contributions and related earnings to 
make the loan;
    (4) The loan exceeds the maximum loan amount set forth in 
Sec. 1655.6(b) as of the most recent valuation date; or
    (5) The loan does not comply with any other criteria that the 
Executive Director may from time to time prescribe.
    (e) Loans will be issued once a month. After the loan issue date, 
the recordkeeper will provide information to the United States Treasury 
which will permit the Treasury to mail a check for the principal amount 
of the approved loan to the participant.
    (f) A loan is considered to have been made to a participant on the 
loan issue date.

[61 FR 58755, Nov. 18, 1996]



Sec. 1655.13  Distributions.

    (a) The Board will declare the unpaid loan principal, plus unpaid 
interest, to be a taxable distribution from the Plan if:
    (1) A participant is in confirmed non-pay status for a period of one 
year or more and the participant has not prepaid the loan as provided in 
Sec. 1655.17;
    (2) A participant separates from Government service and does not 
repay the outstanding loan principal and interest in full within a date 
which is the earlier of:
    (i) 90 calendar days after the date of the notice from the 
recordkeeper to the participant explaining his or her prepayment options 
that are available upon separation from Government service; or
    (ii) 90 calendar days after the date of the notice from the 
recordkeeper to the participant that, because his or her payments were 
incorrect or missing for 90 calendar days (pursuant to Sec. 1655.15(a)), 
his or her loan must be reamortized or prepaid in full or a taxable 
distribution will be declared;
    (3) There are incorrect or missing payments (as described in 
Sec. 1655.15) and the participant fails to or is ineligible to exercise 
one of the reamortization or repayment in full options set forth in 
Sec. 1655.15;
    (4) Any material information provided in accordance with 
Secs. 1655.10 or 1655.11 is found to be false;
    (5) The loan is not repaid in full (including interest due) within 
five years, in the case of any loan other than a loan for purchase of a 
primary residence, or 18 years, in the case of a loan for purchase of a 
primary residence, of the loan issue date;
    (6) The participant dies.
    (b) If a distribution occurs in accordance with paragraph (a) of 
this section, the Board will notify the participant or, in the case of 
death, the estate of

[[Page 250]]

the amount and date of the distribution. The Board will report the 
distribution to the Internal Revenue Service as income for the year in 
which it occurs.

[55 FR 979, Jan. 10, 1990, as amended at 61 FR 58756, Nov. 18, 1996]



Sec. 1655.14  Loan payments.

    (a) Loan payments (except for prepayments) may only be made through 
a discretionary payroll allotment. The allotment must remain in effect 
for the life of the loan.
    (b) The initial payment on a loan is due on or before the 60th day 
following the loan issue date. The date when the initial payment is due 
may be adjusted by the Executive Director from time to time.
    (c) Subsequent payments are due at regular intervals according to 
the participant's pay cycle as prescribed in the Loan Agreement/
Promissory Note.



Sec. 1655.15  Incorrect payments.

    (a) If correct payments are not processed by the recordkeeper for a 
period in excess of 90 calendar days from the applicable one of the 
following dates:
    (1) The date of the last correct payment;
    (2) The date of the first incorrect payment, if there have been no 
prior correct payments; or
    (3) The date the first payment was due (as calculated under 
Sec. 1655.14(b)), if there have been no payments;

the procedures stated in paragraph (b) of this section will apply.
    (b)(1) Interest from the beginning of the 90-day period described in 
paragraph (a) of this section will be added to the outstanding loan 
principal and the participant will be required to reamortize the loan. 
Generally, a reamortization schedule will be calculated to maintain the 
remaining number of payments scheduled for the loan. The recordkeeper 
will prepare and send a Rider to the Loan Agreement/Promissory Note and 
a new payroll allotment form to the participant. The recordkeeper must 
receive from the participant a signed Rider to the Loan Agreement/
Promissory Note and a newly signed payroll allotment form within 45 
calendar days of the date the Rider is prepared. If the 45th day falls 
on a Saturday, Sunday, or a Federal holiday, the deadline will be the 
next business day.
    (2) If the remaining number of payments would cause the loan term to 
extend beyond 18 years less 120 days from the loan issue date for a loan 
for the purchase of a primary residence, or five years less 120 days 
from the loan issue date for any other loan, the recordkeeper will 
reamortize the loan to enable the entire amount of principal and 
interest to be repaid within those limits. The recordkeeper will prepare 
and send to the participant a Rider to the Loan Agreement/Promissory 
Note and a new payroll allotment form. The recordkeeper must receive 
from the participant, within 45 calendar days of the date the Rider is 
prepared, the signed Rider to the Loan Agreement/Promissory Note and a 
newly signed payroll allotment form. If the 45th day falls on a 
Saturday, Sunday, or a Federal holiday, the deadline will be the next 
business day.
    (3) If no reamortized payments can be calculated under this section 
to allow the loan to be repaid within the time limit described in 
paragraph (b)(2) of this section, and the participant does not prepay 
the loan in full, a taxable distribution will be declared.
    (4) If the reamortized loan principal would exceed the maximum loan 
amount as calculated under Sec. 1655.6(b), the loan will not be 
reamortized. The participant must prepay the loan in full or a taxable 
distribution will be declared.
    (5) If a participant does not sign and return the Rider to the Loan 
Agreement/Promissory Note, and the participant does not prepay the loan 
in full, a taxable distribution will be declared.
    (6) A reamortization will be calculated based on the assumption that 
the reamortization will be completed 50 days after the Rider to the Loan 
Agreement/Promissory Note is prepared.
    (c) If a period of incorrect payments does not exceed the 90-day 
period described in paragraph (a) of this section, no reamortization is 
required under paragraph (b) of this section. Any unpaid principal will 
be paid by additional payments in the same amount as

[[Page 251]]

the existing payments added to the term of the loan. Any overpaid 
principal will cause the loan repayment period to be shortened. If the 
additional payments would extend the term of the loan beyond five years 
from the loan issue date (or 18 years from the loan issue date in the 
case of a loan for the purchase of a primary residence), the participant 
must either reamortize the loan so as to establish scheduled payments 
that will repay the loan within those time periods or prepay in full the 
remaining unpaid amounts. If the participant does neither, a taxable 
distribution will be declared.
    (d) For purposes of this section, incorrect payments include 
insufficient, excessive, and missing payments.

[55 FR 979, Jan. 10, 1990, as amended at 61 FR 58756, Nov. 18, 1996]



Sec. 1655.16  Reamortization.

    (a) Reamortization of a loan will occur in the following situations:
    (1) Under the rules stated in Sec. 1655.15;
    (2) Where a participant transfers between agencies and changes pay 
schedules, the loan will be required to be reamortized to reflect the 
changed schedule. A new payroll allotment form must be completed and 
signed by the participant to reflect this changed schedule;
    (3) Where a participant has had his or her loan established on the 
basis of a particular pay schedule (e.g., biweekly), but actual loan 
payments are made on a different pay schedule (e.g., monthly), the loan 
will be reamortized to reflect the correct pay schedule. A new payroll 
allotment form must be completed and signed to reflect the correct pay 
schedule;
    (4) A participant may voluntarily reamortize a loan, subject to the 
following conditions:
    (i) A voluntary reamortization may occur only if the participant is 
not currently required to reamortize the loan under the rules stated in 
this part;
    (ii) An outstanding loan may be voluntarily reamortized only once;
    (iii) Under a voluntary reamortization, the participant can shorten 
or extend the loan repayment period, provided that the new loan 
repayment period, when added to the original loan repayment period, is 
not shorter than one year of scheduled payments and does not exceed 15 
years of scheduled payments, in the case of a loan for the purchase of a 
primary residence, or four years of scheduled payments, in the case of 
all other loans.
    (b) Before a loan can be reamortized, the recordkeeper must receive 
from the participant, within 45 days of the date a Rider to the 
participant's Loan Agreement/Promissory Note was prepared, a signed 
Rider to his or her Loan Agreement/Promissory Note which describes the 
estimated terms and conditions of the reamortized loan and a newly 
signed payroll allotment form. If the 45th day falls on a Saturday, 
Sunday, or Federal holiday, the deadline will be the next business day.
    (c) Upon reamortization, the new principal balance of the loan will 
equal the unpaid principal on the date of reamortization, plus any 
interest due on the unpaid principal.
    (d) [Reserved]
    (e) A loan may only be reamortized if the new principal (as 
described in paragraph (c) of this section) does not exceed the maximum 
loan amount calculated under Sec. 1655.6(b).
    (f) The interest rate on a reamortized loan will be the same as the 
interest rate on the original loan.

[55 FR 979, Jan. 10, 1990, as amended at 61 FR 58757, Nov. 18, 1996]



Sec. 1655.17  Prepayment.

    (a) A participant may prepay a loan in full at any time before the 
declaration of a distribution under Sec. 1655.13 unless a separated 
participant has signed a statement that he or she does not intend to 
prepay. Partial prepayments are not permitted. Prepayment in full means 
receipt by the recordkeeper of payment of all principal and interest due 
in the form of a certified or cashier's check, a certified or 
treasurer's draft from a credit union, or a money order.
    (b) If a participant returns a loan check to the recordkeeper in 
order to repay his or her loan, it will be treated as a prepayment in 
full. However, additional interest may be owed.

[55 FR 979, Jan. 10, 1990, as amended at 61 FR 58757, Nov. 18, 1996]

[[Page 252]]



Sec. 1655.18  Spousal rights.

    (a) Within seven calendar days of a CSRS participant's loan 
application process date, the recordkeeper will send a notice to the 
participant's current spouse that the participant has applied for a 
loan.
    (b) As a condition for approval of the Loan Agreement/Promissory 
Note for a FERS participant, the participant must provide the 
recordkeeper with any evidence the Board requires to demonstrate that 
the current spouse has consented to the loan for which the participant 
has applied.
    (c) A CSRS participant may obtain a waiver of the spousal 
requirement described in paragraph (a) of this section if the 
participant establishes, to the satisfaction of the Executive Director, 
that the spouse's whereabouts are unknown.
    (d) A FERS participant may obtain a waiver of the spousal 
requirement described in paragraph (b) of this section if the 
participant establishes, to the satisfaction of the Executive Director 
that:
    (1) The spouse's whereabouts are unknown; or
    (2) Exceptional circumstances prevent the obtaining of consent.
    (e) The procedures for obtaining an exception to the spousal 
requirements (including the definition of exceptional circumstances) 
described in paragraphs (c) and (d) of this section will be the same as 
the procedures described in 5 CFR part 1650.

[61 FR 58757, Nov. 18, 1996]



Sec. 1655.19  Court orders.

    Upon receipt of a document that purports to be a qualifying 
retirement benefits court order or qualifying legal process relating to 
a participant's legal obligations to provide child support or make 
alimony payments, the participant's TSP account will be frozen. After 
the account is frozen, no loan will be allowed until the account is 
unfrozen. The Board's procedures for processing retirement benefits 
court orders and legal processes are explained in 5 CFR part 1653.

[61 FR 58757, Nov. 18, 1996]



Sec. 1655.20  Loans for the purchase of a primary residence.

    (a) A loan for the purchase of a primary residence will be made only 
for the purchase of the primary residence of the participant or the 
participant and his or her spouse and for related purchase costs. The 
participant must actually bear all or part of the cost of the purchase 
of the primary residence. If the participant purchases a primary 
residence with someone other than his or her spouse, only the portion of 
the purchase costs that are borne by the participant will be considered 
in making the loan. A loan for the purchase of a primary residence will 
not be made for the purpose of paying off an existing mortgage or 
otherwise providing financing for an existing primary residence 
purchased more than 2 years earlier.
    (b) A primary residence must be used by the participant as his or 
her principal residence. A primary residence does not include a second 
home or vacation home. A participant cannot have more than one primary 
residence. A primary residence may include a houseboat, a house trailer, 
a condominium, or stock held in a cooperative housing corporation.
    (c) Purchase of a primary residence means acquisition of the 
residence through the exchange of cash or other property or through the 
total construction of the new residence. Construction of an addition to 
or the renovation of a residence does not constitute ``purchase'' of a 
primary residence.
    (d) Related purchase costs are any costs that are incurred directly 
as a result of the purchase or construction of a residence and which can 
be added to the basis of the residence for Federal tax purposes. 
However, ``points'' or loan origination fees charged for a loan, whether 
or not treated as part of the basis, will not be considered a purchase 
cost.
    (e) The documentation required for a loan under this section is as 
follows:
    (1) For all purchases except for construction, a copy of a home 
purchase contract or a settlement sheet or estimated settlement sheet;
    (2) For construction, a home construction contract. If a single home 
construction contract is unavailable,

[[Page 253]]

additional contracts, building permits, receipts, assessments, or other 
documentation that demonstrates the construction of an entire primary 
residence and expenses in the amount of the loan may be accepted.
    (f) The documentation provided under this subparagraph must bear a 
date that is no more than 24 months preceding the date of application.



PART 1690--MISCELLANEOUS REGULATIONS--Table of Contents




    Authority: 5 U.S.C. 8474.



Sec. 1690.1  Plan year.

    The Thrift Savings Plan's plan year will be established on a 
calendar-year basis for all purposes, except where another applicable 
provision of law requires that a fiscal year or other basis be used. As 
used in this section, the term ``calendar-year basis'' means a twelve 
month period beginning on January 1 and ending on December 31 of the 
same year.

[52 FR 43315, Nov. 12, 1987]

[[Page 255]]



    CHAPTER VII--ADVISORY COMMISSION ON INTERGOVERNMENTAL RELATIONS




  --------------------------------------------------------------------
Part                                                                Page
1700            Employee responsibilities and conduct.......         256
1701            Organization and purpose....................         257
1702            Bylaws of the Commission....................         262
1703            Public availability of documents and records         264
1720            Enforcement of nondiscrimination on the 
                    basis of handicap in programs or 
                    activities conducted by the Advisory 
                    Commission on Intergovernmental 
                    Relations...............................         268

[[Page 256]]



PART 1700--EMPLOYEE RESPONSIBILITIES AND CONDUCT--Table of Contents




Sec.
1700.735-101  Adoption of regulations.
1700.735-102  Review of statements of employment and financial 
          interests.
1700.735-103  Disciplinary and other remedial action.
1700.735-104  Gifts, entertainment, and favors.
1700.735-105  Outside employment.
1700.735-108  Specific provisions of Commission regulations governing 
          special Government employees.
1700.735-109  Statements of employment and financial interest.

    Authority: E.O. 11222, 3 CFR, 1964-1965 Comp., p. 306; 5 CFR 
735.101, et seq.

    Source: 33 FR 4615, Mar. 16, 1968, unless otherwise noted.



Sec. 1700.735-101   Adoption of regulations.

    Pursuant to Sec. 735.104(f) of this title, the Advisory Commission 
on Intergovernmental Relations (referred to hereinafter as the 
Commission) hereby adopts the following sections of part 735 of this 
title, Code of Federal Regulations: Secs. 735.101, 735.102, 735.201a, 
735.202(a), (d), (e), (f)-735.210, 735.302, 735.303(a), 735.304, 
735.305(a), 735.403(a), 735.404-735.411, 735.412 (b) and (d). These 
adopted sections are modified and supplemented as set forth in this 
part.



Sec. 1700.735-102   Review of statements of employment and financial interests.

    Each statement of employment and financial interests submitted under 
this part shall be reviewed by the Executive Director. When this review 
indicates a conflict of interest of an employee or special Government 
employee of the Commission and the performance of his services for the 
Government, the Executive Director shall have the indicated conflict 
brought to the attention of the employee or special Government employee, 
grant the employee or special Government employee an opportunity to 
explain the indicated conflict, and attempt to resolve the indicated 
conflict. If the indicated conflict cannot be resolved, the Executive 
Director shall forward a written report on the indicated conflict to the 
Chairman, Advisory Commission on Intergovernmental Relations.



Sec. 1700.735-103   Disciplinary and other remedial action.

    An employee or special Government employee of the Commission who 
violates any of the regulations in this part or adopted under 
Sec. 1700.735-101 may be disciplined. The disciplinary action may be in 
addition to any penalty prescribed by law for the violation. In addition 
to, or in lieu of, disciplinary action, remedial action to end conflicts 
or appearance of conflicts of interest may include but is not limited 
to:
    (a) Changes in assigned duties;
    (b) Divestment by the employee of his conflicting interests; or
    (c) Disqualification for a particular assignment.



Sec. 1700.735-104   Gifts, entertainment, and favors.

    The Commission authorizes the exceptions to Sec. 735.202(a) of this 
title set forth in Sec. 735.202(b) (1) through (4) of this title.



Sec. 1700.735-105   Outside employment.

    (a) An employee of the Commission may engage in outside employment 
or other outside activity not incompatible with the full and proper 
discharge of the duties and responsibilities of his Government 
employment. An employee who engages in outside employment shall report 
that fact in writing to his supervisor.
    (b) Employees and special Government employees of the Commission may 
engage in teaching, writing, and lecturing, provided, however, employees 
and special Government employees shall not receive compensation or 
anything of monetary value for any consultation, discussion, writing, 
lecturing, or appearance the subject matter of which is devoted 
substantially to the specific responsibilities, programs, or operations 
of the Commission, or which draws substantially on official data or 
ideas which have not been published or otherwise publicly released by 
the Commission. The foregoing limitation on the receipt of compensation 
or anything of monetary value shall not be construed as applying to 
amounts received for reimbursement for travel and other expenses 
incurred in performing the outside employment.

[[Page 257]]



Sec. 1700.735-108   Specific provisions of Commission regulations governing special Government employees.

    (a) The term ``special Government employee'' as used in this part 
means an officer or employee who is retained, designated, appointed, or 
employed by the Commission to perform, with or without compensation, for 
not more than 130 days during any period of 365 consecutive days, 
temporary duties either on a full-time or intermittent basis.
    (b) Special Government employees shall adhere to the standards of 
conduct applicable to employees set forth in this part and adopted under 
Sec. 1700.735-101, except that Sec. 735.203(b) of this title is not 
applicable to a special Government employee.
    (c) Pursuant to Sec. 735.305(b) of this title, the Commission 
authorizes the same exceptions concerning gifts, entertainment, and 
favors for special Government employees as are authorized for employees 
by Sec. 1700.735-104.



Sec. 1700.735-109   Statements of employment and financial interests.

    (a) In addition to the employees required to submit statements of 
employment and financial interests under Sec. 735.403(a) of this title, 
employees in the following named positions shall submit statements of 
employment and financial interest to the Executive Director:
    Assistant Director, Taxation and Finance.
    Assistant Director, Governmental Structure and Functions.
    Assistant Director, Program Implementation.
    (b) The statement of employment and financial interest required by 
this section shall be submitted by the Executive Director to the 
Chairman of the Commission.
    (c) An employee who believes that his position has been improperly 
included in this section as one requiring the submission of a statement 
of employment and financial interests may obtain a review of his 
complaint under the agency's grievance procedure.
    (d) A statement of employment and financial interest is not required 
under this part from Members of the Commission. Members of the 
Commission are subject to 3 CFR 100.735-31 and are required to file a 
statement only if requested to do so by the Counsel to the President.

    Note: Notwithstanding the filing of the annual supplementary 
statement required by 5 CFR 735.406, each employee shall at all times 
avoid acquiring a financial interest that could result, or taking an 
action that would result, in a violation of the conflicts-of-interest 
provisions of section 208 of title 18, United States Code or the 
regulations in this part or adopted under Sec. 735.101.



PART 1701--ORGANIZATION AND PURPOSE--Table of Contents




Sec.
1701.1  Establishment and locations.
1701.2  Name.
1701.3  Purpose.
1701.4  Membership of the Commission.
1701.5  Bipartisan nature of Commission.
1701.6  Organization of Commission, vacancies, quorum.
1701.7  Commission personnel.
1701.8  Activities of the Commission.
1701.9  Step-by-step development of Commission recommendations.
1701.10  Other activities of the Commission.

    Authority: Pub. L. 86-380 of Sept. 24, 1959, 73 Stat 703 (42 U.S.C. 
4271).

    Source: 51 FR 24800, July 9, 1986, unless otherwise noted.



Sec. 1701.1  Establishment and locations.

    The Advisory Commission on Intergovernmental Relations was 
established as a permanent independent and bipartisan agency of the 
Federal Government by Pub. L. 86-380; 73 Stat 703 (43 U.S.C. 4272), 
enacted in 1959. The Commission's offices are located at 1111 20th 
Street, NW., Washington, DC 20575.



Sec. 1701.2  Name.

    The formal name of the agency is ``Advisory Commission on 
Intergovernmental Relations.'' It is also known, and sometimes referred 
to, as the ``Commission,'' or simply ``ACIR.''



Sec. 1701.3  Purpose.

    The underlying purpose of the Commission is to strengthen the 
ability of the United States federal system of government to meet the 
problems of an

[[Page 258]]

increasingly complex society by promoting greater cooperation, 
understanding and coordination of activities between the separate levels 
of government. More specifically the purpose of the Commission includes 
the objectives of:
    (a) Bringing together representatives of the Federal, State, and 
local governments for the consideration of common problem;
    (b) Providing a forum for discussing the administration and 
coordination of Federal grant and other programs requiring 
intergovernmental cooperation;
    (c) Giving critical attention to the conditions and controls 
involved in the administration of Federal grant programs;
    (d) Making available technical assistance to the executive and 
legislative branches of the Federal Government in the review of proposed 
legislation to determine its overall effect on the Federal system;
    (e) Encouraging discussion and study at an early stage of emerging 
public problems that are likely to require intergovernmental 
cooperation;
    (f) Recommending within the framework of the Constitution, the most 
desirable allocation of governmental functions, responsibilities, and 
revenues amount the several levels of government; and
    (g) Recommending methods of coordinating and simplifying tax laws 
and administrative practices to achieve a more orderly and less 
competitive fiscal relationship between the levels of government and to 
reduce the burden of compliance for taxpayers.



Sec. 1701.4  Membership of the Commission.

    The Commission is composed of twenty-six members, as follows:
    (a) Six appointed by the President of the United States, three of 
whom are officers of the executive branch of the Government, and three 
private citizens, all of whom have had experience of familiarity with 
relations between the levels of government;
    (b) Three appointed by the President of the Senate, who are Members 
of the Senate;
    (c) Three appointed by the Speaker of the House of Representatives, 
who are Members of the House;
    (d) Four appointed by the President from a panel of at least eight 
Governors submitted by the Governors' Conference;
    (e) Three appointed by the President from panel of at least six 
members of State legislative bodies submitted by the board of managers 
of the Council of State Governments;
    (f) Four appointed by the President from a panel of at least eight 
mayors submitted jointly by the American Municipal Association and the 
United States Conference of Mayors;
    (g) Three appointed by the President from a panel of at least six 
elected county officers submitted by the National Association of County 
Officials.



Sec. 1701.5  Bipartisan nature of Commission.

    The members appointed from private life under paragraph (a) of 
Sec. 1701.4 are appointed without regard to political affiliation; of 
each class of members enumerated in paragraphs (b) and (c) of 
Sec. 1701.4, two are from the majority party of the respective houses; 
of each class of members enumerated in paragraphs (d), (e), (f) and (g) 
of Sec. 1701.4, not more than two may be from any one political party; 
of each class of members enumerated in paragraphs (e), (f) and (g) of 
Sec. 1701.4, not more than one from any one State; at least two of the 
appointees under paragraph (f) are from cities under five hundred 
thousand population. The term of office of each member of the Commission 
is two years, but members are eligible for reappointment.



Sec. 1701.6  Organization of Commission, vacancies, quorum.

    (a) The President designates a Chairman and a Vice Chairman from 
among members of the Commission.
    (b) Any vacancy in the membership of the Commission is filled in the 
same manner in which the original appointment was made; except that 
where the number of vacancies is fewer than the number of members 
specified in paragraphs (d), (e), (f) and (g) of Sec. 1701.4, each panel 
of names submitted in accordance with the aforementioned

[[Page 259]]

paragraphs contains at least two names for each vacancy.
    (c) Where any member ceases to serve in the official position from 
which he or she was originally appointed under Sec. 1701.4, that place 
on the Commission is deemed to be vacant.
    (d) Thirteen members of the Commission constitute a quorum, but two 
or more members constitute a quorum for the purpose of conducting 
hearings.



Sec. 1701.7  Commission personnel.

    (a) Executive Director. Is appointed by the Commission itself. He is 
appointed without regard to the Civil Service laws or Classification Act 
of 1949, and without regard to political affiliation. He is appointed 
solely on the basis of fitness to perform the duties of the position.
    (b) Other employees. Subject to the provisions of part 1720 of this 
chapter and of such other rules and regulations as the Commission may 
adopt, the Chairman, without reference to the Civil Service laws and the 
Classification Act of 1949, and without regard to political affiliation, 
may appoint, fix the compensation of, and remove such other personnel as 
he deems necessary.
    (c) Temporary employees. The Chairman may also procure temporary and 
intermittent services to the same extent as is authorized by section 15 
of the Administrative Expenses Act of 1946 (5 U.S.C. 55a), but at rates 
not to exceed the daily rate for a GS-18.



Sec. 1701.8  Activities of the Commission.

    The primary role of the Commission is to give advice. It issues no 
rules or regulations governing the general public, and the advice it 
gives is addressed to various levels of the American government, such as 
the Congress of the United States, and the States, counties, and cities. 
The advice it gives is contained in its recommendations and reports, and 
these in turn are based on research conducted by the Commission and its 
staff.
    (a) Selection of research topics--policy applied. The policy applied 
by the Commission in the choice of research topics is to select ones 
which will strengthen the federal system, and promote the power balance 
and fiscal balance among the various levels of government. Weight is 
given to new ways of dealing with practical intergovernmental problems. 
Routine and continual re-evaluation of the same topic will be avoided 
whenever possible.
    (b) Selection of research topics--criteria. The Commission, by vote 
of its members, selects all research projects and approves acceptance of 
all research grants. Its selections take into account the following 
general criteria:
    (1) Importance of the subject area,
    (2) Timeliness of the issues,
    (3) Utility to the governmental levels,
    (4) Compatability with the competence of the staff, and
    (5) Appropriateness for the Commission's composition and procedures.
    (c) Outside requests for research. The Commission undertakes 
research requested by the Congress and by executive agencies to the 
extent that its work program and resources allow. However, where such 
requests do not meet the Commission's research selection criteria or 
where undertaking the work would impede other important work in 
progress, the Commission will necessarily seek additional funding to 
expend its work capacity temporarily. The Commission does not make 
research grants to other outside parties on topics those parties have 
selected for study nor will it request appropriation for such studies.
    (d) Special funding of projects. ACIR will seek and accept grants 
for work on intergovernmental subjects that accord with the Commission's 
finding that the subject is of prime intergovernmental importance, if it 
is within the capacity of the staff--or outside scholars and consultants 
engaged for this purpose--to produce a study that meets the Commission's 
usual standards of quality.



Sec. 1701.9  Step-by-step development of Commission recommendations.

    The Commission itself selects the research projects to be undertaken 
and assigns the priority to be given among projects. In making its 
selection the Commission may consider exploratory research by the ACIR 
staff, the Commission members expertise, and any other information the 
Commission members have. Thereafter:

[[Page 260]]

    (a) Working outline. An outline of the project is prepared by the 
one or more staff members assigned to it by the Executive Director. In 
addition, the Chairman in his or her discretion, may assign one or more 
Commission members to monitor the staff work. The working outline covers 
the issues to be dealt with and the research techniques to be used. This 
outline is sent to the Commission members and reviewed at a ``Thinkers'' 
Session.
    (b) Thinkers session. The participants at a Thinkers Session are 
selected by the staff, after seeking suggestions from Commission 
members. Participants are usually professors, researchers, and other 
experts who have a special knowledge and interest in the subject matter 
of the project. If Commission members have been assigned to oversee the 
work, every effort will be made to enable them to attend. Thinkers 
Sessions are held at times convenient to the participants and are 
usually held at the ACIR headquarters in Washington, but may be held 
elsewhere if necessary for the convenience of the participants.
    (c) Preliminary draft. Following the Thinkers Session, the working 
outline will be appropriately revised and the staff will conduct the 
research work and prepare a preliminary draft of the study that may 
include a range of possible legislative recommendations for Commission 
consideration.
    (d) Critics session. After being reviewed internally, the 
preliminary draft is subjected to review and criticism by an informal 
group of critics, some of whom may have been members of the thinkers 
group. The critics also provide expert knowledge and a diversity of 
substantive and philosophical viewpoints. Care is taken to include among 
the critics representatives of national associations of state and local 
officials, as well as of Congress and federal departments and agencies. 
If Commission members have been assigned to oversee the work, every 
effort is made to encourage them to attend any meeting of the critics. 
Participants in a critics session are selected by the staff after 
seeking suggestions from Commission members. Responses to the criticisms 
and suggestions presented at a critics meeting are determined by the 
staff.
    (e) Revision and submission to Commission. The draft report is then 
revised by the staff in light of criticisms and comments received both 
orally and in writing from critics, Commission members and others. A 
summary of the draft report, along with potential recommendations, is 
included in a ``Docket Book'' and transmitted to Commission members at 
least three weeks in advance of the meeting at which it is to be 
considered. To the maximum extent feasible, copies of the entire report 
are made available to all interested parties at least two weeks before 
the full Commission considers the study.
    (f) Advisory committee. In exceptional projects the Executive 
Director, or the Commission, may appoint a committee of advisors to help 
guide the research. The committee will consist of academics and 
practitioners who have special competence and interest in the subject 
under study and, particularly, who are familiar with the latest 
developments in the field. The committee advises the staff and the 
Commission on all phases of the research, from initiating the research 
design to developing proposed recommendations. The committee's 
activities supplement but do not replace thinkers and critics sessions.
    (g) Adoption of recommendations. The draft recommendations are then 
considered and separately voted upon by the Commission in meeting. 
Majority vote of those present is required for approval. Extensive 
amendments and new germane matter must be set forth in writing and be 
made available to each member attending the meeting before they can be 
voted upon. New matter determined to be non-germane by the Chairman is 
referred to the staff with instructions on how to deal with the 
material.
    (h) Dissent. Members are free to dissent from actions adopted by the 
Commission and may have that dissent registered in any of several ways. 
If requested, the names of dissenting members will be shown in the 
minutes of the meeting where the vote was taken. To the extent 
dissenting members feel the minutes fail to reflect adequately the 
nature of their dissent, they may,

[[Page 261]]

with Commission approval, have the minutes revised to present their 
viewpoint more fully. If a report is involved, the member may be listed 
as having dissented on a point at an appropriate location in the text of 
the report. In addition, if the member wishes, a statement of dissent 
may be included in the report at some appropriate place. On request, the 
staff will assist members in drafting explanatory dissent statements for 
inclusion in either the minutes or reports.
    (i) Informal action by the Commission--polling. The Chairman, on his 
own motion, may poll the membership of the Commission to determine the 
views of members on matters on the agenda of a regular or special 
meeting of the Commission but which were not considered by the 
Commission. Votes so obtained may either be by mail or by telephone, but 
if by telephone, they must be confirmed in writing. The result of any 
poll is reported in the Docket Book for the next session of the 
Commission for ratification. At that time it is subject to a motion to 
reconsider, but not at any later time.



Sec. 1701.10  Other activities of the Commission.

    (a) The Commission devotes the necessary amount of ACIR staff time 
to technical assistance, publications, and education activities so as to 
disseminate Commission reports and encourage study of emerging public 
problems which may require adoption of Commission legislative 
recommendations. In carrying out these implementation activities, 
Commission members and the staff conduct and participate in press 
conferences, briefings for legislative and policy officials, legislative 
hearings, seminars and workshops, technical assistance visits to 
specific jurisdictions, and other activities appropriate to its 
statutory mandate.
    (b) Support activities. In support of its implementation activities, 
the Chairman and members of the Commission complement the staff work by 
participating in press conferences and briefings for legislative and 
policy officials, testifying before Congressional committees and state 
and local legislative bodies, participating in their home states in 
press and legislative activities to generate interest in ACIR reports 
and recommendations and to advance their implementation, making speeches 
as representatives of the Commission, serving as a two-way 
communications channel with the ACIR staff, and undertaking such other 
assignments on behalf of the Commission as may be appropriate.
    (c) Publications. ACIR reports containing legislative 
recommendations or Commission ``findings'' or ``conclusions'' (``A'' 
series) and major research reports not containing legislative 
recommendations (``M'' series) are published only after approval by the 
Commission. Other reports and publications may be published with the 
approval of the Executive Director as follows:

Public Opinion Survey (``S'' series)
Intergovernmental Perspective
In Brief (``B'' series)
``What is ACIR''' Brochure
Publications List
Staff Working Papers
Information Bulletins

    (d) Hearings. Whenever in the opinion of the Commission it is 
necessary or desirable to have a factual determination based on the 
testimony of sworn witnesses in an adjudicatory-type hearing, or to 
provide a forum for receiving statements from interested persons or 
members of the public, or a part thereof, in a legislative-type hearing, 
the Commission, or a sub-committee of the Commission (when authorized by 
the Commission) or any number of members thereof (not less than two) may 
hold a public hearing. Factors weighed when determining whether or not 
to hold a hearing include, but are not limited to:
    (1) The extent to which all directly affected interests were 
represented in the critics session.
    (2) Whether directly affected interests have requested a hearing 
with the Commission.
    (3) The extent to which a report contains findings, conclusions or 
potential recommendations on which identifiable interests are in sharp 
disagreement.
    (4) The extent to which hearings may be a good device for directing 
public attention to the Commission, the report, or both.
    (5) Whether in meetings away from Washington a hearing will be a 
good

[[Page 262]]

device for calling attention to the Commission's presence in a 
particular community or region.



PART 1702--BYLAWS OF THE COMMISSION--Table of Contents




Sec.
1702.1  Establishment.
1702.2  Members.
1702.3  Officers.
1702.4  Responsibilities and duties of the Commission and Commission 
          members.
1702.5  Duties and powers of the Chairman and Vice-Chairman.
1702.6  Commission meetings.
1702.7  Staff--powers and limitations.
1702.8-1702.10  [Reserved]

    Authority: Pub. L. 86-380 of Sept. 24, 1959; 73 Stat. 703 (42 U.S.C. 
4271).

    Source: 51 FR 24802, July 9, 1986, unless otherwise noted.



Sec. 1702.1  Establishment.

    The Act establishing the Advisory Commission on Intergovernmental 
Relations, 42 U.S.C. 4271 et seq. (1959), 73 Stat. 703, empowers the 
Commission to regulate to the extent it deems desirable for the purpose 
of carrying out the provisions of this Act the holding of hearings, 
taking of testimony and fixing the time and place of meetings (42 U.S.C. 
4276(a)), rules covering the appointment and compensation of employees 
and the procurement of temporary and intermittent services (42 U.S.C. 
4276(d)). In addition, the Commission is required to publish regulations 
implementing the provisions of the Freedom of Information Act (5 U.S.C. 
552(a)), and the Privacy Act of 1974 (Pub. L. 93-579, 5 U.S.C. 552a). 
These bylaws are designed to carry out these regulatory obligations.



Sec. 1702.2  Members.

    Public Law 86-380, Sec. 3 (42 U.S.C. 4273), provides that the 
Commission consist of 26 members serving two-year terms--three U.S. 
Senators appointed by the President of the Senate, three members of the 
U.S. House of Representatives appointed by the Speaker of the House, 
three private citizens and three officers of the Executive Branch 
appointed by the President of the United States, and fourteen elected 
officials of state and local governments nominated by their respective 
national associations and appointed by the President of the United 
States. Except for the private citizen and Executive Branch members, 
appointments must have bipartisan balance within each membership group. 
The state and local officials on the Commission are divided into the 
following groups: four governors, three state legislators, four mayors 
and three elected county officials. Members serve until their terms 
expire and their replacements have been appointed, or until they leave 
public office in the membership category they represent. Members are 
eligible for reappointment.



Sec. 1702.3  Officers.

    In accordance with section 4(b) of Pub. L. 86-380 (42 U.S.C. 
4274(b)), the President designates the Chairman and Vice-Chairman from 
among the members of the Commission.



Sec. 1702.4  Responsibilities and duties of the Commission and Commission members.

    (a) Studies, recommendations and reports. In accordance with section 
5 of Pub. L. 86-380 (42 U.S.C. 4275), the Commission is responsible for 
choosing topics to study and consider, for recommending ``ways and means 
for fostering better relations between the levels of government,'' and 
for submitting reports to the President, Congress and any other unit of 
government or organization, including an annual report to the President 
and Congress. The Commission, or the Chairman upon explicit delegation 
by the Commission, must approve publication of each formal report 
containing legislative recommendations (series ``A'' reports) and 
information reports (series ``M'' reports).
    (b) Meeting and hearings. The Commission, by majority vote of those 
attending the meeting, may call meetings and hearings at such times and 
places as it deems appropriate.
    (c) Executive Director. In accordance with section 6(c) of Pub. L. 
86-380 (42 U.S.C. 4276(c)), as amended, the Commission appoints at a 
regular or special meeting, compensates and removes the Executive 
Director.

[[Page 263]]

    (d) Committees. The Commission may establish such committees as it 
deems necessary or desirable to guide research, to hold hearings, or to 
perform other duties.
    (e) Responsibilities and duties of Commission members. Members are 
expected to:
    (1) Attend all meetings.
    (2) Be familiar with docket book contents.
    (3) Be prepared to discuss and vote on proposed recommendations.
    (4) Attend ACIR public hearings and suggest witnesses.
    (5) Make speeches and appearances on behalf of ACIR.
    (6) Testify for ACIR at Congressional hearings.
    (7) Upon request of the Chairman, serve on Commission committees.

Any member authorized by the Commission may administer oaths or 
affirmations to witnesses appearing before the Commission or any 
committee or members thereof (section 6(a), Pub. L. 86-380 (42 U.S.C. 
4276(a)).



Sec. 1702.5  Duties and powers of the Chairman and Vice-Chairman.

    (a) Personnel. Subject to rules and regulations adopted by the 
Commission, the Chairman is empowered by section 6(d) of Pub. L. 86-380 
(42 U.S.C. 4276(d)) to appoint, fix the compensation of, and remove all 
personnel other than the Executive Director, without regard to civil 
service laws or political affiliation; and to procure the services of 
temporary and intermittent employees.
    (b) Information requests. The Chairman is empowered to request 
necessary information of federal departments and agencies to be 
furnished by them as required by Pub. L. 86-380, 42 U.S.C. 4276(b). The 
Vice-Chairman also is empowered to request such information.
    (c) Presiding and voting. The Chairman shall preside at all meetings 
of the Commission. In the absence of the Chairman, the Vice-Chairman 
shall preside at Commission meetings. In the absence of both the 
Chairman and Vice-Chairman, the Commission member who will preside shall 
have been designated by the Chairman or failing such designation, by 
majority vote of those attending. The Chairman votes only in the case of 
a tie or when a vote is taken by written ballot.
    (d) Committees. The Chairman may establish committees as necessary.
    (e) Hearings. The Chairman may call hearings and fix their time and 
place.
    (f) Encouraging attendance and reducing absenteeism. The Chairman 
shall promote regular attendance by Commission members at regular 
Commission meetings and other Commission functions. Whenever a member 
misses three or more consecutive regular Commission meetings, the 
Chairman shall write the member, on behalf of the Commission, requesting 
the member's resignation. The Chairman shall send a copy of his letter 
to the officials responsible under the law for nominating and appointing 
that member to the Commission, noting his record of absenteeism and 
suggesting that efforts be made to vacate the seat so that a new member 
may be nominated. Every effort will be made to make attendance 
expectations known to all new members and to officials making 
nominations and appointments.



Sec. 1702.6  Commission meetings.

    (a) Time and place. The Commission intends in the exercise of its 
discretion provided by Pub. L. 86-380, section 6(a) (42 U.S.C. 4276(a)), 
to meet quarterly at the call of the Chairman, except in even numbered 
election years when the fall quarter meeting may be cancelled. 
Additional meetings may be called by the Chairman or by a majority of 
all the Commission members. Commission meetings shall be held, upon due 
notice, at such times and places as the Chairman or the Commission shall 
determine. The Commission also intends, in the exercise of its 
discretion, that at least one of its meetings each year be held outside 
Washington, D.C.
    (b) Setting meeting agendas--notice. With the approval of the 
Chairman, the Executive Director will establish the agenda for each 
regular meeting and shall notify the members of its contents by sending 
out a docket book at least three weeks in advance of the meeting. 
Members wishing items placed on the agenda may request the Chairman to 
do so. By vote of a majority of the members at the meeting, the agenda 
may be revised.

[[Page 264]]

    (c) Adoption of Robert's Rules of Order. The rules contained in 
Robert's Rules of Order Revised, 1971, shall govern the Commission in 
all cases to which they are applicable to the extent they are not 
inconsistent with these bylaws.
    (d) Quorum. ``Thirteen members of the Commission shall constitute a 
quorum for the transaction of business, but two or more members shall 
constitute a quorum for the purpose of conducting hearings.'' [Pub. L. 
86-380 section 4(3); 42 U.S.C. 427(e).]
    (e) Substitute for Federal executive members.\1\ Federal executive 
members may designate one permanent substitute of at least Assistant 
Secretary rank or equivalent to act fully in his or her stead as a 
member of the Commission. Accordingly, such substitutes for Federal 
Executive members may participate in Commission debates and vote on all 
matters. Such named substitute designations by Federal Executive members 
shall be for the term of the member.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \1\ In amending and reaffirming this provision for alternate members 
from the Executive Branch, the Commission emphasized its desire that 
members of the President's Cabinet be appointed to the Commission and 
attend its meetings whenever possible. The Commission also stressed that 
an alternate substituting for an Executive Branch member should be the 
same person from one meeting to the next and should represent the views 
of the regular member with continuity. Although the Commission 
recognized that it might be necessary to change the designation of an 
alternate, the Commission urged that such changes be kep to a minimum in 
the interest of strengthening continuity within the Commission.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    (f) Polling. The Chairman, on his own motion, may poll the 
membership to determine the views of the members on matters on the 
agenda of a regular or special meeting of the Commission but which were 
not considered by the Commission, or where he wishes to increase the 
number of members voting, or where he determines there is some 
administrative purpose to be served. Such voting shall either be by mail 
or, if by telephone, shall be confirmed in writing. The result of any 
poll shall be reported in the Docket Book for the following meeting of 
the Commission and shall be subject to a motion to reconsider at the 
following meeting but not at any other later time.
    (g) Acceptance of outside financial assistance. No outside financial 
assistance is accepted without approval by the Commission. The Chairman, 
in his discretion, may request such approval by placing it in the 
Commission's regular agenda or by polling the members in accordance with 
Article VI of the Bylaws.



Sec. 1702.7  Staff--powers and limitations.

    (a) Duties and powers of the Executive Director. The Executive 
Director directs and manages the staff in carrying out the directions of 
the Commission and the Chairman; represents the Commission before a 
variety of audiences including the Congress and its committees, the 
Executive Office of the President and other federal agencies, national 
and state associations of state and local officials, state and local 
governments, the media, schools and universities, and the general 
public; and undertakes and directs such other activities as the 
Executive Director and the Chairman of the Commission deem in the best 
interest of improved intergovernmental relations throughout the nation.
    (b) Commission's role in drafting legislative materials. Any 
proposed legislation drafted by the staff to carry out Commission 
recommendations is to be approved by the Commission at a regularly 
scheduled Commission meeting before that material is transmitted to 
Congress, to state legislatures, to other interested groups, or to any 
other source.
Secs. 1702.8--1702.10  [Reserved]



PART 1703--PUBLIC AVAILABILITY OF DOCUMENTS AND RECORDS--Table of Contents




          Subpart A--Freedom of Information Act Implementation

Sec.
1703.1  General.
1703.2  Publications.
1703.3  Requests for records.
1703.4  Index.
1703.5  Policy with respect to request for particular kinds of 
          documents.
1703.6  Schedules of fees.

[[Page 265]]

                  Subpart B--Privacy Act Implementation

1703.20  Purpose and scope.
1703.21  Defintions.
1703.22  Procedures for requests pertaining to individual records in a 
          system of records.
1703.23  Request for amendment or correction of a record.
1703.24  Disclosure of a record to a person other than the individual to 
          whom it pertains.
1703.25  Schedule of fees.

    Authority: 5 U.S.C. 552, 552a, and 571-576.

    Source: 51 FR 24804, July 9, 1986, unless otherwise noted.



          Subpart A--Freedom of Information Act Implementation



Sec. 1703.1  General.

    This part implements section 552 of title 5, United States Code, and 
prescribes rules governing the availability to the public of documents 
and records of the Advisory Commission on Intergovernmental Relations.



Sec. 1703.2  Publications.

    (a) Complete lists of Legislative Recommendations and Reports, 
together with the texts of those Recommendations, Reports and other 
publications are maintained in the Offices of the Commission.
    (b) The Annual Report of the Commission contains a list of all 
Legislative Recommendations and Commission Reports adopted during the 
preceding year. It also contains descriptive material regarding the work 
of the Commission. The Annual Report is available from ACIR. Single 
copies of current and past Annual Reports will also be furnished by the 
Commission on request, to the extent that supplies on hand permit.
    (c) The Commission endeavors to maintain for distribution to 
interested persons an adequate stock of reports, copies of congressional 
testimony, newsletters, minutes of recent committee meetings, and other 
documents of general interest. Requests for single copies of such 
documents will be filled at cost to the extent that supplies on hand 
permit.



Sec. 1703.3  Requests for records.

    (a) It is the policy of the Commission to make records and documents 
in its possession available to the public to the greatest extent 
possible. All records of the Commission are available for public 
inspection and copying in accordance with this section except those 
records or portions of records as to which the Director or his designee 
specifically determines that:
    (1) They fall within a particular exemption in section 552(b) of the 
Freedom of Information Act and
    (2) Disclosure would not be consistent with the national interest, 
the protection of private rights or the efficient conduct of Commission 
business.
    (b) A request for records, other than for documents which are 
published in the Federal Register or available for sale or distribution 
as described in Sec. 1703.2, shall be made in writing and directed to 
the Executive Director, Advisory Commission on Intergovernmental 
Relations, 1111 20th Street, NW., Washington, DC 20575. Such request 
shall be clearly marked ``Freedom of Information Request'' or 
``Information Request'' and shall reasonably describe the record 
requested. The staff of the Commission will make reasonable efforts to 
assist a requester in formulating his request. Nothing in this section 
shall preclude staff of the ACIR from complying with oral, unmarked, or 
generally stated requests for information and documents.
    (c) The Executive Director or his designee shall, within ten working 
days after its receipt, either comply with or deny a request for 
records, provided that when additional time is required because of:
    (1) A need to search for, collect and examine a voluminous amount of 
separate and distinct records demanded in a single request, or (2) a 
need for consultation with another agency having a substantial interest 
in the determination of the request, the time limit for disposing of the 
request may be extended for up to ten additional working days by a 
written notice to the requester setting forth the reasons for and the 
anticipated length of the delay.
    (d)(1) Where it appears to the Executive Director or his designee 
that fees

[[Page 266]]

chargeable under Sec. 1703.6 of this regulation for compliance with the 
request will exceed $25, and the requester has not indicated in advance 
his willingness to pay fees as high as are anticipated, the requester 
shall be promptly notified of the amount of the anticipated fee or such 
portion thereof as can readily be estimated. In such cases, a request 
will not be deemed to have been received until the requester is notified 
of the anticipated cost and agrees to bear it. The notification shall 
offer the requester the opportunity to confer with Commission personnel 
with the object of reformulating the request so as to meet his needs at 
lower cost.
    (2) Where the anticipated fee chargeable under this part exceeds 
$50, an advance deposit of 25% of the anticipated fee or $25, whichever 
is greater, may be required. Where a requester has previously failed to 
pay a fee under this part, an advance deposit of the full amount of the 
anticipated fee may be required.
    (e) The requester will be notified promptly of the determination 
made pursuant to paragraph (c) of this section. If the determination is 
to release the requested record, such record shall promptly be made 
available. If the determination is not to release the record, the person 
making the request shall, at the same time he is notified of such 
determination, be notified of:
    (1) The reason for the determination;
    (2) The name and title or position of each person responsible for 
the denial of the request; and
    (3) His right to seek judicial review of such determination pursuant 
to the provisions of the Freedom of Information Act, 5 U.S.C. 552(a)(4).



Sec. 1703.4  Index.

    The Freedom of Information Act, 5 U.S.C. 552(a)(2), requires each 
agency to maintain and make available for public inspection and copying 
a current index of certain materials issued, adopted or promulgated by 
the agency. With respect to the materials covered by section 
552(l)(2)(B), the Commission maintains currently for distribution a 
complete list of Commission Recommendations (``A'' Series) and Reports 
(``M'' Series), and other reports. The Commission has no adjudicatory 
responsibilities of the kind contemplated by section 552(a)(2)(A) of the 
Act and does not ordinarily issue materials of the type described in 
section 552(a)(2)(C). Should such materials be issued, appropriate 
indexes will be maintained.



Sec. 1703.5  Policy with respect to request for particular kinds of documents.

    This section is intended to amplify the policy set out in 
Sec. 1703.3(a) as applied to specific categories of documents:
    (a) All materials which are distributed to the membership of the 
Commission (Docket Book) for consideration at a plenary session will 
upon distribution be available to the public in accordance with 
Sec. 1703.2(d) of these regulations.
    (b) Consultant and staff reports which are otherwise exempt from 
disclosure under the Freedom of Information Act as interagency or intra-
agency correspondence will, absent special circumstances, be made 
available if the reports are in substantially completed form and have 
been distributed widely for comment within or outside the Government. 
Tentative reports and working drafts which have received only limited 
circulation will ordinarily not be made available.
    (c) Agency comments on a report or proposed legislative 
recommendation, even if exempt from disclosure under the Freedom of 
Information Act, will nevertheless ordinarily be made available unless 
the agency indicates to the Commission that its comment is confidential. 
Comment of an individual Commission member, writing in his personal 
capacity, will not be made available without the consent of the member.
    (d) The following categories of documents are declared to be 
available to the public, notwithstanding any applicable exemption in 
section 552(b) of the Freedom of Information Act:
    (1) Agency reports on the implementation of Commission 
recommendations;
    (2) Correspondence from the Office of the Chairman of the Commission 
or the Executive Director to committees of Congress, commenting on 
pending legislation;

[[Page 267]]

    (3) Minutes of meetings of the standing committees of the 
Commission.
    (4) Transcripts or minutes of Commission meetings.



Sec. 1703.6  Schedules of fees.

    The Executive Director may charge a fee for searching for and 
copying documents or records requested pursuant to Sec. 1703.3, as 
follows:
    (a) The fee for copies shall be $0.10 per copy per page. Copying 
fees of less than $3 per request are waived.
    (b) The search charge shall be $9 per hour for the services of non-
professional personnel and $15 per hour for the services of professional 
personnel. Search charges shall be calculated to the nearest quarter 
hour. There shall be no search charge for searches requiring less than 
one-half man hour.
    (c) No fee will be charged in connection with any record which is 
not made available because it is found to be exempt from disclosure.
    (d) Charges may be waived or reduced where the Executive Director 
determines that such waiver or reduction is in the public interest.



                  Subpart B--Privacy Act Implementation



Sec. 1703.20  Purpose and scope.

    The purpose of this subpart is the implementation of the Privacy Act 
of 1974, 5 U.S.C. 552a, by establishing procedures whereby an individual 
can determine if a system of records maintained by the Commission 
contains a record pertaining to himself, and procedures for providing 
access to such a record for the purpose of review, amendment, or 
correction. Requests for assistance in interpreting or complying with 
these regulations should be addressed to the Executive Director, 
Advisory Commission on Intergovernmental Relations, 1111 20th Street, 
NW., Washington, DC 20575.



Sec. 1703.21  Definitions.

    As used in this subpart, the terms individual, maintain, record, 
system of records, and routine use have the meaning specified in 5 
U.S.C. 552a(a).



Sec. 1703.22  Procedures for requests pertaining to individual records in a system of records.

    (a) An individual can determine if a particular system of records 
maintained by the Commission contains a record pertaining to himself by 
submitting a written request for such information to the Executive 
Director. The Executive Director or his designee will respond to a 
written request under this subpart within a reasonable time by stating 
that a record on the individual either is or is not contained in the 
system.
    (b) If an individual seeks access to a record pertaining to himself 
in a system of records, he shall submit a written request to the 
Executive Director. The Executive Director or his designee will, within 
ten working days after its receipt, acknowledge the request and if 
possible decide if it should be granted. In any event, a decision will 
be reached promptly and notification thereof provided to the individual 
seeking access. If the request is denied, the individual will be 
informed of the reasons therefor and his right to seek judicial review.
    (c) In cases where an individual has been granted access to his 
records, the Executive Director may, prior to releasing such records, 
require the submission of a signed notarized statement verifying the 
identity of the individual to assure that such records are disclosed to 
the proper person. No verification of identify will be required when 
such records are available under the Freedom of Information Act, 5 
U.S.C. 552, as amended.



Sec. 1703.23  Request for amendment of correction of a record.

    (a) An individual may file a request with the Executive Director for 
amendment or correction of a record pertaining to himself in a system of 
records. Such written request shall state the nature of the information 
in the record the individual believes to be inaccurate or incomplete, 
the amendment or correction desired and the reasons therefor. The 
individual should supply whatever information or documentation he can in 
support of his request for amendment or correction of a record.
    (b) The Executive Director or his designee will, within ten working 
days

[[Page 268]]

after its receipt, acknowledge a request for amendment or correction of 
a record. A decision will be reached promptly and notification thereof 
provided to the individual seeking to amend or correct a record. The 
Executive Director may request such additional information or 
documentation as he may deem necessary to arrive at a decision upon the 
request. If the request is granted, the record as amended will be called 
to the attention of all prior recipients of the individual's record.
    (c) If the request is denied, the individual will be informed of the 
reasons therefor and his right to appeal the denial in writing to the 
Chairman of the Commission. The Chairman will render a decision on an 
appeal within thirty working days following the date on which the appeal 
is received. The individual will be notified promptly of the Chairman's 
decision and, if the appeal is denied, the reasons therefor and the 
individual's right to seek judicial review and his right to file a 
concise statement of disagreement, which statement will be noted in the 
records to which it pertains and supplied to all prior and subsequent 
recipients of the disputed record. If an appeal is granted, the record 
as amended will be called to the attention of all prior recipients of 
the individual's record.
    (d) Requests for amendment or correction of a record must be 
accompanied by a signed notarized statement verifying the identity of 
the requesting party.



Sec. 1703.24  Disclosure of a record to a person other than the individual to whom it pertains.

    Except in accordance with 5 U.S.C. 552a(b), or as required by the 
Freedom of Information Act, 5 U.S.C. 552, as amended, or other 
applicable statute, the Commission will not disclose a record to any 
individual other than the individual to whom the record pertains without 
the written consent of such individual. An accounting of the date, 
nature, and purpose of each disclosure of a record as well as the name 
and address of the person or agency to whom the disclosure was made will 
be maintained. This accounting will be made available to the individual 
to whom the record pertains upon the submission of a written, notarized 
request to the Executive Director.



Sec. 1703.25  Schedule of fees.

    Copies of record supplied to any individual at his request shall be 
provided for $.10 per copy per page. Copying fees of less than $3 per 
request are waived.



    PART 1720--ENFORCEMENT OF NONDISCRIMINATION ON THE BASIS OF HANDICAP IN PROGRAMS OR ACTIVITIES CONDUCTED BY THE ADVISORY COMMISSION ON INTERGOVERNMENTAL RELATIONS--Table of Contents





Sec.
1720.101  Purpose.
1720.102  Application.
1720.103  Definitions.
1720.104--1720.109  [Reserved]
1720.110  Self-evaluation.
1720.111  Notice.
1720.112--1720.129  [Reserved]
1720.130  General prohibitions against discrimination.
1720.131--1720.139  [Reserved]
1720.140  Employment.
1720.141--1720.148  [Reserved]
1720.149  Program accessibility: Discrimination prohibited.
1720.150  Program accessibility: Existing facilities.
1720.151  Program accessibility: New construction and alterations.
1720.152--1720.159  [Reserved]
1720.160  Communications.
1720.161--1720.169  [Reserved]
1720.170  Compliance procedures.
1720.171--1720.999  [Reserved]

    Authority: 29 U.S.C. 794.

    Source: 51 FR 4574, 4579, Feb. 5, 1986, unless otherwise noted. 
Redesignated at 51 FR 24800, July 9, 1986.



Sec. 1720.101  Purpose.

    This part effectuates section 119 of the Rehabilitation, 
Comprehensive Services, and Developmental Disabilities Amendments of 
1978, which amended section 504 of the Rehabilitation Act of 1973 to 
prohibit discrimination on the basis of handicap in programs or 
activities conducted by Executive agencies or the United States Postal 
Service.

[[Page 269]]



Sec. 1720.102  Application.

    This part applies to all programs or activities conducted by the 
agency.



Sec. 1720.103  Definitions.

    For purposes of this part, the term--
    Assistant Attorney General means the Assistant Attorney General, 
Civil Rights Division, United States Department of Justice.
    Auxiliary aids means services or devices that enable persons with 
impaired sensory, manual, or speaking skills to have an equal 
opportunity to participate in, and enjoy the benefits of, programs or 
activities conducted by the agency. For example, auxiliary aids useful 
for persons with impaired vision include readers, Brailled materials, 
audio recordings, telecommunications devices and other similar services 
and devices. Auxiliary aids useful for persons with impaired hearing 
include telephone handset amplifiers, telephones compatible with hearing 
aids, telecommunication devices for deaf persons (TDD's), interpreters, 
notetakers, written materials, and other similar services and devices.
    Complete complaint means a written statement that contains the 
complainant's name and address and describes the agency's alleged 
discriminatory action in sufficient detail to inform the agency of the 
nature and date of the alleged violation of section 504. It shall be 
signed by the complainant or by someone authorized to do so on his or 
her behalf. Complaints filed on behalf of classes or third parties shall 
describe or identify (by name, if possible) the alleged victims of 
discrimination.
    Facility means all or any portion of buildings, structures, 
equipment, roads, walks, parking lots, rolling stock or other 
conveyances, or other real or personal property.
    Handicapped person means any person who has a physical or mental 
impairment that substantially limits one or more major life activities, 
has a record of such an impairment, or is regarded as having such an 
impairment.
    As used in this definition, the phrase:
    (1) Physical or mental impairment includes--
    (i) Any physiological disorder or condition, cosmetic disfigurement, 
or anatomical loss affecting one of more of the following body systems: 
Neurological; musculoskeletal; special sense organs; respiratory, 
including speech organs; cardiovascular; reproductive; digestive; 
genitourinary; hemic and lymphatic; skin; and endocrine; or
    (ii) Any mental or psychological disorder, such as mental 
retardation, organic brain syndrome, emotional or mental illness, and 
specific learning disabilities. The term physical or mental impairment 
includes, but is not limited to, such diseases and conditions as 
orthopedic, visual, speech, and hearing impairments, cerebral palsy, 
epilepsy, muscular dystrophy, multiple sclerosis, cancer, heart disease, 
diabetes, mental retardation, emotional illness, and drug addition and 
alcholism.
    (2) Major life activities includes functions such as caring for 
one's self, performing manual tasks, walking, seeing, hearing, speaking, 
breathing, learning, and working.
    (3) Has a record of such an impairment means has a history of, or 
has been misclassified as having, a mental or physical impairment that 
substantially limits one or more major life activities.
    (4) Is regarded as having an impairment means--
    (i) Has a physical or mental impairment that does not substantially 
limit major life activities but is treated by the agency as constituting 
such a limitation;
    (ii) Has a physical or mental impairment that substantially limits 
major life activities only as a result of the attitudes of others toward 
such impairment; or
    (iii) Has none of the impairments defined in paragraph (1) of this 
definition but is treated by the agency as having such an impairment.
    Qualified handicapped person means--
    (1) With respect to any agency program or activity under which a 
person is required to perform services or to achieve a level of 
accomplishment, a handicapped person who meets the essential eligibility 
requirements and who can achieve the purpose of the program or activity 
without modifications in the program or activity that the agency can 
demonstrate would result in a fundamental alteration in its nature; or

[[Page 270]]

    (2) With respect to any other program or activity, a handicapped 
person who meets the essential eligibility requirements for 
participation in, or receipt of benefits from, that program or activity.
    (3) Qualified handicapped person is defined for purposes of 
employment in 29 CFR 1613.702(f), which is made applicable to this part 
by Sec. 1720.140.
    Section 504 means section 504 of the Rehabilitation Act of 1973 
(Pub. L. 93-112, 87 Stat. 394 (29 U.S.C. 794)), as amended by the 
Rehabilitation Act Amendments of 1974 (Pub. L. 93-516, 88 Stat. 1617), 
and the Rehabilitation, Comprehensive Services, and Developmental 
Disabilities Amendments of 1978 (Pub. L. 95-602, 92 Stat. 2955). As used 
in this part, section 504 applies only to programs or activities 
conducted by Executive agencies and not to federally assisted programs.

[51 FR 4574, 4579, Feb. 5, 1986; 51 FR 7543, Mar. 5, 1986]
Secs. 1720.104--1720.109  [Reserved]



Sec. 1720.110  Self-evaluation.

    (a) The agency shall, by April 9, 1987, evaluate its current 
policies and practices, and the effects thereof, that do not or may not 
meet the requirements of this part, and, to the extent modification of 
any such policies and practices is required, the agency shall proceed to 
make the necessary modifications.
    (b) The agency shall provide an opportunity to interested persons, 
including handicapped persons or organizations representing handicapped 
persons, to participate in the self-evaluation process by submitting 
comments (both oral and written).
    (c) The agency shall, until three years following the completion of 
the self-evaluation, maintain on file and make available for public 
inspections:
    (1) A description of areas examined and any problems identified, and
    (2) A description of any modifications made.



Sec. 1720.111  Notice.

    The agency shall make available to employees, applicants, 
participants, beneficiaries, and other interested persons such 
information regarding the provisions of this part and its applicability 
to the programs or activities conducted by the agency, and make such 
information available to them in such manner as the head of the agency 
finds necessary to apprise such persons of the protections against 
discrimination assured them by section 504 and this regulation.
Secs. 1720.112--1720.129  [Reserved]



Sec. 1720.130  General prohibitions against discrimination.

    (a) No qualified handicapped person shall, on the basis of handicap, 
be excluded from participation in, be denied the benefits of, or 
otherwise be subjected to discrimination under any program or activity 
conducted by the agency.
    (b)(1) The agency, in providing any aid, benefit, or service, may 
not, directly or through contractual, licensing, or other arrangements, 
on the basis of handicap--
    (i) Deny a qualified handicapped person the opportunity to 
participate in or benefit from the aid, benefit, or service;
    (ii) Afford a qualified handicapped person an opportunity to 
participate in or benefit from the aid, benefit, or service that is not 
equal to that afforded others;
    (iii) Provide a qualified handicapped person with an aid, benefit, 
or service that is not as effective in affording equal opportunity to 
obtain the same result, to gain the same benefit, or to reach the same 
level of achievement as that provided to others;
    (iv) Provide different or separate aid, benefits, or services to 
handicapped persons or to any class of handicapped persons than is 
provided to others unless such action is necessary to provide qualified 
handicapped persons with aid, benefits, or services that are as 
effective as those provided to others;
    (v) Deny a qualified handicapped person the opportunity to 
participate as a member of planning or advisory boards; or
    (vi) Otherwise limit a qualified handicapped person in the enjoyment 
of any right, privilege, advantage, or opportunity enjoyed by others 
receiving the aid, benefit, or service.

[[Page 271]]

    (2) The agency may not deny a qualified handicapped person the 
opportunity to participate in programs or activities that are not 
separate or different, despite the existence of permissibly separate or 
different programs or activities.
    (3) The agency may not, directly or through contractual or other 
arrangements, utilize criteria or methods of administration the purpose 
or effect of which would--
    (i) Subject qualified handicapped persons to discrimination on the 
basis of handicap; or
    (ii) Defeat or substantially impair accomplishment of the objectives 
of a program or activity with respect to handicapped persons.
    (4) The agency may not, in determining the site or location of a 
facility, make selections the purpose or effect of which would--
    (i) Exclude handicapped persons from, deny them the benefits of, or 
otherwise subject them to discrimination under any program or activity 
conducted by the agency; or
    (ii) Defeat or substantially impair the accomplishment of the 
objectives of a program or activity with respect to handicapped persons.
    (5) The agency, in the selection of procurement contractors, may not 
use criteria that subject qualified handicapped persons to 
discrimination on the basis of handicap.
    (c) The exclusion of nonhandicapped persons from the benefits of a 
program limited by Federal statute or Executive order to handicapped 
persons or the exclusion of a specific class of handicapped persons from 
a program limited by Federal statute or Executive order to a different 
class of handicapped persons is not prohibited by this part.
    (d) The agency shall administer programs and activities in the most 
integrated setting appropriate to the needs of qualified handicapped 
persons.
Secs. 1720.131--1720.139  [Reserved]



Sec. 1720.140  Employment.

    No qualified handicapped person shall, on the basis of handicap, be 
subjected to discrimination in employment under any program or activity 
conducted by the agency. The definitions, requirements, and procedures 
of section 501 of the Rehabilitation Act of 1973 (29 U.S.C. 791), as 
established by the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission in 29 CFR 
part 1613, shall apply to employment in federally conducted programs or 
activities.
Secs. 1720.141--1720.148  [Reserved]



Sec. 1720.149  Program accessibility: Discrimination prohibited.

    Except as otherwise provided in Sec. 1720.150, no qualified 
handicapped person shall, because the agency's facilities are 
inaccessible to or unusable by handicapped persons, be denied the 
benefits of, be excluded from participation in, or otherwise be 
subjected to discrimination under any program or activity conducted by 
the agency.



Sec. 1720.150  Program accessibility: Existing facilities.

    (a) General. The agency shall operate each program or activity so 
that the program or activity, when viewed in its entirety, is readily 
accessible to and usable by handicapped persons. This paragraph does 
not--
    (1) Necessarily require the agency to make each of its existing 
facilities accessible to and usable by handicapped persons; or
    (2) Require the agency to take any action that it can demonstrate 
would result in a fundamental alteration in the nature of a program or 
activity or in undue financial and administrative burdens. In those 
circumstances where agency personnel believe that the proposed action 
would fundamentally alter the program or activity or would result in 
undue financial and administrative burdens, the agency has the burden of 
proving that compliance with Sec. 1720.150(a) would result in such 
alteration or burdens. The decision that compliance would result in such 
alteration or burdens must be made by the agency head or his or her 
designee after considering all agency resources available for use in the 
funding and operation of the conducted program or activity, and must be 
accompanied by a written statement of the reasons for reaching that 
conclusion. If an action would result in such an alteration or

[[Page 272]]

such burdens, the agency shall take any other action that would not 
result in such an alteration or such burdens but would nevertheless 
ensure that handicapped persons receive the benefits and services of the 
program or activity.
    (b) Methods. The agency may comply with the requirements of this 
section through such means as redesign of equipment, reassignment of 
services to accessible buildings, assignment of aides to beneficiaries, 
home visits, delivery of services at alternate accessible sites, 
alteration of existing facilities and construction of new facilities, 
use of accessible rolling stock, or any other methods that result in 
making its programs or activities readily accessible to and usable by 
handicapped persons. The agency is nor required to make structural 
changes in existing facilities where other methods are effective in 
achieving compliance with this section. The agency, in making 
alterations to existing buildings, shall meet accessibility requirements 
to the extent compelled by the Architectural Barriers Act of 1968, as 
amended (42 U.S.C. 4151-4157), and any regulations implementing it. In 
choosing among available methods for meeting the requirements of this 
section, the agency shall give priority to those methods that offer 
programs and activities to qualified handicapped persons in the most 
integrated setting appropriate.
    (c) Time period for compliance. The agency shall comply with the 
obligations established under this section by June 6, 1986, except that 
where structural changes in facilities are undertaken, such changes 
shall be made by April 7, 1989, but in any event as expeditiously as 
possible.
    (d) Transition plan. In the event that structural changes to 
facilities will be undertaken to achieve program accessibility, the 
agency shall develop, by October 7, 1986, a transition plan setting 
forth the steps necessary to complete such changes. The agency shall 
provide an opportunity to interested persons, including handicapped 
persons or organizations representing handicapped persons, to 
participate in the development of the transition plan by submitting 
comments (both oral and written). A copy of the transition plan shall be 
made available for public inspection. The plan shall, at a minimum--
    (1) Identify physical obstacles in the agency's facilities that 
limit the accessibility of its programs or activities to handicapped 
persons;
    (2) Describe in detail the methods that will be used to make the 
facilities accessible;
    (3) Specify the schedule for taking the steps necessary to achieve 
compliance with this section and, if the time period of the transition 
plan is longer than one year, identify steps that will be taken during 
each year of the transition period; and
    (4) Indicate the official responsible for implementation of the 
plan.

[51 FR 4574, 4579, Feb. 5, 1986; 51 FR 7543, Mar. 5, 1986]



Sec. 1720.151  Program accessibility: New construction and alterations.

    Each building or part of a building that is constructed or altered 
by, on behalf of, or for the use of the agency shall be designed, 
constructed, or altered so as to be readily accessible to and usable by 
handicapped persons. The definitions, requirements, and standards of the 
Architectural Barriers Act (42 U.S.C. 4151-4157), as established in 41 
CFR 101-19.600 to 101-19.607, apply to buildings covered by this 
section.
Secs. 1720.152--1720.159  [Reserved]



Sec. 1720.160  Communications.

    (a) The agency shall take appropriate steps to ensure effective 
communication with applicants, participants, personnel of other Federal 
entities, and members of the public.
    (1) The agency shall furnish appropriate auxiliary aids where 
necessary to afford a handicapped person an equal opportunity to 
participate in, and enjoy the benefits of, a program or activity 
conducted by the agency.
    (i) In determining what type of auxiliary aid is necessary, the 
agency shall give primary consideration to the requests of the 
handicapped person.
    (ii) The agency need not provide individually prescribed devices, 
readers for personal use or study, or other devices of a personal 
nature.

[[Page 273]]

    (2) Where the agency communicates with applicants and beneficiaries 
by telephone, telecommunication devices for deaf persons (TDD's) or 
equally effective telecommunication systems shall be used.
    (b) The agency shall ensure that interested persons, including 
persons with impaired vision or hearing, can obtain information as to 
the existence and location of accessible services, activities, and 
facilities.
    (c) The agency shall provide signage at a primary entrance to each 
of its inaccessible facilities, directing users to a location at which 
they can obtain information about accessible facilities. The 
international symbol for accessibility shall be used at each primary 
entrance of an accessible facility.
    (d) This section does not require the agency to take any action that 
it can demonstrate would result in a fundamental alteration in the 
nature of a program or activity or in undue financial and administrative 
burdens. In those circumstances where agency personnel believe that the 
proposed action would fundamentally alter the program or activity or 
would result in undue financial and administrative burdens, the agency 
has the burden of proving that compliance with Sec. 1720.160 would 
result in such alteration or burdens. The decision that compliance would 
result in such alteration or burdens must be made by the agency head or 
his or her designee after considering all agency resources available for 
use in the funding and operation of the conducted program or activity, 
and must be accompanied by a written statement of the reasons for 
reaching that conclusion. If an action required to comply with this 
section would result in such an alteration or such burdens, the agency 
shall take any other action that would not result in such an alteration 
or such burdens but would nevertheless ensure that, to the maximum 
extent possible, handicapped persons receive the benefits and services 
of the program or activity.
Secs. 1720.161--1720.169  [Reserved]



Sec. 1720.170  Compliance procedures.

    (a) Except as provided in paragraph (b) of this section, this 
section applies to all allegations of discrimination on the basis of 
handicap in programs or activities conducted by the agency.
    (b) The agency shall process complaints alleging violations of 
section 504 with respect to employment according to the procedures 
established by the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission in 29 CFR 
part 1613 pursuant to section 501 of the Rehabilitation Act of 1973 (29 
U.S.C. 791).
    (c) The Personnel Officer shall be responsible for coordinating 
implementation of this section. Compliants may be sent to Budget and 
Management Officer, Advisory Commission on Intergovernmental Relations, 
Suite 2000, Vanguard Building, 1111 20th St., NW., Washington, DC 20575.
    (d) The agency shall accept and investigate all complete complaints 
for which it has jurisdiction. All complete complaints must be filed 
within 180 days of the alleged act of discrimination. The agency may 
extend this time period for good cause.
    (e) If the agency receives a complaint over which it does not have 
jurisdiction, it shall promptly notify the complainant and shall make 
reasonable efforts to refer the complaint to the appropriate government 
entity.
    (f) The agency shall notify the Architectural and Transportation 
Barriers Compliance Board upon receipt of any complaint alleging that a 
building or facility that is subject to the Architectural Barriers Act 
of 1968, as amended (42 U.S.C. 4151-4157), or section 502 of the 
Rehabilitation Act of 1973, as amended (29 U.S.C. 792), is not readily 
accessible to and usable by handicapped persons.
    (g) Within 180 days of the receipt of a complete complaint for which 
it has jurisdiction, the agency shall notify the complainant of the 
results of the investigation in a letter containing--
    (1) Findings of fact and conclusions of law;
    (2) A description of a remedy for each violation found;
    (3) A notice of the right to appeal.
    (h) Appeals of the findings of fact and conclusions of law or 
remedies must be filed by the complainant within 90 days of receipt from 
the agency of the letter required by Sec. 1720.170(g). The agency may 
extend this time for good cause.

[[Page 274]]

    (i) Timely appeals shall be accepted and processed by the head of 
the agency.
    (j) The head of the agency shall notify the complainant of the 
results of the appeal within 60 days of the receipt of the request. If 
the head of the agency determines that additional information is needed 
from the complainant, he or she shall have 60 days from the date of 
receipt of the additional information to make his or her determination 
on the appeal.
    (k) The time limits cited in paragraphs (g) and (j) of this section 
may be extended with the permission of the Assistant Attorney General.
    (l) The agency may delegate its authority for conducting complaint 
investigations to other Federal agencies, except that the authority for 
making the final determination may not be delegated to another agency.

[51 FR 4574, 4579, Feb. 5, 1986, as amended at 51 FR 4574, Feb. 5, 1986]
Secs. 1720.171--1720.999  [Reserved]

[[Page 275]]



                  CHAPTER VIII--OFFICE OF SPECIAL COUNSEL




  --------------------------------------------------------------------
Part                                                                Page
1800            Filing of complaints and allegations........         276
1810            Investigative authority of the Special 
                    Counsel.................................         277
1820            Public information..........................         277
1830            Privacy.....................................         281
1840            Subpoenas...................................         282
1850            Enforcement of nondiscrimination on the 
                    basis of handicap in programs or 
                    activities conducted by the Office of 
                    Special Counsel.........................         282

[[Page 276]]



PART 1800--FILING OF COMPLAINTS AND ALLEGATIONS--Table of Contents




Sec.
1800.1  Filing complaints of prohibited personnel practices or other 
          prohibited activities.
1800.2  Filing disclosures of information.
1800.3  Advisory opinions.

    Authority: 5 U.S.C. 1212(e).



Sec. 1800.1  Filing complaints of prohibited personnel practices or other prohibited activities.

    (a) Complaints of prohibited personnel practices or other prohibited 
activities within the investigative authority of the Special Counsel 
(including complaints of political activities prohibited by 5 U.S.C. 
7321-7324) should be submitted to the Office of Special Counsel, 
Complaints Examining Unit, 1730 M Street, NW., Suite 300, Washington, DC 
20036-4505.
    (b) Complaints, allegations, and information may be submitted in any 
written form, but should include:
    (1) The name, mailing address, and telephone number(s) of the 
complainant(s), and a time when the person(s) making the disclosure(s) 
can be safely contacted, unless the matter is submitted anonymously;
    (2) The department or agency, location, and organizational unit 
complained of;
    (3) A concise description of the actions complained about, names and 
positions of employees who took these actions, if known to the 
complainant, and dates, preferably in chronological order, together with 
any documentary evidence the complainant may have;
    (4) In the case of any allegation of a prohibited personnel 
practice, the personnel action that has been taken or is proposed or 
threatened to be taken, and the date of the action, proposal, or threat;
    (5) In the case of action taken because of an individual's 
disclosure of information, the information believed to evidence 
violation of law, rule, or regulation, gross mismanagement, gross waste 
of funds, abuse of authority, or substantial and specific danger to 
public health or safety and when, to whom, and how or in what form it 
was disclosed; and
    (6) A statement as to whether the complainant consents to the 
disclosure of his or her identity to the agency by the Special Counsel 
for the purpose of further investigation.

[54 FR 47341, Nov. 14, 1989, as amended at 55 FR 47839, Nov. 16, 1990; 
59 FR 64843, Dec. 16, 1994]



Sec. 1800.2  Filing disclosures of information.

    (a) Employees, former employees, or applicants for employment having 
information evidencing violations of law, rule, or regulation or gross 
mismanagement, a gross waste of funds, an abuse of authority, or a 
substantial and specific danger to public health or safety should be 
submitted to the Office of Special Counsel, Disclosure Unit, 1730 M 
Street, NW., Suite 300, Washington, DC 20036-4505.
    (b) Information may be submitted in any written form, but should 
include:
    (1) The name, mailing address, and telephone number(s) of the 
person(s) making the disclosure(s), and a time when that person(s) can 
be safely contacted by this agency, unless the matter is submitted 
anonymously;
    (2) The department or agency, location and organizational unit 
complained of;
    (3) A statement as to whether the complainant consents to the 
disclosure of his or her identity to the agency by the Special Counsel 
in connection with referral to the appropriate agency.

[54 FR 47341, Nov. 14, 1989, as amended at 55 FR 47839, Nov. 16, 1990; 
59 FR 64843, Dec. 16, 1994]



Sec. 1800.3  Advisory opinions.

    The Special Counsel is authorized to issue advisory opinions only 
concerning Chapter 15 of Title 5, United States Code (dealing with 
political activity of State or local officers and employees) and 
Subchapter III of Chapter 73 of Title 5, United States Code (dealing 
with political activity of Federal officers and employees). Requesters 
may telephone the Office of Special Counsel toll free at 1-800-872-9855, 
or (202)/FTS 653-7143 in the Washington, DC, area, or make such requests 
in writing to the Office of Special Counsel, 1730 M

[[Page 277]]

Street, NW., Suite 300, Washington, DC 20036-4505.

[54 FR 47341, Nov. 14, 1989, as amended at 59 FR 64843, Dec. 16, 1994]



PART 1810--INVESTIGATIVE AUTHORITY OF THE SPECIAL COUNSEL--Table of Contents




    Authority: 5 U.S.C. 1212(e).



Sec. 1810.1  Investigative policy in discrimination complaints.

    The Special Counsel is authorized to investigate allegations of 
discrimination prohibited by law, as defined in 5 U.S.C. 2302(b)(1). 
Since procedures for investigating discrimination complaints have 
already been established in the agencies and the Equal Employment 
Opportunity Commission, the Special Counsel will normally avoid 
duplicating those procedures and will defer to those procedures rather 
than initiating an independent investigation.

[54 FR 47342, Nov. 14, 1989]



PART 1820--PUBLIC INFORMATION--Table of Contents




Sec.
1820.1  Public list.
1820.2  Procedures for obtaining records under the Freedom of 
          Information Act.
1820.3  Categories of requesters under the Freedom of Information Act.
1820.4  Free or partially free search time and partially free copying.
1820.5  Waiver or reduction of fees.
1820.6  Fees to be charged.
1820.7  Payments and collections.
1820.8  Appeals.
1820.9  Disclosures by authorized officials.

    Authority: 5 U.S.C. 552(a)(3), 552(a)(4), 1212(g), 1219.

    Source: 54 FR 47342, Nov. 14, 1989, unless otherwise noted.



Sec. 1820.1  Public list.

    (a) Pursuant to 5 U.S.C. 1219, the Special Counsel maintains and 
makes available to the public a list of:
    (1) Noncriminal matters referred to heads of agencies under 5 U.S.C. 
1213 (c) and (g)(1), and reports received as a result of such referrals;
    (2) Matters referred by the Special Counsel to heads of agencies 
under 5 U.S.C. 1215(c)(2); and
    (3) Matters referred to heads of agencies under 5 U.S.C. 1214(e), 
together with certifications from the heads of agencies under such 
subsection.
    (b) The list is available to the public between 8:30 a.m. and 5 p.m. 
weekdays (except legal holidays) in the Office of Special Counsel, 1730 
M Street NW., Suite 300, Washington, DC 20036-4505.

[55 FR 47342, Nov. 14, 1989, as amended at 55 FR 47839, Nov. 16, 1990; 
59 FR 64843, Dec. 16, 1994]



Sec. 1820.2  Procedures for obtaining records under the Freedom of Information Act.

    Requests for records shall be made in writing. Requests should be 
addressed to the Office of Special Counsel, 1730 M Street NW., Suite 
300, Washington, DC 20036-4505. Requests must be clearly and prominently 
marked ``Freedom of Information Act Request'' on both the envelope and 
the letter.

[54 FR 47342, Nov. 14, 1989, as amended at 59 FR 64843, Dec. 16, 1994]



Sec. 1820.3  Categories of requesters under the Freedom of Information Act.

    There are four categories of requesters:
    (a) Commercial use requesters. These requesters seek information for 
themselves or on behalf of someone else for a use or purpose that 
furthers commercial, trade, or profit interests of the requester or the 
person on whose behalf the request is made. A requester will not be 
presumed to be a ``commercial use requester'' merely by submitting a 
request on corporate letterhead without further explanation of the use 
to which he plans to put the requested information. Similarly, a request 
submitted on the letterhead of a nonprofit organization without further 
explanation will not be presumed to be for a noncommercial purpose. The 
Office of Special Counsel will seek clarification from the requester 
where there is a reasonable doubt as to the intended use of the 
information.
    (b) Educational and noncommercial scientific institution requesters. 
(1) An ``educational institution'' requester is associated with a 
preschool, a public or private elementary or secondary school, an 
institution of undergraduate or

[[Page 278]]

graduate higher education, or an institution of vocational or 
professional education, that operates a program or programs of scholarly 
research, and seeks the information for a scholarly or scientific 
research goal of the institution, rather than for an individual goal.
    (2) A ``noncommercial scientific institution'' requester is 
associated with an institution that is not operated on a ``commercial'' 
basis (as that term is defined by paragraph (a) of this section), and 
which is operated solely for the purpose of conducting scientific 
research, the results of which are not intended to promote any 
particular product or industry.
    (c) News media requesters. These requesters actively gather news for 
entities that are organized and operated to publish or broadcast news to 
the public. Freelance journalists may be news media requesters if they 
can demonstrate a solid basis for expecting publication through a news 
organization (such as by producing a publication contract or citing 
their past publication records), even though not actually employed by 
it. ``News'' means information about current events or information that 
would be of current interest to the public. News media ``entities'' 
include, but are not limited to, television or radio stations 
broadcasting to the public at large, and publishers of periodicals (but 
only in those instances when they can qualify as disseminators of 
``news'') who make their products available for purchase or subscription 
by the general public.
    (d) All other requesters.



Sec. 1820.4  Free or partially free search time and partially free copying.

    (a) Free search time and partially free copying. Educational and 
noncommercial scientific institution requesters and news media 
requesters who are requesting records for noncommercial use are entitled 
to free copying for the first 100 pages and free search time.
    (b) Partially free search time and partially free copying. 
Requesters who are not commercial use requesters, educational or 
noncommercial scientific institution requesters, or news media 
requesters are ``all other requesters'', and are entitled to two hours 
of free search time and free copying for the first 100 pages. Requests 
from record subjects for records about themselves filed in a system of 
records will continue to be treated under the fee provisions of the 
Privacy Act, which permits the assessment of fees only for copying.



Sec. 1820.5  Waiver or reduction of fees.

    (a) The Associate Special Counsel for Investigation, the Deputy 
Associate Special Counsel for Prosecution, the Associate Special Counsel 
for Prosecution, the Deputy Special Counsel, and the Special Counsel may 
authorize waiver or reduction of fees that could otherwise be assessed 
if disclosure of the information requested:
    (1) Is in the public interest because it is likely to contribute 
significantly to public understanding of the operations or activities of 
the Government, and
    (2) Is not primarily in the commercial interest of the requester.
    (b) Satisfaction of paragraph (a)(1) of this section will be 
determined by all of the following:
    (1) Whether the subject of the requested records concerns ``the 
operations or activities of the Government.'' The requested records 
concern identifiable operations of activities of the Government, and the 
connection between the records and the operations or activities is 
direct and clear, not remote or attenuated;
    (2) Whether disclosure is ``likely to contribute'' to an 
understanding of Government operations or activities. An analysis of the 
substantive content of the releasable portions of the requested records 
reveals meaningfully informative information on the operations or 
activities of the Government that is not already in the public domain in 
duplicative or substantially identical form;
    (3) Whether disclosure will contribute to ``public understanding.'' 
Considering the identity of the requester and his qualifications to make 
use of the information, disclosure will contribute to the understanding 
of the public at large, and not to the individual understanding of the 
requester or a narrow segment of interested persons; and
    (4) Whether the disclosure is likely to contribute ``significantly'' 
to public

[[Page 279]]

understanding of Government operations or activities. By an objective 
standard, the disclosure is likely to enhance the general public's 
understanding of the subject matter in question more than minimally.
    (c) Satisfaction of paragraph (a)(2) of this section will be 
determined by both of the following:
    (1) Whether the requester has a commercial interest to be furthered 
by the disclosure. The requester does not seek to further a commercial, 
trade, or profit interest, as those terms are commonly understood; and
    (2) Whether the magnitude of the identified commercial interest of 
the requester is sufficiently large, compared to the public interest in 
disclosure, that disclosure is ``primarily in the commercial interest of 
the requester.'' If the requester has a commercial interest, that 
interest is not greater than the public interest to be served by 
disclosure of the requested records.



Sec. 1820.6  Fees to be charged.

    (a) Requests for records are subject to the following fees:
    (1) Commercial use requesters. For search, review, and copying: 
Photocopies per page, $0.25. Manual record search, $2.50 per quarter 
hour if conducted by a clerical employee; $5.00 per quarter hour if 
conducted by a professional or managerial employee. Search fees may be 
assessed even if the records in question are not located or if the 
records located are determined to be exempt from disclosure.
    (2) Educational and noncommercial scientific institution requesters, 
news media requesters. For copying only: Photocopies per page, $0.25, 
excluding the first 100 pages.
    (3) All other requesters. For search and copying only: Photocopies 
per page (excluding the first 100 pages), $0.25. Manual record search 
(excluding the first two hours), $2.50 per quarter hour if conducted by 
a clerical employee; $5.00 per quarter hour if conducted by a 
professional or managerial employee.
    (b) Method of search. (1) Any ``search'', which includes all time 
spent looking for material that is responsive to a request, will be done 
in the most efficient and least expensive manner in order to minimize 
costs for both the agency and the requester.
    (2) For researches made by computer, costs will be assessed when the 
hourly cost of operating the central processing unit and the operator's 
hourly salary plus 16 percent equals the equivalent dollar amount of two 
hours of salary of the person performing the search.
    (c) Review charges. Only commercial use requesters will be charged 
for time spent reviewing records to determine whether they are exempt 
from mandatory disclosure. These charges will be assessed only for 
initial review (i.e., the review undertaken when first analyzing the 
applicability of a specific exemption to a particular record or portion 
of record), and not for review at the administrative appeal level of an 
exemption already applied. However, charges will be assessed for a 
second review of records or portions of records withheld in full under 
an exemption which is subsequently determined not to apply in order to 
determine the applicability of other exemptions not previously 
considered. Review charges shall not include costs incurred in resolving 
issues of law or policy that may be raised in the course of processing a 
request.
    (d) Copying. A ``page'' of copying refers to a paper copy of 
standard size, normally 8\1/2\''x11'' or 11x14''. However, copies may 
also take the form of microform, audio-visual materials, or machine 
readable documentation (e.g., magnetic tape or disk), among others.
    (e) Nonassessment of fees. No fees will be assessed to any 
requester, including commercial use requesters, if the cost of routine 
collection and processing of the fee would be equal to or greater than 
the fee itself. To make this determination, the OSC will consider the 
administrative costs of receiving and recording a requester's remittance 
and processing the fee for deposit.
    (f) Other charges. Complying with requests for special services, 
such as certification of records as true copies and sending records by 
special methods (e.g., express mail) is entirely at the discretion of 
the Office. Since neither the Freedom of Information Act nor its fee 
structure covers these kinds of services, the OSC will assess fees to 
recover the full costs of providing these

[[Page 280]]

services should the Office elect to provide them.
    (g) Aggregating requests. If the Office of Special Counsel 
reasonably believes that a requester or a group of requesters acting in 
concert is filing a series of requests for the purpose of evading the 
assessment of fees, the OSC may aggregate the requests and assess fees 
accordingly. One element to be considered in determining reasonable 
belief is the time period within which the requests are filed. Multiple 
requests of this type filed within a 30-day period may be presumed to 
have been made to avoid fees. In no case will the Office aggregate 
requests on unrelated subjects from one requester.
    (h) Advance notice of fees. If it is likely that fees will exceed 
$25, the requester will first be notified of the estimated amount, 
unless the requester has indicated in advance his willingness to pay 
fees as high as those anticipated. The notice will offer the requester 
the opportunity to confer with personnel of the Office of the Special 
Counsel with the object of reformulating the request to meet his or her 
needs at a lower cost.



Sec. 1820.7  Payments and collections.

    (a) Payments. Payment of fees shall be made by check or money order 
payable to the United States Treasury.
    (b) Advance payments. A requester is not required to make an advance 
payment unless:
    (1) The OSC estimates or determines that the requester may be 
required to pay fees in excess of $250, in which case the requester will 
be notified of the estimated cost. The requester must then furnish 
satisfactory assurance of full payment if the requester has a history of 
prompt payment of Freedom of Information Act fees. If the requester has 
no history of payment, then the requester may be required to furnish an 
advance payment up to the full estimated cost; or
    (2) The requester has previously failed to pay a fee assessed in a 
timely fashion (i.e. within 30 days of the date of billing), in which 
case the requester may be required to--
    (i) Pay the full amount owed plus any applicable interest as 
provided in paragraph (d) of this section, or prove payment of the 
alleged amount in arrears, and
    (ii) Make an advance payment of the full amount of the estimated 
cost before a new or pending request will be processed.
    (c) Effect of nonpayment. When the OSC acts under either paragraph 
(b)(2)(i) or (b)(2)(ii) of this section, the administrative time limits 
prescribed in 5 U.S.C. 552(a)(6) of the Freedom of Information Act will 
begin only after the fee payments described above have been received.
    (d) Interest charges. Interest may be charged to any requester who 
fails to pay fees assessed within 30 days of the date of billing. 
Interest will be assessed on the 31st day following the day on which the 
bill for fees was sent, and will be calculated at the rate prescribed in 
31 U.S.C. 3717. Receipt of fees, even if not processed, will stay the 
accrual of interest.
    (e) Collections. If the OSC deems it appropriate in order to 
encourage repayment of fees assessed in accordance with these 
regulations, the OSC will use the procedures authorized by the Debt 
Collection Act of 1982 (Public Law No. 97-365), including disclosure to 
consumer reporting agencies and use of collection agencies.



Sec. 1820.8  Appeals.

    Any denial, in whole or in part, of a request for records of the 
Office of Special Counsel shall advise the requester of his right to 
appeal the denial to the Special Counsel or the Special Counsel's 
designee. The requester shall submit his appeal in writing within 30 
days of the denial. The appeal shall be addressed to the Special Counsel 
at 1730 M Street NW., Suite 300, Washington, DC 20036-4505. When a 
request is denied on appeal, the requester shall be advised of his right 
to seek judicial review.

[54 FR 47342, Nov. 14, 1989, as amended at 59 FR 64843, Dec. 16, 1994]



Sec. 1820.9  Disclosures by authorized officials.

    No employee or former employee of the Office of Special Counsel 
shall, in response to a demand of a court or other authority, produce or 
disclose any information or records acquired as

[[Page 281]]

part of the performance of his official duties or because of his 
official status without the prior approval of the Special Counsel or the 
Special Counsel's duly authorized designee.



PART 1830--PRIVACY--Table of Contents




Sec.
1830.1  Access to records and identification.
1830.2  Medical records.
1830.3  Requests for amendment of records.
1830.4  Appeals.
1830.5  Exemptions.

    Authority: 5 U.S.C. 552a(f), 1212(g).

    Source: 54 FR 47344, Nov. 14, 1989, unless otherwise noted.



Sec. 1830.1  Access to records and identification.

    (a) Individuals may request access to records pertaining to them 
that are maintained as described in the Privacy Act, 5 U.S.C. 552a, by 
addressing an inquiry to the Office of Special Counsel either by mail or 
by appearing in person at the Office of Special Counsel at 1730 M 
Street, NW., Suite 300, Washington, DC 20036-4505, during business hours 
on a regular business day. Requests in writing should be clearly and 
prominently marked ``Privacy Act Request.'' Requests for copies of 
records shall be subject to duplication fees set forth in Sec. 1820.6 of 
this chapter.
    (b) Individuals making a request in person shall be required to 
present satisfactory proof of identity, preferably a document bearing 
the individual's photograph. Requests by mail or submitted other than in 
person should contain sufficient information to enable the Office of 
Special Counsel to determine that the requester and the subject of the 
record are one and the same. To assist in this process, individuals 
should submit their names and addresses, dates and places of birth, 
social security number, and any other known identifying information such 
as an agency file number or identification number and a description of 
the circumstances under which the records were compiled.

[54 FR 47344, Nov. 14, 1989, as amended at 59 FR 64844, Dec. 16, 1994]



Sec. 1830.2  Medical records.

    When a request for access involves medical records that are not 
otherwise exempt from disclosure, the requesting individual may be 
advised, if it is deemed necessary, that the records will be provided 
only to a physician designated in writing by the individual. Upon 
receipt of the designation, the physician will be permitted to review 
the records or to receive copies by mail upon proper verification of 
identity.



Sec. 1830.3  Requests for amendment of records.

    Individuals may request amendment of records pertaining to them that 
are subject to this part. Requests should be addressed, in writing, to 
the Special Counsel at 1730 M Street, NW., Suite 300, Washington, DC 
20036-4505, and be clearly and prominently marked ``Privacy Act 
Request.'' Requests for amendment should include identification of 
records together with a statement of the basis for the requested 
amendment and all available supporting documents and materials. Requests 
for amendment shall be acknowledged not later than 10 days (excluding 
Saturdays, Sundays, and legal holidays) after receipt and a 
determination on the request shall be made promptly.

[54 FR 47344, Nov. 14, 1989, as amended at 59 FR 64844, Dec. 16, 1994]



Sec. 1830.4  Appeals.

    When a request for access or amendment has been denied, in whole or 
in part, the requester shall be advised of his right to appeal to the 
Special Counsel or the Special Counsel's designee. The requester shall 
submit his appeal in writing within 30 days of the denial. A final 
determination on the appeal shall be issued within 30 days (excluding 
Saturdays, Sundays, and legal holidays) after receipt. Where unusual 
circumstances prevent a determination within that time period, the time 
for a determination may be extended an additional 30 working days.



Sec. 1830.5  Exemptions.

    The Office of Special Counsel will claim exemptions from the 
provisions of the Privacy Act at subsections (c)(3) and (d) as permitted 
by subsection (k)

[[Page 282]]

for records subject to the Act that fall within the category of 
investigatory material described in paragraphs (2) and (5) and testing 
or examination material described in paragraph (6) of that subsection. 
The exemptions for investigatory material are necessary to prevent 
frustration of inquiries into allegations of prohibited personnel 
practices or political activity and to protect identities of 
confidential sources of information. The exemption for testing or 
examination material is necessary to prevent the disclosure of 
information which would potentially give an individual an unfair 
competitive advantage or diminish the utility of established examination 
procedures. The Office of Special Counsel also reserves the right to 
assert exemptions for records received from another agency that could be 
properly claimed by that agency in responding to a request and the 
Office of Special Counsel may refuse access to information compiled in 
reasonable anticipation of a civil action or proceeding.



PART 1840--SUBPOENAS--Table of Contents




    Authority: 5 U.S.C. 1212(e).



Sec. 1840.1  Service of subpoenas by mail.

    In addition to all other methods of authorized service, an Office of 
Special Counsel subpoena may be served by mailing a copy to the person 
at his or her residence or place of business by certified or registered 
mail.

[54 FR 47345, Nov. 14, 1989]



PART 1850--ENFORCEMENT OF NONDISCRIMINATION ON THE BASIS OF HANDICAP IN PROGRAMS OR ACTIVITIES CONDUCTED BY THE OFFICE OF SPECIAL COUNSEL--Table of Contents




Sec.
1850.101  Purpose.
1850.102  Application.
1850.103  Definitions.
1850.104--1850.109  [Reserved]
1850.110  Self-evaluation.
1850.111  Notice.
1850.112--1850.129  [Reserved]
1850.130  General prohibitions against discrimination.
1850.131--1850.139  [Reserved]
1850.140  Employment.
1850.141--1850.148  [Reserved]
1850.149  Program accessibility: Discrimination prohibited.
1850.150  Program accessibility: Existing facilities.
1850.151  Program accessibility: New construction and alterations.
1850.152--1850.159  [Reserved]
1850.160  Communications.
1850.161--1850.169  [Reserved]
1850.170  Compliance procedures.
1850.171--1850.999  [Reserved]

    Authority: 29 U.S.C. 794.

    Source: 53 FR 25881 and 25885, July 8, 1988, unless otherwise noted. 
Redesignated at 54 FR 47345, Nov. 14, 1989.



Sec. 1850.101  Purpose.

    The purpose of this regulation is to effectuate section 119 of the 
Rehabilitation, Comprehensive Services, and Developmental Disabilities 
Amendments of 1978, which amended section 504 of the Rehabilitation Act 
of 1973 to prohibit discrimination on the basis of handicap in programs 
or activities conducted by Executive agencies or the United States 
Postal Service.



Sec. 1850.102  Application.

    This regulation (Secs. 1850.101-1850.170) applies to all programs or 
activities conducted by the agency, except for programs or activities 
conducted outside the United States that do not involve individuals with 
handicaps in the United States.



Sec. 1850.103  Definitions.

    For purposes of this regulation, the term--
    Assistant Attorney General means the Assistant Attorney General, 
Civil Rights Division, United States Department of Justice.
    Auxiliary aids means services or devices that enable persons with 
impaired sensory, manual, or speaking skills to have an equal 
opportunity to participate in, and enjoy the benefits of, programs or 
activities conducted by the agency. For example, auxiliary aids useful 
for persons with impaired vision include readers, Brailled materials, 
audio recordings, and other similar services and devices. Auxiliary aids

[[Page 283]]

useful for persons with impaired hearing include telephone handset 
amplifiers, telephones compatible with hearing aids, telecommunication 
devices for deaf persons (TDD's), interpreters, notetakers, written 
materials, and other similar services and devices.
    Complete complaint means a written statement that contains the 
complainant's name and address and describes the agency's alleged 
discriminatory action in sufficient detail to inform the agency of the 
nature and date of the alleged violation of section 504. It shall be 
signed by the complainant or by someone authorized to do so on his or 
her behalf. Complaints filed on behalf of classes or third parties shall 
describe or identify (by name, if possible) the alleged victims of 
discrimination.
    Facility means all or any portion of buildings, structures, 
equipment, roads, walks, parking lots, rolling stock or other 
conveyances, or other real or personal property.
    Historic preservation programs means programs conducted by the 
agency that have preservation of historic properties as a primary 
purpose.
    Historic properties means those properties that are listed or 
eligible for listing in the National Register of Historic Places or 
properties designated as historic under a statute of the appropriate 
State or local government body.
    Individual with handicaps means any person who has a physical or 
mental impairment that substantially limits one or more major life 
activities, has a record of such an impairment, or is regarded as having 
such an impairment.
    As used in this definition, the phrase:
    (1) Physical or mental impairment includes--
    (i) Any physiological disorder or condition, cosmetic disfigurement, 
or anatomical loss affecting one or more of the following body systems: 
Neurological; musculoskeletal; special sense organs; respiratory, 
including speech organs; cardiovascular; reproductive; digestive; 
genitourinary; hemic and lymphatic; skin; and endocrine; or
    (ii) Any mental or psychological disorder, such as mental 
retardation, organic brain syndrome, emotional or mental illness, and 
specific learning disabilities. The term physical or mental impairment 
includes, but is not limited to, such diseases and conditions as 
orthopedic, visual, speech, and hearing impairments, cerebral palsy, 
epilepsy, muscular dystrophy, multiple sclerosis, cancer, heart disease, 
diabetes, mental retardation, emotional illness, and drug addiction and 
alcoholism.
    (2) Major life activities includes functions such as caring for 
one's self, performing manual tasks, walking, seeing, hearing, speaking, 
breathing, learning, and working.
    (3) Has a record of such an impairment means has a history of, or 
has been misclassified as having, a mental or physical impairment that 
substantially limits one or more major life activities.
    (4) Is regarded as having an impairment means--
    (i) Has a physical or mental impairment that does not substantially 
limit major life activities but is treated by the agency as constituting 
such a limitation;
    (ii) Has a physical or mental impairment that substantially limits 
major life activities only as a result of the attitudes of others toward 
such impairment; or
    (iii) Has none of the impairments defined in paragraph (1) of this 
definition but is treated by the agency as having such an impairment.
    Qualified individual with handicaps means--
    (1) With respect to preschool, elementary, or secondary education 
services provided by the agency, an individual with handicaps who is a 
member of a class of persons otherwise entitled by statute, regulation, 
or agency policy to receive education services from the agency;
    (2) With respect to any other agency program or activity under which 
a person is required to perform services or to achieve a level of 
accomplishment, an individual with handicaps who meets the essential 
eligibility requirements and who can achieve the purpose of the program 
or activity without modifications in the program or activity that the 
agency can demonstrate would result in a fundamental alteration in its 
nature;
    (3) With respect to any other program or activity, an individual 
with

[[Page 284]]

handicaps who meets the essential eligibility requirements for 
participation in, or receipt of benefits from, that program or activity; 
and
    (4) Qualified handicapped person as that term is defined for 
purposes of employment in 29 CFR 1613.702(f), which is made applicable 
to this regulation by Sec. 1850.140.
    Section 504 means section 504 of the Rehabilitation Act of 1973 
(Pub. L. 93-112, 87 Stat. 394 (29 U.S.C. 794)), as amended by the 
Rehabilitation Act Amendments of 1974 (Pub. L. 93-516, 88 Stat. 1617); 
the Rehabilitation, Comprehensive Services, and Developmental 
Disabilities Amendments of 1978 (Pub. L. 95-602, 92 Stat. 2955); and the 
Rehabilitation Act Amendments of 1986 (Pub. L. 99-506, 100 Stat. 1810). 
As used in this regulation, section 504 applies only to programs or 
activities conducted by Executive agencies and not to federally assisted 
programs.
    Substantial impairment means a significant loss of the integrity of 
finished materials, design quality, or special character resulting from 
a permanent alteration.
Secs. 1850.104--1850.109  [Reserved]



Sec. 1850.110  Self-evaluation.

    (a) The agency shall, by September 6, 1989, evaluate its current 
policies and practices, and the effects thereof, that do not or may not 
meet the requirements of this regulation and, to the extent modification 
of any such policies and practices is required, the agency shall proceed 
to make the necessary modifications.
    (b) The agency shall provide an opportunity to interested persons, 
including individuals with handicaps or organizations representing 
individuals with handicaps, to participate in the self-evaluation 
process by submitting comments (both oral and written).
    (c) The agency shall, for at least three years following completion 
of the self-evaluation, maintain on file and make available for public 
inspection:
    (1) A description of areas examined and any problems identified; and
    (2) A description of any modifications made.



Sec. 1850.111  Notice.

    The agency shall make available to employees, applicants, 
participants, beneficiaries, and other interested persons such 
information regarding the provisions of this regulation and its 
applicability to the programs or activities conducted by the agency, and 
make such information available to them in such manner as the head of 
the agency finds necessary to apprise such persons of the protections 
against discrimination assured them by section 504 and this regulation.
Secs. 1850.112--1850.129  [Reserved]



Sec. 1850.130  General prohibitions against discrimination.

    (a) No qualified individual with handicaps shall, on the basis of 
handicap, be excluded from participation in, be denied the benefits of, 
or otherwise be subjected to discrimination under any program or 
activity conducted by the agency.
    (b)(1) The agency, in providing any aid, benefit, or service, may 
not, directly or through contractual, licensing, or other arrangements, 
on the basis of handicap--
    (i) Deny a qualified individual with handicaps the opportunity to 
participate in or benefit from the aid, benefit, or service;
    (ii) Afford a qualified individual with handicaps an opportunity to 
participate in or benefit from the aid, benefit, or service that is not 
equal to that afforded others;
    (iii) Provide a qualified individual with handicaps with an aid, 
benefit, or service that is not as effective in affording equal 
opportunity to obtain the same result, to gain the same benefit, or to 
reach the same level of achievement as that provided to others;
    (iv) Provide different or separate aid, benefits, or services to 
individuals with handicaps or to any class of individuals with handicaps 
than is provided to others unless such action is necessary to provide 
qualified individuals with handicaps with aid, benefits, or services 
that are as effective as those provided to others;

[[Page 285]]

    (v) Deny a qualified individual with handicaps the opportunity to 
participate as a member of planning or advisory boards;
    (vi) Otherwise limit a qualified individual with handicaps in the 
enjoyment of any right, privilege, advantage, or opportunity enjoyed by 
others receiving the aid, benefit, or service.
    (2) The agency may not deny a qualified individual with handicaps 
the opportunity to participate in programs or activities that are not 
separate or different, despite the existence of permissibly separate or 
different programs or activities.
    (3) The agency may not, directly or through contractual or other 
arrangements, utilize criteria or methods of administration the purpose 
or effect of which would--
    (i) Subject qualified individuals with handicaps to discrimination 
on the basis of handicap; or
    (ii) Defeat or substantially impair accomplishment of the objectives 
of a program or activity with respect to individuals with handicaps.
    (4) The agency may not, in determining the site or location of a 
facility, make selections the purpose or effect of which would--
    (i) Exclude individuals with handicaps from, deny them the benefits 
of, or otherwise subject them to discrimination under any program or 
activity conducted by the agency; or
    (ii) Defeat or substantially impair the accomplishment of the 
objectives of a program or activity with respect to individuals with 
handicaps.
    (5) The agency, in the selection of procurement contractors, may not 
use criteria that subject qualified individuals with handicaps to 
discrimination on the basis of handicap.
    (6) The agency may not administer a licensing or certification 
program in a manner that subjects qualified individuals with handicaps 
to discrimination on the basis of handicap, nor may the agency establish 
requirements for the programs or activities of licensees or certified 
entities that subject qualified individuals with handicaps to 
discrimination on the basis of handicap. However, the programs or 
activities of entities that are licensed or certified by the agency are 
not, themselves, covered by this regulation.
    (c) The exclusion of nonhandicapped persons from the benefits of a 
program limited by Federal statute or Executive order to individuals 
with handicaps or the exclusion of a specific class of individuals with 
handicaps from a program limited by Federal statute or Executive order 
to a different class of individuals with handicaps is not prohibited by 
this regulation.
    (d) The agency shall administer programs and activities in the most 
integrated setting appropriate to the needs of qualified individuals 
with handicaps.
Secs. 1850.131--1850.139  [Reserved]



Sec. 1850.140  Employment.

    No qualified individual with handicaps shall, on the basis of 
handicap, be subject to discrimination in employment under any program 
or activity conducted by the agency. The definitions, requirements, and 
procedures of section 501 of the Rehabilitation Act of 1973 (29 U.S.C. 
791), as established by the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission in 
29 CFR part 1613, shall apply to employment in federally conducted 
programs or activities.
Sec. 1850.141--1850.148  [Reserved]



Sec. 1850.149  Program accessibility: Discrimination prohibited.

    Except as otherwise provided in Sec. 1850.150, no qualified 
individual with handicaps shall, because the agency's facilities are 
inaccessible to or unusable by individuals with handicaps, be denied the 
benefits of, be excluded from participation in, or otherwise be 
subjected to discrimination under any program or activity conducted by 
the agency.



Sec. 1850.150  Program accessibility: Existing facilities.

    (a) General. The agency shall operate each program or activity so 
that the program or activity, when viewed in its entirety, is readily 
accessible to and usable by individuals with handicaps. This paragraph 
does not--
    (1) Necessarily require the agency to make each of its existing 
facilities accessible to and usable by individuals with handicaps;

[[Page 286]]

    (2) In the case of historic preservation programs, require the 
agency to take any action that would result in a substantial impairment 
of significant historic features of an historic property; or
    (3) Require the agency to take any action that it can demonstrate 
would result in a fundamental alteration in the nature of a program or 
activity or in undue financial and administrative burdens. In those 
circumstances where agency personnel believe that the proposed action 
would fundamentally alter the program or activity or would result in 
undue financial and administrative burdens, the agency has the burden of 
proving that compliance with Sec. 1850.150(a) would result in such 
alteration or burdens. The decision that compliance would result in such 
alteration or burdens must be made by the agency head or his or her 
designee after considering all agency resources available for use in the 
funding and operation of the conducted program or activity, and must be 
accompanied by a written statement of the reasons for reaching that 
conclusion. If an action would result in such an alteration or such 
burdens, the agency shall take any other action that would not result in 
such an alteration or such burdens but would nevertheless ensure that 
individuals with handicaps receive the benefits and services of the 
program or activity.
    (b) Methods--(1) General. The agency may comply with the 
requirements of this section through such means as redesign of 
equipment, reassignment of services to accessible buildings, assignment 
of aides to beneficiaries, home visits, delivery of services at 
alternate accessible sites, alteration of existing facilities and 
construction of new facilities, use of accessible rolling stock, or any 
other methods that result in making its programs or activities readily 
accessible to and usable by individuals with handicaps. The agency is 
not required to make structural changes in existing facilities where 
other methods are effective in achieving compliance with this section. 
The agency, in making alterations to existing buildings, shall meet 
accessibility requirements to the extent compelled by the Architectural 
Barriers Act of 1968, as amended (42 U.S.C. 4151-4157), and any 
regulations implementing it. In choosing among available methods for 
meeting the requirements of this section, the agency shall give priority 
to those methods that offer programs and activities to qualified 
individuals with handicaps in the most integrated setting appropriate.
    (2) Historic preservation programs. In meeting the requirements of 
Sec. 1850.150(a) in historic preservation programs, the agency shall 
give priority to methods that provide physical access to individuals 
with handicaps. In cases where a physical alteration to an historic 
property is not required because of Sec. 1850.150(a) (2) or (3), 
alternative methods of achieving program accessibility include--
    (i) Using audio-visual materials and devices to depict those 
portions of an historic property that cannot otherwise be made 
accessible;
    (ii) Assigning persons to guide individuals with handicaps into or 
through portions of historic properties that cannot otherwise be made 
accessible; or
    (iii) Adopting other innovative methods.
    (c) Time period for compliance. The agency shall comply with the 
obligations established under this section by November 7, 1988, except 
that where structural changes in facilities are undertaken, such changes 
shall be made by September 6, 1991, but in any event as expeditiously as 
possible.
    (d) Transition plan. In the event that structural changes to 
facilities will be undertaken to achieve program accessibility, the 
agency shall develop, by March 6, 1989, a transition plan setting forth 
the steps necessary to complete such changes. The agency shall provide 
an opportunity to interested persons, including individuals with 
handicaps or organizations representing individuals with handicaps, to 
participate in the development of the transition plan by submitting 
comments (both oral and written). A copy of the transition plan shall be 
made available for public inspection. The plan shall, at a minimum--

[[Page 287]]

    (1) Identify physical obstacles in the agency's facilities that 
limit the accessibility of its programs or activities to individuals 
with handicaps;
    (2) Describe in detail the methods that will be used to make the 
facilities accessible;
    (3) Specify the schedule for taking the steps necessary to achieve 
compliance with this section and, if the time period of the transition 
plan is longer than one year, identify steps that will be taken during 
each year of the transition period; and
    (4) Indicate the official responsible for implementation of the 
plan.



Sec. 1850.151   Program accessibility: New construction and alterations.

    Each building or part of a building that is constructed or altered 
by, on behalf of, or for the use of the agency shall be designed, 
constructed, or altered so as to be readily accessible to and usable by 
individuals with handicaps. The definitions, requirements, and standards 
of the Architectural Barriers Act (42 U.S.C. 4151-4157), as established 
in 41 CFR 101-19.600 to 101-19.607, apply to buildings covered by this 
section.
Secs. 1850.152--1850.159  [Reserved]



Sec. 1850.160  Communications.

    (a) The agency shall take appropriate steps to ensure effective 
communication with applicants, participants, personnel of other Federal 
entities, and members of the public.
    (1) The agency shall furnish appropriate auxiliary aids where 
necessary to afford an individual with handicaps an equal opportunity to 
participate in, and enjoy the benefits of, a program or activity 
conducted by the agency.
    (i) In determining what type of auxiliary aid is necessary, the 
agency shall give primary consideration to the requests of the 
individual with handicaps.
    (ii) The agency need not provide individually prescribed devices, 
readers for personal use or study, or other devices of a personal 
nature.
    (2) Where the agency communicates with applicants and beneficiaries 
by telephone, telecommunication devices for deaf persons (TDD's) or 
equally effective telecommunication systems shall be used to communicate 
with persons with impaired hearing.
    (b) The agency shall ensure that interested persons, including 
persons with impaired vision or hearing, can obtain information as to 
the existence and location of accessible services, activities, and 
facilities.
    (c) The agency shall provide signage at a primary entrance to each 
of its inaccessible facilities, directing users to a location at which 
they can obtain information about accessible facilities. The 
international symbol for accessibility shall be used at each primary 
entrance of an accessible facility.
    (d) This section does not require the agency to take any action that 
it can demonstrate would result in a fundamental alteration in the 
nature of a program or activity or in undue financial and administrative 
burdens. In those circumstances where agency personnel believe that the 
proposed action would fundamentally alter the program or activity or 
would result in undue financial and administrative burdens, the agency 
has the burden of proving that compliance with Sec. 1850.160 would 
result in such alteration or burdens. The decision that compliance would 
result in such alteration or burdens must be made by the agency head or 
his or her designee after considering all agency resources available for 
use in the funding and operation of the conducted program or activity 
and must be accompanied by a written statement of the reasons for 
reaching that conclusion. If an action required to comply with this 
section would result in such an alteration or such burdens, the agency 
shall take any other action that would not result in such an alteration 
or such burdens but would nevertheless ensure that, to the maximum 
extent possible, individuals with handicaps receive the benefits and 
services of the program or activity.
Secs. 1850.161--1850.169  [Reserved]



Sec. 1850.170  Compliance procedures.

    (a) Except as provided in paragraph (b) of this section, this 
section applies to all allegations of discrimination on the basis of 
handicap in programs and activities conducted by the agency.

[[Page 288]]

    (b) The agency shall process complaints alleging violations of 
section 504 with respect to employment according to the procedures 
established by the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission in 29 CFR 
part 1613 pursuant to section 501 of the Rehabilitation Act of 1973 (29 
U.S.C. 791).
    (c) The Managing Director for Operations shall be responsible for 
coordinating implementation of this section. Complaints may be sent to 
the Director for Management, Office of the Special Counsel, 1730 M 
Street, NW., Suite 300, Washington, DC 20036-4505.
    (d) The agency shall accept and investigate all complete complaints 
for which it has jurisdiction. All complete complaints must be filed 
within 180 days of the alleged act of discrimination. The agency may 
extend this time period for good cause.
    (e) If the agency receives a complaint over which it does not have 
jurisdiction, it shall promptly notify the complainant and shall make 
reasonable efforts to refer the complaint to the appropriate Government 
entity.
    (f) The agency shall notify the Architectural and Transportation 
Barriers Compliance Board upon receipt of any complaint alleging that a 
building or facility that is subject to the Architectural Barriers Act 
of 1968, as amended (42 U.S.C. 4151-4157), is not readily accessible to 
and usable by individuals with handicaps.
    (g) Within 180 days of the receipt of a complete complaint for which 
it has jurisdiction, the agency shall notify the complainant of the 
results of the investigation in a letter containing--
    (1) Findings of fact and conclusions of law;
    (2) A description of a remedy for each violation found; and
    (3) A notice of the right to appeal.
    (h) Appeals of the findings of fact and conclusions of law or 
remedies must be filed by the complainant within 90 days of receipt from 
the agency of the letter required by Sec. 1850.170(g). The agency may 
extend this time for good cause.
    (i) Timely appeals shall be accepted and processed by the head of 
the agency.
    (j) The head of the agency shall notify the complainant of the 
results of the appeal within 60 days of the receipt of the request. If 
the head of the agency determines that additional information is needed 
from the complainant, he or she shall have 60 days from the date of 
receipt of the additional information to make his or her determination 
on the appeal.
    (k) The time limits cited in paragraphs (g) and (j) of this section 
may be extended with the permission of the Assistant Attorney General.
    (l) The agency may delegate its authority for conducting complaint 
investigations to other Federal agencies, except that the authority for 
making the final determination may not be delegated to another agency.

[53 FR 25881 and 25885, July 8, 1988, as amended at 53 FR 25881, July 8, 
1988. Redesignated and amended at 54 FR 47345, Nov. 14, 1989; 59 FR 
64844, Dec. 16, 1994]
Secs. 1850.171--1850.999  [Reserved]

[[Page 289]]



            CHAPTER IX--APPALACHIAN REGIONAL COMMISSION




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Part                                                                Page
1900            Employee responsibilities and conduct.......         290

[[Page 290]]



PART 1900--EMPLOYEE RESPONSIBILITIES AND CONDUCT--Table of Contents




    Authority: 5 U.S.C. 7301, 40 U.S.C. App. 106.



Sec. 1900.100  Cross-references to employee ethical conduct standards and financial disclosure regulations.

    Officers and employees of the Appalachian Regional Commission 
Federal Staff are subject to the Standards of Ethical Conduct for 
Employees of the Executive Branch at 5 CFR part 2635 and the executive 
branch-wide financial disclosure regulations at 5 CFR part 2634.

[60 FR 62702, Dec. 7, 1995; 61 FR 13051, Mar. 26, 1996]

[[Page 291]]





                CHAPTER XI--ARMED FORCES RETIREMENT HOME




  --------------------------------------------------------------------
Part                                                                Page
2100            Armed Forces Retirement Home Privacy Act 
                    procedures..............................         292

[[Page 292]]



PART 2100--ARMED FORCES RETIREMENT HOME PRIVACY ACT PROCEDURES--Table of Contents




Sec.
2100.1  Purpose.
2100.2  Definitions.
2100.3  Procedure for requesting information.
2100.4  Requirements for identification.
2100.5  Access by individuals.
2100.6  Schedule of fees.
2100.7  Request for correction or amendment.
2100.8  Review of request for amendment.
2100.9  Appeal of denial to grant access or to amend records.
2100.10  Conditions of disclosure and accounting of certain disclosures.
2100.11  Penalties.
2100.12  Accounting of disclosure.
2100.13  Specific exemptions.

    Authority: Public Law 93-579, 88 Stat. 1896, 5 U.S.C. 552a(f).

    Source: 59 FR 30669, June 15, 1994, unless otherwise noted.



Sec. 2100.1  Purpose.

    Pursuant to the requirements of the Privacy Act of 1974, 5 U.S.C. 
552a, as amended, the following rules of procedures are established with 
respect to access and amendment of records maintained on the individual 
subjects of these records by the Armed Forces Retirement Home, which 
includes the continuing care retirement communities of the U.S. 
Soldiers' and Airmen's Home and the U.S. Naval Home. These rules do not 
apply to civilian employees' records maintained by the individual 
facilities which are covered by the Office of Personnel Management 
systems of records.



Sec. 2100.2  Definitions.

    (a) All terms used in this part which are defined in 5 U.S.C. 552a, 
as amended, shall have the same meaning herein.
    (b) Agency, as used in this part, means the Armed Forces Retirement 
Home (AFRH).
    (c) Facility or facilities refers to the continuing care retirement 
communities of the U.S. Soldiers' and Airmen's Home (USSAH) and the U.S. 
Naval Home (USNH), which are incorporated within the Armed Forces 
Retirement Home (AFRH).
    (d) Access means providing a copy of a record to, or allowing review 
of the original record by, the individual or the individual's authorized 
representative, legal guardian or conservator.



Sec. 2100.3  Procedure for requesting information.

    Individuals shall submit written inquiries regarding all AFRH 
records to the appropriate facility at the following addresses: 
Associate Director, Resource Management, U.S. Soldiers' and Airmen's 
Home, 3700 N. Capitol Street, NW., Washington, DC 20317-0002; or, 
Administrative Services, U.S. Naval Home, 1800 Beach Drive, Gulfport, 
Mississippi 39507-1597. All personal (walk-in) requests will require 
some form of common identification.



Sec. 2100.4  Requirements for identification.

    Only upon proper identification will any individual be granted 
access to records which pertain to him/her. Identification is required 
both for accurate record identification and to avoid disclosing records 
to unauthorized individuals. Individuals must provide their full name 
and as much information as possible in order that a proper search for 
records can be accomplished. Requests made by mail shall be signed by 
the individual requesting his/her records. Inclusion of a telephone 
number for the requester is recommended to expedite certain matters. 
Requesters applying in person must provide an identification with 
photograph, such as a driver's license, military or annuitant 
identification card, or any official document as acceptable 
identification validation. Personal requests can only be accepted on 
regularly scheduled workdays (Monday through Friday, excluding Federal 
holidays) between the hours of 7:30 a.m. and 3:30 p.m.



Sec. 2100.5  Access by individuals.

    (a) No individual will be allowed access to any information compiled 
or maintained in reasonable anticipation of civil actions or 
proceedings, or otherwise exempt under Sec. 2100.12. Requests for 
pending investigations will be denied and the requester instructed to

[[Page 293]]

forward another request giving adequate time for the investigation to be 
completed. Requesters shall be provided the telephone number so they can 
call and check on the status in order to know when to resubmit the 
request.
    (b) Any individual may authorize the facility to provide a copy of 
his/her records to a third party. This authorization must be in writing 
and shall be provided to the facility with the initial request.
    (c) Access to records may be authorized to the legal guardian or 
conservator acting on behalf of an individual who has been declared to 
be incompetent due to physical or mental incapacity or age by a court of 
competent jurisdiction.
    (d) When an individual requesting access to his/her record wishes to 
be accompanied by another individual during the course of the 
examination of the record, the individual making the request shall 
submit to the official having operational control of the record, a 
signed statement authorizing that person access to the record.
    (e) If medical records are requested and a USSAH or USNH 
practitioner believes that access to the records by the subject could 
harm that person's mental or physical health, the requester will be 
asked to name a practitioner to receive the records. If this requirement 
poses a hardship on the individual, he/she will be offered the service 
of an USSAH or USNH practitioner other than the one who provided 
treatment. If the individual refuses to name a recipient, the record 
will not be released.



Sec. 2100.6  Schedule of fees.

    (a) Individuals will not be charged for:
    (1) The search and review of the record.
    (2) Copies of the record produced as a necessary part of the process 
of making the record available for access; or,
    (3) Copies of the requested record when it has been determined that 
access can only be accomplished by providing a copy of the record 
through the mail.
    (b) Waiver. The official having operational control at the 
appropriate facility may at no charge, provide copies of a record if it 
is determined the production of the copies is in the interest of the 
Government.
    (c) Fee Schedule and method of payment. With the exception of 
paragraphs (a) and (b) of this section, fees will be charged as 
indicated below:
    (1) Records will be duplicated at a rate of $.10 per page for all 
copying of 5 pages or more. There is no charge for duplication of 4 or 
fewer pages.
    (2) Where it is anticipated that the fees chargeable under this 
section will amount to more than $30.00, the requester shall be promptly 
notified of the amount of the anticipated fee or such portion thereof as 
can readily be estimated. In instances where the estimated fees will 
exceed $30.00, an advance deposit may be required. The notice or request 
for advance deposit shall extend an offer to the requester in order to 
reformulate the request in a manner which will reduce the fees, yet 
still meet the needs of the requester.
    (3) Fees should be paid in full prior to issuance of requested 
copies. In the event the requester is in arrears for previous requested 
copies, no subsequent request will be processed until the arrears have 
been paid in full.
    (4) Remittances shall be in the form either of a personal check, 
bank draft drawn on a bank in the United States, or a postal money 
order. Remittances shall be made payable to the facility to which the 
request is being made, and mailed or delivered to the appropriate 
facility (see Sec. 2100.3 of this part).
    (5) A receipt for fees paid will be given upon request.



Sec. 2100.7  Request for correction or amendment.

    (a) Requests to correct or amend a file shall be addressed to the 
system manager in which the file is located. The request must reasonably 
describe the record to be amended, the items to be changed as 
specifically as possible, the type of amendment (e.g., deletion, 
correction, amendment), and the reason for the amendment. The request 
should also include the reasons why the requester believes the record is 
not accurate, relevant, timely, or complete. The burden of proof will be 
upon the individual to furnish sufficient facts to persuade the change 
of the

[[Page 294]]

record of the inaccuracy, irrelevancy, timeliness, or incompleteness of 
the record. Normally all documents submitted, to include court orders, 
shall be certified. Amendments under this part are limited to correcting 
factual matters and not matters of official judgement or opinions.
    (b) Requirements of identification as outlined in Sec. 2100.4 apply 
to requests to correct or amend a file.
    (c) Incomplete requests shall not be honored, but the requester 
shall be contacted for the additional information needed to process the 
request.
    (d) The amendment process is not intended to permit the alteration 
of evidence presented in the course of judicial or quasi-judicial 
proceedings. Any amendments or changes to these records normally are 
made through the specific procedures established for the amendment of 
such records.
    (e) When records sought to be amended are actually covered by 
another issuance, the administrative procedures under that issuance must 
be exhausted before using the procedures under the Privacy Act.



Sec. 2100.8  Review of request for amendment.

    (a) A written acknowledgement of the receipt of a request for 
amendment of a record will be provided to the requester within 10 
working days, unless final action regarding approval or denial will 
constitute acknowledgment.
    (b) Where there is a determination to grant all or a portion of a 
request to amend a record, the record shall be promptly amended and the 
requesting individual notified. Individuals, agencies or components 
shown by disclosure accounting records to have received copies of the 
record, or to whom disclosure has been made, will be notified of the 
amendment by the system manager in which the file is located.
    (c) Where there is a determination to deny all or a portion of a 
request to amend a record, a designated official will promptly advise 
the requesting individual of the specifics of the refusal and the 
reasons; and inform the individual that he/she may request a review of 
the denial(s).



Sec. 2100.9  Appeal of denial to grant access or to amend records.

    (a) All appeals of denial to grant access or to amend records should 
be addressed to the appropriate facility at the following addresses: 
Associate Director, Resource Management, U.S. Soldiers' and Airmen's 
Home, 3700 N. Capitol Street, NW., Washington, DC 20317-0002; or, 
Administrative Services, U.S. Naval Home, 1800 Beach Drive, Gulfport, 
Mississippi 39507-1597. The appeal should be concise and should specify 
the reasons the requester believes that the initial action was not 
satisfactory. If an appeal is denied, the designated official will 
notify the requester of the reason for denial and of the right to 
judicial review pursuant to 5 U.S.C. 552a(g). If an initial denial of a 
request to amend records is upheld, the requestor will also be advised 
of his or her right to file a statement of dispute disagreeing with the 
denial and such statement will be provided to all future users of the 
file.
    (b) If the designated official decides to amend the record, the 
requester and all previous recipients of the disputed information will 
be notified of the amendment. If the appeal is denied, the designated 
official will notify the requester of the reason of the denial, of the 
requester's right to file a statement of dispute disagreeing with the 
denial, that such statement of dispute will be retained in the file, 
that the statement will be provided to all future users of the file, and 
that the requester may file suit in a Federal district court to contest 
the decision not to amend the record.
    (c) The designated official will respond to all appeals within 30 
working days or will notify the requester of an estimated date of 
completion if the 30 day limit cannot be met.



Sec. 2100.10  Conditions of disclosure and accounting of certain disclosures.

    No record containing personally identifiable information within an 
AFRH system of records shall be disclosed by any means to any person or 
agency outside the AFRH, except by written request or prior written 
consent of the individual subject of the record, or as provided for in 
the Privacy Act of 1974,

[[Page 295]]

as amended, unless when such disclosure is:
    (a) To those officers and employees of the agency which maintains 
the record and who have a need for the record in the performance of 
their duties;
    (b) Required under 5 U.S.C. 552;
    (c) For a routine use of the record compatible with the purpose for 
which it was collected;
    (d) To the Bureau of the Census for purposes of planning or carrying 
out a census or survey or related activity pursuant to 13 U.S.C.;
    (e) To a recipient who has provided the AFRH with advance adequate 
written assurance that the record will be used solely as a statistical 
research or reporting record, and the record is to be transferred in a 
form that is not individually identifiable;
    (f) To the National Archives of the United States as a record which 
has sufficient historical or other value to warrant its continued 
preservation by the U.S. Government or for evaluation by the Archivist 
of the United States, or his/her designee, to determine whether the 
record has such value;
    (g) To another agency or to an instrumentality of any governmental 
jurisdiction within or under the control of the United States for a 
civil or criminal law enforcement activity if the activity is authorized 
by law, and if the head of the agency or instrumentality, has made a 
written request to the agency which maintains the record specifying the 
particular portion desired and the law enforcement activity for which 
the record is sought;
    (h) To a person pursuant to a showing of compelling circumstances 
affecting the health or safety of an individual if upon such disclosure 
notification is transmitted to the last known address of such 
individual;
    (i) To either House of Congress, or, to the extent of matter within 
its jurisdiction, any committee or subcommittee thereof, any joint 
committee of Congress or subcommittee of any such joint committee;
    (j) To the Comptroller General, or any authorized representatives, 
in the course of the performance of the duties of the General Accounting 
Office;
    (k) Pursuant to the order of a court of competent jurisdiction; or
    (l) To a consumer reporting agency in accordance with 31 U.S.C. 
3711(f).



Sec. 2100.11  Penalties.

    (a) An individual may bring a civil action against the AFRH to 
correct or amend the record, or where there is a refusal to comply with 
an individual request or failure to maintain any record with accuracy, 
relevance, timeliness and completeness, so as to guarantee fairness, or 
failure to comply with any other provision of the Privacy Act. The court 
may order correction or amendment of records. The court may enjoin the 
AFRH from withholding the records and order the production of the 
record.
    (b) Where it is determined that the action was willful or 
intentional with respect to 5 U.S.C. 552a(g)(1)(C) or (D), the United 
States may be liable for the actual damages sustained.
    (c) Criminal penalties may be imposed against an officer or employee 
of the USSAH or USNH who discloses material, which he/she knows is 
prohibited from disclosure, or who willfully maintains a system of 
records without compliance with the notice requirements.
    (d) Criminal penalties may be imposed against any person who 
knowingly and willfully requests or obtains any record concerning 
another individual from an agency under false pretenses.
    (e) All of these offenses are misdemeanors with a fine not to exceed 
$5,000.



Sec. 2100.12  Accounting of disclosure.

    (a) The AFRH or agency will maintain a record of disclosures in 
cases where records about the individual are disclosed from a system of 
records except--
    (1) When the disclosure is made pursuant to the Freedom of 
Information Act, 5 U.S.C. 552, as amended; or
    (2) When the disclosure is made to those officers and employees of 
the AFRH who have a need for the record in the performance of their 
duties.
    (b) This accounting of the disclosures will be retained for a least 
5 years or for the life of the record, whichever is longer, and will 
contain the following information:

[[Page 296]]

    (1) A brief description of the record disclosed;
    (2) The date, nature, and purpose for the disclosure; and,
    (3) The name and address of the person, agency, or other entity to 
whom the disclosure is made.
    (c) Except for the accounting of disclosure made to agencies, 
individuals, or entities in law enforcement activities or disclosures 
made from the AFRH exempt systems of records, the accounting of 
disclosures will be made available to the data subject upon request in 
accordance with the access procedures of this part.



Sec. 2100.13  Specific exemptions.

    Subsection (k) of 5 U.S.C. 552a authorizes the AFRH to adopt rules 
designating eligible system of records as exempt from certain 
requirements of 5 U.S.C. 552a. To be eligible for a specific exemption 
under the authority of 5 U.S.C. 552a(k), the pertinent records within a 
designated system must contain one or more of the following:
    (a) Investigative records compiled for law enforcement purposes. If 
this information has been used to deny someone a right however, the AFRH 
must release it unless doing so would reveal the identify of a 
confidential source ((k)(2) exemption).
    (b) Records used only for statistical, research, or other evaluation 
purposes, and which are not used to make decisions on the rights, 
benefits, or privileges of individuals, except as permitted by 13 U.S.C. 
8 (Use of census data) ((k)(4) exemption).
    (c) Data compiled to determine suitability, eligibility, or 
qualifications for Federal service, Federal contracts, or access to 
classified information. This information may be withheld only if 
disclosure would reveal the identity of a confidential source ((k)(5) 
exemption).
    (d) Test or examination material used solely to determine individual 
qualifications for appointment or promotion in the Federal service, the 
disclosure of which would compromise the objectivity or fairness of the 
testing or examination process ((k)(6) exemption).

[[Page 297]]



CHAPTER XIV--FEDERAL LABOR RELATIONS AUTHORITY, GENERAL COUNSEL OF THE FEDERAL LABOR RELATIONS AUTHORITY AND FEDERAL SERVICE IMPASSES PANEL




  --------------------------------------------------------------------

        SUBCHAPTER A--TRANSITION RULES AND REGULATIONS [RESERVED]
                    SUBCHAPTER B--GENERAL PROVISIONS
Part                                                                Page
2411            Availability of official information........         299
2412            Privacy.....................................         307
2413            Open meetings...............................         313
2414            Ex parte communications.....................         315
2415            Employee responsibilities and conduct.......         317
2416            Enforcement of nondiscrimination on the 
                    basis of handicap in programs or 
                    activities conducted by the Federal 
                    Labor Relations Authority...............         318
 SUBCHAPTER C--FEDERAL LABOR RELATIONS AUTHORITY AND GENERAL COUNSEL OF 
                  THE FEDERAL LABOR RELATIONS AUTHORITY
2420            Purpose and scope...........................         325
2421            Meaning of terms as used in this subchapter.         325
2422            Representation proceedings..................         327
2423            Unfair labor practice proceedings...........         339
2424            Expedited review of negotiability issues....         349
2425            Review of arbitration awards................         352
2426            National consultation rights and 
                    consultation rights on Government-wide 
                    rules or regulations....................         353
2427            General statements of policy or guidance....         357
2428            Enforcement of Assistant Secretary standards 
                    of conduct decisions and orders.........         358
2429            Miscellaneous and general requirements......         359
2430            Awards of attorney fees and other expenses..         365
              SUBCHAPTER D--FEDERAL SERVICE IMPASSES PANEL
2470            General.....................................         370

[[Page 298]]

2471            Procedures of the panel.....................         370
2472            Impasses arising pursuant to agency 
                    determinations not to establish or to 
                    terminate flexible or compressed work 
                    schedules...............................         374
2473            Subpoenas...................................         378

 Appendix A to 5 CFR Chapter XIV--Current Addresses and 
  Geographic Jurisdictions..................................         379

 Appendix B to 5 CFR Chapter XIV--Memorandum Describing the 
  Authority and Assigned Responsibilities of the General 
  Counsel of the Federal Labor Relations Authority..........         380

[[Page 299]]



        SUBCHAPTER A--TRANSITION RULES AND REGULATIONS [RESERVED]





                    SUBCHAPTER B--GENERAL PROVISIONS





PART 2411--AVAILABILITY OF OFFICIAL INFORMATION--Table of Contents




Sec.
2411.1  Purpose and scope.
2411.2  Delegation of authority.
2411.3  Information policy.
2411.4  Procedure for obtaining information.
2411.5  Identification of information requested.
2411.6  Time limits for processing requests.
2411.7  Appeal from denial of request.
2411.8  Extension of time limits.
2411.9  Effect of failure to meet time limits.
2411.10  Fees.
2411.11  Compliance with subpenas.
2411.12  Annual report.

    Authority: 5 U.S.C. 552.

    Source: 45 FR 3488, Jan. 17, 1980, unless otherwise noted.



Sec. 2411.1  Purpose and scope.

    This part contains the regulations of the Federal Labor Relations 
Authority, the General Counsel of the Federal Labor Relations Authority 
and the Federal Service Impasses Panel providing for public access to 
information from the Authority, the General Counsel or the Panel. These 
regulations implement the Freedom of Information Act, as amended, 5 
U.S.C. 552, and the policy of the Authority, the General Counsel and the 
Panel to disseminate information on matters of interest to the public 
and to disclose to members of the public on request such information 
contained in records insofar as is compatible with the discharge of 
their responsibilities, consistent with applicable law.



Sec. 2411.2  Delegation of authority.

    (a) Federal Labor Relations Authority/General Counsel of the Federal 
Labor Relations Authority. Regional Directors of the Federal Labor 
Relations Authority, the Freedom of Information Officer of the Office of 
the General Counsel, Washington, DC, and the Solicitor of the Federal 
Labor Relations Authority are delegated the exclusive authority to act 
upon all requests for information, documents and records which are 
received from any person or organization under Sec. 2411.4(a).
    (b) Federal Service Impasses Panel. The Executive Director of the 
Federal Service Impasses Panel is delegated the exclusive authority to 
act upon all requests for information, documents and records which are 
received from any person or organization under Sec. 2411.4(b).



Sec. 2411.3  Information policy.

    (a) Federal Labor Relations Authority/General Counsel of the Federal 
Labor Relations Authority. (1) It is the policy of the Federal Labor 
Relations Authority and the General Counsel of the Federal Labor 
Relations Authority to make available for public inspection and copying: 
(i) Final decisions and orders of the Authority and administrative 
rulings of the General Counsel; (ii) statements of policy and 
interpretations which have been adopted by the Authority or by the 
General Counsel and are not published in the Federal Register; and (iii) 
administrative staff manuals and instructions to staff that affect a 
member of the public (except those establishing internal operating 
rules, guidelines, and procedures for the investigation, trial, and 
settlement of cases). Any person may examine and copy items (i) through 
(iii) at each regional office of the Authority and at the offices of the 
Authority and the General Counsel, respectively, in Washington, DC, 
under conditions prescribed by the Authority and the General Counsel, 
respectively, and at reasonable times during normal working hours so 
long as it does not interfere with the efficient operations of the 
Authority and the General Counsel. To the extent required to prevent a 
clearly unwarranted invasion of personal privacy, identifying details 
may be deleted and, in each case, the justification for the deletion 
shall be fully explained in writing.
    (2) It is the policy of the Authority and the General Counsel to 
make promptly available for public inspection and copying, upon request 
by any

[[Page 300]]

person, other records where the request reasonably describes such 
records and otherwise conforms with the rules provided herein.
    (b) Federal Service Impasses Panel. (1) It is the policy of the 
Federal Service Impasses Panel to make available for public inspection 
and copying: (i) Procedural determinations of the Panel; (ii) 
factfinding and arbitration reports; (iii) final decisions and orders of 
the Panel; (iv) statements of policy and interpretations which have been 
adopted by the Panel and are not published in the Federal Register; and 
(v) administrative staff manuals and instructions to staff that affect a 
member of the public. Any person may examine and copy items (i) through 
(v) at the Panel's offices in Washington, D.C., under conditions 
prescribed by the Panel, and at reasonable times during normal working 
hours so long as it does not interfere with the efficient operations of 
the Panel. To the extent required to prevent a clearly unwarranted 
invasion of personal privacy, identifying details may be deleted and, in 
each case, the justification for the deletion shall be fully explained 
in writing.
    (2) It is the policy of the Panel to make promptly available for 
public inspection and copying, upon request by any person, other records 
where the request reasonably describes such records and otherwise 
conforms with the rules provided herein.
    (c) The Authority, the General Counsel and the Panel shall maintain 
and make available for public inspection and copying the current indexes 
and supplements thereto which are required by 5 U.S.C. 552(a)(2) and, as 
appropriate, a record of the final votes of each member of the Authority 
and of the Panel in every agency proceeding. Any person may examine and 
copy such document or record of the Authority, the General Counsel or 
the Panel at the offices of either the Authority, the General Counsel, 
or the Panel, as appropriate, in Washington, D.C., under conditions 
prescribed by the Authority, the General Counsel or the Panel at 
reasonable times during normal working hours so long as it does not 
interfere with the efficient operations of either the Authority, the 
General Counsel, or the Panel.
    (d) The Authority, the General Counsel or the Panel may decline to 
disclose any matters exempted from the disclosure requirements in 5 
U.S.C. 552(b), particularly those that are:
    (1)(i) Specifically authorized under criteria established by an 
executive order to be kept secret in the interest of national defense or 
foreign policy and (ii) are in fact properly classified pursuant to such 
executive order;
    (2) Related solely to internal personnel rules and practices of the 
Authority, the General Counsel or the Panel;
    (3) Specifically exempted from disclosure by statute (other than 5 
U.S.C. 552(b)), provided that such statute:
    (i) Requires that the matters be withheld from the public in such a 
manner as to leave no discretion on the issue; or
    (ii) Establishes particular criteria for withholding or refers to 
particular types of matters to be withheld;
    (4) Trade secrets and commercial or financial information obtained 
from a person and privileged or confidential;
    (5) Interagency or intra-agency memoranda or letters which would not 
be available by law to a party other than an agency in litigation with 
the agency;
    (6) Personnel and medical files and similar files the disclosure of 
which would constitute a clearly unwarranted invasion of personal 
privacy; or
    (7) Investigatory records compiled for law enforcement purposes, but 
only to the extent that the production of such records would:
    (i) Interfere with an enforcement proceeding;
    (ii) Deprive a person of a right to a fair trial or an impartial 
adjudication;
    (iii) Constitute an unwarranted invasion of personal privacy;
    (iv) Disclose the identity of a confidential source and, in the case 
of a record compiled by a criminal law enforcement authority in the 
course of a criminal investigation, or by an agency conducting a lawful 
national security intelligence investigation, confidential information 
furnished only by the confidential source;
    (v) Disclose investigative techniques and procedures; or

[[Page 301]]

    (vi) Endanger the life or physical safety of law enforcement 
personnel.
    (e)(1) The formal documents constituting the record in a case or 
proceeding are matters of official record and, until destroyed pursuant 
to applicable statutory authority, are available to the public for 
inspection and copying at the appropriate regional office of the 
Authority, or the offices of the Authority, the General Counsel or the 
Panel in Washington, D.C., as appropriate, under conditions prescribed 
by the Authority, the General Counsel or the Panel at reasonable times 
during normal working hours so long as it does not interfere with the 
efficient operations of the Authority, the General Counsel or the Panel.
    (2) The Authority, the General Counsel or the Panel, as appropriate, 
shall certify copies of the formal documents upon request made a 
reasonable time in advance of need and payment of lawfully prescribed 
costs.
    (f)(1) Copies of forms prescribed by the Authority for the filing of 
charges and petitions may be obtained without charge from any regional 
office of the Authority.
    (2) Copies of forms prescribed by the Panel for the filing of 
requests may be obtained without charge from the Panel's offices in 
Washington, DC.



Sec. 2411.4  Procedure for obtaining information.

    (a) Federal Labor Relations Authority/General Counsel of the Federal 
Labor Relations Authority. Any person who desires to inspect or copy any 
records, documents or other information of the Authority or the General 
Counsel, covered by this part, other than those specified in paragraphs 
(a)(1) and (c) of Sec. 2411.3, shall submit a written request to that 
effect as follows:
    (1) If the request is for records, documents or other information in 
a regional office of the Authority, it should be made to the appropriate 
Regional Director;
    (2) If the request is for records, documents or other information in 
the Office of the General Counsel and located in Washington, DC, it 
should be made to the Freedom of Information Officer, Office of the 
General Counsel, Washington, DC; and
    (3) If the request is for records, documents or other information in 
the offices of the Authority in Washington, D.C., it should be made to 
the Solicitor of the Authority, Washington, D.C.
    (b) Federal Service Impasses Panel. Any person who desires to 
inspect or copy any records, documents or other information of the Panel 
covered by this part, other than those specified in paragraphs (b)(1) 
and (c) of Sec. 2411.3, shall submit a written request to that effect to 
the Executive Director, Federal Service Impasses Panel, Washington, DC.
    (c) All requests under this part should be clearly and prominently 
identified as a request for information under the Freedom of Information 
Act and, if submitted by mail or otherwise submitted in an envelope or 
other cover, should be clearly identified as such on the envelope or 
other cover. If a request does not comply with the provisions of this 
paragraph, it shall not be deemed received by the appropriate Regional 
Director, the Freedom of Information Officer of the Office of the 
General Counsel, the Solicitor of the Authority, or the Executive 
Director of the Panel, as appropriate, until the time it is actually 
received by such person.



Sec. 2411.5  Identification of information requested.

    (a) Each request under this part should reasonably describe the 
records being sought in a way that they can be identified and located. A 
request should include all pertinent details that will help identify the 
records sought.
    (b) If the description is insufficient, the officer processing the 
request will so notify the person making the request and indicate the 
additional information needed. Every reasonable effort shall be made to 
assist in the identification and location of the record sought.
    (c) Upon receipt of a request for records, the appropriate Regional 
Director, the Freedom of Information Officer of the Office of the 
General Counsel, the Solicitor of the Authority, or the Executive 
Director of the Panel, as appropriate, shall enter it in a public log. 
The log shall state the date and

[[Page 302]]

time received, the name and address of the person making the request, 
the nature of the records requested, the action taken on the request, 
the date of the determination letter sent pursuant to paragraphs (b) and 
(c) of Sec. 2411.6, the date(s) any records are subsequently furnished, 
the number of staff-hours and grade levels of persons who spent time 
responding to the request, and the payment requested and received.



Sec. 2411.6  Time limits for processing requests.

    (a) All time limits established pursuant to this section shall begin 
as of the time at which a request for records is logged in by the 
appropriate Regional Director, the Freedom of Information Officer of the 
Office of the General Counsel, the Solicitor of the Authority, or the 
Executive Director of the Panel, as appropriate, processing the request 
pursuant to paragraph (c) of Sec. 2411.5. An oral request for records 
shall not begin any time requirement. A written request for records sent 
to other than the appropriate officer will be forwarded to that officer 
by the receiving officer, but in that event the applicable time limit 
for response set forth in paragraph (b) of this section shall begin upon 
the request being logged in as required by paragraph (c) of Sec. 2411.5.
    (b) Except as provided in Sec. 2411.8, the appropriate Regional 
Director, the Freedom of Information Officer of the Office of the 
General Counsel, the Solicitor of the Authority, or the Executive 
Director of the Panel, as appropriate, shall, within ten (10) working 
days following receipt of the request, respond in writing to the 
requester, determining whether, or the extent to which, the request 
shall be complied with.
    (1) If all the records requested have been located and a final 
determination has been made with respect to disclosure of all of the 
records requested, the response shall so state.
    (2) If all of the records have not been located or a final 
determination has not been made with respect to disclosure of all the 
records requested, the response shall state the extent to which the 
records involved shall be disclosed pursuant to the rules established in 
this part.
    (3) If the request is expected to involve allowed charges in excess 
of $250.00, the response shall specify or estimate the fee involved and 
shall require prepayment of any charges in accordance with the 
provisions of paragraph (g) of Sec. 2411.10 before the request is 
processed further.
    (4) Whenever possible, the response relating to a request for 
records that involves a fee of less than $250.00 shall be accompanied by 
the requested records. Where this is not possible, the records shall be 
forwarded as soon as possible thereafter, consistent with other 
obligations of the Authority, the General Counsel or the Panel.
    (c) If any request for records is denied in whole or in part, the 
response required by paragraph (b) of this section shall notify the 
requester of the denial. Such denial shall specify the reason therefor, 
set forth the name and title or position of the person responsible for 
the denial, and notify the person making the request of the right to 
appeal the denial under the provisions of Sec. 2411.7.

[45 FR 3488, Jan. 17, 1980, as amended at 52 FR 26128, July 13, 1987]



Sec. 2411.7  Appeal from denial of request.

    (a) Federal Labor Relations Authority/General Counsel of the Federal 
Labor Relations Authority. (1) Whenever any request for records is 
denied, a written appeal may be filed within thirty (30) days after the 
requester receives notification that the request has been denied or 
after the requester receives any records being made available, in the 
event of partial denial. If the denial was made by a Regional Director 
or by the Freedom of Information Officer of the Office of the General 
Counsel, the appeal shall be filed with the General Counsel in 
Washington, DC. If the denial was made by the Solicitor of the 
Authority, the appeal shall be filed with the Chairman of the Authority 
in Washington, DC.
    (2) The Chairman of the Authority or the General Counsel, as 
appropriate, shall, within twenty (20) working days from the time of 
receipt of the appeal, except as provided in Sec. 2411.8, make a 
determination on the appeal and respond in writing to the requester, 
determining whether, or the extent to

[[Page 303]]

which, the request shall be complied with.
    (i) If the determination is to comply with the request and the 
request is expected to involve an assessed fee in excess of $25.00, the 
determination shall specify or estimate the fee involved and shall 
require prepayment of any charges due in accordance with the provisions 
of paragraph (a) of Sec. 2411.10 before the records are made available.
    (ii) Whenever possible, the determination relating to a request for 
records that involves a fee of less than $25.00 shall be accompanied by 
the requested records. Where this is not possible, the records shall be 
forwarded as soon as possible thereafter, consistent with other 
obligations of the Authority or the General Counsel.
    (b) Federal Service Impasses Panel. (1) Whenever any request for 
records is denied by the Executive Director, a written appeal may be 
filed with the Chairman of the Panel within thirty (30) days after the 
requester receives notification that the request has been denied or 
after the requester receives any records being made available, in the 
event of partial denial.
    (2) The Chairman of the Panel, within twenty (20) working days from 
the time of receipt of the appeal, except as provided in Sec. 2411.8, 
shall make a determination on the appeal and respond in writing to the 
requester, determining whether, or the extent to which, the request 
shall be complied with.
    (i) If the determination is to comply with the request and the 
request is expected to involve an assessed fee in excess of $25.00, the 
determination shall specify or estimate the fee involved and shall 
require prepayment of any charges due in accordance with the provisions 
of paragraph (a) of Sec. 2411.10 before the records are made available.
    (ii) Whenever possible, the determination relating to a request for 
records that involves a fee of less than $25.00 shall be accompanied by 
the requested records. Where this is not possible, the records shall be 
forwarded as soon as possible thereafter, consistent with other 
obligations of the Panel.
    (c) If on appeal the denial of the request for records is upheld in 
whole or in part by the Chairman of the Authority, the General Counsel, 
or the Chairman of the Panel, as appropriate, the person making the 
request shall be notified of the reasons for the determination, the name 
and title or position of the person responsible for the denial, and the 
provisions for judicial review of that determination under 5 U.S.C. 
552(a)(4). Even though no appeal is filed from a denial in whole or in 
part of a request for records by the person making the request, the 
Chairman of the Authority, the General Counsel or the Chairman of the 
Panel, as appropriate, may, without regard to the time limit for filing 
of an appeal, sua sponte initiate consideration of a denial under this 
appeal procedure by written notification to the person making the 
request. In such event the time limit for making the determination shall 
commence with the issuance of such notification.



Sec. 2411.8  Extension of time limits.

    In unusual circumstances as specified in this section, the time 
limits prescribed with respect to initial determinations or 
determinations on appeal may be extended by written notice from the 
officer handling the request (either initial or on appeal) to the person 
making such request setting forth the reasons for such extension and the 
date on which a determination is expected to be dispatched. No such 
notice shall specify a date that would result in a total extension of 
more than ten (10) working days. As used in this section, ``unusual 
circumstances'' means, but only to the extent reasonably necessary to 
the proper processing of the particular request:
    (a) The need to search for and collect the requested records from 
field facilities or other establishments that are separate from the 
office processing the request;
    (b) The need to search for, collect and appropriately examine a 
voluminous amount of separate and distinct records which are demanded in 
a single request; or
    (c) The need for consultation, which shall be conducted with all 
practicable speed, with another agency having a substantial interest in 
the determination of the request or among two or more components of the 
agency having substantial subject matter interest therein.

[[Page 304]]



Sec. 2411.9  Effect of failure to meet time limits.

    Failure by the Authority, the General Counsel or the Panel either to 
deny or grant any request under this part within the time limits 
prescribed by the Freedom of Information Act, as amended, 5 U.S.C. 552, 
and these regulations shall be deemed to be an exhaustion of the 
administrative remedies available to the person making this request.



Sec. 2411.10  Fees.

    (a) Definitions. For the purpose of this section:
    (1) The term direct costs means those expenditures which the 
Authority, the General Counsel or the Panel actually incurs in searching 
for and duplicating (and in the case of commercial requesters, 
reviewing) documents to respond to a FOIA request. Direct costs include, 
for example, the salary of the employee performing work (the basic rate 
of pay for the employee plus 16 percent of the rate to cover benefits) 
and the cost of operating duplicating machinery. Not included in direct 
costs are overhead expenses such as costs of space, and heating or 
lighting the facility in which the records are stored.
    (2) The term search includes all time spent looking for material 
that is responsive to a request, including page-by-page or line-by-line 
identification of material within documents. Searches may be done 
manually or by computer using existing programming.
    (3) The term duplication refers to the process of making a copy of a 
document necessary to respond to a FOIA request. Such copies can take 
the form of paper copy, microfilm, audio-visual materials, or machine 
readable documentation (e.g., magnetic tape or disk), among others.
    (4) The term review refers to the process of examining documents 
located in response to a commercial use request (see paragraph (a)(5) of 
this section) to determine whether any portion of any document located 
is permitted to be withheld. It also includes processing any documents 
for disclosure, e.g., doing all that is necessary to excise them and 
otherwise prepare them for release. Review does not include time spent 
resolving general legal or policy issues regarding the application of 
exemptions.
    (5) The term ``commercial use'' request refers to a request from or 
on behalf of one who seeks information for a use or purpose that 
furthers the commercial, trade, or profit interests of the requester or 
the person on whose behalf the request is made. In determining whether a 
requester properly belongs in this category, the Authority, the General 
Counsel or the Panel will look first to the use to which a requester 
will put the document requested. Where the Authority, the General 
Counsel or the Panel has reasonable cause to doubt the use to which a 
requester will put the records sought, or where that use is not clear 
from the request itself, the Authority, the General Counsel or the Panel 
may seek additional clarification before assigning the request to a 
specific category.
    (6) The term educational institution refers to a preschool, a public 
or private elementary or secondary school, an institution of graduate 
higher education, an institution of undergraduate higher education, an 
institution of professional education, and an institution of vocational 
education, which operates a program or programs of scholarly research.
    (7) The term non-commercial scientific institution refers to an 
institution that is not operated on a ``commercial'' basis as that term 
is referenced in paragraph (a)(5) of this section, and which is operated 
solely for the purpose of conducting scientific research the results of 
which are not intended to promote any particular product or industry.
    (8) The term representative of the news media refers to any person 
actively gathering news for an entity that is organized and operated to 
publish or broadcast news to the public. The term news means information 
that is about current events or that would be of current interest to the 
public. Examples of news media entities include television or radio 
stations broadcasting to the public at large, and publishers of 
periodicals (but only in those instances when they can qualify as 
disseminators of ``news'') who make their products available for 
purchase or subscription by the general public. These examples

[[Page 305]]

are not intended to be all-inclusive. In the case of ``freelance'' 
journalists, they may be regarded as working for a news organization if 
they demonstrate a solid basis for expecting publication through that 
organization, even though not actually employed by it. A publication 
contract would be the clearest proof, but the Authority, the General 
Counsel or the Panel may also look to the past publication record of a 
requester, press accreditation, guild membership, business registration, 
Federal Communications Commission licensing, or similar credentials of a 
requester in making this determination.
    (b) Exceptions to fee charges. (1) With the exception of requesters 
seeking documents for a commercial use, the Authority, the General 
Counsel or the Panel will provide the first 100 pages of duplication and 
the first two hours of search time without charge. The word ``pages'' in 
this paragraph refers to paper copies of standard size, usually 8\1/2\'' 
by 11'', or their equivalent in microfiche or computer disks. The term 
``search time'' in this paragraph is based on a manual search for 
records. In applying this term to searches made by computer, when the 
cost of the search as set forth in paragraph (d)(2) of this section 
equals the equivalent dollar amount of two hours of the salary of the 
person performing the search, the Authority, the General Counsel or the 
Panel will begin assessing charges for computer search.
    (2) The Authority, the General Counsel, or the Panel will not charge 
fees to any requester, including commercial use requesters, if the cost 
of collecting the fee would be equal to or greater than the fee itself.
    (3)(i) The Authority, the General Counsel or the Panel will provide 
documents without charge or at reduced charges if disclosure of the 
information is in the public interest because it is likely to contribute 
significantly to public understanding of the operations or activities of 
the government and is not primarily in the commercial interest of the 
requester.
    (ii) In determining whether disclosure is in the public interest 
under paragraph (b)(3)(i) of this section, the Authority, the General 
Counsel, and the Panel will consider the following factors:
    (a) The subject of the request. Whether the subject of the requested 
records concerns ``the operations or activities of the government'';
    (b) The informative value of the information to be disclosed. 
Whether the disclosure is ``likely to contribute'' to an understanding 
of government operations or activities;
    (c) The contribution to an understanding of the subject by the 
general public likely to result from disclosure. Whether disclosure of 
the requested information will contribute to ``public understanding'';
    (d) The significance of the contribution to the public 
understanding. Whether the disclosure is likely to contribute 
``significantly'' to public understanding of government operations or 
activities;
    (e) The existence and magnitude of a commercial interest. Whether 
the requester has a commercial interest that would be furthered by the 
requested disclosure; and, if so
    (f) The primary interest in disclosure. Whether the magnitude of the 
identified commercial interest of the requester is sufficiently large, 
in comparison with the public interest in disclosure, that disclosure is 
``primary in the commercial interest of the requester.''
    (iii) A request for a fee waiver based on the public interest under 
paragraph (b)(3)(i) of this section must address these factors as they 
apply to the request for records in order to be considered by the 
Authority, the General Counsel, or the Panel.
    (c) Level of fees to be charged. The level of fees to be charged by 
the Authority, the General Counsel or the Panel, in accordance with the 
schedule set forth in paragraph (d) of this section, depends on the 
category of the requester. The fee levels to be charged are as follows:
    (1) A request for documents appearing to be for commercial use will 
be charged to recover the full direct costs of searching for, reviewing 
for release, and duplicating the records sought.
    (2) A request for documents from an educational or non-commercial 
scientific institution will be charged for

[[Page 306]]

the cost of reproduction alone, excluding charges for the first 100 
pages. To be eligible for inclusion in this category, requesters must 
show that the request is being made under the auspices of a qualifying 
institution and that the records are not sought for a commercial use, 
but are sought in furtherance of scholarly (if the request is from an 
educational institution) or scientific (if the request is from a non-
commercial scientific institution) research.
    (3) The Authority, the General Counsel or the Panel shall provide 
documents to requesters who are representatives of the news media for 
the cost of reproduction alone, excluding charges for the first 100 
pages.
    (4) The Authority, the General Counsel or the Panel shall charge 
requesters who do not fit into any of the categories above fees which 
recover the full direct cost of searching for and reproducing records 
that are responsive to the request, except that the first 100 pages of 
reproduction and the first two hours of search time shall be furnished 
without charge. Requests from record subjects for records about 
themselves filed in Authority, General Counsel, or Panel systems of 
records will continue to be treated under the fee provisions of the 
Privacy Act of 1974, which permits fees only for reproduction.

All requesters must reasonably describe the records sought.
    (d) The following fees shall be charged in accordance with paragraph 
(c) of this section:
    (1) Manual searches for records. The salary rate (i.e., basic pay 
plus 16 percent) of the employee(s) making the search. Search time under 
this paragraph and paragraph (d)(2) of this section may be charged for 
even if the Authority, the General Counsel or the Panel fails to locate 
records or if records located are determined to be exempt from 
disclosure.
    (2) Computer searches for records. $4.15 per quarter hour, which the 
Authority, the General Counsel and the Panel determined to be the actual 
direct cost of providing the service, including computer search time 
directly attributable to searching for records responsive to a FOIA 
request, runs, and operator salary apportionable to the search.
    (3) Review of records. The salary rate (i.e., basic pay plus 16 
percent) of the employee(s) conducting the review. This charge applies 
only to requesters who are seeking documents for commercial use, and 
only to the review necessary at the initial administrative level to 
determine the applicability of any relevant FOIA exemptions, and not at 
the administrative appeal level of an exemption already applied.
    (4) Duplication of records. Twenty-five cents per page for paper 
copy reproduction of documents, which the Authority, the General Counsel 
and the Panel determined is the reasonable direct cost of making such 
copies, taking into account the average salary of the operator and the 
cost of the reproduction machinery. For copies of records prepared by 
computer, such as tapes or printouts, the Authority, the General Counsel 
or the Panel shall charge the actual cost, including operator time, of 
production of the tape or printout.
    (5) Forwarding material to destination. Postage, insurance and 
special fees will be charged on an actual cost basis.
    (e) Aggregating requests. When the Authority, the General Counsel or 
the Panel reasonably believes that a requester or group of requesters is 
attempting to break a request down into a series of requests for the 
purpose of evading the assessment of fees, the Authority, the General 
Counsel or the Panel will aggregate any such requests and charge 
accordingly.
    (f) Charging interest. Interest at the rate prescribed in 31 U.S.C. 
3717 may be charged those requesters who fail to pay fees charged, 
beginning on the 30th day following the billing date. Receipt of a fee 
by the Authority, the General Counsel or the Panel, whether processed or 
not, will stay the accrual of interest.
    (g) Advanced payments. The Authority, the General Counsel or the 
Panel will not require a requester to make an advance payment, i.e., 
payment before work is commenced or continued on a request, unless:
    (1) The Authority, the General Counsel or the Panel estimates or 
determines that allowable charges that a requester may be required to 
pay are likely to exceed $250. Then the Authority, the General Counsel 
or the Panel

[[Page 307]]

will notify the requester of the likely cost and obtain satisfactory 
assurance of full payment where the requester has a history of prompt 
payment of FOIA fees, or require an advance payment of an amount up to 
the full estimated charges in the case of requesters with no history of 
payment; or
    (2) A requester has previously failed to pay a fee charged in a 
timely fashion (i.e., within 30 days of the date of the billing), in 
which case the Authority, the General Counsel or the Panel requires the 
requester to pay the full amount owed plus any applicable interest as 
provided above or demonstrate that he has, in fact, paid the fee, and to 
make an advance payment of the full amount of the estimated fee before 
the agency begins to process a new request or a pending request from 
that requester. When the Authority, the General Counsel or the Panel 
acts under paragraph (g) (1) or (2) of this section, the administrative 
time limits prescribed in subsection (a)(6) of the FOIA (i.e., 10 
working days from receipt of initial requests and 20 working days from 
receipt of appeals from initial denial, plus permissible extension of 
these time limits) will begin only after the Authority, the General 
Counsel or the Panel has received fee payments described above.
    (h) Requests for copies of transcripts of hearings should be made to 
the official hearing reporter. However, a person may request a copy of a 
transcript of a hearing from the Authority, the Panel or the General 
Counsel, as appropriate. In such instances, the Authority, the General 
Counsel or the Panel, as appropriate, may, by agreement with the person 
making the request, make arrangements with commercial firms for required 
services to be charged directly to the requester.
    (i) Payment of fees shall be made by check or money order payable to 
the U.S. Treasury.

[52 FR 26128, July 13, 1987]



Sec. 2411.11  Compliance with subpenas.

    No member of the Authority or the Panel, or the General Counsel, or 
other officer or employee of the Authority, the Panel, or the General 
Counsel shall produce or present any files, documents, reports, 
memoranda, or records of the Authority, the Panel or the General 
Counsel, or testify in behalf of any party to any cause pending in any 
arbitration or in any court or before the Authority or the Panel, or any 
other board, commission, or administrative agency of the United States, 
territory, or the District of Columbia with respect to any information, 
facts, or other matter to their knowledge in their official capacity or 
with respect to the contents of any files, documents, reports, 
memoranda, or records of the Authority, the Panel or the General 
Counsel, whether in answer to a subpena, subpena duces tecum, or 
otherwise, without the written consent of the Authority, the Panel or 
the General Counsel, as appropriate. Whenever any subpena, the purpose 
for which is to adduce testimony or require the production of records as 
described above, shall have been served on any member or other officer 
or employee of the Authority, the Panel or the General Counsel, such 
person will, unless otherwise expressly directed by the Authority, the 
Panel or the General Counsel, as appropriate, and as provided by law, 
move pursuant to the applicable procedure to have such subpena 
invalidated on the ground that the evidence sought is privileged against 
disclosure by this rule.



Sec. 2411.12  Annual report.

    On or before March 1 of each calendar year, the Executive Director 
of the Authority shall submit a report of the activities of the 
Authority, the General Counsel and the Panel with regard to public 
information requests during the preceding calendar year to the Speaker 
of the House of Representatives and the President of the Senate for 
referral to the appropriate committees of the Congress. The report shall 
include for such calendar year all information required by 5 U.S.C. 
552(d) and such other information as indicates the efforts of the 
Authority, the General Counsel and the Panel to administer fully the 
provisions of the Freedom of Information Act, as amended.



PART 2412--PRIVACY--Table of Contents




Sec.
2412.1  Purpose and scope.

[[Page 308]]

2412.2  Definitions.
2412.3  Notice and publication.
2412.4  Existence of records requests.
2412.5  Individual access requests.
2412.6  Initial decision on access requests.
2412.7  Special procedures; medical records.
2412.8  Limitations on disclosures.
2412.9  Accounting of disclosures.
2412.10  Requests for correction or amendment of records.
2412.11  Initial decision on correction or amendment.
2412.12  Amendment or correction of previously disclosed records.
2412.13  Agency review of refusal to provide access to, or amendment or 
          correction of, records.
2412.14  Fees.
2412.15  Penalties.
2412.16  Exemptions.

    Authority: 5 U.S.C. 552a.

    Source: 45 FR 3491, Jan. 17, 1980, unless otherwise noted.



Sec. 2412.1  Purpose and scope.

    This part contains the regulations of the Federal Labor Relations 
Authority, the General Counsel of the Federal Labor Relations Authority 
and the Federal Service Impasses Panel implementing the Privacy Act of 
1974, as amended, 5 U.S.C. 552a. The regulations apply to all records 
maintained by the Authority, the General Counsel and the Panel that are 
contained in a system of records, as defined herein, and that contain 
information about an individual. The regulations in this part set forth 
procedures that: (a) Authorize an individual's access to records 
maintained about the individual; (b) limit the access of other persons 
to those records; and (c) permit an individual to request the amendment 
or correction of records about the individual.



Sec. 2412.2  Definitions.

    For the purposes of this part--
    (a) Individual means a citizen of the United States or an alien 
lawfully admitted for permanent residence.
    (b) Maintain includes maintain, collect, use or disseminate.
    (c) Record means any item, collection or grouping of information 
about an individual that is maintained by the Authority, the General 
Counsel and the Panel including, but not limited to, the individual's 
education, financial transactions, medical history and criminal or 
employment history and that contains the individual's name, or the 
identifying number, symbol or other identifying particular assigned to 
the individual, such as a finger or voice print or a photograph.
    (d) System of records means a group of any records under the control 
of the Authority, the General Counsel and the Panel from which 
information is retrieved by the name of the individual or by some 
identifying particular assigned to the individual.
    (e) Routine use means, with respect to the disclosure of a record, 
the use of such record for a purpose which is compatible with the 
purpose for which it was collected.



Sec. 2412.3  Notice and publication.

    The Authority, the General Counsel, and the Panel will publish in 
the Federal Register such notices describing systems of records as are 
required by law.

[51 FR 33837, Sept. 23, 1986]



Sec. 2412.4  Existence of records requests.

    (a) An individual who desires to know if a system of records 
maintained by the Authority, the General Counsel and the Panel contains 
a record pertaining to the individual must submit a written inquiry as 
follows:
    (1) If the system of records is located in a regional office of the 
Authority, it should be made to the appropriate Regional Director; and
    (2) If the system of records is located in the office of the 
Authority, the General Counsel or the Panel in Washington, DC, it should 
be made to the Director of Administration of the Authority, Washington, 
DC.
    (b) The request shall be in writing and should be clearly and 
prominently identified as a Privacy Act request. If the request is 
submitted by mail or otherwise submitted in an envelope or other cover, 
it should bear the legend ``Privacy Act Request'' on the envelope or 
other cover. If a request does not comply with the provisions of this 
paragraph, it shall not be deemed received until the time it is actually 
received by the appropriate Regional Director or the Director of 
Administration of the Authority, as appropriate.
    (c) The inquiry must include the name and address of the individual 
and

[[Page 309]]

reasonably describe the system of records in question by the individual. 
Descriptions of the systems of records maintained by the Authority, the 
General Counsel and the Panel have been published in the Federal 
Register.
    (d) The appropriate Regional Director or the Director of 
Administration of the Authority, as appropriate, will advise the 
individual in writing within ten (10) working days from receipt of the 
request whether the system of records named by the individual contains a 
record pertaining to the individual.

[45 FR 3491, Jan. 17, 1980, as amended at 51 FR 33837, Sept. 23, 1986]



Sec. 2412.5  Individual access requests.

    (a) Any individual who desires to inspect or receive copies of any 
record pertaining to the individual which is contained in a system of 
records maintained by the Authority, the General Counsel and the Panel 
must submit a written request reasonably identifying the records sought 
to be inspected or copied as follows:
    (1) If the system of records is located in a regional office of the 
Authority, it should be made to the appropriate Regional Director; and
    (2) If the system of records is located in the offices of the 
Authority, the General Counsel or the Panel in Washington, DC, it should 
be made to the Deputy Director of Administration of the Authority, 
Washington, DC.
    (b) The request shall be in writing and should be clearly and 
prominently identified as a Privacy Act request. If the request is 
submitted by mail or otherwise submitted in an envelope or other cover, 
it should bear the legend ``Privacy Act Request'' on the envelope or 
other cover. If a request does not comply with the provisions of this 
paragraph, it shall not be deemed received until the time it is actually 
received by the appropriate Regional Director or the Director of 
Administration of the Authority, as appropriate.
    (c) An individual seeking access to a record may, if desired, be 
accompanied by another person during review of the records. If the 
requester does desire to be accompanied by another person during the 
inspection, the requester must sign a statement, to be furnished to the 
Authority, the General Counsel or the Panel representative, as 
appropriate, at the time of the inspection, authorizing such other 
person to accompany the requester.
    (d) Satisfactory identification (i.e., employee identification 
number, current address, and verification of signature) must be provided 
to the Authority, the General Counsel or the Panel representative, as 
appropriate, prior to review of the record.

[45 FR 3491, Jan. 17, 1980, as amended at 51 FR 33837, Sept. 23, 1986]



Sec. 2412.6  Initial decision on access requests.

    (a) Within ten (10) working days of the receipt of a request 
pursuant to Sec. 2412.5, the appropriate Regional Director or the 
Director of Administration of the Authority, as appropriate, shall make 
an initial decision whether the requested records exist and whether they 
will be made available to the person requesting them. That initial 
decision shall immediately be communicated, in writing or other 
appropriate form, to the person who has made the request.
    (b) Where the initial decision is to provide access to the requested 
records, the above writing or other appropriate communication shall:
    (1) Briefly describe the records to be made available;
    (2) State whether any records maintained, in the system of records 
in question, about the individual making the request are not being made 
available;
    (3) State that the requested records will be available during 
ordinary office hours at the appropriate regional office or offices of 
the Authority, the General Counsel or the Panel, as appropriate; and
    (4) State whether any further verification of the identity of the 
requesting individual is necessary.
    (c) Where the initial decision is not to provide access to requested 
records, the appropriate Regional Director or the Director of 
Administration of the Authority, as appropriate, shall by writing or 
other appropriate communication explain the reason for that decision. 
The appropriate Regional Director or the Director of Administration

[[Page 310]]

of the Authority, as appropriate, shall only refuse to provide an 
individual access where:
    (1) There is inadequate verification of identity under 
Sec. 2412.5(d);
    (2) In fact no such records are maintained; or
    (3) The requested records have been compiled in a reasonable 
anticipation of civil or criminal action or proceedings.

[45 FR 3491, Jan. 17, 1980, as amended at 51 FR 33837, Sept. 23, 1986]



Sec. 2412.7  Special procedures; medical records.

    (a) If medical records are requested for inspection which, in the 
opinion of the appropriate Regional Director or the Director of 
Administration of the Authority, as appropriate, may be harmful to the 
requester if personally inspected by such person, such records will be 
furnished only to a licensed physician designated to receive such 
records by the requester. Prior to such disclosure, the requester must 
furnish a signed written authorization to make such disclosure and the 
physician must furnish a written request for the physician's receipt of 
such records to the appropriate Regional Director or the Director of 
Administration of the Authority, as appropriate.
    (b) If such authorization is not executed within the presence of an 
Authority, General Counsel or Panel representative, the authorization 
must be accompanied by a notarized statement verifying the 
identification of the requester.

[45 FR 3491, Jan. 17, 1980, as amended at 51 FR 33837, Sept. 23, 1986]



Sec. 2412.8  Limitations on disclosures.

    (a) Requests for records about an individual made by person other 
than that individual shall also be directed as follows:
    (1) If the system of records is located in a regional office of the 
Authority, it should be made to the appropriate Regional Director; and
    (2) If the system of records is located in the offices of the 
Authority, the General Counsel or the Panel in Washington, DC, it should 
be made to the Director of Administration of the Authority, Washington, 
DC.
    (b) Such records shall only be made available to persons other than 
that individual in the following circumstances:
    (1) To any person with the prior written consent of the individual 
about whom the records are maintained;
    (2) To officers and employees of the Authority, the General Counsel 
and the Panel who need the records in the performance of their official 
duties;
    (3) For a routine use compatible with the purpose for which it was 
collected;
    (4) To any person to whom disclosure is required by the Freedom of 
Information Act, as amended, 5 U.S.C. 552;
    (5) To the Bureau of the Census for uses pursuant to title 13 of the 
United States Code;
    (6) In a form not individually identifiable to a recipient who has 
provided the Authority, the General Counsel and the Panel with adequate 
assurance that the record will be used solely as a statistical research 
or reporting record;
    (7) To the National Archives of the United States or other 
appropriate entity as a record which has historical or other value 
warranting its preservation;
    (8) To another agency or to an instrumentality of any governmental 
jurisdiction within or under control of the United States for a civil or 
criminal law enforcement activity that is authorized by law if the head 
of the agency or instrumentality has made a written request for the 
record to the Authority, the General Counsel or the Panel;
    (9) To a person pursuant to a showing of compelling circumstances 
affecting the health or safety of an individual, provided that 
notification of such a disclosure shall be immediately mailed to the 
last known address of the individual;
    (10) To either House of Congress or to any committee thereof with 
appropriate jurisdiction;
    (11) To the Comptroller General in the performance of the official 
duties of the General Accounting Office; or
    (12) Pursuant to the order of a court of competent jurisdiction.

[[Page 311]]

    (c) The request shall be in writing and should be clearly and 
prominently identified as a Privacy Act request and, if submitted by 
mail or otherwise submitted in an envelope or other cover, should bear 
the legend ``Privacy Act Request'' on the envelope or other cover. If a 
request does not comply with the provisions of this paragraph, it shall 
not be deemed received until the time it is actually received by the 
appropriate Regional Director or the Director of Administration of the 
Authority, as appropriate.

[45 FR 3491, Jan. 17, 1980, as amended at 51 FR 33837, Sept. 23, 1986]



Sec. 2412.9  Accounting of disclosures.

    (a) All Regional Directors of the Authority and the Director of 
Administration of the Authority shall maintain a record (``accounting'') 
of every instance in which records about an individual are made 
available, pursuant to this part, to any person other than:
    (1) Officers or employees of the Authority, the General Counsel or 
the Panel in the performance of their duties; or
    (2) Any person pursuant to the Freedom of Information Act, as 
amended, 5 U.S.C. 552.
    (b) The accounting which shall be retained for at least five (5) 
years or the life of the record, whichever is longer, shall contain the 
following information:
    (1) A brief description of records disclosed;
    (2) The date, nature and, where known, the purpose of the 
disclosure; and
    (3) The name and address of the person or agency to whom the 
disclosure is made.

[45 FR 3491, Jan. 17, 1980, as amended at 51 FR 33837, Sept. 23, 1986]



Sec. 2412.10  Requests for correction or amendment of records.

    (a) After inspection of any records, if the individual disagrees 
with any information in the record, the individual may request that the 
records maintained about the individual be corrected or otherwise 
amended. Such request shall specify the particular portions of the 
record to be amended or corrected, the desired amendment or correction, 
and the reasons therefor.
    (b) Such request shall be in writing and directed as follows:
    (1) If the system of records is located in a regional office of the 
Authority, it should be made to the appropriate Regional Director; and
    (2) If the system of records is located in the offices of the 
Authority, the General Counsel or the Panel in Washington, DC, it should 
be made to the Deputy Director of Administration of the Authority, 
Washington, DC.



Sec. 2412.11  Initial decision on correction or amendment.

    (a) Within ten (10) working days from the date of receipt of a 
request for correction or amendment, the appropriate Regional Director 
or the Director of Administration of the Authority, as appropriate, will 
acknowledge receipt of the request and, under normal circumstances, not 
later than thirty (30) days from receipt of the request, will give the 
requesting individual notice, by mail or other appropriate means, of the 
decision regarding the request.
    (b) Such notice of decision shall include:
    (1) A statement whether the request has been granted or denied, in 
whole or in part;
    (2) A quotation or description of any amendment or correction made 
to any records; and
    (3) Where a request is denied in whole or in part, an explanation of 
the reason for that denial and of the requesting individual's right to 
appeal the decision to the Chairman of the Authority pursuant to 
Sec. 2412.13.

[45 FR 3491, Jan. 17, 1980, as amended at 51 FR 33837, Sept. 23, 1986]



Sec. 2412.12  Amendment or correction of previously disclosed records.

    Whenever a record is amended or corrected pursuant to Sec. 2412.11 
or a written statement filed pursuant to Sec. 2412.13, the appropriate 
Regional Director or the Director of Administration of the Authority, as 
appropriate, shall give notice of that correction, amendment or written 
statement to all persons to whom the records or copies thereof

[[Page 312]]

have been disclosed, as recorded in the accounting kept pursuant to 
Sec. 2412.9.

[45 FR 3491, Jan. 17, 1980, as amended at 51 FR 33837, Sept. 23, 1986]



Sec. 2412.13  Agency review of refusal to provide access to, or amendment or correction of, records.

    (a) Any individual whose request for access to, or amendment or 
correction of, records of the Authority, the General Counsel or the 
Panel has been denied in whole or in part by an initial decision may, 
within thirty (30) days of the receipt of notice of the initial 
decision, appeal that decision by filing a written request for review of 
that decision with the Chairman of the Authority in Washington, DC.
    (b) The appeal shall describe:
    (1) The request initially made by the individual for access to, or 
the amendment or correction of, records;
    (2) The initial decision thereupon of the appropriate Regional 
Director or the Director of Administration; and
    (3) The reasons why that initial decision should be modified by the 
Chairman of the Authority.
    (c) Not later than thirty (30) working days from receipt of a 
request for review (unless such period is extended by the Chairman of 
the Authority for good cause shown), the Chairman of the Authority shall 
make a decision, and give notice thereof to the appealing individual, 
whether to modify the initial decision of the Regional Director or the 
Deputy Director of Administration, in any way. If the Chairman of the 
Authority upholds the Regional Director's or Deputy Director of 
Administration's initial decision not to provide access to requested 
records or not to amend or correct the records as requested, the 
Chairman of the Authority shall notify the appealing individual of the 
individual's right:
    (1) To judicial review of the Chairman of the Authority's decision 
pursuant to 5 U.S.C. 552a(g)(1); and
    (2) To file with the Authority a written statement of disagreement 
setting forth the reasons why the record should have been amended or 
corrected as requested. That written statement of disagreement shall be 
made a part of the record and shall accompany that record in any use or 
disclosure of the record.

[45 FR 3491, Jan. 17, 1980, as amended at 51 FR 33837, Sept. 23, 1986]



Sec. 2412.14  Fees.

    (a) As provided in this part, the Authority, the General Counsel or 
the Panel will provide a copy of the records to the individual to whom 
they pertain. There will be a charge of ten cents per copy of each page.
    (b) Any charges may be waived or reduced whenever it is in the 
public interest to do so.



Sec. 2412.15  Penalties.

    Any person who knowingly and willfully requests or obtains any 
record concerning an individual from the Authority, the General Counsel 
or the Panel under false pretenses shall be subject to criminal 
prosecution under 5 U.S.C. 552a(i)(3) which provides that such person 
shall be guilty of a misdemeanor and fined not more than $5,000.



Sec. 2412.16  Exemptions.

    (a) OIG files compiled for the purpose of a criminal investigation 
and for related purposes. Pursuant to 5 U.S.C. 552a(j)(2), the FLRA 
hereby exempts the system of records entitled ``FLRA/OIG-1, Office of 
Inspector General Investigative Files,'' insofar as it consists of 
information compiled for the purposes of a criminal investigation or for 
other purposes within the scope of 5 U.S.C. 552a(j)(2), from the 
application of 5 U.S.C. 552a, except for subsections (b), (c) (1) and 
(2), (e)(4) (A) through (F), (e) (6), (7), (9), (10), (11) and (i).
    (b) OIG files compiled for other law enforcement purposes. Pursuant 
to 5 U.S.C. 552a(k)(2), the FLRA hereby exempts the system of records 
entitled, ``FLRA/OIG-1, Office of Inspector General Investigative 
Files,'' insofar as it consists of information compiled for law 
enforcement purposes other than material within the scope of 5 U.S.C. 
552a(j)(2), from the application of 5 U.S.C. 552a (c)(3), (d), (e)(1), 
(e)(4) (G), (H), and (I), and (f).

[56 FR 33189, July 19, 1991]

[[Page 313]]





PART 2413--OPEN MEETINGS--Table of Contents




Sec.
2413.1  Purpose and scope.
2413.2  Public observation of meetings.
2413.3  Definition of meeting.
2413.4  Closing of meetings; reasons therefor.
2413.5  Action necessary to close meeting; record of votes.
2413.6  Notice of meetings; public announcement and publication.
2413.7  Transcripts, recordings or minutes of closed meeting; public 
          availability; retention.
    Authority: 5 U.S.C. 552b.

    Source: 45 FR 3494, Jan. 17, 1980, unless otherwise noted.



Sec. 2413.1  Purpose and scope.

    This part contains the regulations of the Federal Labor Relations 
Authority implementing the Government in the Sunshine Act, 5 U.S.C. 
552b.



Sec. 2413.2  Public observation of meetings.

    Every portion of every meeting of the Authority shall be open to 
public observation, except as provided in Sec. 2413.4, and Authority 
members shall not jointly conduct or dispose of agency business other 
than in accordance with the provisions of this part.



Sec. 2413.3  Definition of meeting.

    For purposes of this part, meeting shall mean the deliberations of 
at least two (2) members of the Authority where such deliberations 
determine or result in the joint conduct or disposition of official 
agency business, but does not include deliberations to determine whether 
a meeting should be closed to public observation in accordance with the 
provisions of this part.



Sec. 2413.4  Closing of meetings; reasons therefor.

    (a) Except where the Authority determines that the public interest 
requires otherwise, meetings, or portions thereof, shall not be open to 
public observation where the deliberations concern the issuance of a 
subpena, the Authority's participation in a civil action or proceeding 
or an arbitration, or the initiation, conduct or disposition by the 
Authority of particular cases of formal agency adjudication pursuant to 
the procedures in 5 U.S.C. 554 or otherwise involving a determination on 
the record after opportunity for a hearing, or any court proceedings 
collateral or ancillary thereto.
    (b) Meetings, or portions thereof, may also be closed by the 
Authority, except where it determines that the public interest requires 
otherwise, when the deliberations concern matters or information falling 
within the reasons for closing meetings specified in 5 U.S.C. 552b(c)(1) 
(secret matters concerning national defense or foreign policy); (c)(2) 
(internal personnel rules and practices); (c)(3) (matters specifically 
exempted from disclosure by statute); (c)(4) (privileged or confidential 
trade secrets and commercial or financial information); (c)(5) (matters 
of alleged criminal conduct or formal censure); (c)(6) (personal 
information where disclosure would cause a clearly unwarranted invasion 
of personal privacy); (c)(7) (certain materials or information from 
investigatory files compiled for law enforcement purposes); or (c)(9)(B) 
(disclosure would significantly frustrate implementation of a proposed 
agency action).



Sec. 2413.5  Action necessary to close meeting; record of votes.

    A meeting shall be closed to public observation under Sec. 2413.4, 
only when a majority of the members of the Authority who will 
participate in the meeting vote to take such action.
    (a) When the meeting deliberations concern matters specified in 
Sec. 2413.4(a), the Authority members shall vote at the beginning of the 
meeting, or portion thereof, on whether to close such meeting, or 
portion thereof, to public observation and on whether the public 
interest requires that a meeting which may properly be closed should 
nevertheless be open to public observation. A record of such vote, 
reflecting the vote of each member of the Authority, shall be kept and 
made available to the public at the earliest practicable time.
    (b) When the meeting deliberations concern matters specified in 
Sec. 2413.4(b), the Authority shall vote on whether to close such 
meeting, or portion thereof, to public observation, and on whether there 
is a public interest which requires that a meeting which may properly be 
closed should nevertheless be

[[Page 314]]

open to public observation. The vote shall be taken at a time sufficient 
to permit inclusion of information concerning the open or closed status 
of the meeting in the public announcement thereof. A single vote may be 
taken with respect to a series of meetings at which the deliberations 
will concern the same particular matters where such subsequent meetings 
are scheduled to be held within thirty (30) days after the initial 
meeting. A record of such vote, reflecting the vote of each member of 
the Authority, shall be kept and made available for the public within 
one (1) day after the vote is taken.
    (c) Whenever any person whose interests may be directly affected by 
deliberations during a meeting, or a portion thereof, requests that the 
Authority close that meeting, or portion thereof, to public observation 
for any of the reasons specified in 5 U.S.C. 552b(c)(5) (matters of 
alleged criminal conduct or formal censure), (c)(6) (personal 
information where disclosure would cause a clearly unwarranted invasion 
of personal privacy), or (c)(7) (certain materials or information from 
investigatory files compiled for law enforcement purposes), the 
Authority members participating in the meeting, upon request of any one 
of its members, shall vote on whether to close such meeting, or a 
portion thereof, for that reason. A record of such vote, reflecting the 
vote of each member of the Authority participating in the meeting, shall 
be kept and made available to the public within one (1) day after the 
vote is taken.
    (d) After public announcement of a meeting as provided in 
Sec. 2413.6, a meeting, or portion thereof, announced as closed may be 
opened, or a meeting, or portion thereof, announced as open may be 
closed only if a majority of the members of the Authority who will 
participate in the meeting determine by a recorded vote that Authority 
business so requires and that an earlier announcement of the change was 
not possible. The change made and the vote of each member on the change 
shall be announced publicly at the earliest practicable time.
    (e) Before a meeting may be closed pursuant to Sec. 2413.4, the 
Solicitor of the Authority shall certify that in the Solicitor's opinion 
the meeting may properly be closed to public observation. The 
certification shall set forth each applicable exemptive provision for 
such closing. Such certification shall be retained by the agency and 
made publicly available as soon as practicable.



Sec. 2413.6  Notice of meetings; public announcement and publication.

    (a) A public announcement setting forth the time, place and subject 
matter of meetings, or portions thereof, closed to public observation 
pursuant to the provisions of Sec. 2413.4(a), shall be made at the 
earliest practicable time.
    (b) Except for meetings closed to public observation pursuant to the 
provisions of Sec. 2413.4(a), the agency shall make public announcement 
of each meeting to be held at least seven (7) days before the scheduled 
date of the meeting. The announcement shall specify the time, place and 
subject matter of the meeting, whether it is to be open to public 
observation or closed, and the name, address, and phone number of an 
agency official designated to respond to requests for information about 
the meeting. The seven (7) day period for advance notice may be 
shortened only upon a determination by a majority of the members of the 
Authority who will participate in the meeting that agency business 
requires that such meeting be called at an earlier date, in which event 
the public announcements shall be made at the earliest practicable time. 
A record of the vote to schedule a meeting at an earlier date shall be 
kept and made available to the public.
    (c) Within one (1) day after a vote to close a meeting, or any 
portion thereof, pursuant to the provisions Sec. 2413.4(b), the agency 
shall make publicly available a full written explanation of its action 
closing the meeting, or portion thereof, together with a list of all 
persons expected to attend the meeting and their affiliation.
    (d) If after public announcement required by paragraph (b) of this 
section has been made, the time and place of the meeting are changed, a 
public announcement shall be made at the earliest practicable time. The 
subject matter of the meeting may be changed after the public 
announcement only if

[[Page 315]]

a majority of the members of the Authority who will participate in the 
meeting determine that agency business so requires and that no earlier 
announcement of the change was possible. When such a change in subject 
matter is approved, a public announcement of the change shall be made at 
the earliest practicable time. A record of the vote to change the 
subject matter of the meeting shall be kept and made available to the 
public.
    (e) All announcements or changes thereto issued pursuant to the 
provisions of paragraphs (b) and (d) of this section or pursuant to the 
provisions of Sec. 2413.5(d) shall be submitted for publication in the 
Federal Register immediately following their release to the public.
    (f) Announcements of meetings made pursuant to the provisions of 
this section shall be made publicly available by the Executive Director.



Sec. 2413.7  Transcripts, recordings or minutes of closed meeting; public availability; retention.

    (a) For every meeting, or portion thereof, closed under the 
provisions of Sec. 2413.4, the presiding officer shall prepare a 
statement setting forth the time and place of the meeting and the 
persons present, which statement shall be retained by the agency. For 
each such meeting, or portion thereof, there shall also be maintained a 
complete transcript or electronic recording of the proceedings, except 
that for meetings closed pursuant to Sec. 2413.4(a), the Authority may, 
in lieu of a transcript or electronic recording, maintain a set of 
minutes fully and accurately summarizing any action taken, the reasons 
therefor and views thereon, documents considered and the members' vote 
on each rollcall vote.
    (b) The agency shall make promptly available to the public copies of 
transcripts, recordings or minutes maintained as provided in accordance 
with paragraph (a) of this section, except to the extent the items 
therein contain information which the agency determines may be withheld 
pursuant to the provisions of 5 U.S.C. 552b(c). Copies of transcripts or 
minutes, or transcriptions of electronic recordings including the 
identification of speakers, shall to the extent determined to be 
publicly available, be furnished to any person, subject to the payment 
of duplication costs in accordance with the schedule of fees set forth 
in Sec. 2411.10 of this subchapter and the actual cost of transcription.
    (c) The agency shall maintain a complete verbatim copy of the 
transcript, a complete copy of the minutes, or a complete electronic 
recording of each meeting, or portion of a meeting, closed to the 
public, for a period of at least two (2) years after such meeting or 
until one (1) year after the conclusion of any agency proceeding with 
respect to which the meeting or portion was held whichever occurs later.



PART 2414--EX PARTE COMMUNICATIONS--Table of Contents




Sec.
2414.1  Purpose and scope.
2414.2  Unauthorized communications.
2414.3  Definitions.
2414.4  Duration of prohibition.
2414.5  Communications prohibited.
2414.6  Communications not prohibited.
2414.7  Solicitation of prohibited communications.
2414.8  Reporting of prohibited communications; penalties.
2414.9  Penalties and enforcement.

    Authority: 5 U.S.C. 7134.

    Source: 45 FR 3495, Jan. 17, 1980, unless otherwise noted.



Sec. 2414.1  Purpose and scope.

    This part contains the regulations of the Federal Labor Relations 
Authority relating to ex parte communications.



Sec. 2414.2  Unauthorized communications.

    (a) No interested person outside this agency shall, in any agency 
proceeding subject to 5 U.S.C. 557(a), make or knowingly cause to be 
made any prohibited ex parte communication to any Authority member, 
Administrative Law Judge, or other Authority employee who is or may 
reasonably be expected to be involved in the decisional process of the 
proceeding.
    (b) No Authority member, Administrative Law Judge, or other 
Authority employee who is or may reasonably be expected to be involved 
in the decisional process of the proceeding

[[Page 316]]

relevant to the merits of the proceeding shall: (1) Request any 
prohibited ex parte communications; or (2) make or knowingly cause to be 
made any prohibited ex parte communications about the proceeding to any 
interested person outside this agency relevant to the merits of the 
proceeding.



Sec. 2414.3  Definitions.

    When used in this part:
    (a) The term person outside this agency, to whom the prohibitions 
apply, shall include any individual outside the Authority, labor 
organization, agency, or other entity, or an agent thereof, and the 
General Counsel or his representative when prosecuting an unfair labor 
practice proceeding before the Authority pursuant to 5 U.S.C. 7118.
    (b) The term ex parte communication means an oral or written 
communication not on the public record with respect to which reasonable 
prior notice to all parties is not given, subject however, to the 
provisions of Secs. 2414.5 and 2414.6.



Sec. 2414.4  Duration of prohibition.

    Unless otherwise provided by specific order of the Authority entered 
in the proceeding, the prohibition of Sec. 2414.2 shall be applicable in 
any agency proceeding subject to 5 U.S.C. 557(a) beginning at the time 
of which the proceeding is noticed for hearing, unless the person 
responsible for the communication has knowledge that it will be noticed, 
in which case the prohibitions shall apply beginning at the time of such 
person's acquisition of such knowledge.



Sec. 2414.5  Communications prohibited.

    Except as provided in Sec. 2414.6, ex parte communications 
prohibited by Sec. 2414.2 shall include:
    (a) Such communications, when written, if copies thereof are not 
contemporaneously served by the communicator on all parties to the 
proceeding in accordance with the provisions of part 2429 of this 
chapter; and
    (b) Such communications, when oral, unless advance notice thereof is 
given by the communicator to all parties in the proceeding and adequate 
opportunity afforded to them to be present.



Sec. 2414.6  Communications not prohibited.

    Ex parte communications prohibited by Sec. 2414.2 shall not include:
    (a) Oral or written communications which relate solely to matters 
which the Hearing Officer, Regional Director, Administrative Law Judge, 
General Counsel or member of the Authority is authorized by law or 
Authority rules to entertain or dispose of on an ex parte basis;
    (b) Oral or written requests for information solely with respect to 
the status of a proceeding;
    (c) Oral or written communications which all the parties to the 
proceeding agree, or which the responsible official formally rules, may 
be made on an ex parte basis;
    (d) Oral or written communications proposing settlement or an 
agreement for disposition of any or all issues in the proceeding;
    (e) Oral or written communications which concern matters of general 
significance to the field of labor-management relations or 
administrative practice and which are not specifically related to any 
agency proceeding subject to 5 U.S.C. 557(a); or
    (f) Oral or written communications from the General Counsel to the 
Authority when the General Counsel is acting on behalf of the Authority 
under 5 U.S.C. 7123(d).



Sec. 2414.7  Solicitation of prohibited communications.

    No person shall knowingly and willfully solicit the making of an 
unauthorized ex parte communication by any other person.



Sec. 2414.8  Reporting of prohibited communications; penalties.

    (a) Any Authority member, Administrative Law Judge, or other 
Authority employee who is or may reasonably be expected to be involved 
in the decisional process of the proceeding relevant to the merits of 
the proceeding to whom a prohibited oral ex parte communication is 
attempted to be made, shall refuse to listen to the communication, 
inform the communicator of this rule, and advise such person that if the 
person has anything to say it should be said in writing with copies

[[Page 317]]

to all parties. Any such Authority member, Administrative Law Judge, or 
other Authority employee who is or may reasonably be expected to be 
involved in the decisional process of the proceeding relevant to the 
merits of the proceeding who receives, or who makes or knowingly causes 
to be made, an unauthorized ex parte communication, shall place or cause 
to be placed on the public record of the proceeding: (1) The 
communication, if it was written; (2) a memorandum stating the substance 
of the communication, if it was oral; (3) all written responses to the 
prohibited communication; and (4) memoranda stating the substance of all 
oral responses to the prohibited communication. The Executive Director, 
if the proceeding is then pending before the Authority, the 
Administrative Law Judge, if the proceeding is then pending before any 
such judge, or the Regional Director, if the proceeding is then pending 
before a Hearing Officer or the Regional Director, shall serve copies of 
all such materials placed on the public record of the proceeding on all 
other parties to the proceeding and on the attorneys of record for the 
parties. Within ten (10) days after the mailing of such copies, any 
party may file with the Executive Director, Administrative Law Judge, or 
Regional Director serving the communication, as appropriate, and serve 
on all other parties, a statement setting forth facts or contentions to 
rebut those contained in the prohibited communication. All such 
responses shall be placed in the public record of the proceeding, and 
provision may be made for any further action, including reopening of the 
record, which may be required under the circumstances. No action taken 
pursuant to this provision shall constitute a waiver of the power of the 
Authority to impose an appropriate penalty under Sec. 2414.9.



Sec. 2414.9  Penalties and enforcement.

    (a) Where the nature and circumstances of a prohibited communication 
made by or caused to be made by a party to the proceeding are such that 
the interests of justice and statutory policy may require remedial 
action, the Authority, Administrative Law Judge, or Regional Director, 
as appropriate, may issue to the party making the communication a notice 
to show cause, returnable before the Authority, Administrative Law 
Judge, or Regional Director, within a stated period not less than seven 
(7) days from the date thereof, why the Authority, Administrative Law 
Judge, or Regional Director should not determine that the interests of 
justice and statutory policy require that the claim or interest in the 
proceeding of a party who knowingly makes a prohibited communication or 
knowingly causes a prohibited communication to be made, should be 
dismissed, denied, disregarded or otherwise adversely affected on 
account of such violation.
    (b) Upon notice and hearing, the Authority may censure, suspend, or 
revoke the privilege of practice before the agency of any person who 
knowingly and willfully makes or solicits the making of a prohibited ex 
parte communication. However, before the Authority institutes formal 
proceedings under this subsection, it shall first advise the person or 
persons concerned in writing that it proposes to take such action and 
that they may show cause, within a period to be stated in such written 
advice, but not less than seven (7) days from the date thereof, why it 
should not take such action.
    (c) The Authority may censure, or, to the extent permitted by law, 
suspend, dismiss, or institute proceedings for the dismissal of, any 
Authority agent who knowingly and willfully violates the prohibitions 
and requirements of this rule.



PART 2415--EMPLOYEE RESPONSIBILITIES AND CONDUCT--Table of Contents




    Authority: E.O. 11222, 30 FR 6469, 3 CFR, 1964-65 Comp., p. 306; 5 
CFR 735.101 et seq. and 737.1 et seq.; Pub L. 95-521; 44 FR 19974.



Sec. 2415.1  Employee responsibilities and conduct.

    The Federal Labor Relations Authority, the General Counsel of the 
Federal Labor Relations Authority and the Federal Service Impasses 
Panel, respectively, hereby adopt the rules and regulations contained in 
parts 735 and 737 of title 5 of the Code of Federal Regulations, 
prescribing standards of

[[Page 318]]

conduct and responsibilities, and governing statements reporting 
employment and financial interests for officers and employees, including 
special Government employees, for application, as appropriate, to the 
officers and employees, including special Government employees, of the 
Authority, the General Counsel and the Panel.

[45 FR 3496, Jan. 17, 1980]



PART 2416--ENFORCEMENT OF NONDISCRIMINATION ON THE BASIS OF HANDICAP IN PROGRAMS OR ACTIVITIES CONDUCTED BY THE FEDERAL LABOR RELATIONS AUTHORITY--Table of Contents




Sec.
2416.101  Purpose.
2416.102  Application.
2416.103  Definitions.
2416.104--2416.109  [Reserved]
2416.110  Self-evaluation.
2416.111  Notice.
2416.112--2416.129  [Reserved]
2416.130  General prohibitions against discrimination.
2416.131--2416.139  [Reserved]
2416.140  Employment.
2416.141--2416.148  [Reserved]
2416.149  Program accessibility: Discrimination prohibited.
2416.150  Program accessibility: Existing facilities.
2416.151  Program accessibility: New construction and alterations.
2416.152--2416.159  [Reserved]
2416.160  Communications.
2416.161--2416.169  [Reserved]
2416.170  Compliance procedures.
2416.171--2416.999  [Reserved]

    Authority: 29 U.S.C. 794.

    Source: 53 FR 25881 and 25885, July 8, 1988, unless otherwise noted.



Sec. 2416.101  Purpose.

    The purpose of this regulation is to effectuate section 119 of the 
Rehabilitation, Comprehensive Services, and Developmental Disabilities 
Amendments of 1978, which amended section 504 of the Rehabilitation Act 
of 1973 to prohibit discrimination on the basis of handicap in programs 
or activities conducted by Executive agencies or the United States 
Postal Service.



Sec. 2416.102  Application.

    This regulation (Secs. 2416.101-2416.170) applies to all programs or 
activities conducted by the agency, except for programs or activities 
conducted outside the United States that do not involve individuals with 
handicaps in the United States.



Sec. 2416.103  Definitions.

    For purposes of this regulation, the term--
    Assistant Attorney General means the Assistant Attorney General, 
Civil Rights Division, United States Department of Justice.
    Auxiliary aids means services or devices that enable persons with 
impaired sensory, manual, or speaking skills to have an equal 
opportunity to participate in, and enjoy the benefits of, programs or 
activities conducted by the agency. For example, auxiliary aids useful 
for persons with impaired vision include readers, Brailled materials, 
audio recordings, and other similar services and devices. Auxiliary aids 
useful for persons with impaired hearing include telephone handset 
amplifiers, telephones compatible with hearing aids, telecommunication 
devices for deaf persons (TDD's), interpreters, notetakers, written 
materials, and other similar services and devices.
    Complete complaint means a written statement that contains the 
complainant's name and address and describes the agency's alleged 
discriminatory action in sufficient detail to inform the agency of the 
nature and date of the alleged violation of section 504. It shall be 
signed by the complainant or by someone authorized to do so on his or 
her behalf. Complaints filed on behalf of classes or third parties shall 
describe or identify (by name, if possible) the alleged victims of 
discrimination.
    Facility means all or any portion of buildings, structures, 
equipment, roads, walks, parking lots, rolling stock or other 
conveyances, or other real or personal property.
    Historic preservation programs means programs conducted by the 
agency that have preservation of historic properties as a primary 
purpose.
    Historic properties means those properties that are listed or 
eligible for

[[Page 319]]

listing in the National Register of Historic Places or properties 
designated as historic under a statute of the appropriate State or local 
government body.
    Individual with handicaps means any person who has a physical or 
mental impairment that substantially limits one or more major life 
activities, has a record of such an impairment, or is regarded as having 
such an impairment.
    As used in this definition, the phrase:
    (1) Physical or mental impairment includes--
    (i) Any physiological disorder or condition, cosmetic disfigurement, 
or anatomical loss affecting one or more of the following body systems: 
Neurological; musculoskeletal; special sense organs; respiratory, 
including speech organs; cardiovascular; reproductive; digestive; 
genitourinary; hemic and lymphatic; skin; and endocrine; or
    (ii) Any mental or psychological disorder, such as mental 
retardation, organic brain syndrome, emotional or mental illness, and 
specific learning disabilities. The term physical or mental impairment 
includes, but is not limited to, such diseases and conditions as 
orthopedic, visual, speech, and hearing impairments, cerebral palsy, 
epilepsy, muscular dystrophy, multiple sclerosis, cancer, heart disease, 
diabetes, mental retardation, emotional illness, and drug addiction and 
alcoholism.
    (2) Major life activities includes functions such as caring for 
one's self, performing manual tasks, walking, seeing, hearing, speaking, 
breathing, learning, and working.
    (3) Has a record of such an impairment means has a history of, or 
has been misclassified as having, a mental or physical impairment that 
substantially limits one or more major life activities.
    (4) Is regarded as having an impairment means--
    (i) Has a physical or mental impairment that does not substantially 
limit major life activities but is treated by the agency as constituting 
such a limitation;
    (ii) Has a physical or mental impairment that substantially limits 
major life activities only as a result of the attitudes of others toward 
such impairment; or
    (iii) Has none of the impairments defined in paragraph (1) of this 
definition but is treated by the agency as having such an impairment.
    Qualified individual with handicaps means--
    (1) With respect to preschool, elementary, or secondary education 
services provided by the agency, an individual with handicaps who is a 
member of a class of persons otherwise entitled by statute, regulation, 
or agency policy to receive education services from the agency;
    (2) With respect to any other agency program or activity under which 
a person is required to perform services or to achieve a level of 
accomplishment, an individual with handicaps who meets the essential 
eligibility requirements and who can achieve the purpose of the program 
or activity without modifications in the program or activity that the 
agency can demonstrate would result in a fundamental alteration in its 
nature;
    (3) With respect to any other program or activity, an individual 
with handicaps who meets the essential eligibility requirements for 
participation in, or receipt of benefits from, that program or activity; 
and
    (4) Qualified handicapped person as that term is defined for 
purposes of employment in 29 CFR 1613.702(f), which is made applicable 
to this regulation by Sec. 2416.140.
    Section 504 means section 504 of the Rehabilitation Act of 1973 
(Pub. L. 93-112, 87 Stat. 394 (29 U.S.C. 794)), as amended by the 
Rehabilitation Act Amendments of 1974 (Pub. L. 93-516, 88 Stat. 1617); 
the Rehabilitation, Comprehensive Services, and Developmental 
Disabilities Amendments of 1978 (Pub. L. 95-602, 92 Stat. 2955); and the 
Rehabilitation Act Amendments of 1986 (Pub. L. 99-506, 100 Stat. 1810). 
As used in this regulation, section 504 applies only to programs or 
activities conducted by Executive agencies and not to federally assisted 
programs.
    Substantial impairment means a significant loss of the integrity of 
finished materials, design quality, or special character resulting from 
a permanent alteration.

[[Page 320]]

Secs. 2416.104--2416.109  [Reserved]



Sec. 2416.110  Self-evaluation.

    (a) The agency shall, by September 6, 1989, evaluate its current 
policies and practices, and the effects thereof, that do not or may not 
meet the requirements of this regulation and, to the extent modification 
of any such policies and practices is required, the agency shall proceed 
to make the necessary modifications.
    (b) The agency shall provide an opportunity to interested persons, 
including individuals with handicaps or organizations representing 
individuals with handicaps, to participate in the self-evaluation 
process by submitting comments (both oral and written).
    (c) The agency shall, for at least three years following completion 
of the self-evaluation, maintain on file and make available for public 
inspection:
    (1) A description of areas examined and any problems identified; and
    (2) A description of any modifications made.



Sec. 2416.111  Notice.

    The agency shall make available to employees, applicants, 
participants, beneficiaries, and other interested persons such 
information regarding the provisions of this regulation and its 
applicability to the programs or activities conducted by the agency, and 
make such information available to them in such manner as the head of 
the agency finds necessary to apprise such persons of the protections 
against discrimination assured them by section 504 and this regulation.
Secs. 2416.112--2416.129  [Reserved]



Sec. 2416.130  General prohibitions against discrimination.

    (a) No qualified individual with handicaps shall, on the basis of 
handicap, be excluded from participation in, be denied the benefits of, 
or otherwise be subjected to discrimination under any program or 
activity conducted by the agency.
    (b)(1) The agency, in providing any aid, benefit, or service, may 
not, directly or through contractual, licensing, or other arrangements, 
on the basis of handicap--
    (i) Deny a qualified individual with handicaps the opportunity to 
participate in or benefit from the aid, benefit, or service;
    (ii) Afford a qualified individual with handicaps an opportunity to 
participate in or benefit from the aid, benefit, or service that is not 
equal to that afforded others;
    (iii) Provide a qualified individual with handicaps with an aid, 
benefit, or service that is not as effective in affording equal 
opportunity to obtain the same result, to gain the same benefit, or to 
reach the same level of achievement as that provided to others;
    (iv) Provide different or separate aid, benefits, or services to 
individuals with handicaps or to any class of individuals with handicaps 
than is provided to others unless such action is necessary to provide 
qualified individuals with handicaps with aid, benefits, or services 
that are as effective as those provided to others;
    (v) Deny a qualified individual with handicaps the opportunity to 
participate as a member of planning or advisory boards;
    (vi) Otherwise limit a qualified individual with handicaps in the 
enjoyment of any right, privilege, advantage, or opportunity enjoyed by 
others receiving the aid, benefit, or service.
    (2) The agency may not deny a qualified individual with handicaps 
the opportunity to participate in programs or activities that are not 
separate or different, despite the existence of permissibly separate or 
different programs or activities.
    (3) The agency may not, directly or through contractual or other 
arrangements, utilize criteria or methods of administration the purpose 
or effect of which would--
    (i) Subject qualified individuals with handicaps to discrimination 
on the basis of handicap; or
    (ii) Defeat or substantially impair accomplishment of the objectives 
of a program or activity with respect to individuals with handicaps.
    (4) The agency may not, in determining the site or location of a 
facility, make selections the purpose or effect of which would--
    (i) Exclude individuals with handicaps from, deny them the benefits 
of,

[[Page 321]]

or otherwise subject them to discrimination under any program or 
activity conducted by the agency; or
    (ii) Defeat or substantially impair the accomplishment of the 
objectives of a program or activity with respect to individuals with 
handicaps.
    (5) The agency, in the selection of procurement contractors, may not 
use criteria that subject qualified individuals with handicaps to 
discrimination on the basis of handicap.
    (6) The agency may not administer a licensing or certification 
program in a manner that subjects qualified individuals with handicaps 
to discrimination on the basis of handicap, nor may the agency establish 
requirements for the programs or activities of licensees or certified 
entities that subject qualified individuals with handicaps to 
discrimination on the basis of handicap. However, the programs or 
activities of entities that are licensed or certified by the agency are 
not, themselves, covered by this regulation.
    (c) The exclusion of nonhandicapped persons from the benefits of a 
program limited by Federal statute or Executive order to individuals 
with handicaps or the exclusion of a specific class of individuals with 
handicaps from a program limited by Federal statute or Executive order 
to a different class of individuals with handicaps is not prohibited by 
this regulation.
    (d) The agency shall administer programs and activities in the most 
integrated setting appropriate to the needs of qualified individuals 
with handicaps.
Secs. 2416.131--2416.139  [Reserved]



Sec. 2416.140  Employment.

    No qualified individual with handicaps shall, on the basis of 
handicap, be subject to discrimination in employment under any program 
or activity conducted by the agency. The definitions, requirements, and 
procedures of section 501 of the Rehabilitation Act of 1973 (29 U.S.C. 
791), as established by the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission in 
29 CFR part 1613, shall apply to employment in federally conducted 
programs or activities.
Secs. 2416.141--2416.148  [Reserved]



Sec. 2416.149  Program accessibility: Discrimination prohibited.

    Except as otherwise provided in Sec. 2416.150, no qualified 
individual with handicaps shall, because the agency's facilities are 
inaccessible to or unusable by individuals with handicaps, be denied the 
benefits of, be excluded from participation in, or otherwise be 
subjected to discrimination under any program or activity conducted by 
the agency.



Sec. 2416.150  Program accessibility: Existing facilities.

    (a) General. The agency shall operate each program or activity so 
that the program or activity, when viewed in its entirety, is readily 
accessible to and usable by individuals with handicaps. This paragraph 
does not--
    (1) Necessarily require the agency to make each of its existing 
facilities accessible to and usable by individuals with handicaps;
    (2) In the case of historic preservation programs, require the 
agency to take any action that would result in a substantial impairment 
of significant historic features of an historic property; or
    (3) Require the agency to take any action that it can demonstrate 
would result in a fundamental alteration in the nature of a program or 
activity or in undue financial and administrative burdens. In those 
circumstances where agency personnel believe that the proposed action 
would fundamentally alter the program or activity or would result in 
undue financial and administrative burdens, the agency has the burden of 
proving that compliance with Sec. 2416.150(a) would result in such 
alteration or burdens. The decision that compliance would result in such 
alteration or burdens must be made by the agency head or his or her 
designee after considering all agency resources available for use in the 
funding and operation of the conducted program or activity, and must be 
accompanied by a written statement of the reasons for reaching that 
conclusion. If an action would result in such an alteration or such 
burdens, the agency shall take any other action that would not result

[[Page 322]]

in such an alteration or such burdens but would nevertheless ensure that 
individuals with handicaps receive the benefits and services of the 
program or activity.
    (b) Methods--(1) General. The agency may comply with the 
requirements of this section through such means as redesign of 
equipment, reassignment of services to accessible buildings, assignment 
of aides to beneficiaries, home visits, delivery of services at 
alternate accessible sites, alteration of existing facilities and 
construction of new facilities, use of accessible rolling stock, or any 
other methods that result in making its programs or activities readily 
accessible to and usable by individuals with handicaps. The agency is 
not required to make structural changes in existing facilities where 
other methods are effective in achieving compliance with this section. 
The agency, in making alterations to existing buildings, shall meet 
accessibility requirements to the extent compelled by the Architectural 
Barriers Act of 1968, as amended (42 U.S.C. 4151-4157), and any 
regulations implementing it. In choosing among available methods for 
meeting the requirements of this section, the agency shall give priority 
to those methods that offer programs and activities to qualified 
individuals with handicaps in the most integrated setting appropriate.
    (2) Historic preservation programs. In meeting the requirements of 
Sec. 2416.150(a) in historic preservation programs, the agency shall 
give priority to methods that provide physical access to individuals 
with handicaps. In cases where a physical alteration to an historic 
property is not required because of Sec. 2416.150(a) (2) or (3), 
alternative methods of achieving program accessibility include--
    (i) Using audio-visual materials and devices to depict those 
portions of an historic property that cannot otherwise be made 
accessible;
    (ii) Assigning persons to guide individuals with handicaps into or 
through portions of historic properties that cannot otherwise be made 
accessible; or
    (iii) Adopting other innovative methods.
    (c) Time period for compliance. The agency shall comply with the 
obligations established under this section by November 7, 1988, except 
that where structural changes in facilities are undertaken, such changes 
shall be made by September 6, 1991, but in any event as expeditiously as 
possible.
    (d) Transition plan. In the event that structural changes to 
facilities will be undertaken to achieve program accessibility, the 
agency shall develop, by March 6, 1989, a transition plan setting forth 
the steps necessary to complete such changes. The agency shall provide 
an opportunity to interested persons, including individuals with 
handicaps or organizations representing individuals with handicaps, to 
participate in the development of the transition plan by submitting 
comments (both oral and written). A copy of the transition plan shall be 
made available for public inspection. The plan shall, at a minimum--
    (1) Identify physical obstacles in the agency's facilities that 
limit the accessibility of its programs or activities to individuals 
with handicaps;
    (2) Describe in detail the methods that will be used to make the 
facilities accessible;
    (3) Specify the schedule for taking the steps necessary to achieve 
compliance with this section and, if the time period of the transition 
plan is longer than one year, identify steps that will be taken during 
each year of the transition period; and
    (4) Indicate the official responsible for implementation of the 
plan.



Sec. 2416.151   Program accessibility: New construction and alterations.

    Each building or part of a building that is constructed or altered 
by, on behalf of, or for the use of the agency shall be designed, 
constructed, or altered so as to be readily accessible to and usable by 
individuals with handicaps. The definitions, requirements, and standards 
of the Architectural Barriers Act (42 U.S.C. 4151-4157), as established 
in 41 CFR 101-19.600 to 101-19.607, apply to buildings covered by this 
section.

[[Page 323]]

Secs. 2416.152--2416.159  [Reserved]



Sec. 2416.160  Communications.

    (a) The agency shall take appropriate steps to ensure effective 
communication with applicants, participants, personnel of other Federal 
entities, and members of the public.
    (1) The agency shall furnish appropriate auxiliary aids where 
necessary to afford an individual with handicaps an equal opportunity to 
participate in, and enjoy the benefits of, a program or activity 
conducted by the agency.
    (i) In determining what type of auxiliary aid is necessary, the 
agency shall give primary consideration to the requests of the 
individual with handicaps.
    (ii) The agency need not provide individually prescribed devices, 
readers for personal use or study, or other devices of a personal 
nature.
    (2) Where the agency communicates with applicants and beneficiaries 
by telephone, telecommunication devices for deaf persons (TDD's) or 
equally effective telecommunication systems shall be used to communicate 
with persons with impaired hearing.
    (b) The agency shall ensure that interested persons, including 
persons with impaired vision or hearing, can obtain information as to 
the existence and location of accessible services, activities, and 
facilities.
    (c) The agency shall provide signage at a primary entrance to each 
of its inaccessible facilities, directing users to a location at which 
they can obtain information about accessible facilities. The 
international symbol for accessibility shall be used at each primary 
entrance of an accessible facility.
    (d) This section does not require the agency to take any action that 
it can demonstrate would result in a fundamental alteration in the 
nature of a program or activity or in undue financial and administrative 
burdens. In those circumstances where agency personnel believe that the 
proposed action would fundamentally alter the program or activity or 
would result in undue financial and administrative burdens, the agency 
has the burden of proving that compliance with Sec. 2416.160 would 
result in such alteration or burdens. The decision that compliance would 
result in such alteration or burdens must be made by the agency head or 
his or her designee after considering all agency resources available for 
use in the funding and operation of the conducted program or activity 
and must be accompanied by a written statement of the reasons for 
reaching that conclusion. If an action required to comply with this 
section would result in such an alteration or such burdens, the agency 
shall take any other action that would not result in such an alteration 
or such burdens but would nevertheless ensure that, to the maximum 
extent possible, individuals with handicaps receive the benefits and 
services of the program or activity.
Secs. 2416.161--2416.169  [Reserved]



Sec. 2416.170  Compliance procedures.

    (a) Except as provided in paragraph (b) of this section, this 
section applies to all allegations of discrimination on the basis of 
handicap in programs and activities conducted by the agency.
    (b) The agency shall process complaints alleging violations of 
section 504 with respect to employment according to the procedures 
established by the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission in 29 CFR 
part 1613 pursuant to section 501 of the Rehabilitation Act of 1973 (29 
U.S.C. 791).
    (c) The Deputy for EEO and Affirmative Action shall be responsible 
for coordinating implementation of this section. Complaints may be sent 
to the Deputy for EEO and Affirmative Action, Federal Labor Relations 
Authority, 500 C St. SW., Washington, DC 20424.
    (d) The agency shall accept and investigate all complete complaints 
for which it has jurisdiction. All complete complaints must be filed 
within 180 days of the alleged act of discrimination. The agency may 
extend this time period for good cause.
    (e) If the agency receives a complaint over which it does not have 
jurisdiction, it shall promptly notify the complainant and shall make 
reasonable efforts to refer the complaint to the appropriate Government 
entity.
    (f) The agency shall notify the Architectural and Transportation 
Barriers Compliance Board upon receipt of any

[[Page 324]]

complaint alleging that a building or facility that is subject to the 
Architectural Barriers Act of 1968, as amended (42 U.S.C. 4151-4157), is 
not readily accessible to and usable by individuals with handicaps.
    (g) Within 180 days of the receipt of a complete complaint for which 
it has jurisdiction, the agency shall notify the complainant of the 
results of the investigation in a letter containing--
    (1) Findings of fact and conclusions of law;
    (2) A description of a remedy for each violation found; and
    (3) A notice of the right to appeal.
    (h) Appeals of the findings of fact and conclusions of law or 
remedies must be filed by the complainant within 90 days of receipt from 
the agency of the letter required by Sec. 2416.170(g). The agency may 
extend this time for good cause.
    (i) Timely appeals shall be accepted and processed by the head of 
the agency.
    (j) The head of the agency shall notify the complainant of the 
results of the appeal within 60 days of the receipt of the request. If 
the head of the agency determines that additional information is needed 
from the complainant, he or she shall have 60 days from the date of 
receipt of the additional information to make his or her determination 
on the appeal.
    (k) The time limits cited in paragraphs (g) and (j) of this section 
may be extended with the permission of the Assistant Attorney General.
    (l) The agency may delegate its authority for conducting complaint 
investigations to other Federal agencies, except that the authority for 
making the final determination may not be delegated to another agency.

[53 FR 25881 and 25885, July 8, 1988, as amended at 53 FR 25881, July 8, 
1988]
Secs. 2416.171--2416.999  [Reserved]

[[Page 325]]



SUBCHAPTER C--FEDERAL LABOR RELATIONS AUTHORITY AND GENERAL COUNSEL OF THE FEDERAL LABOR RELATIONS AUTHORITY





PART 2420--PURPOSE AND SCOPE--Table of Contents




    Authority: 5 U.S.C. 7134.



Sec. 2420.1  Purpose and scope.

    The regulations contained in this subchapter are designed to 
implement the provisions of chapter 71 of title 5 of the United States 
Code. They prescribe the procedures, basic principles or criteria under 
which the Federal Labor Relations Authority or the General Counsel of 
the Federal Labor Relations Authority, as applicable, will:
    (a) Determine the appropriateness of units for labor organization 
representation under 5 U.S.C. 7112;
    (b) Supervise or conduct elections to determine whether a labor 
organization has been selected as an exclusive representative by a 
majority of the employees in an appropriate unit and otherwise 
administer the provisions of 5 U.S.C. 7111 relating to the according of 
exclusive recognition to labor organizations;
    (c) Resolve issues relating to the granting of national consultation 
rights under 5 U.S.C. 7113;
    (d) Resolve issues relating to determining compelling need for 
agency rules and regulations under 5 U.S.C. 7117(b);
    (e) Resolve issues relating to the duty to bargain in good faith 
under 5 U.S.C. 7117(c);
    (f) Resolve issues relating to the granting of consultation rights 
with respect to conditions of employment under 5 U.S.C. 7117(d);
    (g) Conduct hearings and resolve complaints of unfair labor 
practices under 5 U.S.C. 7118;
    (h) Resolve exceptions to arbitrators' awards under 5 U.S.C. 7122; 
and
    (i) Take such other actions as are necessary and appropriate 
effectively to administer the provisions of chapter 71 of title 5 of the 
United States Code.

[45 FR 3497, Jan. 17, 1980]



PART 2421--MEANING OF TERMS AS USED IN THIS SUBCHAPTER--Table of Contents




Sec.
2421.1  Federal Service Labor-Management Relations Statute.
2421.2  Terms defined in 5 U.S.C. 7103(a); General Counsel; Assistant 
          Secretary.
2421.3  National consultation rights; consultation rights on Government-
          wide rules or regulations; exclusive recognition; unfair labor 
          practices.
2421.4  Activity.
2421.5  Primary national subdivision.
2421.6  Regional Director.
2421.7  Executive Director.
2421.8  Hearing Officer.
2421.9  Administrative Law Judge.
2421.10  Chief Administrative Law Judge.
2421.11  Party.
2421.12  Intervenor.
2421.13  Certification.
2421.14  Appropriate unit.
2421.15  Secret ballot.
2421.16  Showing of interest.
2421.17  Regular and substantially equivalent employment.
2421.18  Petitioner.
2421.19  Eligibility period.
2421.20  Election agreement.
2421.21  Affected by issues raised.
2421.22  Determinative challenged ballots.

    Authority: 5 U.S.C. 7134.

    Source: 45 FR 3497, Jan. 17, 1980, unless otherwise noted.



Sec. 2421.1  Federal Service Labor-Management Relations Statute.

    The term Federal Service Labor-Management Relations Statute means 
chapter 71 of title 5 of the United States Code.



Sec. 2421.2  Terms defined in 5 U.S.C. 7103(a); General Counsel; Assistant Secretary.

    (a) The terms person, employee, agency, labor organization, dues, 
Authority, Panel, collective bargaining agreement, grievance, 
supervisor, management official, collective bargaining, confidential 
employee, conditions of employment, professional employee, exclusive 
representative, firefighter, and United States, as used herein shall 
have the meanings set forth in 5 U.S.C. 7103(a).

[[Page 326]]

    (b) The term General Counsel means the General Counsel of the 
Authority.
    (c) The term Assistant Secretary means the Assistant Secretary of 
Labor for Labor-Management Relations.



Sec. 2421.3  National consultation rights; consultation rights on Government-wide rules or regulations; exclusive recognition; unfair labor practices.

    (a) National consultation rights has the meaning as set forth in 5 
U.S.C. 7113;
    (b) Consultation rights on Government-wide rules or regulations has 
the meaning as set forth in 5 U.S.C. 7117(d);
    (c) Exclusive recognition has the meaning as set forth in 5 U.S.C. 
7111; and
    (d) Unfair labor practices has the meaning as set forth in 5 U.S.C. 
7116.



Sec. 2421.4  Activity.

    Activity means any facility, organizational entity, or geographical 
subdivision or combination thereof, of any agency.



Sec. 2421.5  Primary national subdivision.

    Primary national subdivision of an agency means a first-level 
organizational segment which has functions national in scope that are 
implemented in field activities.



Sec. 2421.6  Regional Director.

    Regional Director means the Director of a region of the Authority 
with geographical boundaries as fixed by the Authority.



Sec. 2421.7  Executive Director.

    Executive Director means the Executive Director of the Authority.



Sec. 2421.8  Hearing Officer.

    Hearing Officer means the individual designated to conduct a hearing 
involving a question concerning the appropriateness of a unit or such 
other matters as may be assigned.



Sec. 2421.9  Administrative Law Judge.

    Administrative Law Judge means the Chief Administrative Law Judge or 
any Administrative Law Judge designated by the Chief Administrative Law 
Judge to conduct a hearing in cases under 5 U.S.C. 7116, and such other 
matters as may be assigned.



Sec. 2421.10  Chief Administrative Law Judge.

    Chief Administrative Law Judge means the Chief Administrative Law 
Judge of the Authority.



Sec. 2421.11  Party.

    Party means:
    (a) Any labor organization, employing agency or activity or 
individual filing a charge, petition, or request;
    (b) Any labor organization or agency or activity
    (1) Named as
    (i) A charged party in a charge,
    (ii) A respondent in a complaint, or
    (iii) An employing agency or activity or an incumbent labor 
organization in a petition;
    (2) Whose intervention in a proceeding has been permitted or 
directed by the Authority; or
    (3) Who participated as a party
    (i) In a matter that was decided by an agency head under 5 U.S.C. 
7117, or
    (ii) In a matter where the award of an arbitrator was issued; and
    (c) The General Counsel, or the General Counsel's designated 
representative, in appropriate proceedings.

[60 FR 67291, Dec. 29, 1995]



Sec. 2421.12  Intervenor.

    Intervenor means a party in a proceeding whose intervention has been 
permitted or directed by the Authority, its agents or representatives.



Sec. 2421.13  Certification.

    Certification means the determination by the Authority, its agents 
or representatives, of the results of an election, or the results of a 
petition to consolidate existing exclusively recognized units.



Sec. 2421.14  Appropriate unit.

    Appropriate unit means that grouping of employees found to be 
appropriate for purposes of exclusive recognition under 5 U.S.C. 7111, 
and for purposes of allotments to representatives under 5 U.S.C. 
7115(c), and consistent with the provisions of 5 U.S.C. 7112.



Sec. 2421.15  Secret ballot.

    Secret ballot means the expression by ballot, voting machine or 
otherwise,

[[Page 327]]

but in no event by proxy, of a choice with respect to any election or 
vote taken upon any matter, which is cast in such a manner that the 
person expressing such choice cannot be identified with the choice 
expressed, except in that instance in which any determinative challenged 
ballot is opened.



Sec. 2421.16  Showing of interest.

    Showing of interest means evidence of membership in a labor 
organization; employees' signed and dated authorization cards or 
petitions authorizing a labor organization to represent them for 
purposes of exclusive recognition; allotment of dues forms executed by 
an employee and the labor organization's authorized official; current 
dues records; an existing or recently expired agreement; current 
exclusive recognition or certification; employees' signed and dated 
petitions or cards indicating that they no longer desire to be 
represented for the purposes of exclusive recognition by the currently 
recognized or certified labor organization; employees' signed and dated 
petitions or cards indicating a desire that an election be held on a 
proposed consolidation of units; or other evidence approved by the 
Authority.



Sec. 2421.17  Regular and substantially equivalent employment.

    Regular and substantially equivalent employment means employment 
that entails substantially the same amount of work, rate of pay, hours, 
working conditions, location of work, kind of work, and seniority 
rights, if any, of an employee prior to the cessation of employment in 
an agency because of any unfair labor practice under 5 U.S.C. 7116.



Sec. 2421.18  Petitioner.

    Petitioner means the party filing a petition under part 2422 of this 
subchapter.

[60 FR 67291, Dec. 29, 1995]



Sec. 2421.19  Eligibility period.

    Eligibility period means the payroll period during which an employee 
must be in an employment status with an agency or activity in order to 
be eligible to vote in a representation election under part 2422 of this 
subchapter.

[60 FR 67291, Dec. 29, 1995]



Sec. 2421.20  Election agreement.

    Election agreement means an agreement under part 2422 of this 
subchapter signed by all the parties, and approved by the Regional 
Director, concerning the details and procedures of a representation 
election in an appropriate unit.

[60 FR 67291, Dec. 29, 1995]



Sec. 2421.21  Affected by issues raised.

    The phrase affected by issues raised, as used in part 2422, should 
be construed broadly to include parties and other labor organizations, 
or agencies or activities that have a connection to employees affected 
by, or questions presented in, a proceeding.

[60 FR 67291, Dec. 29, 1995]



Sec. 2421.22  Determinative challenged ballots.

    Determinative challenged ballots are challenges that are unresolved 
prior to the tally and sufficient in number after the tally to affect 
the results of the election.

[60 FR 67291, Dec. 29, 1995]



PART 2422--REPRESENTATION PROCEEDINGS--Table of Contents




Sec.
2422.1  Purposes of a petition.
2422.2  Standing to file a petition.
2422.3  Contents of a petition.
2422.4  Service requirements.
2422.5  Filing petitions.
2422.6  Notification of filing.
2422.7  Posting notice of filing of a petition.
2422.8  Intervention and cross-petitions.
2422.9  Adequacy of showing of interest.
2422.10  Validity of showing of interest.
2422.11  Challenge to the status of a labor organization.
2422.12  Timeliness of petitions seeking an election.
2422.13  Resolution of issues raised by a petition.
2422.14  Effect of withdrawal/dismissal.
2422.15  Duty to furnish information and cooperate.
2422.16  Election agreements or directed elections.
2422.17  Notice of hearing and prehearing conference.

[[Page 328]]

2422.18  Hearing procedures.
2422.19  Motions.
2422.20  Rights of parties at a hearing.
2422.21  Duties and powers of the Hearing Officer.
2422.22  Objections to the conduct of the hearing.
2422.23  Election procedures.
2422.24  Challenged ballots.
2422.25  Tally of ballots.
2422.26  Objections to the election.
2422.27  Determinative challenged ballots and objections.
2422.28  Runoff elections.
2422.29  Inconclusive elections.
2422.30  Regional Director investigations, notices of hearings, actions, 
          and Decisions and Orders.
2422.31  Application for review of a Regional Director Decision and 
          Order.
2422.32  Certifications and revocations.
2422.33  Relief obtainable under part 2423.
2422.34  Rights and obligations during the pendency of representation 
          proceedings.

    Authority: 5 U.S.C. 7134.

    Source: 60 FR 67291, Dec. 29, 1995, unless otherwise noted.



Sec. 2422.1  Purposes of a petition.

    A petition may be filed for the following purposes:
    (a) Elections or Eligibility for dues allotment. To request:
    (1)(i) An election to determine if employees in an appropriate unit 
wish to be represented for the purpose of collective bargaining by an 
exclusive representative, and/or
    (ii) A determination of eligibility for dues allotment in an 
appropriate unit without an exclusive representative; or
    (2) an election to determine if employees in a unit no longer wish 
to be represented for the purpose of collective bargaining by an 
exclusive representative.
    (3) Petitions under this subsection must be accompanied by an 
appropriate showing of interest.
    (b) Clarification or Amendment. To clarify, and/or amend:
    (1) A recognition or certification then in effect; and/or
    (2) Any other matter relating to representation.
    (c) Consolidation. To consolidate two or more units, with or without 
an election, in an agency and for which a labor organization is the 
exclusive representative.



Sec. 2422.2  Standing to file a petition.

    A representation petition may be filed by: an individual; a labor 
organization; two or more labor organizations acting as a joint-
petitioner; an individual acting on behalf of any employee(s); an agency 
or activity; or a combination of the above: Provided, however, that
    (a) Only a labor organization has standing to file a petition 
pursuant to section 2422.1(a)(1);
    (b) Only an individual has standing to file a petition pursuant to 
section 2422.1(a)(2); and
    (c) Only an agency or a labor organization may file a petition 
pursuant to section 2422.1(b) or (c).



Sec. 2422.3  Contents of a petition.

    (a) What to file. A petition must be filed on a form prescribed by 
the Authority and contain the following information:
    (1) The name and mailing address for each agency or activity 
affected by issues raised in the petition, including street number, 
city, state and zip code.
    (2) The name, mailing address and work telephone number of the 
contact person for each agency or activity affected by issues raised in 
the petition.
    (3) The name and mailing address for each labor organization 
affected by issues raised in the petition, including street number, 
city, state and zip code. If a labor organization is affiliated with a 
national organization, the local designation and the national 
affiliation should both be included. If a labor organization is an 
exclusive representative of any of the employees affected by issues 
raised in the petition, the date of the recognition or certification and 
the date any collective bargaining agreement covering the unit will 
expire or when the most recent agreement did expire should be included, 
if known.
    (4) The name, mailing address and work telephone number of the 
contact person for each labor organization affected by issues raised in 
the petition.
    (5) The name and mailing address for the petitioner, including 
street number, city, state and zip code. If a labor organization 
petitioner is affiliated with a national organization, the local

[[Page 329]]

designation and the national affiliation should both be included.
    (6) A description of the unit(s) affected by issues raised in the 
petition. The description should generally indicate the geographic 
locations and the classifications of the employees included (or sought 
to be included) in, and excluded (or sought to be excluded) from, the 
unit.
    (7) The approximate number of employees in the unit(s) affected by 
issues raised in the petition.
    (8) A clear and concise statement of the issues raised by the 
petition and the results the petitioner seeks.
    (9) A declaration by the person signing the petition, under the 
penalties of the Criminal Code (18 U.S.C. 1001), that the contents of 
the petition are true and correct to the best of the person's knowledge 
and belief.
    (10) The signature, title, mailing address and telephone number of 
the person filing the petition.
    (b) Compliance with 5 U.S.C. 7111(e). A labor organization/
petitioner complies with 5 U.S.C. 7111(e) by submitting to the agency or 
activity and to the Department of Labor a roster of its officers and 
representatives, a copy of its constitution and bylaws, and a statement 
of its objectives. By signing the petition form, the labor organization/
petitioner certifies that it has submitted these documents to the 
activity or agency and to the Department of Labor.
    (c) Showing of interest supporting a representation petition. When 
filing a petition requiring a showing of interest, the petitioner must:
    (1) So indicate on the petition form;
    (2) Submit with the petition a showing of interest of not less than 
thirty percent (30%) of the employees in the unit involved in the 
petition; and
    (3) Include an alphabetical list of the names constituting the 
showing of interest.
    (d) Petition seeking dues allotment. When there is no exclusive 
representative, a petition seeking certification for dues allotment 
shall be accompanied by a showing of membership in the petitioner of not 
less than ten percent (10%) of the employees in the unit claimed to be 
appropriate. An alphabetical list of names constituting the showing of 
membership must be submitted.



Sec. 2422.4  Service requirements.

    Every petition, motion, brief, request, challenge, written 
objection, or application for review shall be served on all parties 
affected by issues raised in the filing. The service shall include all 
documentation in support thereof, with the exception of a showing of 
interest, evidence supporting challenges to the validity of a showing of 
interest, and evidence supporting objections to an election. The filer 
must submit a written statement of service to the Regional Director.



Sec. 2422.5  Filing petitions.

    (a) Where to file. Petitions must be filed with the Regional 
Director for the region in which the unit or employee(s) affected by 
issues raised in the petition are located. If the unit(s) or employees 
are located in two or more regions of the Authority, the petitions must 
be filed with the Regional Director for the region in which the 
headquarters of the agency or activity is located.
    (b) Number of copies. An original and two (2) copies of the petition 
and the accompanying material must be filed with the Regional Director.
    (c) Date of filing. A petition is filed when it is received by the 
appropriate Regional Director.



Sec. 2422.6  Notification of filing.

    (a) Notification to parties. After a petition is filed, the Regional 
Director will notify any labor organization, agency or activity that the 
parties have identified as being affected by issues raised by the 
petition, that a petition has been filed with the Regional Director. The 
Regional Director will also make reasonable efforts to identify and 
notify any other party affected by the issues raised by the petition.
    (b) Contents of the notification. The notification will inform the 
labor organization, agency or activity of:
    (1) The name of the petitioner;
    (2) The description of the unit(s) or employees affected by issues 
raised in the petition; and,

[[Page 330]]

    (3) A statement that all affected parties should advise the Regional 
Director in writing of their interest in the issues raised in the 
petition.



Sec. 2422.7  Posting notice of filing of a petition.

    (a) Posting notice of petition. When appropriate, the Regional 
Director, after the filing of a representation petition, will direct the 
agency or activity to post copies of a notice to all employees in places 
where notices are normally posted for the employees affected by issues 
raised in the petition and/or distribute copies of a notice in a manner 
by which notices are normally distributed.
    (b) Contents of notice. The notice shall advise affected employees 
about the petition.
    (c) Duration of notice. The notice should be conspicuously posted 
for a period of ten (10) days and not be altered, defaced, or covered by 
other material.



Sec. 2422.8  Intervention and cross-petitions.

    (a) Cross-petitions. A cross-petition is a petition which involves 
any employees in a unit covered by a pending representation petition. 
Cross-petitions must be filed in accordance with this subpart.
    (b) Intervention requests and cross-petitions. A request to 
intervene and a cross-petition, accompanied by any necessary showing of 
interest, must be submitted in writing and filed with either the 
Regional Director or the Hearing Officer before the hearing opens, 
unless good cause is shown for granting an extension. If no hearing is 
held, a request to intervene and a cross-petition must be filed prior to 
action being taken pursuant to Sec. 2422.30.
    (c) Labor organization intervention requests. Except for incumbent 
intervenors, a labor organization seeking to intervene shall submit a 
statement that it has complied with 5 U.S.C. 7111(e) and one of the 
following:
    (1) A showing of interest of ten percent (10%) or more of the 
employees in the unit covered by a petition seeking an election, with an 
alphabetical list of the names of the employees constituting the showing 
of interest; or
    (2) A current or recently expired collective bargaining agreement 
covering any of the employees in the unit affected by issues raised in 
the petition; or
    (3) Evidence that it is or was, prior to a reorganization, the 
recognized or certified exclusive representative of any of the employees 
affected by issues raised in the petition.
    (d) Incumbent. An incumbent exclusive representative, without regard 
to the requirements of paragraph (c) of this section, will be considered 
a party in any representation proceeding raising issues that affect 
employees the incumbent represents, unless it serves the Regional 
Director with a written disclaimer of any representation interest in the 
claimed unit.
    (e) Employing agency. An agency or activity will be considered a 
party if any of its employees are affected by issues raised in the 
petition.
    (f) Agency or activity intervention. An agency or activity seeking 
to intervene in any representation proceeding must submit evidence that 
one or more employees of the agency or activity may be affected by 
issues raised in the petition.



Sec. 2422.9  Adequacy of showing of interest.

    (a) Adequacy. Adequacy of a showing of interest refers to the 
percentage of employees in the unit involved as required by Secs. 2422.3 
(c) and (d) and 2422.8(c)(1).
    (b) Regional Director investigation and Decision and Order. The 
Regional Director will conduct such investigation as deemed appropriate. 
A Regional Director's determination that the showing of interest is 
adequate is final and binding and not subject to collateral attack at a 
representation hearing or on appeal to the Authority. If the Regional 
Director determines that a showing of interest is inadequate, the 
Regional Director will issue a Decision and Order dismissing the 
petition, or denying a request for intervention.



Sec. 2422.10  Validity of showing of interest.

    (a) Validity. Validity questions are raised by challenges to a 
showing of interest on grounds other than adequacy.

[[Page 331]]

    (b) Validity challenge. The Regional Director or any party may 
challenge the validity of a showing of interest.
    (c) When and where validity challenges may be filed. Party 
challenges to the validity of a showing of interest must be in writing 
and filed with the Regional Director or the Hearing Officer before the 
hearing opens, unless good cause is shown for granting an extension. If 
no hearing is held, challenges to the validity of a showing of interest 
must be filed prior to action being taken pursuant to Sec. 2422.30.
    (d) Contents of validity challenges. Challenges to the validity of a 
showing of interest must be supported with evidence.
    (e) Regional Director investigation and Decision and Order. The 
Regional Director will conduct such investigation as deemed appropriate. 
The Regional Director's determination that a showing of interest is 
valid is final and binding and is not subject to collateral attack or 
appeal to the Authority. If the Regional Director finds that the showing 
of interest is not valid, the Regional Director will issue a Decision 
and Order dismissing the petition or denying the request to intervene.



Sec. 2422.11  Challenge to the status of a labor organization.

    (a) Basis of challenge to labor organization status. The only basis 
on which a challenge to the status of a labor organization may be made 
is compliance with 5 U.S.C. 7103(a)(4).
    (b) Format and time for filing a challenge. Any party filing a 
challenge to the status of a labor organization involved in the 
processing of a petition must do so in writing to the Regional Director 
or the Hearing Officer before the hearing opens, unless good cause is 
shown for granting an extension. If no hearing is held, challenges must 
be filed prior to action being taken pursuant to Sec. 2422.30.



Sec. 2422.12  Timeliness of petitions seeking an election.

    (a) Election bar. Where there is no certified exclusive 
representative, a petition seeking an election will not be considered 
timely if filed within twelve (12) months of a valid election involving 
the same unit or a subdivision of the same unit.
    (b) Certification bar. Where there is a certified exclusive 
representative of employees, a petition seeking an election will not be 
considered timely if filed within twelve (12) months after the 
certification of the exclusive representative of the employees in an 
appropriate unit. If a collective bargaining agreement covering the 
claimed unit is pending agency head review under 5 U.S.C. 7114(c) or is 
in effect, paragraphs (c), (d), or (e) of this section apply.
    (c) Bar during 5 U.S.C. 7114(c) agency head review. A petition 
seeking an election will not be considered timely if filed during the 
period of agency head review under 5 U.S.C. 7114(c). This bar expires 
upon either the passage of thirty (30) days absent agency head action, 
or upon the date of any timely agency head action.
    (d) Contract bar where the contract is for three (3) years or less. 
Where a collective bargaining agreement is in effect covering the 
claimed unit and has a term of three (3) years or less from the date it 
became effective, a petition seeking an election will be considered 
timely if filed not more than one hundred and five (105) and not less 
than sixty (60) days prior to the expiration of the agreement.
    (e) Contract bar where the contract is for more than three (3) 
years. Where a collective bargaining agreement is in effect covering the 
claimed unit and has a term of more than three (3) years from the date 
it became effective, a petition seeking an election will be considered 
timely if filed not more than one hundred and five (105) and not less 
than sixty (60) days prior to the expiration of the initial three (3) 
year period, and any time after the expiration of the initial three (3) 
year period.
    (f) Unusual circumstances. A petition seeking an election or a 
determination relating to representation matters may be filed at any 
time when unusual circumstances exist that substantially affect the unit 
or majority representation.
    (g) Premature extension. Where a collective bargaining agreement 
with a term of three (3) years or less has been extended prior to sixty 
(60) days before

[[Page 332]]

its expiration date, the extension will not serve as a basis for 
dismissal of a petition seeking an election filed in accordance with 
this section.
    (h) Contract requirements. Collective bargaining agreements, 
including agreements that go into effect under 5 U.S.C. 7114(c) and 
those that automatically renew without further action by the parties, do 
not constitute a bar to a petition seeking an election under this 
section unless a clear and unambiguous effective date, renewal date 
where applicable, duration, and termination date are ascertainable from 
the agreement and relevant accompanying documentation.



Sec. 2422.13  Resolution of issues raised by a petition.

    (a) Meetings prior to filing a representation petition. All parties 
affected by the representation issues that may be raised in a petition 
are encouraged to meet prior to the filing of the petition to discuss 
their interests and narrow and resolve the issues. If requested by all 
parties a representative of the appropriate Regional Office will 
participate in these meetings.
    (b) Meetings to narrow and resolve the issues after the petition is 
filed. After a petition is filed, the Regional Director may require all 
affected parties to meet to narrow and resolve the issues raised in the 
petition.



Sec. 2422.14  Effect of withdrawal/dismissal.

    (a) Withdrawal/dismissal less than sixty (60) days before contract 
expiration. When a petition seeking an election that has been timely 
filed is withdrawn by the petitioner or dismissed by the Regional 
Director less than sixty (60) days prior to the expiration of an 
existing agreement between the incumbent exclusive representative and 
the agency or activity or any time after the expiration of the 
agreement, another petition seeking an election will not be considered 
timely if filed within a ninety (90) day period from either:
    (1) The date the withdrawal is approved; or
    (2) The date the petition is dismissed by the Regional Director when 
no application for review is filed with the Authority; or
    (3) The date the Authority rules on an application for review. Other 
pending petitions that have been timely filed under this Part will 
continue to be processed.
    (b) Withdrawal by petitioner. A petitioner who submits a withdrawal 
request for a petition seeking an election that is received by the 
Regional Director after the notice of hearing issues or after approval 
of an election agreement, whichever occurs first, will be barred from 
filing another petition seeking an election for the same unit or any 
subdivision of the unit for six (6) months from the date of the approval 
of the withdrawal by the Regional Director.
    (c) Withdrawal by incumbent. When an election is not held because 
the incumbent disclaims any representation interest in a unit, a 
petition by the incumbent seeking an election involving the same unit or 
a subdivision of the same unit will not be considered timely if filed 
within six (6) months of cancellation of the election.



Sec. 2422.15  Duty to furnish information and cooperate.

    (a) Relevant information. After a petition is filed, all parties 
must, upon request of the Regional Director, furnish the Regional 
Director and serve all parties affected by issues raised in the petition 
with information concerning parties, issues, and agreements raised in or 
affected by the petition.
    (b) Inclusions and exclusions. After a petition seeking an election 
is filed, the Regional Director may direct the agency or activity to 
furnish the Regional Director and all parties affected by issues raised 
in the petition with a current alphabetized list of employees and job 
classifications included in and/or excluded from the existing or claimed 
unit affected by issues raised in the petition.
    (c) Cooperation. All parties are required to cooperate in every 
aspect of the representation process. This obligation includes 
cooperating fully with the Regional Director, submitting all required 
and requested information, and participating in prehearing conferences 
and hearings. The failure to cooperate in the representation process may 
result in the Regional Director

[[Page 333]]

taking appropriate action, including dismissal of the petition or denial 
of intervention.



Sec. 2422.16  Election agreements or directed elections.

    (a) Election agreements. Parties are encouraged to enter into 
election agreements.
    (b) Regional Director directed election. If the parties are unable 
to agree on procedural matters, specifically, the eligibility period, 
method of election, dates, hours, or locations of the election, the 
Regional Director will decide election procedures and issue a Direction 
of Election, without prejudice to the rights of a party to file 
objections to the procedural conduct of the election.
    (c) Opportunity for a hearing. Before directing an election, the 
Regional Director shall provide affected parties an opportunity for a 
hearing on other than procedural matters, and thereafter may:
    (1) Issue a Decision and Order; or
    (2) If there are no questions regarding unit appropriateness, issue 
a Direction of Election without a Decision and Order.
    (d) Challenges or objections to a directed election. A Direction of 
Election issued under this section will be issued without prejudice to 
the right of a party to file a challenge to the eligibility of any 
person participating in the election and/or objections to the election.



Sec. 2422.17  Notice of hearing and prehearing conference.

    (a) Purpose of notice of a hearing. The Regional Director may issue 
a notice of hearing involving any issues raised in the petition.
    (b) Contents. The notice of hearing will advise affected parties 
about the hearing. The Regional Director will also notify affected 
parties of the issues raised in the petition and establish a date for 
the prehearing conference.
    (c) Prehearing conference. A prehearing conference will be conducted 
by the Hearing Officer, either by meeting or teleconference. All parties 
must participate in a prehearing conference and be prepared to fully 
discuss, narrow and resolve the issues set forth in the notification of 
the prehearing conference.
    (d) No interlocutory appeal of hearing determination. A Regional 
Director's determination of whether to issue a notice of hearing is not 
appealable to the Authority.



Sec. 2422.18  Hearing procedures.

    (a) Purpose of a hearing. Representation hearings are considered 
investigatory and not adversarial. The purpose of the hearing is to 
develop a full and complete record of relevant and material facts.
    (b) Conduct of hearing. Hearings will be open to the public unless 
otherwise ordered by the Hearing Officer. There is no burden of proof, 
with the exception of proceedings on objections to elections as provided 
for in Sec. 2422.27(b). Formal rules of evidence do not apply.
    (c) Hearing officer. Hearings will be conducted by a Hearing Officer 
appointed by the Regional Director. Another Hearing Officer may be 
substituted for the presiding Hearing Officer at any time.
    (d) Transcript. An official reporter will make the official 
transcript of the hearing. Copies of the official transcript may be 
examined in the appropriate Regional Office during normal working hours. 
Requests by parties to purchase copies of the official transcript should 
be made to the official hearing reporter.



Sec. 2422.19  Motions.

    (a) Purpose of a motion. Subsequent to the issuance of a Notice of 
Hearing in a representation proceeding, a party seeking a ruling, an 
order, or relief must do so by filing or raising a motion stating the 
order or relief sought and the grounds therefor. Challenges and other 
filings referenced in other sections of this subpart may, in the 
discretion of the Regional Director or Hearing Officer, be treated as a 
motion.
    (b) Prehearing motions. Prehearing motions must be filed in writing 
with the Regional Director. Any response must be filed with the Regional 
Director within five (5) days after service of the motion. The Regional 
Director may rule on the motion or refer the motion to the Hearing 
Officer.

[[Page 334]]

    (c) Motions made at the hearing. During the hearing, motions will be 
made to the Hearing Officer and may be oral on the record, unless 
otherwise required in this subpart to be in writing. Responses may be 
oral on the record or in writing, but, absent permission of the Hearing 
Officer, must be provided before the hearing closes. When appropriate, 
the Hearing Officer will rule on motions made at the hearing or referred 
to the Hearing Officer by the Regional Director.
    (d) Posthearing motions. Motions made after the hearing closes must 
be filed in writing with the Regional Director. Any response to a 
posthearing motion must be filed with the Regional Director within five 
(5) days after service of the motion.



Sec. 2422.20  Rights of parties at a hearing.

    (a) Rights. A party at a hearing will have the right:
    (1) To appear in person or by a representative;
    (2) To examine and cross-examine witnesses; and
    (3) To introduce into the record relevant evidence.
    (b) Documentary evidence and stipulations. Parties must submit two 
(2) copies of documentary evidence to the Hearing Officer and copies to 
all other parties. Stipulations of fact between/among the parties may be 
introduced into evidence.
    (c) Oral argument. Parties will be entitled to a reasonable period 
prior to the close of the hearing for oral argument. Presentation of a 
closing oral argument does not preclude a party from filing a brief 
under paragraph (d) of this section.
    (d) Briefs. A party will be afforded an opportunity to file a brief 
with the Regional Director.
    (1) An original and two (2) copies of a brief must be filed with the 
Regional Director within thirty (30) days from the close of the hearing.
    (2) A written request for an extension of time to file a brief must 
be filed with and received by the Regional Director no later than five 
(5) days before the date the brief is due.
    (3) No reply brief may be filed without permission of the Regional 
Director.



Sec. 2422.21  Duties and powers of the Hearing Officer.

    (a) Duties of the Hearing Officer. The Hearing Officer will receive 
evidence and inquire fully into the relevant and material facts 
concerning the matters that are the subject of the hearing, and may make 
recommendations on the record to the Regional Director.
    (b) Powers of the Hearing Officer. During the period a case is 
assigned to a Hearing Officer by the Regional Director and prior to the 
close of the hearing, the Hearing Officer may take any action necessary 
to schedule, conduct, continue, control, and regulate the hearing, 
including ruling on motions when appropriate.



Sec. 2422.22  Objections to the conduct of the hearing.

    (a) Objections. Objections are oral or written complaints concerning 
the conduct of a hearing.
    (b) Exceptions to rulings. There are automatic exceptions to all 
adverse rulings.



Sec. 2422.23  Election procedures.

    (a) Regional Director conducts or supervises election. The Regional 
Director will decide to conduct or supervise the election. In supervised 
elections, agencies will perform all acts as specified in the Election 
Agreement or Direction of Election.
    (b) Notice of election. Prior to the election a notice of election, 
prepared by the Regional Director, will be posted by the activity in 
places where notices to employees are customarily posted and/or 
distributed in a manner by which notices are normally distributed. The 
notice of election will contain the details and procedures of the 
election, including the appropriate unit, the eligibility period, the 
date(s), hour(s) and location(s) of the election, a sample ballot, and 
the effect of the vote.
    (c) Sample ballot. The reproduction of any document purporting to be 
a copy

[[Page 335]]

of the official ballot that suggests either directly or indirectly to 
employees that the Authority endorses a particular choice in the 
election may constitute grounds for setting aside an election if 
objections are filed under Sec. 2422.26.
    (d) Secret ballot. All elections will be by secret ballot.
    (e) Intervenor withdrawal from ballot. When two or more labor 
organizations are included as choices in an election, an intervening 
labor organization may, prior to the approval of an election agreement 
or before the direction of an election, file a written request with the 
Regional Director to remove its name from the ballot. If the request is 
not received prior to the approval of an election agreement or before 
the direction of an election, unless the parties and the Regional 
Director agree otherwise, the intervening labor organization will remain 
on the ballot. The Regional Director's decision on the request is final 
and not subject to the filing of an application for review with the 
Authority.
    (f) Incumbent withdrawal from ballot in an election to decertify an 
incumbent representative. When there is no intervening labor 
organization, an election to decertify an incumbent exclusive 
representative will not be held if the incumbent provides the Regional 
Director with a written disclaimer of any representation interest in the 
unit. When there is an intervenor, an election will be held if the 
intervening labor organization proffers a thirty percent (30%) showing 
of interest within the time period established by the Regional Director.
    (g) Petitioner withdraws from ballot in an election. When there is 
no intervening labor organization, an election will not be held if the 
petitioner provides the Regional Director with a written request to 
withdraw the petition. When there is an intervenor, an election will be 
held if the intervening labor organization proffers a thirty percent 
(30%) showing of interest within the time period established by the 
Regional Director.
    (h) Observers. All parties are entitled to representation at the 
polling location(s) by observers of their own selection subject to the 
Regional Director's approval.
    (1) Parties desiring to name observers must file in writing with the 
Regional Director a request for specifically named observers at least 
fifteen (15) days prior to an election. The Regional Director may grant 
an extension of time for filing a request for specifically named 
observers for good cause where a party requests such an extension or on 
the Regional Director's own motion. The request must name and identify 
the observers requested.
    (2) An agency or activity may use as its observers any employees who 
are not eligible to vote in the election, except:
    (i) Supervisors or management officials;
    (ii) Employees who have any official connection with any of the 
labor organizations involved; or
    (iii) Non-employees of the Federal government.
    (3) A labor organization may use as its observers any employees 
eligible to vote in the election, except:
    (i) Employees on leave without pay status who are working for the 
labor organization involved; or
    (ii) Employees who hold an elected office in the union.
    (4) Objections to a request for specific observers must be filed 
with the Regional Director stating the reasons in support within five 
(5) days after service of the request.
    (5) The Regional Director's ruling on requests for and objections to 
observers is final and binding and is not subject to the filing of an 
application for review with the Authority.



Sec. 2422.24  Challenged ballots.

    (a) Filing challenges. A party or the Regional Director may, for 
good cause, challenge the eligibility of any person to participate in 
the election prior to the employee voting.
    (b) Challenged ballot procedure. An individual whose eligibility to 
vote is in dispute will be given the opportunity to vote a challenged 
ballot. If the parties and the Region are unable to resolve the 
challenged ballot(s) prior to the tally of ballots, the unresolved 
challenged ballot(s) will be impounded and preserved until a 
determination

[[Page 336]]

can be made, if necessary, by the Regional Director.



Sec. 2422.25  Tally of ballots.

    (a) Tallying the ballots. When the election is concluded, the 
Regional Director will tally the ballots.
    (b) Service of the tally. When the tally is completed, the Regional 
Director will serve the tally of ballots on the parties in accordance 
with the election agreement or direction of election.
    (c) Valid ballots cast. Representation will be determined by the 
majority of the valid ballots cast.



Sec. 2422.26  Objections to the election.

    (a) Filing objections to the election. Objections to the procedural 
conduct of the election or to conduct that may have improperly affected 
the results of the election may be filed by any party. Objections must 
be filed and received by the Regional Director within five (5) days 
after the tally of ballots has been served. Any objections must be 
timely regardless of whether the challenged ballots are sufficient in 
number to affect the results of the election. The objections must be 
supported by clear and concise reasons. An original and two (2) copies 
of the objections must be received by the Regional Director.
    (b) Supporting evidence. The objecting party must file with the 
Regional Director evidence, including signed statements, documents and 
other materials supporting the objections within ten (10) days after the 
objections are filed.



Sec. 2422.27  Determinative challenged ballots and objections.

    (a) Investigation. The Regional Director will investigate objections 
and/or determinative challenged ballots that are sufficient in number to 
affect the results of the election.
    (b) Burden of proof. A party filing objections to the election bears 
the burden of proof by a preponderance of the evidence concerning those 
objections. However, no party bears the burden of proof on challenged 
ballots.
    (c) Regional Director Action. After investigation, the Regional 
Director will take appropriate action consistent with Sec. 2422.30.
    (d) Consolidated hearing on objections and/or determinative 
challenged ballots and an unfair labor practice hearing. When 
appropriate, and in accordance with Sec. 2422.33, objections and/or 
determinative challenged ballots may be consolidated with an unfair 
labor practice hearing. Such consolidated hearings will be conducted by 
an Administrative Law Judge. Exceptions and related submissions must be 
filed with the Authority and the Authority will issue a decision in 
accordance with part 2423 of this chapter, except for the following:
    (1) Sections 2423.18 and 2423.19(j) of this Subchapter concerning 
the burden of proof and settlement conferences are not applicable;
    (2) The Administrative Law Judge may not recommend remedial action 
to be taken or notices to be posted as provided by Sec. 2423.26(a) of 
this Subchapter; and,
    (3) References to ``charge'' and ``complaint'' in Sec. 2423.26(b) of 
this chapter will be omitted.



Sec. 2422.28  Runoff elections.

    (a) When a runoff may be held. A runoff election is required in an 
election involving at least three (3) choices, one of which is ``no 
union'' or ``neither,'' when no choice receives a majority of the valid 
ballots cast. However, a runoff may not be held until the Regional 
Director has ruled on objections to the election and determinative 
challenged ballots.
    (b) Eligibility. Employees who were eligible to vote in the original 
election and who are also eligible on the date of the runoff election 
may vote in the runoff election.
    (c) Ballot. The ballot in the runoff election will provide for a 
selection between the two choices receiving the largest and second 
largest number of votes in the election.



Sec. 2422.29  Inconclusive elections.

    (a) Inconclusive elections. An inconclusive election is one where 
challenged ballots are not sufficient to affect the outcome of the 
election and one of the following occurs:
    (1) The ballot provides for at least three (3) choices, one of which 
is ``no union'' or ``neither'' and the votes are equally divided; or

[[Page 337]]

    (2) The ballot provides for at least three (3) choices, the choice 
receiving the highest number of votes does not receive a majority, and 
at least two other choices receive the next highest and same number of 
votes; or
    (3) When a runoff ballot provides for a choice between two labor 
organizations and results in the votes being equally divided; or
    (4) When the Regional Director determines that there have been 
significant procedural irregularities.
    (b) Eligibility to vote in a rerun election. A current payroll 
period will be used to determine eligibility to vote in a rerun 
election.
    (c) Ballot. If the Regional Director determines that the election is 
inconclusive, the election will be rerun with all the choices that 
appeared on the original ballot.
    (d) Number of reruns. There will be only one rerun of an 
inconclusive election. If the rerun results in another inconclusive 
election, the tally of ballots will indicate a majority of valid ballots 
has not been cast for any choice and a certification of results will be 
issued. If necessary, a runoff may be held when an original election is 
rerun.



Sec. 2422.30  Regional Director investigations, notices of hearings, actions, and Decisions and Orders.

    (a) Regional Director investigation. The Regional Director will make 
such investigation of the petition and any other matter as the Regional 
Director deems necessary.
    (b) Regional Director notice of hearing. The Regional Director will 
issue a notice of hearing to inquire into any matter about which a 
material issue of fact exists, and any time there is reasonable cause to 
believe a question exists regarding unit appropriateness.
    (c) Regional Director action and Decision and Order. After 
investigation and/or hearing, when a hearing has been ordered, the 
Regional Director will resolve the matter in dispute and, when 
appropriate, direct an election or approve an election agreement, or 
issue a Decision and Order.
    (d) Appeal of Regional Director Decision and Order. A party may file 
with the Authority an application for review of a Regional Director 
Decision and Order.
    (e) Contents of the Record. When no hearing has been conducted all 
material submitted to and considered by the Regional Director during the 
investigation becomes a part of the record. When a hearing has been 
conducted, the transcript and all material entered into evidence, 
including any posthearing briefs, become a part of the record.



Sec. 2422.31  Application for review of a Regional Director Decision and Order.

    (a) Filing an application for review. A party must file an 
application for review with the Authority within sixty (60) days of the 
Regional Director's Decision and Order. The sixty (60) day time limit 
provided for in 5 U.S.C. 7105(f) may not be extended or waived.
    (b) Contents. An application for review must be sufficient to enable 
the Authority to rule on the application without recourse to the record; 
however, the Authority may, in its discretion, examine the record in 
evaluating the application. An application must specify the matters and 
rulings to which exception(s) is taken, include a summary of evidence 
relating to any issue raised in the application, and make specific 
reference to page citations in the transcript if a hearing was held. An 
application may not raise any issue or rely on any facts not timely 
presented to the Hearing Officer or Regional Director.
    (c) Review. The Authority may grant an application for review only 
when the application demonstrates that review is warranted on one or 
more of the following grounds:
    (1) The decision raises an issue for which there is an absence of 
precedent;
    (2) Established law or policy warrants reconsideration; or,
    (3) There is a genuine issue over whether the Regional Director has:
    (i) Failed to apply established law;
    (ii) Committed a prejudicial procedural error;
    (iii) Committed a clear and prejudicial error concerning a 
substantial factual matter.

[[Page 338]]

    (d) Opposition. A party may file with the Authority an opposition to 
an application for review within ten (10) days after the party is served 
with the application. A copy must be served on the Regional Director and 
all other parties and a statement of service must be filed with the 
Authority.
    (e) Regional Director Decision and Order becomes the Authority's 
action. A Decision and Order of a Regional Director becomes the action 
of the Authority when:
    (1) No application for review is filed with the Authority within 
sixty (60) days after the date of the Regional Director's Decision and 
Order; or
    (2) A timely application for review is filed with the Authority and 
the Authority does not undertake to grant review of the Regional 
Director's Decision and Order within sixty (60) days of the filing of 
the application; or
    (3) The Authority denies an application for review of the Regional 
Director's Decision and Order.
    (f) Authority grant of review and stay. The Authority may rule on 
the issue(s) in an application for review in its order granting the 
application for review. Neither filing nor granting an application for 
review shall stay any action ordered by the Regional Director unless 
specifically ordered by the Authority.
    (g) Briefs if review is granted. If the Authority does not rule on 
the issue(s) in the application for review in its order granting review, 
the Authority may, in its discretion, afford the parties an opportunity 
to file briefs. The briefs will be limited to the issue(s) referenced in 
the Authority's order granting review.



Sec. 2422.32  Certifications and revocations.

    (a) Certifications. The Regional Director will issue an appropriate 
certification when:
    (1) After an election, runoff, or rerun,
    (i) No objections are filed or challenged ballots are not 
determinative, or
    (ii) Objections and determinative challenged ballots are decided and 
resolved; or
    (2) The Regional Director issues a Decision and Order requiring a 
certification and the Decision and Order becomes the action of the 
Authority under Sec. 2422.31(e) or the Authority otherwise directs the 
issuance of a certification.
    (b) Revocations. Without prejudice to any rights and obligations 
which may exist under the Statute, the Regional Director will revoke a 
recognition or certification, as appropriate, and provide a written 
statement of reasons when:
    (1) An incumbent exclusive representative files, during a 
representation proceeding, a disclaimer of any representational interest 
in the unit; or
    (2) Due to a substantial change in the character and scope of the 
unit, the unit is no longer appropriate and an election is not 
warranted.



Sec. 2422.33  Relief obtainable under part 2423.

    Remedial relief that was or could have been obtained as a result of 
a motion, objection, or challenge filed or raised under this subpart, 
may not be the basis for similar relief if filed or raised as an unfair 
labor practice under part 2423 of this chapter: Provided, however, that 
related matters may be consolidated for hearing as noted in 
Sec. 2422.27(d) of this subpart.



Sec. 2422.34  Rights and obligations during the pendency of representation proceedings.

    (a) Existing recognitions, agreements, and obligations under the 
Statute. During the pendency of any representation proceeding, parties 
are obligated to maintain existing recognitions, adhere to the terms and 
conditions of existing collective bargaining agreements, and fulfill all 
other representational and bargaining responsibilities under the 
Statute.
    (b) Unit status of individual employees. Notwithstanding paragraph 
(a) of this section and except as otherwise prohibited by law, a party 
may take action based on its position regarding the bargaining unit 
status of individual employees, pursuant to 5 U.S.C. 7103(a)(2), 7112 
(b) and (c): Provided, however, that its actions may be challenged, 
reviewed, and remedied where appropriate.

[[Page 339]]



PART 2423--UNFAIR LABOR PRACTICE PROCEEDINGS--Table of Contents




Sec.
2423.1  Applicability of this part.
2423.2  Informal proceedings.
2423.3  Who may file charges.
2423.4  Contents of the charge; supporting evidence and documents.
2423.5  Selection of the unfair labor practice procedure or the 
          negotiability procedure.
2423.6  Filing and service of copies.
2423.7  Investigation of charges.
2423.8  Amendment of charges.
2423.9  Action by the Regional Director.
2423.10  Determination not to issue complaint; review of action by the 
          Regional Director.
2423.11  Settlement or adjustment of issues.
2423.12  Issuance and contents of the compliant.
2423.13  Answer to the complaint; extension of time for filing; 
          amendment.
2423.14  Prehearing disclosure, conduct of hearing.
2423.15  Intervention.
2423.16  Rights of parties.
2423.17  Rules of evidence.
2423.18  Burden of proof before the Administrative Law Judge.
2423.19  Duties and powers of the Administrative Law Judge.
2423.20  Unavailability of Administrative Law Judges.
2423.21  Objection to conduct of hearing.
2423.22  Motions.
2423.23  Waiver of objections.
2423.24  Oral argument at the hearing.
2423.25  Filing of briefs.
2423.26  Transmittal of the Administrative Law Judge's decision to the 
          Authority; exceptions.
2423.27  Contents of exceptions to the Administrative Law Judge's 
          decision.
2423.28  Briefs in support of exceptions; oppositions to exceptions; 
          cross-exceptions.
2423.29  Action by the Authority.
2423.30  Compliance with decisions and orders of the Authority.
2423.31  Backpay proceedings.

    Authority: 5 U.S.C. 7134.

    Source: 45 FR 3506, Jan. 17, 1980, unless otherwise noted.



Sec. 2423.1  Applicability of this part.

    This part is applicable to any charge of alleged unfair labor 
practices filed with the Authority on or after January 11, 1979.



Sec. 2423.2  Informal proceedings.

    (a) The purposes and policies of the Federal Service Labor-
Management Relations Statute can best be achieved by the cooperative 
efforts of all persons covered by the program. To this end, it shall be 
the policy of the Authority and the General Counsel to encourage all 
persons alleging unfair labor practices and persons against whom such 
allegations are made to meet and, in good faith, attempt to resolve such 
matters prior to the filing of unfair labor practice charges with the 
Authority.
    (b) In furtherance of the policy referred to in paragraph (a) of 
this section, and noting the six (6) month period of limitation set 
forth in 5 U.S.C. 7118(a)(4), it shall be the policy of the Authority 
and the General Counsel to encourage the informal resolution of unfair 
labor practice allegations subsequent to the filing of a charge and 
prior to the issuance of a complaint by the Regional Director.
    (c) In order to afford the parties an opportunity to implement the 
policy referred to in paragraphs (a) and (b) of this section, the 
investigation of an unfair labor practice charge by the Regional 
Director will normally not commence until the parties have been afforded 
a reasonable amount of time, not to exceed fifteen (15) days from the 
filing of the charge, during which period the parties are urged to 
attempt to informally resolve the unfair labor practice allegation.

(5 U.S.C. 7118(a)(5) and 7134)

[45 FR 3506, Jan. 17, 1980, as amended at 48 FR 27532, June 16, 1983]



Sec. 2423.3  Who may file charges.

    An activity, agency or labor organization may be charged by any 
person with having engaged in or engaging in any unfair labor practice 
prohibited under 5 U.S.C. 7116.



Sec. 2423.4  Contents of the charge; supporting evidence and documents.

    (a) A charge alleging a violation of 5 U.S.C. 7116 shall be 
submitted on forms prescribed by the Authority and shall contain the 
following:
    (1) The name, address and telephone number of the person(s) making 
the charge;
    (2) The name, address and telephone number of the activity, agency, 
or

[[Page 340]]

labor organization against whom the charge is made;
    (3) A clear and concise statement of the facts constituting the 
alleged unfair labor practice, a statement of the section(s) and 
subsection(s) of chapter 71 of title 5 of the United States Code alleged 
to have been violated, and the date and place of occurrence of the 
particular acts; and
    (4) A statement of any other procedure invoked involving the subject 
matter of the charge and the results, if any, including whether the 
subject matter raised in the charge (i) has been raised previously in a 
grievance procedure; (ii) has been referred to the Federal Service 
Impasses Panel, the Federal Mediation and Conciliation Service, the 
Equal Employment Opportunity Commission, the Merit Systems Protection 
Board or the Special Counsel of the Merit Systems Protection Board for 
consideration or action; or (iii) involves a negotiability issue raised 
by the charging party in a petition pending before the Authority 
pursuant to part 2424 of this subchapter.
    (b) Such charge shall be in writing and signed and shall contain a 
declaration by the person signing the charge, under the penalties of the 
Criminal Code (18 U.S.C. 1001), that its contents are true and correct 
to the best of that person's knowledge and belief.
    (c) When filing a charge, the charging party shall submit to the 
Regional Director any supporting evidence and documents.



Sec. 2423.5  Selection of the unfair labor practice procedure or the negotiability procedure.

    Where a labor organization files an unfair labor practice charge 
pursuant to this part which involves a negotiability issue, and the 
labor organization also files pursuant to part 2424 of this subchapter a 
petition for review of the same negotiability issue, the Authority and 
the General Counsel ordinarily will not process the unfair labor 
practice charge and the petition for review simultaneously. Under such 
circumstances, the labor organization must select under which procedure 
to proceed. Upon selection of one procedure, further action under the 
other procedure will ordinarily be suspended. Such selection must be 
made regardless of whether the unfair labor practice charge or the 
petition for review of a negotiability issue is filed first. 
Notification of this selection must be made in writing at the time that 
both procedures have been invoked, and must be served on the Authority, 
the appropriate Regional Director and all parties to both the unfair 
labor practice case and the negotiability case. Cases which solely 
involve an agency's allegation that the duty to bargain in good faith 
does not extend to the matter proposed to be bargained and which do not 
involve actual or contemplated changes in conditions of employment may 
only be filed under part 2424 of this subchapter.



Sec. 2423.6  Filing and service of copies.

    (a) An original and four (4) copies of the charge together with one 
copy for each additional charged party named shall be filed with the 
Regional Director for the region in which the alleged unfair labor 
practice has occurred or is occurring. A charge alleging that an unfair 
labor practice has occurred or is occurring in two or more regions may 
be filed with the Regional Director for any such region.
    (b) Upon the filing of a charge, the charging party shall be 
responsible for the service of a copy of the charge (without the 
supporting evidence and documents) upon the person(s) against whom the 
charge is made, and for filing a written statement of such service with 
the Regional Director. The Regional Director will, as a matter of 
course, cause a copy of such charge to be served on the person(s) 
against whom the charge is made, but shall not be deemed to assume 
responsibility for such service.
    (c) A charge will be deemed to be filed when it is received by the 
appropriate Regional Director in accordance with the requirements in 
paragraph (a) of this section.

[45 FR 3506, Jan. 17, 1986, as amended at 51 FR 45751, Dec. 22, 1986]



Sec. 2423.7  Investigation of charges.

    (a) The Regional Director, on behalf of the General Counsel, shall 
conduct such investigation of the charge as the Regional Director deems 
necessary.

[[Page 341]]

Consistent with the policy set forth in Sec. 2423.2, the investigation 
will normally not commence until the parties have been afforded a 
reasonable amount of time, not to exceed fifteen (15) days from the 
filing of the charge, to informally resolve the unfair labor practice 
allegation.
    (b) During the course of the investigation all parties involved will 
have an opportunity to present their evidence and views to the Regional 
Director.
    (c) In connection with the investigation of charges, all persons are 
expected to cooperate fully with the Regional Director.
    (d) The purposes and policies of the Federal Service Labor-
Management Relations Statute can best be achieved by the full 
cooperation of all parties involved and the voluntary submission of all 
potentially relevant information from all potential sources during the 
course of the investigation. To this end, it shall be the policy of the 
Authority and the General Counsel to protect the identity of individuals 
and the substance of the statements and information they submit or which 
is obtained during the investigation as a means of assuring the 
Authority's and the General Counsel's continuing ability to obtain all 
relevant information.

(5 U.S.C. 7118(a)(5) and 7134)

[45 FR 3506, Jan. 17, 1980, as amended at 48 FR 27532, June 16, 1983]



Sec. 2423.8  Amendment of charges.

    Prior to the issuance of a complaint, the charging party may amend 
the charge in accordance with the requirements set forth in Sec. 2423.6.



Sec. 2423.9  Action by the Regional Director.

    (a) The Regional Director shall take action which may consist of the 
following, as appropriate:
    (1) Approve a request to withdraw a charge;
    (2) Refuse to issue a complaint;
    (3) Approve a written settlement agreement in accordance with the 
provisions of Sec. 2423.11;
    (4) Issue a complaint;
    (5) Upon agreement of all parties, transfer to the Authority for 
decision, after issuance of a complaint, a stipulation of facts in 
accordance with the provisions of Sec. 2429.1(a) of this subchapter; or
    (6) Withdraw a complaint.
    (b) Parties may request the General Counsel to seek appropriate 
temporary relief (including a restraining order) under 5 U.S.C. 7123(d). 
The General Counsel will initiate and prosecute injunctive proceedings 
under 5 U.S.C. 7123(d) only upon approval of the Authority. A 
determination by the General Counsel not to seek approval of the 
Authority for such temporary relief is final and may not be appealed to 
the Authority.
    (c) Upon a determination to issue a complaint, whenever it is deemed 
advisable by the Authority to seek appropriate temporary relief 
(including a restraining order) under 5 U.S.C. 7123(d), the Regional 
Attorney or other designated agent of the Authority to whom the matter 
has been referred will make application for appropriate temporary relief 
(including a restraining order) in the district court of the United 
States within which the unfair labor practice is alleged to have 
occurred or in which the party sought to be enjoined resides or 
transacts business. Such temporary relief will not be sought unless the 
record establishes probable cause that an unfair labor practice is being 
committed, or if such temporary relief will interfere with the ability 
of the agency to carry out its essential functions.
    (d) Whenever temporary relief has been obtained pursuant to 5 U.S.C. 
7123(d) and thereafter the Administrative Law Judge hearing the 
complaint, upon which the determination to seek such temporary relief 
was predicated, recommends dismissal of such complaint, in whole or in 
part, the Regional Attorney or other designated agent of the Authority 
handling the case for the Authority shall inform the district court 
which granted the temporary relief of the possible change in 
circumstances arising out of the decision of the Administrative Law 
Judge.



Sec. 2423.10  Determination not to issue complaint; review of action by the Regional Director.

    (a) If the Regional Director determines that the charge has not been

[[Page 342]]

timely filed, that the charge fails to state an unfair labor practice, 
or for other appropriate reasons, the Regional Director may request the 
charging party to withdraw the charge, and in the absence of such 
withdrawal within a reasonable time, decline to issue a complaint.
    (b) If the Regional Director determines not to issue a complaint on 
a charge which is not withdrawn, the Regional Director shall provide the 
parties with a written statement of the reasons for not issuing a 
complaint.
    (c) The charging party may obtain a review of the Regional 
Director's decision not to issue a complaint by filing an appeal with 
the General Counsel within twenty-five (25) days after service of the 
Regional Director's decision. The appeal shall contain a complete 
statement setting forth the facts and reasons upon which it is based. A 
copy of the appeal shall also be filed with the Regional Director. In 
addition, the charging party should notify all other parties of the fact 
that an appeal has been taken, but any failure to give such notice shall 
not affect the validity of the appeal.
    (d) A request for extension of time to file an appeal shall be in 
writing and received by the General Counsel not later than five (5) days 
before the date the appeal is due. The charging party should notify the 
Regional Director and all other parties that it has requested an 
extention of time in which to file an appeal, but any failure to give 
such notice shall not affect the validity of its request for an 
extension of time to file an appeal.
    (e) The General Counsel may sustain the Regional Director's refusal 
to issue or re-issue a complaint, stating the grounds of affirmance, or 
may direct the Regional Director to take further action. The General 
Counsel's decision shall be served on all the parties. The decision of 
the General Counsel shall be final.



Sec. 2423.11  Settlement or adjustment of issues.

                        General settlement policy

    (a) At any stage of a proceeding prior to hearing, where time, the 
nature of the proceeding, and the public interest permit, all interested 
parties shall have the opportunity to submit to the Regional Director 
with whom the charge was filed, for consideration, all facts and 
arguments concerning offers of settlement, or proposals of adjustment.

                    Precomplaint informal settlements

    (b)(1) Prior to the issuance of any complaint or the taking of other 
formal action, the Regional Director will afford the charging party and 
the respondent a reasonable period of time in which to enter into an 
informal settlement agreement to be approved by the Regional Director. 
Upon approval by the Regional Director and compliance with the terms of 
the informal settlement agreement, no further action shall be taken in 
the case. If the respondent fails to perform its obligations under the 
informal settlement agreement, the Regional Director may determine to 
institute further proceedings.
    (2) In the event that the charging party fails or refuses to become 
a party to an informal settlement agreement offered by the respondent, 
if the Regional Director concludes that the offered settlement will 
effectuate the policies of the Federal Service Labor-Management 
Relations Statute, the agreement shall be between the respondent and the 
Regional Director and the latter shall decline to issue a complaint. The 
charging party may obtain a review of the Regional Director's action by 
filing an appeal with the General Counsel in accordance with 
Sec. 2423.10(c). The General Counsel shall take action on such appeal as 
set forth in Sec. 2423.10(e).

                    Post complaint settlement policy

    (c) Consistent with the policy reflected in paragraph (a) of this 
section, even after the issuance of a complaint, the Authority favors 
the settlement of issues. Such settlements may be either informal or 
formal. Informal settlement agreements shall be accomplished as provided 
in paragraph (b) of this section. Formal settlement agreements are 
subject to the approval of the Authority. In such formal settlement 
agreements, the parties shall agree to waive their right to a hearing

[[Page 343]]

and agree further that the Authority may issue an order requiring the 
respondent to take action appropriate to the terms of the settlement. 
Ordinarily the formal settlement agreement also contains the 
respondent's consent to the Authority's application for the entry of a 
decree by the appropriate federal court enforcing the Authority's order.

              Post complaint--prehearing formal settlements

    (d)(1) If, after issuance of a complaint but before opening of the 
hearing, the charging party and the respondent enter into a formal 
settlement agreement, and such agreement is accepted by the Regional 
Director, the formal settlement agreement shall be submitted to the 
Authority for approval.
    (2) If, after issuance of a complaint but before opening of the 
hearing, the charging party fails or refuses to become a party to a 
formal settlement agreement offered by the respondent, and the Regional 
Director concludes that the offered settlement will effectuate the 
policies of the Federal Service Labor-Management Relations Statute, the 
agreement shall be between the respondent and the Regional Director. The 
charging party will be so informed and provided a brief written 
statement by the Regional Director of the reasons therefor. The formal 
settlement agreement together with the charging party's objections, if 
any, and the Regional Director's written statements, shall be submitted 
to the Authority for approval. The Authority may approve or disapprove 
any formal settlement agreement or return the case to the Regional 
Director for other appropriate action.

             Post complaint--prehearing informal settlements

    (3) After the issuance of a complaint but before opening of the 
hearing, if the Regional Director concludes that it will effectuate the 
policies of the Federal Service Labor-Management Relations Statute, the 
Regional Director may withdraw the complaint and approve an informal 
settlement agreement pursuant to paragraph (b) of this section.

          Informal settlements after the opening of the hearing

    (e)(1) After issuance of a complaint and after opening of the 
hearing, if the Regional Director concludes that it will effectuate the 
policies of the Federal Service Labor-Management Relations Statute, the 
Regional Director may request the Administrative Law Judge for 
permission to withdraw the complaint and, having been granted such 
permission to withdraw the complaint, may approve an informal settlement 
pursuant to paragraph (b) of this section.

           Formal settlements after the opening of the hearing

    (2) If, after issuance of a complaint and after opening of the 
hearing, the parties enter into a formal settlement agreement, the 
Regional Director may request the Administrative Law Judge to approve 
such formal settlement agreement, and upon such approval, to transmit 
the agreement to the Authority for approval.
    (3) If the charging party fails or refuses to become a party to a 
formal settlement agreement offered by the respondent, and the Regional 
Director concludes that the offered settlement will effectuate the 
policies of the Federal Service Labor-Management Relations Statute, the 
agreement shall be between the respondent and the Regional Director. 
After the charging party is given an opportunity to state on the record 
or in writing the reasons for opposing the formal settlement, the 
Regional Director may request the Administrative Law Judge to approve 
such formal settlement agreement, and upon such approval, to transmit 
the agreement to the Authority for approval. The Authority may approve 
or disapprove any formal settlement agreement or return the case to the 
Administrative Law Judge for other appropriate action.



Sec. 2423.12  Issuance and contents of the complaint.

    (a) After a charge is filed, if it appears to the Regional Director 
that formal proceedings in respect thereto should be instituted, the 
Regional Director shall issue and cause to be

[[Page 344]]

served on all other parties a formal complaint: Provided, however, That 
a determination by a Regional Director to issue a complaint shall not be 
subject to review.
    (b) The complaint shall include:
    (1) Notice of the charge;
    (2) Notice that a hearing will be held before an Administrative Law 
Judge;
    (3) Notice of the time and place fixed for the hearing which shall 
not be earlier than five (5) days after service of the complaint;
    (4) A statement of the nature of the hearing;
    (5) A clear and concise statement of the facts upon which assertion 
of jurisdiction by the Authority is predicated;
    (6) A reference to the particular sections of chapter 71 of title 5 
of the United States Code and the rules and regulations involved; and
    (7) A clear and concise description of the acts which are claimed to 
constitute unfair labor practices, including, where known, the 
approximate dates and places of such acts and the names of respondent's 
agents or other representatives by whom committed.
    (c) The Chief Administrative Law Judge may, upon such judge's own 
motion or upon proper cause shown by any other party, extend the date of 
the hearing or may change the place at which it is to be held.
    (d) A complaint may be amended, upon such terms as may be deemed 
just, prior to the hearing, by the Regional Director issuing the 
complaint; at the hearing and until the case has been transmitted to the 
Authority pursuant to Sec. 2423.26, upon motion by the Administrative 
Law Judge designated to conduct the hearing; and after the case has been 
transmitted to the Authority pursuant to Sec. 2423.26, upon motion by 
the Authority at any time prior to the issuance of an order based 
thereon by the Authority.
    (e) Any such complaint may be withdrawn before the hearing by the 
Regional Director.



Sec. 2423.13  Answer to the complaint; extension of time for filing; amendment.

    (a) Except in extraordinary circumstances as determined by the 
Regional Director, within twenty (20) days after the complaint is served 
upon the respondent, the respondent shall file the original and four (4) 
copies of the answer thereto, signed by the respondent or its 
representative, with the Regional Director who issued the complaint. The 
respondent shall serve a copy of the answer on the Chief Administrative 
Law Judge and on all other parties.
    (b) The answer: (1) Shall specifically admit, deny, or explain each 
of the allegations of the complaint unless the respondent is without 
knowledge, in which case the answer shall so state; or (2) Shall state 
that the respondent admits all of the allegations in the complaint. 
Failure to file an answer or to plead specifically to or explain any 
allegation shall constitute an admission of such allegation and shall be 
so found by the Authority, unless good cause to the contrary is shown.
    (c) Upon the Regional Director's own motion or upon proper cause 
shown by any other party, the Regional Director issuing the complaint 
may by written order extend the time within which the answer shall be 
filed.
    (d) The answer may be amended by the respondent at any time prior to 
the hearing. During the hearing or subsequent thereto, the answer may be 
amended in any case where the complaint has been amended, within such 
period as may be fixed by the Administrative Law Judge or the Authority. 
Whether or not the complaint has been amended, the answer may, in the 
discretion of the Administrative Law Judge or the Authority, upon 
motion, be amended upon such terms and within such periods as may be 
fixed by the Administrative Law Judge or the Authority.



Sec. 2423.14  Prehearing disclosure, conduct of hearing.

    (a) Parties will exchange proposed witness lists and copies of 
documents, with index, intended to be offered into evidence at the 
hearing at a prehearing conference at the site of the unfair labor 
practice hearing. The calling of witnesses or introduction of exhibits 
not exchanged prior to the hearing will be subject to the discretion of 
the Administrative Law Judge presiding.

[[Page 345]]

    (b) Hearings shall be conducted not earlier than five (5) days after 
the date on which the complaint is served. The hearing shall be open to 
the public unless otherwise ordered by the Administrative Law Judge. A 
substitute Administrative Law Judge may be designated at any time to 
take the place of the Administrative Law Judge previously designated to 
conduct the hearing. Such hearing shall, to the extent practicable, be 
conducted in accordance with the provisions of subchapter II of chapter 
5 of title 5 of the United States Code, except that the parties shall 
not be bound by the rules of evidence, whether statutory, common law, or 
adopted by a court.
    (c) An official reporter shall make the only official transcript of 
such proceedings. Copies of the official transcript may be examined in 
the appropriate regional office during normal working hours. Requests by 
parties for copies of transcripts should be made to the official hearing 
reporter.

[45 FR 3506, Jan. 17, 1986, as amended at 51 FR 45753, Dec. 22, 1986]



Sec. 2423.15  Intervention.

    Any person involved and desiring to intervene in any proceeding 
pursuant to this part shall file a motion in accordance with the 
procedures set forth in Sec. 2423.22. The motion shall state the grounds 
upon which such person claims involvement.



Sec. 2423.16  Rights of parties.

    A party shall have the right to appear at any hearing in person, by 
counsel, or by other representative, and to examine and cross-examine 
witnesses, and to introduce into the record documentary or other 
relevant evidence, and to submit rebuttal evidence, except that the 
participation of any party shall be limited to the extent prescribed by 
the Administrative Law Judge. Two (2) copies of documentary evidence 
shall be submitted and a copy furnished to each of the other parties. 
Stipulations of fact may be introduced in evidence with respect to any 
issue.



Sec. 2423.17  Rules of evidence.

    The parties shall not be bound by the rules of evidence, whether 
statutory, common law, or adopted by court. Any evidence may be 
received, except that an Administrative Law Judge may exclude any 
evidence which is immaterial, irrelevant, unduly repetitious or 
customarily privileged.



Sec. 2423.18  Burden of proof before the Administrative Law Judge.

    The General Counsel shall have the responsibility of presenting the 
evidence in support of the complaint and shall have the burden of 
proving the allegations of the complaint by a preponderance of the 
evidence.



Sec. 2423.19  Duties and powers of the Administrative Law Judge.

    It shall be the duty of the Administrative Law Judge to inquire 
fully into the facts as they relate to the matter before such judge. 
Subject to the rules and regulations of the Authority and the General 
Counsel, an Administrative Law Judge presiding at a hearing may:
    (a) Grant requests for subpoenas pursuant to Sec. 2429.7 of this 
subchapter;
    (b) Rule upon petitions to revoke subpoenas pursuant to Sec. 2429.7 
of this subchapter;
    (c) Administer oaths and affirmations;
    (d) Take or order the taking of a deposition whenever the ends of 
justice would be served thereby;
    (e) Order responses to written interrogatories whenever the ends of 
justice would be served thereby unless it would interfere with the 
Authority's and the General Counsel's policy of protecting the personal 
privacy and confidentiality of sources of information as set forth in 
Sec. 2423.7(d);
    (f) Call, examine and cross-examine witnesses and introduce into the 
record documentary or other evidence;
    (g) Rule upon offers of proof and receive relevant evidence and 
stipulations of fact with respect to any issue;
    (h) Limit lines of questioning or testimony which are immaterial, 
irrelevant, unduly repetitious, or customarily privileged;
    (i) Regulate the course of the hearing and, if appropriate, exclude 
from the hearing persons who engage in contemptuous conduct and strike 
all related testimony of witnesses refusing to

[[Page 346]]

answer any questions ruled to be proper;
    (j) Hold conferences for the settlement or simplification of the 
issues by consent of the parties or upon the judge's own motion;
    (k) Dispose of procedural requests, motions, or similar matters, 
including motions referred to the Administrative Law Judge by the 
Regional Director and motions for summary judgment or to amend 
pleadings; dismiss complaints or portions thereof; order hearings 
reopened; and, upon motion, order proceedings consolidated or severed 
prior to issuance of the Administrative Law Judge's decision;
    (l) Request the parties at any time during the hearing to state 
their respective positions concerning any issue in the case or theory in 
support thereof;
    (m) Continue the hearing from day-to-day or adjourn it to a later 
date or to a different place, by announcement thereof at the hearing or 
by other appropriate notice;
    (n) Prepare, serve and transmit the decision pursuant to 
Sec. 2423.26;
    (o) Take official notice of any material fact not appearing in 
evidence in the record, which is among the traditional matters of 
judicial notice: Provided, however, That the parties shall be given 
adequate notice, at the hearing or by reference in the Administrative 
Law Judge's decision of the matters so noticed, and shall be given 
adequate opportunity to show the contrary;
    (p) Approve requests for withdrawal of complaints based on informal 
settlements occurring after the opening of the hearing pursuant to 
Sec. 2423.11(e)(1), and transmit formal settlement agreements to the 
Authority for approval pursuant to Sec. 2423.11(e)(2) and (3);
    (q) Grant or deny requests made at the hearing to intervene and to 
present testimony;
    (r) Correct or approve proposed corrections of the official 
transcript when deemed necessary;
    (s) Sequester witnesses where appropriate; and
    (t) Take any other action deemed necessary under the foregoing and 
not prohibited by the regulations in this subchapter.



Sec. 2423.20  Unavailability of Administrative Law Judges.

    In the event the Administrative Law Judge designated to conduct the 
hearing becomes unavailable, the Chief Administrative Law Judge shall 
designate another Administrative Law Judge for the purpose of further 
hearing or issuance of a decision on the record as made, or both.



Sec. 2423.21  Objection to conduct of hearing.

    (a) Any objection with respect to the conduct of the hearing, 
including any objection to the introduction of evidence, may be stated 
orally or in writing accompanied by a short statement of the grounds for 
such objection, and included in the record. No such objection shall be 
deemed waived by further participation in the hearing. Such objection 
shall not stay the conduct of the hearing.
    (b) Formal exceptions to adverse rulings are unnecessary. Automatic 
exceptions will be allowed to all adverse rulings. Except by special 
permission of the Authority, and in view of Sec. 2429.11 of this 
subchapter, rulings by the Administrative Law Judge shall not be 
appealed prior to the transmittal of the case to the Authority, but 
shall be considered by the Authority only upon the filing of exceptions 
to the Administrative Law Judge's decision in accordance with 
Sec. 2423.27. In the discretion of the Administrative Law Judge, the 
hearing may be continued or adjourned pending any such request for 
special permission to appeal.



Sec. 2423.22  Motions.

    (a) Filing of Motions. (1) Motions made prior to a hearing and any 
response thereto shall be made in writing and filed with the Regional 
Director: Provided, however, That after the issuance of a complaint by 
the Regional Director any motion to change the date of the hearing shall 
be filed with the Chief Administrative Law Judge immediately upon 
discovery of the circumstance which in the judgment of the moving party 
warrants a change in the date of the hearing. The moving party shall 
attempt to contact the other parties and shall inform the Chief 
Administrative Law Judge of the

[[Page 347]]

positions of the other parties on the motion. Only in extraordinary 
circumstances will such a motion be granted where filed less than ten 
(10) days prior to the scheduled hearing. Motions made after the hearing 
opens and prior to the transmittal of the case to the Authority shall be 
made in writing to the Administrative Law Judge or orally on the record. 
After the transmittal of the case to the Authority, motions and any 
response thereto shall be filed in writing with the Authority: Provided, 
however, That a motion to correct the transcript shall be filed with the 
Administrative Law Judge.
    (2) A response to a motion shall be filed within five (5) days after 
service of the motion, unless otherwise directed.
    (3) An original and two (2) copies of the motions and responses 
shall be filed, and copies shall be served on the parties. A statement 
of such service shall accompany the original.
    (b) Rulings on motions. (1) Regional Directors may rule on all 
motions filed with them before the hearing, or they may refer them to 
the Chief Administrative Law Judge.
    (2) Except by special permission of the Authority, and in view of 
Sec. 2429.11 of this subchapter, rulings by the Regional Director shall 
not be appealed prior to the transmittal of the case to the Authority, 
but shall be considered by the Authority when the case is transmitted to 
it for decision.
    (3) Administrative Law Judges may rule on motions referred to them 
prior to the hearing and on motions filed after the beginning of the 
hearing and before the transmittal of the case to the Authority. Such 
motions may be ruled upon by the Chief Administrative Law Judge in the 
absence of an Administrative Law Judge.
    (4) Except by special permission of the Authority, and in view of 
Sec. 2429.11 of this subchapter, rulings by Administrative Law Judges 
shall not be appealed prior to the transmittal of the case to the 
Authority, but shall be considered by the Authority when the case is 
transmitted to it for decision. In the discretion of the Administrative 
Law Judge, the hearing may be continued or adjourned pending any such 
request for special permission to appeal.

[45 FR 3506, Jan. 17, 1980, as amended at 46 FR 40674, Aug. 11, 1981]



Sec. 2423.23  Waiver of objections.

    Any objection not made before an Administrative Law Judge shall be 
deemed waived.



Sec. 2423.24  Oral argument at the hearing.

    Any party shall be entitled, upon request, to a reasonable period 
prior to the close of the hearing for oral argument, which shall be 
included in the official transcript of the hearing.



Sec. 2423.25  Filing of briefs.

    Any party desiring to submit a brief to the Administrative Law Judge 
shall file the original and four (4) copies within a reasonable time 
fixed by the Administrative Law Judge, but not in excess of thirty (30) 
days from the close of the hearing. Copies of any brief shall be served 
on all other parties to the proceeding and a statement of such service 
shall be filed with the Administrative Law Judge. Requests for 
extensions of time pursuant to Sec. 2429.23(a) to file briefs shall be 
made to the Chief Administrative Law Judge, in writing, and copies 
thereof shall be served on the other parties. A statement of such 
service shall be furnished. Requests for extensions of time must be 
received not later than five (5) days before the date such briefs are 
due. No reply brief may be filed except by special permission of the 
Administrative Law Judge.

[46 FR 40674, Aug. 11, 1981]



Sec. 2423.26  Transmittal of the Administrative Law Judge's decision to the Authority; exceptions.

    (a) After the close of the hearing, and the receipt of briefs, if 
any, the Administrative Law Judge shall prepare the decision 
expeditiously. The Administrative Law Judge shall prepare a decision 
even when the parties enter into a stipulation of fact at the hearing. 
The decision shall contain findings of fact, conclusions of law, and the 
reasons or basis therefore, including any necessary credibility 
determinations, and conclusions as to the disposition of the

[[Page 348]]

case including, where appropriate, the remedial action to be taken and 
notices to be posted.
    (b) The Administrative Law Judge shall cause the decision to be 
served promptly on all parties to the proceeding. Thereafter, the 
Administrative Law Judge shall transmit the case to the Authority 
including the judge's decision and the record. The record shall include 
the charge, complaint, service sheet, answer, motions, rulings, orders, 
official transcript of the hearing, stipulations, objections, 
depositions, interrogatories, exhibits, documentary evidence and any 
briefs or other documents submitted by the parties.
    (c) An original and four (4) copies of any exception to the 
Administrative Law Judge's decision and briefs in support of exceptions 
may be filed by any party with the Authority within twenty-five (25) 
days after service of the decision: Provided, however, That the 
Authority may for good cause shown extend the time for filing such 
exceptions. Requests for extensions of time pursuant to Sec. 2429.23(a) 
to file exceptions must be received by the Authority not later than five 
(5) days before the date the exceptions are due. Copies of such 
exceptions and any supporting briefs shall be served on all other 
parties, and a statement of such service shall be furnished to the 
Authority.

[45 FR 3506, Jan. 17, 1980, as amended at 46 FR 40674, Aug. 11, 1981]



Sec. 2423.27  Contents of exceptions to the Administrative Law Judge's decision.

    (a) Exceptions to an Administrative Law Judge's decision shall:
    (1) Set forth specifically the questions upon which exceptions are 
taken;
    (2) Identify that part of the Administrative Law Judge's decision to 
which objection is made; and
    (3) Designate by precise citation of page the portions of the record 
relied on, state the grounds for the exceptions, and include the 
citation of authorities unless set forth in a supporting brief.
    (b) Any exception to ruling, finding or conclusion which is not 
specifically urged shall be deemed to have been waived. Any exception 
which fails to comply with the foregoing requirements may be 
disregarded.



Sec. 2423.28  Briefs in support of exceptions; oppositions to exceptions; cross-exceptions.

    (a) Any brief in support of exceptions shall contain only matters 
included within the scope of the exceptions and shall contain, in the 
order indicated, the following:
    (1) A concise statement of the case containing all that is material 
to the consideration of the questions presented;
    (2) A specification of the questions involved and to be argued; and
    (3) The argument, presenting clearly the points of fact and law 
relied on in support of the position taken on each question, with 
specific page reference to the transcript and the legal or other 
material relied on.
    (b) Any party may file an opposition to exceptions, and/or cross-
exceptions, and a supporting brief with the Authority within ten (10) 
days after service of any exceptions to an Administrative Law Judge's 
decision. Copies of any opposition and/or cross-exceptions and of any 
supporting briefs shall be served on all other parties, and a statement 
of such service shall be submitted with the documents filed with the 
Authority.

[45 FR 3506, Jan. 17, 1980, as amended at 46 FR 40674, Aug. 11, 1981]



Sec. 2423.29  Action by the Authority.

    (a) After considering the Administrative Law Judge's decision, the 
record, and any exceptions and related submissions filed, the Authority 
shall issue its decision affirming or reversing the Administrative Law 
Judge, in whole, or in part, or making such other disposition of the 
matter as it deems appropriate: Provided, however, That in the absence 
of exceptions filed timely and in accordance with Sec. 2423.27, the 
findings, conclusions, and recommendations in the decision of the 
Administrative Law Judge shall, without precedential significance, 
become the findings, conclusions, decision and order of the Authority, 
and all objections and exceptions thereto shall be deemed waived for all 
purposes.

[[Page 349]]

    (b) Upon finding a violation, the Authority shall issue an order:
    (1) To cease and desist from any such unfair labor practice in which 
the agency or labor organization is engaged;
    (2) Requiring the parties to renegotiate a collective bargaining 
agreement in accordance with the order of the Authority and requiring 
that the agreement, as amended, be given retroactive effect;
    (3) Requiring reinstatement of an employee with backpay in 
accordance with 5 U.S.C. 5596; or
    (4) Including any combination of the actions described in paragraphs 
(1) through (3) of this paragraph (b), or such other action as will 
carry out the purpose of the Federal Service Labor-Management Relations 
Statute.
    (c) Upon finding no violation, the Authority shall dismiss the 
complaint.

[45 FR 3506, Jan. 17, 1980, as amended at 46 FR 40674, Aug. 11, 1981]



Sec. 2423.30  Compliance with decisions and orders of the Authority.

    When remedial action is ordered, the respondent shall report to the 
appropriate Regional Director within a specified period that the 
required remedial action has been effected. When the General Counsel 
finds that the required remedial action has not been effected, the 
General Counsel shall take such action as may be appropriate, including 
referral to the Authority for enforcement.



Sec. 2423.31  Backpay proceedings.

    After the entry of an Authority order directing payment of backpay, 
or the entry of a court decree enforcing such order, if it appears to 
the Regional Director that a controversy exists between the Authority 
and a respondent which cannot be resolved without a formal proceeding, 
the Regional Director may issue and serve on all parties a backpay 
specification accompanied by a notice of hearing or a notice of hearing 
without a specification. The respondent shall, within twenty (20) days 
after the service of a backpay specification accompanied by a notice of 
hearing, file an answer thereto in accordance with Sec. 2423.13 with the 
Regional Director issuing such specification. No answer need be filed by 
the respondent to a notice of hearing issued without a specification. 
After the issuance of a notice of hearing, with or without a backpay 
specification, the procedures provided in Secs. 2423.14 to 2423.29, 
inclusive, shall be followed insofar as applicable.



PART 2424--EXPEDITED REVIEW OF NEGOTIABILITY ISSUES--Table of Contents




                    Subpart A--Instituting an Appeal

Sec.
2424.1  Conditions governing review.
2424.2  Who may file a petition.
2424.3  Time limits for filing.
2424.4  Content of petition; service.
2424.5  Selection of the unfair labor practice procedure or the 
          negotiability procedure.
2424.6  Position of the agency; time limits for filing; service.
2424.7  Response of the exclusive representative; time limits for 
          filing; service.
2424.8  Additional submissions to the Authority.
2424.9  Hearing.
2424.10  Authority decision and order; compliance.

Subpart B--Criteria for Determining Compelling Need for Agency Rules and 
                               Regulations

2424.11  Illustrative criteria.

    Authority: 5 U.S.C. 7134.

    Source: 45 FR 3511, Jan. 17, 1980, unless otherwise noted.



                    Subpart A--Instituting an Appeal



Sec. 2424.1  Conditions governing review.

    The Authority will consider a negotiability issue under the 
conditions prescribed by 5 U.S.C. 7117 (b) and (c), namely: If an agency 
involved in collective bargaining with an exclusive representative 
alleges that the duty to bargain in good faith does not extend to any 
matter proposed to be bargained because, as proposed, the matter is 
inconsistent with law, rule or regulation, the exclusive representative 
may appeal the allegation to the Authority when--
    (a) It disagrees with the agency's allegation that the matter as 
proposed to be bargained is inconsistent with any Federal law or any 
Government-wide rule or regulation; or

[[Page 350]]

    (b) It alleges, with regard to any agency rule or regulation 
asserted by the agency as a bar to negotiations on the matter, as 
proposed, that:
    (1) The rule or regulation violates applicable law, or rule or 
regulation of appropriate authority outside the agency;
    (2) The rule or regulation was not issued by the agency or by any 
primary national subdivision of the agency, or otherwise is not 
applicable to bar negotiations with the exclusive representative, under 
5 U.S.C. 7117(a)(3); or
    (3) No compelling need exists for the rule or regulation to bar 
negotiations on the matter, as proposed, because the rule or regulation 
does not meet the criteria established in subpart B of this part.



Sec. 2424.2  Who may file a petition.

    A petition for review of a negotiability issue may be filed by an 
exclusive representative which is a party to the negotiations.



Sec. 2424.3  Time limits for filing.

    The time limit for filing a petition for review is fifteen (15) days 
after the date the agency's allegation that the duty to bargain in good 
faith does not extend to the matter proposed to be bargained is served 
on the exclusive representative. The exclusive representative shall 
request such allegation in writing and the agency shall make the 
allegation in writing and serve a copy on the exclusive representative: 
Provided, however, That review of a negotiability issue may be requested 
by an exclusive representative under this subpart without a prior 
written allegation by the agency if the agency has not served such 
allegation upon the exclusive representative within ten (10) days after 
the date of the receipt by any agency bargaining representative at the 
negotiations of a written request for such allegation.



Sec. 2424.4  Content of petition; service.

    (a) A petition for review shall be dated and shall contain the 
following:
    (1) A statement setting forth the express language of the proposal 
sought to be negotiated as submitted to the agency;
    (2) An explicit statement of the meaning attributed to the proposal 
by the exclusive representative including:
    (i) Explanation of terms of art, acronyms, technical language, or 
any other aspect of the language of the proposal which is not in common 
usage; and
    (ii) Where the proposal is concerned with a particular work 
situation, or other particular circumstances, a description of the 
situation or circumstances which will enable the Authority to understand 
the context in which the proposal is intended to apply;
    (3) A copy of all pertinent material, including the agency's 
allegation in writing that the matter, as proposed, is not within the 
duty to bargain in good faith, and other relevant documentary material; 
and
    (4) Notification by the petitioning labor organization whether the 
negotiability issue is also involved in an unfair labor practice charge 
filed by such labor organization under part 2423 of this subchapter and 
pending before the General Counsel.
    (b) A copy of the petition including all attachments thereto shall 
be served on the agency head and on the principal agency bargaining 
representative at the negotiations.
    (c)(1) Filing an incomplete petition for review will result in the 
exclusive representative being asked to provide the missing or 
incomplete information. Noncompliance with a request to complete the 
record may result in dismissal of the petition.
    (2) The processing priority accorded to an incomplete petition, 
relative to other pending negotiability appeals, will be based upon the 
date when the petition is completed--not the date it was originally 
filed.

[45 FR 3511, Jan. 17, 1980, as amended at 46 FR 40674, Aug. 11, 1981; 51 
FR 45753, Dec. 22, 1986]



Sec. 2424.5  Selection of the unfair labor practice procedure or the negotiability procedure.

    Where a labor organization files an unfair labor practice charge 
pursuant to part 2423 of this subchapter which involves a negotiability 
issue, and the labor organization also files pursuant to this part a 
petition for review of the

[[Page 351]]

same negotiability issue, the Authority and the General Counsel 
ordinarily will not process the unfair labor practice charge and the 
petition for review simultaneously. Under such circumstances, the labor 
organization must select under which procedure to proceed. Upon 
selection of one procedure, further action under the other procedure 
will ordinarily be suspended. Such selection must be made regardless of 
whether the unfair labor practice charge or the petition for review of a 
negotiability issue is filed first. Notification of this selection must 
be made in writing at the time that both procedures have been invoked, 
and must be served on the Authority, the appropriate Regional Director 
and all parties to both the unfair labor practice case and the 
negotiability case. Cases which solely involve an agency's allegation 
that the duty to bargain in good faith does not extend to the matter 
proposed to be bargained and which do not involve actual or contemplated 
changes in conditions of employment may only be filed under this part.



Sec. 2424.6  Position of the agency; time limits for filing; service.

    (a) Within thirty (30) days after the date of the receipt by the 
head of an agency of a copy of a petition for review of a negotiability 
issue the agency shall file a statement--
    (1) Withdrawing the allegation that the duty to bargain in good 
faith does not extend to the matter proposed to be negotiated; or
    (2) Setting forth in full its position on any matters relevant to 
the petition which it wishes the Authority to consider in reaching its 
decision, including a full and detailed statement of its reasons 
supporting the allegation. The statement shall cite the section of any 
law, rule or regulation relied upon as a basis for the allegation and 
shall contain a copy of any internal agency rule or regulation so relied 
upon. The statement shall include:
    (i) Explanation of the meaning the agency attributes to the proposal 
as a whole, including any terms of art, acronyms, technical language or 
any other aspect of the language of the proposal which is not in common 
usage; and
    (ii) Description of a particular work situation, or other particular 
circumstance the agency views the proposal to concern, which will enable 
the Authority to understand the context in which the proposal is 
considered to apply by the agency.
    (b) A copy of the agency's statement of position, including all 
attachments thereto shall be served on the exclusive representative.

[45 FR 3511, Jan. 17, 1980; 45 FR 8933, Feb. 11, 1980; 51 FR 45753, Dec. 
22, 1986]



Sec. 2424.7  Response of the exclusive representative; time limits for filing; service.

    (a) Within fifteen (15) days after the date of the receipt by an 
exclusive representative of a copy of an agency's statement of position 
the exclusive representative shall file a full and detailed response 
stating its position and reasons for:
    (1) Disagreeing with the agency's allegation that the matter, as 
proposed to be negotiated, is inconsistent with any Federal law or 
Government-wide rule or regulation; or
    (2) Alleging that the agency's rules or regulations violate 
applicable law, or rule or regulation or appropriate authority outside 
the agency; that the rules or regulations were not issued by the agency 
or by any primary national subdivision of the agency, or otherwise are 
not applicable to bar negotiations under 5 U.S.C. 7117(a)(3); or that no 
compelling need exists for the rules or regulations to bar negotiations.
    (b) The response shall cite the particular section of any law, rule 
or regulation alleged to be violated by the agency's rules or 
regulations; or shall explain the grounds for contending the agency 
rules or regulations are not applicable to bar negotiations under 5 
U.S.C. 7117(a)(3), or fail to meet the criteria established in subpart B 
of this part or were not issued at the agency headquarters level or at 
the level of a primary national subdivision.
    (c) A copy of the response of the exclusive representative including 
all attachments thereto shall be served on the agency head and on the 
agency's

[[Page 352]]

representative of record in the proceeding before the Authority.

[45 FR 3511, Jan. 17, 1980; 45 FR 8933, Feb. 11, 1980]



Sec. 2424.8  Additional submissions to the Authority.

    The Authority will not consider any submission filed by any party, 
whether supplemental or responsive in nature, other than those 
authorized under Secs. 2424.2 through 2424.7 unless such submission is 
requested by the Authority; or unless, upon written request by any 
party, a copy of which is served on all other parties, the Authority in 
its discretion grants permission to file such submission.



Sec. 2424.9  Hearing.

    A hearing may be held, in the discretion of the Authority, before a 
determination is made under 5 U.S.C. 7117(b) or (c). If a hearing is 
held, it shall be expedited to the extent practicable and shall not 
include the General Counsel as a party.



Sec. 2424.10  Authority decision and order; compliance.

    (a) Subject to the requirements of this subpart the Authority shall 
expedite proceedings under this part to the extent practicable and shall 
issue to the exclusive representative and to the agency a written 
decision on the allegation and specific reasons therefor at the earliest 
practicable date.
    (b) If the Authority finds that the duty to bargain extends to the 
matter proposed to be bargained, the decision of the Authority shall 
include an order that the agency shall upon request (or as otherwise 
agreed to by the parties) bargain concerning such matter. If the 
Authority finds that the duty to bargain does not extend to the matter 
proposed to be negotiated, the Authority shall so state and issue an 
order dismissing the petition for review of the negotiability issue. If 
the Authority finds that the duty to bargain extends to the matter 
proposed to be bargained only at the election of the agency, the 
Authority shall so state and issue an order dismissing the petition for 
review of the negotiability issue.
    (c) When an order is issued as provided in paragraph (b) of this 
section, the agency or exclusive representative shall report to the 
appropriate Regional Director within a specified period failure to 
comply with an order that the agency shall upon request (or as otherwise 
agreed to by the parties) bargain concerning the disputed matter. If the 
Authority finds such a failure to comply with its order, the Authority 
shall take whatever action it deems necessary, including enforcement 
under 5 U.S.C. 7123(b).

[45 FR 48576, July 21, 1980; 45 FR 49905, July 28, 1980; 46 FR 12191, 
Feb. 13, 1981]



Subpart B--Criteria for Determining Compelling Need for Agency Rules and 
                               Regulations



Sec. 2424.11  Illustrative criteria.

    A compelling need exists for an agency rule or regulation concerning 
any condition of employment when the agency demonstrates that the rule 
or regulation meets one or more of the following illustrative criteria:
    (a) The rule or regulation is essential, as distinguished from 
helpful or desirable, to the accomplishment of the mission or the 
execution of functions of the agency or primary national subdivision in 
a manner which is consistent with the requirements of an effective and 
efficient government.
    (b) The rule or regulation is necessary to insure the maintenance of 
basic merit principles.
    (c) The rule or regulation implements a mandate to the agency or 
primary national subdivision under law or other outside authority, which 
implementation is essentially nondiscretionary in nature.



PART 2425--REVIEW OF ARBITRATION AWARDS--Table of Contents




Sec.
2425.1  Who may file an exception; time limits for filing; opposition; 
          service.
2425.2  Content of exception.
2425.3  Grounds for review.
2425.4  Authority decision.

    Authority: 5 U.S.C. 7134.

[[Page 353]]



Sec. 2425.1  Who may file an exception; time limits for filing; opposition; service.

    (a) Either party to arbitration under the provisions of chapter 71 
of title 5 of the United States Code may file an exception to an 
arbitrator's award rendered pursuant to the arbitration.
    (b) The time limit for filing an exception to an arbitration award 
is thirty (30) days beginning on the date the award is served on the 
filing party.
    (c) An opposition to the exception may be filed by a party within 
thirty (30) days after the date of service of the exception.
    (d) A copy of the exception and any opposition shall be served on 
the other party.

[45 FR 3513, Jan. 17, 1980, as amended at 46 FR 40675, Aug. 11, 1981; 49 
FR 22623, May 31, 1984]



Sec. 2425.2  Content of exception.

    An exception must be a dated, self-contained document which sets 
forth in full:
    (a) A statement of the grounds on which review is requested;
    (b) Evidence or rulings bearing on the issues before the Authority;
    (c) Arguments in support of the stated grounds, together with 
specific reference to the pertinent documents and citations of 
authorities; and
    (d) A legible copy of the award of the arbitrator and legible copies 
of other pertinent documents.
    (e) The name and address of the arbitrator.

[45 FR 3513, Jan. 17, 1986, as amended at 51 FR 45755, Dec. 22, 1986]



Sec. 2425.3  Grounds for review.

    (a) The Authority will review an arbitrator's award to which an 
exception has been filed to determine if the award is deficient--
    (1) Because it is contrary to any law, rule or regulation; or
    (2) On other grounds similar to those applied by Federal courts in 
private sector labor-management relations.
    (b) The Authority will not consider an exception with respect to an 
award relating to:
    (1) An action based on unacceptable performance covered under 5 
U.S.C. 4303;
    (2) A removal, suspension for more than fourteen (14) days, 
reduction in grade, reduction in pay, or furlough of thirty (30) days or 
less covered under 5 U.S.C. 7512; or
    (3) Matters similar to those covered under 5 U.S.C. 4303 and 5 
U.S.C. 7512 which arise under other personnel systems.

[45 FR 3513, Jan. 17, 1980]



Sec. 2425.4  Authority decision.

    The Authority shall issue its decision and order taking such action 
and making such recommendations concerning the award as it considers 
necessary, consistent with applicable laws, rules, or regulations.

[45 FR 3513, Jan. 17, 1980]



PART 2426--NATIONAL CONSULTATION RIGHTS AND CONSULTATION RIGHTS ON GOVERNMENT-WIDE RULES OR REGULATIONS--Table of Contents




                 Subpart A--National Consultation Rights

Sec.
2426.1  Requesting; granting; criteria.
2426.2  Requests; petition and procedures for determination of 
          eligibility for national consultation rights.
2426.3  Obligation to consult.

 Subpart B--Consultation Rights on Government-wide Rules or Regulations

2426.11  Requesting; granting; criteria.
2426.12  Requests; petition and procedures for determination of 
          eligibility for consultation rights on Government-wide rules 
          or regulations.
2426.13  Obligation to consult.

    Authority: 5 U.S.C. 7134.

    Source: 45 FR 3513, Jan. 17, 1980, unless otherwise noted.



                 Subpart A--National Consultation Rights



Sec. 2426.1  Requesting; granting; criteria.

    (a) An agency shall accord national consultation rights to a labor 
organization that:
    (1) Requests national consultation rights at the agency level; and

[[Page 354]]

    (2) Holds exclusive recognition for either:
    (i) Ten percent (10%) or more of the total number of civilian 
personnel employed by the agency and the non-appropriated fund Federal 
instrumentalities under its jurisdiction, excluding foreign nationals; 
or
    (ii) 3,500 or more employees of the agency.
    (b) An agency's primary national subdivision which has authority to 
formulate conditions of employment shall accord national consultation 
rights to a labor organization that:
    (1) Requests national consultation rights at the primary national 
subdivision level; and
    (2) Holds exclusive recognition for either:
    (i) Ten percent (10%) or more of the total number of civilian 
personnel employed by the primary national subdivision and the non-
appropriated fund Federal instrumentalities under its jurisdiction, 
excluding foreign nationals; or
    (ii) 3,500 or more employees of the primary national subdivision.
    (c) In determining whether a labor organization meets the 
requirements as prescribed in paragraphs (a)(2) and (b)(2) of this 
section, the following will not be counted:
    (1) At the agency level, employees represented by the labor 
organization under national exclusive recognition granted at the agency 
level.
    (2) At the primary national subdivision level, employees represented 
by the labor organization under national exclusive recognition granted 
at the agency level or at that primary national subdivision level.
    (d) An agency or a primary national subdivision of an agency shall 
not grant national consultation rights to any labor organization that 
does not meet the criteria prescribed in paragraphs (a), (b) and (c) of 
this section.



Sec. 2426.2  Requests; petition and procedures for determination of eligibility for national consultation rights.

    (a) Requests by labor organizations for national consultation rights 
shall be submitted in writing to the headquarters of the agency or the 
agency's primary national subdivision, as appropriate, which 
headquarters shall have fifteen (15) days from the date of service of 
such request to respond thereto in writing.
    (b) Issues relating to a labor organization's eligibility for, or 
continuation of, national consultation rights shall be referred to the 
Authority for determination as follows:
    (1) A petition for determination of the eligibility of a labor 
organization for national consultation rights under criteria set forth 
in Sec. 2426.1 may be filed by a labor organization.
    (2) A petition for determination of eligibility for national 
consultation rights shall be submitted on a form prescribed by the 
Authority and shall set forth the following information:
    (i) Name and affiliation, if any, of the petitioner and its address 
and telephone number;
    (ii) A statement that the petitioner has submitted to the agency or 
the primary national subdivision and to the Assistant Secretary a roster 
of its officers and representatives, a copy of its constitution and 
bylaws, and a statement of its objectives;
    (iii) A declaration by the person signing the petition, under the 
penalties of the Criminal Code (18 U.S.C. 1001), that its contents are 
true and correct to the best of such person's knowledge and belief;
    (iv) The signature of the petitioner's representative, including 
such person's title and telephone number;
    (v) The name, address, and telephone number of the agency or primary 
national subdivision in which the petitioner seeks to obtain or retain 
national consultation rights, and the persons to contact and their 
titles, if known;
    (vi) A showing that petitioner holds adequate exclusive recognition 
as required by Sec. 2426.1; and
    (vii) A statement as appropriate: (A) That such showing has been 
made to and rejected by the agency or primary national subdivision, 
together with a statement of the reasons for rejection, if any, offered 
by that agency or primary national subdivision;
    (B) That the agency or primary national subdivision has served 
notice of its intent to terminate existing national consultation rights, 
together

[[Page 355]]

with a statement of the reasons for termination; or
    (C) That the agency or primary national subdivision has failed to 
respond in writing to a request for national consultation rights made 
under Sec. 2426.2(a) within fifteen (15) days after the date the request 
is served on the agency or primary national subdivision.
    (3) The following regulations govern petitions filed under this 
section:
    (i) A petition for determination of eligibility for national 
consultation rights shall be filed with the Regional Director for the 
region wherein the headquarters of the agency or the agency's primary 
national subdivision is located.
    (ii) An original and four (4) copies of a petition shall be filed, 
together with a statement of any other relevant facts and of all 
correspondence.
    (iii) Copies of the petition together with the attachments referred 
to in paragraph (b)(3)(ii) of this section shall be served by the 
petitioner on all known interested parties, and a written statement of 
such service shall be filed with the Regional Director.
    (iv) A petition shall be filed within thirty (30) days after the 
service of written notice by the agency or primary national subdivision 
of its refusal to accord national consultation rights pursuant to a 
request under Sec. 2426.2(a) or its intention to terminate existing 
national consultation rights. If an agency or a primary national 
subdivision fails to respond in writing to a request for national 
consultation rights made under Sec. 2426.2(a) within fifteen (15) days 
after the date the request is served on the agency or primary national 
subdivision, a petition shall be filed within thirty (30) days after the 
expiration of such fifteen (15) day period.
    (v) If an agency or primary national subdivision wishes to terminate 
national consultation rights, notice of its intention to do so shall 
include a statement of its reasons and shall be served not less than 
thirty (30) days prior to the intended termination date. A labor 
organization, after receiving such notice, may file a petition within 
the time period prescribed herein, and thereby cause to be stayed 
further action by the agency or primary national subdivision pending 
disposition of the petition. If no petition has been filed within the 
provided time period, an agency or primary national subdivision may 
terminate national consultation rights.
    (vi) Within fifteen (15) days after the receipt of a copy of the 
petition, the agency or primary national subdivision shall file a 
response thereto with the Regional Director raising any matter which is 
relevant to the petition.
    (vii) The Regional Director shall make such investigations as the 
Regional Director deems necessary and thereafter shall issue and serve 
on the parties a Decision and Order with respect to the eligibility for 
national consultation rights which shall be final: Provided, however, 
That an application for review of the Regional Director's Decision and 
Order may be filed with the Authority in accordance with the procedure 
set forth in Sec. 2422.17 of this subchapter. A determination by the 
Regional Director to issue a notice of hearing shall not be subject to 
the filing of an application for review. The Regional Director, if 
appropriate, may cause a notice of hearing to be issued to all 
interested parties where substantial factual issues exist warranting a 
hearing. Hearings shall be conducted by a Hearing Officer in accordance 
with Secs. 2422.9 through 2422.15 of this subchapter and after the close 
of the hearing a Decision and Order shall be issued by the Regional 
Director in accordnce with Sec. 2422.16 of this subchapter.

[45 FR 3513, Jan. 17, 1980, as amended at 48 FR 40193, Sept. 6, 1983]



Sec. 2426.3  Obligation to consult.

    (a) When a labor organization has been accorded national 
consultation rights, the agency or the primary national subdivision 
which has granted those rights shall, through appropriate officials, 
furnish designated representatives of the labor organization:
    (1) Reasonable notice of any proposed substantive change in 
conditions of employment; and
    (2) Reasonable time to present its views and recommendations 
regarding the change.

[[Page 356]]

    (b) If a labor organization presents any views or recommendations 
regarding any proposed substantive change in conditions of employment to 
an agency or a primary national subdivision, that agency or primary 
national subdivision shall:
    (1) Consider the views or recommendations before taking final action 
on any matter with respect to which the views or recommendations are 
presented; and
    (2) Provide the labor organization a written statement of the 
reasons for taking the final action.
    (c) Nothing in this subpart shall be construed to limit the right of 
any agency or exclusive representative to engage in collective 
bargaining.



 Subpart B--Consultation Rights on Government-wide Rules or Regulations



Sec. 2426.11  Requesting; granting; criteria.

    (a) An agency shall accord consultation rights on Government-wide 
rules or regulations to a labor organization that:
    (1) Requests consultation rights on Government-wide rules or 
regulations from an agency; and
    (2) Holds exclusive recognition for 3,500 or more employees.
    (b) An agency shall not grant consultation rights on Government-wide 
rules or regulations to any labor organization that does not meet the 
criteria prescribed in paragraph (a) of this section.



Sec. 2426.12  Requests; petition and procedures for determination of eligibility for consultation rights on Government-wide rules or regulations.

    (a) Requests by labor organizations for consultation rights on 
Government-wide rules or regulations shall be submitted in writing to 
the headquarters of the agency, which headquarters shall have fifteen 
(15) days from the date of service of such request to respond thereto in 
writing.
    (b) Issues relating to a labor organization's eligibility for, or 
continuation of, consultation rights on Government-wide rules or 
regulations shall be referred to the Authority for determination as 
follows:
    (1) A petition for determination of the eligibility of a labor 
organization for consultation rights under criteria set forth in 
Sec. 2426.11 may be filed by a labor organization.
    (2) A petition for determination of eligibility for consultation 
rights shall be submitted on a form prescribed by the Authority and 
shall set forth the following information:
    (i) Name and affiliation, if any, of the petitioner and its address 
and telephone number;
    (ii) A statement that the petitioner has submitted to the agency and 
to the Assistant Secretary a roster of its officers and representatives, 
a copy of its constitution and bylaws, and a statement of its 
objectives;
    (iii) A declaration by the person signing the petition, under the 
penalties of the Criminal Code (18 U.S.C. 1001), that its contents are 
true and correct to the best of such person's knowledge and belief;
    (iv) The signature of the petitioner's representative, including 
such person's title and telephone number;
    (v) The name, address, and telephone number of the agency in which 
the petitioner seeks to obtain or retain consultation rights on 
Government-wide rules or regulations, and the persons to contact and 
their titles, if known;
    (vi) A showing that petitioner meets the criteria as required by 
Sec. 2426.11; and
    (vii) A statement, as appropriate:
    (A) That such showing has been made to and rejected by the agency, 
together with a statement of the reasons for rejection, if any, offered 
by that agency;
    (B) That the agency has served notice of its intent to terminate 
existing consultation rights on Government-wide rules or regulations, 
together with a statement of the reasons for termination; or
    (C) That the agency has failed to respond in writing to a request 
for consultation rights on Government-wide rules or regulations made 
under Sec. 2426.12(a) within fifteen (15) days after the date the 
request is served on the agency.
    (3) The following regulations govern petitions filed under this 
section:

[[Page 357]]

    (i) A petition for determination of eligibility for consultation 
rights on Government-wide rules or regulations shall be filed with the 
Regional Director for the region wherein the headquarters of the agency 
is located.
    (ii) An original and four (4) copies of a petition shall be filed, 
together with a statement of any other relevant facts and of all 
correspondence.
    (iii) Copies of the petition together with the attachments referred 
to in paragraph (b)(3)(ii) of this section shall be served by the 
petitioner on the agency, and a written statement of such service shall 
be filed with the Regional Director.
    (iv) A petition shall be filed within thirty (30) days after the 
service of written notice by the agency of its refusal to accord 
consultation rights on Government-wide rules or regulations pursuant to 
a request under Sec. 2426.12(a) or its intention to terminate such 
existing consultation rights. If an agency fails to respond in writing 
to a request for consultation rights on Government-wide rules or 
regulations made under Sec. 2426.12(a) within fifteen (15) days after 
the date the request is served on the agency, a petition shall be filed 
within thirty (30) days after the expiration of such fifteen (15) day 
period.
    (v) If an agency wishes to terminate consultation rights on 
Government-wide rules or regulations, notice of its intention to do so 
shall be served not less than thirty (30) days prior to the intended 
termination date. A labor organization, after receiving such notice, may 
file a petition within the time period prescribed herein, and thereby 
cause to be stayed further action by the agency pending disposition of 
the petition. If no petition has been filed within the provided time 
period, an agency may terminate such consultation rights.
    (vi) Within fifteen (15) days after the receipt of a copy of the 
petition, the agency shall file a response thereto with the Regional 
Director raising any matter which is relevant to the petition.
    (vii) The Regional Director shall make such investigation as the 
Regional Director deems necessary and thereafter shall issue and serve 
on the parties a Decision and Order with respect to the eligibility for 
consultation rights which shall be final: Provided, however, That an 
application for review of the Regional Director's Decision and Order may 
be filed with the Authority in accordance with the procedure set forth 
in Sec. 2422.17 of this subchapter. A determination by the Regional 
Director to issue a notice of hearing shall not be subject to the filing 
of an application for review. The Regional Director, if appropriate, may 
cause a notice of hearing to be issued where substantial factual issues 
exist warranting a hearing. Hearings shall be conducted by a Hearing 
Officer in accordance with Secs. 2422.9 through 2422.15 of this chapter 
and after the close of the hearing a Decision and Order shall be issued 
by the Regional Director in accordance with Sec. 2422.16 of this 
subchapter.

[45 FR 3513, Jan. 17, 1980, as amended at 48 FR 40193, Sept. 6, 1983]



Sec. 2426.13  Obligation to consult.

    (a) When a labor organization has been accorded consultation rights 
on Government-wide rules or regulations, the agency which has granted 
those rights shall, through appropriate officials, furnish designated 
representatives of the labor organization:
    (1) Reasonable notice of any proposed Government-wide rule or 
regulation issued by the agency affecting any substantive change in any 
condition of employment; and
    (2) Reasonable time to present its views and recommendations 
regarding the change.
    (b) If a labor organization presents any views or recommendations 
regarding any proposed substantive change in any condition of employment 
to an agency, that agency shall:
    (1) Consider the views or recommendations before taking final action 
on any matter with respect to which the views or recommendations are 
presented; and
    (2) Provide the labor organization a written statement of the 
reasons for taking the final action.



PART 2427--GENERAL STATEMENTS OF POLICY OR GUIDANCE--Table of Contents




Sec.
2427.1  Scope.

[[Page 358]]

2427.2  Requests for general statements of policy or guidance.
2427.3  Content of request.
2427.4  Submissions from interested parties.
2427.5  Standards governing issuance of general statements of policy or 
          guidance.

    Authority: 5 U.S.C. 7134.

    Source: 45 FR 3516, Jan. 17, 1980, unless otherwise noted.



Sec. 2427.1  Scope.

    This part sets forth procedures under which requests may be 
submitted to the Authority seeking the issuance of general statements of 
policy or guidance under 5 U.S.C. 7105(a)(1).



Sec. 2427.2  Requests for general statements of policy or guidance.

    (a) The head of an agency (or designee), the national president of a 
labor organization (or designee), or the president of a labor 
organization not affiliated with a national organization (or designee) 
may separately or jointly ask the Authority for a general statement of 
policy or guidance. The head of any lawful association not qualified as 
a labor organization may also ask the Authority for such a statement 
provided the request is not in conflict with the provisions of chapter 
71 of title 5 of the United States Code or other law.
    (b) The Authority ordinarily will not consider a request related to 
any matter pending before the Authority, General Counsel, Panel or 
Assistant Secretary.



Sec. 2427.3  Content of request.

    (a) A request for a general statement of policy or guidance shall be 
in writing and must contain:
    (1) A concise statement of the question with respect to which a 
general statement of policy or guidance is requested together with 
background information necessary to an understanding of the question;
    (2) A statement of the standards under Sec. 2427.5 upon which the 
request is based;
    (3) A full and detailed statement of the position or positions of 
the requesting party or parties;
    (4) Identification of any cases or other proceedings known to bear 
on the question which are pending under chapter 71 of title 5 of the 
United States Code; and
    (5) Identification of other known interested parties.
    (b) A copy of each document also shall be served on all known 
interested parties, including the General Counsel, the Panel, the 
Federal Mediation and Conciliation Service, and the Assistant Secretary, 
where appropriate.



Sec. 2427.4  Submissions from interested parties.

    Prior to issuance of a general statement of policy or guidance the 
Authority, as it deems appropriate, will afford an opportunity to 
interested parties to express their views orally or in writing.



Sec. 2427.5  Standards governing issuance of general statements of policy or guidance.

    In deciding whether to issue a general statement of policy or 
guidance, the Authority shall consider:
    (a) Whether the question presented can more appropriately be 
resolved by other means;
    (b) Where other means are available, whether an Authority statement 
would prevent the proliferation of cases involving the same or similar 
question;
    (c) Whether the resolution of the question presented would have 
general applicability under the Federal Service Labor-Management 
Relations Statute;
    (d) Whether the question currently confronts parties in the context 
of a labor-management relationship;
    (e) Whether the question is presented jointly by the parties 
involved; and
    (f) Whether the issuance by the Authority of a general statement of 
policy or guidance on the question would promote constructive and 
cooperative labor-management relationships in the Federal service and 
would otherwise promote the purposes of the Federal Service Labor-
Management Relations Statute.



PART 2428--ENFORCEMENT OF ASSISTANT SECRETARY STANDARDS OF CONDUCT DECISIONS AND ORDERS--Table of Contents




Sec.
2428.1  Scope.

[[Page 359]]

2428.2  Petitions for enforcement.
2428.3  Authority decision.

    Authority: 5 U.S.C. 7134.

    Source: 45 FR 3516, Jan. 17, 1980, unless otherwise noted.



Sec. 2428.1  Scope.

    This part sets forth procedures under which the Authority, pursuant 
to 5 U.S.C. 7105(a)(2)(I), will enforce decisions and orders of the 
Assistant Secretary in standards of conduct matters arising under 5 
U.S.C. 7120.



Sec. 2428.2  Petitions for enforcement.

    (a) The Assistant Secretary may petition the Authority to enforce 
any Assistant Secretary decision and order in a standards of conduct 
case arising under 5 U.S.C. 7120. The Assistant Secretary shall transfer 
to the Authority the record in the case, including a copy of the 
transcript if any, exhibits, briefs, and other documents filed with the 
Assistant Secretary. A copy of the petition for enforcement shall be 
served on the labor organization against which such order applies.
    (b) An opposition to Authority enforcement of any such Assistant 
Secretary decision and order may be filed by the labor organization 
against which such order applies twenty (20) days from the date of 
service of the petition, unless the Authority, upon good cause shown by 
the Assistant Secretary, sets a shorter time for filing such opposition. 
A copy of the opposition to enforcement shall be served on the Assistant 
Secretary.



Sec. 2428.3  Authority decision.

    (a) A decision and order of the Assistant Secretary shall be 
enforced unless it is arbitrary and capricious or based upon manifest 
disregard of the law.
    (b) The Authority shall issue its decision on the case enforcing, 
enforcing as modified, refusing to enforce, or remanding the decision 
and order of the Assistant Secretary.



PART 2429--MISCELLANEOUS AND GENERAL REQUIREMENTS--Table of Contents




                        Subpart A--Miscellaneous

Sec.
2429.1  Transfer of cases to the Authority.
2429.2  Transfer and consolidation of cases.
2429.3  Transfer of record.
2429.4  Referral of policy questions to the Authority.
2429.5  Matters not previously presented; official notice.
2429.6  Oral argument.
2429.7  Subpenas.
2429.8  [Reserved]
2429.9  Amicus curiae.
2429.10  Advisory opinions.
2429.11  Interlocutory appeals.
2429.12  Service of process and papers by the Authority.
2429.13  Official time.
2429.14  Witness fees.
2429.15  Authority requests for advisory opinions.
2429.16  General remedial authority.
2429.17  Reconsideration.
2429.18  Service of petitions for review of final authority orders.

                     Subpart B--General Requirements

2429.21  Computation of time for filing papers.
2429.22  Additional time after service by mail.
2429.23  Extension; waiver.
2429.24  Place and method of filing; acknowledgement.
2429.25  Number of copies and paper size.
2429.26  Other documents.
2429.27  Service; statement of service.
2429.28  Petitions for amendment of regulations.

    Authority: 5 U.S.C. 7134; Sec. 2429.18 also issued under 28 U.S.C. 
2112(a).

    Source: 45 FR 3516, Jan. 17, 1980, unless otherwise noted.



                        Subpart A--Miscellaneous



Sec. 2429.1  Transfer of cases to the Authority.

    (a) In any unfair labor practice case under part 2423 of this 
subchapter in which, after the issuance of a complaint, the Regional 
Director determines, based upon a stipulation by the parties, that no 
material issue of fact exists, the Regional Director may upon agreement 
of all parties transfer the case to the Authority; and the Authority may 
decide the case on the basis of the formal documents alone. Briefs in 
the case must be filed with the Authority within thirty (30) days from 
the date of the Regional Director's order transferring the case to the 
Authority. The Authority may also remand any such case to the Regional 
Director for

[[Page 360]]

further processing. Orders of transfer and remand shall be served on all 
parties.
    (b) In any case under part 2423 of this subchapter in which it 
appears to the Regional Director that the proceedings raise questions 
which should be decided by the Authority, the Regional Director may, at 
any time, issue an order transferring the case to the Authority for 
decision or other appropriate action. Such an order shall be served on 
the parties.

[48 FR 40194, Sept. 6, 1983]



Sec. 2429.2  Transfer and consolidation of cases.

    In any matter arising pursuant to parts 2422 and 2423 of this 
subchapter, whenever it appears necessary in order to effectuate the 
purposes of the Federal Service Labor-Management Relations Statute or to 
avoid unnecessary costs or delay, Regional Directors may consolidate 
cases within their own region or may transfer such cases to any other 
region, for the purpose of investigation or consolidation with any 
proceedings which may have been instituted in, or transferred to, such 
region.



Sec. 2429.3  Transfer of record.

    In any case under part 2425 of this subchapter, upon request by the 
Authority, the parties jointly shall transfer the record in the case, 
including a copy of the transcript, if any, exhibits, briefs and other 
documents filed with the arbitrator, to the Authority.



Sec. 2429.4  Referral of policy questions to the Authority.

    Notwithstanding the procedures set forth in this subchapter, the 
General Counsel, the Assistant Secretary, or the Panel may refer for 
review and decision or general ruling by the Authority any case 
involving a major policy issue that arises in a proceeding before any of 
them. Any such referral shall be in writing and a copy of such referral 
shall be served on all parties to the proceeding. Before decision or 
general ruling, the Authority shall obtain the views of the parties and 
other interested persons, orally or in writing, as it deems necessary 
and appropriate.



Sec. 2429.5  Matters not previously presented; official notice.

    The Authority will not consider evidence offered by a party, or any 
issue, which was not presented in the proceedings before the Regional 
Director, Hearing Officer, Administrative Law Judge, or arbitrator. The 
Authority may, however, take official notice of such matters as would be 
proper.



Sec. 2429.6  Oral argument.

    The Authority or the General Counsel, in their discretion, may 
request or permit oral argument in any matter arising under this 
subchapter under such circumstances and conditions as they deem 
appropriate.



Sec. 2429.7  Subpenas.

    (a) Any member of the Authority, the General Counsel, any 
Administrative Law Judge appointed by the Authority under 5 U.S.C. 3105, 
and any Regional Director, Hearing Officer, or other employee of the 
Authority designated by the Authority may issue subpenas requiring the 
attendance and testimony of witnesses and the production of documentary 
or other evidence. However, no subpena shall be issued under this 
section which requires the disclosure of intramanagement guidance, 
advice, counsel, or training within an agency or between an agency and 
the Office of Personnel Management.
    (b) Where the parties are in agreement that the appearance of 
witnesses or the production of documents is necessary, and such 
witnesses agree to appear, no such subpena need be sought.
    (c) A request for a subpena by any person, as defined in 5 U.S.C. 
7103(a)(1), shall be in writing and filed with the Regional Director, in 
proceedings arising under parts 2422 and 2423 of this subchapter, or 
filed with the Authority, in proceedings arising under parts 2424 and 
2425 of this subchapter, not less than fifteen (15) days prior to the 
opening of a hearing, or with the appropriate presiding official(s) 
during the hearing.
    (d) All requests shall name and identify the witnesses or documents 
sought, and state the reasons therefor. The Authority, General Counsel, 
Administrative Law Judge, Regional Director, Hearing Officer, or any 
other

[[Page 361]]

employee of the Authority designated by the Authority, as appropriate, 
shall grant the request upon the determination that the testimony or 
documents appear to be necessary to the matters under investigation and 
the request describes with sufficient particularity the documents 
sought. Service of an approved subpena is the responsibility of the 
party on whose behalf the subpena was issued. The subpena shall show on 
its face the name and address of the party on whose behalf the subpena 
was issued.
    (e) Any person served with a subpena who does not intend to comply, 
shall, within five (5) days after the date of service of the subpena 
upon such person, petition in writing to revoke the subpena. A copy of 
any petition to revoke a subpena shall be served on the party on whose 
behalf the subpena was issued. Such petition to revoke, if made prior to 
the hearing, and a written statement of service, shall be filed with the 
Regional Director, who may refer the petition to the Authority, General 
Counsel, Administrative Law Judge, Hearing Officer, or any other 
employee of the Authority designated by the Authority, as appropriate, 
for ruling. A petition to revoke a subpena filed during the hearing, and 
a written statement of service, shall be filed with the appropriate 
presiding official(s). The Regional Director, or the appropriate 
presiding official(s) will, as a matter of course, cause a copy of the 
petition to revoke to be served on the party on whose behalf the subpena 
was issued, but shall not be deemed to assume responsibility for such 
service. The Authority, General Counsel, Administrative Law Judge, 
Regional Director, Hearing Officer, or any other employee of the 
Authority designated by the Authority, as appropriate, shall revoke the 
subpena if the evidence the production of which is required does not 
relate to any matter under investigation or in question in the 
proceedings, or the subpena does not describe with sufficient 
particularity the evidence the production of which is required, or if 
for any other reason sufficient in law the subpena is invalid. The 
Authority, General Counsel, Administrative Law Judge, Regional Director, 
Hearing Officer, or any other employee of the Authority designated by 
the Authority, as appropriate, shall make a simple statement of 
procedural or other ground for the ruling on the petition to revoke. The 
petition to revoke, any answer thereto, and any ruling thereon shall not 
become part of the official record except upon the request of the party 
aggrieved by the ruling.
    (f) Upon the failure of any person to comply with a subpena issued, 
upon the request of the party on whose behalf the subpena was issued, 
the General Counsel shall, on behalf of such party, institute 
proceedings in the appropriate district court for the enforcement 
thereof, unless, in the judgment of the General Counsel, the enforcement 
of such subpena would be inconsistent with law and the policies of the 
Federal Service Labor-Management Relations Statute. The General Counsel 
shall not be deemed thereby to have assumed responsibility for the 
effective prosecution of the same before the court thereafter.
Sec. 2429.8  [Reserved]



Sec. 2429.9  Amicus curiae.

    Upon petition of an interested person, a copy of which petition 
shall be served on the parties, and as the Authority deems appropriate, 
the Authority may grant permission for the presentation of written and/
or oral argument at any stage of the proceedings by an amicus curiae and 
the parties shall be notified of such action by the Authority.



Sec. 2429.10  Advisory opinions.

    The Authority and the General Counsel will not issue advisory 
opinions.



Sec. 2429.11  Interlocutory appeals.

    The Authority and the General Counsel ordinarily will not consider 
interlocutory appeals.



Sec. 2429.12  Service of process and papers by the Authority.

    (a) Methods of service. Notices of hearings, Decisions and Orders of 
Regional Directors, decisions of Administrative Law Judges, complaints, 
written rulings on motions, decisions and orders, and all other papers 
required by this

[[Page 362]]

subchapter to be issued by the Authority, the General Counsel, Regional 
Directors, Hearing Officers and Administrative Law Judges, shall be 
served personally or be certified mail or by telegraph.
    (b) Upon whom served. All papers required to be served under 
paragraph (a) of this section shall be served upon all counsel of record 
or other designated representative(s) of parties, and upon parties not 
so represented. Service upon such counsel or representative shall 
constitute service upon the party, but a copy also shall be transmitted 
to the party.
    (c) Proof of service. Proof of service shall be the verified return 
by the individual serving the papers setting forth the manner of such 
service, the return post office receipt, or the return telegraph 
receipt. When service is by mail, the date of service shall be the day 
when the matter served is deposited in the United States mail.

[45 FR 3516, Jan. 17, 1980, as amended at 48 FR 40194, Sept. 6, 1983]



Sec. 2429.13  Official time.

    If the participation of any employee in any phase of any proceeding 
before the Authority, including the investigation of unfair labor 
practice charges and representation petitions and the participation in 
hearings and representation elections, is deemed necessary by the 
Authority, the General Counsel, any Administrative Law Judge, Regional 
Director, Hearing Officer, or other agent of the Authority designated by 
the Authority, such employee shall be granted official time for such 
participation, including necessary travel time, as occurs during the 
employee's regular work hours and when the employee would otherwise be 
in a work or paid leave status. In addition, necessary transportation 
and per diem expenses shall be paid by the employing activity or agency.



Sec. 2429.14  Witness fees.

    (a) Witnesses (whether appearing voluntarily, or under a subpena) 
shall be paid the fee and mileage allowances which are paid subpenaed 
witnesses in the courts of the United States: Provided, That any witness 
who is employed by the Federal Government shall not be entitled to 
receive witness fees in addition to compensation received pursuant to 
Sec. 2429.13.
    (b) Witness fees and mileage allowances shall be paid by the party 
at whose instance the witnesses appear, except when the witness receives 
compensation pursuant to Sec. 2429.13.



Sec. 2429.15  Authority requests for advisory opinions.

    (a) Whenever the Authority, pursuant to 5 U.S.C. 7105(i) requests an 
advisory opinion from the Director of the Office of Personnel Management 
concerning the proper interpretation of rules, regulations, or policy 
directives issued by that Office in connection with any matter before 
the Authority, a copy of such request, and any response thereto, shall 
be served upon the parties in the matter.
    (b) The parties shall have fifteen (15) days from the date of 
service of a copy of the response of the Office of Personnel Management 
to file with the Authority comments on that response which the parties 
wish the Authority to consider before reaching a decision in the matter. 
Such comments shall be in writing and copies shall be served upon the 
other parties in the matter and upon the Office of Personnel Management.



Sec. 2429.16  General remedial authority.

    The Authority shall take any actions which are necessary and 
appropriate to administer effectively the provisions of chapter 71 of 
title 5 of the United States Code.



Sec. 2429.17  Reconsideration.

    After a final decision or order of the Authority has been issued, a 
party to the proceeding before the Authority who can establish in its 
moving papers extraordinary circumstances for so doing, may move for 
reconsideration of such final decision or order. The motion shall be 
filed within ten (10) days after service of the Authority's decision or 
order. A motion for reconsideration shall state with particularity the 
extraordinary circumstances claimed and shall be supported by 
appropriate citations. The filing and pendency of a motion under this 
provision shall not operate to stay the effectiveness of the

[[Page 363]]

action of the Authority, unless so ordered by the Authority. A motion 
for reconsideration need not be filed in order to exhaust administrative 
remedies.

[46 FR 40675, Aug. 11, 1981]



Sec. 2429.18  Service of petitions for review of final authority orders.

    Any aggrieved person filing pursuant to 5 U.S.C. 7123(a) a petition 
for review of a final Authority order in an appropriate Federal circuit 
court of appeals within 10 days of issuance of the Authority's final 
order must ensure that a court-stamped copy of the petition for review 
is received by the Solicitor of the Authority within that 10-day period 
in order to qualify for participation in the random selection process 
established in Public Law No. 100-236 for determining the appropriate 
court of appeals to review an agency final order when petitions for 
review of that order are filed in more than one court of appeals.

[55 FR 2509, Jan. 25, 1990]



                     Subpart B--General Requirements



Sec. 2429.21  Computation of time for filing papers.

    (a) In computing any period of time prescribed by or allowed by this 
subchapter, except in agreement bar situations described in Sec. 2422.12 
(c), (d), (e), and (f) of this subchapter, and except as to the filing 
of exceptions to an arbitrator's award under Sec. 2425.1 of this 
subchapter, the day of the act, event, or default from or after which 
the designated period of time begins to run shall not be included. The 
last day of the period so computed is to be included unless it is a 
Saturday, Sunday, or a Federal legal holiday in which event the period 
shall run until the end of the next day which is neither a Saturday, 
Sunday, or a Federal legal holiday. Provided, however, in agreement bar 
situations described in Sec. 2422.12 (c), (d), (e), and (f), if the 60th 
day prior to the expiration date of an agreement falls on Saturday, 
Sunday, or a Federal legal holiday, a petition, to be timely, must be 
filed by the close of business on the last official workday preceding 
the 60th day. When the period of time prescribed or allowed is 7 days or 
less, intermediate Saturdays, Sundays, and Federal legal holidays shall 
be excluded from the computations.
    (b) Except when filing an unfair labor practice charge pursuant to 
Sec. 2423.6 of this subchapter, a representation petition pursuant to 
Part 2422 of this subchapter, and a request for an extension of time 
pursuant to Sec. 2429.23(a) of this part, when this subchapter requires 
the filing of any paper with the Authority, the General Counsel, a 
Regional Director, or an Administrative Law Judge, the date of filing 
shall be determined by the date of mailing indicated by the postmark 
date. If no postmark date is evident on the mailing, it shall be 
presumed to have been mailed 5 days prior to receipt. If the filing is 
by personal delivery, it shall be considered filed on the date it is 
received by the Authority or the officer or agent designated to receive 
such matter.
    (c) All documents filed or required to be filed with the Authority 
shall be filed in accordance with Sec. 2429.24(a) of this subchapter.

[51 FR 45751, Dec. 22, 1986, as amended at 60 FR 67298, Dec. 29, 1995]



Sec. 2429.22  Additional time after service by mail.

    Except as to the filing of an application for review to a Regional 
Director's Decision and Order under Sec. 2422.31 of this subchapter, 
whenever a party has the right or is required to do some act pursuant to 
this subchapter within a prescribed period after service of a notice or 
other paper upon such party, and the notice or paper is served on such 
party by mail, five (5) days shall be added to the prescribed period: 
Provided, however, That five (5) days shall not be added in any instance 
where an extension of time has been granted.

[60 FR 67298, Dec. 29, 1995]



Sec. 2429.23  Extension; waiver.

    (a) Except as provided in paragraph (d) of this section, and 
notwithstanding Sec. 2429.21(b) of this subchapter, the Authority or 
General Counsel, or their designated representatives, as appropriate, 
may extend any time limit provided in this subchapter for good cause 
shown, and shall notify the parties of

[[Page 364]]

any such extension. Requests for extensions of time shall be in writing 
and received by the appropriate official not later than five (5) days 
before the established time limit for filing, shall state the position 
of the other parties on the request for extension, and shall be served 
on the other parties.
    (b) Except as provided in paragraph (d) of this section, the 
Authority or General Counsel, or their designated representatives, as 
appropriate, may waive any expired time limit in this subchapter in 
extraordinary circumstances. Request for a waiver of time limits shall 
state the position of the other parties and shall be served on the other 
parties.
    (c) The time limits established in this subchapter may not be 
extended or waived in any manner other than that described in this 
subchapter.
    (d) Time limits established in 5 U.S.C. 7105(f), 7117(c)(2) and 
7122(b) may not be extended or waived under this section.

[45 FR 3516, Jan. 17, 1980, as amended at 48 FR 40194, Sept. 6, 1983; 51 
FR 45752, Dec. 22, 1986]



Sec. 2429.24  Place and method of filing; acknowledgement.

    (a) All documents filed or required to be filed with the Authority 
pursuant to this subchapter shall be filed with the Director, Case 
Control Office, Federal Labor Relations Authority, Docket Room, suite 
415, 607 14th Street, NW., Washington, DC 20424-0001 (telephone: FTS or 
Commercial (202) 482-6540) between 9 a.m. and 5 p.m., Monday through 
Friday (except Federal holidays). Documents hand-delivered for filing 
must be presented in the Docket Room not later than 5 p.m. to be 
accepted for filing on that day.
    (b) A document submitted to the General Counsel pursuant to this 
subchapter shall be filed with the General Counsel at the address set 
forth in the appendix.
    (c) A document submitted to a Regional Director pursuant to this 
subchapter shall be filed with the appropriate regional office, as set 
forth in the appendix.
    (d) A document submitted to an Administrative Law Judge pursuant to 
this subchapter shall be filed with the appropriate Administrative Law 
Judge, as set forth in the appendix.
    (e) All documents filed pursuant to this section shall be filed in 
person or by mail.
    (f) All matters filed under paragraphs (a), (b), (c) and (d) of this 
section shall be printed, typed, or otherwise legibly duplicated: Carbon 
copies of typewritten matter will be accepted if they are clearly 
legible.
    (g) Documents in any proceedings under this subchapter, including 
correspondence, shall show the title of the proceeding and the case 
number, if any.
    (h) The original of each document required to be filed under this 
subchapter shall be signed by the party or by an attorney or 
representative of record for the party, or by an officer of the party, 
and shall contain the address and telephone number of the person signing 
it.
    (i) A return postal receipt may serve as acknowledgement of receipt 
by the Authority, General Counsel, Administrative Law Judge, Regional 
Director, or Hearing Officer, as appropriate. The receiving officer will 
otherwise acknowledge receipt of documents filed only when the filing 
party so requests and includes an extra copy of the document or its 
transmittal letter which the receiving office will date stamp upon 
receipt and return. If return is to be made by mail, the filing party 
shall include a self-addressed, stamped envelope for the purpose.

[45 FR 3516, Jan. 17, 1980, as amended at 51 FR 45752, Dec. 22, 1986; 58 
FR 53105, Oct. 14, 1993]



Sec. 2429.25  Number of copies and paper size.

    Unless otherwise provided by the Authority or the General Counsel, 
or their designated representatives, as appropriate, or under this 
subchapter, and with the exception of any prescribed forms, any document 
or paper filed with the Authority, General Counsel, Administrative Law 
Judge, Regional Director, or Hearing Officer, as appropriate, under this 
subchapter, together with any enclosure filed therewith, shall be 
submitted on 8\1/2\  x  11 inch size paper in an original and four (4) 
legible copies. A clean copy capable of being used as an original for

[[Page 365]]

purposes such as further reproduction may be substituted for the 
original.

[47 FR 55379, Dec. 9, 1982]



Sec. 2429.26  Other documents.

    (a) The Authority or the General Counsel, or their designated 
representatives, as appropriate, may in their discretion grant leave to 
file other documents as they deem appropriate.
    (b) A copy of such other documents shall be served on the other 
parties.



Sec. 2429.27  Service; statement of service.

    (a) Except as provided in Sec. 2423.10(c) and (d), any party filing 
a document as provided in this subchapter is responsible for serving a 
copy upon all counsel of record or other designated representative(s) of 
parties, upon parties not so represented, and upon any interested person 
who has been granted permission by the Authority pursuant to Sec. 2429.9 
to present written and/or oral argument as amicus curiae. Service upon 
such counsel or representative shall constitute service upon the party, 
but a copy also shall be transmitted to the party.
    (b) Service of any document or paper under this subchapter, by any 
party, including documents and papers served by one party on another, 
shall be made by certified mail or in person. A return post office 
receipt or other written receipt executed by the party or person served 
shall be proof of service.
    (c) A signed and dated statement of service shall be submitted at 
the time of filing. The statement of service shall include the names of 
the parties and persons served, their addresses, the date of service, 
the nature of the document served, and the manner in which service was 
made.
    (d) The date of service or date served shall be the day when the 
matter served is deposited in the U.S. mail or is delivered in person.



Sec. 2429.28  Petitions for amendment of regulations.

    Any interested person may petition the Authority or General Counsel 
in writing for amendments to any portion of these regulations. Such 
petition shall identify the portion of the regulations involved and 
provide the specific language of the proposed amendment together with a 
statement of grounds in support of such petition.



PART 2430--AWARDS OF ATTORNEY FEES AND OTHER EXPENSES--Table of Contents




Sec.
2430.1  Purpose.
2430.2  Proceedings affected; eligibility for award.
2430.3  Standards for awards.
2430.4  Allowable fees and expenses.
2430.5  Rulemaking on maximum rates for attorney fees.
2430.6  Contents of application; net worth exhibit; documentation of 
          fees and expenses.
2430.7  When an application may be filed; referral to Administrative Law 
          Judge; stay of proceeding.
2430.8  Filing and service of documents.
2430.9  Answer to application; reply to answer; comments by other 
          parties; extensions of time to file documents.
2430.10  Settlement.
2430.11  Further proceedings.
2430.12  Administrative Law Judge's decision; contents; service; 
          transfer of case to the Authority; contents of record in case.
2430.13  Exceptions to Administrative Law Judge's decision; briefs; 
          action of Authority.
2430.14  Payment of award.

    Authority: Sec. 203(a)(1), Pub. L. 96-481, 94 Stat. 2325 (5 U.S.C. 
504(c)(1)), as extended and amended, Pub. L. 99-80, 99 Stat. 183 (1985).

    Source: 46 FR 48623, Oct. 2, 1981, unless otherwise noted.



Sec. 2430.1  Purpose.

    The Equal Assess to Justice Act, 5 U.S.C. 504, provides for the 
award of attorney, agent, or witness fees and other expenses to eligible 
individuals and entities who are parties to Authority adversary 
adjudications. An eligible party may receive an award when it prevails 
over the General Counsel, unless the General Counsel's position in the 
proceeding was substantially justified, or special circumstances make an 
award unjust. The rules in this part describe the parties eligible for 
awards, and the Authority proceeding that is covered. They also set 
forth the procedures for applying for such awards, and the procedures by 
which the Authority will rule on such applications.

[51 FR 33837, Sept. 23, 1986]

[[Page 366]]



Sec. 2430.2  Proceedings affected; eligibility for award.

    (a) The provisions of this part apply to unfair labor practice 
proceedings pending on complaint against a labor organization at any 
time since October 1, 1981.
    (b) A respondent in an unfair labor proceeding which has prevailed 
in the proceeding, or in a significant and discrete portion of the 
proceeding, and who otherwise meets the eligibility requirements of this 
section, is eligible to apply for an award of attorneys fees and other 
expenses allowable under the provisions of Sec. 2430.4 of these rules.
    (1) Applicants eligible to receive an award in proceedings conducted 
by the Authority are any partnership, corporation, association, or 
public or private organization with a net worth of not more than $5 
million ($7 million in cases involving adversary adjudications pending 
on or commenced on or after August 5, 1985) and not more than 500 
employees.
    (2) For the purpose of eligibility, the net worth and number of 
employees of an applicant shall be determined as of the date the 
complaint was issued.
    (3) The employees of an applicant include all persons who regularly 
perform services for remuneration for the applicant, under the 
applicant's direction and control. Part-time employees shall be included 
on a proportional basis.
    (4) An applicant that participates in a proceeding primarily on 
behalf of one or more other persons or entities that would be ineligible 
is not itself eligible for an award.

[46 FR 48623, Oct. 2, 1981, as amended at 51 FR 33837, Sept. 23, 1986]



Sec. 2430.3  Standards for awards.

    (a) An eligible applicant may receive an award for fees and expenses 
incurred in connection with a proceeding, or in a significant and 
discrete portion of the proceeding, unless the position of the General 
Counsel over which the applicant has prevailed was substantially 
justified. The burden of proof that an award should not be made to an 
eligible applicant is on the General Counsel, who may avoid an award by 
showing that its position in initiating the proceeding was reasonable in 
law and fact.
    (b) An award will be reduced or denied if the applicant has unduly 
or unreasonably protracted the proceeding or if special circumstances 
make the award sought unjust.



Sec. 2430.4  Allowable fees and expenses.

    (a) No award for the fee of an attorney or agent under these rules 
may exceed $75.00 per hour. No award to compensate an expert witness may 
exceed the highest rate which the Authority pays expert witnesses. 
However, an award may also include the reasonable expenses of the 
attorney, agent, or witness as a separate item, if the attorney, agent 
or witness ordinarily charges clients separately for such expenses.
    (b) In determining the reasonableness of the fee sought for an 
attorney, agent or expert witness, the following matters may be 
considered:
    (1) If the attorney, agent or witness is in practice, his or her 
customary fee for similar services, or, if an employee of the applicant, 
the fully allocated cost of the services;
    (2) The prevailing rate for similar services in the community in 
which the attorney, agent or witness ordinarily performs services;
    (3) The time actually spent in the representation of the applicant;
    (4) The time reasonably spent in light of the difficulty or 
complexity of the issues in the proceeding; and
    (5) Such other factors as may bear on the value of the services 
provided.
    (c) The reasonable cost of any study, analysis, engineering report, 
test, project or similar matters prepared on behalf of an applicant may 
be awarded, to the extent that the charge for the service does not 
exceed the prevailing rate for similar services, and the study or other 
matter was necessary for preparation of the applicant's case.



Sec. 2430.5  Rulemaking on maximum rates for attorney fees.

    Any person may file with the Authority a petition under Sec. 2429.28 
of these rules for rulemaking to increase the maximum rate for attorney 
fees. The petition should specify the rate the petitioner believes 
should be established

[[Page 367]]

and explain fully the reasons why the higher rate is warranted.



Sec. 2430.6  Contents of application; net worth exhibit; documentation of fees and expenses.

    (a) An application for an award of fees and expenses under the Act 
shall identify the applicant and the proceeding for which an award is 
sought. The application shall state the particulars in which the 
applicant has prevailed and identify the positions of the General 
Counsel in the proceeding that the applicant alleges were not 
substantially justified. The application shall also state the number of 
employees of the applicant and describe briefly the type and purpose of 
its organization or business.
    (b) The application shall include a statement that the applicant's 
net worth does not exceed $5 million.
    (c) The application shall state the amount of fees and expenses for 
which an award is sought.
    (d) The application may also include any other matters that the 
applicant wishes the Authority to consider in determining whether and in 
what amount an award should be made.
    (e) The application shall be signed by the applicant or an 
authorized officer or attorney of the applicant. It shall also contain 
or be accompanied by a written verification under oath or under penalty 
of perjury that the information provided in the application is true.
    (f) Each applicant must provide with its application a detailed 
exhibit showing the net worth of the applicant when the proceeding was 
initiated. The exhibit may be in any form convenient to the applicant 
that provides full disclosure of the applicant's assets and liabilities 
and is sufficient to determine whether the applicant qualifies under the 
standards in this part. The Administrative Law Judge may require an 
applicant to file additional information to determine its eligibility 
for an award.
    (g) The application shall be accompanied by full documentation of 
the fees and expenses for which an award is sought. A separate itemized 
statement shall be submitted for each professional firm or individual 
whose services are covered by the application, showing the hours spent 
in connection with the proceeding by each individual, the rate at which 
each fee has been computed, any expenses for which reimbursement is 
sought, the total amount claimed, and the total amount paid or payable 
by the applicant or by any other person or entity for the services 
provided. The Administrative Law Judge may require the applicant to 
provide vouchers, receipts, or other substantiation for any expenses 
claimed.



Sec. 2430.7  When an application may be filed; referral to Administrative Law Judge; stay of proceeding.

    (a) An application may be filed after entry of the final order 
establishing that the applicant has prevailed in the proceeding, or in a 
significant and discrete substantive portion of the proceeding, but in 
no case later than thirty (30) days after the entry of the Authority's 
final order in the proceeding. The application for an award shall be 
filed with the Authority in Washington, DC, in an original and four 
copies, and served on all parties to the unfair labor practice 
proceeding. Service of the application shall be in the same manner as 
prescribed in Secs. 2429.22 and 2429.27. Upon filing, the application 
shall be referred by the Authority to the Administrative Law Judge who 
heard the proceeding upon which the application is based, or, in the 
event the proceeding had not previously been heard by an Administrative 
Law Judge, it shall be referred to the Chief Administrative Law Judge 
for designation of an Administrative Law Judge, to consider the 
application. When the Administrative Law Judge to whom the application 
has been referred is or becomes unavailable, the provisions of 
Sec. 2423.20 shall be applicable.
    (b) Proceedings for the award of fees and other expenses, but not 
the time limit of this section for filing an application for an award, 
shall be stayed pending final disposition of the case, in the event any 
persons seeks Authority reconsideration or court review of the Authority 
decision that forms the basis for the application for fees and expenses.

[[Page 368]]



Sec. 2430.8  Filing and service of documents.

    All pleadings or documents after the time the case is referred by 
the Authority to an Administative Law Judge, until the issuance of the 
Judge's decision, shall be filed in an original and four copies with the 
Administrative Law Judge and served on all parties to the proceeding. 
Service of such documents shall be in the same manner as prescribed in 
Secs. 2429.22 and 2429.27.



Sec. 2430.9  Answer to application; reply to answer; comments by other parties; extensions of time to file documents.

    (a) Within 30 days after service of an application, the General 
Counsel may file an answer to the application. The filing of a motion to 
dismiss the application shall stay the time for filing an answer to a 
date thirty (30) days after issuance of any order denying the motion.
    (b) If the General Counsel and the applicant believe that the issues 
in the fee application can be settled, they may jointly file a statement 
of their intent to negotiate toward a settlement. The filing of such a 
statement shall extend the time for filing an answer for an additional 
30 days.
    (c) The answer shall explain in detail any objections to the award 
requested, and identify the facts relied on in support of the General 
Counsel's position. If the answer is based on alleged facts not already 
in the record of the proceeding, supporting affidavits shall be provided 
or a request made for further proceedings under Sec. 2430.11.
    (d) Within fifteen (15) days after service of an answer, the 
applicant may file a reply. If the reply is based on alleged facts not 
already in the record of the proceeding, supporting affidavits shall be 
provided or a request made for further proceedings under Sec. 2430.11.
    (e) Any party to a proceeding other than the applicant and the 
General Counsel may file comments on an application within 30 days after 
it is served, or on an answer within 15 days after it is served. A 
commenting party may not participate further in the proceeding on the 
application unless the Administrative Law Judge determines that such 
participation is required in order to permit full exploration of matters 
raised in the comments.
    (f) Motions for extensions of time to file documents permitted by 
this section or Sec. 2430.11 shall be filed with the Administrative Law 
Judge not less than five (5) days before the due date of the document.



Sec. 2430.10  Settlement.

    The applicant and the General Counsel may agree on a proposed 
settlement of the award before final action on the application. If an 
applicant and the General Counsel agree on a proposed settlement of an 
award before an application has been filed, the proposed settlement 
shall be filed with the application. All such settlements shall be 
subject to approval by the Authority.



Sec. 2430.11  Further proceedings.

    (a) The determination of an award may be made on the basis of the 
documents in the record, or the Administrative Law Judge, upon request 
of either the applicant or the General Counsel, or on his or her own 
initiative, may order further proceedings. Such further proceedings may 
include, but shall not be limited to, an informal conference, oral 
argument, additional written submissions, or an evidentiary hearing.
    (b) A request that the Administrative Law Judge order further 
proceedings under this section shall specifically identify the disputed 
issues and the evidence sought to be adduced, and shall explain why the 
additional proceedings are necessary to resolve the issues.
    (c) An order of the Administrative Law Judge scheduling oral 
argument, additional written submissions, or an evidentiary hearing, 
shall specify the issues to be considered in such argument, submission, 
or hearing.
    (d) Any evidentiary hearing held pursuant to this section shall be 
conducted not earlier than forty-five (45) days after the date on which 
the application is served. In all other respects, such hearing shall be 
conducted in accordance with Secs. 2423.14, 2423.16, 2423.17, 2423.19 
through 2423.21, 2423.23, and 2423.24, insofar as these sections are 
consistent with the provisions of this part.

[[Page 369]]



Sec. 2430.12  Administrative Law Judge's decision; contents; service; transfer of case to the Authority; contents of record in case.

    (a) Upon conclusion of proceedings under Secs. 2430.6 to 2430.11, 
the Administrative Law Judge shall prepare a decision. The decision 
shall include written findings and conclusions on the applicant's status 
as a prevailing party and eligibility, and an explanation of the reasons 
for any difference between the amount requested and the amount awarded. 
The decision shall also include, if at issue, findings on whether the 
agency's position was substantially justified, whether the applicant 
unduly protracted the proceedings, or whether special circumstances make 
an award unjust. The Administrative Law Judge shall cause the decision 
to be served promptly on all parties to the proceeding. Thereafter, the 
Administrative Law Judge shall transmit the case to the Authority, 
including the judge's decision and the record. Service of the 
Administrative Law Judge's decision and of the order transferring the 
case to the Board shall be complete upon mailing.
    (b) The record in a proceeding on an application for an award of 
fees and expenses shall consist of the application for an award of fees 
and expenses and any amendments or attachments thereto, the net worth 
exhibit, the answer and any amendments or attachments thereto, any reply 
to the answer, any comments by other parties, motions, rulings, orders, 
stipulations, written submissions, the stenographic transcript of oral 
argument, the stenographic transcript of the hearing, exhibits and 
depositions, together with the Administrative Law Judge's decision, and 
the exceptions and briefs as provided in Sec. 2430.13, and the record of 
the unfair labor practice proceeding upon which the application is 
based.



Sec. 2430.13  Exceptions to Administrative Law Judge's decision; briefs; action of Authority.

    Procedures before the Authority, including the filing of exceptions 
to the administrative law judge's decision rendered pursuant to 
Sec. 2430.12, and action by the Authority, shall be in accordance with 
Secs. 2423.26(c), 2423.27, and 2423.28 of these rules. The Authority's 
review of the matter shall be in accordance with Sec. 2423.29(a).



Sec. 2430.14  Payment of award.

    To obtain payment of an award made by the Authority the applicant 
shall submit to the Executive Director of the Authority a copy of the 
Authority's final decision granting the award, accompanied by a 
statement that the applicant will not seek court review of the decision. 
The amount awarded will then be paid unless judicial review of the 
award, or of the underlying decision, has been sought by the applicant 
or any other party to the proceeding.

[[Page 370]]



              SUBCHAPTER D--FEDERAL SERVICE IMPASSES PANEL





PART 2470--GENERAL--Table of Contents




                           Subpart A--Purpose

Sec.
2470.1  Purpose.

                         Subpart B--Definitions

2470.2  Definitions.

    Authority: 5 U.S.C. 7119, 7134.



                           Subpart A--Purpose



Sec. 2470.1  Purpose.

    The regulations contained in this subchapter are intended to 
implement the provisions of section 7119 of title 5 of the United States 
Code. They prescribe procedures and methods which the Federal Service 
Impasses Panel may utilize in the resolution of negotiation impasses 
when voluntary arrangements, including the services of the Federal 
Mediation and Conciliation Service or any other third-party mediation, 
fail to resolve the disputes. It is the policy of the Panel to encourage 
labor and management to resolve disputes on terms that are mutually 
agreeable at any stage of the Panel's procedures.

[45 FR 3520, Jan. 17, 1980, as amended at 61 FR 41294, Aug. 8, 1996]



                         Subpart B--Definitions



Sec. 2470.2  Definitions.

    (a) The terms agency, labor organization, and conditions of 
employment as used herein shall have the meaning set forth in 5 U.S.C. 
7103(a).
    (b) The term Executive Director means the Executive Director of the 
Panel.
    (c) The terms designated representative or designee of the Panel 
means a Panel member, a staff member, or other individual designated by 
the Panel to act on its behalf.
    (d) The term hearing means a factfinding hearing, arbitration 
hearing, or any other hearing procedure deemed necessary to accomplish 
the purposes of 5 U.S.C. 7119.
    (e) The term impasse means that point in the negotiation of 
conditions of employment at which the parties are unable to reach 
agreement, notwithstanding their efforts to do so by direct negotiations 
and by the use of mediation or other voluntary arrangements for 
settlement.
    (f) The term Panel means the Federal Service Impasses Panel 
described in 5 U.S.C. 7119(c) or a quorum thereof.
    (g) The term party means the agency or the labor organization 
participating in the negotiation of conditions of employment.
    (h) The term quorum means a majority of the members of the Panel.
    (i) The term voluntary arrangements means any method adopted by the 
parties for the purpose of assisting them in their resolution of a 
negotiation dispute which is not inconsistent with the provisions of 5 
U.S.C. 7119.

[45 FR 3520, Jan. 17, 1980, as amended at 48 FR 19693, May 2, 1983]



PART 2471--PROCEDURES OF THE PANEL--Table of Contents




Sec.
2471.1  Request for Panel consideration; request for Panel approval of 
          binding arbitration.
2471.2  Request form.
2471.3  Content of request.
2471.4  Where to file.
2471.5  Filing and service.
2471.6  Investigation of request; Panel procedures; approval of binding 
          arbitration.
2471.7  Preliminary factfinding procedures.
2471.8  Conduct of factfinding and other hearings; prehearing 
          conferences.
2471.9  Report and recommendations.
2471.10  Duties of each party following receipt of recommendations.
2471.11  Final action by the Panel.
2471.12  Inconsistent labor agreement provisions.

    Authority: 5 U.S.C. 7119, 7134.

    Source: 45 FR 3520, Jan. 17, 1980, unless otherwise noted.



Sec. 2471.1  Request for Panel consideration; request for Panel approval of binding arbitration.

    If voluntary arrangements, including the services of the Federal 
Mediation and Conciliation Service or any other

[[Page 371]]

third-party mediation, fail to resolve a negotiation impasse:
    (a) Either party, or the parties jointly, may request the Panel to 
consider the matter by filing a request as hereinafter provided; or the 
Panel may, pursuant to 5 U.S.C. 7119(c)(1), undertake consideration of 
the matter upon request of (i) the Federal Mediation and Conciliation 
Service, or (ii) the Executive Director; or
    (b) The parties may jointly request the Panel to approve any 
procedure, which they have agreed to adopt, for binding arbitration of 
the negotiation impasse by filing a request as hereinafter provided.



Sec. 2471.2   Request form.

    A form is available for use by the parties in filing a request for 
consideration of an impasse or approval of a binding arbitration 
procedure. Copies are available from the Office of the Executive 
Director, Federal Service Impasses Panel, 607 14th Street, NW., Suite 
220, Washington, DC. 20424-0001. Telephone (202) 482-6670. Use of the 
form is not required provided that the request includes all of the 
information set forth in Sec. 2471.3.

[61 FR 41294, Aug. 8, 1996]



Sec. 2471.3  Content of request.

    (a) A request from a party or parties to the Panel for consideration 
of an impasse must be in writing and include the following information:
    (1) Identification of the parties and individuals authorized to act 
on their behalf, including their addresses, telephone numbers, and 
facsimile numbers;
    (2) Statement of issues at impasse and the summary positions of the 
initiating party or parties with respect to those issues; and
    (3) Number, length, and dates of negotiation and mediation sessions 
held, including the nature and extent of all other voluntary 
arrangements utilized.
    (b) A request for approval of a binding arbitration procedure must 
be in writing, jointly filed by the parties, and include the following 
information about the pending impasse:
    (1) Identification of the parties and individuals authorized to act 
on their behalf, including their addresses, telephone numbers, and 
facsimile numbers;
    (2) Brief description of the impasse including the issues to be 
submitted to the arbitrator;
    (3) Number, length, and dates of negotiation and mediation sessions 
held, including the nature and extent of all other voluntary 
arrangements utilized;
    (4) Statement as to whether any of the proposals to be submitted to 
the arbitrator contain questions concerning the duty to bargain and a 
statement of each party's position concerning such questions; and
    (5) Statement of the arbitration procedures to be used, including 
the type of arbitration, the method of selecting the arbitrator, and the 
arrangement for paying for the proceedings or, in the alternative, those 
provisions of the parties' labor agreement which contain this 
information.

[45 FR 3520, Jan. 17, 1980, as amended at 61 FR 41294, Aug. 8, 1996]



Sec. 2471.4   Where to file.

    Requests to the Panel provided for in this part, and inquiries or 
correspondence on the status of impasses or other related matters, 
should be addressed to the Executive Director, Federal Service Impasses 
Panel, 607 14th Street, NW., Suite 220, Washington, D.C. 20424-0001. 
Telephone (202) 482-6670. Facsimile (202) 482-6674.

[61 FR 41294, Aug. 8, 1996]



Sec. 2471.5   Filing and service.

    (a) Filing and service of request. (1) Any party submitting a 
request for Panel consideration of an impasse or a request for approval 
of a binding arbitration procedure shall file an original and one copy 
with the Panel. A clean copy may be submitted for the original. Requests 
may be submitted in person or by registered mail, certified mail, 
regular mail, or private delivery service. Requests may also be accepted 
by the Panel if transmitted to the facsimile machine of its office. A 
party submitting a request by facsimile shall also file an original for 
the Panel's records, but failure to do so shall not affect the validity 
of the filing by facsimile, if otherwise proper.
    (2) The party submitting the request shall serve a copy of such 
request upon

[[Page 372]]

all counsel of record or other designated representative(s) of parties, 
upon parties not so represented, and upon any mediation service which 
may have been utilized. Service upon such counsel or representative 
shall constitute service upon the party, but a copy also shall be 
transmitted to the party. Service of a request may be made in person or 
by registered mail, certified mail, regular mail, or private delivery 
service. With the permission of the person receiving the request, 
service may be made by facsimile transmission or by any other agreed-
upon method. When the Panel acts on a request from the Federal Mediation 
and Conciliation Service or acts on a request from the Executive 
Director under Sec. 2471.1(a), it will notify the parties to the 
dispute, their counsel of record, if any, and any mediation service 
which may have been utilized.
    (b) Filing and service of other documents. (1) Any party submitting 
a response to, or other document in connection with, a request for Panel 
consideration of an impasse or a request for approval of a binding 
arbitration procedure shall file an original and one copy with the 
Panel. A clean copy may be submitted for the original. Documents may be 
submitted to the Panel in person or by registered mail, certified mail, 
regular mail, or private delivery service. Documents may also be 
accepted by the Panel if transmitted to the facsimile machine of its 
office, but only with advance permission, which may be obtained by 
telephone. A party submitting a document by facsimile shall also file an 
original for the Panel's records, but failure to do so shall not affect 
the validity of the submission, if otherwise proper.
    (2) The party submitting the document shall serve a copy of such 
request upon all counsel of record or other designated representative(s) 
of parties, or upon parties not so represented. Service upon such 
counsel or representative shall constitute service upon the party, but a 
copy also shall be transmitted to the party. Service of a document may 
be made in person or by registered mail, certified mail, regular mail, 
or private delivery service. With the permission of the person receiving 
the document, service may be made by facsimile transmission or by any 
other agreed-upon method.
    (c) A signed and dated statement of service shall accompany each 
document submitted to the Panel. The statement of service shall include 
the names of the parties and persons served, their addresses, the date 
of service, the nature of the document served, and the manner in which 
service was made.
    (d) The date of service or date served shall be the day when the 
matter served, if properly addressed, is deposited in the U.S. mail or 
is delivered in person or is deposited with a private delivery service 
that will provide a record showing the date the document was tendered to 
the delivery service. Where service is made by facsimile transmission, 
the date of service shall be the date on which transmission is received.
    (e) Unless otherwise provided by the Panel or its designated 
representatives, any document or paper filed with the Panel under this 
section, together with any enclosure filed therewith, shall be 
typewritten on 8\1/2\ x 11 inch plain white paper, shall have margins no 
less than 1 inch on each side, shall be in typeface no smaller than 10 
characters per inch, and shall be numbered consecutively. Nonconforming 
papers may, at the Panel's discretion, be rejected.

[48 FR 19694, May 2, 1983, as amended at 61 FR 41294, Aug. 8, 1996]



Sec. 2471.6  Investigation of request; Panel procedures; approval of binding arbitration.

    (a) Upon receipt of a request for consideration of an impasse, the 
Panel or its designee will promptly conduct an investigation, consulting 
when necessary with the parties and with any mediation service utilized. 
After due consideration, the Panel shall either:
    (1) Decline to assert jurisdiction in the event that it finds that 
no impasse exists or that there is other good cause for not asserting 
jurisdiction, in whole or in part, and so advise the parties in writing, 
stating its reasons; or
    (2) Assert jurisdiction and
    (i) Recommend to the parties procedures for the resolution of the 
impasse; and/or

[[Page 373]]

    (ii) Assist the parties in resolving the impasse through whatever 
methods and procedures the Panel considers appropriate. The procedures 
utilized by the Panel may include, but are not limited to: informal 
conferences with a Panel designee; factfinding (by a Panel designee or a 
private factfinder); written submissions; show cause orders; oral 
presentations to the Panel; and arbitration or mediation-arbitration (by 
a Panel designee or a private arbitrator). Following procedures used by 
the Panel, it may issue a report to the parties containing 
recommendations for settlement prior to taking final action to resolve 
the impasse.
    (b) Upon receipt of a request for approval of a binding arbitration 
procedure, the Panel or its designee will promptly conduct an 
investigation, consulting when necessary with the parties and with any 
mediation service utilized. After due consideration, the Panel shall 
promptly approve or disapprove the request, normally within five (5) 
workdays.

[45 FR 3520, Jan. 17, 1980, as amended at 61 FR 41294, Aug. 8, 1996]



Sec. 2471.7  Preliminary factfinding procedures.

    When the Panel determines that a factfinding hearing is necessary 
under Sec. 2471.6, and it appoints one or more of its designees to 
conduct such hearing, it will issue and serve upon each of the parties a 
notice of hearing and a notice of prehearing conference, if any. The 
notice will state:
    (a) The names of the parties to the dispute;
    (b) The date, time, place, type, and purpose of the hearing;
    (c) The date, time, place, and purpose of the prehearing conference, 
if any;
    (d) The name of the designated representatives appointed by the 
Panel;
    (e) The issues to be resolved; and
    (f) The method, if any, by which the hearing shall be recorded.

[45 FR 3520, Jan. 17, 1980, as amended at 48 FR 19694, May 2, 1983; 61 
FR 41295, Aug. 8, 1996]



Sec. 2471.8  Conduct of factfinding and other hearings; prehearing conferences.

    (a) A designated representative of the Panel, when so appointed to 
conduct a hearing, shall have the authority on behalf of the Panel to:
    (1) Administer oaths, take the testimony or deposition of any person 
under oath, receive other evidence, and issue subpenas;
    (2) Conduct the hearing in open, or in closed session at the 
discretion of the designated representative for good cause shown;
    (3) Rule on motions and requests for appearance of witnesses and the 
production of records;
    (4) Designate the date on which posthearing briefs, if any, shall be 
submitted.
    (5) Determine all procedural matters concerning the hearing, 
including the length of sessions, conduct of persons in attendance, 
recesses, continuances, and adjournments; and take any other appropriate 
procedural action which, in the judgment of the designated 
representative, will promote the purpose and objectives of the hearing.
    (b) A prehearing conference may be conducted by the designated 
representative of the Panel in order to:
    (1) Inform the parties of the purpose of the hearing and the 
procedures under which it will take place;
    (2) Explore the possibilities of obtaining stipulations of fact;
    (3) Clarify the positions of the parties with respect to the issues 
to be heard; and
    (4) Discuss any other relevant matters which will assist the parties 
in the resolution of the dispute.

[45 FR 3520, Jan. 17, 1980, as amended at 48 FR 19694, May 2, 1983]



Sec. 2471.9  Report and recommendations.

    (a) When a report is issued after a factfinding hearing is conducted 
pursuant to Sec. 2471.7 and 2471.8, it normally shall be in writing and, 
when authorized by the Panel, shall contain recommendations.
    (b) A report of the designated representative containing 
recommendations shall be submitted to the parties,

[[Page 374]]

with two (2) copies to the Executive Director, within a period normally 
not to exceed thirty (30) calendar days after receipt of the transcript 
or briefs, if any.
    (c) A report of the designated representative not containing 
recommendations shall be submitted to the Panel with a copy to each 
party within a period normally not to exceed thirty (30) calendar days 
after receipt of the transcript or briefs, if any. The Panel shall then 
take whatever action it may consider appropriate or necessary to resolve 
the impasse.

[45 FR 3520, Jan. 17, 1980, as amended at 61 FR 41295, Aug. 8, 1996]



Sec. 2471.10  Duties of each party following receipt of recommendations.

    (a) Within thirty (30) calendar days after receipt of a report 
containing recommendations of the Panel or its designated 
representative, each party shall, after conferring with the other, 
either:
    (1) Accept the recommendations and so notify the Executive Director; 
or
    (2) Reach a settlement of all unresolved issues and submit a written 
settlement statement to the Executive Director; or
    (3) Submit a written statement to the Executive Director setting 
forth the reasons for not accepting the recommendations and for not 
reaching a settlement of all unresolved issues.
    (b) A reasonable extension of time may be authorized by the 
Executive Director for good cause shown when requested in writing by 
either party prior to the expiration of the time limits.

[45 FR 3520, Jan. 17, 1980, as amended at 48 FR 19694, May 2, 1983]



Sec. 2471.11  Final action by the Panel.

    (a) If the parties do not arrive at a settlement as a result of or 
during actions taken under Secs. 2471.6(a)(2), 2471.7, 2471.8, 2471.9, 
and 2471.10, the Panel may take whatever action is necessary and not 
inconsistent with 5 U.S.C. chapter 71 to resolve the impasse, including 
but not limited to, methods and procedures which the Panel considers 
appropriate, such as directing the parties to accept a factfinder's 
recommendations, ordering binding arbitration conducted according to 
whatever procedure the Panel deems suitable, and rendering a binding 
decision.
    (b) In preparation for taking such final action, the Panel may hold 
hearings, administer oaths, take the testimony or deposition of any 
person under oath, and issue subpenas as provided in 5 U.S.C. 7132, or 
it may appoint or designate one or more individuals pursuant to 5 U.S.C. 
7119(c)(4) to exercise such authority on its behalf.
    (c) When the exercise of authority under this section requires the 
holding of a hearing, the procedure contained in Sec. 2471.8 shall 
apply.
    (d) Notice of any final action of the Panel shall be promptly served 
upon the parties, and the action shall be binding on such parties during 
the term of the agreement, unless they agree otherwise.

[45 FR 3520, Jan. 17, 1980, as amended at 48 FR 19694, May 2, 1983]



Sec. 2471.12  Inconsistent labor agreement provisions.

    Any provisions of the parties' labor agreements relating to impasse 
resolution which are inconsistent with the provisions of either 5 U.S.C. 
7119 or the procedures of the Panel shall be deemed to be superseded, 
unless such provisions are permitted under 5 U.S.C. 7135.



PART 2472--IMPASSES ARISING PURSUANT TO AGENCY DETERMINATIONS NOT TO ESTABLISH OR TO TERMINATE FLEXIBLE OR COMPRESSED WORK SCHEDULES--Table of Contents




                   Subpart A--Purpose and Definitions

Sec.
2472.1 Purpose.
2472.2 Definitions.

                   Subpart B--Procedures of the Panel

2472.3  Request for Panel consideration.
2472.4  Content of request.
2472.5  Where to file.
2472.6  Filing and service.
2472.7  Investigation of request; Panel assistance.
2472.8  Preliminary hearing procedures.
2472.9  Conduct of hearing and prehearing conference.
2472.10  Reports.
2472.11  Final action by the Panel.


[[Page 375]]


    Authority: 5 U.S.C. 6131.

    Source: 48 FR 19695, May 2, 1983, unless otherwise noted.



                   Subpart A--Purpose and Definitions



Sec. 2472.1  Purpose.

    The regulations contained in this Part are intended to implement the 
provisions of section 6131 of title 5 of the United States Code. They 
prescribe procedures and methods which the Federal Service Impasses 
Panel may utilize in the resolution of negotiations impasses arising 
from agency determinations not to establish or to terminate flexible and 
compressed work schedules.



Sec. 2472.2  Definitions.

    (a) The term the Act means the Federal Employees Flexible and 
Compressed Work Schedules Act of 1982, Pub. L. 97-221, 5 U.S.C. 6120 et 
seq.
    (b) The term adverse agency impact shall have the meaning set forth 
in 5 U.S.C. 6131(b).
    (c) The term agency shall have the meaning set forth in 5 U.S.C. 
6121(1).
    (d) The term duly authorized delegatee means an official who has 
been delegated the authority to act for the head of the agency in the 
matter concerned.
    (e) The term agency determination means a determination: (1) Not to 
establish a flexible or compressed work schedule under 5 U.S.C. 
6131(c)(2); or (2) to terminate such a schedule under 5 U.S.C. 
6131(c)(3).
    (f) The terms collective bargaining agreement and exclusive 
representative shall have the meanings set forth in 5 U.S.C. 6121(8).
    (g) The term Executive Director means the Executive Director of the 
Panel.
    (h) The terms designated representative or designee of the Panel 
means a Panel member, staff member, or other individual designated by 
the Panel to act on its behalf.
    (i) The term flexible and compressed work schedules shall have the 
meaning set forth in 5 U.S.C. 6121 et seq.
    (j) The term hearing means a factfinding hearing or any other 
hearing procedures deemed necessary to accomplish the purpose of 5 
U.S.C. 6131.
    (k) The term impasse means that point in the negotiation of flexible 
and compressed work schedules at which the parties are unable to reach 
agreement on whether a schedule has had or would have an adverse agency 
impact.
    (l) The term Panel means the Federal Service Impasses Panel 
described in 5 U.S.C. 7119(c) or a quorum thereof.
    (m) The term party means the agency or the exclusive representative 
participating in negotiations concerning flexible and compressed work 
schedules.
    (n) The term quorum means a majority of the members of the Panel.
    (o) The term schedule(s) means flexible and compressed work 
schedules.

[48 FR 19695, May 2, 1983, as amended at 61 FR 41295, Aug. 8, 1996]



                   Subpart B--Procedures of the Panel



Sec. 2472.3  Request for Panel consideration.

    Either party, or the parties jointly, may request the Panel to 
resolve an impasse resulting from an agency determination not to 
establish or to terminate a flexible or compressed work schedule by 
filing a request as hereinafter provided. A form is available for use by 
the parties in filing a request with the Panel. Copies are available 
from the Office of the Executive Director, Federal Service Impasses 
Panel, 607 14th Street, NW., Suite 220, Washington, DC 20424-0001. 
Telephone (202) 482-6670. Facsimile (202) 482-6674. Use of the form is 
not required provided that the request includes all of the information 
set forth in Sec. 2472.4.

[61 FR 41295, Aug. 8, 1996]



Sec. 2472.4  Content of request.

    (a) A request from a party or parties to the Panel for consideration 
of an impasse arising from an agency determination not to establish or 
to terminate a flexible or compressed work schedule under section 6131 
(c)(2) or (c)(3) of the Act must be in writing and shall include the 
following information:
    (1) Identification of the parties and individuals authorized to act 
on their

[[Page 376]]

behalf, including their addresses, telephone numbers, and facsimile 
numbers;
    (2) Description of the bargaining unit involved in the dispute and 
the date recognition was accorded to the exclusive representative;
    (3) Number, length, and dates of negotiation sessions held;
    (4) A copy of any collective bargaining agreement between the 
parties and any other agreements concerning flexible and compressed work 
schedules;
    (5) A copy of the schedule or proposed schedule, if any, which is 
the subject of the agency's determination;
    (6) A copy of the agency's written determination and the finding on 
which the determination is based, including, in a case where the finding 
is made by a duly authorized delegatee, evidence of a specific 
delegation of authority to make such a finding; and
    (7) A summary of the position of the initiating party or parties 
with respect to the agency's determination.

[48 FR 19695, May 2, 1983, as amended at 61 FR 41295, Aug. 8, 1996]



Sec. 2472.5  Where to file.

    Requests to the Panel provided for in these rules, and inquiries or 
correspondence on the status of impasses or other related matters, 
should be directed to the Executive Director, Federal Service Impasses 
Panel, 607 14th Street, NW., Suite 220, Washington, DC 20424-0001. 
Telephone (202) 482-6670. Facsimile (202) 482-6674.

[61 FR 41295, Aug. 8, 1996]



Sec. 2472.6  Filing and service.

    (a) Filing and service of request. (1) Any party submitting a 
request for Panel consideration of an impasse filed pursuant to 
Sec. 2472.3 of these rules shall file an original and one copy with the 
Panel. A clean copy may be submitted for the original. Requests may be 
submitted in person or by registered mail, certified mail, regular mail, 
or private delivery service. Requests will also be accepted by the Panel 
if transmitted to the facsimile machine of its office. A party 
submitting a request by facsimile shall also file an original for the 
Panel's records, but failure to do so shall not affect the validity of 
the filing by facsimile, if otherwise proper.
    (2) The party submitting the request shall serve a copy of such 
request upon all counsel of record or other designated representative(s) 
of parties, and upon parties not so represented. Service upon such 
counsel or representative shall constitute service upon the party, but a 
copy also shall be transmitted to the party. Service of a request may be 
made in person or by registered mail, certified mail, regular mail, or 
private delivery service. With the permission of the person receiving 
the request, service may be made by facsimile transmission or by any 
other agreed-upon method.
    (b) Filing and service of other documents. (1) Any party submitting 
a response to, or other document in connection with, a request for Panel 
consideration of an impasse filed pursuant to Sec. 2472.3 shall file an 
original and one copy with the Panel. A clean copy may be submitted for 
the original. Documents may be submitted to the Panel in person or by 
registered mail, certified mail, regular mail, or private delivery 
service. Documents may also be accepted by the Panel if transmitted to 
the facsimile machine of its office, but only with advance permission, 
which may be obtained by telephone. A party submitting a document by 
facsimile shall also file an original for the Panel's records, but 
failure to do so shall not affect the validity of the submission, if 
otherwise proper.
    (2) The party submitting the document shall serve a copy of such 
request upon all counsel of record or other designated representative(s) 
of parties, or upon parties not so represented. Service upon such 
counsel or representative shall constitute service upon the party, but a 
copy also shall be transmitted to the party. Service of a document may 
be made in person or by registered mail, certified mail, regular mail, 
or private delivery service. With the permission of the person receiving 
the document, service may be made by facsimile transmission or by any 
other agreed-upon method.
    (c) A signed and dated statement of service shall accompany each 
document submitted to the Panel. The statement of service shall include 
the names of the parties and persons served, their addresses, the date 
of

[[Page 377]]

service, the nature of the document served, and the manner in which 
service was made.
    (d) The date of service or date served shall be the day when the 
matter served, if properly addressed, is deposited in the U.S. mail, is 
delivered in person, or is deposited with a private delivery service 
that will provide a record showing the date the document was tendered to 
the delivery service. Where service is made by facsimile transmission, 
the date of service shall be the date on which transmission is received.
    (e) Unless otherwise provided by the Panel or its designated 
representatives, any document or paper filed with the Panel under this 
part, together with any enclosure filed therewith, shall be typewritten 
on 8\1/2\ x 11 inch plain white paper, shall have margins no less than 1 
inch on each side, shall be in typeface no smaller than 10 characters 
per inch, and shall be numbered consecutively. Nonconforming papers may, 
at the Panel's discretion, be rejected.
    (f) An impasse arising pursuant to section 6131(c) (2) or (3) of the 
Act will not be considered to be filed, and no Panel action will be 
taken, until the party initiating the request has complied with 
Sec. 2472.4, 2472.5, and 2472.6 of these regulations.

[48 FR 19695, May 2, 1983. Redesignated and amended at 61 FR 41295, Aug. 
8, 1996]



Sec. 2472.7  Investigation of request; Panel assistance.

    (a) Upon receipt of a request for consideration of an impasse filed 
in accordance with these rules, the Panel or its designee shall promptly 
conduct an investigation, consulting when necessary with the parties. 
After due consideration, the Panel shall determine the procedures by 
which the impasse shall be resolved and shall notify the parties of its 
determination.
    (b) The procedures utilized by the Panel shall afford the parties an 
opportunity to present their positions, including supporting evidence 
and arguments orally and/or in writing. They include, but are not 
limited to: informal conferences with a Panel designee; factfinding (by 
a Panel designee or a private factfinder); written submissions; show 
cause orders; and oral presentations to the Panel.

[48 FR 19695, May 2, 1983. Redesignated and amended at 61 FR 41295, 
41296, Aug. 8, 1996]



Sec. 2472.8  Preliminary hearing procedures.

    When the Panel determines that a hearing shall be held, and it 
appoints one or more of its designees to conduct such a hearing, it will 
issue and serve upon each of the parties a notice of hearing and a 
notice of prehearing conference, if any. The notice will state:
    (a) The names of the parties to the dispute;
    (b) The date, time, place, type, and purpose of the hearing;
    (c) The date, time, place, and purpose of the prehearing conference, 
if any;
    (d) The name of the designated representative(s) appointed by the 
Panel;
    (e) The issue(s) to be resolved; and
    (f) The method, if any, by which the hearing shall be transcribed.

[61 FR 41296, Aug. 8, 1996]



Sec. 2472.9  Conduct of hearing and prehearing conference.

    (a) A designated representative of the Panel, when so appointed to 
conduct a hearing, shall have the authority on behalf of the Panel to:
    (1) Administer oaths, take the testimony or deposition of any person 
under oath, receive other evidence, and issue subpoenas;
    (2) Conduct the hearing in open or in closed session at the 
discretion of the designated representative for good cause shown;
    (3) Rule on motions and requests for appearance of witnesses and the 
production of records;
    (4) Designate the date on which posthearing briefs, if any, shall be 
submitted; and
    (5) Determine all procedural matters concerning the hearing, 
including the length of sessions, conduct of persons in attendance, 
recesses, continuances, and adjournments; and take any other action 
which, in the judgment of the designated representative, will promote 
the purpose and objectives of the hearing.
    (b) A prehearing conference may be conducted by the designated 
representative of the Panel to:

[[Page 378]]

    (1) Inform the parties of the purpose of the hearing and the 
procedures under which it will take place;
    (2) Explore the possibilities of obtaining stipulations of fact;
    (3) Clarify the positions of the parties with respect to the issues 
to be heard; and
    (4) Discuss any other relevant matters which will assist the parties 
in the resolution of the dispute.

[48 FR 19695, May 2, 1983. Redesignated at 61 FR 41295, Aug. 8, 1996]



Sec. 2472.10  Reports.

    When a report is issued after a hearing conducted pursuant to 
Sec. 2472.8 and 2472.9, it normally shall be in writing and shall be 
submitted to the Panel, with a copy to each party, within a period 
normally not to exceed 30 calendar days after the close of the hearing 
and receipt of briefs, if any.

[61 FR 41296, Aug. 8, 1996]



Sec. 2472.11  Final action by the Panel.

    (a) After due consideration of the parties' positions, evidence, and 
arguments, including any report submitted in accordance with 
Sec. 2472.10, the Panel shall take final action in favor of the agency's 
determination if:
    (1) The finding on which a determination under 5 U.S.C. 6131(c)(2) 
not to establish a flexible or compressed work schedule is based is 
supported by evidence that the schedule is likely to cause an adverse 
agency impact; or
    (2) The finding on which a determination under 5 U.S.C. 6131(c)(3) 
to terminate a flexible or compressed work schedule is based is 
supported by evidence that the schedule has caused an adverse agency 
impact.
    (b) If the finding on which an agency determination under 5 U.S.C. 
6131(c)(2) or (c)(3) is based is not supported by evidence that the 
schedule is likely to cause or has caused an adverse agency impact, the 
Panel shall take whatever final action is appropriate.
    (c) In preparation for taking such final action, the Panel may hold 
hearings, administer oaths, take the testimony or deposition of any 
person under oath, and issue subpoenas, or it may appoint one or more 
individuals to exercise such authority on its behalf. Such action may be 
taken without regard to procedures previously authorized by the Panel.
    (d) Notice of any final action of the Panel shall be promptly served 
upon the parties.

[48 FR 19695, May 2, 1983. Redesignated and amended at 61 FR 41295, 
41296, Aug. 8, 1996]



PART 2473--SUBPOENAS--Table of Contents




    Authority: 5 U.S.C. 7119, 7134.



Sec. 2473.1   Subpenas.

    (a) Any member of the Panel, the Executive Director, or other person 
designated by the Panel, may issue subpenas requiring the attendance and 
testimony of witnesses and the production of documentary or other 
evidence. However, no subpena shall be issued under this section which 
requires the disclosure of intramanagement guidance, advice, counsel, or 
training within an agency or between an agency and the Office of 
Personnel Management.
    (b) Where the parties are in agreement that the appearance of 
witnesses or the production of documents is necessary, and such 
witnesses agree to appear, no such subpena need be sought.
    (c) A request for a subpena by any person, as defined in 5 U.S.C. 
7103(a)(1), shall be in writing and filed with the Executive Director, 
not less than fifteen (15) days prior to the opening of a hearing, or 
with the appropriate presiding official(s) during the hearing.
    (d) All requests shall name and identify the witnesses or documents 
sought, and state the reasons therefor. The Panel, Executive Director, 
or any other person designated by the Panel, as appropriate, shall grant 
the request upon the determination that the testimony or documents 
appear to be necessary to the matters under consideration and the 
request describes with sufficient particularity the documents sought. 
Service of an approved subpena is the responsibility of the party on 
whose behalf the subpena was issued. The subpena shall show on its face 
the name and address of the party on whose behalf the subpena was 
issued.
    (e) Any person served with a subpena who does not intend to comply 
shall

[[Page 379]]

within five (5) days after the date of service of the subpena upon such 
person, petition in writing to revoke the subpena. A copy of any 
petition to revoke a subpena shall be served on the party on whose 
behalf the subpena was issued. Such petition to revoke, if made prior to 
the hearing, and a written statement of service, shall be filed with the 
Executive Director. A petition to revoke a subpena filed during the 
hearing, and a written statement of service shall be filed with the 
appropriate presiding official(s). The Executive Director, or the 
appropriate presiding official(s) will, as a matter of course, cause a 
copy of the petition to revoke to be served on the party on whose behalf 
the subpena was issued, but shall not be deemed to assume responsibility 
for such service. The Panel, Executive Director, or any other person 
designated by the Panel, as appropriate, shall revoke the subpena if the 
evidence the production of which is required does not relate to any 
matter under consideration in the proceedings, or the subpena does not 
describe with sufficient particularity the evidence the production of 
which is required, or if for any other reason sufficient in law the 
subpena is invalid. The Panel, Executive Director, or any other person 
designated by the Panel, as appropriate, shall make a simple statement 
of procedural or other ground for the ruling on the petition to revoke. 
The petition to revoke, any answer thereto, and any ruling thereon shall 
not become part of the official record except upon the request of the 
party aggrieved by the ruling.
    (f) Upon the failure of any person to comply with a subpena issued, 
and upon the request of the party on whose behalf the subpena was 
issued, the Solicitor of the FLRA shall, on behalf of such party, 
institute proceedings in the appropriate district court for the 
enforcement thereof, unless to do so would be inconsistent with law and 
the policies of the Federal Service Labor-Management Relations Statute. 
The Solicitor of the FLRA shall not be deemed thereby to have assumed 
responsibility for the effective prosecution of the same before the 
court thereafter.
    (g) All papers submitted to the Executive Director under this 
section shall be filed in duplicate, along with a statement of service 
showing that a copy has been served on the other party to the dispute.
    (h)(1) Witnesses (whether appearing voluntarily or under a subpena) 
shall be paid the fee and mileage allowances which are paid subpenaed 
witnesses in the courts of the United States: Provided, that any witness 
who is employed by the Federal Government shall not be entitled to 
receive witness fees in addition to compensation received in conjunction 
with official time granted for such participation, including necessary 
travel time, as occurs during the employee's regular work hours and when 
the employee would otherwise be in a work or paid leave status.
    (2) Witness fees and mileage allowances shall be paid by the party 
at whose instance the witnesses appear except when the witness receives 
compensation in conjunction with official time as described in paragraph 
(h)(1) of this section.

[61 FR 41296, Aug. 8, 1996]

   Appendix A to 5 CFR Chapter XIV--Current Addresses and Geographic 
                              Jurisdictions

    (a) The Office address, telephone and fax numbers of the Authority 
are: 607 14th Street, NW., Washington, DC 20424-0001; telephone: FTS or 
Commercial (202) 482-6540; fax: FTS or Commercial (202) 482-6635.
    (b) The Office address, telephone and fax numbers of the General 
Counsel are: 607 14th Street, NW., Washington, DC 20424-0001; telephone: 
FTS or Commercial (202) 482-6600; fax: FTS Commercial (202) 482-6608.
    (c) The Office address, telephone and fax numbers of the Chief 
Administrative Law Judge are: 607 14th Street, NW., Washington, DC 
20424-0001; telephone: FTS or Commercial (202) 482-6630; fax: FTS or 
Commercial (202) 482-6635.
    (d) The Office addresses, telephone and fax numbers of the Regional 
Offices of the Authority are as follows:
    (1) Boston, Massachusetts Regional Office-99 Summer Street, suite 
1500, Boston, Massachusetts 02110-1200; telephone: FTS or commercial 
(617) 424-5730; fax: FTS or commercial (617) 424-5743.
    (2) Washington, DC Regional Office--1255 22nd Street, NW., suite 
400, Washington, DC 20037-1206; telephone: FTS or commercial

[[Page 380]]

(202) 653-8500; fax: FTS or commercial (202) 653-5091.
    (3) Atlanta, Georgia Regional Office--285 Peachtree Center Avenue, 
suite 701, Atlanta, Georgia 30303-1270; telephone: FTS or commercial 
(404) 331-5300; fax: FTS or commercial (404) 331-5280.
    (4) Chicago, Illinois Regional Office--55 West Monroe, suite 1150, 
Chicago, Illinois 60603-9729; telephone: FTS or commercial (312) 353-
6306; fax: FTS or commercial (312) 886-5977.
    (5) Dallas, Texas Regional Office--525 Griffin Street, suite 926, 
LB-107, Dallas, Texas 75202-1906; telephone: FTS or commercial (214) 
767-4996; fax: FTS or commercial (214) 767-0156.
    (6) Denver, Colorado Regional Office--1244 Speer Boulevard, suite 
100, Denver, Colorado 80204-3581; telephone: FTS or commercial (303) 
844-5224; fax: FTS or commercial (303) 844-2774.
    (7) San Francisco, California Regional Office--901 Market Street, 
suite 220, San Francisco, California 94103-1791; telephone: FTS or 
commercial (415) 356-5000; fax: FTS or commercial (415) 356-5017.
    (e) The Office address and telephone number of the Federal Service 
Impasses Panel are: 607 14th Street NW., Washington, DC 20424-0001; 
telephone: FTS or Commercial (202) 482-6670.
    (f) The geographic jurisdictions of the Regional Directors of the 
Federal Labor Relations Authority are as follows:

------------------------------------------------------------------------
       State or other locality                  Regional office         
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Alabama..............................  Atlanta.                         
Alaska...............................  San Francisco.                   
Arizona..............................  Denver.                          
Arkansas.............................  Dallas.                          
California...........................  San Francisco.                   
Colorado.............................  Denver.                          
Connecticut..........................  Boston.                          
Delaware.............................  Washington, DC.                  
District of Columbia.................  Washington, DC.                  
Florida..............................  Atlanta.                         
Georgia..............................  Atlanta.                         
Hawaii and all land water areas west   San Francisco.                   
 of the continents of North and South                                   
 America (except coastal islands) to                                    
 long 90 degrees East.                                                  
Idaho................................  Denver.                          
Illinois.............................  Chicago.                         
Indiana..............................  Chicago.                         
Iowa.................................  Chicago.                         
Kansas...............................  Denver.                          
Kentucky.............................  Chicago.                         
Louisiana............................  Dallas.                          
Maine................................  Boston.                          
Maryland.............................  Washington, DC.                  
Massachusetts........................  Boston.                          
Michigan.............................  Chicago.                         
Minnesota............................  Chicago.                         
Mississippi..........................  Atlanta.                         
Missouri.............................  Denver.                          
Montana..............................  Denver.                          
Nebraska.............................  Denver.                          
Nevada...............................  Denver.                          
New Hampshire........................  Boston.                          
New Jersey...........................  Boston.                          
New Mexico...........................  Dallas.                          
New York.............................  Boston.                          
North Carolina.......................  Atlanta.                         
North Dakota.........................  Chicago.                         
Ohio.................................  Chicago.                         
Oklahoma.............................  Dallas.                          
Oregon...............................  San Francisco.                   
Pennsylvania.........................  Boston.                          
Puerto Rico..........................  Atlanta.                         
Rhode Island.........................  Boston.                          
South Carolina.......................  Atlanta.                         
South Dakota.........................  Denver.                          
Tennessee............................  Chicago.                         
Texas................................  Dallas.                          
Utah.................................  Denver.                          
Vermont..............................  Boston.                          
Virginia.............................  Washington, DC.                  
Washington...........................  San Francisco.                   
West Virginia........................  Washington, DC.                  
Wisconsin............................  Chicago.                         
Wyoming..............................  Denver.                          
Virgin Islands.......................  Atlanta.                         
Panama/limited FLRA jurisdiction.....  Dallas.                          
All land and water areas east of the   Chicago.                         
 continents of North and South                                          
 America to long 90 degrees East,                                       
 except the Virgin Islands, Panama                                      
 (limited FLRA jurisdiction), Puerto                                    
 Rico and coastal islands.                                              
------------------------------------------------------------------------


[55, FR 52831, Dec. 24, 1990, as amended at 58 FR 13695, Mar. 15, 1993; 
59 FR 30504, June 14, 1994; 60 FR 49493, Sept. 26, 1995; 61 FR 1697, 
Jan. 23, 1996; 61 FR 51207, Oct. 1, 1996]

Appendix B to 5 CFR Chapter XIV--Memorandum Describing the Authority and 
 Assigned Responsibilities of the General Counsel of the Federal Labor 
                           Relations Authority

    The statutory authority and responsibility of the General Counsel of 
the Federal Labor Relations Authority are stated in section 7104(f), 
subsections (1), (2) and (3), of the Federal Service Labor-Management 
Relations Statute as follows:

    (1) The General Counsel of the Authority shall be appointed by the 
President, by and with the advice and consent of the Senate, for a term 
of 5 years. The General Counsel may be removed at any time by the 
President. The General Counsel shall hold no other office or position in 
the Government of the United States except as provided by law.
    (2) The General Counsel may--
    (A) investigate alleged unfair labor practices under this chapter,
    (B) file and prosecute complaints under this chapter, and
    (C) exercise such other powers of the Authority as the Authority may 
prescribe.

[[Page 381]]

    (3) The General Counsel shall have direct authority over, and 
responsibility for, all employees in the office of the General Counsel, 
including employees of the General Counsel in the regional offices of 
the Authority.

This memorandum is intended to describe the statutory authority and set 
forth the prescribed duties and authority of the General Counsel of the 
Federal Labor Relations Authority, effective January 28, 1980.
    I. Case handling--A. Unfair labor practice cases. The General 
Counsel has full and final authority and responsibility, on behalf of 
the Authority, to accept and investigate charges filed, to enter into 
and approve the informal settlement of charges, to approve withdrawal 
requests, to dismiss charges, to determine matters concerning the 
consolidation and severance of cases before the complaint issues, to 
issue complaints and notices of hearing, to appear before Administrative 
Law Judges in hearings on complaints and prosecute as provided in the 
Authority's and the General Counsel's rules and regulations, and to 
initiate and prosecute injunction proceedings as provided for in section 
7123(d) of the Statute. After issuance of the Administrative Law Judge's 
decision, the General Counsel may file exceptions and briefs and appear 
before the Authority in oral argument, subject to the Authority's and 
the General Counsel's rules and regulations.
    B. Compliance actions (injunction proceedings). The General Counsel 
is authorized and responsible, on behalf of the Authority, to seek and 
effect compliance with the Authority's orders and make such compliance 
reports to the Authority as it may from time to time require.

On behalf of the Authority, the General Counsel will, in full accordance 
with the directions of the Authority, initiate and prosecute injunction 
proceedings as provided in section 7123(d) of the Statute: Provided 
however, That the General Counsel will initiate and conduct injunction 
proceedings under section 7123(d) of the Statute only upon approval of 
the Authority.
    C. Representation cases. The statutory authority of the Federal 
Labor Relations Authority to delegate to Regional Directors its 
authority to process and determine representation matters is set forth 
in section 7105 (e)(1) and (f) of the Statute as follows:
    (e)(1) The Authority may delegate to any regional director its 
authority under this chapter--
    (A) to determine whether a group of employees is an appropriate 
unit;
    (B) to conduct investigations and to provide for hearings;
    (C) to determine whether a question of representation exists and to 
direct an election; and
    (D) to supervise or conduct secret ballot elections and certify the 
results thereof.
    (f) If the Authority delegates any authority to any regional 
director . . . to take any action pursuant to subsection (e) of this 
section, the Authority may, upon application by any interested person 
filed within 60 days after the date of the action, review such action, 
but the review shall not, unless specifically ordered by the Authority, 
operate as a stay of action. The Authority may affirm, modify, or 
reverse any action reviewed under this subsection. If the Authority does 
not undertake to grant review of the action under this subsection within 
60 days after the later of--
    (1) the date of the action, or
    (2) the date of the filing of any application under this subsection 
for review of the action;

the action shall become the action of the Authority at the end of such 
60 day period.
    In accordance with section 7105 (e)(1) and (f) of the Statute, 
Regional Directors, who are directed and supervised by the General 
Counsel as provided by section III of this memorandum, are hereby 
delegated the authority to determine whether a group of employees is an 
appropriate unit, to conduct investigations and to provide for hearings, 
to determine whether a question of representation exists and to direct 
an election, and to supervise or conduct secret ballot elections and 
certify the results thereof.
    Regional Directors are authorized and have responsibility to receive 
and process, in accordance with decisions of the Authority and the rules 
and regulations of the Authority and the General Counsel, all petitions 
filed pursuant to sections 7111, 7112(d), 7113, 7115 and 7117(d) of the 
Statute.
    The authority and responsibility of Regional Directors in cases 
filed involving such petitions shall extend to all phases of the 
investigation of such petitions through the conclusion of the hearing to 
be conducted by a Regional Office employee (if a hearing should be 
necessary to resolve disputed issues), including decisional action by 
the Regional Director after such investigation or hearing.
    Regional Directors also are authorized and have responsibility to 
direct an election after a hearing pursuant to sections 7111 and 7112(d) 
of the Statute and to approve consent election agreements in accordance 
with section 7111(g) of the Statute.
    In the event a Regional Director directs an election or approves a 
consent election agreement, the Regional Director is authorized to 
supervise or conduct the election pursuant to section 7111 and 7112(d) 
of the Statute. In such instances, Regional Directors are authorized and 
have responsibility to determine the validity of determinative 
challenges and objections to the conduct of the

[[Page 382]]

election and other similar matters. This authority and responsibility 
extends to all phases of the investigation such determinative challenges 
and objections through the conclusion of a hearing to be conducted by a 
Regional Office employee (if a hearing should be necessary to resolve 
disputed issues), including decisional action by the Regional Director 
after such investigation or hearing.
    Decisions and Orders of Regional Directors made pursuant to this 
delegation of authority become the action of the Authority:
    (1) If no interested person files an application for review of the 
Regional Director's Decision and Order with the Authority within sixty 
(60) days after the Regional Director's Decision and Order; or
    (2) If the Authority does not undertake to grant review of the 
Regional Director's Decision and Order within sixty (60) days after the 
filing of a timely application for review;
    If no interested person files an application for review of the 
Regional Director's Decision and Order with the Authority within (60) 
days after the Regional Director's Decision and Order, or if the 
Authority does not undertake to grant review of the action of the 
regional Director's Decision and Order within sixty (60) days after the 
filing of a timely application for review, the Regional Director's 
Decision and Order will become final and binding, and the Regional 
Director will certify to the parties the results of any election held or 
issue any clarification of unit, amendment of recognition or 
certification, determination of eligibility for dues allotment, or 
certification on consolidation of units as required.
    The Authority will undertake to grant review of a Decision and Order 
of a Regional Director upon the timely filing of an application for 
review only where compelling reasons exist therefor as set forth in the 
rules and regulations.
    The Authority's granting of review upon the timely filing of an 
application for review of a Regional Director's Decision and Order will 
not operate as a stay of such action ordered by the Regional Director, 
unless specifically ordered by the Authority. If the Authority grants 
review, the Authority may affirm, modify or reverse action reviewed.
    II. Liaison with other governmental agencies. The General Counsel is 
authorized and has responsibility, on behalf of the Authority, to 
maintain appropriate and adequate liaison and arrangements with the 
Office of the Assistant Secretary of Labor for Labor-Management 
Relations with reference to the financial and other reports required to 
be filed with the Assistant Secretary pursuant to section 7120(c) of the 
Statute and the availability to the Authority and the General Counsel of 
the contents thereof. The General Counsel is authorized and has 
responsibility, on behalf of the Authority, to maintain appropriate and 
adequate liaison with the Federal Mediation and Conciliation Service 
with respect to functions which may be performed by the Federal 
Mediation and Conciliation Service.
    III. Personnel. Under 5 U.S.C. 7105(d), the Authority is authorized 
to appoint Regional Directors. In order better to ensure the effective 
exercise of the duties and responsibilities of the General Counsel 
described above, the General Counsel is delegated authority to recommend 
the appointment, transfer, demotion or discharge of any Regional 
Director. However, such actions may be taken only with the approval of 
the Authority. In the event of a vacant Regional Director position, the 
General Counsel may, without the approval of the Authority, detail 
personnel as acting Regional Director for a total period of up to 120 
days commencing on the day the position becomes vacant. If the position 
remains vacant for more than 120 days, a detail must be approved by the 
Authority. Other details of personnel to act as Regional Director during 
periods when there is an incumbent in the position shall be accomplished 
by the General Counsel without the approval of the Authority. The 
General Counsel shall have authority to direct and supervise the 
Regional Directors. Under 5 U.S.C. 7104(f)(3), the General Counsel shall 
have direct authority over, and responsibility for all employees in the 
Office of the General Counsel and all personnel of the General Counsel 
in the field offices of the Authority. This includes full and final 
authority subject to applicable laws and rules, regulations and 
procedures of the Office of Personnel Management and the Authority over 
the selection, retention, transfer, promotion, demotion, discipline, 
discharge and in all other respects of such personnel except the detail 
in the event of a vacancy for a period in excess of 120 days, 
appointment, transfer, demotion or discharge of any Regional Director. 
Further, the establishment, transfer, or elimination of any Regional 
Office or non-Regional Office duty location may be accomplished only 
with the approval of the Authority. The Authority will provide such 
administrative support functions, including personnel management, 
financial management and procurement functions, through the Office of 
Administration of the Authority as are required by the General Counsel 
to carry out the General Counsel's statutory and prescribed functions.
    IV. To the extent that the above-described duties, powers and 
authority rest by statute with the Authority, the foregoing statement 
constitutes a prescription and assignment of such duties, powers and 
authority, whether or not so specified.

[45 FR 3523, Jan. 17, 1980, as amended at 48 FR 28814, June 23, 1983; 61 
FR 16043, Apr. 11, 1996]

[[Page 383]]



 CHAPTER XV--OFFICE OF ADMINISTRATION, EXECUTIVE OFFICE OF THE PRESIDENT




  --------------------------------------------------------------------
Part                                                                Page
2500            Information security regulation.............         384
2502            Availability of records.....................         385
2504            Privacy Act regulations.....................         395

[[Page 384]]



PART 2500--INFORMATION SECURITY REGULATION--Table of Contents




Sec.
2500.1  Introduction.
2500.3  Original classification.
2500.5  Derivative classification.
2500.7  Declassification and downgrading.
2500.9  Safeguarding.
2500.11  Implementation and review.

    Authority: Executive Order 12356, 3 CFR, 1982 COMP., p. 166.


    Source: 44 FR 50039, Aug. 27, 1979; 45 FR 20453, Mar. 28, 1980; 45 
FR 22873, Apr. 4, 1980, unless otherwise noted.



Sec. 2500.1  Introduction.

    (a) References. (1) Executive Order 12065, ``National Security 
Information'', dated June 28, 1978.
    (2) Information Security Oversight Office Directive No. 1, 
``National Security Information'', dated October 2, 1978.
    (b) Purpose. The purpose of this regulation is to ensure, consistent 
with the authorities listed in section (a), that national security 
information held by the Office of Administration is protected to the 
extent necessary to safeguard the national security.
    (c) Applicability. This regulation governs the Office of 
Administration. Together with the authorities listed in section (a), it 
establishes the policies and procedures for safeguarding of information 
that is under the control of the Office of Administration.



Sec. 2500.3  Original classification.

    No one in the Office of Administration has been granted authority 
for original classification of information.



Sec. 2500.5  Derivative classification.

    The Office of Administration serves only as the temporary physical 
custodian of classified information which originated in other agencies 
of the Executive Office of the President. Therefore, no one in the 
Office of Administration incorporates, restates, paraphrases or 
generates in a new form information which is already classified.



Sec. 2500.7  Declassification and downgrading.

    (a) Declassification authority. No one in the Office of 
Administration has the authority to declassify or downgrade classified 
information.
    (b) Mandatory review for declassification. (1) Requests for 
mandatory review of national security information contained in the 
records of any Executive Office of the President (EOP) agency for which 
OA provides services must be in writing and addressed to the Security 
Officer, OA, 725 17th Street, NW., Washington, DC 20503. Those agencies 
for which OA provides services include the Council of Economic Advisors, 
the Council on Environmental Quality, the Office of Administration, and 
the Office of the United States Trade Representative.
    (2) The OA Security Officer will receive and monitor all requests 
for mandatory review for declassification of information as received by 
the EOP agencies named above.
    (3) Requests for mandatory review for declassification of classified 
information contained in the records of any other Executive Office of 
the President agency for which OA provides services should be addressed 
directly to the agency which is the owner of the record, in accordance 
with that agency's published Information Security Regulation.

[44 FR 50039, Aug. 27, 1979; 45 FR 20453, Mar. 28, 1980; 45 FR 22873, 
Apr. 4, 1980, as amended at 56 FR 8101, Feb. 27, 1991]



Sec. 2500.9  Safeguarding.

    The Office of Administration shall protect information in its 
custody against unauthorized disclosure commensurate with its level of 
classification.



Sec. 2500.11  Implementation and review.

    The Information Security Oversight Committee of the Office of 
Administration shall be chaired by the agency's General Counsel. The 
Committee shall be responsible for acting on all suggestions and 
complaints concerning the administration of the information security 
program. The chairperson shall also be responsible for conducting an 
active oversight program to ensure effective implementation of Executive 
Order 12356.

[44 FR 50039, Aug. 27, 1979; 45 FR 20453, Mar. 28, 1980; 45 FR 22873, 
Apr. 4, 1980, as amended at 56 FR 8101, Feb. 27, 1991]

[[Page 385]]



PART 2502--AVAILABILITY OF RECORDS--Table of Contents




  Subpart A--Production or Disclosure of Records Under the Freedom of 
                      Information Act, 5 U.S.C. 552

Sec.
2502.1  Definitions.
2502.2  Purpose and scope.
2502.3  Organization and functions.
2502.4  Public reference facilities and current index.
2502.5  Records of other Agencies.
2502.6  How to request records--form and content.
2502.7  Initial determination.
2502.8  Prompt response.
2502.9  Responses--form and content.
2502.10  Appeals to the Deputy Director from initial denials.

                   Charges for Search and Reproduction

2502.11  Definitions.
2502.12  Fees to be charged--general.
2502.13  Fees to be charged--categories of requestors.
2502.14  Miscellaneous fee provisions.
2502.15  Waiver or reduction of charges.
2502.16  Information to be disclosed.
2502.17  Exemptions.
2502.18  Deletion of exempted information.
2502.19  Annual report.

 Subpart B--Production in Response to Subpoenas or Demands of Courts or 
                            Other Authorities

2502.30  Purpose and scope.
2502.31  Production prohibited unless approved by Deputy Director.
2502.32  Procedure in the event of a demand for disclosure.
2502.33  Procedure in the event of an adverse ruling.

    Authority: 5 U.S.C. 552, as amended by Pub. L. 93-502 and Pub. L. 
99-570.

    Source: 45 FR 47112, July 14, 1980, unless otherwise noted.



  Subpart A--Production or Disclosure of Records Under the Freedom of 
                      Information Act, 5 U.S.C. 552



Sec. 2502.1  Definitions.

    (a) Office or OA means the Office of Administration, Executive 
Office of the President;
    (b) Agency means agency as defined in 5 U.S.C. 552(e);
    (c) Workday means those days when the Office is open for the conduct 
of government business, and does not include Saturdays, Sundays and 
legal public holidays;
    (d) FOIA means Freedom of Information Act, 5 U.S.C. 552, as amended.

[45 FR 47112, July 14, 1980, as amended at 49 FR 28233, July 11, 1984]



Sec. 2502.2  Purpose and scope.

    This subpart contains the regulations of the Office of 
Administration, Executive Office of the President, implementing 5 U.S.C. 
552. The regulations of this subpart describe the procedures by which 
records may be obtained from all organizational units within the Office 
of Administration. Official records of the Office made available 
pursuant to the requirements of 5 U.S.C. 552 shall be furnished to 
members of the public only as prescribed by this subpart. To the extent 
that it is not prohibited by other laws the Office also will make 
available records which it is authorized to withhold under 5 U.S.C. 552 
whenever it determines that such disclosure is in the public interest.

[45 FR 47112, July 14, 1980. Redesignated at 49 FR 28233, July 11, 1984]



Sec. 2502.3  Organization and functions.

    (a) The Office of Administration (OA) was created by Reorganization 
Plan No. 1 of 1977 and Executive Order 12028. Its primary function is to 
provide common administrative and support services for the various 
agencies and offices of the Executive Office of the President. It 
consists of:

    (1) Office of the Director
    (2) Office of the Deputy Director
    (3) Office of the Executive Secretary
    (4) Office of the General Counsel
    (5) Six Directors and their staffs, who are responsible for the 
following divisions:
    (i) Administrative Operations
    (ii) Facilities Management
    (iii) Financial Management
    (iv) Information Resources Management
    (v) Library and Information Services
    (vi) Personnel Management
    (b) The Office has no field organization. Offices are presently 
located in the Old Executive Office Building, 17th

[[Page 386]]

and Pennsylvania Avenue NW., 20500, and in the New Executive Office 
Building, 725 17th Street NW., Washington, DC 20503. Regular office 
hours are from 9:00 a.m. to 5:30 p.m., Monday through Friday. Both 
buildings are under security control. Persons desiring access are 
encourged to make advance arrangements by telephone with the office they 
plan to visit.

[49 FR 28233, July 11, 1984; 49 FR 29769, July 24, 1984, as amended at 
56 FR 5741 and 5742, Feb. 13, 1991]



Sec. 2502.4  Public reference facilities and current index.

    (a) The Office maintains a public reading area located in the 
Executive Office of the President Library, Room G-102, New Executive 
Office Building, 725 17th Street NW., Washington, DC, and makes 
available for public inspection and copying a copy of all material 
required by 5 U.S.C. 552(a)(2), including all documents published by OA 
in the Federal Register and currently in effect.
    (b) The FOIA Officer or his or her designee shall maintain files 
containing all materials required to be retained by or furnished to the 
FOIA Officer under this subpart. The material shall be filed by 
chronological number of request within each calendar year, indexed 
according to the exceptions asserted, and, to the extent feasible, 
indexed according to the type of records requested.
    (c) The FOIA Officer shall also maintain a file open to the public, 
which shall contain copies of all grants or denials of appeals by the 
Office.

[49 FR 28233, July 11, 1984, as amended at 56 FR 5742, Feb. 13, 1991]



Sec. 2502.5  Records of other Agencies.

    Requests for records that originated in another Agency and are in 
the custody of the Office of Administration, will be referred to that 
Agency for processing, and the person submitting the request shall be so 
notified. The decision made by that Agency with respect to such records 
will be honored by the Office of Administration.

[45 FR 47112, July 14, 1980. Redesignated at 49 FR 28233, July 11, 1984]



Sec. 2502.6  How to request records--form and content.

    (a) A request made under the FOIA must be submitted in writing, 
addressed to: FOIA Officer, Office of Administration, 725 17th Street 
NW., Washington, DC 20503. The words ``FOIA REQUEST'' should be clearly 
marked on both the letter and the envelope. Due to security measures at 
the Old and New Executive Office Buildings, requests made in person 
should be delivered to Room G-1, at the above address.
    (b) Any Office employee or official who receives a FOIA Request 
shall promptly forward it to the FOIA Officer, at the above address. Any 
Office employee or official who receives an oral request made under the 
FOIA shall inform the person making the request of the provisions of 
this subpart requiring a written request according to the procedures set 
out herein.
    (c) Each request must reasonably describe the record(s) sought, 
including when known: Agency/individual originating the record, date, 
subject matter, type of document, location, and any other pertinent 
information which would assist in promptly locating the record(s).
    (d) When a request is not considered reasonably descriptive, or 
requires the production of voluminous records, or places an 
extraordinary burden on the Office of Administration, seriously 
interfering with its normal functioning to the detriment of the business 
of the Government, the Office may require the person or agent making the 
FOIA request to confer with an Office representative in order to attempt 
to verify, and, if possible, narrow the scope of the request.
    (e) Upon receipt of the FOIA request, the FOIA Officer will make an 
initial determination of which officials and offices may be involved in 
the search and reviewing procedures. The FOIA Officer will circulate the 
request to all offices so identified and any others the FOIA Officer 
later determines should be notified.

[49 FR 28233, July 11, 1984, as amended at 56 FR 5742, Feb. 13, 1991]

[[Page 387]]



Sec. 2502.7  Initial determination.

    The General Counsel or his or her designee shall have the authority 
to approve or deny requests received pursuant to these regulations. The 
decision of the General Counsel shall be final, subject only to 
administrative review as provided in Sec. 2502.10.

[45 FR 47112, July 14, 1980. Redesignated and amended at 49 FR 28234, 
July 11, 1984; 56 FR 5742, Feb. 13, 1991]



Sec. 2502.8  Prompt response.

    (a) The General Counsel or his or her designee shall either approve 
or deny a request for records within 10 working days after receipt of 
the request unless additional time is required for one of the following 
reasons:
    (1) It is necessary to search for, collect, and appropriately 
examine a voluminous amount of separate and distinct records which are 
demanded in a single request; or
    (2) It is necessary to consult with another agency having a 
substantial interest in the determination of the request or among two or 
more components of the agency having substantial subject matter interest 
therein.
    (b) When additional time is required for one of the reasons stated 
in paragraph (a) of this section, the General Counsel or his or her 
designee shall acknowledge receipt of the request within the 10 workday 
period and include a brief explanation of the reason for the delay, 
indicating the date by which a determination will be forthcoming. An 
extended deadline adopted for one of the reasons set forth above may not 
exceed 10 additional workdays.

[45 FR 47112, July 14, 1980. Redesignated and amended at 49 FR 28234, 
July 11, 1984]



Sec. 2502.9  Responses--form and content.

    (a) When a requested record has been identified and is available, 
the General Counsel or his or her designee shall notify the person 
making the request as to where and when the record is available for 
inspection or the copies will be available. The notification shall also 
advise the person making the request of any fees assessed under 
Sec. 2502.13 hereof.
    (b) A denial or partial denial of a request for a record shall be in 
writing signed by the General Counsel or his or her designee and shall 
include:
    (1) The name and title of the person making the determination;
    (2) A reference to the specific exemption under the Freedom of 
Information Act authorizing the withholding of the record, and a brief 
explanation of how the exemption applies to the record withheld; or
    (3) A statement that, after diligent effort, the requested records 
have not been found or have not been adequately examined during the time 
allowed by Sec. 2502.9, and that the denial will be reconsidered as soon 
as the search or examination is complete;
    (4) A statement that no agency records are responsive to the 
request.
    (5) A statement that the denial may be appealed to the Deputy 
Director within 30 days of receipt of the denial or partial denial.

If a requested record cannot be located from the information supplied, 
or is known to have been destroyed or otherwise disposed of, the person 
making the request shall be so notified and the legal authority for 
disposition shall be cited.

[45 FR 47112, July 14, 1980. Redesignated and amended at 49 FR 28234, 
July 11, 1984; 56 FR 5742, Feb. 13, 1991]



Sec. 2502.10  Appeals to the Deputy Director from initial denials.

    (a) When the General Counsel or his or her designee had denied a 
request for records in whole or in part, the person making the request 
may, within 30 days of its receipt, appeal the denial to the Deputy 
Director. The appeal must be in writing, addressed to the Deputy 
Director, Office of Administration, 725 17th Street NW., Washington, DC 
20503 and clearly labeled as a ``Freedom of Information Act Appeal''.
    (b) The Deputy Director will act upon the appeal within 20 workdays 
of its receipt. The Deputy Director may extend the 20 day period of time 
by any number of workdays which could have been claimed and consumed by 
the General Counsel or his or her designee under Sec. 2502.9 but which 
were not claimed and consumed in making the initial determination. The 
Office of Administration's action on an appeal shall be in

[[Page 388]]

writing, signed by the Deputy Director of the Office.
    (c) If the decision is in favor of the person making the request, 
the Deputy Director shall order records promptly made available to the 
person making the request.
    (d) A denial in whole or in part of a request on appeal shall set 
forth the exemption relied on and a brief explanation of how the 
exemption applied to the records withheld and the reasons for asserting 
it, if different from that described by the General Counsel or his or 
her designee under Sec. 2502.10. The denial shall state that the person 
making the request may, if dissatisfied with the decision on appeal, 
file a civil action in the district in which the person resides or has 
his principal place of business, in the district where the records are 
located, or in the District of Columbia.
    (e) No personal appearance, oral argument or hearing will ordinarily 
be permitted in connection with an appeal to the Office of 
Administration.
    (f) On appeal, the Office may reduce any fees previously assessed.

[45 FR 47112, July 14, 1980. Redesignated and amended at 49 FR 28234, 
July 11, 1984; 56 FR 5742, Feb. 13, 1991]

                   Charges for Search and Reproduction



Sec. 2502.11  Definitions.

    For the purpose of this part:
    (a) All the terms defined in the Freedom of Information Act apply.
    (b) A statute specifically providing for setting the level of fees 
for particular types of records (5 U.S.C. 552(a)(4)(vi)) means any 
statute that specifically requires a government agency, such as the 
Government Printing Office (GPO) or the National Technical Information 
Service (NTIS), to set the level of fees for particular types of 
agencies in order to:
    (1) Serve both the general public and private sector organizations 
by conveniently making available government information;
    (2) Ensure that groups and individuals pay the cost of publications 
and other services that are for their special use so that these costs 
are not borne by the general taxpaying public;
    (3) Operate an information dissemination activity on a self-
sustaining basis to the maximum extent possible; or
    (4) Return overdue revenue to the Treasury for defraying, wholly or 
in part, appropriated funds used to pay the cost of disseminating 
government information.

Statutes, such as the User Fee Statute, which only provide a general 
discussion of fees without explicitly requiring that an agency set and 
collect fees for particular documents do not supersede the Freedom of 
Information Act under section (a)(4)(A)(vi) of that statute.
    (c) The term direct costs means those expenditures that OA incurs in 
searching for and duplicating (and in the case of commercial requestors, 
reviewing) documents to respond to a FOIA request. Direct costs include, 
for example, the salary of the employee performing the work (the basic 
rate of pay for the employee plus 16 percent of that rate to cover 
benefits) and the cost of operating duplicating machinery. Not included 
in direct costs are overhead expenses such as costs of space, and 
heating or lighting the facility in which the records are stored.
    (d) The term search includes all time spent looking for material 
that is responsive to a request, including page-by-page or line-by-line 
identification of material within documents. OA employees should ensure 
that searching for material is done in the most efficient and least 
expensive manner so as to minimize costs for both the agency and the 
requestor. For example, employees should not engage in a line-by-line 
search when merely duplicating an entire document would prove the least 
expensive and quicker method of complying with a request. Search should 
be distinguished, moreover, from review of material in order to 
determine whether the material is exempt from disclosure (see paragraph 
(f) of this section). Searches may be done manually or by computer using 
existing programming.
    (e) The term duplication refers to the process of making a copy of a 
document necessary to respond to a FOIA request. Such copies can take 
the form of paper copy, microform, audio-visual materials, or machine 
readable (e.g. magnetic tape or disk), among others.

[[Page 389]]

The copy provided must be in a form that is reasonably usable by the 
requestors.
    (f) The term review refers to the process of examining documents 
located in response to a request that is for a commercial use (see 
paragraph (g) of this section) to determine whether any portion of any 
document located is permitted to be withheld. It also includes 
processing any documents for disclosure, (e.g., doing all that is 
necessary to excise them and otherwise prepare them for release). Review 
does not include time spent resolving general legal or policy issues 
regarding the application of exemptions.
    (g) The term `commercial use' request refers to a request from or on 
behalf of one who seeks information for a use or purpose that furthers 
the commercial, trade, or profit interests of the requestor or the 
person on whose behalf the request is made. In determining whether the 
requestor properly belongs in this category, OA must determine the use 
to which a requestor will put the documents requested. Moreover, where 
an OA employee has reasonable cause to doubt the use to which a 
requestor will put the records sought, or where that use is not clear 
from the request itself, the employee should seek additional 
clarification before assigning the request to a specific category.
    (h) The term educational institution refers to a preschool, a public 
or private elementary or secondary school, an institution of graduate 
higher education, an institution of undergraduate higher education, an 
institution of professional education, or an institution of vocational 
education, that operates a program or programs of scholarly research.
    (i) The term non-commercial scientific institution refers to an 
institution that is not operated on a commercial basis (as that term is 
referenced in paragraph (g) of this section) and that is operated solely 
for the purpose of conducting scientific research, the results of which 
are not intended to promote any particular product or industry.
    (j) The term representative of the news media refers to any person 
actively gathering news for an entity that is organized and operated to 
publish or broadcast news to the public. The term news means information 
that is about current events or that would be of current interest to the 
public. Examples of news media entities include television or radio 
stations broadcasting to the public at large, and publishers of 
periodicals (but only in those instances when they can qualify as 
disseminators of news) who make their products available for purchase 
and subscription by the general public. These examples are not intended 
to be all-inclusive. Moreover, as traditional methods of news delivery 
evolve (e.g., electronic dissemination of newspapers through 
telecommunications services), such alternative media would be included 
in this category. In the case of free lance journalists, they may be 
regarded as working for a news organization, if they can demonstrate a 
solid basis for expecting publication through that organization, even 
though not actually employed by it. A publication contract would be the 
clearest proof, but OA may also look to the past publication record of a 
requestor in making this determination.

[56 FR 5742, Feb. 13, 1991]



Sec. 2502.12  Fees to be charged--general.

    OA should charge fees that recoup the full allowable direct costs it 
incurs. Moreover, it shall use the most efficient and least costly 
methods to comply with requests for documents made under the FOIA. When 
documents that would be responsive to a request are maintained for 
distribution by agencies operating statutory-based fee schedule programs 
(see definition in Sec. 2502.11(b)), such as the NTIS, OA should inform 
requestors of the steps necessary to obtain records from those sources.
    (a) Manual searches for records. OA will charge at the salary 
rate(s) (i.e., basic pay plus 16 percent) of the employee(s) making the 
search.
    (b) Computer searches for records. OA will charge at the actual 
direct cost of providing this service. This will include the cost of 
operating the central processing unit for that portion of operating time 
that is directly attributable to searching for records responsive to a 
FOIA request and operator/programmer salary apportionable to the search.

[[Page 390]]

    (c) Review of records. Only requestors who are seeking documents for 
commercial use may be charged for time spent reviewing records to 
determine whether they are exempt from mandatory disclosure. Charges may 
be assessed only for the initial review; i.e., the review undertaken the 
first time OA analyzes the applicability of a specific exemption to a 
particular record or portion of a record. Records or portions of records 
withheld in full under an exemption that is subsequently determined not 
to apply may be reviewed again to determine the applicability of other 
exemptions not previously considered. The costs for such a subsequent 
review are assessable.
    (d) Duplication of records. Records will be duplicated at a rate of 
$.15 per page. For copies prepared by computer such as tapes or 
printouts, OA shall charge the actual cost, including operator time, of 
production of the tape or printout. For other methods of reproduction or 
duplication, OA will charge the actual direct costs of producing the 
document(s). If OA estimates that duplication charges are likely to 
exceed $25.00, it shall notify the requestor of the estimated amount of 
fees, unless the requestor has indicated in advance his willingness to 
pay fees as high as those anticipated. Such a notice shall offer a 
requestor the opportunity to confer with agency personnel with the 
object of reformulating the request to meet his or her needs at a lower 
cost.
    (e) Other charges. OA will recover the full costs of providing 
services such as those enumerated below when it elects to provide them:
    (1) Certifying that records are true copies;
    (2) Sending records by special methods such as express mail.
    (f) Remittances shall be in the form of a personal check or bank 
draft drawn on a bank in the United States, or a postal money order. 
Remittances shall be made payable to the order of the Treasury of the 
United States and mailed or delivered to the FOIA Officer, Office of 
Administration, 725 17th Street, NW., Washington, DC 20503.
    (g) A receipt for fees paid will be given upon request. Refund of 
fees paid for services actually rendered will not be made.
    (h) Restrictions on assessing fees. With the exception of requestors 
seeking documents for a commercial use, OA will provide the first 100 
pages of duplication and the first two hours of search time without 
charge. Moreover, OA will not charge fees to any requestor, including 
commercial use requestors, if the cost of collecting a fee would be 
equal to or greater than the fee itself.
    (1) The elements to be considered in determining whether the ``cost 
of collecting a fee'' are the administrative costs of receiving and 
recording a requestor's remittance, and processing the fee for deposit 
in the Treasury Department's special account.
    (2) For purposes of these restrictions on assessment of fees, the 
word ``pages'' refers to copies of ``8\1/2\  x  11'' or ``11  x  14.'' 
Thus, requestors are not entitled to 100 microfiche or 100 computer 
disks, for example. A microfiche containing the equivalent of 100 pages 
or 100 pages of computer printout does meet the terms of the 
restriction.
    (3) Similarly, the term ``search time'' in this context has as its 
basis, manual search. To apply this term to searches made by computer, 
OA will determine the hourly cost of operating the central processing 
unit and the operator's hourly salary plus 16 percent. When the cost of 
a search (including the operator time and the cost of operating the 
computer to process the request) equals the equivalent dollar amount of 
two hours of the salary of the person performing the search, i.e., the 
operator, OA will begin assessing charges for a computer search.

[56 FR 5742, Feb. 13, 1991]



Sec. 2502.13  Fees to be charged--categories of requestors.

    There are four categories of FOIA requestors: commercial use 
requestors educational and non-commercial scientific institutions; 
representatives of the news media; and all other requestors. The 
specific levels of fees for each of these categories are:
    (a) Commercial use requestors. When OA receives a request for 
documents for commercial use, it will assess charges that recover the 
full direct costs of searching for, reviewing for release, and 
duplicating the record sought. Requestors must reasonably

[[Page 391]]

describe the records sought. Commercial use requestors are not entitled 
to two hours of free search time nor 100 free pages of reproduction of 
documents. OA may recover the cost of searching for and reviewing 
records even if there is ultimately no disclosure of records (see 
Sec. 2502.14).
    (b) Educational and non-commercial scientific institution 
requestors. OA shall provide documents to requestors in this category 
for the cost of reproduction alone, excluding charges for the first 100 
pages. To be eligible for inclusion in this category, requestors must 
show that the request is being made as authorized by and under the 
auspices of a qualifying institution and that the records are not sought 
for a commercial use, but are sought in furtherance of scholarly if the 
request is from an education institution) or scientific (if the request 
is from a non-commercial scientific institution) research. Requestors 
must reasonably describe the records sought.
    (c) Requestors who are representatives of the news media. OA shall 
provide documents to requestors in this category for the cost of 
reproduction alone, excluding charges for the first 100 pages. To be 
eligible for inclusion in this category, a requestor must meet the 
criteria in Sec. 2502.11(j), and his or her request must not be made for 
commercial use. In reference to this class of requestors a request for 
records supporting the news dissemination function of the requestor 
shall not be considered to be a request that is for a commercial use. 
Requestors must reasonably describe the records sought.
    (d) All other requestors. OA shall charge requestors who do not fit 
into any of the categories above fees that recover the full, reasonable, 
direct cost of searching for and reproducing the records that are 
responsive to the request, except that the first 100 pages and the first 
two hours of search time shall be furnished without charge. Moreover, 
requests for records about the requestors filed in OA's system of 
records will continue to be treated under the fee provisions of the 
Privacy Act of 1974 which permit fees only for reproduction. Requestors 
must reasonably describe the records sought.

[56 FR 5742, Feb. 13, 1991]



Sec. 2502.14  Miscellaneous fee provisions.

    (a) Charging interest--notice and rate. OA may begin assessing 
interest on an unpaid bill starting on the 31st day of the month 
following the date on which billing was sent. The fact that the fee has 
been received by OA within the thirty day grace period, even if not 
processed, will suffice to stay the accrual of interest. Interest will 
be at the rate prescribed in section 3717 of title 31 of the United 
States Code and will accrue from the date of billing.
    (b) Charges for an unsuccessful search. OA may assess charges for 
time spent searching, even if it fails to locate the records or if 
records located are determined to be exempt from disclosure. If OA 
estimates that search charges are likely to exceed $25.00, it shall 
notify the requestor of the estimated amount of fees, unless the 
requestor has indicated in advance his willingness to pay fees as high 
as those anticipated. Such a notice shall offer the requestor the 
opportunity to confer with agency personnel with the object of 
reformulating the request to meet his or her needs at a lower cost.
    (c) Aggregation results. A requestor may not file multiple requests 
at the same time, each seeking portions of a document or documents 
solely in order to avoid payment of fees. When OA reasonably believes 
that a requestor, or on rare occasions, a group of requestors acting in 
concert is attempting to break a request down into a series of requests 
for the purpose of evading the assessment of fees, OA may aggregate any 
such request and charge accordingly. One element to be considered in 
determining whether a belief would be reasonable is the time period over 
which the requests have occurred.
    (d) Advance payments. OA may not require a requestor to make an 
advance payment, i.e., payment before work is commenced or continued on 
a request unless:
    (1) OA estimates or determines that allowable charges that a 
requestor may be required to pay are likely to exceed $250.00. Then, OA 
will notify the requestor of the likely cost and obtain satisfactory 
assurance of full payment where the requestor has a history of prompt 
payment of FOIA fees, or require an advance payment of an

[[Page 392]]

amount up to the full estimated charges in the case of requestors with 
no history of payment; or
    (2) A requestor has previously failed to pay a fee charged in a 
timely fashion (i.e., within thirty days of the date of the billing). OA 
may require the requestor to pay the full amount owed plus any 
applicable interest as provided above or demonstate that he or she has 
in fact paid the fee, and to make an advance payment of the full amount 
of the estimated fee before the agency begins to process a new request, 
or a pending request from that requestor.

When OA acts under paragraph (d) (1) or (2) of this section, the 
administrative time limits prescribed in the FOIA, 5 U.S.C. 552(a)(6) 
(i.e., ten working days from receipt of initial request and 20 working 
days from receipt of appeals from initial denial, plus permissible 
extensions of these time limits) will begin only after OA has received 
fee payments described above.
    (e) Effect of the Debt Collection Act of 1982 (Pub. L. 97-365). OA 
should comply with the provisions of the Debt Collection Act, including 
disclosure to consumer reporting agencies and use of collection 
agencies, where appropriate, to encourage repayment.

[56 FR 5744, Feb. 13, 1991]



Sec. 2502.15  Waiver or reduction of charges.

    Fees otherwise chargeable in connection with a request for 
disclosure of a record shall be waived or reduced where it is determined 
that disclosure is in the public interest because it is likely to 
contribute significantly to public understanding of the operations or 
activities of the Government and is not primarily in the commercial 
interest of the requestor.


[56 FR 5744, Feb. 13, 1991]



Sec. 2502.16  Information to be disclosed.

    (a) In general, all records of the Office of Administration are 
available to the public, as required by the Freedom of Information Act. 
However, the Office claims the right, where it is applicable, to 
withhold material under the provisions specified in the Freedom of 
Information Act as amended (5 U.S.C. 552(b)).
    (b) Records from Non-U.S. Government Source. (1) Upon receipt of a 
request for a record that was obtained from a non-U.S. Government 
source, or for a record containing information clearly identified as 
having been provided by a non-U.S. Government source, including a 
contract proposal or contract material, the Office will contact the 
source of the requested record or information requesting advice as to 
whether release of the record would adversely affect the source's 
competitive position or invade anyone's privacy. Subsequent to receipt 
of such advice, the Office will independently examine the requested 
document and will notify the requester of the final decision.
    (2) OA personnel will generally consider two exemptions in the FOIA 
in deciding whether to withhold from disclosure material from a non-U.S. 
Government source. Exemption 4 permits withholding of ``trade secrets 
and commercial or financial information obtained from a person and 
privileged or confidential.'' Exemption 6 permits withholding certain 
information, the disclosure of which ``would constitute a clearly 
unwarranted invasion of personal privacy.'' The source whose material 
has been requested will be asked to supply convincing justification for 
any material it wishes withheld under the Act, in accordance with the 
following general guidelines.
    (i) For consideration under exemption 4, the supplier of the record 
or information should identify material that would be likely to cause 
substantial harm to its present or future competitive position if it 
were released. If a contractor, the provider should assume that the 
material will be released to a competitor, even if that is not always 
the case. A contractor must provide detailed information on why release 
would be harmful, e.g., the general custom or usage in the business; the 
number and situation of the persons who have access to the information; 
the type and degree of risk of financial injury that release would 
cause; and the length of time the information will need to be kept 
confidential.
    (A) In this respect, the Office of Administration will--as a general 
rule--look favorably upon recommendations for withholding information 
about

[[Page 393]]

ideas, methods, and processes that are unique; about equipment, 
materials, or systems that are potentially patentable; or about a unique 
use of equipment which is specifically outlined.
    (B) OA will not withhold information that is known through custom or 
usage in the relevant trade, business, or profession, or information 
that is generally known to any reasonably educated person. Self-evident 
statements or reviews of the general state of the art will not 
ordinarily be withheld.
    (C) OA will withhold all cost data submitted except the total 
estimated cost for each year of the contract. Where appropriate, OA will 
release unit pricing data except where that information would disclose 
confidential information such as profit margins. It will release these 
total estimated costs and ordinarily release explanatory material and 
headings associated with the cost data, withholding only the figures 
themselves. If a contractor believes some of the explanatory material 
should be withheld, that material must be identified and a justification 
be presented as to why it should not be released.
    (ii) Exemption 6 is not a blanket exemption for all personal 
information. The Office will balance the need to keep a person's private 
affairs from unnecessary public scrutiny with protection of the public's 
right to information on Government records.
    (A) As a general practice, the Office will release information about 
any person named in a contract itself or about any person who signed a 
contract as well as information given in a proposal about any officer of 
a corporation submitting that proposal. Except for names and other 
identifying details, the Office usually releases all information in 
resumes concerning employees, including education and experience. 
Efforts will be made to identify information that should be deleted and 
offerors are urged to point out such material for guidance. Any 
information in the proposal which might constitute an unwarranted 
invasion of personal privacy if released should be identified and a 
justification for non-release provided in order to receive proper 
consideration.
    (B) The Office can protect the names of and identifying details 
about other staff members who are described in a contract proposal if it 
is clear that identification of these employees would assist competitors 
in raiding and hiring them away. In this regard, names and other 
identifying details could be protected under Exemption 4 (harmful to 
competitive position) and also under Exemption 6 (it would be an 
unwarranted invasion of personal privacy to release them). In such a 
case, the Office would withhold names, home addresses, salaries, 
telephone numbers, social security numbers, marital status and, if these 
served to identify them, perhaps some details about past employment or 
professional activities of these persons.

[45 FR 47112, July 14, 1980. Redesignated and amended at 49 FR 28234, 
July 11, 1984. Redesignated and amended at 56 FR 5744, Feb. 13, 1991]



Sec. 2502.17  Exemptions.

    (a) 5 U.S.C. 552 exempts from all of its publication and disclosure 
requirements nine categories of records which are described in 552(b). 
These categories include such matters as national defense and foreign 
policy information, investigatory files, internal procedures and 
communications, materials exempted from disclosure by other statutes, 
information given in confidence and matters involving personal privacy.
    (b) Executive Order 12028 (December 4, 1977) provides that the 
Office of Administration shall upon request, assist the White House 
office in performing its role of providing those administrative services 
which are primarily in direct support of the President. Due to this role 
of providing direct support of the President, members of the public 
should presume that communications between the Director of the Office of 
Administration and the President (and their staffs) are confidential or 
ordinarily will not be released; they will usually fall, at a minimum, 
within Exemption 5 of the Act.
    (c) The records of the Office of Administration which are part of 
systems of records subject to the Privacy Act of 1974 are exempt from 
disclosure to the

[[Page 394]]

public except as provided by 5 CFR part 2504.

[45 FR 47112, July 14, 1980. Redesignated at 49 FR 28235, July 11, 1984, 
and further redesignated at 56 FR 5744, Feb. 13, 1991]



Sec. 2502.18  Deletion of exempted information.

    Where requested records contain matters which are exempted under 5 
U.S.C. 552(b) but which matters are reasonably segregable from the 
remainder of the records, they shall be disclosed by the Office with 
deletions. To each such record, the Office shall attach a written 
justification for making deletions. A single such justification shall 
suffice for deletions made in a group of similar or related records.

[45 FR 47112, July 14, 1980. Redesignated at 49 FR 28235, July 11, 1984, 
and further redesignated 56 FR 5744, Feb. 13, 1991]



Sec. 2502.19  Annual report.

    The General Counsel or his or her designee shall annually on or 
before March 1, submit a Freedom of Information report covering the 
preceding calendar year to the Speaker of the House of Representatives 
and President of the Senate. The report shall include those matters 
required by 5 U.S.C. 552(d).

[45 FR 47112, July 14, 1980. Redesignated and amended at 49 FR 28235, 
July 11, 1984. Redesignated at 56 FR 5744, Feb. 13, 1991]



 Subpart B--Production in Response to Subpoenas or Demands of Courts or 
                            Other Authorities



Sec. 2502.30  Purpose and scope.

    This subpart contains the regulations of the Office concerning 
procedures to be followed when a subpoena, order or other demand 
(hereinafter in this subpart referred to as a ``demand'') of a court or 
other authority is issued for the production or disclosure of:
    (a) Any material contained in the files of the Office of 
Administration;
    (b) Any information relating to materials contained in the files of 
the Office; or
    (c) Any information or material acquired by any person while such 
person as an employee of the Office of Administration as a part of the 
performance of his official duties or because of his official status.



Sec. 2502.31  Production prohibited unless approved by the Deputy Director.

    No employee or former employee of the Office of Administration 
shall, in response to a demand of a court or other authority, produce 
any material contained in the files of the Office of Administration or 
disclose any information or produce any material acquired as part of the 
performance of his official status without the prior approval of the 
Deputy Director.

[45 FR 47112, July 14, 1980, as amended at 56 FR 5744, Feb. 13, 1991]



Sec. 2502.32  Procedure in the event of a demand for disclosure.

    (a) Whenever a demand is made upon an employee or former employee of 
the Office of Administration for the production of material or the 
disclosure of information described in Sec. 2502.31, he shall 
immediately notify the Deputy Director. If possible, the Deputy Director 
shall be notified before the employee or former employee concerned 
replies to or appears before the court or other authority.
    (b) If response to the demand is required before instructions from 
the Deputy Director are received, an attorney designated for that 
purpose by the Office of Administration shall appear with the employee 
or former employee upon whom the demand has been made, and shall furnish 
the court or other authority with a copy of the regulations contained in 
this part and inform the court or other authority that the demand has 
been or is being, as the case may be, referred for prompt consideration 
by the Deputy Director. The court or other authority shall be requested 
respectfully to stay the demand pending receipt of the requested 
instructions from the Deputy Director.

[45 FR 47112, July 14, 1980, as amended at 56 FR 5744, Feb. 13, 1991]



Sec. 2502.33  Procedure in the event of an adverse ruling.

    If the court or other authority declines to stay the effect of the 
demand in response to a request made in accordance with Sec. 2502.32(b) 
pending receipt of instructions from the Deputy

[[Page 395]]

Director, or if the court or other authority rules that the demand must 
be complied with irrespective of the instructions from the Deputy 
Director not to produce the material or disclose the information sought, 
the employee or former employee upon whom the demand has been made shall 
respectfully decline to comply with the demand. (United States ex rel. 
Touhy v. Ragen, 340 U.S. 462 (1951)).

[45 FR 47112, July 14, 1980, as amended at 56 FR 5744, Feb. 13, 1991]



PART 2504--PRIVACY ACT REGULATIONS--Table of Contents




Sec.
2504.1  Purpose and scope.
2504.2  Definitions.
2504.3  Annual notice of systems of records maintained.
2504.4  Determining if an individual is the subject of a record.
2504.5  Granting access to a record.
2504.6  Special procedures for medical records.
2504.7  Granting access when accompanied by another individual.
2504.8  Action on request.
2504.9  Identification requirements.
2504.10  Access of others to records about an individual.
2504.11  Access to the accounting of disclosures from records.
2504.12  Denials of access.
2504.13  Requirements for requests to amend records.
2504.14  Action on request to amend a record.
2504.15  Procedures for appeal of determination to deny access to or 
          amendment of records.
2504.16  Appeals process.
2504.17  Fees.
2504.18  Penalties.

    Authority: 5 U.S.C. 552a.

    Source: 45 FR 41121, June 18, 1980, unless otherwise noted.



Sec. 2504.1  Purpose and scope.

    These regulations implement the Privacy Act of 1974, 5 U.S.C. 552a. 
The regulations apply to all records maintained by the Office of 
Administration that are contained in a system of records, and that 
contain information about an individual. The regulations also establish 
procedures that (a) authorize an individual's access to records 
maintained about him; (b) limit the access of other persons to those 
records, and (c) permit an individual to request the amendment or 
correction of records about him.



Sec. 2504.2  Definitions.

    For the purposes of this part--(a) Office means the Office of 
Administration, Executive Office of the President;
    (b) Individual means a citizen of the United States or an alien 
lawfully admitted for permanent residence.
    (c) Maintain means collect, use or distribute;
    (d) Record means any item collection or grouping of information 
about an individual that is maintained by the Office, including but not 
limited to education, financial transactions, medical history, and 
criminal or employment history and that contain's the individual's name, 
identifying number, symbol, or other identifiers assigned to the 
individual, such as a finger or voice print or photograph;
    (e) System of records means a group of any records controlled by the 
Office and from which information is retrieved by the name of the 
individual;
    (f) System manager means the employee of the Office who is 
responsible for the maintenance, collection, use or distribution of 
information contained in a system of records;
    (g) Routine use means, with respect to the disclosure of a record, 
the use of that record for a purpose consistent with the purpose for 
which it was collected;
    (h) Subject individual means the individual by whose name or other 
personal identifier a record is maintained or retrieved;
    (i) Statistical record means record in a system of records 
maintained for statistical research or reporting purposes only and not 
used in whole or in part in making any determination about an 
identifiable individual, except as provided by section 8 of title 13 
U.S.C.;
    (j) Agency means agency as defined in 5 U.S.C. 552(e);
    (k) Work days as used in calculating the date when response is due 
does not include Saturdays, Sundays and legal public holidays.

[[Page 396]]



Sec. 2504.3  Annual notice of systems of records maintained.

     The Office will publish in the Federal Register upon establishment 
or revision a notice of the existence and character of the systems of 
records the Office maintains. The notices shall include (1) the system 
name, (2) the system location, (3) the categories of individuals covered 
by the system, (4) the categories of records in the system, (5) the 
Office's authority to maintain the system, (6) the routine uses of the 
system, (7) the Office's policies and practice for maintenance of the 
system, (8) the system manager, (9) the procedures for notification, 
access to and correction of records in the system, and (10) the sources 
of information for the system.

[45 FR 47112, July 14, 1980, as amended at 49 FR 28236, July 11, 1984]



Sec. 2504.4  Determining if an individual is the subject of a record.

    (a) Individuals desiring to know if a specific system of records 
maintained by the Office contains a record pertaining to them should 
address inquiries to the Privacy Act Officer, Office of Administration, 
Washington, DC 20503.
    (b) Inquiries must be in writing and the words ``PRIVACY ACT 
REQUEST'' should be printed on both the letter and the envelope. The 
request letter should contain the complete name and identifying number 
of the pertinent system as published in the annual Federal Register 
notice describing the Office's Systems of Records; the full name and 
address of the subject individual; a brief description of the nature, 
time, place and circumstances of the individual's prior association with 
the Office; and any other information the individual believes would help 
the Privacy Act Officer determine whether the information about the 
individual is included in the system of records. In instances when the 
information is insufficient to ensure disclosure to the subject 
individual to whom the record pertains, the Office reserves the right to 
ask the requestor for additional identifying information.
    (c) To the extent possible, the Privacy Act Officer will answer or 
acknowledge the inquiry within 10 work days of its receipt by the 
Office. When the response cannot be made within 10 work days, the 
Privacy Act Officer will provide the requestor with the date when a 
response may be expected and, whenever possible, the specific reasons 
for the delay.

[45 FR 41121, June 18, 1980, as amended at 49 FR 28235, July 11, 1984]



Sec. 2504.5  Granting access to a record.

    (a) An individual requesting access to a record about himself in a 
system of records maintained by the Office should submit the request in 
writing to the Privacy Act Officer. Due to security measures at the Old 
and New Executive Office Buildings, requests made in person can only be 
accepted from current Office employees, who should make access requests 
to the Privacy Act Officer on regularly scheduled work days between 9:00 
a.m. and 5:30 p.m.
    (b) The request for access should contain the same information set 
forth in Sec. 2504.4(b). However, if the request for access follows a 
request made under Sec. 2504.4(a) and (b) of this part, the same 
identifying information need not be included: Provided, That a copy of 
the prior request or a copy of the Office's response to that request is 
attached. The request should state if a copy of the record is desired.

[45 FR 41121, June 18, 1980, as amended at 49 FR 28235, July 11, 1984]



Sec. 2504.6  Special procedures for medical records.

    (a) When the Privacy Act Officer receives a request from an 
individual for access to those official medical records which belong to 
the Office of Personnel Management and are described in Chapter 339, 
Federal Personnel Manual (medical records about entrance qualification 
or fitness for duty, or medical records which are otherwise filed in the 
Official Personnel Folder), the pertinent records shall be referred to a 
Federal Medical Officer for review and determination in accordance with 
this section. If no Federal Medical Officer is available to make the 
determination required by this section, the Privacy Act Officer shall 
refer the request and the medical reports concerned to the

[[Page 397]]

Office of Personnel Management for determination.
    (b) If, in the opinion of a Federal Medical Officer, medical records 
requested by the subject individual indicate a condition about which a 
prudent physician would hesitate to inform a person suffering from such 
a condition of its exact nature and probable outcome, the Privacy Act 
Officer shall not release the medical information to the subject 
individual nor to any person other than a physician designated in 
writing by the subject individual, his guardian, or conservator.
    (c) If, in the opinion of a Federal Medical Officer, the medical 
information does not indicate the presence of any condition which would 
cause a prudent physician to hesitate to inform a person suffering from 
such a condition of its exact nature and probable outcome, the Privacy 
Act Officer shall release it to the subject individual or to any person, 
firm, or organization which the individual authorizes in writing to 
receive it.

[45 FR 41121, June 18, 1980, as amended at 49 FR 28235, July 11, 1984]



Sec. 2504.7  Granting access when accompanied by another individual.

    An individual who wishes to have a person of his choosing review, 
accompany him (or her) in reviewing, or obtain a copy of a record must, 
prior to the disclosure, sign a statement authorizing the disclosure of 
his record. The statement shall be maintained with the record.



Sec. 2504.8  Action on request.

    (a) The Privacy Act Officer shall acknowledge requests for access 
within 10 work days of its receipt by the Office. At a minimum, the 
acknowledgement shall include:
    (1) When and where the records will be available;
    (2) The name, title and telephone number of the official who will 
make the records available;
    (3) Whether access will be granted only through providing a copy of 
the record through the mail, or only by examination of the record in 
person if the Privacy Act Officer after consulting with the appropriate 
system manager, has determined the requestor's access would not be 
unduly impeded;
    (4) Fee, if any, charged for copies. (See Sec. 2504.17); and
    (5) Identification documentation required to verify the identify of 
the requestor (see Sec. 2504.9).

[45 FR 41121, June 18, 1980, as amended at 49 FR 28235, July 11, 1984]



Sec. 2504.9  Identification requirements.

    (a) A requestor should be prepared to identify himself (or herself) 
by signature, i.e., to note by signature the date of access and/or to 
produce two other legal forms of identification (driver's license, 
employee identification, annuitant card, passport, etc.).
    (b) If an individual is unable to produce adequate identification, 
the individual shall sign a statement asserting identity and 
acknowledging that knowingly or willfully seeking or obtaining access to 
records about another person under false pretenses may result in a fine 
of up to $5,000 (see Sec. 2504.18). In addition, depending upon the 
sensitivity of the records, the Privacy Act Officer after consulting 
with the appropriate system manager, may require further reasonable 
assurances, such as statements of other individuals who can attest to 
the identity of the requestor.
    (c) If access is granted by mail, the identity of the requestor 
shall be verified by comparing signatures. If, in the opinion of the 
Privacy Act Officer, after consulting with the appropriate system 
manager, the granting of access through the mail may result in harm or 
embarrassment if disclosed to a person other than the subject 
individual, a notarized statement of identify or some other similar 
assurance of identity will be required.

[45 FR 41121, June 18, 1980, as amended at 49 FR 28235, July 11, 1984]



Sec. 2504.10  Access of others to records about an individual.

    (a) No official or employee of the Office shall disclose any record 
to any person or to another agency without the express written consent 
of the subject individual, unless the disclosure is:

[[Page 398]]

    (1) To officers or employees of the Office who need the information 
to perform their official duties;
    (2) Under the requirements of the Freedom of Information Act;
    (3) For a routine use that has been published in a notice in the 
Federal Register;
    (4) To the Bureau of the Census for uses under title 13 of the 
United States Code;
    (5) To a person or agency who has given the Office advance written 
notice of the purpose of the request and certification that the record 
will be used only for statistical purposes. (In addition to deleting 
personal identifying information from records released for statistical 
purposes, the Privacy Act Officer shall ensure that the identity of the 
individual cannot reasonably be deduced by combining various statistical 
records);
    (6) To the National Archives of the United States if a record has 
sufficient historical or other value to be preserved by the United 
States Government, or to the Privacy Act Officer (or a designee) to 
determine whether the record has that value;
    (7) In response to written request, that identifies the record and 
the purpose of the request, made by another agency or instrumentality of 
any Government jurisdiction within or under the control of the United 
States for civil or criminal law enforcement activity, if that activity 
is authorized by law;
    (8) To a person who, showing compelling circumstances, needs the 
information to prevent harm to the health or safety of an individual, 
but not necessarily the individual to whom the record pertains (upon 
such disclosure, a notification shall be sent to the last known address 
of the subject individual);
    (9) To either House of Congress, or to a Congressional committee or 
subcommittee if the subject matter is within its jurisdiction;
    (10) To the Comptroller General, or an authorized representative, to 
carry out the duties of the General Accounting Office;
    (11) Pursuant to a court order; or
    (12) To a consumer reporting agency in accordance with section 
3711(f) of title 31.

[45 FR 41121, June 18, 1980, as amended at 49 FR 28235, July 11, 1984]



Sec. 2504.11  Access to the accounting of disclosures from records.

    Rules governing access to the accounting of disclosures are the same 
as those granting access to the records.



Sec. 2504.12  Denials of access.

    (a) The Privacy Act Officer may deny an individual access to his (or 
her) record if: (1) In the opinion of the Privacy Act Officer, the 
individual seeking access has not provided sufficient identification 
documentation to permit access; or
    (2) The Office has published rules in the Federal Register exempting 
the pertinent system of records from the access requirement.
    (b) If access is denied, the requestor shall be informed of the 
reasons for denial and the procedures to obtain a review of the denial 
(see Sec. 2504.15).

[45 FR 41121, June 18, 1980, as amended at 49 FR 28235, July 11, 1984]



Sec. 2504.13  Requirements for requests to amend records.

    (a) Individuals who desire to correct or amend a record pertaining 
to them should submit a written request to the Privacy Act Officer, 
Office of Administration, Washington, DC 20503. The words ``PRIVACY 
ACT--REQUEST TO AMEND RECORD'' should be written on the letter and the 
envelope.
    (b) The request for amendment or correction of the record must state 
the exact name of the system of records as published in the Federal 
Register; a precise description of the record proposed for amendment; a 
brief statement describing the information the requestor believes to be 
inaccurate or incomplete, and why; and, the amendment or correction 
desired. If the request to amend the record is the result of the 
individual's having accessed the record in accordance with Secs. 2504.5, 
2504.6, 2504.7, 2504.8 of this part, copies of previous correspondence 
between the requestor and the Office should be attached, if possible.

[[Page 399]]

    (c) Individuals needing assistance in preparing a request to amend a 
record may contact the Privacy Act Officer at the address cited in 
Sec. 2504.13(a) of this part.
    (d) If the individual's identity has not been previously verified, 
the Office may require identification documentation as described in 
Sec. 2504.9.

[45 FR 41121, June 18, 1980, as amended at 49 FR 28235, July 11, 1984]



Sec. 2504.14  Action on request to amend a record.

    (a) A request for amendment of a record will be acknowledged within 
10 work days of its receipt by the Office. If a decision cannot be made 
within this time, the requestor will be informed by mail of the reasons 
for the delay and the date when a reply can be expected, normally within 
30 work days from receipt of the request.
    (b) The final response will include the Office's determination of 
whether to grant or deny the request. If the request is denied, the 
response will include:
    (1) The reasons for the decision;
    (2) The name and address of the official to whom an appeal should be 
directed;
    (3) The name and address of the official designated to assist the 
individual in preparing the appeal;
    (4) A description of the appeal process within the Office; and
    (5) A description of any other procedures which may be required of 
the individual in order to process the appeal.



Sec. 2504.15  Procedures for appeal of determination deny access to or amendment of records.

    (a) Individuals who disagree with the refusal of the Office to grant 
them access to or to amend a record about them should submit a written 
request for review to the Privacy Act Officer, Office of Administration, 
Washington, DC 20503. The words ``PRIVACY ACT--APPEAL'' should be 
written on the letter and the envelope. Individuals desiring assistance 
preparing their appeal should contact the Privacy Act Officer.
    (b) The appeal letter must be received by the Office within 30 
calendar days from the date the requestor received the notice of denial. 
At a minimum, the appeal letter should identify:
    (1) The records involved;
    (2) The date of the initial request for access to or amendment of 
the record;
    (3) The date of the Office denial of that request; and
    (4) The reasons supporting the request for reversal of the Office's 
decision.

Copies of previous correspondence from the Office denying the request to 
access or amend the record should also be attached, if possible.
    (c) The Office reserves the right to dispose of correspondence 
concerning the request to access or amend a record if no request for 
review of the Office's decision is received within 180 days of the 
decision date. Therefore, a request for review received after 180 days 
may, at the discretion of the Privacy Act Officer, be treated as an 
initial request to access or amend a record.

[45 FR 41121, June 18, 1980, as amended at 49 FR 28235, July 11, 1984]



Sec. 2504.16  Appeals process.

    (a) Within 20 work days of receiving the request for review, a 
review group composed of the Privacy Act Officer, the General Counsel 
and the Official having operational control over the record, will 
propose a determination on the appeal for the Director's final decision. 
If a final determination cannot be made in 20 days, the requestor will 
be informed of the reasons for the delay and the date on which a final 
decision can be expected. Such extensions are unusal, and should not 
exceed an additional 30 work days.
    (b) If the original request was for access and the initial 
determination is reversed, the procedures in Sec. 2504.8 will be 
followed. If the initial determination is upheld, the requestor will be 
so informed and advised of the right to judicial review pursuant to 5 
U.S.C. 552a(g).
    (c) If the initial denial of a request to amend a record is 
reversed, the Office will correct the record as requested and advise the 
individual of the correction. If the original decision is upheld, the 
requestor will be so advised and informed in writing of the right to 
judicial review pursuant to 5 U.S.C. 552a(g).

[[Page 400]]

In addition, the requestor will be advised of his (or her) right to file 
a concise statement of disagreement with the Director. The statement of 
disagreement should include an explanation of why the requestor believes 
the record is inaccurate, irrelevant, untimely or incomplete. The 
Director shall maintain the statement of disagreement with the disputed 
record, and shall include a copy of the statement of disagreement in any 
disclosure of the record. Additionally, the Privacy Act Officer shall 
provide a copy of the statement of disagreement to any person or agency 
to whom the record has been disclosed, if the disclosure was made 
pursuant to Sec. 2504.10 (5 U.S.C. 552(a)(c)).

[45 FR 41121, June 18, 1980, as amended at 49 FR 28235, July 11, 1984]



Sec. 2504.17  Fees.

    (a) Individuals will not be charged for:
    (1) The search and review of the record;
    (2) Any copies produced to make the record available for access;
    (3) Copies of the requested record if access can only be 
accomplished by providing a copy through the mail; and
    (4) Copies of three (3) or less pages of a requested record.
    (b) Records will be photocopied for 10 cents per page for four pages 
or more (except for paragraphs (a), (1), (2), (3), (4) of this section). 
If the record is larger than 8\1/2\  x  14 inches, the fee will be the 
cost of reproducing the record through Government or commerical sources.
    (c) Fees shall be paid in full prior to issuance of requested 
copies. Payment shall be by personal check or money order payable to the 
Treasurer of the United States, and mailed or delivered to the Deputy 
Director, Office of Administration, Washington, DC 20503.
    (d) The Deputy Director may waive the fee if: (1) The cost of 
collecting the fee exceeds the amount collected; or
    (2) The production of the copies at no charge is in the best 
interest of the government.
    (e) A receipt will be furnished on request.

[45 FR 41121, June 18, 1980, as amended at 49 FR 28235, July 11, 1984]



Sec. 2504.18  Penalties.

    (a) Title 18, U.S.C. 1001, Crimes and Criminal Procedures, makes it 
a criminal offense, subject to a maximum fine of $10,000 or imprisonment 
for not more than five years, or both, to knowingly and willfully make 
or cause to be made any false or fraudulent statements or representation 
in any matter within the jurisdiction of any agency of the United 
States. Section (i)(3) of the Privacy Act (5 U.S.C. 552a) makes it a 
misdemeanor, subject to a maximum fine of $5,000 to knowingly and 
willfully request or obtain any record concerning an individual under 
false pretenses. Sections (i) (1) and (2) or 5 U.S.C. 552a provide 
penalties for violations by agency employees of the Privacy Act or 
regulations established thereunder.

[[Page 401]]



                CHAPTER XVI--OFFICE OF GOVERNMENT ETHICS




  --------------------------------------------------------------------

                SUBCHAPTER A--ORGANIZATION AND PROCEDURES
Part                                                                Page
2600            Organization and functions of the Office of 
                    Government Ethics.......................         402
2602      Employee responsibilities and conduct, addendum [Reserved]
2604            Freedom of Information Act rules and 
                    schedule of fees for the production of 
                    public financial disclosure reports.....         403
2606      Privacy Act rules [Reserved]
2610            Implementation of the Equal Access to 
                    Justice Act.............................         414
                     SUBCHAPTER B--GOVERNMENT ETHICS

2634            Executive branch financial disclosure, 
                    qualified trusts, and certificates of 
                    divestiture.............................         421
2635            Standards of ethical conduct for employees 
                    of the executive branch.................         473
2636            Limitations on outside employment and 
                    prohibition of honoraria; confidential 
                    reporting of payments to charities in 
                    lieu of honoraria.......................         520
2637            Regulations concerning post employment 
                    conflict of interest....................         534
2638            Office of Government Ethics and executive 
                    agency ethics program responsibilities..         556
2640            Interpretation, exemptions and waiver 
                    guidance concerning 18 U.S.C. 208 (Acts 
                    affecting a personal financial interest)         573
2641            Post-employment conflict of interest 
                    restrictions............................         591

[[Page 402]]



                SUBCHAPTER A--ORGANIZATION AND PROCEDURES





PART 2600--ORGANIZATION AND FUNCTIONS OF THE OFFICE OF GOVERNMENT ETHICS--Table of Contents




Sec.
2600.101  Statement of the history and purpose of the Office of 
          Government Ethics.
2600.102  Office of Government Ethics address.
2600.103  Office of Government Ethics divisions; functions.

    Authority: 5 U.S.C. App. (Ethics in Government Act of 1978); E.O. 
12674, 54 FR 15159, 3 CFR, 1989 Comp., p. 215, as modified by E.O. 
12731, 55 FR 42547, 3 CFR, 1990 Comp., p. 306.

    Source: 55 FR 39589, Sept. 28, 1990, unless otherwise noted.



Sec. 2600.101  Statement of the history and purpose of the Office of Government Ethics.

    The U.S. Office of Government Ethics (OGE) is an executive branch 
agency which is responsible for overseeing and providing guidance on 
Government ethics for the executive branch, including the ethics 
programs of executive departments and agencies. OGE was created by the 
Ethics in Government Act (``the Act'') of 1978, Public Law No. 95-521, 
as amended. OGE was originally part of the Office of Personnel 
Management (OPM). Public Law No. 100-598 of November 3, 1988, provided 
for OGE's separate agency status, effective October 1, 1989. The Act 
created OGE to provide overall direction for executive branch policies 
designed to prevent conflicts of interest and to help insure high 
ethical standards on the part of agency officers and employees. Pursuant 
to the Ethics Reform Act of 1989 (Public Law No. 101-194), as revised by 
the technical amendments of May 4, 1990 (Public Law No. 101-280), OGE is 
the ``supervising ethics office'' for the executive branch for various 
purposes, including public and confidential financial disclosure 
reporting by executive agency officials. OGE also has various Government 
ethics guidance responsibilities under Executive Order 12674 of April 
12, 1989, ``Principles of Ethical Conduct for Government Officers and 
Employees'' (3 CFR 1989 Compilation, pp. 215-218).



Sec. 2600.102  Office of Government Ethics address.

    The Office of Government Ethics is located at suite 500, 1201 New 
York Avenue NW., Washington, DC 20005-3917. OGE has no regional offices.



Sec. 2600.103  Office of Government Ethics divisions; functions.

    (a) The Office of Government Ethics is divided into the following 
offices:
    (1) The Office of the Director;
    (2) The Office of the General Counsel;
    (3) The Office of Monitoring and Compliance;
    (4) The Office of Education; and
    (5) The Office of Administration.
    (b) The Office of the Director. The Director of the Office of 
Government Ethics is appointed by the President and confirmed by the 
Senate. The responsibilities of the OGE Director include: Advising the 
White House and executive branch Presidential appointees on Government 
ethics matters; maintaining ethics liaison with and providing guidance 
on ethics to executive branch departments and agencies; providing ethics 
liaison to the Congress; responding to public and press inquiries on 
ethics; and overseeing and coordinating all OGE rules, regulations, 
formal advisory opinions and major policy decisions. The OGE Deputy 
Director is also attached to this office and assists the Director in 
carrying out OGE's responsibilities, including serving as Acting 
Director in the absence of the Director.
    (c) The Office of the General Counsel. The responsibilities of the 
OGE Office of the General Counsel include: Developing regulations and 
approving executive agency implementation under conflict of interest 
laws, administrative standards of conduct, post-Government employment 
restrictions, and public and confidential financial disclosure 
reporting; initiating executive branch administrative ethics corrective 
actions; reviewing public financial disclosure statements of advice-and-
consent Presidential executive branch nominees, to identify and resolve 
conflicts; advising the OGE Director whether to

[[Page 403]]

approve and reviewing the ongoing administration of executive branch 
Ethics in Government Act qualified trusts; issuing certificates of 
divestiture; providing informal ethics advisory opinions/advice; 
participating in training and public forums on ethics; monitoring and 
providing technical assistance on legislative Government ethics 
initiatives; making Freedom of Information Act and Privacy Act 
determinations for OGE; facilitating executive agency referrals of 
criminal conflict of interest violations to the Department of Justice; 
and advising on executive agency exemptions and designations under 18 
U.S.C. 207 and 208.
    (d) The Office of Monitoring and Compliance. The responsibilities of 
the OGE Office of Monitoring and Compliance include: auditing the ethics 
programs in executive branch departments and agencies, regional offices 
and military bases to insure compliance with ethics regulations and 
requirements; monitoring compliance with ethics agreements made by 
Presidential executive branch appointees requiring Senate advice and 
consent, and reviewing their annual and termination SF 278 financial 
disclosure reports, as well as assisting in the review of their nominee 
reports; reviewing executive agency designations pursuant to 18 U.S.C. 
207; participating in training and public forums on ethics; and 
providing advice, review and liaison to the executive agencies on all 
ethics administrative matters pursuant to a desk officer system which 
the office operates.
    (e) The Office of Education. The responsibilities of the OGE Office 
of Education include: providing information on and promoting 
understanding of ethical standards through training courses for 
executive agency ethics practitioners and development of instructional 
materials, such as the Government Ethics Newsgram, handbooks and 
videotapes; carrying out the mandate of Executive Order 12674 to develop 
and disseminate an ethics reference manual for executive branch 
employees; coordinating on required annual executive agency ethics 
training plans and annual agency ethics program reports, including a 
yearly ethics survey; and providing liaison with the public and outside 
groups such as non-profit and educational organizations, as well as 
officials of state, local and foreign governments to promote 
understanding of Government ethics.
    (f) The Office of Administration. The Office of Administration is 
responsible for providing and coordinating essential administrative 
support services to all OGE operating programs and divisions. These 
intra-agency functions include: Personnel; payroll; fiscal resource 
management; facilities management; procurement, records and property 
management; publishing and distribution; printing; management 
information systems support; library; personnel security; and funding 
mandatory overhead expenses necessary for the operation of OGE.



PART 2602--EMPLOYEE RESPONSIBILITIES AND CONDUCT, ADDENDUM [RESERVED]






PART 2604--FREEDOM OF INFORMATION ACT RULES AND SCHEDULE OF FEES FOR THE PRODUCTION OF PUBLIC FINANCIAL DISCLOSURE REPORTS--Table of Contents




                      Subpart A--General Provisions

Sec.
2604.101  Purpose.
2604.102  Applicability.
2604.103  Definitions.

Subpart B--Public Reading Room and Index Identifying Information for the 
                                 Public

2604.201  Public reading room.
2604.202  Index identifying information for the public.

       Subpart C--Production and Disclosure of Records Under FOIA

2604.301  Requests for records.
2604.302  Response to requests.
2604.303  Form and content of responses.
2604.304  Appeal of denials.
2604.305  Time limits.

                    Subpart D--Exemptions Under FOIA

2604.401  Policy.
2604.402  Business information.

                       Subpart E--Schedule of Fees

2604.501  Fees to be charged--general.
2604.502  Fees to be charged--categories of requesters.

[[Page 404]]

2604.503  Limitations on charging fees.
2604.504  Miscellaneous fee provisions.

                  Subpart F--Annual Report to Congress

2604.601  Submission of report.
2604.602  Contents of the report.

  Subpart G--Fees for the Reproduction and Mailing of Public Financial 
                           Disclosure Reports

2604.701  Policy.
2604.702  Charges.

    Authority: 5 U.S.C. 552; 5 U.S.C. App. (Ethics in Government Act of 
1978); E.O. 12600, 52 FR 23781, 3 CFR, 1987 Comp., p. 235.

    Source: 60 FR 10007, Feb. 23, 1995, unless otherwise noted.



                      Subpart A--General Provisions



Sec. 2604.101  Purpose.

    This part contains the regulations of the Office of Government 
Ethics (OGE) implementing the Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) and 
Executive Order 12600. It describes how any person may obtain records 
from OGE under the FOIA. It also implements section 105(b)(1) of the 
Ethics in Government Act of 1978, as amended, which authorizes an agency 
to charge reasonable fees to cover the cost of reproduction and mailing 
of public financial disclosure reports requested by any person.



Sec. 2604.102  Applicability.

    (a) General. The FOIA and this rule apply to all OGE records. 
However, if another law sets forth procedures for the disclosure of 
specific types of records, such as section 105 of the Ethics in 
Government Act of 1978, 5 U.S.C. appendix, OGE will process a request 
for those records in accordance with the procedures that apply to those 
specific records. See 5 CFR 2634.603 and subpart G of this part. If 
there is any record which is not required to be released under those 
provisions, OGE will consider the request under the FOIA and this rule, 
provided that the special Ethics Act access procedures cited must be 
complied with as to any record within the scope thereof.
    (b) The relationship between the FOIA and the Privacy Act of 1974. 
The Privacy Act of 1974, 5 U.S.C. 552a, applies to records that are 
about individuals, but only if the records are in a system of records as 
defined in the Privacy Act. Requests from individuals for records about 
themselves which are contained in an OGE system of records will be 
processed under the provisions of the Privacy Act as well as the FOIA. 
OGE will not deny access by a first party to a record under the FOIA or 
the Privacy Act unless the record is not available to that individual 
under both the Privacy Act and the FOIA.
    (c) Records available through routine distribution procedures. When 
the record requested includes material published and offered for sale 
(e.g., by the Superintendent of Documents, Government Printing Office) 
or which is available to the public through an established distribution 
system (such as that of the National Technical Information Service of 
the Department of Commerce), OGE will explain how the record may be 
obtained through those channels. If the requester, after having been 
advised of such alternative access, asks for regular FOIA processing 
instead, OGE will provide the record in accordance with its usual FOIA 
procedures under this part.



Sec. 2604.103  Definitions.

    As used in this part,
    Agency has the meaning given in 5 U.S.C. 551(1) and 5 U.S.C. 552(f).
    Business information means trade secrets or other commercial or 
financial information, provided to the Office by a submitter, which 
arguably is protected from disclosure under Exemption 4 of the Freedom 
of Information Act.
    Business submitter means any person who provides business 
information, directly or indirectly, to the Office and who has a 
proprietary interest in the information.
    Commercial use means, when referring to a request, that the request 
is from, or on behalf of one who seeks information for a use or purpose 
that furthers the commercial, trade, or profit interests of the 
requester or of a person on whose behalf the request is made. Whether a 
request is for a commercial use depends on the purpose of the request 
and the use to which the records will be put. When a request is from a 
representative of the news media, a

[[Page 405]]

purpose or use supporting the requester's news dissemination function is 
not a commercial use.
    Direct costs means those expenditures actually incurred in searching 
for and duplicating (and, in the case of commercial use requesters, 
reviewing) records to respond to a FOIA request. Direct costs include 
the salary of the employee performing the work and the cost of operating 
duplicating machinery. Not included in direct costs are overhead 
expenses such as costs of space and heating or lighting of the facility 
in which the records are stored.
    Duplication means the process of making a copy of a record. Such 
copies include paper copy, microform, audio-visual materials, and 
magnetic tapes, cards, and discs.
    Educational institution means a preschool, elementary or secondary 
school, institution of undergraduate or graduate higher education, or 
institute of professional or vocational education, which operates a 
program of scholarly research.
    Freedom of Information Act or FOIA means 5 U.S.C. 552.
    General Counsel means the General Counsel of the Office of 
Government Ethics. The General Counsel may delegate any of his 
responsibilities in handling FOIA requests in this part to a designee on 
OGE's staff.
    He, his and him include she, hers and her.
    Noncommercial scientific institution means an institution that is 
not operated solely for purposes of furthering its own or someone else's 
business, trade, or profit interests, and that is operated for purposes 
of conducting scientific research the results of which are not intended 
to promote any particular product or industry.
    Office or OGE means the United States Office of Government Ethics.
    Person has the meaning given in 5 U.S.C. 551(2).
    Records means any handwritten, typed, or printed documents (such as 
memoranda, books, brochures, studies, writings, drafts, letters, 
transcripts, and minutes) and documentary material in other forms (such 
as punchcards, magnetic tapes, cards or discs, paper tapes, audio or 
video recordings, maps, photographs, slides, microfilm and motion 
pictures) that are either created or obtained by the Office and are 
under Office control. It does not include objects or articles such as 
exhibits, models, equipment, and duplication machines or audiovisual 
processing materials.
    Representative of the news media means a person actively gathering 
information for an entity organized and operated to publish or broadcast 
news to the public. News media entities include television and radio 
broadcasters, publishers of periodicals who distribute their products to 
the general public or who make their products available for purchase or 
subscription by the general public, and entities that may disseminate 
news through other media, such as electronic dissemination of text. 
Freelance journalists will be considered as representatives of a news 
media entity if they can show a solid basis for expecting publication 
through such an entity. A publication contract is such a basis, and the 
requester's past publication record may show such a basis.
    Request means any request for records made pursuant to 5 U.S.C. 
552(a)(3).
    Requester means any person who makes a request for records to OGE.
    Review means the process of initially, or upon appeal (see 
Sec. 2604.501(b)(3)), examining documents located in a response to a 
request to determine whether any portion of any document is permitted to 
be withheld. It also includes processing documents for disclosure, such 
as redacting portions which may be withheld. Review does not include 
time spent resolving general legal and policy issues regarding the 
application of exemptions.
    Search means the time spent looking for material that is responsive 
to a request, including page-by-page or line-by-line identification of 
material within documents.
    Working days means calendar days, excepting Saturdays, Sundays, and 
legal public holidays.

[[Page 406]]



Subpart B--Public Reading Room and Index Identifying Information for the 
                                 Public



Sec. 2604.201  Public reading room.

    (a) Location of public reading room. The Office of Government Ethics 
maintains a public reading room at its offices located at 1201 New York 
Avenue, NW., Suite 500, Washington, DC 20005-3917. Persons desiring to 
utilize the reading room should contact the Office, in writing or by 
telephone at (202) 523-5757 or FAX (202) 523-6325, to arrange a time to 
inspect the materials available there.
    (b) Records available. The Office of Government Ethics public 
reading room contains OGE records which are required by 5 U.S.C. 
552(a)(2) to be made available for public inspection and copying, 
including:
    (1) Any final opinions, as well as orders, made in the adjudication 
of cases;
    (2) Any statements of policy and interpretation which have been 
adopted by the agency and are not published in the Federal Register;
    (3) Any administrative staff manuals and instructions to staff that 
affect a member of the public, and which are not exempt from disclosure 
under section (b) of the FOIA; and
    (4) Current indexes providing identifying information for the public 
as to any matter which was issued, adopted or promulgated after July 4, 
1967, and is required by 5 U.S.C. 552(a)(2) to be made available or 
published.
    (c) Copying. The cost of copying information available in OGE's 
public reading room shall be imposed on a requester in accordance with 
the provisions of subpart E of this part.



Sec. 2604.202  Index identifying information for the public.

    (a) The Office of Government Ethics will maintain and make available 
for public inspection and copying a current index of the materials 
available at its public reading room which are required to be indexed 
under 5 U.S.C. 552(a)(2).
    (b) The Director of the Office of Government Ethics has determined 
that it is unnecessary and impracticable to publish quarterly or more 
frequently and distribute (by sale or otherwise) copies of each index 
and supplements thereto, as provided in 5 U.S.C. 552(a)(2). The Office 
will provide copies of such indexes upon request, at a cost not to 
exceed the direct cost of duplication and mailing, if sending records by 
other than ordinary mail.



       Subpart C--Production and Disclosure of Records Under FOIA



Sec. 2604.301  Requests for records.

    (a) Addressing requests. Requests for copies of records may be made 
in person or by telephone, (202) 523-5757, during normal business hours 
at the Office of Government Ethics, 1201 New York Avenue, NW., Suite 
500, Washington, DC 20005-3917 or by mail addressed to the General 
Counsel of OGE. Although oral requests may be honored, a requester 
generally will be asked to submit his request under the FOIA in writing. 
In the case of a written request, the envelope containing the request 
and the letter itself should both clearly indicate that the subject is a 
Freedom of Information Act request.
    (b) Description of records. Each request must reasonably describe 
the desired records in sufficient detail to enable Office personnel to 
locate the records with a reasonable amount of effort. A request for a 
specific category of records will be regarded as fulfilling this 
requirement if it enables responsive records to be identified by a 
technique or process that is not unreasonably burdensome or disruptive 
of Office operations.
    (1) Wherever possible, a request should include specific information 
about each record sought, such as the date, title or name, author, 
recipient, and subject matter of the record.
    (2) If the General Counsel determines that a request does not 
reasonably describe the records sought, he will either advise the 
requester what additional information is needed to locate the record, or 
otherwise state why the request is insufficient. The General Counsel 
will also extend to the requester an opportunity to confer with Office 
personnel with the objective of reformulating the request in a manner 
which will meet the requirements of this section.
    (c) Agreement to pay fees. The filing of a request under this 
subpart will be

[[Page 407]]

deemed to constitute an agreement by the requester to pay all applicable 
fees charged under subpart E of this part, up to $25.00, unless a waiver 
of fees is sought. The request may also specify a limit on the amount 
the requester is willing to spend, or may indicate a willingness to pay 
an amount greater than $25.00, if applicable. In cases where a requester 
has been notified that actual or estimated fees may amount to more than 
$25.00, the request will be deemed not to have been received until the 
requester has agreed to pay the anticipated total fee.
    (d) Requests for records relating to corrective actions. No record 
developed pursuant to the authority of 5 U.S.C. app. (Ethics in 
Government Act of 1978, section 402(f)(2)) concerning the investigation 
of an employee for a possible violation of any provision relating to a 
conflict of interest shall be made available pursuant to this part 
unless the request for such information identifies the employee to whom 
the records relate and the subject matter of any alleged violation to 
which the records relate. Nothing in this subsection shall affect the 
application of subpart D of this part to any record so identified.



Sec. 2604.302  Response to requests.

    (a) Response to initial request. The General Counsel is authorized 
to grant or deny any request for a record and to determine appropriate 
fees.
    (b) Referral to another agency. When a requester seeks records that 
originated in another Government agency, OGE will normally refer the 
request to the other agency for response. If OGE refers the request to 
another agency, it will notify the requester of the referral. If release 
of certain records may adversely affect United States relations with 
foreign governments, the Office will usually consult with the Department 
of State. A request for any records classified by some other agency will 
be referred to that agency for response.
    (c) Creating records. If a person seeks information from OGE in a 
format that does not currently exist, OGE will not ordinarily reformat 
the information for the purpose of responding to the request. OGE will 
advise the requester that it does not have the record in the format 
sought, but will provide whatever nonexempt records in existing formats 
that would reasonably respond to the request. Additionally, OGE will not 
generally develop a new record of information to satisfy a request.
    (d) Record cannot be located. If a requested record cannot be 
located from the information supplied, the General Counsel will so 
notify the requester in writing.



Sec. 2604.303  Form and content of responses.

    (a) Form of notice granting a request. After the General Counsel has 
made a determination to grant a request in whole or in part, the 
requester will be notified in writing. The notice shall describe the 
manner in which the record will be disclosed, whether by providing a 
copy of the record with the response or at a later date, or by making a 
copy of the record available to the requester for inspection at a 
reasonable time and place. The procedure for such an inspection may not 
unreasonably disrupt the operations of the Office. The response letter 
will also inform the requester in the response of any fees to be charged 
in accordance with the provisions of subpart E of this part.
    (b) Form of notice denying a request. When the General Counsel 
denies a request in whole or in part, he will so notify the requester in 
writing. The response will be signed by the General Counsel and will 
include:
    (1) The name and title or position of the person making the denial;
    (2) A brief statement of the reason or reasons for the denial, 
including the FOIA exemption or exemptions which the General Counsel has 
relied upon in denying the request; and
    (3) A statement that the denial may be appealed under Sec. 2604.304 
of this subpart, and a description of the requirements of that section.



Sec. 2604.304  Appeal of denials.

    (a) Right of appeal. If a request has been denied in whole or in 
part, the requester may appeal the denial to the Deputy Director of the 
Office of Government Ethics, 1201 New York Avenue, NW., Suite 500, 
Washington, DC 20005-3917.

[[Page 408]]

    (b) Letter of appeal. The appeal must be in writing and must be sent 
within 30 days of receipt of the denial letter. An appeal should include 
a copy of the initial request, a copy of the letter denying the request 
in whole or in part, and a statement of the circumstances, reasons or 
arguments advanced in support of disclosure of the request for the 
record. Both the envelope and the letter of appeal must be clearly 
marked ``Freedom of Information Act Appeal.''
    (c) Action on appeal. The disposition of an appeal will be in 
writing and will constitute the final action of the Office on a request. 
A decision affirming in whole or in part the denial of a request will 
include a brief statement of the reason or reasons for affirmance, 
including each FOIA exemption relied on. If the denial of a request is 
reversed in whole or in part on appeal, the request will be processed 
promptly in accordance with the decision on appeal.
    (d) Judicial review. If the denial of the request for records is 
upheld in whole or in part, the Office will notify the person making the 
request of his right to seek judicial review under 5 U.S.C. 552(a)(4).



Sec. 2604.305  Time limits.

    (a) Initial request. Following receipt of a request for records, the 
General Counsel will determine whether to comply with the request and 
will notify the requester in writing of his determination within 10 
working days.
    (b) Appeal. A written determination on an appeal submitted in 
accordance with Sec. 2604.304 will be issued within 20 working days 
after receipt of the appeal.
    (c) Extension of time limits. The time limits specified in either 
paragraph (a) or (b) of this section may be extended in unusual 
circumstances up to a total of 10 working days, after written notice to 
the requester setting forth the reasons for the extension and the date 
on which a determination is expected to be made.
    (d) For the purposes of paragraph (c) of this section, unusual 
circumstances means that there is a need to:
    (1) Search for and collect records from archives;
    (2) Search for, collect, and appropriately examine a voluminous 
amount of separate and distinct records which are demanded in a single 
request; or
    (3) Consult with another agency having a substantial interest in the 
determination of the request, or consult with various OGE components 
that have substantial subject matter interest in the records requested.



                    Subpart D--Exemptions Under FOIA



Sec. 2604.401  Policy.

    (a) Policy on application of exemptions. Section 552(b) of the 
Freedom of Information Act contains nine exemptions to the mandatory 
disclosure of records. A requested record will not be withheld from 
inspection or copying unless it comes within one of the classes of 
records exempted by 5 U.S.C. 552. In making its determination on 
withholding, OGE will consider whether another statute, Executive order 
or regulation prohibits release or, if not, whether there is a need in 
the public interest to withhold material which is otherwise exempt under 
FOIA.
    (b) Pledge of confidentiality. Information obtained from any 
individual or organization, furnished in reliance on a provision for 
confidentiality authorized by applicable statute, Executive order or 
regulation, will not be disclosed to the extent it can be withheld under 
one of the exemptions. However, this paragraph does not itself authorize 
the giving of any pledge of confidentiality by any officer or employee 
of the Office of Government Ethics.
    (c) Exception for law enforcement information. The Office may treat 
records compiled for law enforcement purposes as not subject to the 
requirements of the Freedom of Information Act when:
    (1) The investigation or proceeding involves a possible violation of 
criminal law;
    (2) There is reason to believe that the subject of the investigation 
or proceeding is unaware of its pendency; and
    (3) The disclosure of the existence of the records could reasonably 
be expected to interfere with the enforcement proceedings.
    (d) Partial application of exemptions. Any reasonably segregable 
portion of a record will be provided to any person requesting the record 
after deletion of

[[Page 409]]

the portions which are exempt under this subpart.



Sec. 2604.402  Business information.

    (a) In general. Business information provided to the Office of 
Government Ethics by a submitter will not be disclosed pursuant to a 
Freedom of Information Act request except in accordance with this 
section.
    (b) Designation of business information. Submitters of business 
information should use good-faith efforts to designate, by appropriate 
markings, either at the time of submission or at a reasonable time 
thereafter, those portions of their submissions which they deem to be 
protected under exemption 4 of the FOIA (5 U.S.C. 552(b)(4)). Any such 
designation will expire 10 years after the records were submitted to the 
Government, unless the submitter requests, and provides reasonable 
justification for, a designation period of longer duration.
    (c) Predisclosure notification. The General Counsel will provide a 
submitter with prompt written notice of a FOIA request regarding its 
business information if:
    (1) The information has been designated by the submitter as 
information deemed protected from disclosure under Exemption 4 of the 
FOIA; or
    (2) The General Counsel has reason to believe that the information 
may be protected from disclosure under Exemption 4 of the FOIA. Such 
written notice shall either describe the exact nature of the business 
information requested or provide copies of the records containing the 
business information. The requester also shall be notified that notice 
and an opportunity to object are being provided to a submitter.
    (d) Opportunity to object to disclosure. A submitter has five 
working days from receipt of the predisclosure notification to provide a 
written statement of any objection to disclosure. Such statement shall 
specify all the grounds for withholding any of the information under any 
exemption of the FOIA and, in the case of Exemption 4, shall demonstrate 
why the information is deemed to be a trade secret or commercial or 
financial information that is privileged or confidential. Information 
provided by a submitter pursuant to this paragraph may itself be subject 
to disclosure under the FOIA.
    (e) Notice of intent to disclose. The General Counsel will consider 
all objections raised by a submitter and specific grounds for 
nondisclosure prior to determining whether to disclose business 
information. Whenever the General Counsel decides to disclose business 
information over the objection of a submitter, he will send the 
submitter a written notice at least 10 working days before the date of 
disclosure containing:
    (1) A statement of the reasons why the submitter's objections were 
not sustained;
    (2) A copy of the records which will be disclosed or a written 
description of the records; and
    (3) A specified disclosure date. The requester shall also be 
notified of the General Counsel's determination to disclose records over 
a submitter's objections.
    (f) Notice of FOIA lawsuit. Whenever a requester brings suit seeking 
to compel disclosure of business information, the General Counsel shall 
promptly notify the submitter.
    (g) Exceptions to predisclosure notification. The notice 
requirements in paragraph (c) of this section do not apply if:
    (1) The General Counsel determines that the information should not 
be disclosed;
    (2) The information has been published previously or has been 
officially made available to the public;
    (3) Disclosure of the information is required by law (other than 5 
U.S.C. 552); or
    (4) The designation made by the submitter in accordance with 
paragraph (b) of this section appears obviously frivolous; except that, 
in such a case, the General Counsel will provide the submitter with 
written notice of any final decision to disclose business information 
within a reasonable number of days prior to a specified disclosure date.



                       Subpart E--Schedule of Fees



Sec. 2604.501  Fees to be charged--general.

    (a) Policy. Fees shall be assessed according to the schedule 
contained in

[[Page 410]]

paragraph (b) of this section and the category of requesters described 
in Sec. 2604.502 for services rendered in responding to and processing 
requests for records under subpart C of this part. All fees shall be 
charged to the requester, except where the charging of fees is limited 
under Sec. 2604.503(a) and (b) or where a waiver or reduction of fees is 
granted under Sec. 2604.503(c). Requesters shall pay fees by check or 
money order made payable to the Treasury of the United States.
    (b) Types of charges. The types of charges that may be assessed in 
connection with the production of records in response to a FOIA request 
are as follows:
    (1) Searches--(i) Manual searches for records. Whenever feasible, 
the Office will charge at the salary rate (i.e., basic pay plus 16%) of 
the employee making the search. However, where a homogeneous class of 
personnel is used exclusively in a search (e.g., all clerical time or 
all professional time) the Office will charge $10.00 per hour for 
clerical time and $20.00 per hour for professional time. Charges for 
search time will be billed by fifteen minute segments.
    (ii) Computer searches for records. Requesters will be charged the 
actual direct cost of conducting a search using existing programming. 
These direct costs shall include the cost of operating a central 
processing unit for that portion of operating time that is directly 
attributable to searching for records responsive to a request, as well 
as the cost of operator/programmer salary apportionable to the search. 
The Office will not alter or develop programming to conduct a search.
    (iii) Unproductive searches. The Office will charge search fees even 
if no records are found which are responsive to the request, or if the 
records found are exempt from disclosure.
    (2) Duplication. The standard copying charge for documents in paper 
copy is $.15 per page. When responsive information is provided in a 
format other than paper copy, such as in the form of computer tapes and 
discs, the requester may be charged the direct costs of the tape, disc, 
or whatever medium is used to produce the information, as well as any 
related reproduction costs.
    (3) Review. Costs associated with the review of documents, as 
defined in Sec. 2604.104(q), will be charged at the salary rate (i.e., 
basic pay plus 16%) of the employee conducting the review. Except as 
noted below, charges may be assessed only for review at the initial 
level, i.e., the review undertaken the first time the documents are 
analyzed to determine the applicability of specific exemptions to a 
particular record or portion of the records. A requester will not be 
charged for review at the administrative appeal level concerning the 
applicability of an exemption already applied at the initial level. 
However, when a record has been withheld pursuant to an exemption which 
is subsequently determined not to apply and the record is reviewed again 
at the appeal level to determine the potential applicability of other 
exemptions, the costs of such additional review may be assessed.
    (4) Other services and materials. Where the Office elects, as a 
matter of administrative discretion, to comply with a request for a 
special service or materials, such as certifying that records are true 
copies or sending records by special methods, the actual direct costs of 
providing the service or materials will be charged.



Sec. 2604.502  Fees to be charged--categories of requesters.

    (a) Fees for various requester categories. The paragraphs below 
state, for each category of requester, the type of fees generally 
charged by the Office. However, for each of these categories, the fees 
may be limited, waived or reduced in accordance with the provisions set 
forth in Sec. 2604.503. In determining whether a requester belongs in 
any of the following categories, the Office will determine the use to 
which the requester will put the documents requested. If the Office has 
reasonable cause to doubt the use to which the requester will put the 
records sought, or where the use is not clear from the request itself, 
the Office will seek clarification before assigning the request to a 
specific category.
    (b) Commercial use requester. The Office will charge the full costs 
of search, review, and duplication. Commercial use requesters are not 
entitled to two

[[Page 411]]

hours of free search time or 100 free pages of reproduction as described 
in Sec. 2604.503(a); however, the de minimis fees provision of 
Sec. 2604.503(b) does apply to such requesters.
    (c) Educational and noncommercial scientific institutions and news 
media. If the request is from an educational institution or a 
noncommercial scientific institution, operated for scholarly or 
scientific research, or a representative of the news media, and the 
request is not for a commercial use, the Office will charge only for 
duplication of documents, excluding charges for the first 100 pages.
    (d) All other requesters. If the request is not one described in 
paragraph (b) or (c) of this section, the Office will charge the full 
and direct costs of searching for and reproducing records that are 
responsive to the request, excluding the first 100 pages of duplication 
and the first two hours of search time.



Sec. 2604.503  Limitations on charging fees.

    (a) In general. Except for requesters seeking records for a 
commercial use as described in Sec. 2604.502(b), the Office will 
provide, without charge, the first 100 pages of duplication and the 
first two hours of search time, or their cost equivalent.
    (b) De minimis fees. The Office will not assess fees for individual 
requests if the total charge would be $10.00 or less.
    (c) Waiver or reduction of fees. Records responsive to a request 
under 5 U.S.C. 552 will be furnished without charge or at a reduced 
charge where the Office determines, based upon information provided by a 
requester in support of a fee waiver request, that disclosure of the 
requested information is in the public interest because it is likely to 
contribute significantly to public understanding of the operations or 
activities of the Government and is not primarily in the commercial 
interest of the requester. Requests for a waiver or reduction of fees 
will be considered on a case-by-case basis.
    (1) In determining whether disclosure is in the public interest 
because it is likely to contribute significantly to public understanding 
of the operations or activities of the Government, the Office will 
consider the following factors:
    (i) The subject of the request: Whether the subject of the requested 
records concerns the operations or activities of the Government. The 
subject matter of the requested records, in the context of the request, 
must specifically and directly concern identifiable operations or 
activities of the Federal Government. Furthermore, the records must be 
sought for their informative value with respect to those Government 
operations or activities;
    (ii) The informative value of the information to be disclosed: 
Whether the information is likely to contribute to an understanding of 
Government operations or activities. The disclosable portions of the 
requested records must be meaningfully informative on specific 
Government operations or activities in order to hold potential for 
contributing to increased public understanding of those operations and 
activities. The disclosure of information which is already in the public 
domain, in either a duplicative or substantially identical form, would 
not be likely to contribute to such understanding, as nothing new would 
be added to the public record;
    (iii) The contribution to an understanding of the subject by the 
public likely to result from disclosure: Whether disclosure of the 
requested information will contribute to public understanding. The 
disclosure must contribute to the understanding of the public at large, 
as opposed to the individual understanding of the requester or a narrow 
segment of interested persons. A requester's identity and 
qualifications--e.g., expertise in the subject area and ability and 
intention to convey information to the general public--will be 
considered; and
    (iv) The significance of the contribution to public understanding: 
Whether the disclosure is likely to contribute significantly to public 
understanding of Government operations or activities. The public's 
understanding of the subject matter in question, as compared to the 
level of public understanding existing prior to the disclosure, must be 
likely to be significantly enhanced by the disclosure.
    (2) In determining whether disclosure of the requested information 
is not primarily in the commercial interest of

[[Page 412]]

the requester, the Office will consider the following factors:
    (i) The existence and magnitude of a commercial interest: Whether 
the requester has a commercial interest that would be furthered by the 
requested disclosure. The Office will consider all commercial interests 
of the requester, or any person on whose behalf the requester may be 
acting, which would be furthered by the requested disclosure. In 
assessing the magnitude of identified commercial interests, 
consideration will be given to the effect that the information disclosed 
would have on those commercial interests; and
    (ii) The primary interest in disclosure: Whether the magnitude of 
the identified commercial interest of the requester is sufficiently 
large, in comparison with the public interest in disclosure, that 
disclosure is primarily in the commercial interest of the requester. A 
fee waiver or reduction is warranted only where the public interest can 
fairly be regarded as greater in magnitude than the requester's 
commercial interest in disclosure. The Office will ordinarily presume 
that, where a news media requester has satisfied the public interest 
standard, the public interest will be served primarily by disclosure to 
that requester. Disclosure to data brokers and others who compile and 
market Government information for direct economic return will not be 
presumed to primarily serve the public interest.
    (3) Where only a portion of the requested record satisfies the 
requirements for a waiver or reduction of fees under this paragraph, a 
waiver or reduction shall be granted only as to that portion.
    (4) A request for a waiver or reduction of fees must accompany the 
request for disclosure of records, and should include:
    (i) A clear statement of the requester's interest in the documents;
    (ii) The proposed use of the documents and whether the requester 
will derive income or other benefit from such use;
    (iii) A statement of how the public will benefit from release of the 
requested documents; and
    (iv) If specialized use of the documents is contemplated, a 
statement of the requester's qualifications that are relevant to the 
specialized use.
    (5) A requester may appeal the denial of a request for a waiver or 
reduction of fees in accordance with the provisions of Sec. 2604.304.



Sec. 2604.504  Miscellaneous fee provisions.

    (a) Notice of anticipated fees in excess of $25.00. Where the Office 
determines or estimates that the fees to be assessed under this section 
may amount to more than $25.00, the Office shall notify the requester as 
soon as practicable of the actual or estimated amount of fees, unless 
the requester has indicated in advance his willingness to pay fees as 
high as those anticipated. Where a requester has been notified that the 
actual or estimated fees may exceed $25.00, the request will be deemed 
not to have been received until the requester has agreed to pay the 
anticipated total fee. A notice to the requester pursuant to this 
paragraph will include the opportunity to confer with Office personnel 
in order to reformulate the request to meet the requester's needs at a 
lower cost.
    (b) Aggregating requests. A requester may not file multiple 
requests, each seeking portions of a document or documents in order to 
avoid the payment of fees. Where there is reason to believe that a 
requester or group of requesters acting in concert, is attempting to 
divide a request into a series of requests for the purpose of evading 
the assessment of fees, the Office may aggregate the requests and charge 
accordingly. The Office will presume that multiple requests of this type 
made within a 30-day period have been made in order to evade fees. 
Multiple requests regarding unrelated matters will not be aggregated.
    (c) Advance payments. An advance payment before work is commenced or 
continued will not be required unless:
    (1) The Office estimates or determines that the total fee to be 
assessed under this section is likely to exceed $250.00. When a 
determination is made that the allowable charges are likely to

[[Page 413]]

exceed $250.00, the requester will be notified of the likely cost and 
will be required to provide satisfactory assurance of full payment where 
the requester has a history of prompt payment of FOIA fees, or will be 
required to submit an advance payment of an amount up to the full 
estimated charges in the case of requesters with no history of payment; 
or
    (2) A requester has previously failed to pay a fee charged in a 
timely fashion (i.e., within 30 days of the date of the billing). In 
such cases the requester may be required to pay the full amount owed 
plus any applicable interest as provided by paragraph (e) of this 
section, and to make an advance payment of the full amount of the 
estimated fee before the Office begins to process a new request.
    (3) When the Office requests an advance payment of fees, the 
administrative time limits described in subsection (a)(6) of the FOIA 
will begin to run only after the Office has received the advance 
payment.
    (d) Billing and payment. Normally the Office will require a 
requester to pay all fees before furnishing the requested records. 
However, the Office may send a bill along with, or following the 
furnishing of records, in cases where the requester has a history of 
prompt payment.
    (e) Interest charges. Interest charges on an unpaid bill may be 
assessed starting on the 31st day following the day on which the billing 
was sent. Interest shall be at the rate prescribed in 31 U.S.C. 3717 and 
shall accrue from the date of billing. To collect unpaid bills, the 
Office will follow the provisions of the Debt Collection Act of 1982, as 
amended (96 Stat. 1749 et seq.) including the use of consumer reporting 
agencies, collection agencies, and offset.



                  Subpart F--Annual Report to Congress



Sec. 2604.601  Submission of report.

    On or before March 1 of each calendar year, a report of OGE's 
activities over the preceding year relating to the Freedom of 
Information Act will be submitted to the Speaker of the House of 
Representatives and the President of the Senate.



Sec. 2604.602  Contents of the report.

    The annual report to Congress will include for the relevant 
reporting period:
    (a) The number of FOIA requests made to OGE, determinations made by 
OGE not to comply with requests for records made to it under the FOIA 
and the reasons for each such determination;
    (b) The number of appeals made by persons under the FOIA, the 
results of such appeals, and the reasons for the action by OGE upon each 
appeal that results in a denial of information;
    (c) The names and titles or positions of each person responsible for 
the denial of records requested under the FOIA;
    (d) The results of each proceeding conducted pursuant to subsection 
(a)(4)(F) of the FOIA, including a report of the disciplinary action 
taken against the officer or employee who was primarily responsible for 
improperly withholding records or an explanation of why disciplinary 
action was not taken;
    (e) A copy of every rule made by OGE regarding the FOIA;
    (f) A copy of the fee schedule and the total amount of fees 
collected by OGE for making records available under the FOIA; and
    (g) Such other information as indicates efforts by OGE to administer 
fully the FOIA.



  Subpart G--Fees for the Reproduction and Mailing of Public Financial 
                           Disclosure Reports



Sec. 2604.701  Policy.

    Fees for the reproduction and mailing of public financial disclosure 
reports (SF 278s) requested pursuant to section 105 of the Ethics in 
Government Act of 1978, as amended, and Sec. 2634.603 of this chapter 
shall be assessed according to the schedule contained in Sec. 2604.702. 
Requesters shall pay fees by check or money order made payable to the 
Treasury of the United States. Except as provided in Sec. 2604.702(d), 
nothing concerning fees in subpart E of this part supersedes the charges 
set forth in this subpart for records covered in this subpart.

[[Page 414]]



Sec. 2604.702  Charges.

    (a) Duplication. Except as provided in paragraph (c) of this 
section, copies of public financial disclosure reports (SF 278s) 
requested pursuant to section 105 of the Ethics in Government Act of 
1978, as amended, and Sec. 2634.603 of this chapter will be provided 
upon payment of $.03 per page furnished.
    (b) Mailing. Except as provided in paragraph (c) of this section, 
the actual direct cost of mailing public financial disclosure reports 
will be charged for all forms requested. Where the Office elects to 
comply, as a matter of administrative discretion, with a request for 
special mailing services, the actual direct cost of such service will be 
charged.
    (c) De minimis fees. The Office will not assess fees for individual 
requests if the total charge would be $10.00 or less.
    (d) Miscellaneous fee provisions. The miscellaneous fee provisions 
set forth in Sec. 2604.504 apply to requests for public financial 
disclosure reports pursuant to Sec. 2634.603 of this chapter.



PART 2606--PRIVACY ACT RULES [RESERVED]






PART 2610--IMPLEMENTATION OF THE EQUAL ACCESS TO JUSTICE ACT--Table of Contents




                      Subpart A--General Provisions

Sec.
2610.101  Definitions.
2610.102  Purpose.
2610.103  When the Act applies.
2610.104  Proceedings covered.
2610.105  Eligibility of applicants.
2610.106  Standards for awards.
2610.107  Allowable fees and expenses.
2610.108  Rulemaking on maximum rate for attorney fees.
2610.109  Awards against other agencies.

             Subpart B--Information Required From Applicants

2610.201  Contents of application.
2610.202  Net worth exhibit.
2610.203  Documentation of fees and expenses.
2610.204  When an application may be filed.

           Subpart C--Procedures for Considering Applications

2610.301  Jurisdiction of adjudicative officer.
2610.302  Filing and service of documents.
2610.303  Answer to application.
2610.304  Reply.
2610.305  Comments by other parties.
2610.306  Settlement.
2610.307  Further proceedings.
2610.308  Decision.
2610.309  Agency review.
2610.310  Judicial review.
2610.311  Payment of award.

    Authority: 5 U.S.C. 504(c)(1); 5 U.S.C. App. (Ethics in Government 
Act of 1978).

    Source: 57 FR 33268, July 28, 1992, unless otherwise noted.



                      Subpart A--General Provisions



Sec. 2610.101  Definitions.

    (a) Act means the Equal Access to Justice Act, 5 U.S.C. 504, as 
amended.
    (b) Adjudicative officer means the official, without regard to 
whether the official is designated as a hearing examiner, administrative 
law judge, administrative judge, or otherwise, who presided at the 
adversary adjudication.
    (c) Adversary adjudication means:
    (1) An adjudication under 5 U.S.C. 554 in which the position of the 
United States is represented by counsel or otherwise, but not including 
an adjudication for the purpose of establishing or fixing a rate or for 
the purpose of granting or renewing a license; and
    (2) An appeal of a decision of a contracting officer made pursuant 
to section 6 of the Contracts Disputes Act of 1978 (41 U.S.C. 605) as 
provided in section 8 of that statute (41 U.S.C. 607).
    (d) Agency counsel means:
    (1) When the position of the Office is being represented, the 
attorney or attorneys designated by the Office's General Counsel to 
represent the Office in a proceeding covered by this part; and
    (2) When the position of another agency of the United States is 
being represented, the representative or representatives as designated 
by that agency.
    (e) Office means the United States Office of Government Ethics, or 
the organizational unit within the Office responsible for conducting an 
adversary adjudication subject to this part.

[[Page 415]]

    (f) Proceeding means an adversary adjudication as defined above.
    (g) Director means the Director of the United States Office of 
Government Ethics.



Sec. 2610.102  Purpose.

    The Act provides for the award of attorney fees and other expenses 
to eligible individuals and entities who are parties to certain 
administrative proceedings (``adversary adjudications'') before the 
Office of Government Ethics. An eligible party may receive an award when 
it prevails over the Office unless the Office's position was 
substantially justified or special circumstances make an award unjust. 
The rules in this part describe the parties eligible for awards and the 
proceedings that are covered. They also explain how to apply for awards, 
and the procedures and standards that the Office will use to make them.



Sec. 2610.103  When the Act applies.

    The Act applies to any adversary adjudication pending or commenced 
before the Office of Government Ethics on or after October 1, 1989, 
which is the date the Office became a separate executive agency. Prior 
to October 1, 1989, the Office was part of the Office of Personnel 
Management. Any adversary adjudication pending or commenced before 
October 1, 1989, and not finally disposed of by that date, is governed 
by the rules and policies implementing the Equal Access to Justice Act 
as adopted by the Office of Personnel Management.



Sec. 2610.104  Proceedings covered.

    (a) This part applies to adversary administrative adjudications 
conducted by the Office of Government Ethics. When all other conditions 
in the Act and in these rules are met, the types of proceedings to which 
this part applies are adversary administrative adjudications conducted 
by the Office under:
    (1) The Debt Collection Act of 1982, 5 U.S.C. 5514;
    (2) The Contract Disputes Act of 1978, 41 U.S.C. 605, 607;
    (3) The Ethics in Government Act of 1978, section 402(f)(2), 5 
U.S.C. app., and subpart E of part 2638 of this chapter.
    (b) The Office's failure to identify a type of proceeding as an 
adversary adjudication shall not preclude the filing of an application 
by a party who believes the proceeding is covered by the Act; whether 
the proceeding is covered will then be an issue for resolution in the 
proceedings on the application.
    (c) If a proceeding includes both matters covered by the Act and 
matters specifically excluded from coverage, any award made will include 
only fees and expenses related to covered matters.



Sec. 2610.105  Eligibility of applicants.

    (a) To be eligible for an award of attorney fees and other expenses 
under the Act, the applicant must be a party to the adversary 
adjudication for which it seeks an award. The term ``party'' is defined 
in 5 U.S.C. 551(3). The applicant must show that it meets all conditions 
of eligibility set out in this subpart and in subpart B of this part.
    (b) The types of eligible applicants are as follows:
    (1) An individual with a net worth of not more than $2,000,000;
    (2) The sole owner of an unincorporated business who has a net worth 
of not more than $7,000,000, including both personal and business 
interests, and not more than 500 employees;
    (3) A charitable or other tax-exempt organization described in 
section 501(c)(3) of the Internal Revenue Code, 26 U.S.C. 501(c)(3), 
with not more than 500 employees;
    (4) A cooperative association as defined in section 15(a) of the 
Agricultural Marketing Act, 12 U.S.C. 1141j(a), with not more than 500 
employees; and
    (5) any other partnership, corporation, association, unit of local 
government, or organization with a net worth of not more than $7,000,000 
and not more than 500 employees.
    (c) For the purpose of eligibility, the net worth and number of 
employees of an applicant shall be determined as of the date the 
underlying proceeding was initiated. For appeals of decisions of 
contracting officers made pursuant to section 6 of the Contracts 
Disputes Act of 1978, the net worth and number of employees of an 
applicant shall be determined as of the date the applicant filed its 
appeal under 41 U.S.C. 606.

[[Page 416]]

    (d) An applicant who owns an unincorporated business will be 
considered as an ``individual'' rather than a ``sole owner of an 
unincorporated business'' if the issues on which the applicant prevails 
are related primarily to personal interests rather than to business 
interests.
    (e) The employees of an applicant include all persons who regularly 
perform services for remuneration for the applicant, under the 
applicant's direction and control. Part-time employees shall be included 
on a proportional basis.
    (f) The net worth and number of employees of the applicant and all 
of its affiliates shall be aggregated to determine eligibility. An 
individual, corporation or other entity that directly or indirectly 
controls or owns a majority of the voting shares or other interests of 
the applicant, or any corporation or other entity of which the applicant 
directly or indirectly owns or controls a majority of the voting shares 
or other interest, will be considered an affiliate for purposes of this 
part, unless the adjudicative officer determines that such treatment 
would be unjust and contrary to the purposes of the Act in light of the 
actual relationship between the affiliated entities. In addition, the 
adjudicative officer may determine that financial relationships of the 
applicant other than those described in this paragraph constitute 
special circumstances that would make an award unjust.
    (g) An applicant that participates in a proceeding primarily on 
behalf of one or more other persons or entities that would be ineligible 
is not itself eligible for an award.



Sec. 2610.106  Standards for awards.

    (a) A prevailing applicant may receive an award for fees and 
expenses incurred in connection with a proceeding or in a significant 
and discrete substantive portion of the proceeding, unless the position 
of the Office was substantially justified. The position of the Office 
includes, in addition to the position taken by the Office in the 
adversary adjudication, the action or failure to act by the Office upon 
which the adversary adjudication is based. The burden of proof that an 
award should not be made to an eligible prevailing applicant because the 
Office's position was substantially justified is on the Office. No 
presumption arises that the Office's position was not substantially 
justified simply because the Office did not prevail.
    (b) Awards for fees and expenses incurred before the date on which a 
proceeding was initiated will be made only if the applicant can 
demonstrate that they were reasonably incurred in preparation for the 
proceeding.
    (c) An award under this part will be reduced or denied if the 
applicant has unduly or unreasonably protracted the proceeding, if the 
applicant has falsified the application (including documentation) or net 
worth exhibit, or if special circumstances make the award sought unjust.

[57 FR 33268, July 28, 1992, as amended at 60 FR 38666, July 28, 1995]



Sec. 2610.107  Allowable fees and expenses.

    (a) Awards will be based on rates customarily charged by persons 
engaged in the business of acting as attorneys, agents and expert 
witnesses, even if the services were made available without charge or at 
reduced rate to the applicant.
    (b) Except as provided in Sec. 2610.108, no award for the fee of an 
attorney or agent under these rules may exceed $75.00 per hour. No award 
to compensate an expert witness may exceed the highest rate at which the 
Office pays expert witnesses. However, an award may also include the 
reasonable expenses of the attorney, agency, or witness as a separate 
item, if the attorney, agent or witness ordinarily charges clients 
separately for such expenses.
    (c) In determining the reasonableness of the fee sought for an 
attorney, agent or expert witness, the adjudicative officer shall 
consider the following:
    (1) If the attorney, agent or witness is in private practice, his or 
her customary fees for similar services, or, if an employee of the 
applicant, the fully allocated costs of the services;
    (2) The prevailing rate for similar services in the community in 
which the attorney, agent or witness ordinarily performs services;

[[Page 417]]

    (3) The time actually spent in the representation of the applicant;
    (4) The time reasonably spent in light of the difficulty or 
complexity of the issues in the proceeding; and
    (5) Such other factors as may bear on the value of the services 
provided.
    (d) The reasonable cost of any study, analysis, engineering report, 
test, project or similar matter prepared on behalf of a party may be 
awarded, to the extent that the charge for the services does not exceed 
the prevailing rate for similar services, and the study or other matter 
was necessary for preparation of applicant's case.



Sec. 2610.108  Rulemaking on maximum rate for attorney fees.

    (a) If warranted by an increase in the cost of living or by special 
circumstances (such as limited availability of attorneys qualified to 
handle certain types of proceedings), the Office may adopt regulations 
providing that attorney fees may be awarded at a rate higher than $75.00 
per hour in some or all of the types of proceedings covered by this 
part. The Office will conduct any rulemaking proceedings for this 
purpose under the informal rulemaking procedures of the Administrative 
Procedure Act, 5 U.S.C. 553.
    (b) Any person may file with the Office a petition for rulemaking to 
increase the maximum rate for attorney fees as provided in 5 U.S.C. 
504(b)(1)(A)(ii). The petition should identify the rate the petitioner 
believes the Office should establish and the types of proceedings in 
which the rate should be used. It should also explain fully the reasons 
why the higher rate is warranted. The Office will respond to the 
petition within 60 days after it is filed, by initiating a rulemaking 
proceeding, denying the petition, or taking other appropriate action.



Sec. 2610.109  Awards against other agencies.

    If an applicant is entitled to an award because it prevails over 
another agency of the United States that participates in a proceeding 
before the Office of Government Ethics and takes a position that is not 
substantially justified, the award or an appropriate portion of the 
award shall be made against that agency.



             Subpart B--Information Required From Applicants



Sec. 2610.201  Contents of application.

    (a) An application for an award of fees and expenses under the Act 
shall identify the applicant and the proceeding for which an award is 
sought. The application shall show that the applicant has prevailed and 
identify the position of the Office that the applicant alleges was not 
substantially justified. Unless the applicant is an individual, the 
application shall also state the number of employees of the applicant 
and describe briefly the type and purpose of its organization or 
business.
    (b) The application shall also include a statement that the 
applicant's net worth does not exceed $2,000,000 (if an individual) or 
$7,000,000 (for all other applicants, including their affiliates). 
However, an applicant may omit this statement if:
    (1) It attaches a copy of a ruling by the Internal Revenue Service 
that it qualifies as an organization described in section 501(c)(3) of 
the Internal Revenue Code (26 U.S.C. 501(c)(3)) or, in the case of a 
tax-exempt organization not required to obtain a ruling from the 
Internal Revenue Service on its exempt status, a statement that 
describes the basis for the applicant's belief that it qualifies under 
such section; or
    (2) It states that it is a cooperative association as defined in 
section 15(a) of the Agricultural Marketing Act (12 U.S.C. 1141j(a)).
    (c) The application shall state the amount of fees and expenses for 
which an award is sought.
    (d) The application may also include any other matters that the 
applicant wishes the Office to consider in determining whether and in 
what amount an award should be made.
    (e) The application shall be signed by the applicant or an 
authorized officer or attorney of the applicant. It shall also contain 
or be accompanied by a written verification made by the applicant or 
authorized officer or attorney of the applicant under oath or under 
penalty of perjury that the information

[[Page 418]]

provided in the application is true and correct.
    (f) These collections of information are not subject to Office of 
Management and Budget review under the Paperwork Reduction Act (44 
U.S.C. chapter 35) because they are expected to involve nine or fewer 
persons each year. (See 5 CFR 1320.4(a)).

[57 FR 33268, July 28, 1992, as amended at 59 FR 34755, July 7, 1994]



Sec. 2610.202  Net worth exhibit.

    (a) Each applicant, except a qualified tax-exempt organization or 
cooperative association, must provide with its application a detailed 
exhibit showing the net worth of the applicant and any affiliates (as 
defined in Sec. 2610.105(f)) when the underlying adversary adjudication 
was initiated. The exhibit may be in any form convenient to the 
applicant that provides full disclosure of the applicant's and its 
affiliates' assets and liabilities and is sufficient to determine 
whether the applicant qualifies under the standards in this part. The 
adjudicative officer may require an applicant to file additional 
information to determine its eligibility for an award.
    (b) Ordinarily, the net worth exhibit will be included in the public 
record of the proceeding. However, an applicant that objects to public 
disclosure of information in any portion of the exhibit and believes 
there are legal grounds for withholding it from disclosure may submit 
that portion of the exhibit directly to the adjudicative officer in a 
sealed envelope labeled ``Confidential Financial Information,'' 
accompanied by a motion to withhold the information from public 
disclosure. The motion shall describe the information sought to be 
withheld and explain, in detail, why it falls within one or more of the 
specific exemptions from mandatory disclosure under the Freedom of 
Information Act, 5 U.S.C. 552(b)(1)-(9), why public disclosure of the 
information would adversely affect the applicant, and why disclosure is 
not required in the public interest. The material in question shall be 
served on counsel representing the Office, but need not be served on any 
other party to the proceeding, if any. If the adjudicative officer finds 
that the information should not be withheld from disclosure, it shall be 
placed in the public record of the proceeding. Otherwise, any request by 
another party or the public to inspect or copy the exhibit shall be 
resolved in accordance with the Office of Government Ethics' established 
procedures under the Freedom of Information Act.



Sec. 2610.203  Documentation of fees and expenses.

    The application shall be accompanied by full and itemized 
documentation of the fees and expenses, including the cost of any study, 
analysis, engineering report, test, project or similar matter, for which 
an award is sought. A separate itemized statement shall be submitted for 
each professional firm or individual whose services are covered by the 
application, showing the hours spent in connection with the proceeding 
by each individual, a description of the specific services performed, 
the rates at which each fee has been computed, any expenses for which 
reimbursement is sought, the total amount claimed, and the total amount 
paid or payable by the applicant or by any other person or entity for 
the services provided. The adjudicative officer may require the 
applicant to provide vouchers, receipts, logs, or other documentation 
for any fees or expenses claimed, pursuant to Sec. 2610.306.



Sec. 2610.204  When an application may be filed.

    (a) An application may be filed whenever the applicant has prevailed 
in the proceeding or in a significant and discrete substantive portion 
of the proceeding, but in no case later than 30 days after the Office of 
Government Ethics' final disposition of the proceeding.
    (b) For purposes of this rule, final disposition means the date on 
which a decision or order disposing of the merits of the proceeding or 
any other complete resolution of the proceeding, such as a settlement or 
voluntary dismissal, becomes final and unappealable, both within the 
Office and to the courts.
    (c) If review or reconsideration is sought or taken of a decision as 
to which an applicant believes it has prevailed, proceedings for the 
award of

[[Page 419]]

fees shall be stayed pending final disposition of the underlying 
controversy. When the United States appeals the underlying merits of an 
adversary adjudication to a court, no decision on an application for 
fees and other expenses in connection with that adversary adjudication 
shall be made until a final and unreviewable decision is rendered by the 
court on the appeal or until the underlying merits of the case have been 
finally determined pursuant to the appeal.



           Subpart C--Procedures for Considering Applications



Sec. 2610.301  Jurisdiction of adjudicative officer.

    Any provision in the Office's rules and regulations other than this 
part which limits or terminates the jurisdiction of an adjudicative 
officer upon the effective date of his or her decision in the underlying 
proceeding shall not in any way affect his or her jurisdiction to render 
a decision under this part.



Sec. 2610.302  Filing and service of documents.

    Any application for an award or other pleading or document related 
to an application shall be filed and served on all parties to the 
proceeding in the same manner as other pleadings in the proceeding, 
except as provided in Sec. 2610.202(b) for confidential financial 
information.



Sec. 2610.303  Answer to application.

    (a) Within 30 days after service of an application, counsel 
representing the Office may file an answer to the application. Agency 
counsel may request an extension of time for filing. If agency counsel 
fails to answer or otherwise fails to contest or settle the application 
within the 30-day period, the adjudicative officer, upon a satisfactory 
showing of entitlement by the applicant, may make an award for the 
applicant's fees and other expenses under the Act.
    (b) If agency counsel and the applicant believe that the issues in 
the fee application can be settled, they may jointly file a statement of 
their intent to negotiate a settlement. The filing of this statement 
shall extend the time for filing an answer for an additional 30 days, 
and further extensions may be granted for good cause by the adjudicative 
officer upon request by agency counsel and the applicant.
    (c) The answer shall explain in detail any objections to the award 
requested and identify the facts relied on in support of agency 
counsel's position. If the answer is based on any alleged facts not 
already in the record of the proceeding, agency counsel shall include 
with the answer either supporting affidavits or a request for further 
proceedings under Sec. 2610.307.



Sec. 2610.304  Reply.

    Within 15 days after service of an answer, the applicant may file a 
reply. If the reply is based on any alleged facts not already in the 
record of the proceeding, the applicant shall include with the reply 
either supporting affidavits or a request for further proceedings under 
Sec. 2610.307.



Sec. 2610.305  Comments by other parties.

    Any party to a proceeding other than the applicant and agency 
counsel may file comments on an application within 30 days after it is 
served, or on an answer within 15 days after it is served. A commenting 
party may not participate further in proceedings on the application 
unless the adjudicative officer determines that the public interest 
requires such participation in order to permit full exploration of 
matters raised in the comments.



Sec. 2610.306  Settlement.

    The applicant and agency counsel may agree on a proposed settlement 
of the award before final action on the application, either in 
connection with a settlement of the underlying proceeding, or after the 
underlying proceeding has been concluded, in accordance with the 
settlement procedure applicable to the underlying procedure. If an 
eligible prevailing party and agency counsel agree on a proposed 
settlement of an award before an application has been filed, the 
application shall be filed with the proposed settlement.

[[Page 420]]



Sec. 2610.307  Further proceedings.

    (a) Ordinarily, the determination of an award will be made on the 
basis of the written record. However, on request of either the applicant 
or agency counsel, or on his or her own initiative, the adjudicative 
officer may order further proceedings, such as an informal conference, 
oral argument, additional written submissions or, as to issues other 
than substantial justification (such as the applicant's eligibility or 
substantiation of fees and expenses), pertinent discovery or an 
evidentiary hearing. Such further proceedings shall be held only when 
necessary for full and fair resolution of the issues arising from the 
application, and shall be conducted as promptly as possible. Whether or 
not the position of the Office was substantially justified shall be 
determined on the basis of the administrative record, as a whole, which 
is made in the adversary adjudication for which fees and other expenses 
are sought.
    (b) A request that the adjudicative officer order further 
proceedings under this section shall specifically identify the 
information sought or the disputed issues and shall explain why the 
additional proceedings are necessary to resolve the issues.



Sec. 2610.308  Decision.

    The adjudicative officer shall issue an initial decision on the 
application within 30 days after completion of proceedings on the 
application. The decision shall include written findings and conclusions 
on the applicant's eligibility and status as a prevailing party, and an 
explanation of the reasons for any difference between the amount 
requested and the amount awarded. The decision shall also include, if at 
issue, findings on whether the Office's position was substantially 
justified, whether the applicant unduly protracted the proceedings, or 
whether special circumstances make an award unjust. If the applicant has 
sought an award against more than one agency, the decision shall 
allocate responsibility for payment of any award made among the 
agencies, and shall explain the reasons for the allocation made.



Sec. 2610.309  Agency review.

    Within 30 days after issuance of an initial decision under this 
part, either the applicant or agency counsel may seek review of the 
initial decision on the fee application, or the Director (or his or her 
designee) may decide to review the initial decision on his or her own 
initiative, in accordance with the Office's review or appeal procedures 
applicable to the underlying proceeding. If neither the applicant nor 
agency counsel seeks review and the Director (or designee) does not take 
review on his or her own initiative, the initial decision on the 
application shall become a final decision of the Office of Government 
Ethics 30 days after it is issued. Whether to review a decision is a 
matter within the discretion of the Director (or his or her designee, if 
any). If review is taken, the Office will issue a final decision on the 
application or remand the application to the adjudicative officer for 
further proceedings.



Sec. 2610.310  Judicial review.

    Judicial review of final agency decisions on awards may be sought as 
provided in 5 U.S.C. 504(c)(2).



Sec. 2610.311  Payment of award.

    An applicant seeking payment of an award shall submit a copy of the 
Office's final decision granting the award, accompanied by a 
certification that the applicant will not seek review of the decision in 
the United States courts, to the Associate Director for Administration, 
Office of Government Ethics, Suite 500, 1201 New York Avenue NW., 
Washington, DC 20005-3917. The Office will pay the amount awarded to the 
applicant within 60 days, unless judicial review of the award or of the 
underlying decision of the adversary adjudication has been sought by the 
applicant, the Office, or any other party to the proceedings.

[[Page 421]]



                     SUBCHAPTER B--GOVERNMENT ETHICS





PART 2634--EXECUTIVE BRANCH FINANCIAL DISCLOSURE, QUALIFIED TRUSTS, AND CERTIFICATES OF DIVESTITURE--Table of Contents




                      Subpart A--General Provisions

Sec.
2634.101  Authority.
2634.102  Purpose and overview.
2634.103  Executive agency supplemental regulations.
2634.104  Policies.
2634.105  Definitions.

 Subpart B--Persons Required to File Public Financial Disclosure Reports

2634.201  General requirements, filing dates, and extensions.
2634.202  Public filer defined.
2634.203  Persons excluded by rule.
2634.204  Employment of sixty days or less.
2634.205  Special waiver of public reporting requirements.

                     Subpart C--Contents of Reports

2634.301  Interests in property.
2634.302  Income.
2634.303  Purchases, sales, and exchanges.
2634.304  Gifts and reimbursements.
2634.305  Liabilities.
2634.306  Agreements and arrangements.
2634.307  Outside positions.
2634.308  Reporting periods and contents of public financial disclosure 
          reports.
2634.309  Spouses and dependent children.
2634.310  Trusts, estates, and investment funds.
2634.311  Special rules.

                       Subpart D--Qualified Trusts

2634.401  General considerations.
2634.402  Special notice for advice-and-consent nominees.
2634.403  Qualified blind trusts.
2634.404  Qualified diversified trusts.
2634.405  Certification of trusts.
2634.406  Independent trustees.
2634.407  Restrictions on fiduciaries and interested parties.
2634.408  Special filing requirements for qualified trusts.
2634.409  OMB control number.

    Subpart E--Revocation of Trust Certificates and Trustee Approvals

2634.501  Purpose and scope.
2634.502  Definitions.
2634.503  Determinations.

                          Subpart F--Procedure

2634.601  Report forms.
2634.602  Filing of reports.
2634.603  Custody of and access to public reports.
2634.604  Custody of and denial of public access to confidential 
          reports.
2634.605  Review of reports.
2634.606  Updated disclosure of advice-and-consent nominees.
2634.607  Advice and opinions.

                          Subpart G--Penalties

2634.701  Failure to file or falsifying reports.
2634.702  Breaches by trust fiduciaries and interested parties.
2634.703  Misuse of public reports.
2634.704  Late filing fee.

                      Subpart H--Ethics Agreements

2634.801  Scope.
2634.802  Requirements.
2634.803  Notification of ethics agreements.
2634.804  Evidence of compliance.
2634.805  Retention.

          Subpart I--Confidential Financial Disclosure Reports

2634.901  Policies of confidential financial disclosure reporting.
2634.902  Transition to the new confidential financial disclosure 
          reporting system.
2634.903  General requirements, filing dates, and extensions.
2634.904  Confidential filer defined.
2634.905  Exclusions from filing requirements.
2634.906  Review of confidential filer status.
2634.907  Report contents.
2634.908  Reporting periods.
2634.909  Procedures, penalties, and ethics agreements.

                 Subpart J--Certificates of Divestiture

2634.1001  Nonrecognition for sales to comply with conflict of interest 
          requirements; general considerations.
2634.1002  Issuance of Certificates of Divestiture.
2634.1003  Permitted property.
2634.1004  Special rule.

Appendix A to Part 2634--Certificate of Independence
Appendix B to Part 2634--Certificate of Compliance
Appendix C to Part 2634--Privacy Act and Paperwork Reduction Act Notices 
          for Appendixes A and B


[[Page 422]]


    Authority: 5 U.S.C. App. (Ethics in Government Act of 1978); 26 
U.S.C. 1043; E.O. 12674, 54 FR 15159, 3 CFR, 1989 Comp., p. 215, as 
modified by E.O. 12731, 55 FR 42547, 3 CFR, 1990 Comp., p. 306.



                      Subpart A--General Provisions

    Source: 57 FR 11804, Apr. 7, 1992, unless otherwise noted.



Sec. 2634.101  Authority.

    The regulation in this part is issued pursuant to the authority of 
title I of the Ethics in Government Act of 1978, (Pub. L. 95-521, as 
amended) (``the Act'') as modified by the Ethics Reform Act of 1989 
(Pub. L. 101-194, as amended by Pub. L. 101-280) (``the Reform Act''); 
section 502 of the Reform Act; and section 201(d) of Executive Order 
12674 of April 12, 1989, as modified by Executive Order 12731 of October 
17, 1990.

[57 FR 11804, Apr. 7, 1992; 57 FR 21854, May 22, 1992]



Sec. 2634.102  Purpose and overview.

    (a) This regulation supplements and implements title I of the Act 
and section 201(d) of Executive Order 12674 (as modified by Executive 
Order 12731) with respect to executive branch employees, by setting 
forth more specifically the uniform procedures and requirements for 
financial disclosure and for the certification and use of qualified 
blind and diversified trusts. Additionally, this regulation implements 
section 502 of the Reform Act by establishing procedures for executive 
branch personnel to obtain Certificates of Divestiture, which permit 
deferred recognition of capital gain in certain instances.
    (b) The rules in this part govern both the public and confidential 
(nonpublic) financial disclosure systems, except as otherwise indicated. 
Subpart I of this part contains special rules unique to the confidential 
disclosure system.



Sec. 2634.103  Executive agency supplemental regulations.

    (a) This regulation is intended to provide uniformity for executive 
branch financial disclosure systems. However, an agency may, subject to 
the prior written approval of the Office of Government Ethics, issue 
supplemental regulations implementing this part, if necessary to address 
special or unique agency circumstances. Such regulations:
    (1) Shall be consistent with the Act, Executive Orders 12674 and 
12731, and this part; and
     (2) Shall impose no additional reporting requirements on either 
public or confidential filers, unless specifically authorized by the 
Office of Government Ethics as supplemental confidential reporting.

    Note: Supplemental regulations will not be used to satisfy the 
separate requirement of 5 U.S.C. App. (Ethics in Government Act of 1978, 
Section 402(d)(1)) that each agency have established written procedures 
on how to collect, review, evaluate, and, where appropriate, make 
publicly available, financial disclosure statements filed with it.

    (b) Requests for approval of supplemental regulations under 
paragraph (a) of this section shall be submitted in writing to the 
Office of Government Ethics, and shall set forth the agency's need for 
any proposed supplemental reporting requirements. See Sec. 2634.901 (b) 
and (c).
    (c) Agencies should review all of their existing financial 
disclosure regulations to determine which of those regulations must be 
modified or revoked in order to conform with the requirements of this 
part. Any amendatory agency regulations shall be processed in accordance 
with paragraphs (a) and (b) of this section.



Sec. 2634.104  Policies.

    (a) Title I of the Act requires that high-level Federal officials 
disclose publicly their personal financial interests, to ensure 
confidence in the integrity of the Federal Government by demonstrating 
that they are able to carry out their duties without compromising the 
public trust. Title I also authorizes the Office of Government Ethics to 
establish a confidential (nonpublic) financial disclosure system for 
less senior executive branch personnel in certain designated positions, 
to facilitate internal agency conflict-of-interest review.
    (b) Public and confidential financial disclosure serves to prevent 
conflicts of

[[Page 423]]

interest and to identify potential conflicts, by providing for a 
systematic review of the financial interests of both current and 
prospective officers and employees. These reports assist agencies in 
administering their ethics programs and providing counseling to 
employees.
    (c) Financial disclosure reports are not net worth statements. 
Financial disclosure systems seek only the information that the 
President, Congress, or OGE as the supervising ethics office for the 
executive branch has deemed relevant to the administration and 
application of the criminal conflict of interest laws, other statutes on 
ethical conduct or financial interests, and Executive orders or 
regulations on standards of ethical conduct.
    (d) Nothing in the Act or this part requiring reporting of 
information or the filing of any report shall be deemed to authorize 
receipt of income, honoraria, gifts, or reimbursements; holding of 
assets, liabilities, or positions; or involvement in transactions that 
are prohibited by law, Executive order or regulation.
    (e) The provisions of title I of the Act and this part requiring the 
reporting of information shall supersede any general requirement under 
any other provision of law or regulation on the reporting of information 
required for purposes of preventing conflicts of interest or apparent 
conflicts of interest. However, the provisions of title I and this part 
shall not supersede the requirements of 5 U.S.C. 7342 (the Foreign Gifts 
and Decorations Act).
    (f) This regulation is intended to be gender-neutral; therefore, use 
of the terms he, his, and him include she, hers, and her, and vice 
versa.



Sec. 2634.105  Definitions.

    For purposes of this part:
    (a) Act means the Ethics in Government Act of 1978 (Pub. L. 95-521, 
as amended), as modifed by the Ethics Reform Act of 1989 (Pub. L. 101-
194, as amended).
    (b) Agency means any executive agency as defined in 5 U.S.C. 105 
(any executive department, Government corporation, or independent 
establishment in the executive branch), any military department as 
defined in 5 U.S.C. 102, and the Postal Service and the Postal Rate 
Commission. It does not include the General Accounting Office.
    (c) Confidential filer. For the definition of ``confidential 
filer,'' see Sec. 2634.904.
    (d) Dependent child means, when used with respect to any reporting 
individual, any individual who is a son, daughter, stepson, or 
stepdaughter and who:
    (1) Is unmarried, under age 21, and living in the household of the 
reporting individual; or
    (2) Is a dependent of the reporting individual within the meaning of 
section 152 of the Internal Revenue Code of 1986, 26 U.S.C. 152.
    (e) Designated agency ethics official means the primary officer or 
employee who is designated by the head of an agency to administer the 
provisions of title I of the Act and this part within an agency, and in 
his absence the alternate who is designated by the head of the agency. 
The term also includes a delegate of such an official, unless otherwise 
indicated. See subpart B of part 2638 of this chapter on the appointment 
and additional responsibilities of a designated agency ethics official 
and alternate.
    (f) Executive branch means any agency as defined in paragraph (b) of 
this section and any other entity or administrative unit in the 
executive branch.
    (g) Filer is used interchangeably with ``reporting individual,'' and 
may refer to a ``confidential filer'' as defined in paragraph (c) of 
this section, a ``public filer'' as defined in paragraph (m) of this 
section, or a nominee or candidate as described in Sec. 2634.201.
    (h) Gift means a payment, advance, forbearance, rendering, or 
deposit of money, or anything of value, unless consideration of equal or 
greater value is received by the donor, but does not include:
    (1) Bequests and other forms of inheritance;
    (2) Suitable mementos of a function honoring the reporting 
individual;
    (3) Food, lodging, transportation, and entertainment provided by a 
foreign government within a foreign country or by the United States 
Government, the District of Columbia, or a State or local government or 
political subdivision thereof;

[[Page 424]]

    (4) Food and beverages which are not consumed in connection with a 
gift of overnight lodging;
    (5) Communications to the offices of a reporting individual, 
including subscriptions to newspapers and periodicals; or
    (6) Consumable products provided by home-State businesses to the 
offices of the President or Vice President, if those products are 
intended for consumption by persons other than the President or Vice 
President.
    (i) Honorarium means a payment of money or anything of value for an 
appearance, speech, or article. For guidance on the propriety of 
receiving honoraria, see part 2636 of this subchapter.
    (j) Income means all income from whatever source derived. It 
includes but is not limited to the following items: earned income such 
as compensation for services, fees, commissions, salaries, wages and 
similar items; gross income derived from business (and net income if the 
individual elects to include it); gains derived from dealings in 
property including capital gains; interest; rents; royalties; dividends; 
annuities; income from the investment portion of life insurance and 
endowment contracts; pensions; income from discharge of indebtedness; 
distributive share of partnership income; and income from an interest in 
an estate or trust. The term includes all income items, regardless of 
whether they are taxable for Federal income tax purposes, such as 
interest on municipal bonds. Generally, income means ``gross income'' as 
determined in conformity with the Internal Revenue Service principles at 
26 CFR 1.61-1 through 1.61-15 and 1.61-21.
    (k) Personal hospitality of any individual means hospitality 
extended for a nonbusiness purpose by an individual, not a corporation 
or organization, at the personal residence of or on property or 
facilities owned by that individual or his family.
    (l) Personal residence means any real property used exclusively as a 
private dwelling by the reporting individual or his spouse, which is not 
rented out during any portion of the reporting period. The term is not 
limited to one's domicile; there may be more than one personal 
residence, including a vacation home.
    (m) Public filer. For the definition of ``public filer,'' see 
Sec. 2634.202.
    (n) Reimbursement means any payment or other thing of value received 
by the reporting individual (other than gifts, as defined in paragraph 
(h) of this section) to cover travel-related expenses of such 
individual, other than those which are:
    (1) Provided by the United States Government, the District of 
Columbia, or a State or local government or political subdivision 
thereof;
    (2) Required to be reported by the reporting individual under 5 
U.S.C. 7342 (the Foreign Gifts and Decorations Act); or
    (3) Required to be reported under section 304 of the Federal 
Election Campaign Act of 1971 (2 U.S.C. 434) (relating to reports of 
campaign contributions).

    Note: Payments which are not made to the individual are not 
reimbursements for purposes of this part. Thus, payments made to the 
filer's employing agency to cover official travel-related expenses do 
not fit this definition of reimbursement. For example, payments being 
accepted by the agency pursuant to statutory authority such as 31 U.S.C. 
1353, as implemented by 41 CFR part 304-1, are not considered 
reimbursements under this part 2634, because they are not payments 
received by the reporting individual. On the other hand, travel payments 
made to the employee by an outside entity for private travel are 
considered reimbursements for purposes of this part. Likewise, travel 
payments received from certain nonprofit entities under authority of 5 
U.S.C. 4111 are considered reimbursements, even though for official 
travel, since that statute specifies that such payments must be made to 
the individual directly (with prior approval from the individual's 
agency).

    (o) Relative means an individual who is related to the reporting 
individual, as father, mother, son, daughter, brother, sister, uncle, 
aunt, great uncle, great aunt, first cousin, nephew, niece, husband, 
wife, grandfather, grandmother, grandson, granddaughter, father-in-law, 
mother-in-law, son-in-law, daughter-in-law, brother-in-law, sister-in-
law, stepfather, stepmother, stepson, stepdaughter, stepbrother, 
stepsister, half brother, half sister, or who is the grandfather or 
grandmother of the spouse of the reporting individual, and shall be 
deemed

[[Page 425]]

to include the fiance or fiancee of the reporting individual.
    (p) Reporting individual is used interchangeably with ``filer,'' and 
may refer to a ``confidential filer'' as defined in Sec. 2634.904, a 
``public filer'' as defined in Sec. 2634.202, or a nominee or candidate 
as described in Sec. 2634.201.
    (q) Reviewing official means the designated agency ethics official 
or his delegate, the Secretary concerned, the head of the agency, or the 
Director of the Office of Government Ethics.
    (r) Secretary concerned has the meaning set forth in 10 U.S.C. 
101(8) (relating to the Secretaries of the Army, Navy, Air Force, and 
for certain Coast Guard matters, the Secretary of Transportation); and, 
in addition, means:
    (1) The Secretary of Commerce, in matters concerning the National 
Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration;
    (2) The Secretary of Health and Human Services, with respect to 
matters concerning the Public Health Service; and
    (3) The Secretary of State with respect to matters concerning the 
Foreign Service.
    (s) Special Government employee has the meaning given to that term 
by the first sentence of 18 U.S.C. 202(a): an officer or employee of an 
agency who is retained, designated, appointed, or employed to perform 
temporary duties, with or without compensation, for not to exceed 130 
days during any period of 365 consecutive days, either on a full-time or 
intermittent basis.
    (t) Value means a good faith estimate of the fair market value if 
the exact value is neither known nor easily obtainable by the reporting 
individual without undue hardship or expense. In the case of any 
interest in property, see the alternative valuation options in 
Sec. 2634.301(e). For gifts and reimbursements, see Sec. 2634.304(e).

[57 FR 11804, Apr. 7, 1992; 57 FR 21854, May 22, 1992]



 Subpart B--Persons Required to File Public Financial Disclosure Reports

    Source: 57 FR 11806, Apr. 7, 1992, unless otherwise noted.



Sec. 2634.201  General requirements, filing dates, and extensions.

    (a) Incumbents. A public filer as defined in Sec. 2634.202 of this 
subpart who, during any calendar year, performs the duties of his 
position or office, as described in that section, for a period in excess 
of 60 days shall file a public financial disclosure report containing 
the information prescribed in subpart C of this part, on or before May 
15 of the succeeding year.

     Example 1. An SES official commences performing the duties of his 
position on November 15. He will not be required to file an incumbent 
report for that calendar year.
     Example 2. An employee, who is classified at GS-15, is assigned to 
fill an SES position in an acting capacity, from October 15 through 
December 31. Having performed the duties of a covered position for more 
than 60 days during the calendar year, he will be required to file an 
incumbent report.

    (b) New entrants. (1) Within 30 days of assuming a public filer 
position or office described in Sec. 2634.202 of this subpart, an 
individual shall file a public financial disclosure report containing 
the information prescribed in subpart C of this part.
    (2) However, no report shall be required if the individual:
    (i) Has, within 30 days prior to assuming such position, left 
another position or office for which a public financial disclosure 
report under the Act was required to be filed; or
    (ii) Has already filed such a report as a nominee or candidate for 
the position.

    Example: Y, an employee of the Treasury Department who has 
previously filed reports in accordance with the rules of this section, 
terminates employment with that Department on January 12, 1991, and 
begins employment with the Commerce Department on February 10, 1991, in 
a Senior Executive Service position. Y is not a new entrant since he has 
assumed a position described in Sec. 2634.202 of this subpart within 
thirty days of leaving another position so described. Accordingly, he 
need not file a new report with the Commerce Department.

    Note: While Y did not have to file a new entrant report with the 
Commerce Department, that Department should request a copy of the last 
report which he filed with the Treasury Department, so that Commerce 
could determine whether or not there would be any conflicts or potential 
conflicts in connection with Y's new employment. Additionally, Y will 
have to file an incumbent report

[[Page 426]]

covering the 1990 calendar year, in accordance with paragraph (a) of 
this section, due not later than May 15, 1991, with Commerce, which 
should provide a copy to Treasury so that both may review it.

    (c) Nominees. (1) At any time after a public announcement by the 
President or President-elect of his intention to nominate an individual 
to an executive branch position, appointment to which requires the 
advice and consent of the Senate, such individual may, and in any event 
within five days after the transmittal of the nomination to the Senate 
shall, file a public financial disclosure report containing the 
information prescribed in subpart C of this part.
    (2) This requirement shall not apply to any individual who is 
nominated to a position as:
    (i) An officer of the uniformed services; or
    (ii) A Foreign Service Officer.

    Note: Although the statute, 5 U.S.C. app. (Ethics in Government Act 
of 1978, section 101(b)(1)), exempts uniformed service officers only if 
they are nominated for appointment to a grade or rank for which the pay 
grade is 0-6 or below, the Senate confirmation committees have adopted a 
practice of exempting all uniformed service officers, unless otherwise 
specified by the committee assigned.

    (3) Section 2634.605(c) provides expedited procedures in the case of 
individuals described in paragraph (c)(1) of this section. Those 
individuals referred to in paragraph (c)(2) of this section as being 
exempt from filing nominee reports shall file new entrant reports, if 
required by paragraph (b) of this section.
    (d) Candidates. A candidate (as defined in section 301 of the 
Federal Election Campaign Act of 1971, 2 U.S.C. 431) for nomination or 
election to the office of President or Vice President (other than an 
incumbent) shall file a public financial disclosure report containing 
the information prescribed in subpart C of this part, in accordance with 
the following:
    (1) Within 30 days of becoming a candidate or on or before May 15 of 
the calendar year in which the individual becomes a candidate, whichever 
is later, but in no event later than 30 days before the election; and
    (2) On or before May 15 of each successive year an individual 
continues to be a candidate. However, in any calendar year in which an 
individual continues to be a candidate but all elections relating to 
such candidacy were held in prior calendar years, the individual need 
not file a report unless he becomes a candidate for a vacancy during 
that year.

    Example. P became a candidate for President in January 1991. P will 
be required to file a public financial disclosure report on or before 
May 15, 1991. If P had become a candidate on June 1, 1991, he would have 
been required to file a disclosure report within 30 days of that date.

    (e) Termination of employment. (1) On or before the thirtieth day 
after termination of employment from a public filer position or office 
described in Sec. 2634.202 of this subpart, an individual shall file a 
public financial disclosure report containing the information prescribed 
in subpart C of this part.
    (2) However, if within 30 days of such termination the individual 
assumes employment in another position or office for which a public 
report under the Act is required to be filed, no report shall be 
required by the provisions of this paragraph. See the related Example in 
paragraph (b) of this section.
    (f) Extensions. The reviewing official may, for good cause shown, 
grant to any public filer or class thereof an extension of time for 
filing which shall not exceed 45 days. The Director of the Office of 
Government Ethics, for good cause shown, may grant an additional 
extension of time which shall not exceed 45 days. The employee shall set 
forth specific reasons for such additional extension, which shall be 
forwarded to the Director through the reviewing official. The reviewing 
official shall also submit his comments on the request. (For extensions 
on confidential financial disclosure reports, see Sec. 2634.903(d).)

[57 FR 11806, Apr. 7, 1992; 57 FR 21854, May 22, 1992]



Sec. 2634.202  Public filer defined.

    The term public filer includes:
    (a) The President;
    (b) The Vice President;
    (c) Each officer or employee in the executive branch, including a 
special Government employee as defined in 18

[[Page 427]]

U.S.C. 202(a), whose position is classified above GS-15 of the General 
Schedule prescribed by 5 U.S.C. 5332, or the rate of basic pay for which 
is fixed, other than under the General Schedule, at a rate equal to or 
greater than 120% of the minimum rate of basic pay for GS-15 of the 
General Schedule; each member of a uniformed service whose pay grade is 
at or in excess of 0-7 under 37 U.S.C. 201; and each officer or employee 
in any other position determined by the Director of the Office of 
Government Ethics to be of equal classification;
    (d) Each employee who is an administrative law judge appointed 
pursuant to 5 U.S.C. 3105;
    (e) Any employee not otherwise described in paragraph (c) of this 
section who is in a position in the executive branch which is excepted 
from the competitive service by reason of being of a confidential or 
policy-making character, unless excluded by virtue of a determination 
under Sec. 2634.203 of this subpart;
    (f) The Postmaster General, the Deputy Postmaster General, each 
Governor of the Board of Governors of the United States Postal Service 
and each officer or employee of the United States Postal Service or 
Postal Rate Commission whose basic rate of pay is equal to or greater 
than 120% of the minimum rate of basic pay for GS-15 of the General 
Schedule;
    (g) The Director of the Office of Government Ethics and each 
agency's primary designated agency ethics official;
    (h) Any civilian employee not otherwise described in paragraph (c) 
of this section who is employed in the Executive Office of the President 
(other than a special Government employee, as defined in 18 U.S.C. 
202(a)) and holds a commission of appointment from the President; and
    (i) Anyone whose employment in a position or office described in 
paragraphs (a) through (h) of this section has terminated, but who has 
not yet satisfied the filing requirements of Sec. 2634.201(e) of this 
subpart.

    Note: References in this section and in Secs. 2634.203 and 2634.904 
to position classifications have been adjusted to reflect elimination of 
General Schedule classifications GS-16, GS-17, and GS-18 by the Federal 
Employees Pay Comparability Act of 1990, as incorporated in section 529 
of Public Law 101-509.



Sec. 2634.203  Persons excluded by rule.

    (a) In general. Any individual or group of individuals described in 
Sec. 2634.202(e) of this subpart (relating to positions of a 
confidential or policy-making character) may be excluded by rule from 
the public reporting requirements of this subpart when the Director of 
the Office of Government Ethics determines, in his sole discretion, that 
such exclusion would not affect adversely the integrity of the 
Government or the public's confidence in the integrity of the 
Government.
    (b) Exclusion determination. The determination required by paragraph 
(a) of this section has been made for the following group of individuals 
who, therefore, may be excluded from the public reporting requirements 
of this subpart, pursuant to the procedures in paragraph (c) of this 
section: Individuals in any position classified at GS-15 of the General 
Schedule or below, or the rate of basic pay for which is less than 120% 
of the minimum rate of basic pay fixed for GS-15, who have no policy-
making role with respect to agency programs. Such individuals may 
include chauffeurs, private secretaries, stenographers, and others 
holding positions of a similar nature whose exclusion would be 
consistent with the basic criterion set forth in paragraph (a) of this 
section. See Sec. 2634.904(d) for possible coverage by confidential 
disclosure rules.
    (c) Procedure. (1) The exclusion of any individual from reporting 
requirements pursuant to this section will be effective as of the time 
the employing agency files with the Office of Government Ethics a list 
and description of each position for which exclusion is sought, and the 
identity of any incumbent employees in those positions. Exclusions 
should be requested prior to due dates for the reports which such 
employees would otherwise have to file.
    (2) If the Office of Government Ethics finds that one or more 
positions has been improperly excluded, it will advise the agency and 
set a date for the filing of the report.

[57 FR 11806, Apr. 7, 1992; 57 FR 21854, May 22, 1992, as amended at 58 
FR 38912, July 21, 1993]

[[Page 428]]



Sec. 2634.204  Employment of sixty days or less.

    (a) In general. Any public filer or nominee who, as determined by 
the official specified in this paragraph, is not reasonably expected to 
perform the duties of an office or position described in 
Sec. 2634.201(c) or Sec. 2634.202 of this subpart for more than 60 days 
in any calendar year shall not be subject to the reporting requirements 
of Sec. 2634.201 (b), (c), or (e) of this subpart. This determination 
will be made by:
    (1) The designated agency ethics official or Secretary concerned, in 
a case to which the provisions of Sec. 2634.201 (b) or (e) of this 
subpart (relating to new entrant and termination reports) would 
otherwise apply; or
    (2) The Director of the Office of Government Ethics, in a case to 
which the provisions of Sec. 2634.201(c) of this subpart (relating to 
nominee reports) would otherwise apply.
    (b) Alternative reporting. Any new entrant who is exempted from 
filing a public financial report under paragraph (a) of this section and 
who is a special Government employee is subject to confidential 
reporting under Sec. 2634.903(b). See Sec. 2634.904(b).
    (c) Exception. If the public filer or nominee actually performs the 
duties of an office or position referred to in paragraph (a) of this 
section for more than 60 days in a calendar year, the public report 
otherwise required by:
    (1) Section 2634.201 (b) or (c) of this subpart (relating to new 
entrant and nominee reports) shall be filed within 15 calendar days 
after the sixtieth day of duty; and
    (2) Section 2634.201(e) of this subpart (relating to termination 
reports) shall be filed as provided in that paragraph.



Sec. 2634.205  Special waiver of public reporting requirements.

    (a) General rule. In unusual circumstances, the Director of the 
Office of Government Ethics may grant a request for a waiver of the 
public reporting requirements under this subpart for an individual who 
is reasonably expected to perform, or has performed, the duties of an 
office or position for fewer than 130 days in a calendar year, but only 
if the Director determines that:
    (1) The individual is a special Government employee, as defined in 
18 U.S.C. 202(a), who performs temporary duties either on a full-time or 
intermittent basis;
    (2) The individual is able to provide services specially needed by 
the Government;
    (3) It is unlikely that the individual's outside employment or 
financial interests will create a conflict of interest; and
    (4) Public financial disclosure by the individual is not necessary 
under the circumstances.
    (b) Procedure. (1) Requests for waivers must be submitted to the 
Office of Government Ethics, via the requester's agency, within 10 days 
after an employee learns that he will hold a position which requires 
reporting and that he will serve in that position for more than 60 days 
in any calendar year, or upon serving in such a position for more than 
60 days, whichever is earlier.
    (2) The request shall consist of:
    (i) A cover letter which identifies the individual and his position, 
states the approximate number of days in a calendar year which he 
expects to serve in that position, and requests a waiver of public 
reporting requirements under this section;
    (ii) An enclosure which states the reasons for the individual's 
belief that the conditions of paragraphs (a) (1) through (4) of this 
section are met in the particular case; and
    (iii) The report otherwise required by this subpart B, as a factual 
basis for the determination required by this section. The report shall 
bear the legend at the top of page 1: ``CONFIDENTIAL: WAIVER REQUEST 
PENDING PURSUANT TO 5 CFR 2634.205.''
    (3) The agency in which the individual serves shall advise the 
Office of Government Ethics as to the justification for a waiver.
    (4) In the event a waiver is granted, the report shall not be 
subject to the public disclosure requirements of Sec. 2634.603; however, 
the waiver request cover letter shall be subject to those requirements. 
In the event that a waiver is not granted, the confidential legend shall 
be removed from the report,

[[Page 429]]

and the report shall be subject to public disclosure; however, the 
waiver request cover letter shall not then be subject to public 
disclosure.

(Approved by the Office of Management and Budget under control number 
3209-0004)

[57 FR 11806, Apr. 7, 1992, as amended at 59 FR 34756, July 7, 1994]



                     Subpart C--Contents of Reports

    Source: 57 FR 11808, Apr. 7, 1992, unless otherwise noted.



Sec. 2634.301  Interests in property.

    (a) In general. Each financial disclosure report filed pursuant to 
this part, whether public or confidential, shall include a brief 
description of any interest in property held by the filer at the end of 
the reporting period in a trade or business, or for investment or the 
production of income, having a fair market value in excess of $1,000. In 
the case of public financial disclosure reports, the report shall 
designate the category of value of the property in accordance with 
paragraph (d) of this section. Each item of real and personal property 
shall be disclosed separately. Note that for Individual Retirement 
Accounts (IRA's), brokerage accounts, trusts, mutual or pension funds 
and other entities with portfolio holdings, each underlying asset must 
be separately disclosed, unless the entity qualifies for special 
treatment under Sec. 2634.310 of this subpart.
    (b) Types of property reportable. Subject to the exceptions in 
paragraph (c) of this section, examples of the types of property 
required to be reported include, but are not limited to:
    (1) Real estate;
    (2) Stocks, bonds, securities, and futures contracts;
    (3) Livestock owned for commercial purposes;
    (4) Commercial crops, either standing or held in storage;
    (5) Antiques or art held for resale or investment;
    (6) Beneficial interests in trusts and estates;
    (7) Deposits in banks or other financial institutions;
    (8) Pensions and annuities;
    (9) Mutual funds;
    (10) Accounts or other funds receivable; and
    (11) Capital accounts or other asset ownership in a business.
    (c) Exceptions. The following property interests are exempt from the 
reporting requirements under paragraphs (a) and (b) of this section:
    (1) Any personal liability owed to the filer, spouse, or dependent 
child by a spouse, or by a parent, brother, sister, or child of the 
filer, spouse, or dependent child;
    (2) Personal savings accounts (defined as any form of deposit in a 
bank, savings and loan association, credit union, or similar financial 
institution) in a single financial institution or holdings in a single 
money market mutual fund, aggregating $5,000 or less in that institution 
or fund;
    (3) A personal residence of the filer or spouse, as defined in 
Sec. 2634.105(l); and
    (4) Financial interests in any retirement system of the United 
States (including the Thrift Savings Plan) or under the Social Security 
Act.
    (d) Valuation categories. The valuation categories specified for 
property items on public financial disclosure reports are as follows:
    (1) Not more than $15,000;
    (2) Greater than $15,000 but not more than $50,000;
    (3) Greater than $50,000 but not more than $100,000;
    (4) Greater than $100,000 but not more than $250,000;
    (5) Greater than $250,000 but not more than $500,000;
    (6) Greater than $500,000 but not more than $1,00,000; and
    (7) Greater than $1,000,000.
    (e) Valuation of interests in property. A good faith estimate of the 
fair market value of interests in property may be made in any case in 
which the exact value cannot be obtained without undue hardship or 
expense to the filer. Fair market value may also be determined by:
    (1) The purchase price (in which case, the filer should indicate 
date of purchase);
    (2) Recent appraisal;
    (3) The assessed value for tax purposes (adjusted to reflect the 
market

[[Page 430]]

value of the property used for the assessment if the assessed value is 
computed at less than 100 percent of that market value);
    (4) The year-end book value of nonpublicly traded stock, the year-
end exchange value of corporate stock, or the face value of corporate 
bonds or comparable securities;
    (5) The net worth of a business partnership;
    (6) The equity value of an individually owned business; or
    (7) Any other recognized indication of value (such as the last sale 
on a stock exchange).

    Example 1. An official has a $4,000 savings account in Bank A. His 
spouse has a $2,500 certificate of deposit issued by Bank B and his 
dependent daughter has a $200 savings account in Bank C. The official 
does not have to disclose the deposits, as the total value of the 
deposits in any one bank does not exceed $5,000. Note, however, that the 
source, and if he is a public filer the amount, of interest income from 
any bank is required to be reported under Sec. 2634.302(b) of this 
subpart if it exceeds the reporting threshold for income. See 
Sec. 2634.309 of this subpart for disclosure coverage of spouses and 
dependent children.
    Example 2. Public filer R has a collection of post-impressionist 
paintings which have been carefully selected over the years. From time 
to time, as new paintings have been acquired to add to the collection, R 
has made sales of both less desirable works from his collection and 
paintings of various schools which he acquired through inheritance. 
Under these circumstances, R must report the value of all the paintings 
he retains as interests in property pursuant to this section, as well as 
income from the sales of paintings pursuant to Sec. 2634.302(b) of this 
subpart. Recurrent sales from a collection indicate that the collection 
is being held for investment or the production of income.
    Example 3. A reporting individual has investments which her broker 
holds as an IRA and invests in stocks, bonds, and mutual funds. Each 
such asset having a fair market value in excess of $1,000 at the close 
of the reporting period must be separately listed, and also the value 
must be shown if she is a public filer. See Sec. 2634.311(c) of this 
subpart for attachment of brokerage statements in lieu of listing, in 
the event of extensive holdings. Note that for a mutual fund held in 
this IRA investment account, its underlying assets must also be 
separately detailed, unless it qualifies as an excepted investment fund, 
pursuant to Sec. 2634.310 of this subpart.

[57 FR 11808, Apr. 7, 1992; 57 FR 21854, May 22, 1992]



Sec. 2634.302  Income.

    (a) Noninvestment income. (1) Each financial disclosure report filed 
pursuant to this part, whether public or confidential, shall disclose 
the source, type, and in the case of public financial disclosure reports 
the actual amount or value, of earned or other noninvestment income in 
excess of $200 from any one source which is received by the filer or has 
accrued to his benefit during the reporting period, including:
    (i) Salaries, fees, commissions, wages and any other compensation 
for personal services (other than from United States Government 
employment);
    (ii) Retirement benefits (other than from United States Government 
employment, including the Thrift Savings Plan, or from Social Security);
    (iii) Any honoraria, and the date services were provided, including 
payments made or to be made to charitable organizations on behalf of the 
filer in lieu of honoraria; and
    (iv) Any other noninvestment income, such as prizes, awards, or 
discharge of indebtedness.

    Note: In calculating the amount of an honorarium, subtract any 
actual and necessary travel expenses incurred by the recipient and one 
relative. For example, if such expenses are paid or reimbursed by the 
honorarium source, they shall not be counted as part of the honorarium 
payment; if the expenses are paid or reimbursed by the individual 
receiving the honorarium, the amount of honorarium shall be reduced by 
the amount of such expenses.

    Example 1. An official is a participant in a retirement plan of 
Coastal Airlines. Pursuant to such plan, the official and his spouse 
receive passage on some Coastal flights without charge, and they receive 
passage on other flights at a discounted fare. The difference between 
what Coastal charges members of the public generally and what the 
official and his spouse are charged for a particular flight is deemed 
income in-kind and must be disclosed by this reporting individual if it 
exceeds the $200 threshold.
    Example 2. An official serves on the board of directors at a bank, 
for which he receives a $500 fee each calendar quarter. He also receives 
an annual fee of $1,500 for service as trustee of a private trust. In 
both instances, such fees received or earned during the reporting period 
must be disclosed, and if he is a public filer the actual amount must be 
shown.

    (2) In the case of payments in lieu of honoraria made on or after 
January 1,

[[Page 431]]

1991, the individual shall also file a separate confidential report of 
charitable recipients, in accordance with part 2636 of this chapter.
    (b) Investment income. Each financial disclosure report filed 
pursuant to this part, whether public or confidential, shall disclose:
    (1) The source and type of investment income, characterized as 
dividends, rents, interest, capital gains, or income from qualified or 
excepted trusts or excepted investment funds (see Sec. 2634.310 of this 
subpart), which is received by the filer or accrued to his benefit 
during the reporting period, and which exceeds $200 in amount or value 
from any one source. Examples include, but are not limited to, income 
derived from real estate, collectible items, stocks, bonds, notes, 
copyrights, pensions, mutual funds, the investment portion of life 
insurance contracts, loans, and personal savings accounts (as defined in 
Sec. 2634.301(c)(2) of this subpart). Note that for entities with 
portfolio holdings, such as Individual Retirement Accounts (IRA's), 
brokerage accounts, trusts, and mutual or pension funds, each underlying 
source of income must be separately disclosed, unless the entity 
qualifies for special treatment under Sec. 2634.310 of this subpart. For 
public financial disclosure reports, the amount or value of income from 
each reported source shall also be disclosed and categorized in 
accordance with the following table:
    (i) Not more than $1,000;
    (ii) Greater than $1,000 but not more than $2,500;
    (iii) Greater than $2,500 but not more than $5,000;
    (iv) Greater than $5,000 but not more than $15,000;
    (v) Greater than $15,000 but not more than $50,000;
    (vi) Greater than $50,000 but not more than $100,000;
    (vii) Greater than $100,000 but not more than $1,000,000; and
    (viii) Greater than $1,000,000.
    (2) The source, type, and in the case of public financial disclosure 
reports the actual amount or value, of gross income from a business, 
distributive share of a partnership, joint business venture income, 
payments from an estate or an annuity or endowment contract, or any 
other items of income not otherwise covered by paragraphs (a) or (b)(1) 
of this section which are received by the filer or accrued to his 
benefit during the reporting period and which exceed $200 from any one 
source.

    Example 1. An official rents out a portion of his residence. He 
receives rental income of $600 from one individual for four months and 
$1,200 from another individual for the remaining eight months of the 
year covered by his incumbent financial disclosure report. He must 
identify the property, specify the type of income (rent), and if he is a 
public filer indicate the category of the total amount of rent received. 
(He must also disclose the asset information required by Sec. 2634.301 
of this subpart.)
    Example 2. A reporting individual has three savings accounts with 
Bank A. One is in his name and earned $85 in interest during the 
reporting period. One is in a joint account with his spouse and earned 
$120 in interest. One is in his name and his dependent daughter's name 
and earned $35 in interest. Since the aggregate interest income from 
this source exceeds $200, the official must disclose the name of the 
bank, the type of income, and if he is a public filer, the category of 
the total amount of interest earned from all three accounts. (He must 
also disclose the accounts as assets under Sec. 2634.301 of this subpart 
if, in the aggregate, they total more than $5,000 in that bank.)
    Example 3. An official has an ownership interest in a fast-food 
restaurant, from which she receives $10,000 in annual income. She must 
specify on her financial disclosure report the type of income, such as 
partnership distributive share or gross business income, and if she is a 
public filer indicate the actual amount of such income. (Additionally, 
she must describe the business and categorize its asset value, pursuant 
to Sec. 2634.301 of this subpart).

[57 FR 11808, Apr. 7, 1992; 57 FR 21854, May 22, 1992]



Sec. 2634.303  Purchases, sales, and exchanges.

    (a) In general. Except as indicated in Sec. 2634.308(b) of this 
subpart, each public financial disclosure report filed pursuant to 
subpart B of this part shall include a brief description, the date and 
value (using the categories of value in Sec. 2634.301(d) of this 
subpart) of any purchase, sale, or exchange by the filer during the 
reporting period, in which the amount involved in the transaction 
exceeds $1,000:
    (1) Of real property, other than a personal residence of the filer 
or spouse,

[[Page 432]]

as defined in Sec. 2634.105(l) of this part; and
    (2) Of stocks, bonds, commodity futures, mutual fund shares, and 
other forms of securities.
    (b) Exceptions. (1) Any transaction solely by and between the 
reporting individual, his spouse, and dependent children need not be 
reported under paragraph (a) of this section.
    (2) Transactions involving Treasury bills, notes, and bonds; money 
market mutual funds or accounts; and personal savings accounts (as 
defined in Sec. 2634.301(c)(2) of this subpart) need not be reported 
when occurring at rates, terms, and conditions available generally to 
members of the public. Likewise, transactions involving portfolio 
holdings of trusts and investment funds described in Sec. 2634.310 (b) 
and (c) of this subpart need not be reported.
    (3) Any transaction which occurred at a time when the reporting 
individual was not a Federal Government officer or employee need not be 
reported under paragraph (a) of this section.

    Example 1. An official sells her personal residence in Virginia for 
$100,000 and purchases a personal residence in the District of Columbia 
for $200,000. She need not report the sale of the Virginia residence or 
the purchase of the D.C. residence.
    Example 2. An official sells his beach home in Maryland for $50,000. 
Because he has rented it out for one month every summer, it does not 
qualify as a personal residence. He must disclose the sale under this 
section and any capital gain over $200 realized on the sale under 
Sec. 2634.302 of this subpart.
    Example 3. An official sells a ranch to his dependent daughter. The 
official need not report the sale because it is a transaction between 
the reporting individual and a dependent child; however, any capital 
gain, except for that portion attributable to a personal residence, is 
required to be reported under Sec. 2634.302 of this subpart.
    Example 4. An official sells an apartment building and realizes a 
loss of $100,000. He must report the sale of the building if the sale 
price of the property exceeds $1,000; however, he need not report 
anything under Sec. 2634.302 of this subpart, as the sale did not result 
in a capital gain.

[57 FR 11808, Apr. 7, 1992; 57 FR 21854, May 22, 1992]



Sec. 2634.304  Gifts and reimbursements.

    (a) Gifts. Except as indicated in Secs. 2634.308(b) and 2634.907(a), 
each financial disclosure report filed pursuant to this part, whether 
public or confidential, shall contain the identity of the source, a 
brief description, and in the case of public financial disclosure 
reports the value, of all gifts aggregating $250 or more in value which 
are received by the filer during the reporting period from any one 
source. For in-kind travel-related gifts, include a travel itinerary, 
dates, and nature of expenses provided.
    (b) Reimbursements. Except as indicated in Secs. 2634.308(b) and 
2634.907(a), each financial disclosure report filed pursuant to this 
part, whether public or confidential, shall contain the identity of the 
source, a brief description (including a travel itinerary, dates, and 
the nature of expenses provided), and in the case of public financial 
disclosure reports the value, of any travel-related reimbursements 
aggregating $250 or more in value, which are received by the filer 
during the reporting period from any one source.

    Note: The $250 threshold in paragraphs (a) and (b) of this section 
will increase if the definition of minimal value under the Foreign Gifts 
and Decorations Act ever exceeds $250. Section 314(a) of Public Law 102-
90 established the threshold for financial disclosure of gifts and 
reimbursements as ``more than the minimal value as established by 
section 7342(a)(5) of title 5, United States Code, or $250, whichever is 
greater.''

    (c) Exclusions. Reports need not contain any information about gifts 
and reimbursements to which the provisions of this section would 
otherwise apply which are received from relatives (see Sec. 2634.105(o)) 
or during a period in which the filer was not an officer or employee of 
the Federal Government. Additionally, any food, lodging, or 
entertainment received as ``personal hospitality of any individual,'' as 
defined in Sec. 2634.105(k), need not be reported. See also exclusions 
specified in the definitions of gift and reimbursement, at 
Sec. 2634.105(h) and (n).
    (d) Aggregation exception. Any gift or reimbursement with a fair 
market value of $100 or less need not be aggregated for purposes of the 
reporting rules of this section. However, the acceptance of gifts, 
whether or not reportable, is subject to the restrictions imposed by 
Executive Order 12674, as modified by Executive Order 12731, and

[[Page 433]]

the implementing regulations on standards of ethical conduct.

    Note: The aggregation exception for gifts or reimbursements with a 
fair market value of $100 or less will increase if the definition of 
minimal value under the Foreign Gifts and Decorations Act ever exceeds 
$250. Section 314(a) of Public Law 102-90 established the aggregation 
exception for ``any gift with a fair market value of $100 or less, as 
adjusted at the same time and by the same percentage as the minimal 
value is adjusted'' above $250 pursuant to 5 U.S.C. 7342(a)(5).

    Example 1. An official accepts a print, a pen and pencil set, and a 
letter opener from a community service organization he has worked with 
solely in his private capacity. He determines, in accordance with 
paragraph (e) of this section, that these gifts are valued as follows:
Gift 1--Print: $150
Gift 2--Pen and pencil set: $105
Gift 3--Letter opener: $20
    The official must disclose Gifts 1 and 2, since together they 
aggregate $250 or more in value from the same source. Gift 3 need not be 
aggregated, because its value does not exceed $100.
    Example 2. An official receives the following gifts from a single 
source:
1. Dinner for two at a local restaurant--$120.
2. Round-trip taxi fare to meet donor at the restaurant--$25.
3. Dinner at donor's city residence--(value uncertain).
4. Round-trip airline transportation and hotel accommodations to visit 
Epcot Center in Florida-$400.
5. Weekend at donor's country home, including duck hunting and tennis 
match--(value uncertain).
    The official need only disclose Gift 4. Gift 1 falls within the 
exception in Sec. 2634.105(h) for food and beverages not consumed in 
connection with a gift of overnight lodging. Gifts 3 and 5 need not be 
disclosed because they fall within the exception for personal 
hospitality of an individual. Gift 2 need not be aggregated and 
reported, because its value does not exceed $100.
    Example 3. An official receives free tickets from an outside source 
for himself and his spouse to attend an awards banquet at a local club. 
The value of each ticket is $130. Even though this is a gift which 
exceeds the $250 threshold amount for disclosure, the official need not 
report it, because of the exception in Sec. 2634.105(h) for food and 
beverages not consumed in connection with a gift of overnight lodging.

    Note: Prior to accepting this gift of tickets, the individual should 
consult ethics officials at his agency to determine whether standards of 
conduct rules will permit acceptance, depending on whether or not the 
donor is a prohibited source and the exact nature of the event.

    Example 4. An official is asked to speak at an out-of-town meeting 
on a matter which is unrelated to her official duties and her agency. 
The round-trip airfare exceeds $250. If the official pays for the ticket 
and is then reimbursed by the organization to which she spoke, she must 
disclose this reimbursement under paragraph (b) of this section. If the 
organization simply provided the ticket, that must be disclosed as a 
gift under paragraph (a) of this section.

    (e) Valuation of gifts and reimbursements. The value to be assigned 
to a gift or reimbursement is its fair market value. For most 
reimbursements, this will be the amount actually received. For gifts, 
the value should be determined in one of the following manners:
    (1) If the gift has been newly purchased or is readily available in 
the market, the value shall be its retail price. The filer need not 
contact the donor, but may contact a retail establishment selling 
similar items to determine the present cost in the market.
    (2) If the item is not readily available in the market, such as a 
piece of art, a handmade item, or an antique, the filer may make a good 
faith estimate of the value of the item.
    (3) The term readily available in the market means that an item 
generally is available for retail purchase in the metropolitan area 
nearest to the official's residence.

    Example 1. Items such as a pen and pencil set, letter opener, 
leather case or engraved pen are generally available in the market and 
can be determined by contacting stores which sell like items and 
ascertaining the retail price of each.
    Example 2. The value of a dinner at a restaurant can either be the 
actual cost of the reported dinners or the approximate value, based on 
the posted fare of the restaurant. The filer need not ask to see the 
check.

    Note: The market value of a ticket entitling the holder to attend an 
event which includes food, refreshments, entertainment or other benefits 
is the face value of the ticket, which may exceed the actual cost of the 
food and other benefits.

    (f) Waiver rule in the case of certain gifts--(1) In general. In 
unusual cases, a gift as defined in Sec. 2634.105(h) need not be 
aggregated under this section by public filers, if the Director of the 
Office of Government Ethics receives a

[[Page 434]]

written request for and issues a waiver, after determining that:
    (i) Both the basis of the relationship between the grantor and the 
grantee and the motivation behind the gift are entirely personal; and
    (ii) No countervailing public purpose requires public disclosure of 
the nature, source, and value of the gift.
    (2) Public disclosure of waiver request. If approved, the cover 
letter requesting the waiver shall be subject to the public disclosure 
requirements in Sec. 2634.603 of this part.
    (3) Procedure. A public filer seeking a waiver under this paragraph 
shall submit a request to the Office of Government Ethics, through his 
agency. The request shall be made by a cover letter which identifies the 
filer and his position and which states that a waiver is requested under 
this section. On an enclosure to the cover letter, the filer shall set 
forth:
    (i) The identity and occupation of the donor;
    (ii) A statement that the relationship between the donor and the 
filer is entirely personal in nature; and
    (iii) A statement that neither the donor nor any person or 
organization who employs the donor or whom the donor represents, 
conducts or seeks business with, engages in activities regulated by, or 
is directly affected by action taken by, the agency employing the filer. 
If the proceding statement cannot be made without qualification, the 
filer shall indicate those qualifications, along with a statement 
demonstrating that he plays no role in any official action which might 
directly affect the donor or any organization for which the donor works 
or serves as a representative.

[57 FR 11808, Apr. 7, 1992; 57 FR 62605, Dec. 31, 1992]



Sec. 2634.305  Liabilities.

    (a) In general. Each financial disclosure report filed pursuant to 
this part, whether public or confidential, shall identify and include a 
brief description of the filer's liabilities over $10,000 owed to any 
creditor at any time during the reporting period, and the name of the 
creditors to whom such liabilities are owed. For public financial 
disclosure reports, the report shall designate the category of value of 
the liabilities in accordance with Sec. 2634.301(d) of this subpart, 
using the greatest amount owed to the creditor during the period.
    (b) Exceptions. The following are not required to be reported under 
paragraph (a) of this section:
    (1) Personal liabilities owed to a spouse or to the parent, brother, 
sister, or child of the filer, spouse, or dependent child;
    (2) Any mortgage secured by a personal residence of the filer or his 
spouse;
    (3) Any loan secured by a personal motor vehicle, household 
furniture, or appliances, provided that the loan does not exceed the 
purchase price of the item which secures it; and
    (4) Any revolving charge account with an outstanding liability which 
does not exceed $10,000 at the close of the reporting period.

    Example. An incumbent official has the following debts outstanding 
at the end of the calendar year:
    1. Mortgage on personal residence--$80,000.
    2. Mortgage on rental property--$50,000.
    3. VISA Card--$1,000.
    4. Master Card--$11,000.
    5. Loan balance of $15,000, secured by family automobile purchased 
for $16,200.
    6. Loan balance of $10,500, secured by antique furniture purchased 
for $8,000.
    7. Loan from parents--$20,000.
    The loans indicated in items 2, 4, and 6 must be disclosed. Loan 1 
is exempt from disclosure under paragraph (b)(2) of this section because 
it is secured by the personal residence. Loan 3 need not be disclosed 
under paragraph (b)(4) of this section because it is considered to be a 
revolving charge account with an outstanding liability that does not 
exceed $10,000 at the end of the reporting period. Loan 5 need not be 
disclosed under paragraph (b)(3) of this section because it is secured 
by a personal motor vehicle which was purchased for more than the value 
of the loan. Loan 7 need not be disclosed because the creditors are 
persons specified in paragraph (b)(1) of this section.



Sec. 2634.306   Agreements and arrangements.

    Each financial disclosure report filed pursuant to this part, 
whether public or confidential, shall identify the parties to and the 
date of, and shall briefly describe the terms of, any agreement or 
arrangement of the filer in existence

[[Page 435]]

at any time during the reporting period with respect to:
    (a) Future employment;
    (b) A leave of absence from employment during the period of the 
reporting individual's Government service;
    (c) Continuation of payments by a former employer other than the 
United States Government; and
    (d) Continuing participation in an employee welfare or benefit plan 
maintained by a former employer.



Sec. 2634.307   Outside positions.

    (a) In general. Each financial disclosure report filed pursuant to 
this part, whether public or confidential, shall identify all positions 
held at any time by the filer during the reporting period, as an 
officer, director, trustee, general partner, proprietor, representative, 
executor, employee, or consultant of any corporation, company, firm, 
partnership, trust, or other business enterprise, any nonprofit 
organization, any labor organization, or any educational or other 
institution other than the United States.
    (b) Exceptions. The following need not be reported under paragraph 
(a) of this section:
    (1) Positions held in any religious, social, fraternal, or political 
entity; and
    (2) Positions solely of an honorary nature, such as those with an 
emeritus designation.

[57 FR 11808, Apr. 7, 1992; 57 FR 21854, May 22, 1992]



Sec. 2634.308   Reporting periods and contents of public financial disclosure reports.

    (a) Incumbents. Each public financial disclosure report filed 
pursuant to Sec. 2634.201(a) shall include on the standard form 
prescribed by the Office of Government Ethics consistent with subpart F 
of this part and in accordance with instructions issued by that Office, 
a full and complete statement of the information required to be reported 
according to the provisions of subpart C of this part, for the preceding 
calendar year (or for any portion of that year not already covered by a 
new entrant or nominee report filed under paragraph (b) or (c) of 
Sec. 2634.201), and, in the case of Secs. 2634.306 and 2634.307, for the 
additional period up to the date of filing.
    (b) New entrants, nominees, and candidates. Each public financial 
disclosure report filed pursuant to Sec. 2634.201(b), (c), or (d) shall 
include, on the standard form prescribed by the Office of Government 
Ethics consistent with subpart F of this part and in accordance with 
instructions issued by that Office, a full and complete statement of the 
information required to be reported according to the provisions of 
subpart C of this part, except for Sec. 2634.303 (relating to purchases, 
sales, and exchanges of certain property) and Sec. 2634.304 (relating to 
gifts and reimbursements). The following special rules apply:
    (1) Interests in property. For purposes of Sec. 2634.301 of this 
subpart, the report shall include all interests in property specified by 
that section which are held on or after a date which is fewer than 
thirty-one days before the date on which the report is filed.
    (2) Income. For puposes of Sec. 2634.302 of this subpart, the report 
shall include all income items specified by that section which are 
received or accrued during the period beginning on January 1 of the 
preceding calendar year and ending on the date on which the report is 
filed, except as otherwise provided by Sec. 2634.606 relating to updated 
disclosure for nominees.
    (3) Liabilities. For purposes of Sec. 2634.305 of this subpart, the 
report shall include all liabilities specified by that section which are 
owed during the period beginning on January 1 of the preceding calendar 
year and ending fewer than thirty-one days before the date on which the 
report is filed.
    (4) Agreements and arrangements. For purposes of Sec. 2634.306 of 
this subpart, the report shall include only those agreements and 
arrangements which still exist at the time of filing.
    (5) Outside positions. For purposes of Sec. 2634.307 of this 
subpart, the report shall include all such positions held during the 
preceding two calendar years and the current calendar year up to the 
date of filing.
    (6) Certain sources of compensation. Except in the case of the 
President, the Vice President, or a candidate referred to in 
Sec. 2634.201(d), the report shall also

[[Page 436]]

identify the filer's sources of compensation which exceed $5,000 during 
either of the preceding two calendar years or during the current 
calendar year up to the date of filing, and shall briefly describe the 
nature of the duties performed or services rendered by the reporting 
individual for each such source of compensation. Information need not be 
reported, however, which is considered confidential as a result of a 
privileged relationship, established by law, between the reporting 
individual and any person. The report also need not contain any 
information with respect to any person for whom services were provided 
by any firm or association of which the reporting individual was a 
member, partner, or employee, unless such individual was directly 
involved in the provision of such services.

    Example. A nominee who is a partner or employee of a law firm and 
who has worked on a matter involving a client from which the firm 
received over $5,000 in fees during a calendar year must report the name 
of the client only if the value of the services rendered by the nominee 
exceeded $5,000. The name of the client would not normally be considered 
confidential.

    (c) Termination reports. Each public financial disclosure report 
filed under Sec. 2634.201(e) shall include, on the standard form 
prescribed by the Office of Government Ethics consistent with subpart F 
of this part and in accordance with instructions issued by that Office, 
a full and complete statement of the information required to be reported 
according to the provisions of subpart C of this part, for the period 
beginning on the last date covered by the most recent public financial 
disclosure report filed by the reporting individual under this part, or 
on January 1 of the preceding calendar year, whichever is later, and 
ending on the date on which the filer's employment terminates.



Sec. 2634.309  Spouses and dependent children.

    (a) Special disclosure rules. Each report required by the provisions 
of either subpart B or subpart I of this part shall also include the 
following information with respect to the spouse or dependent children 
of the reporting individual:
    (1) Income. For purposes of Sec. 2634.302 of this subpart:
    (i) With respect to a spouse, the source but not the amount of items 
of earned income (other than honoraria) which exceed $1,000 from any one 
source; and if items of earned income are derived from a spouse's self-
employment in a business or profession, the nature of the business or 
profession but not the amount of the earned income;
    (ii) With respect to a spouse, the source, and for a public 
financial disclosure report the actual amount or value, of any honoraria 
received by or accrued to the spouse (or payments made or to be made to 
charity on the spouse's behalf in lieu of honoraria) which exceed $200 
from any one source, and the date on which the services were provided; 
and
    (iii) With respect to a spouse or dependent child, the type and 
source, and for a public financial disclosure report the amount or value 
(category or actual amount, in accordance with Sec. 2634.302 of this 
subpart), of all other income exceeding $200 from any one source, such 
as investment income from interests in property (if the property itself 
is reportable according to Sec. 2634.301 of this subpart).

    Example 1. The spouse of a filer is employed as a teller at Bank X 
and earns $23,000 per year. The report must disclose that the spouse is 
employed by Bank X. The amount of the spouse's earnings need not be 
disclosed, either on a public or confidential financial disclosure 
report.
    Example 2. The spouse of a reporting individual is self-employed as 
a pediatrician. The report must disclose that he is a physician, but 
need not disclose the amount of income, either on a public or 
confidential financial disclosure report.

    (2) Gifts and reimbursements. For purposes of Sec. 2634.304 of this 
subpart, gifts and reimbursements received by a spouse or dependent 
child which are not received totally independent of their relationship 
to the filer.
    (3) Interests in property, transactions, and liabilities. For 
purposes of Secs. 2634.301, 2634.303 (applicable only to public filers), 
and 2634.305 of this subpart, all information concerning property 
interests, transactions, or liabilities referred to by those sections of 
a spouse or dependent child, unless the

[[Page 437]]

following three conditions are satisfied:
    (i) The filer certifies that the item represents the spouse's or 
dependent child's sole financial interest or responsibility, and that 
the filer has no specific knowledge regarding that item;
    (ii) The item is not in any way, past or present, derived from the 
income, assets or activities of the filer; and
    (iii) The filer neither derives, nor expects to derive, any 
financial or economic benefit from the item.

    Note: One who prepares a joint tax return with his spouse will 
normally derive a financial or economic benefit from assets held by the 
spouse, and will also be charged with knowledge of such items; therefore 
he could not avail himself of this exception. Likewise, a trust for the 
education of one's minor child normally will convey a financial benefit 
to the parent. If so, the assets of the trust would be reportable on a 
financial disclosure statement.

    (b) Exception. For reports filed as a new entrant, nominee, or 
candidate under Sec. 2634.201(b), (c), or (d), or as a new entrant under 
Sec. 2634.908(b), no information regarding gifts and reimbursements or 
transactions is required for a spouse or dependent child.
    (c) Divorce and separation. A reporting individual need not report 
any information about:
    (1) A spouse living separate and apart from the reporting individual 
with the intention of terminating the marriage or providing for 
permanent separation;
    (2) A former spouse or a spouse from whom the reporting individual 
is permanently separated; or
    (3) Any income or obligations of the reporting individual arising 
from dissolution of the reporting individual's marriage or permanent 
separation from a spouse.



Sec. 2634.310  Trusts, estates, and investment funds.

    (a) In general. (1) Except as otherwise provided in this section, 
each financial disclosure report shall include the information required 
by this subpart or subpart I of this part about the holdings of and 
income from the holdings of any trust, estate, investment fund or other 
financial arrangement from which income is received by, or with respect 
to which a beneficial interest in principal or income is held by, the 
filer, his spouse, or dependent child.
    (2) No information, however, is required about a nonvested 
beneficial interest in the principal or income of an estate or trust. A 
vested interest is a present right or title to property, which carries 
with it an existing right of alienation, even though the right to 
possession or enjoyment may be postponed to some uncertain time in the 
future. This includes a future interest when one has a right, defeasible 
or indefeasible, to the immediate possession or enjoyment of the 
property, upon the ceasing of another's interest. Accordingly, it is not 
the uncertainty of the time of enjoyment in the future, but the 
uncertainty of the right of enjoyment (title and alienation), which 
differentiates a ``vested'' and a ``nonvested'' interest.
    (b) Qualified trusts and excepted trusts. (1) A filer should not 
report information about the holdings of or income from holdings of, any 
qualified blind trust (as defined in Sec. 2634.403) or any qualified 
diversified trust (as defined in Sec. 2634.404). For a qualified blind 
trust, a public financial disclosure report shall disclose the category 
of the aggregate amount of the trust's income attributable to the 
beneficial interest of the filer, his spouse, or dependent child in the 
trust. For a qualified diversified trust, a public financial disclosure 
report shall disclose the category of the aggregate amount of income 
with respect to such a trust which is actually received by the filer, 
his spouse, or dependent child, or applied for the benefit of any of 
them.
    (2) In the case of an excepted trust, a filer should indicate the 
general nature of its holdings, to the extent known, but will not 
otherwise need to report information about the trust's holdings or 
income from holdings. The category of the aggregate amount of income 
from an excepted trust which is received by or accrued to the benefit of 
the filer, his spouse, or dependent child shall be reported on public 
financial disclosure reports. For purposes of this part, the term 
``excepted trust'' means a trust:
    (i) Which was not created directly by the filer, spouse, or 
dependent child; and

[[Page 438]]

    (ii) The holdings or sources of income of which the filer, spouse, 
or dependent child have no specific knowledge through a report, 
disclosure, or constructive receipt, whether intended or inadvertent.
    (c) Excepted investment funds. (1) No information is required under 
paragraph (a) of this section about the underlying holdings of or income 
from underlying holdings of an excepted investment fund as defined in 
paragraph (c)(2) of this section, except that the fund itself shall be 
identified as an interest in property and/or a source of income. Public 
financial disclosure reports must also disclose the category of value of 
the fund interest held; aggregate amount of income from the fund which 
is received by or accrued to the benefit of the filer, his spouse, or 
dependent child; and value of any transactions involving shares or units 
of the fund.
    (2) For purposes of financial disclosure reports filed under the 
provisions of this part, an ``excepted investment fund'' means a widely 
held investment fund (whether a mutual fund, regulated investment 
company, common trust fund maintained by a bank or similar financial 
institution, pension or deferred compensation plan, or any other 
investment fund), if:
    (i)(A) The fund is publicly traded or available; or
    (B) The assets of the fund are widely diversified; and
    (ii) The filer neither exercises control over nor has the ability to 
exercise control over the financial interests held by the fund.
    (3) A fund is widely diversified if it holds no more than 5% of the 
value of its portfolio in the securities of any one issuer (other than 
the United States Government) and no more than 20% in any particular 
economic or geographic sector.

[57 FR 11808, Apr. 7, 1992; 57 FR 21854, May 22, 1992]



Sec. 2634.311  Special rules.

    (a) Political campaign funds. Political campaign funds, including 
campaign receipts and expenditures, need not be included in any report 
filed under this part. However, if the individual has authority to 
exercise control over the fund's assets for personal use rather than 
campaign or political purposes, that portion of the fund over which such 
authority exists must be reported.
    (b) Certificates of Divestiture. Each public financial disclosure 
report required by the provisions of this part shall identify those 
sales which have occurred pursuant to a Certificate of Divestiture 
during the period covered by such report. See subpart J of this part for 
the rules relating to the issuance of such Certificates.
    (c) Reporting standards. (1) In lieu of entering data on a schedule 
of the report form designated by the Office of Government Ethics, a 
filer may attach to the reporting form a copy of a brokerage report, 
bank statement, or other material, which, in a clear and concise 
fashion, readily discloses all information which the filer would 
otherwise have been required to enter on the schedule.
    (2) In lieu of reporting the category of amount or value of any item 
listed in any public financial disclosure report filed pursuant to this 
part, a filer may report the actual dollar amount of such item.



                       Subpart D--Qualified Trusts

    Source: 57 FR 11814, Apr. 7, 1992, unless otherwise noted.



Sec. 2634.401  General considerations.

    (a) Statutory standards governing qualified trusts--(1) Types of 
qualified trusts and their relationshp to conflict of interest laws. The 
Ethics in Government Act of 1978 created, and provided special public 
financial disclosure requirements for, two types of qualified trusts, It 
was envisioned that the use of those trusts by Government employees 
would reduce the real and apparent conflicts of interest which might 
arise between the financial interests held by those employees (or 
attributable to them) and their official responsibilities.
    (i) Interested party means a Government employee, his spouse, any 
minor or dependent child, and their representatives in any case in which 
the employee, spouse, or child has a beneficial interest in the 
principal or income of a

[[Page 439]]

trust proposed for certification or certified.
    (ii) Qualified blind trust. The most universally adaptable qualified 
trust is the qualified blind trust, defined in Sec. 2634.403 of this 
subpart. A trust is considered to be ``blind'' only with regard to those 
trust assets about which no interested party has knowledge. When an 
interested party originally places assets in trust, that party still 
possesses knowledge about those assets. Those original assets remain 
financial interests of the Government official for purposes of 18 U.S.C. 
208 or for any other Federal conflict of interest statutes or 
regulations, until the trustee notifies the official either that a 
particular original asset has been disposed of or that the asset's value 
is less than $1000. If the trustee sells or disposes of original trust 
assets and then uses the proceeds to acquire new trust holdings, or if 
the trustee reinvests trust income to acquire new trust holdings, a 
``blind'' trust exists for those new holdings because the interested 
parties possess no information about the newly acquired assets. The 
holdings of a ``blind'' trust are not classified as financial interests 
of the Government official for purposes of 18 U.S.C. 208 or for any 
other Federal conflict of interest statutes or regulations.
    (iii) Qualified diversified trust. The second type of qualified 
trust established by the Act is the qualified diversified trust, defined 
in Sec. 2634.404 of this subpart. Among other requirements, a trust is 
considered to be ``diversified'' if it can be demonstrated, to the 
satisfaction of the Director of the Office of Government Ethics, 
pursuant to Sec. 2634.404(b), that the trust assets comprise a widely 
diversified portfolio of readily marketable securities, and do not 
initially include the securities of any entities having substantial 
activities in the same area as the Government official's primary area of 
responsiblity. The trust holdings are never classified as financial 
interests of the Government official for purposes of 18 U.S.C. 208 or 
for any other Federal conflict of interest statutes or regulations.
    (2) Independence of trustees and other fiduciaries. Under the Act 
and Sec. 2634.406 of this subpart, those entities that are authorized by 
the Act or by the trust instrument to manage the assets of, and to 
control and administer, either a qualified blind or a qualified 
diversified trust must be independent, in fact and in appearance, from 
those parties who hold beneficial interests in the trust.
    (i) The independence of trustees is facilitated by limiting the 
entities which may serve in this capacity to certain financial 
institutions.
    (ii) In addition to the trustee, the Act extends the independence 
requirement to other entities which manage trust assets or administer 
the trust, including officers and employees of the trustee, any other 
entity designated in the trust instrument to perform fiduciary duties on 
behalf of the trust, and the officers and employees of any other entity 
that is involved in the management or control of the trust, such as 
investment counsel, investment advisers, accountants, or tax preparers 
and their assistants.
    (iii) Those entities governed by the Act will be considered 
``independent'' for purposes of this subpart if, among other 
requirements, the entities are not affiliated with, associated with, 
related to, or subject to the control or influence of, any of the 
parties that hold a beneficial interest in the trust.
    (3) Communications betweeen trust administrators and interested 
parties. For purposes of Federal ethics laws, the most important feature 
of those qualified trusts that are recognized under the Act is the 
separation which those trusts foster between parties with beneficial 
interests in the trust and entities which manage trust assets and 
administer the trust instrument. Once a qualified trust has been 
certified, the beneficiaries and their representatives are expressly 
prohibited from commenting directly to the trustee about matters 
relating to asset management and trust holdings, or to trust 
administration and activities. Likewise, the trustee must make 
investment decisions for the trust without consulting, or being 
controlled by, interested parties, and the trustee is prohibited from 
informing interested parties directly about trust activities, except to 
the limited extent required under the Act. The Act requires the trustee 
to provide

[[Page 440]]

trust beneficiaries with certain standard periodic reports. Beyond 
receipt of these standard reports, trust beneficiaries are prohibited 
from actively attempting to obtain, and from passively but knowningly 
obtaining, directly or indirectly, any additional information which the 
Act prohibits beneficiaries from obtaining, including information about 
trust holdings and activities. Finally, instruments creating qualified 
trusts must require interested parties and trustees to make all 
permissible communications relating to the trust and to its assets in 
writing, with the prior written approval of the Director of the Office 
of Government Ethics. Sections 2634.403-2634.405 and 2634.407 of this 
subpart contain standards implementing these restrictions.
    (4) Trust and beneficiary taxes. For tax purposes, because a trust 
is a separate entity distinct from its beneficiaries, a trustee must 
file an annual fiduciary tax return for the trust (IRS Form 1041). In 
addition, the trust beneficiaries must report income received from the 
trust on their individual tax returns. The Act establishes special 
filing procedures to be used by the trustee and trust beneficiaries in 
order to maintain the substantive separation between trust beneficiaries 
and trust administration. For beneficiaries of qualified blind trusts, 
the trustee sends a Schedule K-1 form summarizing trust income in 
appropriate categories to enable the beneficiaries to file individual 
tax returns. For beneficiaries of qualified diversified trusts, the 
statute requires the trustee to file the individual tax returns on 
behalf of the trust beneficiaries. The beneficiaries must transmit to 
the trustee materials concerning taxable transactions and occurrences 
outside of the trust, pursuant to the requirements in each trust 
instrument which detail this procedure.
    (b) Policy considerations and objectives underlying the qualified 
trust program. (1) Prior to enactment of the Act's qualified trust 
provisions, there was no accepted definition of a properly formulated 
blind or diversified trust. However, there was general agreement that 
the use of blind or diversified trusts often reduced the potential for 
conflicts of interest. If Government employees do not know the exact 
identity, nature, and extent of their financial interests, then the 
employees cannot be influenced in the performance of their official 
duties by those interests. Their official actions, under these 
circumstances, should be free from collateral attack arising out of real 
or apparent conflicts of interest. Therefore, the most significant 
objective to be achieved through the use of a blind trust is the lack of 
knowledge, or actual ``blindness,'' by a Government official with 
respect to the holdings in his trust. The same goal may be achieved 
through the use of a diversified trust, if that trust holds securities 
from different issuers in different economic sectors, and if the trust's 
interest in any one issuer is limited. Under these conditions, it is 
unlikely that official actions taken by the Government employee who 
holds a beneficial interest in the trust would affect individual 
securities to such a degree that the overall value of the trust's 
portfolio would be materially enhanced. Thus, wide diversification is 
tantamount to actual ``blindness.''
    (2) Because, for the trusts certified under the provisions of this 
subpart D, the Government official is or will become blind to the 
identity and nature of his actual trust holdings, the reporting 
requirements of section 102(f)(1) of the Act and subparts C or I of this 
part, which generally require Government filers to disclose the contents 
of a trust's portfolio, do not apply. See Sec. 2634.310 of this part. 
Further, as discussed in paragraphs (a)(1) (ii) and (iii) of this 
section, 18 U.S.C. 208 and other Federal conflict of interest laws do 
not generally apply to the holdings of qualified trusts, except in the 
case of the original assets transferred to a qualified blind trust until 
notice that a particular original asset has been disposed of or that the 
asset's value is below $1,000.
    (c) Qualified trust provisions of the regulation. This subpart D 
prescribes standards which implement the statutory requirements and 
policy objectives underlying the Act's qualified blind and diversified 
trust provisions. The Office of Government Ethics will apply the 
standards of this subpart to specific cases.

[[Page 441]]

    (1) Classification as a qualified trust. In order to be classified 
as a qualified trust for purposes of the Act, blind and diversified 
trusts must satisfy the following three requirements:
    (i) The trust document must conform to announced standards. As 
provided under Sec. 2634.403(b) for blind trusts and Sec. 2634.404(c) 
for diversified trusts, the trust document must conform to the model 
trust instruments which are drafted and distributed by the Office of 
Government Ethics for use by interested parties when drafting their 
trust arrangements. Prior to certifying a trust under Sec. 2634.405 of 
this subpart, as discussed in paragraph (c)(1)(iii) of this section, the 
Office of Government Ethics must approve every proposed trust document. 
In addition to other required provisions, the trust instrument must 
contain language which implements the communications restrictions 
discussed in paragraph (a)(3) of this section. By requiring interested 
parties, trustees, and other signatories to the trust instrument to 
include communications provisions, these regulations compel the 
signatories diligently to safeguard against inadvertent disclosures of 
precluded information to the interested parties.
    (ii) Truly independent fiduciaries. As discussed in paragraph (a)(2) 
of this section, the fiduciaries in charge of administering and managing 
the assets of a qualified trust must be actually and apparently 
independent of the parties who hold beneficial interests in the trust, 
and of their representatives. To ensure such independence, Sec. 2634.406 
of this subpart limits the range of permissible fiduciaries. Before a 
trust may be classified as a qualified blind or diversified trust, the 
Director of the Office of Government Ethics must conclude, in his 
judgment, that the trust fiduciaries named in the trust instrument 
satisfy the standards for independence contained in Sec. 2634.406 of 
this subpart.
    (iii) Certification by the Office of Government Ethics. Before a 
trust may be classified as a qualified blind or diversified trust, the 
Director of the Office of Government Ethics must certify, in accordance 
with the standards and procedures established in Sec. 2634.405 of this 
subpart, that the trust meets the requirements of section 102(f) of the 
Act and of this subpart, that certification is in the public interest, 
and that certification is consistent with the policies established by 
these provisions and by other applicable laws and regulations. This 
certification is essential so that the Office can ensure, in advance 
that the proposed trust arrangement satisfies the established standards.
    (2) Certification of pre-existing trusts. Normally, those trusts 
certified as qualified trusts by the Director of the Office of 
Government Ethics under Sec. 2634.405 of this subpart are newly created 
trust arrangements, formulated in accordance with established standards 
by representatives of the interested parties in consultation with the 
Office of Government Ethics. However, the Director may certify a pre-
existing trust as a qualified blind or qualified diversified trust under 
Sec. 2634.403 (blind) or Sec. 2634.404 (diversified) if he determines 
that such action is appropriate and is sufficient to ensure compliance 
with applicable laws and regulations. The pre-existing trust proposed 
for certification must meet both the generally applicable trust 
requirements, and several special requirements contained in 
Sec. 2634.405(c) of this subpart, including that all of the parties to 
the original trust agree to administer the trust in accordance with the 
requirements of this subpart. The pre-existing trust may be certified 
only if all of the conditions of this subpart are fulfilled, and if the 
requisite confidentially can be assured with respect to the trust.
    (3) Reporting requirements. Once a trust is classified as a 
qualified blind or qualified diversified trust in the manner discussed 
under paragraph (c)(1) of this section, Sec. 2634.310(b) applies less 
inclusive financial disclosure requirements to the trust assets.
    (4) Sanctions and enforcement. Section 2634.702 provides civil 
sanctions which apply to any Government official or trust fiduciary who 
violates his obligations under the Act, its implementing regulations, or 
the trust instrument. In addition, the Office of Government Ethics has 
authority under the Act to impose appropriate administrative or other 
sanctions. Subpart E of this part delineates the procedure which must be 
followed with respect to the revocation

[[Page 442]]

of trust certificates and trustee approvals.
    (d) Drafting and implementation of the qualified trust instrument. 
(1) The overview of the qualified trust program contained in this 
section cannot anticipate every concern or question, or discuss every 
scenario which might arise in the course of formulating and implementing 
a qualified trust instrument. The Office of Government Ethics should be 
contacted by an interested party or by his professional representatives 
if the Act, the implementing regulations, and the trust instrument 
itself do not provide guidance in a particular instance.
    (2) No trust will be considered ``qualified'' for purposes of the 
Act until the Office of Government Ethics certifies the trust prior to 
execution. The Office of Government Ethics makes available to attorneys 
model trust agreements for use in drafting proposed trust agreements 
which are to be submitted to the Office for certification. Attorneys are 
cautioned to consider each model provision in light of the circumstances 
presented by the particular case, and to modify provisions to the extent 
that such modifications are necessary or appropriate. Attorneys should 
not rely uncritically upon the language of the model agreements. 
However, many of the model provisions implement the minimum requirements 
which must be contained in any trust instrument certified by the Office. 
Certificates of Independence for fiduciaries must be executed in the 
form indicated in appendix A of this part.
    (3) The Office of Government Ethics does not draft trust instruments 
for use in individual cases. However, its staff is always willing to 
cooperate with attorneys and to make its experience available to them in 
developing appropriate trust instruments which satisfy applicable 
Federal laws, Executive orders and regulations. If the use of a 
qualified trust is contemplated in a particular case, it is strongly 
recommended that the interested parties or their representatives contact 
the Office of Government Ethics as early as possible.
    (4) Prior to trust certification, prospective trustees or their 
representatives should schedule with the staff of the Office of 
Government Ethics an appointment for an orientation to the specialized 
requirements and procedures which have been established by the Act and 
the regulations with respect to qualified trust administration.



Sec. 2634.402  Special notice for advice-and-consent nominees.

    (a) In general. In any case in which the establishment of a 
qualified diversified trust is contemplated with respect to a reporting 
individual whose nomination is being considered by a Senate committee, 
that individual shall inform the committee of the intention to establish 
a qualified diversified trust at the time of filing a financial 
disclosure report with the committee.
    (b) Applicability. The rule of this section is not applicable to 
members of the uniformed services or Foreign Service officers. The 
special notice requirement of this section shall not preclude an 
individual from seeking the certification of a qualified blind trust or 
qualified diversified trust after the Senate has given its advice and 
consent to a nomination.



Sec. 2634.403  Qualified blind trusts.

    (a) Definition. A qualified blind trust is a trust in which the 
filer, his spouse, or his minor or dependent child has a beneficial 
interest, which is certified pursuant to Sec. 2634.405 of this subpart 
by the Director of the Office of Government Ethics, and which includes 
in the trust instrument in the provisions required by paragraph (b) of 
this section, and has an independent trustee as defined in Sec. 2634.406 
of this subpart. See section 102(f)(3) of the Act.
    (b) Required provisions. The instrument which establishes a blind 
trust must adhere substantively to model drafts circulated by the Office 
of Government Ethics, and must provide that:
    (1) The primary purpose of the blind trust is to confer on the 
independent trustee and any other designated fiduciary the sole 
responsibility to administer the trust and to manage trust assets 
without the participation by, or the knowledge of, any interested party. 
This includes the duty to decide when and to what extent the original 
assets of the trust are to be sold or disposed

[[Page 443]]

of and in what investments the proceeds of sale are to be reinvested;
    (2) The trustee and any other designated fiduciary in the exercise 
of their authority and discretion to manage and control the assets of 
the trust shall not consult or notify any interested party;
    (3) None of the assets initially placed in the trust's portfolio 
shall include assets the holding of which by any interested party would 
be prohibited by the Act, by the implementing regulations, or by any 
other applicable Federal law, Executive order, or regulation;
    (4) Any portfolio asset transferred to the trust by an interested 
party is free of any restriction with respect to its transfer or sale, 
except as fully described in schedules attached to the trust instrument, 
and as approved by the Director of the Office of Government Ethics;
    (5) During the term of the trust, the interested parties shall not 
pledge, mortgage, or otherwise encumber their interests in the property 
held by the trust;
    (6) The trustee shall promptly notify the filer and the Director of 
the Office of Government Ethics when any particular asset transferred to 
the trust by an interested party has been completely disposed of or when 
the value of that asset is reduced to less than $1,000;
    (7) The trustee or his designee shall prepare the trust's income tax 
return. Under no circumstances shall the trustee or any other designated 
fiduciary disclose publicly, or to any interested party, the trust's tax 
return, any information relating to that return except for a summary of 
trust income in categories necessary for an interested party to complete 
his individual tax return, or any information which might specifically 
identify current trust assets, or those assets which have been sold or 
disposed of from trust holdings, other than information relating to the 
sale or disposition of original trust assets under paragraph (b)(6) of 
this section;
    (8) An interested party shall not receive any report on trust 
holdings and sources of trust income, except that the trustee shall, 
without identifying specifically any asset or holding:
    (i) Report quarterly the aggregate market value of the assets 
representing the interested party's interest in the trust;
    (ii) Report the net income or loss of the trust, and any other 
information necessary to enable the interested party to complete his 
individual income tax return; and
    (iii) Report annually, for purposes of section 102(a)(1)(B) of the 
Act, the aggregate amount of the trust's income attributable to the 
interested party's beneficial interest in the trust, categorized in 
accordance with Sec. 2634.302(b);
    (9) There shall be no direct or indirect communication with respect 
to the trust between an interested party and the independent trustee or 
any other designated fiduciary with respect to the trust unless:
    (i) Such communication is in writing, with the prior written 
approval of the Director of the Office of Government Ethics and is filed 
with the Director in accordance with Sec. 2634.408(c) of this subpart; 
and
    (ii) It relates only:
    (A) To the request for a distribution from the trust, which does not 
specify whether the distribution shall be made in cash or in kind;
    (B) To the general financial interest and needs of the interested 
party including, but not limited to, a preference for maximizing current 
income or long-term capital appreciation;
    (C) To notification of the trustee by the interested party that the 
interested party is prohibited by subsequently applicable statute, 
Executive order, or regulation from holding an asset, and to directions 
to the trustee that the trust shall not hold that asset; or
    (D) To instructions to the trustee to sell all of an asset which was 
initially placed in the trust by an interested party, and which, in the 
determination of the filer creates a real or apparent conflict due to 
duties subsequently assumed by the filer (but the filer is not required 
to give such directions);

    Note: By the terms of paragraph (3)(C)(vi) of section 102(f) of the 
Act, communications which solely consist of requests for distributions 
of cash or other unspecified assets of the trust are not required to be 
in writing.

[[Page 444]]

Further, there is no statutory mechanism for pre-screening of proposed 
communications. However, experience of the Office of Government Ethics 
over the years dictates the necessity of prohibiting any oral 
communications between the trustee and an interested party with respect 
to the trust and pre-screening all proposed written communications, to 
prevent inadvertent prohibited communications and preserve confidence in 
the Federal qualified trust program. Accordingly, under its authority 
pursuant to paragraph (3)(D) of section 102(f) of the Act, the Office of 
Government Ethics will not approve proposed trust instruments which do 
not contain language conforming to this policy, except in unusual cases 
where compelling necessity is demonstrated to the Director, in his sole 
discretion.

    (10) The interested parties shall not take any action to obtain, and 
shall take reasonable action to avoid receiving, information with 
respect to the holdings and the sources of income of the trust, 
including a copy of any trust tax return filed by the trustee, or any 
information relating to that return, except for the reports and 
information specified in paragraphs (b)(6) and (b)(8) of this section;
    (11) An independent trustee and any other designated fiduciary shall 
file, with the Director of the Office of Government Ethics by May 15th 
following any calendar year during which the trust was in existence, a 
properly executed Certificate of Compliance in the form prescribed in 
appendix B to this part. In addition, the independent trustee and such 
fiduciary shall maintain and make available for inspection by the Office 
of Government Ethics, as it may from time to time direct, the trust's 
books of account and other records and copies of the trust's tax returns 
for each taxable year of the trust;
    (12) Neither the trustee nor any other designated fiduciary shall 
knowingly and willfully, or negligently:
    (i) Disclose to any interested party any information regarding the 
trust that may not be disclosed pursuant to title I of the Act, the 
implementing regulations, or the trust instrument;
    (ii) Acquire any holding the ownership of which is prohibited by, or 
not in accordance with, the terms of the trust instrument;
    (iii) Solicit advice from any interested party with respect to the 
trust, if such solicitation is prohibited by title I of the Act, the 
implementing regulations, or the trust instrument; or
    (iv) Fail to file any document required by title I of the Act or by 
this part;
    (13) An interested party shall not knowingly and willfully, or 
negligently:
    (i) Solicit or receive any information regarding the trust that may 
not be disclosed pursuant to title I of the Act, the implementing 
regulations, or the trust instrument; or
    (ii) Fail to file any document required by title I of the Act or by 
this part;
    (14) No person, including investment counsel, investment advisers, 
accountants, and tax preparers, may be employed or consulted by an 
independent trustee or any other designated fiduciary to assist in any 
capacity to administer the trust or to manage and control the trust 
assets, unless the following four conditions are met:
    (i) When any interested party learns about such employment or 
consultation, the person must sign the trust instrument as a party, 
subject to the prior approval of the Director of the Office of 
Government Ethics;
    (ii) Under all the facts and circumstances, the person is determined 
pursuant to the requirements for eligible entities under Sec. 2634.406 
of this subpart to be independent of any interested party with respect 
to the trust arrangement;
    (iii) The person is instructed by the independent trustee or other 
designated fiduciary not to disclose publicly or to any interested party 
information which might specifically identify current trust assets which 
have been sold or disposed of from trust holdings, other than 
information relating to the sale or disposition of original trust assets 
under paragraph (b)(6) of this section; and
    (iv) The person is instructed by the trustee or other designated 
fiduciary to have no direct communication with respect to the trust with 
any interested party, and to make all indirect communications with 
respect to the trust only through the trustee, pursuant to paragraph 
(b)(9) of this section;

[[Page 445]]

    (15) The trustee shall not acquire by purchase, grant, gift, 
exercise of option, or otherwise, without the prior written approval of 
the Director of the Office of Government Ethics, securities, cash, or 
other property from any interested party;
    (16) The existence of any banking or other client relationship 
between any interested party and an independent trustee or any other 
designated fiduciary shall be disclosed in schedules attached to the 
trust instrument, and no other such relationship shall be instituted 
unless that relationship is disclosed to the Director of the Office of 
Government Ethics; and
    (17) The independent trustee and any other designated fiduciary 
shall be compensated in accordance with schedules annexed to the trust 
instrument.

[57 FR 11814, Apr. 7, 1992; 57 FR 21854, May 22, 1992]



Sec. 2634.404  Qualified diversified trusts.

    (a) Definition. A qualified diversified trust is any trust in which 
the filer, his spouse, or his minor or dependent child has a beneficial 
interest, which is certified pursuant to Sec. 2634.405 of this subpart 
by the Director of the Office of Government Ethics, which has a 
portfolio as specified in paragraph (b) of this section, and which 
includes in the trust instrument the provisions required by paragraph 
(c) of this section and has an independent trustee as defined in 
Sec. 2634.406 of this subpart. See section 102(f)(4)(B) of the Act.
    (b) Required portfolio--(1) Standards for initial assets. It must be 
established, to the satisfaction of the Director of the Office of 
Government Ethics, that the initial assets of the trust proposed for 
certification comprise a widely diversified portfolio of readily 
marketable securities. The reporting individual or other interested 
party shall provide the Director with a detailed list of the securities 
proposed for inclusion in the portfolio, specifying their fair market 
values and demonstrating that these securities meet the requirements of 
this paragraph. The initial trust portfolio may not contain securities 
of issuers having substantial activities in the reporting individual's 
primary area of responsibility. If requested by the Director, the 
designated agency ethics official for the reporting individual's 
employing agency shall certify whether the proposed portfolio meets this 
standard.
    (2) Diversification standards. For purposes of paragraph (b)(1) of 
this section, a portfolio will be widely diversified if:
    (i) The value of the securities concentrated in any particular or 
limited industrial, economic or geographic sector is no more than twenty 
percent of the total; and
    (ii) The value of the securities of any single issuer (other than 
the United States Government) is no more than five percent of the total.
    (3) Marketability standard. For purposes of paragraph (b)(1) of this 
section, a security will be readily marketable if:
    (i) Daily price quotations for the security appear regularly in 
newspapers of general circulation; and
    (ii) The trust holds the security in a quantity that does not unduly 
impair liquidity.
    (c) Required provisions. The instrument which establishes a 
diversified trust must adhere substantively to model drafts circulated 
by the Office of Government Ethics, and must provide that:
    (1) The primary purpose of the diversified trust is to confer on the 
independent trustee and any other designated fiduciary the sole 
responsibility to administer the trust and to manage trust assets 
without the participation by, or the knowledge of, any interested party. 
This includes the duty to decide when and to what extent the original 
assets of the trust are to be sold or disposed of and in what 
investments the proceeds of sale are to be reinvested;
    (2) The trustee and any other designated fiduciary in the exercise 
of their authority and discretion to manage and control the assets of 
the trust shall not consult or notify any interested party;
    (3) The trust's initial assets shall comprise a widely diversified 
portfolio

[[Page 446]]

of readily marketable securities, in accordance with the principles of 
paragraph (b) of this section, and the trustee shall not acquire 
additional securities in excess of the diversification standards;
    (4) Any portfolio asset transferred to the trust by an interested 
party is free of any restriction with respect to its transfer or sale, 
except as fully described in schedules attached to the trust instrument, 
and as approved by the Director of the Office of Government Ethics;
    (5) During the term of the trust, the interested parties shall not 
pledge, mortgage, or otherwise encumber their interests in the property 
held under the trust;
    (6) None of the assets initially placed in the trust's portfolio 
shall consist of securities of issuers having substantial activities in 
the reporting individual's primary area of Federal responsibility;
    (7) The trustee or designee shall prepare the trust's income tax 
return and, on behalf of any interested party, the personal income tax 
returns and similar tax documents which may contain information relating 
to the trust. Under no circumstances shall the trustee or any other 
designated fiduciary disclose publicly or to any interested party, any 
of the returns prepared by the trustee or his designee, any information 
relating to those returns, or any information which might specifically 
identify current trust assets, or those assets which have been sold or 
disposed of from trust holdings;
    (8) An interested party shall not receive any report on trust 
holding and sources of trust income, except that the trustee shall, 
without identifying specifically any asset or holding:
    (i) Report quarterly the aggregate market value of the assets 
representing the interested party's interest in the trust; and
    (ii) Report annually, for purposes of section 102(a)(1)(B) of the 
Act, the aggregate amount actually distributed from the trust to such 
interested party, or applied for the party's benefit;
    (9) There shall be no direct or indirect communication with respect 
to the trust between an interested party and the independent trustee or 
any other designated fiduciary unless:
    (i) Such communication is in writing, with the prior written 
approval of the Director of the Office of Government Ethics and is filed 
with the Director in accordance with Sec. 2634.408(c) of this subpart; 
and,
    (ii) It relates only:
    (A) To the request for a distribution from the trust, which does not 
specify whether the distribution shall be made in cash or in kind;
    (B) To the general financial interest and needs of the interested 
party including, but not limited to, a preference for maximizing current 
income or long-term capital appreciation; or
    (C) To information, documents, and funds concerning income tax 
obligations arising from sources other than the property held in trust, 
which are required by the trustee to enable him to file, on behalf of an 
interested party, the personal income tax returns and similar tax 
documents which may contain information relating to the trust;

    Note: By the terms of paragraph (3)(C)(vi) of section 102(f) of the 
Act, communications which soley consist of requests for distributions of 
cash or other unspecified assets of the trust are not required to be in 
writing. Further, there is no statutory mechanism for pre-screening of 
proposed communications. However, experience of the Office of Government 
Ethics over the years dictates the necessity of prohibiting any oral 
communications between the trustee and an interested party with respect 
to the trust and pre-screening all proposed written communications, to 
prevent inadvertent prohibited communications and preserve confidence in 
the Federal qualified trust program. Accordingly, under its authority 
pursuant to paragraph (3)(D) of section 102(f) of the Act, the Office of 
Government Ethics will not approve proposed trust instruments which do 
not contain language conforming to this policy, except in unusual cases 
where compelling necessity is demonstrated to the Director, in his sole 
discretion.

    (10) The interested parties shall not seek to obtain, and shall take 
reasonable action to avoid receiving, information with respect to trust 
holdings and sources of trust income, including a copy of any tax return 
filed by the trustee, or any information relating to that return, except 
for the reports and information specified in paragraph (c)(8) of this 
section;
    (11) An independent trustee and any other designated fiduciary shall 
file,

[[Page 447]]

with the Director of the Office of Government Ethics, by May 15 
following any calendar year during which the trust was in existence, a 
properly executed Certificate of Compliance in the form prescribed in 
appendix B to this part. In addition, the independent trustee and any 
other designated fiduciary shall maintain and make available for 
inspection by the Office of Government Ethics, as it may from time to 
time direct, the trust's books of account and other records and copies 
of the trust's tax returns for each taxable year of the trust;
    (12) Neither the trustee nor any other designated fiduciary shall 
knowingly and willfully, or negligently:
    (i) Disclose to any interested party any information regarding the 
trust that may not be disclosed pursuant to title I of the Act, the 
implementing regulations, or the trust instrument;
    (ii) Acquire any holding the ownership of which is prohibited by, or 
not in accordance with, the terms of the trust instrument;
    (iii) Solicit advice from any interested party with respect to the 
trust, if such solicitation is prohibited by title I of the Act, the 
implementing regulations, or the trust instrument; or
    (iv) Fail to file any document required by title I of the Act or by 
this part;
    (13) An interested party shall not knowingly and willfully, or 
negligently:
    (i) Solicit or receive any information regarding the trust that may 
not be disclosed pursuant to title I of the Act, the implementing 
regulations, or the trust instrument; or
    (ii) Fail to file any document required by title I of the Act or by 
this part;
    (14) No person, including investment counsel, investment advisers, 
accountants, and tax preparers, may be employed or consulted by an 
independent trustee or any other designated fiduciary to assist in any 
capacity to administer the trust or to manage and control the trust 
assets, unless, the following four conditions are met:
    (i) When an interested party learns about such employment or 
consultation, the person must sign the trust instrument as a party, 
subject to the prior approval of the Director of the Office of 
Government Ethics;
    (ii) Under all the facts and circumstances, the person is determined 
pursuant to the requirements for eligible entities under Sec. 2634.406 
of this subpart to be independent of any interested party with respect 
to the trust arrangement;
    (iii) The person is instructed by the independent trustee or other 
designated fiduciary not to disclose publicly or to any interested party 
information which might specifically identify current trust assets or 
those assets which have been sold or disposed of from trust holdings; 
and
    (iv) The person is instructed by an independent trustee or other 
designated fiduciary to have no direct communication with respect to the 
trust with any interested party, and to make all indirect communications 
with respect to the trust only through the trustee, pursuant to 
paragraph (c)(9) of this section;
    (15) The trustee shall not acquire by purchase, grant, gift, 
exercise of option, or otherwise, without the prior written approval of 
the Director of the Office of Government Ethics, any securities, cash, 
or other property from any interested party;
    (16) The existence of any banking or other client relationship 
between any interested party and an independent trustee or other 
designated fiduciary shall be disclosed in schedules attached to the 
trust instrument, and no other such relationship shall be instituted 
unless that relationship is disclosed to the Director of the Office of 
Government Ethics; and
    (17) The independent trustee and any other designated fiduciary 
shall be compensated in accordance with schedules annexed to the trust 
instrument.
    (d) Personal income tax returns. In the case of a trust to which 
this section applies, the trustee shall be given power of attorney to 
prepare, and shall file, on behalf of any interested party, the personal 
income tax returns and similar tax documents which may contain 
information relating to the trust. Appropriate Internal Revenue Service

[[Page 448]]

power of attorney forms shall be used for this purpose.

[57 FR 11814, Apr. 7, 1992; 57 FR 21854, May 22, 1992]



Sec. 2634.405   Certification of trusts.

    (a) Standards. Before a trust may be classified as a qualified blind 
or a qualified diversified trust, under the provisions of Sec. 2634.403 
or Sec. 2634.404 of this subpart, respectively, the trust must be 
certified by the Director of the Office of Government Ethics.
    (1) A trust will be certified for purposes of this subpart only if:
    (i) It is established to the Director's satisfaction that the 
requirements of section 102(f) of the Act and this subpart have been 
met;
    (ii) Certification is in the public interest; and
    (iii) Certification is consistent with the policies established by 
the Act, this subpart and other applicable laws and regulations.
    (2) Certification will not be granted in any case in which, in the 
Director's sole judgment, such action would not be appropriate because 
of the ready availability of other remedies, the lack of any substantive 
ethical concern which would warrant the establishment of a qualified 
trust, or the nature or negligible value of the assets proposed for a 
trust's initial portfolio.
    (b) Certification procedures. The interested parties or their 
representatives should first consult the staff of the Office of 
Government Ethics concerning the appropriateness of, and requirements 
for, certification in the particular case. In order to assure timely 
trust certification, the interested parties shall be responsible for the 
expeditious submission to the Office of all required documents and 
responses to requests for information, including a statement that any 
interested party who will be a party to a certified trust instrument has 
read and understands the overview of executive branch qualified trusts 
in Sec. 2634.401(a) of this subpart. Certification shall be indicated by 
a letter from the Director to the interested parties or their 
representatives.
    (c) Certification of pre-existing trusts. In addition to the 
normally applicable rules of this subpart D, other considerations apply 
to pre-existing trusts. Generally, in the case of a pre-existing trust 
whose terms do not permit amendments satisfying the rules of this 
subpart, all of the relevant parties (including the reporting 
individual, any other interested parties, the trustee of the pre-
existing trust, and all of its other parties and beneficiaries) will be 
required pursuant to section 102(f)(7) of the Act to enter into an 
umbrella agreement specifying that the pre-existing (underlying) trust 
will be administered in accordance with the provisions of this subpart. 
A parent or guardian may execute the umbrella agreement on behalf of a 
required participant who is a dependent child. The umbrella agreement 
will be certified as a qualified trust if all requirements of this 
subpart are fulfilled under conditions where required confidentiality 
with respect to the trust can be assured. A copy of the underlying trust 
instrument, and a list of its assets at the time the umbrella agreement 
is certified as a qualified trust (categorized as to value in accordance 
with Sec. 2634.301(d)), shall be filed with the executed umbrella trust 
instrument as specified by Sec. 2634.408(a)(1)(i) of this subpart.
    (d) Review of certification. The Office of Government Ethics shall 
maintain a program to assess, on a frequent basis, the appropriateness 
of any trust certification which has been granted.
    (e) Revocation of certification and modification of trust 
instrument. Certification of a trust may be revoked pursuant to the 
rules of subpart E of this part. The terms of a qualified trust may not 
be revoked or amended, except with the prior written approval of the 
Director, and upon a showing of necessity and appropriateness.



Sec. 2634.406  Independent trustees.

    (a) Standards. (1) The term independent trustee means any entity 
referred to in paragraph (a)(2) of this section which, under all the 
facts and circumstances, is determined by the Director of the Office of 
Government Ethics and in the Director's sole discretion, to be 
independent of any interested party with respect to a trust proposed for 
certification under this subpart. The term includes, unless the

[[Page 449]]

context indicates otherwise, in addition to the party to a trust 
instrument who is designated to serve as trustee, those parties who are 
designated to perform fiduciary duties. Approval of a proposed trustee 
or other designated fiduciary shall be granted only if it is established 
to the Director's satisfaction that the requirements of section 102 of 
the Act and this subpart have been met, and that approval in the case is 
in the public interest and consistent with the policies established by 
those provisions and other applicable laws and regulations.
    (2) Eligible entities. Eligibility to serve as a trustee or other 
fiduciary under this section is limited to a financial institution (not 
a person), not more than 10 percent of which is owned or controlled by a 
single individual, which is:
    (i) A bank, as defined in 12 U.S.C. 1841(c); or
    (ii) An investment adviser, as defined in 15 U.S.C. 8Ob-2(a)(11).

    Note: By the terms of paragraph (3)(A)(i) of section 102(f) of the 
Act, an individual who is an attorney, a certified public accountant, a 
broker, or an investment advisor is also eligible to serve as an 
independent trustee. However, experience of the Office of Government 
Ethics over the years dictates the necessity of limiting service as a 
trustee or other fiduciary to the financial institutions referred to in 
this paragraph, to maintain effective administration of trust 
arrangements and preserve confidence in the Federal qualified trust 
program. Accordingly, under its authority pursuant to paragraph (3)(D) 
of section 102(f) of the Act, the Office of Government Ethics will not 
approve proposed trustees or other fiduciaries who are not financial 
institutions, except in unusual cases where compelling necessity is 
demonstrated to the Director, in his sole discretion.

    (3) Requirements. No eligible entity shall be determined to be an 
independent trustee under this section unless:
    (i) That entity is independent of and unassociated with any 
interested party so that it cannot be controlled or influenced in the 
administration of the trust by any interested party; and
    (ii) That entity is not and has not been affiliated with any 
interested party, and is not a partner of, or involved in any joint 
venture or other investment or business with, any interested party; and
    (iii) Any director, officer, or employee of such entity:
    (A) Is independent of and unassociated with any interested party so 
that such director, officer, or employee cannot be controlled or 
influenced in the administration of the trust by any interested party;
    (B) Is not and has not been employed by any interested party, not 
served as a director, officer, or employee of any organization 
affiliated with any interested party, and is not and has not been a 
partner of, or involved in any joint venture or other investment with, 
any interested party; and
    (C) Is not a relative of any interested party.
    (b) Approval procedures. (1) Appropriate documentation to establish, 
pursuant to the requirements of paragraph (a)(3) of this section, the 
independence of a proposed trustee or any other person to be designated 
in a trust instrument to perform fiduciary duties shall be submitted to 
the Office of Government Ethics in writing, including the Certificate of 
Independence in the form prescribed in appendix A of this part. The 
existence of any other banking or client relationship between an 
interested party and a proposed trustee or other designated fiduciary 
must be disclosed in such documentation, and may be subject to 
discontinuance as a condition of approval.
    (2) The Director shall indicate approval of a proposed trustee, and 
of any other person designated in the trust instrument to perform 
fiduciary duties, including those of an investment adviser, by reporting 
such approval in writing to the interested parties or to their 
representatives.
    (c) Review of approval. The Office of Government Ethics shall 
maintain a program to assess, on a frequent basis, the appropriateness 
of any approval which has been granted under this section.
    (d) Revocation of approval. Approval of a trustee or any other 
designated fiduciary may be revoked pursuant to the rules of subpart E 
of this part.



Sec. 2634.407  Restrictions on fiduciaries and interested parties.

    (a) Restrictions applicable to trustees and other fiduciaries. Any 
trustee or any

[[Page 450]]

other designated fiduciary of a qualified trust shall not knowingly or 
negligently:
    (1) Disclose any information to an interested party with respect to 
the trust that may not be disclosed under title I of the Act, the 
implementing regulations or the trust instrument;
    (2) Acquire any holding:
    (i) Directly from an interested party without the prior written 
approval of the Director; or
    (ii) The ownership of which is prohibited by, or not in accordance 
with, title I of the Act, the implementing regulations, the trust 
instrument, or with other applicable statutes and regulations;
    (3) Solicit advice from any interested party with respect to such 
trust, which solicitation is prohibited by title I of the Act, the 
implementing regulations, or the trust instrument; or
    (4) Fail to file any document required by the implementing 
regulations or the trust instrument.
    (b) Restrictions applicable to interested parties. An interested 
party to a qualified trust shall not knowingly or negligently:
    (1) Solicit or receive any information about the trust that may not 
be disclosed under title I of the Act, the implementing regulations or 
the trust instrument; or
    (2) Fail to file any document required by this subpart or the trust 
instrument.



Sec. 2634.408  Special filing requirements for qualified trusts.

    (a) The interested party. In the case of any qualified trust, the 
Government employee or other interested party shall:
    (1) Execution of the trust. Within thirty days after the trust is 
certified under Sec. 2634.405 of this subpart by the Director of the 
Office of Government Ethics, file with the Director a copy of:
    (i) The executed trust instrument of the trust (other than those 
provisions which relate to the testamentary disposition of the trust 
assets); and
    (ii) A list of the assets which were transferred to the trust, 
categorized as to value of each asset in accordance with 
Sec. 2634.301(d).
    (2) Transfer of assets. Within thirty days of transferring an asset, 
other than cash, to a qualified trust, file a report with the Director 
of the Office of Government Ethics, which identifies and briefly 
describes each asset, categorized as to value in accordance with 
Sec. 2634.301(d).
    (3) Dissolution of the trust. Within thirty days of the dissolution 
of a qualified trust:
    (i) File a report of the dissolution with the Director of the Office 
of Government Ethics; and
    (ii) File with the Director a list of assets of the trust at the 
time of the dissolution, categorized as to value in accordance with 
Sec. 2634.301(d).
    (b) Trustees and other designated fiduciaries. An independent 
trustee of a qualified trust, and any other person designated in the 
trust instrument to perform fiduciary duties, shall file, with the 
Director of the Office of Government Ethics by May 15th following any 
calendar year during which the trust was in existence, a properly 
executed Certificate of Compliance in the form prescribed by appendix B 
of this part. In addition, an independent trustee and other fiduciaries 
shall maintain and make available for inspection by the Office of 
Government Ethics, as it may from time to time direct, the trust's books 
of account and other records and copies of the trust's tax returns for 
each taxable year of the trust.
    (c) Written communications. All communications between an interested 
party and the trustee of a qualified trust must, under this subpart, 
have the prior written approval of the Director of the Office of 
Government Ethics. After such an approved written communication 
(including those communications described in Sec. 2634.403(b)(9) or 
Sec. 2634.404(c)(9) of this subpart) has been transmitted, the person 
initiating the communication shall file a copy of the communication 
within five days of its date, with the Director of the Office of 
Government Ethics.
    (d) Public access. Any document filed under the requirements of 
paragraph (a) of this section by a public filer, nominee, or candidate 
shall be subject to the public disclosure requirements

[[Page 451]]

of Sec. 2634.603. Any document (and the information contained therein) 
inspected under the requirements of paragraph (b) of this section (other 
than a Certificate of Compliance), or filed under the requirements of 
paragraph (c) of this section, shall be exempt from the public 
disclosure requirements of Sec. 2634.603, and shall not be disclosed to 
any interested party.



Sec. 2634.409  OMB control number.

    The various model trust documents and Certificates of Independence 
and Compliance referenced in this subpart, together with the underlying 
regulatory provisions (and appendixes A, B and C to this part for the 
Certificates), are all approved by the Office of Management and Budget 
under control number 3209-0007.

[59 FR 34756, July 7, 1994]



    Subpart E--Revocation of Trust Certificates and Trustee Approvals

    Source: 57 FR 11821, Apr. 7, 1992, unless otherwise noted.



Sec. 2634.501  Purpose and scope.

    (a) Purpose. This subpart establishes the procedures of the Office 
of Government Ethics for enforcement of the qualified blind trust, 
qualified diversified trust, and independent trustee provisions of title 
I of the Ethics in Government Act of 1978, as amended, and the 
regulation issued thereunder (subpart D of this part).
    (b) Scope. This subpart applies to all trust certifications and 
trustee approvals pursuant to Secs. 2634.405(a) and 2634.406(a), 
respectively.



Sec. 2634.502  Definitions.

    For purposes of this subpart (unless otherwise indicated):
    (a) Senior Attorney means the Office of Government Ethics employee 
designated as the manager of the qualified trust program.
    (b) Trust restrictions means the applicable provisions of title I of 
the Ethics in Government Act of 1978, subpart D of this part, and the 
trust instrument.



Sec. 2634.503  Determinations.

    (a) Where the Senior Attorney concludes that violations or apparent 
violations of the trust restrictions exist and may warrant revocation of 
trust certification or trustee approval previously granted under 
Sec. 2634.405 or Sec. 2634.406 of this subpart, the Senior Attorney may, 
pursuant to the procedure specified in paragraph (b) of this section, 
conduct a review of the matter, and may submit findings and a 
recommendation concerning final action to the Director of the Office of 
Government Ethics.
    (b) Review procedure. (1) In his review of the matter, the Senior 
Attorney shall perform such examination and analysis of violations or 
apparent violations as he deems reasonable.
    (2) The Senior Attorney shall provide an independent trustee and, if 
appropriate, the interested parties, with:
    (i) Notice that revocation of trust certification or trustee 
approval is under consideration pursuant to the procedures in this 
subpart;
    (ii) A summary of the violation or apparent violations which shall 
state the preliminary facts and circumstances of the transactions or 
occurrences involved with sufficient particularity to permit the 
recipients to determine the nature of the allegations; and
    (iii) Notice that the recipients may present evidence and submit 
statements on any matter in issue within ten business days of the 
recipient's actual receipt of the notice and summary.
    (c) Determination. (1) In making determinations with respect to the 
violations or apparent violations under this section, the Director of 
the Office of Government Ethics shall consider the findings and 
recommendations of final action submitted by the Senior Attorney under 
paragraph (a) of this section, as well as the written record of review 
compiled under paragraph (b) of this section.
    (2) If the Director finds a violation or violations of the trust 
restrictions he may, as he deems appropriate:
    (i) Issue an order revoking trust certification or trust approval;
    (ii) Resolve the matter through any other remedial action within the 
Director's authority;

[[Page 452]]

    (iii) Order further examination and analysis of the violation or 
apparent violation; or
    (iv) Decline to take further action.
    (3) If an order of revocation is issued, the parties to the trust 
instrument shall be expeditiously notified in writing. The notice shall 
state the basis for the revocation, and shall inform the parties either 
that the trust is no longer a qualified blind or qualified diversified 
trust for any purpose under Federal law; or that the independent trustee 
may no longer serve the trust in any capacity, and must be replaced by a 
successor, who is subject to the prior written approval of the Director; 
or both where appropriate.



                          Subpart F--Procedure

    Source: 57 FR 11821, Apr. 7, 1992, unless otherwise noted.



Sec. 2634.601  Report forms.

    (a) The Office of Government Ethics provides, through the Federal 
Supply Service of the General Services Administration, two standard 
forms for financial disclosure reporting: the SF 278 (Public Financial 
Disclosure Report) for reporting the information described in subpart B 
of this part on executive branch public disclosure; and the SF 450 
(Confidential Financial Disclosure Report) for reporting the information 
described in subpart I of this part on executive branch confidential 
disclosure.
    (b) Subject to the prior written approval of the Director of the 
Office of Government Ethics, an agency may require employees to file 
additional confidential financial disclosure forms which supplement 
either or both of the standard forms referred to in paragraph (a) of 
this section, if necessary because of special or unique agency 
circumstances. The Director may approve such agency forms when, in his 
opinion, the supplementation is shown to be necessary for a 
comprehensive and effective agency ethics program to identify and 
resolve conflicts of interest. See Secs. 2634.103 and 2634.901.
    (c) Reports concerning payments made to charitable organizations in 
lieu of honoraria shall also be filed on the separate standard form 
provided in conjunction with part 2636 of this chapter, and in 
accordance with the procedures specified therein.

(Approved by the Office of Management and Budget under control numbers 
3209-0001 and 3209-0006)

[57 FR 11821, Apr. 7, 1992, as amended at 58 FR 38912, July 21, 1993; 59 
FR 34756, July 7, 1994]



Sec. 2634.602  Filing of reports.

    (a) Except as otherwise provided in this section, the reporting 
individual shall file financial disclosure reports required under this 
part with the designated agency ethics official or his delegate at the 
agency where the individual is employed, or was employed immediately 
prior to termination of employment, or in which he will serve. Detailees 
shall file with their primary agency. Reports are due at the times 
indicated in Sec. 2634.201 of subpart B (public disclosure) or 
Sec. 2634.903 of subpart I (confidential disclosure) of this part, 
unless an extension is granted pursuant to the provisions of subparts B 
or I of this part.
    (b) The President, the Vice President, any independent counsel, and 
persons appointed by independent counsel under 28 U.S.C. chapter 40, 
shall file the public financial disclosure reports required under this 
part with the Director of the Office of Government Ethics.
    (c)(1) Each agency receiving the public financial disclosure reports 
required to be filed under this part by the following individuals shall 
transmit copies to the Director of the Office of Government Ethics:
    (i) The Postmaster General;
    (ii) The Deputy Postmaster General;
    (iii) The Governors of the Board of Governors of the United States 
Postal Service;
    (iv) The designated agency ethics official;
    (v) Employees of the Executive Office of the President who are 
appointed under 3 U.S.C. 105(a)(2)(A) or (B) or 3 U.S.C. 107(a)(1)(A) or 
(b)(1)(A)(i), and employees of the Office of Vice President who are 
appointed under 3 U.S.C. 106(a)(1)(A) or (B); and
    (vi) Officers and employees in, and nominees to, offices or 
positions which require confirmation by the Senate,

[[Page 453]]

other than members of the uniformed services.
    (2) Prior to transmitting a copy of a report to the Director of the 
Office of Government Ethics, the designated agency ethics official or 
his delegate shall review that report in accordance with Sec. 2634.605 
of this subpart, except for his own report, which shall be reviewed by 
the agency head or by a delegate of the agency head.
    (3) For nominee reports, the Director of the Office of Government 
Ethics shall forward a copy to the Senate committee that is considering 
the nomination. (See Sec. 2634.605(c) of this subpart for special 
procedures regarding the review of such reports.)
    (d) The Director of the Office of Government Ethics shall file his 
financial disclosure report with his Office, which shall make it 
immediately available to the public in accordance with this part.
    (e) Candidates for President and Vice President identified in 
Sec. 2634.201(d), other than an incumbent President or Vice President, 
shall file their financial disclosure reports with the Federal Election 
Commission, which shall review and send copies of such reports to the 
Director of the Office of Government Ethics.
    (f) Members of the uniformed services identified in Sec. 2634.202(c) 
shall file their financial disclosure reports with the Secretary 
concerned, or his delegate.



Sec. 2634.603  Custody of and access to public reports.

    (a) Each agency shall make available to the public in accordance 
with the provisions of this section those public reports filed with the 
agency by reporting individuals described under subpart B of this part.
    (b) This section does not require public availability of those 
reports filed by:
    (1) Any individual in the Central Intelligence Agency, the Defense 
Intelligence Agency, or the National Security Agency, or any individual 
engaged in intelligence activities in any agency of the United States, 
if the President finds or has found that, due to the nature of the 
office or position occupied by that individual, public disclosure of the 
report would, by revealing the identity of the individual or other 
sensitive information, compromise the national interest of the United 
States. Individuals referred to in this paragraph who are exempt from 
the public availability requirement may also be authorized, 
notwithstanding Sec. 2634.701, to file any additional reports necessary 
to protect their identity from public disclosure, if the President finds 
or has found that such filings are necessary in the national interest; 
or
    (2) An independent counsel whose identity has not been disclosed by 
the Court under 28 U.S.C chapter 40, or any person appointed by that 
independent counsel under such chapter.
    (c) Each agency shall, within thirty days after any public report is 
received by the agency, permit inspection of the report by, or furnish a 
copy of the report to, any person who makes written application as 
provided by agency procedure. Agency reviewing officials and the support 
staffs who maintain the files, the staff of the Office of Government 
Ethics, and Special Agents of the Federal Bureau of Investigation who 
are conducting a criminal inquiry into possible conflict of interest 
violations need not submit an application. The agency may utilize Office 
of Government Ethics Form 201 for such applications. An application 
shall state:
    (1) The requesting person's name, occupation, and address;
    (2) The name and address of any other person or organization on 
whose behalf the inspection or copy is requested; and
    (3) That the requesting person is aware of the prohibitions on 
obtaining or using the report set forth in paragraph (f) of this 
section.
    (d) Applications for the inspection of or copies of public reports 
shall also be made available to the public throughout the period during 
which the report itself is made available, utilizing the procedures in 
paragraph (c) of this section.
    (e) The agency may require a reasonable fee, established by agency 
regulation, to recover the direct cost of reproduction or mailing of a 
public report, excluding the salary of any employee involved. A copy of 
the report may be furnished without charge or at a reduced charge if the 
agency determines that waiver or reduction of the

[[Page 454]]

fee is in the public interest. The criteria used by an agency to 
determine when a fee will be reduced or waived shall be established by 
regulation. Agency regulations contemplated by paragraph (e) of this 
section do not require approval pursuant to Sec. 2634.103.
    (f) It is unlawful for any person to obtain or use a public report:
    (1) For any unlawful purpose;
    (2) For any commercial purpose, other than by news and 
communications media for dissemination to the general public;
    (3) For determining or establishing the credit rating of any 
individual; or
    (4) For use, directly or indirectly, in the solicitation of money 
for any political, charitable, or other purpose.

    Example 1. The deputy general counsel of Agency X is responsible for 
reviewing the public financial disclosure reports filed by persons 
within that agency. The agency personnel director, who does not exercise 
functions within the ethics program, wishes to review the disclosure 
report of an individual within the agency. The personnel director must 
file an application to review the report. However, the supervisor of an 
official with whom the deputy general counsel consults concerning 
matters arising in the review process need not file such an application.
    Example 2. A state law enforcement agent is conducting an 
investigation which involves the private financial dealings of an 
individual who has filed a public financial disclosure report. The agent 
must complete a written application in order to inspect or obtain a 
copy.
    Example 3. A financial institution has received an application for a 
loan from an official which indicates her present financial status. The 
official has filed a public financial disclosure statement with her 
agency. The financial institution cannot be given access to the 
disclosure form for purposes of verifying the information contained on 
the application.

    (g)(1) Any public report filed with an agency or transmitted to the 
Director of the Office of Government Ethics under this section shall be 
retained by the agency, and by the Office of Government Ethics when it 
receives a copy. The report shall be made available to the public for a 
period of six years after receipt. After the six-year period, the report 
shall be destroyed unless needed in an ongoing investigation, except 
that in the case of an individual who filed the report pursuant to 
Sec. 2634.201(c) as a nominee and was not subsequently confirmed by the 
Senate, or who filed the report pursuant to Sec. 2634.201(d) as a 
candidate and was not subsequently elected, the report, unless needed in 
an ongoing investigation, shall be destroyed one year after the 
individual either is no longer under consideration by the Senate or is 
no longer a candidate for nomination or election to the Office of 
President or Vice President. See also the OGE/GOVT-1 Governmentwide 
executive branch Privacy Act system of records (available for inspection 
at the Office of Government Ethics), as well as any applicable agency 
system of records.
    (2) For purposes of paragraph (g)(1) of this section, in the case of 
a reporting individual with respect to whom a trust has been certified 
under subpart D of this part, a copy of the qualified trust agreement, 
the list of assets initially placed in the trust, and all other publicly 
available documents relating to the trust shall be retained and made 
available to the public until the periods for retention of all other 
reports of the individual have lapsed under paragraph (g)(1) of this 
section.

(Approved by the Office of Management and Budget under control numbers 
3209-0001 and 3209-0002)

[57 FR 11821, Apr. 7, 1992; 57 FR 21854, May 22, 1992, as amended at 59 
FR 34756, July 7, 1994]



Sec. 2634.604  Custody of and denial of public access to confidential reports.

    (a) Any report filed with an agency under subpart I of this part 
shall be retained by the agency for a period of six years after receipt. 
After the six-year period, the report shall be destroyed unless needed 
in an ongoing investigation. See also the OGE/GOVT-2 Governmentwide 
executive branch Privacy Act system of records (available for inspection 
at the Office of Government Ethics), as well as any applicable agency 
system of records.
    (b) The reports filed pursuant to subpart I of this part are 
confidential. No member of the public shall have access to such reports, 
except pursuant to the order of a Federal court or as otherwise provided 
under the Privacy Act. See 5 U.S.C. 552a and the OGE/GOVT-2 Privacy Act 
system of records (and any applicable agency system); 5 U.S.C.

[[Page 455]]

app. (Ethics in Government Act of 1978, section 107(a)); sections 201(d) 
and 502(b) of Executive Order 12674, as modified by Executive Order 
12731; and Sec. 2634.901(d).

[57 FR 11821, Apr. 7, 1992; 57 FR 21854, May 22, 1992]



Sec. 2634.605  Review of reports.

    (a) In general. The designated agency ethics official shall normally 
serve as the reviewing official for reports submitted to his agency. 
That responsibility may be delegated, except in the case of 
certification of nominee reports required by paragraph (c) of this 
section. See also Sec. 2634.105(q). He shall note on any report or 
supplemental report the date on which it is received. Except as 
indicated in paragraph (c) of this section, all reports shall be 
reviewed within 60 days after the date of filing. Reports reviewed by 
the Director of the Office of Government Ethics shall be reviewed within 
60 days from the date on which they are received by that Office. Final 
certification in accordance with paragraph (b)(2) of this section may, 
of necessity, occur later, where additional information is being sought 
or remedial action is being taken under this section.
    (b) Responsibilities of reviewing officials--(1) Initial review. The 
reviewing official may request an intermediate review by the filer's 
supervisor. In the case of a filer who is detailed to another agency for 
more than 60 days during the reporting period, the reviewing official 
shall obtain an intermediate review by the agency where the filer served 
as a detailee. After obtaining any intermediate review or determining 
that such review is not required, the reviewing official shall examine 
the report to determine, to his satisfaction that:
    (i) Each required item is completed; and
    (ii) No interest or position disclosed on the form violates or 
appears to violate:
    (A) Any applicable provision of chapter 11 of title 18, United 
States Code;
    (B) The Act, as amended, and the implementing regulations;
    (C) Executive Order 12674, as modified by Executive Order 12731, and 
the implementing regulations; or
    (D) Any other agency-specific statute or regulation which governs 
the filer.
    (2) Signature by reviewing official. If the reviewing official 
determines that the report meets the requirements of paragraph (b)(1) of 
this section, he shall certify it by signature and date. The reviewing 
official need not audit the report to ascertain whether the disclosures 
are correct. Disclosures shall be taken at ``face value'' as correct, 
unless there is a patent omission or ambiguity or the official has 
independent knowledge of matters outside the report. However, a report 
which is signed by a reviewing official certifies that the filer's 
agency has reviewed the report, and that the reviewing official has 
concluded that each required item has been completed and that on the 
basis of information contained in such report the filer is in compliance 
with applicable laws and regulations noted in paragraph (b)(1)(ii) of 
this section.
    (3) Requests for, and review based on, additional information. If 
the reviewing official believes that additional information is required, 
he shall request that it be submitted by a specified date. This 
additional information shall be made a part of the report. If the 
reviewing official concludes, on the basis of the information disclosed 
in the report and any additional information submitted, that the report 
fulfills the requirements of paragraph (b)(1) of this section, the 
reviewing official shall sign and date the report.
    (4) Compliance with applicable laws and regulations. If the 
reviewing official concludes that information disclosed in the report 
may reveal a violation of applicable laws and regulations as specified 
in paragraph (b)(1)(ii) of this section, the official shall:
    (i) Notify the filer of that conclusion;
    (ii) Afford the filer a reasonable opportunity for an oral or 
written response; and
    (iii) Determine, after considering any response, whether or not the 
filer is then in compliance with applicable laws and regulations 
specified in paragraph (b)(1)(ii) of this section. If the reviewing 
official concludes that the report does fulfill the requirements, he 
shall sign and date the report. If he determines that it does not, he 
shall:
    (A) Notify the filer of the conclusion;

[[Page 456]]

    (B) Afford the filer an opportunity for personal consultation if 
practicable;
    (C) Determine what remedial action under paragraph (b)(5) of this 
section should be taken to bring the report into compliance with the 
requirements of paragraph (b)(1)(ii) of this section; and
    (D) Notify the filer in writing of the remedial action which is 
needed, and the date by which such action should be taken.
    (5) Remedial action. (i) Except in unusual circumstances, which must 
be fully documented to the satisfaction of the reviewing official, 
remedial action shall be completed not later than three months from the 
date on which the filer received notice that the action is required.
    (ii) Remedial action may include, as appropriate:
    (A) Divestiture of a conflicting interest (see subpart J of this 
part);
    (B) Resignation from a position with a non-Federal business or other 
entity;
    (C) Restitution;
    (D) Establishment of a qualified blind or diversified trust under 
the Act and subpart D of this part;
    (E) Procurement of a waiver under 18 U.S.C. 208(b)(1) or (b)(3);
    (F) Preparation of a written instrument of recusal 
(disqualification); or
    (G) Voluntary request by the filer for transfer, reassignment, 
limitation of duties, or resignation.
    (6) Compliance or referral. (i) If the filer complies with a written 
request for remedial action under paragraph (b)(4) of this section, the 
reviewing official shall indicate, in the comment section of the report, 
what remedial action has been taken. The official shall also sign and 
date the report.
    (ii) If the filer does not comply by the designated date with the 
written request for remedial action transmitted under paragraph (b)(4) 
of this section, the reviewing official shall, in the case of a public 
filer under subpart B of this part, notify the head of the agency and 
the Office of Government Ethics, for appropriate action. Where the filer 
is in a position in the executive branch (other than in the uniformed 
services or the Foreign Service), appointment to which requires the 
advice and consent of the Senate, the Director of the Office of 
Government Ethics shall refer the matter to the President. In the case 
of the Postmaster General or Deputy Postmaster General, the Director of 
the Office of Government Ethics shall recommend to the Governors of the 
Board of Governors of the United States Postal Service the action to be 
taken. For confidential filers, the reviewing official will follow 
agency procedures.
    (c) Expedited procedure in the case of individuals appointed by the 
President and subject to confirmation by the Senate. In the case of a 
report filed by an individual described in Sec. 2634.201(c) who is 
nominated by the President for appointment to a position that requires 
the advice and consent of the Senate:
    (1) The Executive Office of the President shall furnish the 
applicable financial disclosure report form to the nominee. It shall 
forward the completed report to the designated agency ethics official at 
the agency where the nominee is serving or will serve, or it may direct 
the nominee to file the completed report directly with the designated 
agency ethics official.
    (2) The designated agency ethics official shall complete an 
accelerated review of the report, in accordance with the standards and 
procedures in paragraph (b) of this section. If that official concludes 
that the report reveals no conflict of interest under applicable laws 
and regulations, the official shall:
    (i) Attach to the report a description (when available) of the 
position to be filled by the nominee;
    (ii) Personally certify the report by signature, and date the 
certification;
    (iii) Write an opinion letter to the Director of the Office of 
Government Ethics, personally certifying that there is no unresolved 
conflict of interest under applicable laws and regulations, and 
discussing:
    (A) Any actual or apparent conflicts of interest that were detected 
during the review process; and
    (B) The resolution of those real or apparent conflicts, including 
any specific commitment, ethics agreement entered under the provisions 
of subpart H of this part, or other undertaking by the nominee to 
resolve any such conflicts. A copy of any commitment, agreement,

[[Page 457]]

or other undertaking which is reduced to writing shall be sent to the 
Director, in accordance with subpart H of this part; and
    (iv) Deliver the letter and the report to the Director of the Office 
of Government Ethics, within three working days after the designated 
agency ethics official receives the report.

    Note: The designated agency ethics official's certification 
responsibilities in Sec. 2634.605(c) are nondelegable and must be 
accomplished by him personally, or by the agency's alternate designated 
agency ethics official, in his absence. See Sec. 2638.203 of this 
chapter.

    (3) The Director of the Office of Government Ethics shall review the 
report and the letter from the designated agency ethics official. If the 
Director is satisfied that no unresolved conflicts of interest exist, 
then the Director shall sign and date the report form. The Director 
shall then submit the report with a letter to the appropriate Senate 
committee, expressing the Director's opinion whether, on the basis of 
information contained in the report, the nominee has complied with all 
applicable conflict laws and regulations.
    (4) If, in the case of any nominee or class of nominees, the 
expedited procedure specified in this paragraph cannot be completed 
within the time set forth in paragraph (c)(2)(iv) of this section, the 
designated agency ethics official shall inform the Director. When 
necessary and appropriate, the Director may modify the rule of that 
paragraph for a nominee or a class of nominees with respect to a 
particular department or agency.



Sec. 2634.606   Updated disclosure of advice-and-consent nominees.

    (a) General rule. Each individual described in Sec. 2634.201(c) who 
is nominated by the President for appointment to a position that 
requires advice and consent of the Senate, shall, at or before the 
commencement of the first Senate committee hearing to consider the 
nomination, submit to the committee an amendment to the report 
previously filed under Sec. 2634.201(c) and transmit copies of the 
amendment to the designated agency ethics official referred to in 
Sec. 2634.605(c)(1) of this subpart and to the Office of Government 
Ethics, which shall update, through the period ending no more than five 
days prior to the commencement of the hearing, the disclosure of 
information required with respect to receipt of:
    (1) Outside earned income; and
    (2) Honoraria, as defined in Sec. 2634.105(i).
    (b) Additional certification. In each case to which this section 
applies, the Director of the Office of Government Ethics shall, at the 
request of the committee considering the nomination, submit to the 
committee an opinion letter of the nature described in 
Sec. 2634.605(c)(3) of this subpart concerning the updated disclosure. 
If the committee requests such a letter, the expedited procedure 
provided by Sec. 2634.605(c) of this subpart shall govern review of the 
updated disclosure, which shall be deemed a report filed for purposes of 
that paragraph.



Sec. 2634.607   Advice and opinions.

    To assist employees in avoiding situations in which they might 
violate applicable financial disclosure laws and regulations:
    (a) The Director of the Office of Government Ethics shall render 
formal advisory opinions and informal advisory letters on generally 
applicable matters, or on important matters of first impression. See 
also subpart C of part 2638 of this chapter. The Director shall insure 
that these advisory opinions and letters are compiled, published, and 
made available to agency ethics officials and the public. Good faith 
reliance on such opinions shall provide a defense to any penalty or 
sanction provided by this part for fact situations indistinguishable in 
all material aspects from those in the opinion.
    (b) Designated agency ethics officials will offer advice and 
guidance to employees as needed, to assist them in complying with the 
requirements of the Act and this part on financial disclosure.



                          Subpart G--Penalties

    Source: 57 FR 11824, Apr. 7, 1992, unless otherwise noted.

[[Page 458]]



Sec. 2634.701   Failure to file or falsifying reports.

    (a) Referral of cases. The head of each agency, each Secretary 
concerned, or the Director of the Office of Government Ethics, as 
appropriate, shall refer to the Attorney General the name of any 
individual when there is reasonable cause to believe that such 
individual has willfully failed to file a public report or information 
required on such report, or has willfully falsified any information 
(public or confidential) required to be reported under this part.
    (b) Civil action. The Attorney General may bring a civil action in 
any appropriate United States district court against any individual who 
knowingly and willfully falsifies or who knowingly and willfully fails 
to file or report any information required by filers of public reports 
under subpart B of this part. The court in which the action is brought 
may assess against the individual a civil penalty in any amount, not to 
exceed $10,000, as provided by section 104 of the Act.
    (c) Criminal action. An individual may also be prosecuted under 
criminal statutes for supplying false information on any financial 
disclosure report.
    (d) Administrative remedies. The President, the Vice President, the 
Director of the Office of Government Ethics, the Secretary concerned, 
the head of each agency, and the Office of Personnel Management may take 
appropriate personnel or other action in accordance with applicable law 
or regulation against any individual for failing to file public or 
confidential reports required by this part, for filing such reports 
late, or for falsifying or failing to report required information. This 
may include adverse action under 5 CFR part 752, if applicable.



Sec. 2634.702   Breaches by trust fiduciaries and interested parties.

    (a) The Attorney General may bring a civil action in any appropriate 
United States district court against any individual who knowingly and 
willfully violates the provisions of Sec. 2634.407 of this part. The 
court in which the action is brought may assess against the individual a 
civil penalty in any amount, not to exceed $10,000, as provided by 
section 102(f)(6)(C)(i) of the Act.
    (b) The Attorney General may bring a civil action in any appropriate 
United States district court against any individual who negligently 
violates the provisions of Sec. 2634.407. The court in which the action 
is brought may assess against the individual a civil penalty in any 
amount, not to exceed $5,000, as provided by section 102(f)(6)(C)(ii) of 
the Act.



Sec. 2634.703  Misuse of public reports.

    The Attorney General may bring a civil action against any person who 
obtains or uses a report filed under this part for any purpose 
prohibited by section 105(c)(1) of the Act, as incorporated in 
Sec. 2634.603(f). The court in which the action is brought may assess 
against the person a penalty in any amount, not to exceed $10,000, as 
provided by section 105 of the Act. This remedy shall be in addition to 
any other remedy available under statutory or common law.



Sec. 2634.704  Late filing fee.

    (a) In general. In accordance with section 104(d) of the Act, any 
reporting individual who is required to file a public financial 
disclosure report by the provisions of this part shall remit a late 
filing fee of $200 to the appropriate agency, payable to the U.S. 
Treasury, if such report is filed more than thirty days after the later 
of:
    (1) The date such report is required to be filed pursuant to the 
provisions of this part; or
    (2) The last day of any filing extension period granted pursuant to 
Sec. 2634.201(f).
    (b) Exceptions. (1) The Director of the Office of Government Ethics 
may waive the late filing fee if he determines that the delay in filing 
was caused by extraordinary circumstances which made the delay 
reasonably necessary.
    (2) Any request for a waiver of this filing fee provision must be 
made in writing and submitted with supporting documentation to the 
designated agency ethics official. That official shall review the 
request, and then forward it, with an opinion on the merits, to the 
Office of Government Ethics.

[[Page 459]]

    (c) Procedure. (1) The designated agency ethics official shall 
maintain a record of the due dates for all public reports which the 
employees of that agency must file, along with the new filing dates 
under extensions which have been granted. Each report received by the 
agency shall be marked with the date of receipt. For any report which 
has not been received by the end of the period specified in paragraph 
(a) of this section, the agency shall advise the delinquent filer, in 
writing, that:
    (i) Because his financial disclosure report is more than thirty days 
overdue, a $200 late filing fee will become due at the time of filing, 
by reason of section 104(d) of the Act and Sec. 2634.704;
    (ii) The filer is directed to remit to the agency, with the 
completed report, the $200 fee, payable to the United States Treasury;
    (iii) If the filer fails to remit the $200 fee when filing his late 
report, it shall be subject to agency debt collection procedures; and
    (iv) If extraordinary circumstances exist that would justify a 
request for a fee waiver, pursuant to paragraph (b) of this section, 
such request and supporting documentation must be submitted immediately.
    (2) Upon receipt from the reporting individual of the $200 late 
filing fee, the collecting agency shall note the payment in its records, 
and shall then forward the money to the U.S. Treasury for deposit as 
miscellaneous receipts, in accordance with 31 U.S.C. 3302 and section 
8030.30 of Volume 1 of the Treasury Financial Manual. If payment is not 
forthcoming, agency debt collection procedures shall be utilized, which 
may include salary or administrative offset, initiation of a tax refund 
offset, or other authorized action.
    (d) Late filing fee not exclusive remedy. The late filing fee is in 
addition to other sanctions which may be imposed for late filing. See 
Sec. 2634.701 of this subpart.
    (e) Confidential filers. The late filing fee does not apply to 
confidential filers. Late filing of confidential reports will be handled 
administratively under Sec. 2634.701(d) of this subpart.
    (f) Date of filing. The date of filing for purposes of determining 
whether a public financial disclosure report is filed more than thirty 
days late under this section will be the date of receipt by the agency, 
which should be noted on the report in accordance with Sec. 2634.605(a). 
The thirty-day grace period on imposing a late filing fee is adequate 
allowance for administrative delays in the receipt of reports by an 
agency.

[57 FR 11824, Apr. 7, 1992, as amended at 58 FR 38912, July 21, 1993]



                      Subpart H--Ethics Agreements

    Source: 57 FR 11825, Apr. 7, 1992, unless otherwise noted.



Sec. 2634.801  Scope.

    This subpart applies to ethics agreements made by any reporting 
individual under either subpart B or I of this part, to resolve 
potential or actual conflicts of interest.



Sec. 2634.802  Requirements.

    (a) Ethics agreement defined. The term ethics agreement shall 
include, for the purposes of this subpart, any oral or written promise 
by a reporting individual to undertake specific actions in order to 
alleviate an actual or apparent conflict of interest, such as:
    (1) Preparation of a written instrument for recusing (disqualifying) 
the individual from one or more particular matters or categories of 
official action;
    (2) Divestiture of a financial interest;
    (3) Resignation from a position with a non-Federal business or other 
entity;
    (4) Procurement of a waiver pursuant to 18 U.S.C. 208(b)(1) or 
(b)(3); or
    (5) Establishment of a qualified blind or diversified trust under 
the Act and subpart D of this part.
    (b) Time limit. The ethics agreement shall specify that the 
individual must complete the action which he or she has agreed to 
undertake within a period not to exceed three months from the date of 
the agreement (or of Senate confirmation, if applicable). Exceptions to 
the three-month deadline can be made in cases of unusual hardship, as 
determined by the Office of Government Ethics, for those ethics 
agreements which are submitted to it (see Sec. 2634.803 (a), (b), or (c) 
of this subpart),

[[Page 460]]

or by the designated agency ethics official for all other ethics 
agreements.

    Example. An official of the ABC Aircraft Company is nominated to a 
Department of Defense position requiring the advice and consent of the 
Senate. As a condition of assuming the position, the individual has 
agreed to divest himself of his ABC Aircraft stock which he recently 
acquired while he was an officer with the company. However, the 
Securities and Exchange Commission prohibits officers of public 
corporations from deriving a profit from the sale of stock in the 
corporation in which they hold office within six months of acquiring the 
stock, and directs that any such profit must be returned to the issuing 
corporation or its stock holders. Since meeting the usual three-month 
time limit specified in this subpart for satisfying an ethics agreement 
might entail losing any profit that could be realized on the sale of 
this stock, the nominee requests that the limit be extended beyond the 
six-month period imposed by the Commission. Written approval would have 
to be obtained from the Office of Government Ethics to extend the 
customary three-month period.



Sec. 2634.803  Notification of ethics agreements.

    (a) Nominees to positions requiring the advice and consent of the 
Senate. (1) In the case of a nominee referred to in Sec. 2634.201(c), 
the designated agency ethics official shall include with the report 
submitted to the Office of Government Ethics any ethics agreement which 
the nominee has made.
    (2) A designated agency ethics official shall immediately notify the 
Office of Government Ethics of any ethics agreement of a nominee which 
is made or becomes known to the designated agency ethics official after 
the submission of the nominee's report to the Office of Government 
Ethics. This requirement includes an ethics agreement made between a 
nominee and the Senate confirmation committee. The nominee shall 
immediately report to the designated agency ethics official any ethics 
agreement made with the committee.
    (3) The Office of Government Ethics shall immediately apprise the 
designated agency ethics official and the Senate confirmation committee 
of any ethics agreements made directly between the nominee and the 
Office of Government Ethics.
    (b) Incumbents in positions requiring the advice and consent of the 
Senate. In the case of a position which required the advice and consent 
of the Senate, the designated agency ethics official shall keep the 
Office of Government Ethics apprised of any ethics agreements which the 
incumbent makes, or which become known to the designated agency ethics 
official during the incumbent's term in his position.
    (c) Designated agency ethics officials not holding advice-and-
consent positions, and employees of the Offices referred to in 
Sec. 2634.602(c)(1)(v). A designated agency ethics official who has 
entered into a ethics agreement, and who is neither a nominee to, nor an 
incumbent in, a position which requires the advice and consent of the 
Senate, as well as each employee of the Executive Office of the 
President or the Office of the Vice President who is referred to in 
Sec. 2634.602(c)(1)(v), shall include with his initial financial 
disclosure report submitted to the Office of Government Ethics any 
ethics agreement undertaken by such official or employee. He shall also 
apprise the Office of Government Ethics promptly of any subsequent 
ethics agreement.
    (d) Other reporting individuals. Other reporting individuals 
desiring to enter into ethics agreement may do so with the designated 
agency ethics official for the employee's agency. Where an ethics 
agreement has been made with someone other than the designated agency 
ethics official, the officer or employee involved shall promptly apprise 
the designated agency ethics official of the agreement.

[57 FR 11825, Apr. 7, 1992; 57 FR 21855, May 22, 1992]



Sec. 2634.804  Evidence of compliance.

    (a) Requisite evidence of action taken. (1) For ethics agreements of 
nominees to positions requiring the advice and consent of the Senate, 
evidence of any action taken to comply with the terms of such ethics 
agreements shall be submitted by the designated agency ethics official, 
upon receipt of the evidence, to the Office of Government Ethics and to 
the Senate confirmation committee.
    (2) For ethics agreements of incumbents in positions which required 
the advice and consent of the Senate, evidence of any action taken to 
comply

[[Page 461]]

with the terms of such ethics agreements shall be submitted promptly by 
the designated agency ethics official to the Office of Government 
Ethics. A designated agency ethics official or an employee referred to 
in Sec. 2634.803(c) of this subpart who is neither a nominee to, nor an 
incumbent in, an advice-and-consent position, must also promptly send 
evidence of any action taken to comply with the terms of an ethics 
agreement to the Office of Government Ethics.
    (3) In the case of all other reporting individuals, evidence of any 
action taken to comply with the terms of an ethics agreement must be 
sent promptly to the designated agency ethics official.
    (b) The following materials and any other appropriate information 
constitute evidence of the action taken:
    (1) Recusal. A copy of any recusal instrument listing and describing 
the specific matters or subjects to which the recusal applies, a 
statement of the method by which the agency will enforce the recusal, 
and a list of the positions of those agency employees involved in the 
enforcement (i.e., the individual's immediate subordinates and 
supervisors).

    Example. A new employee of a Federal safety board owns stock in 
Nationwide Airlines. She has entered into an ethics agreement to recuse 
herself from participating in any accident investigations involving that 
company's aircraft until such time as she can complete a divestiture of 
the asset. She must give a copy of the recusal instrument to her 
immediate subordinates and supervisors, and to the designated agency 
ethics official. The employee has also agreed to recuse herself from any 
particular matter (as that term is used in 18 U.S.C. 208) that might 
arise with respect to any of her present or future holdings. There is no 
requirement to execute a recusal instrument for this type of general 
recusal, because it is simply a promise to abide by the terms of the 
statute.

    (2) Divestiture or resignation. Written notification that the 
divestiture or resignation has occurred.
    (3) Waivers. A copy of any waivers issued pursuant to 18 U.S.C. 
208(b)(1) or (b)(3) and signed by the appropriate supervisory official.
    (4) Blind or diversified trusts. Information required by subpart D 
of this part to be submitted to the Office of Government Ethics for its 
certification of any qualified trust instrument. If the Office of 
Government Ethics does not certify the trust, the designated agency 
ethics official and, as appropriate, the Senate confirmation committee 
should be informed immediately.

[57 FR 11825, Apr. 7, 1992; 57 FR 21855, May 22, 1992]



Sec. 2634.805  Retention.

    Records of ethics agreements and actions described in this subpart 
shall be maintained with the individual's financial disclosure report at 
the agency and additionally, in the case of filers described in 
paragraphs (a), (b), and (c) of Sec. 2634.803 of this subpart, at the 
Office of Government Ethics.

[57 FR 11825, Apr. 7, 1992; 57 FR 21855, May 22, 1992]



          Subpart I--Confidential Financial Disclosure Reports

    Source: 57 FR 11826, Apr. 7, 1992, unless otherwise noted.



Sec. 2634.901  Policies of confidential financial disclosure reporting.

    (a) The confidential financial reporting system set forth in this 
subpart is designed to complement the public reporting system 
established by title I of the Act. High-level officials in the executive 
branch are required to report certain financial interests publicly to 
ensure that every citizen can have confidence in the integrity of the 
Federal Government. It is equally important in order to guarantee the 
efficient and honest operation of the Government that other, less 
senior, executive branch employees, whose Government duties involve the 
exercise of significant discretion in certain sensitive areas, report 
their financial interests and outside business activities to their 
employing agencies, to facilitate the review of possible conflicts of 
interest. These reports assist an agency in administering its ethics 
program and counseling its employees. Such reports are filed on a 
confidential basis.
    (b) The confidential reporting system seeks from employees only that 
information which is relevant to the administration and application of 
criminal

[[Page 462]]

conflict of interest laws, administrative standards of conduct, and 
agency-specific statutory and program-related restrictions. The basic 
content of the reports required by Sec. 2634.907 of this subpart 
reflects that certain information is generally relevant to all agencies. 
However, depending upon an agency's authorized activities and any 
special or unique circumstances, additional information may be 
necessary. In these situations, and subject to the prior written 
approval of the Director of the Office of Government Ethics, agencies 
may formulate supplemental reporting requirements by following the 
procedures of Secs. 2634.103 and 2634.601(b).
    (c) This subpart also allows an agency to request, on a confidential 
basis, additional information from persons who are already subject to 
the public reporting requirements of this part. The public reporting 
requirements of the Act address Governmentwide concerns. The reporting 
requirements of this subpart allow agencies to confront special or 
unique agency concerns. If those concerns prompt an agency to seek more 
extensive reporting from employees who file public reports, it may 
proceed on a confidential, nonpublic basis, with prior written approval 
from the Director of the Office of Government Ethics, under the 
procedures of Secs. 2634.103 and 2634.601(b).
    (d) The reports filed pursuant to this subpart are specifically 
characterized as ``confidential,'' and are required to be withheld from 
the public, pursuant to section 107(a) of the Act. Section 107(a) leaves 
no discretion on this issue with the agencies. See also Sec. 2634.604. 
Further, Executive Order 12674 as modified by Executive Order 12731 
provides, in section 201(d), for a system of nonpublic (confidential) 
executive branch financial disclosure to complement the Act's system of 
public disclosure. The confidential reports provided for by this subpart 
contain sensitive commercial and financial information, as well as 
personal privacy-protected information. These reports and the 
information which they contain are, accordingly, exempt from being 
released to the public, under exemptions 3 (A) and (B), 4, and 6 of the 
Freedom of Information Act (FOIA), 5 U.S.C. 552(b)(3) (A) and (B), 
(b)(4), and (b)(6). Additional FOIA exemptions may apply to particular 
reports or portions of reports. Agency personnel shall not publicly 
release the reports or the information which these reports contain, 
except pursuant to an order issued by a Federal court, or as otherwise 
provided under applicable provisions of the Privacy Act (5 U.S.C. 552a), 
and in the OGE/GOVT-2 Governmentwide executive branch Privacy Act system 
of records, as well as any applicable agency records system. If an 
agency statute requires the public reporting of certain information and, 
for purposes of convenience, an agency chooses to collect that 
information on the confidential report form filed under this subpart, 
only the special statutory information may be released to the public, 
pursuant to the terms of the statute under which it was collected.
    (e) Executive branch agencies hire or use the paid and unpaid 
services of many individuals on an advisory or other less than full-time 
basis as special Government employees. These employees may include 
experts and consultants to the Government, as well as members of 
Government advisory committees. It is important for those agencies that 
utilize such services, and for the individuals who provide the services, 
to anticipate and avoid real or apparent conflicts of interest. The 
confidential financial disclosure system promotes that goal, with 
special Government employees among those required to file confidential 
reports.
    (f) For additional policies and definitions of terms applicable to 
both the public and confidential reporting systems, see Secs. 2634.104 
and 2634.105.



Sec. 2634.902  Transition to the new confidential financial disclosure reporting system.

    (a) The new confidential financial disclosure reporting system for 
executive branch departments and agencies established by this subpart 
will become effective on October 5, 1992. Until this subpart becomes 
effective, each executive agency shall continue to comply with its 
current regulations governing confidential statements regarding 
employment and financial interests, as promulgated under prior Executive

[[Page 463]]

Order 11222, and 5 CFR part 735, Sec. 735.106 and subpart D, and as 
preserved by the savings clause of section 502(a) of Executive Order 
12674 as modified by Executive Order 12731.
    (b) To the extent feasible, agencies should strive to eliminate 
overlaps between, or gaps in, reporting periods as the transition to the 
new confidential reporting system takes place. However, the reporting 
periods prescribed under the new system, once effective, must be 
followed.
    (c) Once effective, this new subpart and any other portions of this 
part applicable to confidential reports will supersede 5 CFR 735.106, 
all of subpart D of part 735 of 5 CFR, and any implementing agency 
regulations thereunder. See also Secs. 2634.103 and 2634.601 and 
Sec. 2634.901 of this subpart concerning requests for new special 
supplemental agency regulations and forms, where necessary.
    (d) As required by applicable law and Executive order, the 
confidential statements regarding employment and financial interests 
which were collected and retained under existing confidential financial 
disclosure reporting systems shall continue to be held in confidence. 
See section 107(a)(2) of the Act, as effective January 1, 1991 (as well 
as former section 207(a)(2) thereof, which was effective through 
December 31, 1990), section 502(b) of Executive Order 12674 as modified 
by Executive Order 12731 (and the prior ethics Executive Orders 11222 
and 12565), and Sec. 2634.901(d) of this subpart.



Sec. 2634.903  General requirements, filing dates, and extensions.

    (a) Incumbents. A confidential filer who holds a position or office 
described in Sec. 2634.904 of this subpart and who performs the duties 
of that position or office for a period in excess of 60 days during the 
twelve-month period ending September 30 (including more than 60 days in 
an acting capacity) shall file a confidential report as an incumbent, 
containing the information prescribed in Secs. 2634.907 and 2634.908 of 
this subpart on or before October 31 immediately following that period. 
No incumbent reports are required of special Government employees 
described in Sec. 2634.904(b) of this subpart, but they must file new 
entrant reports under Sec. 2634.903(b) of this subpart upon each 
appointment or reappointment. For confidential filers under 
Sec. 2634.904(c) of this subpart, consult agency supplemental 
regulations.
    (b) New entrants. (1) Not later than 30 days after assuming a new 
position or office described in Sec. 2634.904 of this subpart (which 
also encompasses the reappointment or redesignation of a special 
Government employee, including one who is serving on an advisory 
committee), a confidential filer shall file a confidential report 
containing the information prescribed in Secs. 2634.907 and 2634.908 of 
this subpart. For confidential filers under Sec. 2634.904(c) of this 
subpart, consult agency supplemental regulations.
    (2) However, no report shall be required if the individual:
    (i) Has, within 30 days prior to assuming his position, left another 
position or office referred to in Sec. 2634.904 of this subpart or in 
Sec. 2634.202, and has previously satisfied the reporting requirements 
applicable to that former position, but a copy of the report filed by 
the individual while in that position should be made available to the 
appointing agency, and the individual must comply with any agency 
requirement for a supplementary report for the new position;
    (ii) Has already filed such a report in connection with 
consideration for appointment to the position. The agency may request 
that the individual update such a report if more than six months has 
expired since it was filed; or
    (iii) Is not reasonably expected to perform the duties of an office 
or position referred to in Sec. 2634.904 of this subpart for more than 
60 days in the following twelve-month period, as determined by the 
designated agency ethics official or delegate. That may occur most 
commonly in the case of an employee who temporarily serves in an acting 
capacity in a position described by Sec. 2634.904(a) of this subpart. If 
the individual actually performs the duties of such position for more 
than 60 days in the twelve-month period, then a confidential financial 
disclosure report must be filed within 15 calendar days after the 
sixtieth day of such service in the position. Paragraph (b)(2)(iii) of

[[Page 464]]

Sec. 2634.903 does not apply to new entrants filing as special 
Government employees under Sec. 2634.904(b) of this subpart.
    (3) Notwithstanding the filing deadline prescribed in paragraph 
(b)(1) of this section, agencies may at their discretion, require that 
prospective entrants into positions described in Sec. 2634.904 of this 
subpart file their new entrant confidential financial disclosure reports 
prior to serving in such positions, to insure that there are no 
insurmountable ethics concerns. Additionally, a special Government 
employee who has been appointed to serve on an advisory committee shall 
file the required report before any advice is rendered by the employee 
to the agency, or in no event, later than the first committee meeting.
    (c) Advisory committee definition. For purposes of this subpart, the 
term advisory committee shall have the meaning given to that term under 
section 3 of the Federal Advisory Committee Act (5 U.S.C. app). 
Specifically, it means any committee, board, commission, council, 
conference, panel, task force, or other similar group which is 
established by statute or reorganization plan, or established or 
utilized by the President or one or more agencies, in the interest of 
obtaining advice or recommendations for the President or one or more 
agencies or officers of the Federal Government. Such term includes any 
subcommittee or other subgroup of any advisory committee, but does not 
include the Advisory Commission on Intergovernmental Relations, the 
Commission on Government Procurement, or any committee composed wholly 
of full-time officers or employees of the Federal Government.
    (d) Extensions. The agency reviewing official may, for good cause 
shown, grant to any employee or class of employees a filing extension or 
several extensions totaling not more than 90 days.

[57 FR 11826, Apr. 7, 1992, as amended at 58 FR 38912, July 21, 1993]



Sec. 2634.904  Confidential filer defined.

    The term confidential filer includes:
    (a) Each officer or employee in the executive branch whose position 
is classified at GS-15 or below of the General Schedule prescribed by 5 
U.S.C. 5332, or the rate of basic pay for which is fixed, other than 
under the General Schedule, at a rate which is less than 120% of the 
minimum rate of basic pay for GS-15 of the General Schedule; each 
officer or employee of the United States Postal Service or Postal Rate 
Commission whose basic rate of pay is less than 120% of the minimum rate 
of basic pay for GS-15 of the General Schedule; each member of a 
uniformed service whose pay grade is less than O-7 under 37 U.S.C. 201; 
and each officer or employee in any other position determined by the 
designated agency ethics official to be of equal classification; if:
    (1) The agency concludes that the duties and responsibilities of the 
employee's position require that employee to participate personally and 
substantially through decision or the exercise of significant judgment, 
in taking a Government action regarding:
    (i) Contracting or procurement;
    (ii) Administering or monitoring grants, subsidies, licenses, or 
other federally conferred financial or operational benefits;
    (iii) Regulating or auditing any non-Federal entity; or
    (iv) Other activities in which the final decision or action will 
have a direct and substantial economic effect on the interests of any 
non-Federal entity; or
    (2) The agency concludes that the duties and responsibilities of the 
employee's position require the employee to file such a report to avoid 
involvement in a real or apparent conflict of interest, and to carry out 
the purposes behind any statute, Executive order, rule, or regulation 
applicable to or administered by that employee. Positions which might be 
subject to a reporting requirement under this subparagraph include those 
with duties which involve investigating or prosecuting violations of 
criminal or civil law.

    Example 1. A contracting officer drafts the requests for proposals 
for data processing equipment of significant value which is to be 
purchased by his agency. He works with substantial independence of 
action. The contracting officer should be required to file a 
confidential financial disclosure report.

[[Page 465]]

    Example 2. An agency environmental engineer inspects a manufacturing 
plant to ascertain whether the plant complies with a permit to release a 
certain effluent into a nearby stream. Any violation of the permit 
standards may result in civil penalties for the plant, and in criminal 
penalties for the plant's management based upon any action which they 
took to create the violation. If the agency engineer determines that the 
plant does not meet the permit requirements, he can require the plant to 
terminate release of the effluent until the plant satisfies the permit 
standards. Because the engineer exercises substantial discretion in 
regulating the plant's activities, and because his final decisions will 
have a substantial economic effect on the plant's interests, the 
engineer should be required to file a confidential financial disclosure 
report.

    (b) Unless required to file public financial disclosure reports by 
subpart B of this part, all executive branch special Government 
employees as defined in 18 U.S.C 202(a) and Sec. 2634.105(s), including 
those who serve on advisory committees. The term special Government 
employees does not include an advisory committee member who serves only 
as a representative of an industry of other outside entity or who is 
already a Federal employee.

    Example 1. A consultant to an agency periodically advises the agency 
regarding important foreign policy matters. The consultant must file a 
confidential report if he is retained as a special Government employee 
and not an independent contractor.
    Example 2. An advisory committee member (who is not a private group 
representative) attends four committee meetings every year to provide 
advice to an agency about pharmaceutical matters. No compensation is 
received by the committee member, other than travel expenses. The 
advisory committee member must file a confidential disclosure report, 
since she is a special Government employee.

    (c) Each public filer referred to in Sec. 2634.202 on public 
disclosure who is required by agency regulations issued in accordance 
with Sec. 2634.907(b) of this subpart to file a supplemental 
confidential financial disclosure report which contains information that 
is more extensive than the information required in the reporting 
individual's public financial disclosure report under this part.
    (d) Any employee who, notwithstanding his exclusion from the public 
financial reporting requirements of this part by virtue of a 
determination under Sec. 2634.203, is covered by the criteria of 
paragraph (a) of this section.



Sec. 2634.905  Exclusions from filing requirements.

    Any individual or class of individuals, including special Government 
employees, described in Sec. 2634.904 of this subpart, may be excluded 
from all or a portion of the confidential reporting requirements of this 
subpart, when the agency head or designee determines that:
    (a) The duties of a position make remote the possibility that the 
incumbent will be involved in a real or apparent conflict of interest;
    (b) The duties of a position involve such a low level of 
responsibility that the submission of a confidential financial 
disclosure report is unnecessary because of:
    (1) The substantial degree of supervision and review over the 
position; or
    (2) The inconsequential effect of any potential conflict on the 
integrity of the Government; or
    (c) The use of an alternative procedure approved in writing by the 
Office of Government Ethics is adequate to prevent possible conflicts of 
interest.

    Example 1. An agency special Government employee who is a draftsman 
prepares the drawings to be used by an agency in soliciting bids for 
construction work on a bridge. Because he is not involved in the 
contracting process associated with the construction, the likelihood 
that his actions will create a conflict of interest is remote. The 
draftsman need not be required by the agency to file a confidential 
financial disclosure report.
    Example 2. An investigator is principally assigned as the field 
agent to investigate alleged violations of conflict of interest laws. 
The investigator works under the direct supervision of an agent-in-
charge. The agent-in-charge reviews all of the investigator's work 
product and then uses those materials to prepare the agency's report 
which is submitted under his own name. The agency may decide not to 
require the investigator to file a confidential disclosure report.
    Example 3. A nonsupervisory auditor at an agency is regularly 
assigned to cases involving possible loan improprieties by financial 
institutions. Prior to undertaking each enforcement review, the auditor 
reviews the file to determine if she, her spouse, minor or dependent 
child, or any general partner, organization in which she serves as an 
officer,

[[Page 466]]

director, trustee, employee, or general partner, or organization with 
which she is negotiating or has an agreement or an arrangement for 
future employment, or a close friend or relative is a subject of the 
investigation, or will be in any way affected by the investigation. Once 
she determines that there is no such relationship, she signs and dates a 
certification which verifies that she has reviewed the file and has 
determined that no conflict of interest exists. She then files the 
certification with the head of her auditing division at the agency. On 
the other hand, if she cannot execute the certification, she informs the 
head of her auditing division. In response, the division will either 
reassign the case or review the conflicting interest to determine 
whether a waiver would be appropriate. This alternate procedure, if 
approved by the Office of Government Ethics in writing, will suffice for 
a conflict of interest review. Therefore, the agency may exclude the 
auditor from filing a confidential disclosure report under this subpart.

[57 FR 11826, Apr. 7, 1992; 57 FR 21855, May 22, 1992]



Sec. 2634.906  Review of confidential filer status.

    The head of each agency, or an officer designated by the head of the 
agency for that purpose, shall review any complaint by an individual 
that his position has been improperly determined by the agency to be one 
which requires the submission of a confidential financial disclosure 
report pursuant to this subpart. A decision by the agency head or 
designee regarding the complaint shall be final.



Sec. 2634.907  Report contents.

    (a) Other than the reports of confidential filers described in 
Sec. 2634.904(c), each confidential financial disclosure report filed 
pursuant to Sec. 2634.903 of this subpart shall include on the standard 
form prescribed by the Office of Government Ethics (see Sec. 2634.601 of 
subpart F of this part) and in accordance with instructions issued by 
the Office, a full and complete statement of information required to be 
reported according to the provisions of subpart C of this part, (except 
for those provisions in subpart C requiring the reporting of the amounts 
or values of any item), with respect to the following:
    (1) Interests in property. All the interests in property specified 
by Sec. 2634.301, except:
    (i) Accounts (including both demand and time deposits) in depository 
institutions, including banks, savings and loan associations, credit 
unions, and similar depository financial institutions;
    (ii) Money market mutual funds and accounts;
    (iii) U.S. Government obligations, including Treasury bonds, bills, 
notes, and savings bonds; and
    (iv) Government securities issued by U.S. Government agencies;
    (2) Income. All the income items specified by Sec. 2634.302, except 
from:
    (i) Accounts (including both demand and time deposits) in depository 
institutions, including banks, savings and loan associations, credit 
unions, and similar depository financial institutions;
    (ii) Money market mutual funds and accounts;
    (iii) U.S. Government obligations, including Treasury bonds, bills, 
notes, and savings bonds; and
    (iv) Government securities issued by U.S. Government agencies;
    (3) Gifts and reimbursements. All gifts and reimbursements specified 
by Sec. 2634.304 (except that new entrants, as described in 
Sec. 2634.903(b) of this subpart, need not report any information on 
gifts and reimbursements);
    (4) Liabilities. All liabilities specified by Sec. 2634.305;
    (5) Agreements and arrangements. All agreements and arrangements 
specified by Sec. 2634.306; and
    (6) Outside positions. All outside positions specified by 
Sec. 2634.307.
    (b) For reports of confidential filers described in Sec. 2634.904(c) 
of this subpart, each supplemental confidential financial disclosure 
report shall include only the supplemental information:
    (1) Which is more extensive than that required in the reporting 
individual's public financial disclosure report under this part; and
    (2) Which has been approved by the Office of Government Ethics for 
collection by the agency concerned, as set forth in supplemental agency 
regulations and forms, issued under Secs. 2634.103 and 2634.601(b) (see 
Sec. 2634.901 (b) and (c) of this subpart).

[57 FR 11826, Apr. 7, 1992, as amended at 58 FR 63024, Nov. 30, 1993]

[[Page 467]]



Sec. 2634.908  Reporting periods.

    (a) Incumbents. Each confidential financial disclosure report filed 
under Sec. 2634.903(a) of this subpart shall include on the standard 
form prescribed by the Office of Government Ethics and in accordance 
with instructions issued by the Office, a full and complete statement of 
the information required to be reported according to the provisions of 
this subpart for the preceding twelve months ending September 30, or for 
any portion of that period not covered by a previous confidential or 
public financial disclosure report filed under this part.
    (b) New entrants. Each confidential financial disclosure report 
filed under Sec. 2634.903(b) of this subpart shall include, on the 
standard form prescribed by the Office of Government Ethics and in 
accordance with instructions issued by the Office, a full and complete 
statement of the information required to be reported according to the 
provisions of this subpart for the preceding twelve months from the date 
of filing.



Sec. 2634.909  Procedures, penalties, and ethics agreements.

    (a) The provisions of subpart F of this part govern the filing 
procedures and forms for, and the custody and review of, confidential 
disclosure reports filed under this subpart.
    (b) For penalties and remedial action which apply in the event that 
the reporting individual fails to file, falsifies information, or files 
late with respect to confidential financial disclosure reports, see 
subpart G of this part.
    (c) Subpart H of this part on ethics agreements applies to both the 
public and confidential reporting systems under this part.



                 Subpart J--Certificates of Divestiture

    Source: 55 FR 14408, Apr. 18, 1990, unless otherwise noted.



Sec. 2634.1001  Nonrecognition for sales to comply with conflict of interest requirements; general considerations.

    (a) Purpose. This subpart establishes the procedures and policies of 
the Office of Government Ethics with respect to the issuance of 
Certificates of Divestiture pursuant to section 1043 of the Internal 
Revenue Code of 1986 (hereinafter in this subpart referred to as 
``section 1043'').
    (b) Scope. Section 1043 and the rules of this subpart provide for 
nonrecognition of gain in the case of sales to comply with conflict of 
interest requirements. The rules of this subpart relate to the issuance 
of Certificates of Divestiture and the permitted property into which a 
reinvestment must be made during the 60-day period beginning on the date 
of such a sale in order for nonrecognition to be permitted. Such 
reinvestments are called rollovers, and are limited to obligations of 
the United States and diversified investment funds as defined in 
Sec. 2634.1003. The substantive and procedural rules relating to the tax 
aspects of such sales and rollovers pursuant to the statutory scheme are 
subject to the jurisdiction of the Internal Revenue Service. Eligible 
persons should seek the advice of their personal tax advisors for 
guidance as to the tax aspects of divestiture transactions and whether 
proposed acquisitions meet the requirements for permitted property. 
Internal Revenue Service regulations and other guidance should be 
consulted as to these matters. Internal Revenue Service requirements for 
reporting dispositions of property and making an election not to 
recognize gain under section 1043 must be followed by eligible persons 
wishing to make such an election.
    (c) Policy. The Federal purpose reflected in section 1043 of the 
Internal Revenue Code and these rules is to minimize the burden of 
Government service resulting from gain on the sale of assets for which 
divestiture is reasonably necessary because of the conflict of interest 
laws, in order to attract and retain highly qualified personnel in the 
executive branch and to ensure the confidence of the public in the 
integrity of Government officials and decision-making processes.

[55 FR 14408, Apr. 18, 1990, as amended at 61 FR 32635, June 25, 1996]



Sec. 2634.1002  Issuance of Certificates of Divestiture.

    (a) General rule. Pursuant to section 1043, a Certificate of 
Divestiture with

[[Page 468]]

respect to specific property shall be issued by the Director of the 
Office of Government Ethics pursuant to the procedures of paragraph (b) 
of this section upon a determination that such divestiture by an 
eligible person as defined in paragraph (c) of this section is 
reasonably necessary to comply with 18 U.S.C. 208, or any other Federal 
conflict of interest statute, regulation, rule, or executive order, or 
pursuant to the request of a congressional committee as a condition of 
confirmation.
    (b) Procedural requirements--(1) Required submissions. A 
determination to issue a Certificate of Divestiture may be made by the 
Director of the Office of Government Ethics only upon the submission by 
the designated agency ethics official of the agency of employment or 
proposed employment of the individual referred to in paragraph (c)(1) of 
this section of full and complete case materials to the Office of 
Government Ethics. Such case materials shall include:
    (i) A copy of a written request from the eligible person who is to 
divest the property (a Certificate of Divestiture cannot be issued for 
property which has already been divested) to the designated agency 
ethics official to pursue certification in the case of the property to 
be divested, which includes:
    (A) A commitment to complete the divestiture on or before a 
specified date which is no later than the end of the three-month period 
referred to by Sec. 2634.802(b) (or a similarly structured agreement in 
any case to which paragraph (b)(1)(ii)(B) of this section applies), or 
any extension thereof granted, or concurred with in writing, by the 
Office of Government Ethics; and
    (B) Full and complete information concerning the facts and 
circumstances relating to the acquisition of such property and its 
contemplated divestiture;
    (ii) In the case of an individual referred to in paragraph (c)(1) of 
this section who:
    (A) Is required by the rules of this part or this title, to file a 
financial disclosure report, a copy of the latest report which has been 
filed; or
    (B) Is not required to file a report referred to in paragraph 
(b)(1)(ii)(A) of this section, a memorandum from such individual which 
discloses the information with respect to the specification of interests 
in property, income, liabilities, agreements and arrangements, and 
outside positions which are required to be disclosed on such a report;
    (iii) A detailed description of the specific property as to which 
divestiture is contemplated;
    (iv) Complete statements of: (A) The facts and circumstances 
relevant to whether there is a reasonable necessity for divestiture 
(including a description of the position or applicable statutory 
citation setting forth the duties of the subject position); and
    (B) Analysis and opinion from such designated agency ethics official 
concerning the application of the rules of this part in the case of the 
proposed certification, including specification of the date on which the 
three-month period referred to by Sec. 2634.802(b) (or a similarly 
structured agreement in any case to which paragraph (b)(1)(ii)(B) of 
this section applies), or any extension thereof granted, or concurred 
with in writing, by the Office of Government Ethics, will lapse; and
    (v) In lieu of the materials described in paragraph (b)(1)(iv) of 
this section, in the case of the contemplated divestiture of specific 
property pursuant to the request of a congressional committee as a 
condition of confirmation, such materials shall include the written 
acknowledgement of the Chairman of such committee of such request, a 
letter to the committee containing a promise from the nominee to divest 
specified property in accordance with such request, or a transcript of 
congressional testimony containing such a commitment by the nominee 
pursuant to such request.
    (2) Standards for issuance. Certification pursuant to the rules of 
this subpart relates to the reasonable necessity for the divestiture of 
specific property pursuant to section 1043. Divestiture is one of the 
standard remedial actions available to comply with conflict of interest 
statutes, regulations, rules, and executive orders (see 
Sec. 2634.604(b)(5)), and certification ameliorates the impact of a 
divestiture. In cases in which the contemplated divestiture is not 
pursuant to the request of

[[Page 469]]

a congressional committee as a condition of confirmation, a Certificate 
of Divestiture will be issued by the Director of the Office of 
Government Ethics only if he concurs with the opinion of the designated 
agency ethics official referred to in paragraph (b)(1)(iv)(B) of this 
section that such divestiture is reasonably necessary to comply with 18 
U.S.C. 208, or any other Federal conflict of interest statute, 
regulation, rule, or executive order. Issues relating to whether the 
terms of a contemplated divestiture constitute a sale or other 
disposition of the property under Internal Revenue Service Rules and 
other tax matters are under the jurisdiction of the Internal Revenue 
Service. See Sec. 2634.1001(b).
    (3) Documentation of the certification. Certification shall be 
indicated by a letter from the Director to the eligible party or his 
representative.
    (c) Eligible person. For purposes of section 1043 and this subpart, 
the term ``eligible person'' includes:
    (1) Any officer or employee of the executive branch of the Federal 
Government, except a person who is a special Government employee as 
defined in 18 U.S.C. 202;
    (2) The spouse and any minor or dependent child of an individual 
referred to in paragraph (c)(1) of this section whose ownership of 
property required to be divested is attributable to such person by 18 
U.S.C. 208, or any other Federal conflict of interest statute, 
regulation, rule, or executive order; and
    (3) Any trustee holding property in trust required to be divested in 
which:
    (i) An individual referred to in paragraph (c)(1) of this section 
has a beneficial interest in principal or income; or
    (ii) A spouse or any minor or dependent child of an individual 
referred to in paragraph (c)(2) of this section has a beneficial 
interest in principal or income which is attributable to a person 
referred to in paragraph (c)(1) of this section by 18 U.S.C. 208, or any 
other Federal conflict of interest statute, regulation, rule, or 
executive order.
    (d) Special rules in the case of a trustee who is an eligible 
person. (1) Notwithstanding any other rule of this subpart, in the case 
of a trustee who is an eligible person pursuant to paragraph (c)(3) of 
this section, a Certificate of Divestiture will not be issued unless the 
parties take those actions which, in the opinion of the Director of the 
Office of Government Ethics, are appropriate to exclude parties in 
addition to those referred to in paragraph (c) (1) and (2) of this 
section from participation in the nonrecognition mechanism. Such 
measures may include, as permitted by applicable State trust and estate 
law, division of the trust into separate portfolios, special 
distributions, dissolution of the trust, or any other method deemed by 
the Director, in his sole discretion, to be feasible under the facts and 
circumstances to exclude additional parties from benefiting from the 
nonrecognition mechanism.
    (2) In view of the further analysis which must be undertaken by the 
Office of Government Ethics in the case of a Certificate of Divestiture 
request with respect to a trustee, the required submissions in such a 
case shall include in addition to the materials described in paragraph 
(b)(1) of this section, a copy of the trust instrument, full details as 
to its current portfolio, and a memorandum analyzing all beneficial 
interests in principal and income. To the extent that there may be 
additional parties with beneficial interests, the staff of the Office of 
Government Ethics may consult with representatives of the Government 
official, trustee, and other concerned parties, as appropriate, in order 
to resolve the issues presented in light of the principles described in 
paragraph (d)(1) of this section.
    (e) Special rules in the case of employees; unfair and unintended 
benefits--(1) In general. Notwithstanding any other rule of this 
subpart, a Certificate of Divestiture will not be issued in any case in 
which, in the opinion of the Director of the Office of Government 
Ethics, in his sole discretion, an unfair or unintended benefit would be 
conferred on an eligible person. Paragraphs (e)(2) through (e)(6) of 
this section give examples of the application of the general rule of 
this paragraph (e)(1).
    (2) Employee benefit plans. With respect to interests in pension, 
profit-sharing, stock bonus and other employee benefit plans, such an 
unfair or

[[Page 470]]

unintended benefit would occur upon certification of property held or 
received during one step of a sequence in avoidance of transferring an 
otherwise qualifying rollover distribution to an eligible retirement 
plan within 60 days. In other words, Certificates of Divestiture may not 
be used to achieve a tax advantaged removal of employee benefit plan 
funds from the rules which normally pertain to such plans in cases where 
no capital gains tax would be imposed if those rules were followed. 
Accordingly, in the absence of a demonstration that an interest in an 
employee benefit plan is not eligible for rollover treatment, a 
certificate will not be issued with respect to such an interest. Such a 
demonstration must satisfy the Office of Government Ethics that the plan 
administrator cannot make a qualifying distribution in the case of the 
eligible person to which the provisions of section 402(f) of the 
Internal Revenue Code of 1986 would apply and that the particular 
property interest proposed for certification falls within the statutory 
scheme.
    (3) Certain property received as compensation for services. Such an 
unfair and unintended benefit would occur upon certification of property 
received as compensation for services, the gain from which would 
otherwise be treated as earned income. For example, with respect to the 
contemplated exercise of a stock option granted by an employer, such an 
unfair and unintended benefit would occur upon certification if such 
exercise or the sale of the resultant stock would otherwise result in 
earned income to the employee.
    (4) Nontimely divestitures. With respect to any contemplated 
divestiture, such an unfair or unintended benefit would occur upon 
certification after the three-month period referred to by 
Sec. 2634.802(b) (or a similarly structured agreement in any case to 
which paragraph (b)(1)(ii)(B) of this section applies) has lapsed, 
unless there is an extension of time in a case of unusual hardship as 
determined pursuant to such section by the Office of Government Ethics 
or the designated agency ethics official (with the written concurrence 
of the Office of Government Ethics). In the case of such an agreement to 
implement a divestiture required by statute, regulation, rule, or 
executive order, such three-month period shall be deemed, for purposes 
of this subpart, to have started no later than 10 days after such 
requirement had become applicable.
    (5) Similar or related interests. With respect to any contemplated 
divestiture, such an unfair or unintended benefit would occur unless all 
similar or related interests in property were also subject to a 
divestiture commitment.
    (6) Property acquired under improper circumstances. With respect to 
any contemplated divestiture, such an unfair advantage or unintended 
benefit would occur if the property was acquired at a time when the 
holding of such property was prohibited by any law or regulation or 
under circumstances which otherwise would create the appearance of a 
conflict with the conscientious performance of governmental 
responsibilities.

[55 FR 14408, Apr. 18, 1990, as amended at 61 FR 32635, June 25, 1996; 
61 FR 40145, Aug. 1, 1996]



Sec. 2634.1003  Permitted property.

    (a) In general. The categories of permitted property into which 
rollovers are permitted to be made have been drawn through the rules of 
this section so as to be neutral in respect of the vast majority of 
Federal programs and responsibilities. The Internal Revenue Service has 
jurisdiction with respect to determinations concerning the application 
of the rules of this section in specific cases (see Sec. 2634.1001(b)). 
However, the ethics program rules applicable to specific agencies and 
positions may further limit an eligible person's choices. The advice of 
the designated agency ethics official should be sought in this regard. 
For example, there are restrictions on the purchases of shares in 
regulated investment companies by some Securities and Exchange 
Commission personnel and on purchases of obligations of the United 
States by some officials of the Department of the Treasury. 
Additionally, it may not be appropriate for some officials of agencies 
having international responsibilities to invest in mutual funds which 
exclusively invest in securities outside of the United States.

[[Page 471]]

    (b) Definition of ``permitted property''. For purposes of section 
1043 and this subpart, the term permitted property means:
    (1) Any obligation of the United States; and
    (2) Any ``diversified investment fund'', as defined in paragraph (c) 
of this section.
    (c) Diversified investment fund--(1) Definition. The term 
diversified investment fund means any open-end mutual fund (which is a 
``regulated investment company'', as defined by section 851 of the 
Internal Revenue Code of 1986), which by its prospectus, or any common 
trust fund maintained by a bank (which is a ``common trust fund'', as 
defined by section 584(a) of the Internal Revenue Code of 1986), which 
by the literature it distributes to prospective and current investors 
describing its objectives and practices, does not indicate the objective 
or practice of devoting its investments to particular or limited 
industrial, economic, or geographic sectors.
    (2) Ownership limitation. Notwithstanding any other rule of this 
paragraph (c), a fund may not be considered to be a diversified 
investment fund in any case in which the ownership of more than one 
percent of the market value of the fund would be attributable to an 
individual referred to in Sec. 2634.1002(c)(1) immediately after a 
rollover.

    Example 1: The Alpha Group is a family of funds which markets 
numerous open-end mutual funds which are typical of those generally 
available to the general public:
    (i) The following funds of the Alpha Group would be presumed to be 
diversified investment funds for purposes of paragraph (c)(1) of this 
section, unless their prospectuses indicated an objective or practice of 
devoting their investments to particular or limited industrial, 
economic, or geographic sectors: the Common Stock Fund, the Growth Stock 
Fund, the S&P Index Fund, the Global Fund (investing in common stocks 
world-wide), the Blue Chip Fund, the Corporate Bond Fund, the Municipal 
Bond Fund, and the Government Bond Fund (which invests exclusively in 
obligations of the United States).
    (ii) The following funds of the Alpha Group would not be presumed to 
qualify as diversified investment funds, unless their prospectuses 
indicated that they do not have an objective or practice of devoting 
their investments to particular or limited industrial, economic, or 
geographic sectors for purposes of paragraph (c)(1) of this section: The 
Pacific fund, the Mexico Fund, the New England Fund, the Gold Fund, the 
Commodity Futures Fund, the Venture Capital Fund, and the Drug Industry 
Sector Fund.
    Example 2: The Omega Fund is a closed-end mutual fund which is 
listed on the New York Stock Exchange. The Omega Fund is not a 
diversified investment fund, as only open-end mutual funds are within 
the definition of that term pursuant to paragraph (c)(1) of this 
section.



Sec. 2634.1004  Special rule.

    Public access to Certificates of Divestiture. The Certificates of 
Divestiture issued pursuant to the provisions of this part shall be 
available to the public in accordance with the rules of Sec. 2634.603 of 
this part.

          Appendix A to Part 2634--Certificate of Independence

    The Certificate of Independence required by Sec. 2634.406(b) shall 
be executed as follows:

                       Certificate of Independence

    With respect to the trust of __________ (Settlor), which has been 
submitted to the Office of Government Ethics for certification pursuant 
to the Ethics in Government Act of 1978 (Pub. L. 95-521, as amended), 
the undersigned proposed [Trustee] [__________] of such trust is a 
financial institution which is eligible to serve in such fiduciary 
capacity in accordance with section 102(f)(3)(A) of such Act:
    FIRST: The undersigned is (check one)--
    (  ) a bank, as defined in 12 U.S.C. 1841(c), or
    (  ) an investment adviser, as defined in 15 U.S.C. 80b-2(a)(11),
    not more than 10 percent of which is owned or controlled by a single 
individual.
    SECOND: The undersigned--
    (1) Is independent of and unassociated with any interested party so 
that the undersigned cannot be controlled or influenced in the 
administration of the trust by any interested party; and
    (2) is not and has not been affiliated with any interested party, 
and is not a partner of, or involved in any joint venture or other 
investment or business with any interested party.
    THIRD: Any director, officer, or employee of the undersigned--
    (1) Is independent of and unassociated with any interested party so 
that such director, officer, or employee cannot be controlled or 
influenced in the administration of the trust by any interested party;
    (2) Is not and has not been employed by any interested party, nor a 
director, officer,

[[Page 472]]

or employee of any organization affiliated with any interested party, 
and is not and has not been a partner of, or involved in any joint 
venture or other investment or business with, any interested party; and
    (3) Is not a relative of any interested party.
    FOURTH: The undersigned certifies that the statements contained 
herein are true, complete and correct to the best of such undersigned's 
knowledge and belief.
    Date________
    (firm)________
    By:________
    (title)________
Approved by________
    Director, Office of Government Ethics
    Date________

    Note: See Appendix C of this part for Privacy Act and Paperwork 
Reduction Act notices.

[57 FR 11829, Apr. 7, 1992]

           Appendix B to Part 2634--Certificate of Compliance

    The Certificate of Compliance required by Sec. 2634.408(b) shall be 
executed as follows:

                        Certificate of Compliance

    With respect to the qualified blind trust (qualified diversified 
trust) of________ (Settlor), the undersigned, the approved [Trustee] 
[________] of such trust, pursuant to 5 CFR 2634.406, has served in such 
fiduciary capacity during the calendar year [or for the period 
beginning________ and ending________] and is eligible to continue in 
such capacity by virtue of the following:
    FIRST: The undersigned (and any director, officer, or employee) has 
not knowingly or negligently, and will not--
    (A) disclose any information to an interested party with respect to 
the trust that may not be disclosed pursuant to title I of the Act, the 
implementing regulations (including 5 CFR 2634.403(b)(12)(i) for a 
qualified blind trust, and 5 CFR 2634.404(c)(12)(i) for a qualified 
diversified trust), or the trust instrument;
    (B) acquire any holding the ownership of which is prohibited by, or 
not in accordance with, applicable statute, regulation, or the terms of 
the trust instrument;
    (C) solicit advice from any interested party with respect to such 
trust, which solicitation is prohibited by title I of the Act, the 
implementing regulations (including 5 CFR 2634.403(b)(12)(iii) for a 
qualified blind trust and 5 CFR 2634.404(c)(12)(iii), for a qualified 
diversified trust), or the trust instrument;
    (D) fail to file any document required by title I of the Act, the 
implementing regulations (including 5 CFR 2634.408(b) and (c)), or the 
trust instrument; or
    (E) violate or fail to comply with any provision or requirement of 
title I of the Act, the implementing regulations, or the trust 
instrument.
    SECOND: The undersigned (and any director, officer, or employee) 
will not knowingly or negligently engage in the above-mentioned 
activities.
    THIRD: The undersigned certifies that the statements contained 
herein are true, complete and correct to the best of such undersigned's 
knowledge and belief.
    Date________
    (firm)________
    By:________
    (title)________
    Note: See appendix C of this part for Privacy Act and Paperwork 
Reduction Act notices.

[57 FR 11830, Apr. 7, 1992; 57 FR 21855, May 22, 1992]

Appendix C to Part 2634--Privacy Act and Paperwork Reduction Act Notices 
                         for Appendixes A and B

                          Privacy Act Statement

    Section 102(f) of the Ethics in Government Act of 1978 as amended 
(the ``Ethics Act'') (5 U.S.C. App.) and subpart D of 5 CFR part 2634 of 
the regulations of the Office of Government Ethics (OGE) require the 
reporting of this information for the administration of qualified trusts 
under the Ethics Act. The primary use of the information on this 
certificate is for review by Government officials of OGE and the agency 
of the Government employee for whom the trust is established to 
determine compliance with applicable Federal laws and regulations as 
regards qualified trusts. Additional disclosures of the information on 
this certificate may be made:
    (1) to any requesting person in accordance with the access 
provisions of section 105 of the Ethics Act;
    (2) to a Federal, State or local law enforcement agency if the 
disclosing agency becomes aware of a violation or potential violation of 
law or regulation;
    (3) to a court or party in a court or Federal administrative 
proceeding if the Government is a party or in order to comply with a 
subpoena;
    (4) to a source when necessary to obtain information relevant to a 
conflict of interest issue;
    (5) to the National Archives and Records Administration or the 
General Services Administration in records management inspections;
    (6) to the Office of Management and Budget during legislative 
coordination on private relief legislation; and

[[Page 473]]

    (7) in response to a discovery request or for the appearance of a 
witness in a pending judicial or administrative proceeding, if the 
information is relevant to the subject matter.

Knowing or willful falsification of information on this certificate or 
failure to file or report information required to be reported under 
title I of the Ethics Act and 5 CFR part 2634 of the OGE regulations may 
lead to disqualification as a trustee or other fiduciary as well as 
possible disqualification of the underlying trust itself. Knowing and 
willful falsification of information required under the Ethics Act and 
the regulations may also subject you to criminal prosecution.

                        Public Burden Information

    This collection of information is estimated to take an average of 
twenty minutes per response.

[57 FR 11830, Apr. 7, 1992]



PART 2635--STANDARDS OF ETHICAL CONDUCT FOR EMPLOYEES OF THE EXECUTIVE BRANCH--Table of Contents




                      Subpart A--General Provisions

Sec.
2635.101  Basic obligation of public service.
2635.102  Definitions.
2635.103  Applicability to members of the uniformed services.
2635.104  Applicability to employees on detail.
2635.105  Supplemental agency regulations.
2635.106  Disciplinary and corrective action.
2635.107  Ethics advice.

                  Subpart B--Gifts From Outside Sources

2635.201  Overview.
2635.202  General standards.
2635.203  Definitions.
2635.204  Exceptions.
2635.205  Proper disposition of prohibited gifts.

                   Subpart C--Gifts Between Employees

2635.301  Overview.
2635.302  General standards.
2635.303  Definitions.
2635.304  Exceptions.

               Subpart D--Conflicting Financial Interests

2635.401  Overview.
2635.402  Disqualifying financial interests.
2635.403  Prohibited financial interests.

          Subpart E--Impartiality in Performing Official Duties

2635.501  Overview.
2635.502  Personal and business relationships.
2635.503  Extraordinary payments from former employers.

                   Subpart F--Seeking Other Employment

2635.601  Overview.
2635.602  Applicability and related considerations.
2635.603  Definitions.
2635.604  Disqualification while seeking employment.
2635.605  Waiver or authorization permitting participation while seeking 
          employment.
2635.606  Disqualification based on an arrangement concerning 
          prospective employment or otherwise after negotiations.

                      Subpart G--Misuse of Position

2635.701  Overview.
2635.702  Use of public office for private gain.
2635.703  Use of nonpublic information.
2635.704  Use of Government property.
2635.705  Use of official time.

                      Subpart H--Outside Activities

2635.801  Overview.
2635.802  Conflicting outside employment and activities.
2635.803  Prior approval for outside employment and activities.
2635.804  Outside earned income limitations applicable to certain 
          Presidential appointees and other noncareer employees.
2635.805  Service as an expert witness.
2635.806  Participation in professional associations. [Reserved]
2635.807  Teaching, speaking and writing.
2635.808  Fundraising activities.
2635.809  Just financial obligations.

                Subpart I--Related Statutory Authorities

2635.901  General.
2635.902  Related statutes.
    Appendix A to Part 2635--Agencies Entitled to Additional One-Year 
Grace Period Extension Pursuant to Notes Following Secs. 2635.403(a) and 
2635.803
    Appendix B to Part 2635--Agencies Entitled to a Further (Second) 
Grace Period Extension Pursuant to Notes Following Secs. 2635.403(a) and 
2635.803
    Appendix C to Part 2635--Agencies Entitled to Another Further 
(Third) Grace Period Extension Pursuant to Notes Following 
Secs. 2635.403(a) and 2635.803
    Appendix D to Part 2635--Agencies Entitled to Another Further 
(Fourth) Grace Period Extension Pursuant to Notes Following 
Secs. 2635.403(a) and 2635.803

    Authority: 5 U.S.C. 7351, 7353; 5 U.S.C. App. (Ethics in Government 
Act of 1978); E.O.

[[Page 474]]

12674, 54 FR 15159, 3 CFR, 1989 Comp., p. 215, as modified by E.O. 
12731, 55 FR 42547, 3 CFR, 1990 Comp., p. 306.

    Source: 57 FR 35042, Aug. 7, 1992, unless otherwise noted.



                      Subpart A--General Provisions



Sec. 2635.101  Basic obligation of public service.

    (a) Public service is a public trust. Each employee has a 
responsibility to the United States Government and its citizens to place 
loyalty to the Constitution, laws and ethical principles above private 
gain. To ensure that every citizen can have complete confidence in the 
integrity of the Federal Government, each employee shall respect and 
adhere to the principles of ethical conduct set forth in this section, 
as well as the implementing standards contained in this part and in 
supplemental agency regulations.
    (b) General principles. The following general principles apply to 
every employee and may form the basis for the standards contained in 
this part. Where a situation is not covered by the standards set forth 
in this part, employees shall apply the principles set forth in this 
section in determining whether their conduct is proper.
    (1) Public service is a public trust, requiring employees to place 
loyalty to the Constitution, the laws and ethical principles above 
private gain.
    (2) Employees shall not hold financial interests that conflict with 
the conscientious performance of duty.
    (3) Employees shall not engage in financial transactions using 
nonpublic Government information or allow the improper use of such 
information to further any private interest.
    (4) An employee shall not, except as permitted by subpart B of this 
part, solicit or accept any gift or other item of monetary value from 
any person or entity seeking official action from, doing business with, 
or conducting activities regulated by the employee's agency, or whose 
interests may be substantially affected by the performance or 
nonperformance of the employee's duties.
    (5) Employees shall put forth honest effort in the performance of 
their duties.
    (6) Employees shall not knowingly make unauthorized commitments or 
promises of any kind purporting to bind the Government.
    (7) Employees shall not use public office for private gain.
    (8) Employees shall act impartially and not give preferential 
treatment to any private organization or individual.
    (9) Employees shall protect and conserve Federal property and shall 
not use it for other than authorized activities.
    (10) Employees shall not engage in outside employment or activities, 
including seeking or negotiating for employment, that conflict with 
official Government duties and responsibilities.
    (11) Employees shall disclose waste, fraud, abuse, and corruption to 
appropriate authorities.
    (12) Employees shall satisfy in good faith their obligations as 
citizens, including all just financial obligations, especially those--
such as Federal, State, or local taxes--that are imposed by law.
    (13) Employees shall adhere to all laws and regulations that provide 
equal opportunity for all Americans regardless of race, color, religion, 
sex, national origin, age, or handicap.
    (14) Employees shall endeavor to avoid any actions creating the 
appearance that they are violating the law or the ethical standards set 
forth in this part. Whether particular circumstances create an 
appearance that the law or these standards have been violated shall be 
determined from the perspective of a reasonable person with knowledge of 
the relevant facts.
    (c) Related statutes. In addition to the standards of ethical 
conduct set forth in this part, there are conflict of interest statutes 
that prohibit certain conduct. Criminal conflict of interest statutes of 
general applicability to all employees, 18 U.S.C. 201, 203, 205, 208, 
and 209, are summarized in the appropriate subparts of this part and 
must be taken into consideration in determining whether conduct is 
proper. Citations to other generally applicable statutes relating to 
employee conduct are set forth in subpart I and employees are further 
cautioned that there may be

[[Page 475]]

additional statutory and regulatory restrictions applicable to them 
generally or as employees of their specific agencies. Because an 
employee is considered to be on notice of the requirements of any 
statute, an employee should not rely upon any description or synopsis of 
a statutory restriction, but should refer to the statute itself and 
obtain the advice of an agency ethics official as needed.



Sec. 2635.102  Definitions.

    The definitions listed below are used throughout this part. 
Additional definitions appear in the subparts or sections of subparts to 
which they apply. For purposes of this part:
    (a) Agency means an executive agency as defined in 5 U.S.C. 105 and 
the Postal Service and the Postal Rate Commission. It does not include 
the General Accounting Office or the Government of the District of 
Columbia.
    (b) Agency designee refers to any employee who, by agency 
regulation, instruction, or other issuance, has been delegated authority 
to make any determination, give any approval, or take any other action 
required or permitted by this part with respect to another employee. An 
agency may delegate these authorities to any number of agency designees 
necessary to ensure that determinations are made, approvals are given, 
and other actions are taken in a timely and responsible manner. Any 
provision that requires a determination, approval, or other action by 
the agency designee shall, where the conduct in issue is that of the 
agency head, be deemed to require that such determination, approval or 
action be made or taken by the agency head in consultation with the 
designated agency ethics official.
    (c) Agency ethics official refers to the designated agency ethics 
official or to the alternate designated agency ethics official, referred 
to in Sec. 2638.202(b) of this chapter, and to any deputy ethics 
official, described in Sec. 2638.204 of this chapter, who has been 
delegated authority to assist in carrying out the responsibilities of 
the designated agency ethics official.
    (d) Agency programs or operations refers to any program or function 
carried out or performed by an agency, whether pursuant to statute, 
Executive order, or regulation.
    (e) Corrective action includes any action necessary to remedy a past 
violation or prevent a continuing violation of this part, including but 
not limited to restitution, change of assignment, disqualification, 
divestiture, termination of an activity, waiver, the creation of a 
qualified diversified or blind trust, or counseling.
    (f) Designated agency ethics official refers to the official 
designated under Sec. 2638.201 of this chapter.
    (g) Disciplinary action includes those disciplinary actions referred 
to in Office of Personnel Management regulations and instructions 
implementing provisions of title 5 of the United States Code or provided 
for in comparable provisions applicable to employees not subject to 
title 5, including but not limited to reprimand, suspension, demotion, 
and removal. In the case of a military officer, comparable provisions 
may include those in the Uniform Code of Military Justice.
    (h) Employee means any officer or employee of an agency, including a 
special Government employee. It includes officers but not enlisted 
members of the uniformed services. For purposes other than subparts B 
and C of this part, it does not include the President or Vice President. 
Status as an employee is unaffected by pay or leave status or, in the 
case of a special Government employee, by the fact that the individual 
does not perform official duties on a given day.
    (i) Head of an agency means, in the case of an agency headed by more 
than one person, the chair or comparable member of such agency.
    (j) He, his, and him include she, hers and her.
    (k) Person means an individual, corporation and subsidiaries it 
controls, company, association, firm, partnership, society, joint stock 
company, or any other organization or institution, including any 
officer, employee, or agent of such person or entity. For purposes of 
this part, a corporation will be deemed to control a subsidiary if it 
owns 50 percent or more of the subsidiary's voting securities. The term 
is all-inclusive and applies to commercial ventures and nonprofit 
organizations

[[Page 476]]

as well as to foreign, State, and local governments, including the 
Government of the District of Columbia. It does not include any agency 
or other entity of the Federal Government or any officer or employee 
thereof when acting in his official capacity on behalf of that agency or 
entity.
    (l) Special Government employee means those executive branch 
officers or employees specified in 18 U.S.C. 202(a). A special 
Government employee is retained, designated, appointed, or employed to 
perform temporary duties either on a full-time or intermittent basis, 
with or without compensation, for a period not to exceed 130 days during 
any consecutive 365-day period.
    (m) Supplemental agency regulation means a regulation issued 
pursuant to Sec. 2635.105.



Sec. 2635.103  Applicability to members of the uniformed services.

    The provisions of this part, except this section, are not applicable 
to enlisted members of the uniformed services. Each agency with 
jurisdiction over enlisted members of the uniformed services shall issue 
regulations defining the ethical conduct obligations of enlisted members 
under its jurisdiction. Those regulations shall be consistent with 
Executive Order 12674, April 12, 1989, as modified, and may prescribe 
the full range of statutory and regulatory sanctions, including those 
available under the Uniform Code of Military Justice, for failure to 
comply with such regulations.



Sec. 2635.104  Applicability to employees on detail.

    (a) Details to other agencies. Except as provided in paragraph (d) 
of this section, an employee on detail, including a uniformed officer on 
assignment, from his employing agency to another agency for a period in 
excess of 30 calendar days shall be subject to any supplemental agency 
regulations of the agency to which he is detailed rather than to any 
supplemental agency regulations of his employing agency.
    (b) Details to the legislative or judicial branch. An employee on 
detail, including a uniformed officer on assignment, from his employing 
agency to the legislative or judicial branch for a period in excess of 
30 calendar days shall be subject to the ethical standards of the branch 
or entity to which detailed. For the duration of any such detail or 
assignment, the employee shall not be subject to the provisions of this 
part, except this section, or, except as provided in paragraph (d) of 
this section, to any supplemental agency regulations of his employing 
agency, but shall remain subject to the conflict of interest 
prohibitions in title 18 of the United States Code.
    (c) Details to non-Federal entities. Except to the extent exempted 
in writing pursuant to this paragraph, an employee detailed to a non-
Federal entity remains subject to this part and to any supplemental 
agency regulation of his employing agency. When an employee is detailed 
pursuant to statutory authority to an international organization or to a 
State or local government for a period in excess of six months, the 
designated agency ethics official may grant a written exemption from 
subpart B of this part based on his determination that the entity has 
adopted written ethical standards covering solicitation and acceptance 
of gifts which will apply to the employee during the detail and which 
will be appropriate given the purpose of the detail.
    (d) Applicability of special agency statutes. Notwithstanding 
paragraphs (a) and (b) of this section, an employee who is subject to an 
agency statute which restricts his activities or financial holdings 
specifically because of his status as an employee of that agency shall 
continue to be subject to any provisions in the supplemental agency 
regulations of his employing agency that implement that statute.



Sec. 2635.105  Supplemental agency regulations.

    In addition to the regulations set forth in this part, an employee 
shall comply with any supplemental agency regulations issued by his 
employing agency under this section.
    (a) An agency that wishes to supplement this part shall prepare and 
submit to the Office of Government Ethics, for its concurrence and joint 
issuance, any agency regulations that supplement the regulations 
contained in

[[Page 477]]

this part. Supplemental agency regulations which the agency determines 
are necessary and appropriate, in view of its programs and operations, 
to fulfill the purposes of this part shall be:
    (1) In the form of a supplement to the regulations in this part; and
    (2) In addition to the substantive provisions of this part.
    (b) After concurrence and co-signature by the Office of Government 
Ethics, the agency shall submit its supplemental agency regulations to 
the Federal Register for publication and codification at the expense of 
the agency in title 5 of the Code of Federal Regulations. Supplemental 
agency regulations issued under this section are effective only after 
concurrence and co-signature by the Office of Government Ethics and 
publication in the Federal Register.
    (c) This section applies to any supplemental agency regulations or 
amendments thereof issued under this part. It does not apply to:
    (1) A handbook or other issuance intended merely as an explanation 
of the standards contained in this part or in supplemental agency 
regulations;
    (2) An instruction or other issuance the purpose of which is to:
    (i) Delegate to an agency designee authority to make any 
determination, give any approval or take any other action required or 
permitted by this part or by supplemental agency regulations; or
    (ii) Establish internal agency procedures for documenting or 
processing any determination, approval or other action required or 
permitted by this part or by supplemental agency regulations, or for 
retaining any such documentation; or
    (3) Regulations or instructions that an agency has authority, 
independent of this part, to issue, such as regulations implementing an 
agency's gift acceptance statute, protecting categories of nonpublic 
information or establishing standards for use of Government vehicles. 
Where the content of any such regulations or instructions was included 
in the agency's standards of conduct regulations issued pursuant to 
Executive Order 11222 and the Office of Government Ethics concurs that 
they need not be issued as part of an agency's supplemental agency 
regulations, those regulations or instructions may be promulgated 
separately from the agency's supplemental agency regulations.



Sec. 2635.106  Disciplinary and corrective action.

    (a) Except as provided in Sec. 2635.107, a violation of this part or 
of supplemental agency regulations may be cause for appropriate 
corrective or disciplinary action to be taken under applicable 
Governmentwide regulations or agency procedures. Such action may be in 
addition to any action or penalty prescribed by law.
    (b) It is the responsibility of the employing agency to initiate 
appropriate disciplinary or corrective action in individual cases. 
However, corrective action may be ordered or disciplinary action 
recommended by the Director of the Office of Government Ethics under the 
procedures at part 2638 of this chapter.
    (c) A violation of this part or of supplemental agency regulations, 
as such, does not create any right or benefit, substantive or 
procedural, enforceable at law by any person against the United States, 
its agencies, its officers or employees, or any other person. Thus, for 
example, an individual who alleges that an employee has failed to adhere 
to laws and regulations that provide equal opportunity regardless of 
race, color, religion, sex, national origin, age, or handicap is 
required to follow applicable statutory and regulatory procedures, 
including those of the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission.



Sec. 2635.107  Ethics advice.

    (a) As required by Secs. 2638.201 and 2638.202(b) of this chapter, 
each agency has a designated agency ethics official who, on the agency's 
behalf, is responsible for coordinating and managing the agency's ethics 
program, as well as an alternate. The designated agency ethics official 
has authority under Sec. 2638.204 of this chapter to delegate certain 
responsibilities, including that of providing ethics counseling 
regarding the application of this part, to one or more deputy ethics 
officials.

[[Page 478]]

    (b) Employees who have questions about the application of this part 
or any supplemental agency regulations to particular situations should 
seek advice from an agency ethics official. Disciplinary action for 
violating this part or any supplemental agency regulations will not be 
taken against an employee who has engaged in conduct in good faith 
reliance upon the advice of an agency ethics official, provided that the 
employee, in seeking such advice, has made full disclosure of all 
relevant circumstances. Where the employee's conduct violates a criminal 
statute, reliance on the advice of an agency ethics official cannot 
ensure that the employee will not be prosecuted under that statute. 
However, good faith reliance on the advice of an agency ethics official 
is a factor that may be taken into account by the Department of Justice 
in the selection of cases for prosecution. Disclosures made by an 
employee to an agency ethics official are not protected by an attorney-
client privilege. An agency ethics official is required by 28 U.S.C. 535 
to report any information he receives relating to a violation of the 
criminal code, title 18 of the United States Code.



                  Subpart B--Gifts From Outside Sources



Sec. 2635.201  Overview.

    This subpart contains standards that prohibit an employee from 
soliciting or accepting any gift from a prohibited source or given 
because of the employee's official position unless the item is excluded 
from the definition of a gift or falls within one of the exceptions set 
forth in this subpart.



Sec. 2635.202  General standards.

    (a) General prohibitions. Except as provided in this subpart, an 
employee shall not, directly or indirectly, solicit or accept a gift:
    (1) From a prohibited source; or
    (2) Given because of the employee's official position.
    (b) Relationship to illegal gratuities statute. Unless accepted in 
violation of paragraph (c)(1) of this section, a gift accepted under the 
standards set forth in this subpart shall not constitute an illegal 
gratuity otherwise prohibited by 18 U.S.C. 201(c)(1)(B).
    (c) Limitations on use of exceptions. Notwithstanding any exception 
provided in this subpart, other than Sec. 2635.204(j), an employee shall 
not:
    (1) Accept a gift in return for being influenced in the performance 
of an official act;
    (2) Solicit or coerce the offering of a gift;
    (3) Accept gifts from the same or different sources on a basis so 
frequent that a reasonable person would be led to believe the employee 
is using his public office for private gain;

    Example 1: A purchasing agent for a Veterans Administration hospital 
routinely deals with representatives of pharmaceutical manufacturers who 
provide information about new company products. Because of his crowded 
calendar, the purchasing agent has offered to meet with manufacturer 
representatives during his lunch hours Tuesdays through Thursdays and 
the representatives routinely arrive at the employee's office bringing a 
sandwich and a soft drink for the employee. Even though the market value 
of each of the lunches is less than $6 and the aggregate value from any 
one manufacturer does not exceed the $50 aggregate limitation in 
Sec. 2635.204(a) on de minimis gifts of $20 or less, the practice of 
accepting even these modest gifts on a recurring basis is improper.

    (4) Accept a gift in violation of any statute. Relevant statutes 
applicable to all employees include:
    (i) 18 U.S.C. 201(b), which prohibits a public official from 
seeking, accepting, or agreeing to receive or accept anything of value 
in return for being influenced in the performance of an official act or 
for being induced to take or omit to take any action in violation of his 
official duty. As used in 18 U.S.C. 201(b), the term ``public official'' 
is broadly construed and includes regular and special Government 
employees as well as all other Government officials;
    (ii) 18 U.S.C. 209, which prohibits an employee, other than a 
special Government employee, from receiving any salary or any 
contribution to or supplementation of salary from any source other than 
the United States as compensation for services as a Government employee. 
The statute contains several specific exceptions to this general 
prohibition, including an exception for contributions made from the

[[Page 479]]

treasury of a State, county, or municipality; and
    (iii) 41 U.S.C. 423(b)(2), which prohibits a procurement official 
from seeking, accepting, or agreeing to receive any money, gratuity, or 
other thing of value from any officer, employee, representative, agent, 
or consultant of a competing contractor during the conduct of a Federal 
agency procurement. Implementing regulations, including exceptions to 
the gift prohibition, are contained in the Federal Acquisition 
Regulation, 48 CFR 3.104; or
    (5) Accept vendor promotional training contrary to applicable 
regulations, policies or guidance relating to the procurement of 
supplies and services for the Government, except pursuant to 
Sec. 2635.204(l).

[57 FR 35041, Aug. 7, 1992; 57 FR 48557, Oct. 27, 1992]



Sec. 2635.203  Definitions.

    For purposes of this subpart, the following definitions shall apply:
    (a) Agency has the meaning set forth in Sec. 2635.102(a). However, 
for purposes of this subpart, an executive department, as defined in 5 
U.S.C. 101, may, by supplemental agency regulation, designate as a 
separate agency any component of that department which the department 
determines exercises distinct and separate functions.
    (b) Gift includes any gratuity, favor, discount, entertainment, 
hospitality, loan, forbearance, or other item having monetary value. It 
includes services as well as gifts of training, transportation, local 
travel, lodgings and meals, whether provided in-kind, by purchase of a 
ticket, payment in advance, or reimbursement after the expense has been 
incurred. It does not include:
    (1) Modest items of food and refreshments, such as soft drinks, 
coffee and donuts, offered other than as part of a meal;
    (2) Greeting cards and items with little intrinsic value, such as 
plaques, certificates, and trophies, which are intended solely for 
presentation;
    (3) Loans from banks and other financial institutions on terms 
generally available to the public;
    (4) Opportunities and benefits, including favorable rates and 
commercial discounts, available to the public or to a class consisting 
of all Government employees or all uniformed military personnel, whether 
or not restricted on the basis of geographic considerations;
    (5) Rewards and prizes given to competitors in contests or events, 
including random drawings, open to the public unless the employee's 
entry into the contest or event is required as part of his official 
duties;
    (6) Pension and other benefits resulting from continued 
participation in an employee welfare and benefits plan maintained by a 
former employer;
    (7) Anything which is paid for by the Government or secured by the 
Government under Government contract;

    Note: Some airlines encourage those purchasing tickets to join 
programs that award free flights and other benefits to frequent fliers. 
Any such benefit earned on the basis of Government-financed travel 
belongs to the agency rather than to the employee and may be accepted 
only insofar as provided under 41 CFR 301-1.103 (b) and (f).

    (8) Any gift accepted by the Government under specific statutory 
authority, including:
    (i) Travel, subsistence, and related expenses accepted by an agency 
under the authority of 31 U.S.C. 1353 in connection with an employee's 
attendance at a meeting or similar function relating to his official 
duties which takes place away from his duty station. The agency's 
acceptance must be in accordance with the implementing regulations at 41 
CFR part 304-1; and
    (ii) Other gifts provided in-kind which have been accepted by an 
agency under its agency gift acceptance statute; or
    (9) Anything for which market value is paid by the employee.
    (c) Market value means the retail cost the employee would incur to 
purchase the gift. An employee who cannot ascertain the market value of 
a gift may estimate its market value by reference to the retail cost of 
similar items of like quality. The market value of a gift of a ticket 
entitling the holder to food, refreshments, entertainment, or any other 
benefit shall be the face value of the ticket.


[[Page 480]]


    Example 1: An employee who has been given an acrylic paperweight 
embedded with the corporate logo of a prohibited source may determine 
its market value based on her observation that a comparable acrylic 
paperweight, not embedded with a logo, generally sells for about $20.
    Example 2: A prohibited source has offered an employee a ticket to a 
charitable event consisting of a cocktail reception to be followed by an 
evening of chamber music. Even though the food, refreshments, and 
entertainment provided at the event may be worth only $20, the market 
value of the ticket is its $250 face value.

    (d) Prohibited source means any person who:
    (1) Is seeking official action by the employee's agency;
    (2) Does business or seeks to do business with the employee's 
agency;
    (3) Conducts activities regulated by the employee's agency;
    (4) Has interests that may be substantially affected by performance 
or nonperformance of the employee's official duties; or
    (5) Is an organization a majority of whose members are described in 
paragraphs (d) (1) through (4) of this section.
    (e) A gift is solicited or accepted because of the employee's 
official position if it is from a person other than an employee and 
would not have been solicited, offered, or given had the employee not 
held his position as a Federal employee.

    Note: Gifts between employees are subject to the limitations set 
forth in subpart C of this part.

    Example 1: Where free season tickets are offered by an opera guild 
to all members of the Cabinet, the gift is offered because of their 
official positions.

    (f) A gift which is solicited or accepted indirectly includes a 
gift:
    (1) Given with the employee's knowledge and acquiescence to his 
parent, sibling, spouse, child, or dependent relative because of that 
person's relationship to the employee, or
    (2) Given to any other person, including any charitable 
organization, on the basis of designation, recommendation, or other 
specification by the employee, except as permitted for the disposition 
of perishable items by Sec. 2635.205(a)(2) or for payments made to 
charitable organizations in lieu of honoraria under Sec. 2636.204 of 
this chapter.

    Example 1: An employee who must decline a gift of a personal 
computer pursuant to this subpart may not suggest that the gift be given 
instead to one of five charitable organizations whose names are provided 
by the employee.

    (g) Vendor promotional training means training provided by any 
person for the purpose of promoting its products or services. It does 
not include training provided under a Government contract or by a 
contractor to facilitate use of products or services it furnishes under 
a Government contract.

[57 FR 35042, Aug. 7, 1992, as amended at 60 FR 51667, Oct. 3, 1995]



Sec. 2635.204  Exceptions.

    The prohibitions set forth in Sec. 2635.202(a) do not apply to a 
gift accepted under the circumstances described in paragraphs (a) 
through (l) of this section and a gift accepted in accordance with one 
of those paragraphs will not be deemed to violate the principles set 
forth in Sec. 2635.101(b). Even though acceptance of a gift may be 
permitted by one of the exceptions contained in paragraphs (a) through 
(l) of this section, it is never inappropriate and frequently prudent 
for an employee to decline a gift offered by a prohibited source or 
because of his official position.
    (a) Gifts of $20 or less. An employee may accept unsolicited gifts 
having an aggregate market value of $20 or less per occasion, provided 
that the aggregate market value of individual gifts received from any 
one person under the authority of this paragraph shall not exceed $50 in 
a calendar year. This exception does not apply to gifts of cash or of 
investment interests such as stock, bonds, or certificates of deposit. 
Where the market value of a gift or the aggregate market value of gifts 
offered on any single occasion exceeds $20, the employee may not pay the 
excess value over $20 in order to accept that portion of the gift or 
those gifts worth $20. Where the aggregate value of tangible items 
offered on a single occasion exceeds $20, the employee may decline any 
distinct and separate item in order to accept those items aggregating 
$20 or less.

    Example 1: An employee of the Securities and Exchange Commission and 
his spouse

[[Page 481]]

have been invited by a representative of a regulated entity to a 
Broadway play, tickets to which have a face value of $30 each. The 
aggregate market value of the gifts offered on this single occasion is 
$60, $40 more than the $20 amount that may be accepted for a single 
event or presentation. The employee may not accept the gift of the 
evening of entertainment. He and his spouse may attend the play only if 
he pays the full $60 value of the two tickets.
    Example 2: An employee of the Defense Mapping Agency has been 
invited by an association of cartographers to speak about his agency's 
role in the evolution of missile technology. At the conclusion of his 
speech, the association presents the employee a framed map with a market 
value of $18 and a book about the history of cartography with a market 
value of $15. The employee may accept the map or the book, but not both, 
since the aggregate value of these two tangible items exceeds $20.
    Example 3: On four occasions during the calendar year, an employee 
of the Defense Logistics Agency was given gifts worth $10 each by four 
employees of a corporation that is a DLA contractor. For purposes of 
applying the yearly $50 limitation on gifts of $20 or less from any one 
person, the four gifts must be aggregated because a person is defined at 
Sec. 2635.102(k) to mean not only the corporate entity, but its officers 
and employees as well. However, for purposes of applying the $50 
aggregate limitation, the employee would not have to include the value 
of a birthday present received from his cousin, who is employed by the 
same corporation, if he can accept the birthday present under the 
exception at Sec. 2635.204(b) for gifts based on a personal 
relationship.
    Example 4: Under the authority of 31 U.S.C. 1353 for agencies to 
accept payments from non-Federal sources in connection with attendance 
at certain meetings or similar functions, the Environmental Protection 
Agency has accepted an association's gift of travel expenses and 
conference fees for an employee of its Office of Radiation Programs to 
attend an international conference on ``The Chernobyl Experience.'' 
While at the conference, the employee may accept a gift of $20 or less 
from the association or from another person attending the conference 
even though it was not approved in advance by the EPA. Although 31 
U.S.C. 1353 is the only authority under which an agency may accept gifts 
from certain non-Federal sources in connection with its employees' 
attendance at such functions, a gift of $20 or less accepted under 
Sec. 2635.204(a) is a gift to the employee rather than to his employing 
agency.
    Example 5: A Navy contracting officer is participating in a 
procurement for environmental cleanup services at a Navy installation 
that has recently been closed. She is presently involved in negotiations 
with three competing contractors, one of whom has offered her a fancy 
ballpoint pen embossed with its corporate logo. Even though the pen has 
a market value of $18 and could be accepted under the $20 de minimis 
exception at Sec. 2635.204(a), the contracting officer cannot accept the 
competing contractor's gift. Under the procurement integrity provisions 
at 41 U.S.C. 423, she is a ``procurement official'' for that contract 
and, except as specifically permitted by the regulations implementing 
that statute, she is prohibited prior to award from accepting a gift 
from a competing contractor for that contract. The Federal Acquisition 
Regulation at 48 CFR 3.104 contains an exception for gifts with a market 
value of $10 or less.

    (b) Gifts based on a personal relationship. An employee may accept a 
gift given under circumstances which make it clear that the gift is 
motivated by a family relationship or personal friendship rather than 
the position of the employee. Relevant factors in making such a 
determination include the history of the relationship and whether the 
family member or friend personally pays for the gift.

    Example 1: An employee of the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation 
has been dating a secretary employed by a member bank. For Secretary's 
Week, the bank has given each secretary 2 tickets to an off-Broadway 
musical review and has urged each to invite a family member or friend to 
share the evening of entertainment. Under the circumstances, the FDIC 
employee may accept his girlfriend's invitation to the theater. Even 
though the tickets were initially purchased by the member bank, they 
were given without reservation to the secretary to use as she wished, 
and her invitation to the employee was motivated by their personal 
friendship.
    Example 2: Three partners in a law firm that handles corporate 
mergers have invited an employee of the Federal Trade Commission to join 
them in a golf tournament at a private club at the firm's expense. The 
entry fee is $500 per foursome. The employee cannot accept the gift of 
one-quarter of the entry fee even though he and the three partners have 
developed an amicable relationship as a result of the firm's dealings 
with the FTC. As evidenced in part by the fact that the fees are to be 
paid by the firm, it is not a personal friendship but a business 
relationship that is the motivation behind the partners' gift.

    (c) Discounts and similar benefits. In addition to those 
opportunities and benefits excluded from the definition of

[[Page 482]]

a gift by Sec. 2635.203(b)(4), an employee may accept:
    (1) Reduced membership or other fees for participation in 
organization activities offered to all Government employees or all 
uniformed military personnel by professional organizations if the only 
restrictions on membership relate to professional qualifications; and
    (2) Opportunities and benefits, including favorable rates and 
commercial discounts not precluded by paragraph (c)(3) of this section:
    (i) Offered to members of a group or class in which membership is 
unrelated to Government employment;
    (ii) Offered to members of an organization, such as an employees' 
association or agency credit union, in which membership is related to 
Government employment if the same offer is broadly available to large 
segments of the public through organizations of similar size; or
    (iii) Offered by a person who is not a prohibited source to any 
group or class that is not defined in a manner that specifically 
discriminates among Government employees on the basis of type of 
official responsibility or on a basis that favors those of higher rank 
or rate of pay; provided, however, that
    (3) An employee may not accept for personal use any benefit to which 
the Government is entitled as the result of an expenditure of Government 
funds.

    Example 1: An employee of the Consumer Product Safety Commission may 
accept a discount of $50 on a microwave oven offered by the manufacturer 
to all members of the CPSC employees' association. Even though the CPSC 
is currently conducting studies on the safety of microwave ovens, the 
$50 discount is a standard offer that the manufacturer has made broadly 
available through a number of similar organizations to large segments of 
the public.
    Example 2: An Assistant Secretary may not accept a local country 
club's offer of membership to all members of Department Secretariats 
which includes a waiver of its $5,000 membership initiation fee. Even 
though the country club is not a prohibited source, the offer 
discriminates in favor of higher ranking officials.
    Example 3: The administrative officer for a district office of the 
Immigration and Naturalization Service has signed an INS order to 
purchase 50 boxes of photocopy paper from a supplier whose literature 
advertises that it will give a free briefcase to anyone who purchases 50 
or more boxes. Because the paper was purchased with INS funds, the 
administrative officer cannot keep the briefcase which, if claimed and 
received, is Government property.

    (d) Awards and honorary degrees. (1) An employee may accept gifts, 
other than cash or an investment interest, with an aggregate market 
value of $200 or less if such gifts are a bona fide award or incident to 
a bona fide award that is given for meritorious public service or 
achievement by a person who does not have interests that may be 
substantially affected by the performance or nonperformance of the 
employee's official duties or by an association or other organization 
the majority of whose members do not have such interests. Gifts with an 
aggregate market value in excess of $200 and awards of cash or 
investment interests offered by such persons as awards or incidents of 
awards that are given for these purposes may be accepted upon a written 
determination by an agency ethics official that the award is made as 
part of an established program of recognition:
    (i) Under which awards have been made on a regular basis or which is 
funded, wholly or in part, to ensure its continuation on a regular 
basis; and
    (ii) Under which selection of award recipients is made pursuant to 
written standards.
    (2) An employee may accept an honorary degree from an institution of 
higher education as defined at 20 U.S.C. 1141(a) based on a written 
determination by an agency ethics official that the timing of the award 
of the degree would not cause a reasonable person to question the 
employee's impartiality in a matter affecting the institution.
    (3) An employee who may accept an award or honorary degree pursuant 
to paragraph (d)(1) or (2) of this section may also accept meals and 
entertainment given to him and to members of his family at the event at 
which the presentation takes place.

    Example 1: Based on a determination by an agency ethics official 
that the prize meets the criteria set forth in Sec. 2635.204(d)(1), an 
employee of the National Institutes of Health may accept the Nobel Prize 
for Medicine, including the cash award which accompanies the prize, even 
though the prize was conferred on the basis of laboratory work performed 
at NIH.

[[Page 483]]

    Example 2: Prestigious University wishes to give an honorary degree 
to the Secretary of Labor. The Secretary may accept the honorary degree 
only if an agency ethics official determines in writing that the timing 
of the award of the degree would not cause a reasonable person to 
question the Secretary's impartiality in a matter affecting the 
university.
    Example 3: An ambassador selected by a nonprofit organization as 
recipient of its annual award for distinguished service in the interest 
of world peace may, together with his wife, and children, attend the 
awards ceremony dinner and accept a crystal bowl worth $200 presented 
during the ceremony. However, where the organization has also offered 
airline tickets for the ambassador and his family to travel to the city 
where the awards ceremony is to be held, the aggregate value of the 
tickets and the crystal bowl exceeds $200 and he may accept only upon a 
written determination by the agency ethics official that the award is 
made as part of an established program of recognition.

    (e) Gifts based on outside business or employment relationships. An 
employee may accept meals, lodgings, transportation and other benefits:
    (1) Resulting from the business or employment activities of an 
employee's spouse when it is clear that such benefits have not been 
offered or enhanced because of the employee's official position;

    Example 1: A Department of Agriculture employee whose husband is a 
computer programmer employed by an Agriculture Department contractor may 
attend the company's annual retreat for all of its employees and their 
families held at a resort facility. However, under Sec. 2635.502, the 
employee may be disqualified from performing official duties affecting 
her husband's employer.
    Example 2: Where the spouses of other clerical personnel have not 
been invited, an employee of the Defense Contract Audit Agency whose 
wife is a clerical worker at a defense contractor may not attend the 
contractor's annual retreat in Hawaii for corporate officers and members 
of the board of directors, even though his wife received a special 
invitation for herself and her spouse.

    (2) Resulting from his outside business or employment activities 
when it is clear that such benefits have not been offered or enhanced 
because of his official status; or

    Example 1: The members of an Army Corps of Engineers environmental 
advisory committee that meets 6 times per year are special Government 
employees. A member who has a consulting business may accept an 
invitation to a $50 dinner from her corporate client, an Army 
construction contractor, unless, for example, the invitation was 
extended in order to discuss the activities of the committee.

    (3) Customarily provided by a prospective employer in connection 
with bona fide employment discussions. If the prospective employer has 
interests that could be affected by performance or nonperformance of the 
employee's duties, acceptance is permitted only if the employee first 
has complied with the disqualification requirements of subpart F of this 
part applicable when seeking employment.

    Example 1: An employee of the Federal Communications Commission with 
responsibility for drafting regulations affecting all cable television 
companies wishes to apply for a job opening with a cable television 
holding company. Once she has properly disqualified herself from further 
work on the regulations as required by subpart F of this part, she may 
enter into employment discussions with the company and may accept the 
company's offer to pay for her airfare, hotel and meals in connection 
with an interview trip.

    (4) For purposes of paragraphs (e)(1) through (3) of this section, 
employment shall have the meaning set forth in Sec. 2635.603(a).
    (f) Gifts in connection with political activities permitted by the 
Hatch Act Reform Amendments. An employee who, in accordance with the 
Hatch Act Reform Amendments of 1993, at 5 U.S.C. 7323, may take an 
active part in political management or in political campaigns, may 
accept meals, lodgings, transportation and other benefits, including 
free attendance at events, when provided, in connection with such active 
participation, by a political organization described in 26 U.S.C. 
527(e). Any other employee, such as a security officer, whose official 
duties require him to accompany an employee to a political event may 
accept meals, free attendance and entertainment provided at the event by 
such an organization.

    Example 1: The Secretary of the Department of Health and Human 
Services may accept an airline ticket and hotel accommodations furnished 
by the campaign committee of a candidate for the United States Senate in 
order to give a speech in support of the candidate.


[[Page 484]]


    (g) Widely attended gatherings and other events--(1) Speaking and 
similar engagements. When an employee is assigned to participate as a 
speaker or panel participant or otherwise to present information on 
behalf of the agency at a conference or other event, his acceptance of 
an offer of free attendance at the event on the day of his presentation 
is permissible when provided by the sponsor of the event. The employee's 
participation in the event on that day is viewed as a customary and 
necessary part of his performance of the assignment and does not involve 
a gift to him or to the agency.
    (2) Widely attended gatherings. When there has been a determination 
that his attendance is in the interest of the agency because it will 
further agency programs and operations, an employee may accept an 
unsolicited gift of free attendance at all or appropriate parts of a 
widely attended gathering of mutual interest to a number of parties from 
the sponsor of the event or, if more than 100 persons are expected to 
attend the event and the gift of free attendance has a market value of 
$250 or less, from a person other than the sponsor of the event. A 
gathering is widely attended if it is expected that a large number of 
persons will attend and that persons with a diversity of views or 
interests will be present, for example, if it is open to members from 
throughout the interested industry or profession or if those in 
attendance represent a range of persons interested in a given matter. 
For employees subject to a leave system, attendance at the event shall 
be on the employee's own time or, if authorized by the employee's 
agency, on excused absence pursuant to applicable guidelines for 
granting such absence, or otherwise without charge to the employee's 
leave account.
    (3) Determination of agency interest. The determination of agency 
interest required by paragraph (g)(2) of this section shall be made 
orally or in writing by the agency designee.
    (i) If the person who has extended the invitation has interests that 
may be substantially affected by the performance or nonperformance of an 
employee's official duties or is an association or organization the 
majority of whose members have such interests, the employee's 
participation may be determined to be in the interest of the agency only 
where there is a written finding by the agency designee that the 
agency's interest in the employee's participation in the event outweighs 
the concern that acceptance of the gift of free attendance may or may 
appear to improperly influence the employee in the performance of his 
official duties. Relevant factors that should be considered by the 
agency designee include the importance of the event to the agency, the 
nature and sensitivity of any pending matter affecting the interests of 
the person who has extended the invitation, the significance of the 
employee's role in any such matter, the purpose of the event, the 
identity of other expected participants and the market value of the gift 
of free attendance.
    (ii) A blanket determination of agency interest may be issued to 
cover all or any category of invitees other than those as to whom the 
finding is required by paragraph (g)(3)(i) of this section. Where a 
finding under paragraph (g)(3)(i) of this section is required, a written 
determination of agency interest, including the necessary finding, may 
be issued to cover two or more employees whose duties similarly affect 
the interests of the person who has extended the invitation or, where 
that person is an association or organization, of its members.
    (4) Free attendance. For purposes of paragraphs (g)(1) and (g)(2) of 
this section, free attendance may include waiver of all or part of a 
conference or other fee or the provision of food, refreshments, 
entertainment, instruction and materials furnished to all attendees as 
an integral part of the event. It does not include travel expenses, 
lodgings, entertainment collateral to the event, or meals taken other 
than in a group setting with all other attendees. Where the invitation 
has been extended to an accompanying spouse or other guest (see 
paragraph (g)(6) of this section), the market value of the gift of free 
attendance includes the market value of free attendance by the spouse or 
other guest as well as the market value of the employee's own 
attendance.


[[Page 485]]


    Note: There are statutory authorities implemented other than by part 
2635 under which an agency or an employee may be able to accept free 
attendance or other items not included in the definition of free 
attendance, such as travel expenses.

    (5) Cost provided by sponsor of event. The cost of the employee's 
attendance will not be considered to be provided by the sponsor, and the 
invitation is not considered to be from the sponsor of the event, where 
a person other than the sponsor designates the employee to be invited 
and bears the cost of the employee's attendance through a contribution 
or other payment intended to facilitate that employee's attendance. 
Payment of dues or a similar assessment to a sponsoring organization 
does not constitute a payment intended to facilitate a particular 
employee's attendance.
    (6) Accompanying spouse or other guest. When others in attendance 
will generally be accompanied by a spouse or other guest, and where the 
invitation is from the same person who has invited the employee, the 
agency designee may authorize an employee to accept an unsolicited 
invitation of free attendance to an accompanying spouse or to another 
accompanying guest to participate in all or a portion of the event at 
which the employee's free attendance is permitted under paragraph (g)(1) 
or (g)(2) of this section. The authorization required by this paragraph 
may be provided orally or in writing.
    Example 1: An aerospace industry association that is a prohibited 
source sponsors an industrywide, two-day seminar for which it charges a 
fee of $400 and anticipates attendance of approximately 400. An Air 
Force contractor pays $2,000 to the association so that the association 
can extend free invitations to five Air Force officials designated by 
the contractor. The Air Force officials may not accept the gifts of free 
attendance. Because the contractor specified the invitees and bore the 
cost of their attendance, the gift of free attendance is considered to 
be provided by the company and not by the sponsoring association. Had 
the contractor paid $2,000 to the association in order that the 
association might invite any five Federal employees, an Air Force 
official to whom the sponsoring association extended one of the five 
invitations could attend if his participation were determined to be in 
the interest of the agency. The Air Force official could not in any case 
accept an invitation directly from the nonsponsor contractor because the 
market value of the gift exceeds $250.
    Example 2: An employee of the Department of Transportation is 
invited by a news organization to an annual press dinner sponsored by an 
association of press organizations. Tickets for the event cost $250 per 
person and attendance is limited to 400 representatives of press 
organizations and their guests. If the employee's attendance is 
determined to be in the interest of the agency, she may accept the 
invitation from the news organization because more than 100 persons will 
attend and the cost of the ticket does not exceed $250. However, if the 
invitation were extended to the employee and an accompanying guest, her 
guest could not be authorized to attend for free since the market value 
of the gift of free attendance would be $500 and the invitation is from 
a person other than the sponsor of the event.
    Example 3: An employee of the Department of Energy (DOE) and his 
wife have been invited by a major utility executive to a small dinner 
party. A few other officials of the utility and their spouses or other 
guests are also invited, as is a representative of a consumer group 
concerned with utility rates and her husband. The DOE official believes 
the dinner party will provide him an opportunity to socialize with and 
get to know those in attendance. The employee may not accept the free 
invitation under this exception, even if his attendance could be 
determined to be in the interest of the agency. The small dinner party 
is not a widely attended gathering. Nor could the employee be authorized 
to accept even if the event were instead a corporate banquet to which 
forty company officials and their spouses or other guests were invited. 
In this second case, notwithstanding the larger number of persons 
expected (as opposed to the small dinner party just noted) and despite 
the presence of the consumer group representative and her husband who 
are not officials of the utility, those in attendance would still not 
represent a diversity of views or interests. Thus, the company banquet 
would not qualify as a widely attended gathering under those 
circumstances either.
    Example 4: An employee of the Department of the Treasury authorized 
to participate in a panel discussion of economic issues as part of a 
one-day conference may accept the sponsor's waiver of the conference 
fee. Under the separate authority of Sec. 2635.204(a), he may accept a 
token of appreciation for his speech having a market value of $20 or 
less.
    Example 5: An Assistant U.S. Attorney is invited to attend a 
luncheon meeting of a local bar association to hear a distinguished 
judge lecture on cross-examining expert witnesses. Although members of 
the bar association are assessed a $15 fee for the meeting, the 
Assistant U.S. Attorney may accept the bar association's offer to attend 
for free,

[[Page 486]]

even without a determination of agency interest. The gift can be 
accepted under the $20 de minimis exception at Sec. 2635.204(a).
    Example 6: An employee of the Department of the Interior authorized 
to speak on the first day of a four-day conference on endangered species 
may accept the sponsor's waiver of the conference fee for the first day 
of the conference. If the conference is widely attended, he may be 
authorized, based on a determination that his attendance is in the 
agency's interest, to accept the sponsor's offer to waive the attendance 
fee for the remainder of the conference.

    (h) Social invitations from persons other than prohibited sources. 
An employee may accept food, refreshments and entertainment, not 
including travel or lodgings, at a social event attended by several 
persons where:
    (1) The invitation is from a person who is not a prohibited source; 
and
    (2) No fee is charged to any person in attendance.

    Example 1: Along with several other Government officials and a 
number of individuals from the private sector, the Administrator of the 
Environmental Protection Agency has been invited to the premier showing 
of a new adventure movie about industrial espionage. The producer is 
paying all costs of the showing. The Administrator may accept the 
invitation since the producer is not a prohibited source and no 
attendance fee is being charged to anyone who has been invited.
    Example 2: An employee of the White House Press Office has been 
invited to a cocktail party given by a noted Washington hostess who is 
not a prohibited source. The employee may attend even though he has only 
recently been introduced to the hostess and suspects that he may have 
been invited because of his official position.

    (i) Meals, refreshments and entertainment in foreign areas. An 
employee assigned to duty in, or on official travel to, a foreign area 
as defined in 41 CFR 301-7.3(c) may accept food, refreshments or 
entertainment in the course of a breakfast, luncheon, dinner or other 
meeting or event provided:
    (1) The market value in the foreign area of the food, refreshments 
or entertainment provided at the meeting or event, as converted to U.S. 
dollars, does not exceed the per diem rate for the foreign area 
specified in the U.S. Department of State's Maximum Per Diem Allowances 
for Foreign Areas, Per Diem Supplement Section 925 to the Standardized 
Regulations (GC,FA) available from the Superintendent of Documents, U.S. 
Government Printing Office, Washington, DC 20402;
    (2) There is participation in the meeting or event by non-U.S. 
citizens or by representatives of foreign governments or other foreign 
entities;
    (3) Attendance at the meeting or event is part of the employee's 
official duties to obtain information, disseminate information, promote 
the export of U.S. goods and services, represent the United States or 
otherwise further programs or operations of the agency or the U.S. 
mission in the foreign area; and
    (4) The gift of meals, refreshments or entertainment is from a 
person other than a foreign government as defined in 5 U.S.C. 
7342(a)(2).

    Example 1: A number of local businessmen in a developing country are 
anxious for a U.S. company to locate a manufacturing facility in their 
province. An official of the Overseas Private Investment Corporation may 
accompany the visiting vice president of the U.S. company to a dinner 
meeting hosted by the businessmen at a province restaurant where the 
market value of the food and refreshments does not exceed the per diem 
rate for that country.

    (j) Gifts to the President or Vice President. Because of 
considerations relating to the conduct of their offices, including those 
of protocol and etiquette, the President or the Vice President may 
accept any gift on his own behalf or on behalf of any family member, 
provided that such acceptance does not violate Sec. 2635.202(c) (1) or 
(2), 18 U.S.C. 201(b) or 201(c)(3), or the Constitution of the United 
States.
    (k) Gifts authorized by supplemental agency regulation. An employee 
may accept any gift the acceptance of which is specifically authorized 
by a supplemental agency regulation.
    (l) Gifts accepted under specific statutory authority. The 
prohibitions on acceptance of gifts from outside sources contained in 
this subpart do not apply to any item, receipt of which is specifically 
authorized by statute. Gifts which may be received by an employee under 
the authority of specific statutes include, but are not limited to:
    (1) Free attendance, course or meeting materials, transportation, 
lodgings, food and refreshments or reimbursements therefor incident to 
training or

[[Page 487]]

meetings when accepted by the employee under the authority of 5 U.S.C. 
4111 from an organization with tax-exempt status under 26 U.S.C. 
501(c)(3) or from a person to whom the prohibitions in 18 U.S.C. 209 do 
not apply. The employee's acceptance must be approved by the agency in 
accordance with Secs. 410.701 through 410.706 of this title; or

    Note: 26 U.S.C. 501(c)(3) is authority for tax-exempt treatment of a 
limited class of nonprofit organizations, including those organized and 
operated for charitable, religious or educational purposes. Many 
nonprofit organizations are not exempt from taxation under this section.

    (2) Gifts from a foreign government or international or 
multinational organization, or its representative, when accepted by the 
employee under the authority of the Foreign Gifts and Decorations Act, 5 
U.S.C. 7342. As a condition of acceptance, an employee must comply with 
requirements imposed by the agency's regulations or procedures 
implementing that Act.

[57 FR 35041, Aug. 7, 1992; 57 FR 48557, Oct. 27, 1992; 61 FR 42969, 
Aug. 20, 1996; 61 FR 48733, Sept. 16, 1996; 61 FR 50691, Sept. 27, 1996]



Sec. 2635.205  Proper disposition of prohibited gifts.

    (a) An employee who has received a gift that cannot be accepted 
under this subpart shall, unless the gift is accepted by an agency 
acting under specific statutory authority:
    (1) Return any tangible item to the donor or pay the donor its 
market value. An employee who cannot ascertain the actual market value 
of an item may estimate its market value by reference to the retail cost 
of similar items of like quality. See Sec. 2635.203(c).

    Example 1: To avoid public embarrassment to the seminar sponsor, an 
employee of the National Park Service did not decline a barometer worth 
$200 given at the conclusion of his speech on Federal lands policy. The 
employee must either return the barometer or promptly reimburse the 
sponsor $200.

    (2) When it is not practical to return a tangible item because it is 
perishable, the item may, at the discretion of the employee's supervisor 
or an agency ethics official, be given to an appropriate charity, shared 
within the recipient's office, or destroyed.

    Example 1: With approval by the recipient's supervisor, a floral 
arrangement sent by a disability claimant to a helpful employee of the 
Social Security Administration may be placed in the office's reception 
area.

    (3) For any entertainment, favor, service, benefit or other 
intangible, reimburse the donor the market value. Subsequent 
reciprocation by the employee does not constitute reimbursement.

    Example 1: A Department of Defense employee wishes to attend a 
charitable event to which he has been offered a $300 ticket by a 
prohibited source. Although his attendance is not in the interest of the 
agency under Sec. 2635.204(g), he may attend if he reimburses the donor 
the $300 face value of the ticket.

    (4) Dispose of gifts from foreign governments or international 
organizations in accordance with 41 CFR part 101-49, and dispose of 
materials received in conjunction with official travel in accordance 
with 41 CFR 101-25.103.
    (b) An agency may authorize disposition or return of gifts at 
Government expense. Employees may use penalty mail to forward 
reimbursements required or permitted by this section.
    (c) An employee who, on his own initiative, promptly complies with 
the requirements of this section will not be deemed to have improperly 
accepted an unsolicited gift. An employee who promptly consults his 
agency ethics official to determine whether acceptance of an unsolicited 
gift is proper and who, upon the advice of the ethics official, returns 
the gift or otherwise disposes of the gift in accordance with this 
section, will be considered to have complied with the requirements of 
this section on his own initiative.



                   Subpart C--Gifts Between Employees



Sec. 2635.301  Overview.

    This subpart contains standards that prohibit an employee from 
giving, donating to, or soliciting contributions for, a gift to an 
official superior and from accepting a gift from an employee receiving 
less pay than himself, unless the item is excluded from the definition 
of a gift or falls within one of the exceptions set forth in this 
subpart.

[[Page 488]]



Sec. 2635.302  General standards.

    (a) Gifts to superiors. Except as provided in this subpart, an 
employee may not:
    (1) Directly or indirectly, give a gift to or make a donation toward 
a gift for an official superior; or
    (2) Solicit a contribution from another employee for a gift to 
either his own or the other employee's official superior.
    (b) Gifts from employees receiving less pay. Except as provided in 
this subpart, an employee may not, directly or indirectly, accept a gift 
from an employee receiving less pay than himself unless:
    (1) The two employees are not in a subordinate-official superior 
relationship; and
    (2) There is a personal relationship between the two employees that 
would justify the gift.
    (c) Limitation on use of exceptions. Notwithstanding any exception 
provided in this subpart, an official superior shall not coerce the 
offering of a gift from a subordinate.



Sec. 2635.303  Definitions.

    For purposes of this subpart, the following definitions shall apply:
    (a) Gift has the meaning set forth in Sec. 2635.203(b). For purposes 
of that definition an employee will be deemed to have paid market value 
for any benefit received as a result of his participation in any carpool 
or other such mutual arrangement involving another employee or other 
employees if he bears his fair proportion of the expense or effort 
involved.
    (b) Indirectly, for purposes of Sec. 2635.302(b), has the meaning 
set forth in Sec. 2635.203(f). For purposes of Sec. 2635.302(a), it 
includes a gift:
    (1) Given with the employee's knowledge and acquiescence by his 
parent, sibling, spouse, child, or dependent relative; or
    (2) Given by a person other than the employee under circumstances 
where the employee has promised or agreed to reimburse that person or to 
give that person something of value in exchange for giving the gift.
    (c) Subject to paragraph (a) of this section, market value has the 
meaning set forth in Sec. 2635.203(c).
    (d) Official superior means any other employee, other than the 
President and the Vice President, including but not limited to an 
immediate supervisor, whose official responsibilities include directing 
or evaluating the performance of the employee's official duties or those 
of any other official superior of the employee. For purposes of this 
subpart, an employee is considered to be the subordinate of any of his 
official superiors.
    (e) Solicit means to request contributions by personal communication 
or by general announcement.
    (f) Voluntary contribution means a contribution given freely, 
without pressure or coercion. A contribution is not voluntary unless it 
is made in an amount determined by the contributing employee, except 
that where an amount for a gift is included in the cost for a luncheon, 
reception or similar event, an employee who freely chooses to pay a 
proportionate share of the total cost in order to attend will be deemed 
to have made a voluntary contribution. Except in the case of 
contributions for a gift included in the cost of a luncheon, reception 
or similar event, a statement that an employee may choose to contribute 
less or not at all shall accompany any recommendation of an amount to be 
contributed for a gift to an official superior.

    Example 1: A supervisory employee of the Agency for International 
Development has just been reassigned from Washington, DC to Kabul, 
Afghanistan. As a farewell party, 12 of her subordinates have decided to 
take her out to lunch at the Khyber Repast. It is understood that each 
will pay for his own meal and that the cost of the supervisor's lunch 
will be divided equally among the twelve. Even though the amount they 
will contribute is not determined until the supervisor orders lunch, the 
contribution made by those who choose to participate in the farewell 
lunch is voluntary.



Sec. 2635.304  Exceptions.

    The prohibitions set forth in Sec. 2635.302(a) and (b) do not apply 
to a gift given or accepted under the circumstances described in 
paragraph (a) or (b) of this section. A contribution or the solicitation 
of a contribution that would otherwise violate the prohibitions set 
forth in Sec. 2635.302(a) and (b)

[[Page 489]]

may only be made in accordance with paragraph (c) of this section.
    (a) General exceptions. On an occasional basis, including any 
occasion on which gifts are traditionally given or exchanged, the 
following may be given to an official superior or accepted from a 
subordinate or other employee receiving less pay:
    (1) Items, other than cash, with an aggregate market value of $10 or 
less per occasion;
    (2) Items such as food and refreshments to be shared in the office 
among several employees;
    (3) Personal hospitality provided at a residence which is of a type 
and value customarily provided by the employee to personal friends;
    (4) Items given in connection with the receipt of personal 
hospitality if of a type and value customarily given on such occasions; 
and
    (5) Leave transferred under subpart I of part 630 of this title to 
an employee who is not an immediate supervisor, unless obtained in 
violation of Sec. 630.912 of this title.

    Example 1: Upon returning to work following a vacation at the beach, 
a claims examiner with the Department of Veterans Affairs may give his 
supervisor, and his supervisor may accept, a bag of saltwater taffy 
purchased on the boardwalk for $8.
    Example 2: An employee of the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation 
whose bank examination responsibilities require frequent travel may not 
bring her supervisor, and her supervisor may not accept, souvenir coffee 
mugs from each of the cities she visits in the course of performing her 
duties, even though each of the mugs costs less than $5. Gifts given on 
this basis are not occasional.
    Example 3: The Secretary of Labor has invited the agency's General 
Counsel to a dinner party at his home. The General Counsel may bring a 
$15 bottle of wine to the dinner party and the Secretary may accept this 
customary hostess gift from his subordinate, even though its cost is in 
excess of $10.
    Example 4: For Christmas, a secretary may give his supervisor, and 
the supervisor may accept, a poinsettia plant purchased for $10 or less. 
The secretary may also invite his supervisor to a Christmas party in his 
home and the supervisor may attend.

    (b) Special, infrequent occasions. A gift appropriate to the 
occasion may be given to an official superior or accepted from a 
subordinate or other employee receiving less pay:
    (1) In recognition of infrequently occurring occasions of personal 
significance such as marriage, illness, or the birth or adoption of a 
child; or
    (2) Upon occasions that terminate a subordinate-official superior 
relationship, such as retirement, resignation, or transfer.

    Example 1: The administrative assistant to the personnel director of 
the Tennessee Valley Authority may send a $30 floral arrangement to the 
personnel director who is in the hospital recovering from surgery. The 
personnel director may accept the gift.
    Example 2: A chemist employed by the Food and Drug Administration 
has been invited to the wedding of the lab director who is his official 
superior. He may give the lab director and his bride, and they may 
accept, a place setting in the couple's selected china pattern purchased 
for $70.
    Example 3: Upon the occasion of the supervisor's retirement from 
Federal service, an employee of the Fish and Wildlife Service may give 
her supervisor a book of wildlife photographs which she purchased for 
$19. The retiring supervisor may accept the book.

    (c) Voluntary contributions. An employee may solicit voluntary 
contributions of nominal amounts from fellow employees for an 
appropriate gift to an official superior and an employee may make a 
voluntary contribution of a nominal amount to an appropriate gift to an 
official superior:
    (1) On a special, infrequent occasion as described in paragraph (b) 
of this section; or
    (2) On an occasional basis, for items such as food and refreshments 
to be shared in the office among several employees.
    An employee may accept such gifts to which a subordinate or other 
employee receiving less pay than himself has contributed.

    Example 1: To mark the occasion of his retirement, members of the 
immediate staff of the Under Secretary of the Army would like to give 
him a party and provide him with a gift certificate. They may distribute 
an announcement of the party and include a nominal amount for a 
retirement gift in the fee for the party.
    Example 2: The General Counsel of the National Endowment for the 
Arts may not collect contributions for a Christmas gift for the 
Chairman. Christmas occurs annually and is not an occasion of personal 
significance.
    Example 3: Subordinates may not take up a collection for a gift to 
an official superior on

[[Page 490]]

the occasion of the superior's swearing in or promotion to a higher 
grade position within the supervisory chain of that organization. These 
are not events that mark the termination of the subordinate-official 
superior relationship, nor are they events of personal significance 
within the meaning of Sec. 2635.304(b). However, subordinates may take 
up a collection and employees may contribute $3 each to buy refreshments 
to be consumed by everyone in the immediate office to mark either such 
occasion.
    Example 4: Subordinates may each contribute a nominal amount to a 
fund to give a gift to an official superior upon the occasion of that 
superior's transfer or promotion to a position outside the organization.
    Example 5: An Assistant Secretary at the Department of the Interior 
is getting married. His secretary has decided that a microwave oven 
would be a nice gift from his staff and has informed each of the 
Assistant Secretary's subordinates that they should contribute $5 for 
the gift. Her method of collection is improper. Although she may 
recommend a $5 contribution, the recommendation must be coupled with a 
statement that the employee whose contribution is solicited is free to 
contribute less or nothing at all.



               Subpart D--Conflicting Financial Interests



Sec. 2635.401  Overview.

    This subpart contains two provisions relating to financial 
interests. One is a disqualification requirement and the other is a 
prohibition on acquiring or continuing to hold specific financial 
interests. An employee may acquire or hold any financial interest not 
prohibited by Sec. 2635.403. Notwithstanding that his acquisition or 
holding of a particular interest is proper, an employee is prohibited in 
accordance with Sec. 2635.402 of this subpart from participating in an 
official capacity in any particular matter in which, to his knowledge, 
he or any person whose interests are imputed to him has a financial 
interest, if the particular matter will have a direct and predictable 
effect on that interest.



Sec. 2635.402  Disqualifying financial interests.

    (a) Statutory prohibition. An employee is prohibited by criminal 
statute, 18 U.S.C. 208(a), from participating personally and 
substantially in an official capacity in any particular matter in which, 
to his knowledge, he or any person whose interests are imputed to him 
under this statute has a financial interest, if the particular matter 
will have a direct and predictable effect on that interest.

    Note: Standards applicable when seeking non-Federal employment are 
contained in subpart F of this part and, if followed, will ensure that 
an employee does not violate 18 U.S.C. 208(a) or this section when he is 
negotiating for or has an arrangement concerning future employment. In 
all other cases where the employee's participation would violate 18 
U.S.C. 208(a), an employee shall disqualify himself from participation 
in the matter in accordance with paragraph (c) of this section or obtain 
a waiver, as described in paragraph (d) of this section.

    (b) Definitions. For purposes of this section, the following 
definitions shall apply:
    (1) Direct and predictable effect. (i) A particular matter will have 
a direct effect on a financial interest if there is a close causal link 
between any decision or action to be taken in the matter and any 
expected effect of the matter on the financial interest. An effect may 
be direct even though it does not occur immediately. A particular matter 
will not have a direct effect on a financial interest, however, if the 
chain of causation is attenuated or is contingent upon the occurrence of 
events that are speculative or that are independent of, and unrelated 
to, the matter. A particular matter that has an effect on a financial 
interest only as a consequence of its effects on the general economy 
does not have a direct effect within the meaning of this subpart.
    (ii) A particular matter will have a predictable effect if there is 
a real, as opposed to a speculative possibility that the matter will 
affect the financial interest. It is not necessary, however, that the 
magnitude of the gain or loss be known, and the dollar amount of the 
gain or loss is immaterial.

    Note: If a particular matter involves a specific party or parties, 
generally the matter will at most only have a direct and predictable 
effect, for purposes of this subpart, on a financial interest of the 
employee in or with a party, such as the employee's interest by virtue 
of owning stock. There may, however, be some situations in which, under 
the above standards, a particular matter will have a direct and 
predictable effect on an employee's financial interests in or with a 
nonparty. For example, if a party is a corporation, a particular matter 
may also have a direct and

[[Page 491]]

predictable effect on an employee's financial interests through 
ownership of stock in an affiliate, parent, or subsidiary of that party. 
Similarly, the disposition of a protest against the award of a contract 
to a particular company may also have a direct and predictable effect on 
an employee's financial interest in another company listed as a 
subcontractor in the proposal of one of the competing offerors.

    Example 1: An employee of the National Library of Medicine at the 
National Institutes of Health has just been asked to serve on the 
technical evaluation panel to review proposals for a new library 
computer search system. DEF Computer Corporation, a closely held company 
in which he and his wife own a majority of the stock, has submitted a 
proposal. Because award of the systems contract to DEF or to any other 
offeror will have a direct and predictable effect on both his and his 
wife's financial interests, the employee cannot participate on the 
technical evaluation team unless his disqualification has been waived.
    Example 2: Upon assignment to the technical evaluation panel, the 
employee in the preceding example finds that DEF Computer Corporation 
has not submitted a proposal. Rather, LMN Corp., with which DEF competes 
for private sector business, is one of the six offerors. The employee is 
not disqualified from serving on the technical evaluation panel. Any 
effect on the employee's financial interests as a result of the agency's 
decision to award or not award the systems contract to LMN would be at 
most indirect and speculative.

    (2) Imputed interests. For purposes of 18 U.S.C. 208(a) and this 
subpart, the financial interests of the following persons will serve to 
disqualify an employee to the same extent as if they were the employee's 
own interests:
    (i) The employee's spouse;
    (ii) The employee's minor child;
    (iii) The employee's general partner;
    (iv) An organization or entity which the employee serves as officer, 
director, trustee, general partner or employee; and
    (v) A person with whom the employee is negotiating for or has an 
arrangement concerning prospective employment. (Employees who are 
seeking other employment should refer to and comply with the standards 
in subpart F of this part).

    Example 1: An employee of the Department of Education serves without 
compensation on the board of directors of Kinder World, Inc., a 
nonprofit corporation that engages in good works. Even though her 
personal financial interests will not be affected, the employee must 
disqualify herself from participating in the review of a grant 
application submitted by Kinder World. Award or denial of the grant will 
affect the financial interests of Kinder World and its financial 
interests are imputed to her as a member of its board of directors.
    Example 2: The spouse of an employee of the Food and Drug 
Administration has obtained a position with a well established 
biomedical research company. The company has developed an artificial 
limb for which it is seeking FDA approval and the employee would 
ordinarily be asked to participate in the FDA's review and approval 
process. The spouse is a salaried employee of the company and has no 
direct ownership interest in the company. Nor does she have an indirect 
ownership interest, as would be the case, for example, if she were 
participating in a pension plan that held stock in the company. Her 
position with the company is such that the granting or withholding of 
FDA approval will not have a direct and predictable effect on her salary 
or on her continued employment with the company. Since the FDA approval 
process will not affect his spouse's financial interests, the employee 
is not disqualified under Sec. 2635.402 from participating in that 
process. Nevertheless, the financial interests of the spouse's employer 
may be disqualifying under the impartiality principle, as implemented at 
Sec. 2635.502.

    (3) Particular matter. The term particular matter encompasses only 
matters that involve deliberation, decision, or action that is focused 
upon the interests of specific persons, or a discrete and identifiable 
class of persons. Such a matter is covered by this subpart even if it 
does not involve formal parties and may include governmental action such 
as legislation or policy-making that is narrowly focused on the 
interests of such a discrete and identifiable class of persons. The term 
particular matter, however, does not extend to the consideration or 
adoption of broad policy options that are directed to the interests of a 
large and diverse group of persons. The particular matters covered by 
this subpart include a judicial or other proceeding, application, 
request for a ruling or other determination, contract, claim, 
controversy, charge, accusation or arrest.

    Example 1: The Internal Revenue Service's amendment of its 
regulations to change the manner in which depreciation is calculated is 
not a particular matter, nor is the Social Security Administration's 
consideration of

[[Page 492]]

changes to its appeal procedures for disability claimants.
    Example 2: Consideration by the Interstate Commerce Commission of 
regulations establishing safety standards for trucks on interstate 
highways involves a particular matter.

    (4) Personal and substantial. To participate personally means to 
participate directly. It includes the direct and active supervision of 
the participation of a subordinate in the matter. To participate 
substantially means that the employee's involvement is of significance 
to the matter. Participation may be substantial even though it is not 
determinative of the outcome of a particular matter. However, it 
requires more than official responsibility, knowledge, perfunctory 
involvement, or involvement on an administrative or peripheral issue. A 
finding of substantiality should be based not only on the effort devoted 
to a matter, but also on the importance of the effort. While a series of 
peripheral involvements may be insubstantial, the single act of 
approving or participating in a critical step may be substantial. 
Personal and substantial participation may occur when, for example, an 
employee participates through decision, approval, disapproval, 
recommendation, investigation or the rendering of advice in a particular 
matter.
    (c) Disqualification. Unless the employee is authorized to 
participate in the particular matter by virtue of a waiver described in 
paragraph (d) of this section or because the interest has been divested 
in accordance with paragraph (e) of this section, an employee shall 
disqualify himself from participating in a particular matter in which, 
to his knowledge, he or a person whose interests are imputed to him has 
a financial interest, if the particular matter will have a direct and 
predictable effect on that interest. Disqualification is accomplished by 
not participating in the particular matter.
    (1) Notification. An employee who becomes aware of the need to 
disqualify himself from participation in a particular matter to which he 
has been assigned should notify the person responsible for his 
assignment. An employee who is responsible for his own assignment should 
take whatever steps are necessary to ensure that he does not participate 
in the matter from which he is disqualified. Appropriate oral or written 
notification of the employee's disqualification may be made to coworkers 
by the employee or a supervisor to ensure that the employee is not 
involved in a matter from which he is disqualified.
    (2) Documentation. An employee need not file a written 
disqualification statement unless he is required by part 2634 of this 
chapter to file written evidence of compliance with an ethics agreement 
with the Office of Government Ethics or is asked by an agency ethics 
official or the person responsible for his assignment to file a written 
disqualification statement. However, an employee may elect to create a 
record of his actions by providing written notice to a supervisor or 
other appropriate official.

    Example 1: An Assistant Secretary of the Department of the Interior 
owns recreational property that borders on land which is being 
considered for annexation to a national park. Annexation would directly 
and predictably increase the value of her vacation property and, thus, 
she is disqualified from participating in any way in the Department's 
deliberations or decisions regarding the annexation. Because she is 
responsible for determining which matters she will work on, she may 
accomplish her disqualification merely by ensuring that she does not 
participate in the matter. Because of the level of her position, 
however, the Assistant Secretary might be wise to establish a record 
that she has acted properly by providing a written disqualification 
statement to an official superior and by providing written notification 
of the disqualification to subordinates to ensure that they do not raise 
or discuss with her any issues related to the annexation.

    (d) Waiver of disqualification. An employee who would otherwise be 
disqualified by 18 U.S.C. 208(a) may be permitted to participate in a 
particular matter where the otherwise disqualifying financial interest 
is the subject of a regulatory or individual waiver described in this 
paragraph, or results from certain Indian birthrights as described in 18 
U.S.C. 208(b)(4).
    (1) Regulatory waivers. Under 18 U.S.C. 208(b)(2), regulatory 
waivers of general applicability may be issued by the Office of 
Government Ethics based on its determination that particular interests 
are too remote or too inconsequential to affect the integrity of the 
services of

[[Page 493]]

the employees to whom the waivers apply. Pending issuance of superseding 
regulatory waivers under this authority, agency regulatory waivers 
issued under 18 U.S.C. 208(b)(2) as in effect prior to November 30, 1989 
continue to apply.
    (2) Individual waivers. An individual waiver enabling the employee 
to participate in one or more particular matters may be issued under 18 
U.S.C. 208(b)(1) if, in advance of the employee's participation:
    (i) The employee:
    (A) Advises the Government official responsible for the employee's 
appointment (or other Government official to whom authority to issue 
such a waiver for the employee has been delegated) about the nature and 
circumstances of the particular matter or matters; and
    (B) Makes full disclosure to such official of the nature and extent 
of the disqualifying financial interest; and
    (ii) Such official determines, in writing, that the employee's 
financial interest in the particular matter or matters is not so 
substantial as to be deemed likely to affect the integrity of the 
services which the Government may expect from such employee.
    (3) Federal advisory committee member waivers. An individual waiver 
may be issued under 18 U.S.C. 208(b)(3) to a special Government employee 
serving on, or under consideration for appointment to, an advisory 
committee within the meaning of the Federal Advisory Committee Act if 
the Government official responsible for the employee's appointment (or 
other Government official to whom authority to issue such a waiver for 
the employee has been delegated):
    (i) Reviews the financial disclosure report filed by the special 
Government employee pursuant to the Ethics in Government Act of 1978; 
and
    (ii) Certifies in writing that the need for the individual's 
services outweighs the potential for a conflict of interest created by 
the otherwise disqualifying financial interest.
    (4) Consultation and notification regarding waivers. When 
practicable, an official is required to consult formally or informally 
with the Office of Government Ethics prior to granting a waiver referred 
to in paragraph (d)(2) or (3) of this section. A copy of each such 
waiver is to be forwarded to the Director of the Office of Government 
Ethics.
    (e) Divestiture of a disqualifying financial interest. Upon sale or 
other divestiture of the asset or other interest that causes his 
disqualification from participation in a particular matter, 18 U.S.C. 
208(a) and paragraph (c) of this section will no longer prohibit the 
employee's participation in the matter.
    (1) Voluntary divestiture. An employee who would otherwise be 
disqualified from participation in a particular matter may voluntarily 
sell or otherwise divest himself of the interest that causes the 
disqualification.
    (2) Directed divestiture. An employee may be required to sell or 
otherwise divest himself of the disqualifying financial interest if his 
continued holding of that interest is prohibited by statute or by agency 
supplemental regulation issued in accordance with Sec. 2635.403(a), or 
if the agency determines in accordance with Sec. 2635.403(b) that a 
substantial conflict exists between the financial interest and the 
employee's duties or accomplishment of the agency's mission.
    (3) Eligibility for special tax treatment. An employee who is 
directed to divest an interest may be eligible to defer the tax 
consequences of divestiture under subpart J of part 2634 of this 
chapter. An employee who divests before obtaining a certificate of 
divestiture will not be eligible for this special tax treatment.
    (f) Official duties that give rise to potential conflicts. Where an 
employee's official duties create a substantial likelihood that the 
employee may be assigned to a particular matter from which he is 
disqualified, the employee should advise his supervisor or other person 
responsible for his assignments of that potential so that conflicting 
assignments can be avoided, consistent with the agency's needs.



Sec. 2635.403  Prohibited financial interests.

    An employee shall not acquire or hold any financial interest that he 
is prohibited from acquiring or holding by statute, by agency regulation 
issued in accordance with paragraph (a) of this section or by reason of 
an agency

[[Page 494]]

determination of substantial conflict under paragraph (b) of this 
section.

    Note: There is no statute of Governmentwide applicability 
prohibiting employees from holding or acquiring any financial interest. 
Statutory restrictions, if any, are contained in agency statutes which, 
in some cases, may be implemented by agency regulations issued 
independent of this part.

    (a) Agency regulation prohibiting certain financial interests. An 
agency may, by supplemental agency regulation, prohibit or restrict the 
acquisition or holding of a financial interest or a class of financial 
interests by agency employees, or any category of agency employees, and 
the spouses and minor children of those employees, based on the agency's 
determination that the acquisition or holding of such financial 
interests would cause a reasonable person to question the impartiality 
and objectivity with which agency programs are administered. Where the 
agency restricts or prohibits the holding of certain financial interests 
by its employees' spouses or minor children, any such prohibition or 
restriction shall be based on a determination that there is a direct and 
appropriate nexus between the prohibition or restriction as applied to 
spouses and minor children and the efficiency of the service.

    Note: Any prohibition on acquiring or holding a specific financial 
interest contained in an agency regulation, instruction or other 
issuance in effect prior to the effective date of this part shall, for 
employees of that agency, constitute a prohibited financial interest for 
purposes of this paragraph for one year after the effective date of this 
part or until issuance of an agency supplemental regulation, whichever 
occurs first. Provided, that for those agencies listed in appendix A to 
this part, the grace period for any such existing provisions shall be 
extended for an additional year until February 3, 1995 (for a total of 
two years after the effective date of this part) or until issuance by 
each individual agency concerned of a supplemental regulation, whichever 
occurs first. Provided further, that for those agencies listed in 
appendix B to this part, the grace period for any such existing 
provisions shall be further extended for an additional eleven months 
until January 3, 1996 (for a total of two years and eleven months after 
the effective date of this part) or until issuance by each individual 
agency concerned of a supplemental regulation, whichever occurs first. 
Provided still further, that for those agencies listed in appendix C to 
this part, the grace period for any such existing provisions shall be 
further extended until August 7, 1996 or until issuance by each 
individual agency concerned of a supplemental regulation, whichever 
occurs first. Provided still further, that for those agencies listed in 
appendix D to this part, the grace period for any such existing 
provisions shall be further extended until November 1, 1996 or until 
issuance by each individual agency concerned of a supplemental 
regulation, whichever occurs first.

    (b) Agency determination of substantial conflict. An agency may 
prohibit or restrict an individual employee from acquiring or holding a 
financial interest or a class of financial interests based upon the 
agency designee's determination that the holding of such interest or 
interests will:
    (1) Require the employee's disqualification from matters so central 
or critical to the performance of his official duties that the 
employee's ability to perform the duties of his position would be 
materially impaired; or
    (2) Adversely affect the efficient accomplishment of the agency's 
mission because another employee cannot be readily assigned to perform 
work from which the employee would be disqualified by reason of the 
financial interest.

    Example 1: An Air Force employee who owns stock in a major aircraft 
engine manufacturer is being considered for promotion to a position that 
involves responsibility for development of a new fighter airplane. If 
the agency determined that engineering and other decisions about the Air 
Force's requirements for the fighter would directly and predictably 
affect his financial interests, the employee could not, by virtue of 18 
U.S.C. 208(a), perform these significant duties of the position while 
retaining his stock in the company. The agency can require the employee 
to sell his stock as a condition of being selected for the position 
rather than allowing him to disqualify himself in particular matters.

    (c) Definition of financial interest. For purposes of this section:
    (1) Except as provided in paragraph (c)(2) of this section, the term 
financial interest is limited to financial interests that are owned by 
the employee or by the employee's spouse or minor children. However, the 
term is not limited to only those financial interests that would be 
disqualifying under 18 U.S.C. 208(a) and Sec. 2635.402. The term 
includes any current or contingent ownership, equity, or security 
interest in real or

[[Page 495]]

personal property or a business and may include an indebtedness or 
compensated employment relationship. It thus includes, for example, 
interests in the nature of stocks, bonds, partnership interests, fee and 
leasehold interests, mineral and other property rights, deeds of trust, 
and liens, and extends to any right to purchase or acquire any such 
interest, such as a stock option or commodity future. It does not 
include a future interest created by someone other than the employee, 
his spouse, or dependent child or any right as a beneficiary of an 
estate that has not been settled.

    Example 1: A regulatory agency has concluded that ownership by its 
employees of stock in entities regulated by the agency would 
significantly diminish public confidence in the agency's performance of 
its regulatory functions and thereby interfere with the accomplishment 
of its mission. In its supplemental agency regulations, the agency may 
prohibit its employees from acquiring or continuing to hold stock in 
regulated entities.
    Example 2: An agency that insures bank deposits may, by supplemental 
agency regulation, prohibit its employees who are bank examiners from 
obtaining loans from banks they examine. Examination of a member bank 
could have no effect on an employee's fixed obligation to repay a loan 
from that bank and, thus, would not affect an employee's financial 
interests so as to require disqualification under Sec. 2635.402. 
Nevertheless, a loan from a member bank is a discrete financial interest 
within the meaning of Sec. 2635.403(c) that may, when appropriate, be 
prohibited by supplemental agency regulation.

    (2) The term financial interest includes service, with or without 
compensation, as an officer, director, trustee, general partner or 
employee of any person, including a nonprofit entity, whose financial 
interests are imputed to the employee under Sec. 2635.402(b)(2) (iii) or 
(iv).

    Example 1. The Foundation for the Preservation of Wild Horses 
maintains herds of horses that graze on public and private lands. 
Because its costs are affected by Federal policies regarding grazing 
permits, the Foundation routinely comments on all proposed rules 
governing use of Federal grasslands issued by the Bureau of Land 
Management. BLM may require an employee to resign his uncompensated 
position as Vice President of the Foundation as a condition of his 
promotion to a policy-level position within the Bureau rather than 
allowing him to rely on disqualification in particular cases.

    (d) Reasonable period to divest or terminate. Whenever an agency 
directs divestiture of a financial interest under paragraph (a) or (b) 
of this section, the employee shall be given a reasonable period of 
time, considering the nature of his particular duties and the nature and 
marketability of the interest, within which to comply with the agency's 
direction. Except in cases of unusual hardship, as determined by the 
agency, a reasonable period shall not exceed 90 days from the date 
divestiture is first directed. However, as long as the employee 
continues to hold the financial interest, he remains subject to any 
restrictions imposed by this subpart.
    (e) Eligibility for special tax treatment. An employee required to 
sell or otherwise divest a financial interest may be eligible to defer 
the tax consequences of divestiture under subpart J of part 2634 of this 
chapter.

[57 FR 35042, Aug. 7, 1992, as amended at 59 FR 4780, Feb. 2, 1994; 60 
FR 6391, Feb. 2, 1995; 60 FR 66858, Dec. 27, 1995; 61 FR 40951, Aug. 7, 
1996]



          Subpart E--Impartiality in Performing Official Duties



Sec. 2635.501  Overview.

    (a) This subpart contains two provisions intended to ensure that an 
employee takes appropriate steps to avoid an appearance of loss of 
impartiality in the performance of his official duties. Under 
Sec. 2635.502, unless he receives prior authorization, an employee 
should not participate in a particular matter involving specific parties 
which he knows is likely to affect the financial interests of a member 
of his household, or in which he knows a person with whom he has a 
covered relationship is or represents a party, if he determines that a 
reasonable person with knowledge of the relevant facts would question 
his impartiality in the matter. An employee who is concerned that other 
circumstances would raise a question regarding his impartiality should 
use the process described in Sec. 2635.502 to determine whether he 
should or should not participate in a particular matter.

[[Page 496]]

    (b) Under Sec. 2635.503, an employee who has received an 
extraordinary severance or other payment from a former employer prior to 
entering Government service is subject, in the absence of a waiver, to a 
two-year period of disqualification from participation in particular 
matters in which that former employer is or represents a party.

    Note: Questions regarding impartiality necessarily arise when an 
employee's official duties impact upon the employee's own financial 
interests or those of certain other persons, such as the employee's 
spouse or minor child. An employee is prohibited by criminal statute, 18 
U.S.C. 208(a), from participating personally and substantially in an 
official capacity in any particular matter in which, to his knowledge, 
he, his spouse, general partner or minor child has a financial interest, 
if the particular matter will have a direct and predictable effect on 
that interest. The statutory prohibition also extends to an employee's 
participation in a particular matter in which, to his knowledge, an 
organization in which the employee is serving as officer, director, 
trustee, general partner or employee, or with whom he is negotiating or 
has an arrangement concerning prospective employment has a financial 
interest. Where the employee's participation in a particular matter 
would affect any one of these financial interests, the standards set 
forth in subparts D or F of this part apply and only a statutory waiver, 
as described respectively in Secs. 2635.402(d) and 2635.605(a), will 
enable the employee to participate in that matter. The authorization 
procedures in Sec. 2635.502(d) may not be used to authorize an 
employee's participation in any such matter. Where the employee complies 
with all terms of the waiver, the granting of a statutory waiver will be 
deemed to constitute a determination that the interest of the Government 
in the employee's participation outweighs the concern that a reasonable 
person may question the integrity of agency programs and operations.



Sec. 2635.502  Personal and business relationships.

    (a) Consideration of appearances by the employee. Where an employee 
knows that a particular matter involving specific parties is likely to 
have a direct and predictable effect on the financial interest of a 
member of his household, or knows that a person with whom he has a 
covered relationship is or represents a party to such matter, and where 
the employee determines that the circumstances would cause a reasonable 
person with knowledge of the relevant facts to question his impartiality 
in the matter, the employee should not participate in the matter unless 
he has informed the agency designee of the appearance problem and 
received authorization from the agency designee in accordance with 
paragraph (d) of this section.
    (1) In considering whether a relationship would cause a reasonable 
person to question his impartiality, an employee may seek the assistance 
of his supervisor, an agency ethics official or the agency designee.
    (2) An employee who is concerned that circumstances other than those 
specifically described in this section would raise a question regarding 
his impartiality should use the process described in this section to 
determine whether he should or should not participate in a particular 
matter.
    (b) Definitions. For purposes of this section:
    (1) An employee has a covered relationship with:
    (i) A person, other than a prospective employer described in 
Sec. 2635.603(c), with whom the employee has or seeks a business, 
contractual or other financial relationship that involves other than a 
routine consumer transaction;

    Note: An employee who is seeking employment within the meaning of 
Sec. 2635.603 shall comply with subpart F of this part rather than with 
this section.

    (ii) A person who is a member of the employee's household, or who is 
a relative with whom the employee has a close personal relationship;
    (iii) A person for whom the employee's spouse, parent or dependent 
child is, to the employee's knowledge, serving or seeking to serve as an 
officer, director, trustee, general partner, agent, attorney, 
consultant, contractor or employee;
    (iv) Any person for whom the employee has, within the last year, 
served as officer, director, trustee, general partner, agent, attorney, 
consultant, contractor or employee; or
    (v) An organization, other than a political party described in 26 
U.S.C. 527(e), in which the employee is an active participant. 
Participation is active if, for example, it involves service as an 
official of the organization or in a capacity similar to that of a 
committee or subcommittee chairperson or

[[Page 497]]

spokesperson, or participation in directing the activities of the 
organization. In other cases, significant time devoted to promoting 
specific programs of the organization, including coordination of 
fundraising efforts, is an indication of active participation. Payment 
of dues or the donation or solicitation of financial support does not, 
in itself, constitute active participation.

    Note: Nothing in this section shall be construed to suggest that an 
employee should not participate in a matter because of his political, 
religious or moral views.

    (2) Direct and predictable effect has the meaning set forth in 
Sec. 2635.402(b)(1).
    (3) Particular matter involving specific parties has the meaning set 
forth in Sec. 2637.102(a)(7) of this chapter.

    Example 1: An employee of the General Services Administration has 
made an offer to purchase a restaurant owned by a local developer. The 
developer has submitted an offer in response to a GSA solicitation for 
lease of office space. Under the circumstances, she would be correct in 
concluding that a reasonable person would be likely to question her 
impartiality if she were to participate in evaluating that developer's 
or its competitor's lease proposal.
    Example 2: An employee of the Department of Labor is providing 
technical assistance in drafting occupational safety and health 
legislation that will affect all employers of five or more persons. His 
wife is employed as an administrative assistant by a large corporation 
that will incur additional costs if the proposed legislation is enacted. 
Because the legislation is not a particular matter involving specific 
parties, the employee may continue to work on the legislation and need 
not be concerned that his wife's employment with an affected corporation 
would raise a question concerning his impartiality.
    Example 3: An employee of the Defense Logistics Agency who has 
responsibilities for testing avionics being produced by an Air Force 
contractor has just learned that his sister-in-law has accepted 
employment as an engineer with the contractor's parent corporation. 
Where the parent corporation is a conglomerate, the employee could 
reasonably conclude that, under the circumstances, a reasonable person 
would not be likely to question his impartiality if he were to continue 
to perform his test and evaluation responsibilities.
    Example 4: An engineer has just resigned from her position as vice 
president of an electronics company in order to accept employment with 
the Federal Aviation Administration in a position involving procurement 
responsibilities. Although the employee did not receive an extraordinary 
payment in connection with her resignation and has severed all financial 
ties with the firm, under the circumstances she would be correct in 
concluding that her former service as an officer of the company would be 
likely to cause a reasonable person to question her impartiality if she 
were to participate in the administration of a DOT contract for which 
the firm is a first-tier subcontractor.
    Example 5: An employee of the Internal Revenue Service is a member 
of a private organization whose purpose is to restore a Victorian-era 
railroad station and she chairs its annual fundraising drive. Under the 
circumstances, the employee would be correct in concluding that her 
active membership in the organization would be likely to cause a 
reasonable person to question her impartiality if she were to 
participate in an IRS determination regarding the tax-exempt status of 
the organization.

    (c) Determination by agency designee. Where he has information 
concerning a potential appearance problem arising from the financial 
interest of a member of the employee's household in a particular matter 
involving specific parties, or from the role in such matter of a person 
with whom the employee has a covered relationship, the agency designee 
may make an independent determination as to whether a reasonable person 
with knowledge of the relevant facts would be likely to question the 
employee's impartiality in the matter. Ordinarily, the agency designee's 
determination will be initiated by information provided by the employee 
pursuant to paragraph (a) of this section. However, at any time, 
including after the employee has disqualified himself from participation 
in a matter pursuant to paragraph (e) of this section, the agency 
designee may make this determination on his own initiative or when 
requested by the employee's supervisor or any other person responsible 
for the employee's assignment.
    (1) If the agency designee determines that the employee's 
impartiality is likely to be questioned, he shall then determine, in 
accordance with paragraph (d) of this section, whether the employee 
should be authorized to participate in the matter. Where the agency 
designee determines that the employee's participation should not be 
authorized, the employee will be disqualified from participation in the 
matter

[[Page 498]]

in accordance with paragraph (e) of this section.
    (2) If the agency designee determines that the employee's 
impartiality is not likely to be questioned, he may advise the employee, 
including an employee who has reached a contrary conclusion under 
paragraph (a) of this section, that the employee's participation in the 
matter would be proper.
    (d) Authorization by agency designee. Where an employee's 
participation in a particular matter involving specific parties would 
not violate 18 U.S.C. 208(a), but would raise a question in the mind of 
a reasonable person about his impartiality, the agency designee may 
authorize the employee to participate in the matter based on a 
determination, made in light of all relevant circumstances, that the 
interest of the Government in the employee's participation outweighs the 
concern that a reasonable person may question the integrity of the 
agency's programs and operations. Factors which may be taken into 
consideration include:
    (1) The nature of the relationship involved;
    (2) The effect that resolution of the matter would have upon the 
financial interests of the person involved in the relationship;
    (3) The nature and importance of the employee's role in the matter, 
including the extent to which the employee is called upon to exercise 
discretion in the matter;
    (4) The sensitivity of the matter;
    (5) The difficulty of reassigning the matter to another employee; 
and
    (6) Adjustments that may be made in the employee's duties that would 
reduce or eliminate the likelihood that a reasonable person would 
question the employee's impartiality.
    Authorization by the agency designee shall be documented in writing 
at the agency designee's discretion or when requested by the employee. 
An employee who has been authorized to participate in a particular 
matter involving specific parties may not thereafter disqualify himself 
from participation in the matter on the basis of an appearance problem 
involving the same circumstances that have been considered by the agency 
designee.

    Example 1: The Deputy Director of Personnel for the Department of 
the Treasury and an attorney with the Department's Office of General 
Counsel are general partners in a real estate partnership. The Deputy 
Director advises his supervisor, the Director of Personnel, of the 
relationship upon being assigned to a selection panel for a position for 
which his partner has applied. If selected, the partner would receive a 
substantial increase in salary. The agency designee cannot authorize the 
Deputy Director to participate on the panel under the authority of this 
section since the Deputy Director is prohibited by criminal statute, 18 
U.S.C. 208(a), from participating in a particular matter affecting the 
financial interest of a person who is his general partner. See 
Sec. 2635.402.
    Example 2: A new employee of the Securities and Exchange Commission 
is assigned to an investigation of insider trading by the brokerage 
house where she had recently been employed. Because of the sensitivity 
of the investigation, the agency designee may be unable to conclude that 
the Government's interest in the employee's participation in the 
investigation outweighs the concern that a reasonable person may 
question the integrity of the investigation, even though the employee 
has severed all financial ties with the company. Based on consideration 
of all relevant circumstances, the agency designee might determine, 
however, that it is in the interest of the Government for the employee 
to pass on a routine filing by the particular brokerage house.
    Example 3: An Internal Revenue Service employee involved in a long 
and complex tax audit is advised by her son that he has just accepted an 
entry-level management position with a corporation whose taxes are the 
subject of the audit. Because the audit is essentially complete and 
because the employee is the only one with an intimate knowledge of the 
case, the agency designee might determine, after considering all 
relevant circumstances, that it is in the Government's interest for the 
employee to complete the audit, which is subject to additional levels of 
review.

    (e) Disqualification. Unless the employee is authorized to 
participate in the matter under paragraph (d) of this section, an 
employee shall not participate in a particular matter involving specific 
parties when he or the agency designee has concluded, in accordance with 
paragraph (a) or (c) of this section, that the financial interest of a 
member of the employee's household, or the role of a person with whom he 
has a covered relationship, is likely to raise a question in the mind of 
a reasonable person about his impartiality.

[[Page 499]]

Disqualification is accomplished by not participating in the matter.
    (1) Notification. An employee who becomes aware of the need to 
disqualify himself from participation in a particular matter involving 
specific parties to which he has been assigned should notify the person 
responsible for his assignment. An employee who is responsible for his 
own assignment should take whatever steps are necessary to ensure that 
he does not participate in the matter from which he is disqualified. 
Appropriate oral or written notification of the employee's 
disqualification may be made to coworkers by the employee or a 
supervisor to ensure that the employee is not involved in a particular 
matter involving specific parties from which he is disqualified.
    (2) Documentation. An employee need not file a written 
disqualification statement unless he is required by part 2634 of this 
chapter to file written evidence of compliance with an ethics agreement 
with the Office of Government Ethics or is specifically asked by an 
agency ethics official or the person responsible for his assignment to 
file a written disqualification statement. However, an employee may 
elect to create a record of his actions by providing written notice to a 
supervisor or other appropriate official.
    (f) Relevant considerations. An employee's reputation for honesty 
and integrity is not a relevant consideration for purposes of any 
determination required by this section.



Sec. 2635.503  Extraordinary payments from former employers.

    (a) Disqualification requirement. Except as provided in paragraph 
(c) of this section, an employee shall be disqualified for two years 
from participating in any particular matter in which a former employer 
is a party or represents a party if he received an extraordinary payment 
from that person prior to entering Government service. The two-year 
period of disqualification begins to run on the date that the 
extraordinary payment is received.

    Example 1: Following his confirmation hearings and one month before 
his scheduled swearing in, a nominee to the position of Assistant 
Secretary of a department received an extraordinary payment from his 
employer. For one year and 11 months after his swearing in, the 
Assistant Secretary may not participate in any particular matter to 
which his former employer is a party.
    Example 2: An employee received an extraordinary payment from her 
former employer, a coal mine operator, prior to entering on duty with 
the Department of the Interior. For two years thereafter, she may not 
participate in a determination regarding her former employer's 
obligation to reclaim a particular mining site, because her former 
employer is a party to the matter. However, she may help to draft 
reclamation legislation affecting all coal mining operations because 
this legislation does not involve any parties.

    (b) Definitions. For purposes of this section, the following 
definitions shall apply:
    (1) Extraordinary payment means any item, including cash or an 
investment interest, with a value in excess of $10,000, which is paid:
    (i) On the basis of a determination made after it became known to 
the former employer that the individual was being considered for or had 
accepted a Government position; and
    (ii) Other than pursuant to the former employer's established 
compensation, partnership, or benefits program. A compensation, 
partnership, or benefits program will be deemed an established program 
if it is contained in bylaws, a contract or other written form, or if 
there is a history of similar payments made to others not entering into 
Federal service.

    Example 1: The vice president of a small corporation is nominated to 
be an ambassador. In recognition of his service to the corporation, the 
board of directors votes to pay him $50,000 upon his confirmation in 
addition to the regular severance payment provided for by the corporate 
bylaws. The regular severance payment is not an extraordinary payment. 
The gratuitous payment of $50,000 is an extraordinary payment, since the 
corporation had not made similar payments to other departing officers.

    (2) Former employer includes any person which the employee served as 
an officer, director, trustee, general partner, agent, attorney, 
consultant, contractor or employee.
    (c) Waiver of disqualification. The disqualification requirement of 
this section may be waived based on a finding that the amount of the 
payment was

[[Page 500]]

not so substantial as to cause a reasonable person to question the 
employee's ability to act impartially in a matter in which the former 
employer is or represents a party. The waiver shall be in writing and 
may be given only by the head of the agency or, where the recipient of 
the payment is the head of the agency, by the President or his designee. 
Waiver authority may be delegated by agency heads to any person who has 
been delegated authority to issue individual waivers under 18 U.S.C. 
208(b) for the employee who is the recipient of the extraordinary 
payment.



                   Subpart F--Seeking Other Employment



Sec. 2635.601  Overview.

    This subpart contains a disqualification requirement that applies to 
employees when seeking employment with persons who otherwise would be 
affected by the performance or nonperformance of the employees' official 
duties. Specifically, it addresses the requirement of 18 U.S.C. 208(a) 
that an employee disqualify himself from participation in any particular 
matter that will have a direct and predictable effect on the financial 
interests of a person ``with whom he is negotiating or has any 
arrangement concerning prospective employment.'' Beyond this statutory 
requirement, it also addresses the issues of lack of impartiality that 
require disqualification from particular matters affecting the financial 
interests of a prospective employer when an employee's actions in 
seeking employment fall short of actual employment negotiations.



Sec. 2635.602  Applicability and related considerations.

    To ensure that he does not violate 18 U.S.C. 208(a) or the 
principles of ethical conduct contained in Sec. 2635.101(b), an employee 
who is seeking employment or who has an arrangement concerning 
prospective employment shall comply with the applicable disqualification 
requirements of Secs. 2635.604 and 2635.606 if the employee's official 
duties would affect the financial interests of a prospective employer or 
of a person with whom he has an arrangement concerning prospective 
employment. Compliance with this subpart also will ensure that the 
employee does not violate subpart D or E of this part.

    Note: An employee who is seeking employment with a person whose 
financial interests are not affected by the performance or 
nonperformance of his official duties has no obligation under this 
subpart. An employee may, however, be subject to other statutes which 
impose restrictions on employment contacts or discussions, such as 41 
U.S.C. 423(b)(1), applicable to procurement officials, and 10 U.S.C. 
2397a, applicable to certain employees of the Department of Defense.

    (a) Related employment restrictions--(1) Outside employment while a 
Federal employee. An employee who is contemplating outside employment to 
be undertaken concurrently with his Federal employment must abide by any 
limitations applicable to his outside activities under subparts G and H 
of this part. He must also comply with any disqualification requirement 
that may be applicable under subpart D or E of this part as a result of 
his outside employment activities.
    (2) Post-employment restrictions. An employee who is contemplating 
employment to be undertaken following the termination of his Federal 
employment should consult an agency ethics official to obtain advice 
regarding any post-employment restrictions that may be applicable. 
Regulations implementing the Governmentwide post-employment statute, 18 
U.S.C. 207, are contained in parts 2637 and 2641 of this chapter. 
Employees are cautioned that they may be subject to additional statutory 
restrictions on their post-employment activities, such as 41 U.S.C. 
423(f) applicable to procurement officials, 10 U.S.C. 2397b applicable 
to certain Department of Defense personnel and special statutes 
applicable to certain retired officers.
    (b) Interview trips and entertainment. Where a prospective employer 
who is a prohibited source as defined in Sec. 2635.203(d) offers to 
reimburse an employee's travel expenses, or provide other reasonable 
amenities incident to employment discussions, the employee may accept 
such amenities in accordance with Sec. 2635.204(e)(3).



Sec. 2635.603  Definitions.

    For purposes of this subpart:

[[Page 501]]

    (a) Employment means any form of non-Federal employment or business 
relationship involving the provision of personal services by the 
employee, whether to be undertaken at the same time as or subsequent to 
Federal employment. It includes but is not limited to personal services 
as an officer, director, employee, agent, attorney, consultant, 
contractor, general partner or trustee.

     Example 1: An employee of the Bureau of Indian Affairs who has 
announced her intention to retire is approached by tribal 
representatives concerning a possible consulting contract with the 
tribe. The independent contractual relationship the tribe wishes to 
negotiate is employment for purposes of this subpart.
    Example 2: An employee of the Department of Health and Human 
Services is invited to a meeting with officials of a nonprofit 
corporation to discuss the possibility of his serving as a member of the 
corporation's board of directors. Service, with or without compensation, 
as a member of the board of directors constitutes employment for 
purposes of this subpart.

    (b) An employee is seeking employment once he has begun seeking 
employment within the meaning of paragraph (b)(1) of this section and 
until he is no longer seeking employment within the meaning of paragraph 
(b)(2) of this section.
    (1) An employee has begun seeking employment if he has directly or 
indirectly:
    (i) Engaged in negotiations for employment with any person. For 
these purposes, as for 18 U.S.C. 208(a), the term negotiations means 
discussion or communication with another person, or such person's agent 
or intermediary, mutually conducted with a view toward reaching an 
agreement regarding possible employment with that person. The term is 
not limited to discussions of specific terms and conditions of 
employment in a specific position;
    (ii) Made an unsolicited communication to any person, or such 
person's agent or intermediary, regarding possible employment with that 
person. However, the employee has not begun seeking employment if that 
communication was:
    (A) For the sole purpose of requesting a job application; or
    (B) For the purpose of submitting a resume or other employment 
proposal to a person affected by the performance or nonperformance of 
the employee's duties only as part of an industry or other discrete 
class. The employee will be considered to have begun seeking employment 
upon receipt of any response indicating an interest in employment 
discussions; or
    (iii) Made a response other than rejection to an unsolicited 
communication from any person, or such person's agent or intermediary, 
regarding possible employment with that person.
    (2) An employee is no longer seeking employment when:
    (i) The employee or the prospective employer rejects the possibility 
of employment and all discussions of possible employment have 
terminated; or
    (ii) Two months have transpired after the employee's dispatch of an 
unsolicited resume or employment proposal, provided the employee has 
received no indication of interest in employment discussions from the 
prospective employer.
    (3) For purposes of this definition, a response that defers 
discussions until the foreseeable future does not constitute rejection 
of an unsolicited employment overture, proposal, or resume nor rejection 
of a prospective employment possibility.

    Example 1: An employee of the Health Care Financing Administration 
is complimented on her work by an official of a State Health Department 
who asks her to call if she is ever interested in leaving Federal 
service. The employee explains to the State official that she is very 
happy with her job at HCFA and is not interested in another job. She 
thanks him for his compliment regarding her work and adds that she'll 
remember his interest if she ever decides to leave the Government. The 
employee has rejected the unsolicited employment overture and has not 
begun seeking employment.
    Example 2: The employee in the preceding example responds by stating 
that she cannot discuss future employment while she is working on a 
project affecting the State's health care funding but would like to 
discuss employment with the State when the project is completed. Because 
the employee has merely deferred employment discussions until the 
foreseeable future, she has begun seeking employment with the State 
Health Department.
    Example 3: An employee of the Defense Contract Audit Agency is 
auditing the overhead accounts of an Army contractor. While at the 
contractor's headquarters, the head of

[[Page 502]]

the contractor's accounting division tells the employee that his 
division is thinking about hiring another accountant and asks whether 
the employee might be interested in leaving DCAA. The DCAA employee says 
he is interested in knowing what kind of work would be involved. They 
discuss the duties of the position the accounting division would like to 
fill and the DCAA employee's qualifications for the position. They do 
not discuss salary. The head of the division explains that he has not 
yet received authorization to fill the particular position and will get 
back to the employee when he obtains the necessary approval for 
additional staffing. The employee and the contractor's official have 
engaged in negotiations regarding possible employment. The employee has 
begun seeking employment with the Army contractor.
    Example 4: An employee of the Occupational Safety and Health 
Administration helping to draft safety standards applicable to the 
textile industry has mailed his resume to 25 textile manufacturers. He 
has not begun seeking employment with any of the twenty-five. If he 
receives a response from one of the resume recipients indicating an 
interest in employment discussions, the employee will have begun seeking 
employment with the respondent at that time.
    Example 5: A special Government employee of the Federal Deposit 
Insurance Corporation is serving on an advisory committee formed for the 
purpose of reviewing rules applicable to all member banks. She mails an 
unsolicited letter to a member bank offering her services as a contract 
consultant. She has not begun seeking employment with the bank until she 
receives some response indicating an interest in discussing her 
employment proposal. A letter merely acknowledging receipt of the 
proposal is not an indication of interest in employment discussions.
    Example 6: A geologist employed by the U.S. Geological Survey has 
been working as a member of a team preparing the Government's case in an 
action brought by the Government against six oil companies. The 
geologist sends her resume to an oil company that is a named defendant 
in the action. The geologist has begun seeking employment with that oil 
company and will be seeking employment for two months from the date the 
resume was mailed. However, if she withdraws her application or is 
notified within the two-month period that her resume has been rejected, 
she will no longer be seeking employment with the oil company as of the 
date she makes such withdrawal or receives such notification.

    (c) Prospective employer means any person with whom the employee is 
seeking employment. Where contacts that constitute seeking employment 
are made by or with an agent or other intermediary, the term prospective 
employer includes:
    (1) A person who uses that agent or other intermediary for the 
purpose of seeking to establish an employment relationship with the 
employee if the agent identifies the prospective employer to the 
employee; and
    (2) A person contacted by the employee's agent or other intermediary 
for the purpose of seeking to establish an employment relationship if 
the agent identifies the prospective employer to the employee.

    Example 1: An employee of the Federal Aviation Administration has 
overall responsibility for airport safety inspections in a three-state 
area. She has retained an employment search firm to help her find 
another job. The search firm has just reported to the FAA employee that 
it has given her resume to and had promising discussions with two 
airport authorities within her jurisdiction. Even though the employee 
has not personally had employment discussions with either, each airport 
authority is her prospective employer. She began seeking employment with 
each upon learning its identity and that it has been given her resume.

    (d) Direct and predictable effect and particular matter have the 
respective meanings set forth in Sec. 2635.402(b) (1) and (3).



Sec. 2635.604  Disqualification while seeking employment.

    (a) Obligation to disqualify. Unless the employee's participation is 
authorized in accordance with Sec. 2635.605, the employee shall not 
participate in a particular matter that, to his knowledge, has a direct 
and predictable effect on the financial interests of a prospective 
employer with whom he is seeking employment within the meaning of 
Sec. 2635.603(b). Disqualification is accomplished by not participating 
in the particular matter.
    (b) Notification. An employee who becomes aware of the need to 
disqualify himself from participation in a particular matter to which he 
has been assigned should notify the person responsible for his 
assignment. An employee who is responsible for his own assignment should 
take whatever steps are necessary to ensure that he does not participate 
in the matter from which he is disqualified. Appropriate oral or written 
notification of the employee's

[[Page 503]]

disqualification may be made to coworkers by the employee or a 
supervisor to ensure that the employee is not involved in a matter from 
which he is disqualified.
    (c) Documentation. An employee need not file a written 
disqualification statement unless he is required by part 2634 of this 
chapter to file written evidence of compliance with an ethics agreement 
with the Office of Government Ethics or is specifically asked by an 
agency ethics official or the person responsible for his assignment to 
file a written disqualification statement. However, an employee may 
elect to create a record of his actions by providing written notice to a 
supervisor or other appropriate official.

    Example 1: An employee of the Department of Veterans Affairs is 
participating in the audit of a contract for laboratory support 
services. Before sending his resume to a lab which is a subcontractor 
under the VA contract, the employee should disqualify himself from 
participation in the audit. Since he cannot withdraw from participation 
in the contract audit without the approval of his supervisor, he should 
disclose his intentions to his supervisor in order that appropriate 
adjustments in his work assignments can be made.
    Example 2: An employee of the Food and Drug Administration is 
contacted in writing by a pharmaceutical company concerning possible 
employment with the company. The employee is involved in testing a drug 
for which the company is seeking FDA approval. Before making a response 
that is not a rejection, the employee should disqualify himself from 
further participation in the testing. Where he has authority to ask his 
colleague to assume his testing responsibilities, he may accomplish his 
disqualification by transferring the work to that coworker. However, to 
ensure that his colleague and others with whom he had been working on 
the recommendations do not seek his advice regarding testing or 
otherwise involve him in the matter, it may be necessary for him to 
advise those individuals of his disqualification.
    Example 3: The General Counsel of a regulatory agency wishes to 
engage in discussions regarding possible employment as corporate counsel 
of a regulated entity. Matters directly affecting the financial 
interests of the regulated entity are pending within the Office of 
General Counsel, but the General Counsel will not be called upon to act 
in any such matter because signature authority for that particular class 
of matters has been delegated to an Assistant General Counsel. Because 
the General Counsel is responsible for assigning work within the Office 
of General Counsel, he can in fact accomplish his disqualification by 
simply avoiding any involvement in matters affecting the regulated 
entity. However, because it is likely to be assumed by others that the 
General Counsel is involved in all matters within the cognizance of the 
Office of General Counsel, he would be wise to file a written 
disqualification statement with the Commissioners of the regulatory 
agency and provide his subordinates with written notification of his 
disqualification, or he may be specifically asked by an agency ethics 
official or the Commissioners to file a written disqualification 
statement.
    Example 4: A scientist is employed by the National Science 
Foundation as a special Government employee to serve on a panel that 
reviews grant applications to fund research relating to deterioration of 
the ozone layer. She is discussing possible employment as a member of 
the faculty of a university that several years earlier received an NSF 
grant to study the effect of fluorocarbons, but has no grant application 
pending. As long as the university does not submit a new application for 
the panel's review, the employee would not have to take any action to 
effect disqualification.

    (d) Agency determination of substantial conflict. Where the agency 
determines that the employee's action in seeking employment with a 
particular person will require his disqualification from matters so 
central or critical to the performance of his official duties that the 
employee's ability to perform the duties of his position would be 
materially impaired, the agency may allow the employee to take annual 
leave or leave without pay while seeking employment, or may take other 
appropriate administrative action.



Sec. 2635.605  Waiver or authorization permitting participation while seeking employment.

    (a) Waiver. Where, as defined in Sec. 2635.603(b)(1)(i), an employee 
is engaged in discussions that constitute employment negotiations for 
purposes of 18 U.S.C. 208(a), the employee may participate in a 
particular matter that has a direct and predictable effect on the 
financial interests of a prospective employer only after receiving a 
written waiver issued under the authority of 18 U.S.C. 208(b)(1) or 
(b)(3). These waivers are described in Sec. 2635.402(d).


[[Page 504]]


    Example 1: An employee of the Department of Agriculture has had two 
telephone conversations with an orange grower regarding possible 
employment. They have discussed the employee's qualifications for a 
particular position with the grower, but have not yet discussed salary 
or other specific terms of employment. The employee is negotiating for 
employment within the meaning of 18 U.S.C. 208(a) and 
Sec. 2635.603(b)(1)(i). In the absence of a written waiver issued under 
18 U.S.C. 208(b)(1), she may not take official action on a complaint 
filed by a competitor alleging that the grower has shipped oranges in 
violation of applicable quotas.

    (b) Authorization by agency designee. Where an employee is seeking 
employment within the meaning of Sec. 2635.603(b)(1) (ii) or (iii), a 
reasonable person would be likely to question his impartiality if he 
were to participate in a particular matter that has a direct and 
predictable effect on the financial interests of any such prospective 
employer. The employee may participate in such matters only where the 
agency designee has authorized his participation in accordance with the 
standards set forth in Sec. 2635.502(d).

    Example 1: Within the past month, an employee of the Education 
Department mailed her resume to a university. She is thus seeking 
employment with the university within the meaning of 
Sec. 2635.603(b)(1)(ii) even though she has received no reply. In the 
absence of specific authorization by the agency designee in accordance 
with Sec. 2635.502(d), she may not participate in an assignment to 
review a grant application submitted by the university.



Sec. 2635.606  Disqualification based on an arrangement concerning prospective employment or otherwise after negotiations.

    (a) Employment or arrangement concerning employment. An employee 
shall be disqualified from taking official action in a particular matter 
that has a direct and predictable effect on the financial interests of 
the person by whom he is employed or with whom he has an arrangement 
concerning future employment, unless authorized to participate in the 
matter by a written waiver issued under the authority of 18 U.S.C. 208 
(b)(1) or (b)(3). These waivers are described in Sec. 2635.402(d).

    Example 1: A military officer has accepted a job with a defense 
contractor to begin in six months, after his retirement from military 
service. During the period that he remains with the Government, the 
officer may not participate in the administration of a contract with 
that particular defense contractor unless he has received a written 
waiver under the authority of 18 U.S.C. 208(b)(1).
    Example 2: An accountant has just been offered a job with the 
Comptroller of the Currency which involves a two-year limited 
appointment. Her private employer, a large corporation, believes the job 
will enhance her skills and has agreed to give her a two-year unpaid 
leave of absence at the end of which she has agreed to return to work 
for the corporation. During the two-year period she is to be a COC 
employee, the accountant will have an arrangement concerning future 
employment with the corporation that will require her disqualification 
from participation in any particular matter that will have a direct and 
predictable effect on the corporation's financial interests.

    (b) Offer rejected or not made. The agency designee for the purpose 
of Sec. 2635.502(c) may, in an appropriate case, determine that an 
employee not covered by the preceding paragraph who has sought but is no 
longer seeking employment nevertheless shall be subject to a period of 
disqualification upon the conclusion of employment negotiations. Any 
such determination shall be based on a consideration of all the relevant 
factors, including those listed in Sec. 2635.502(d), and a determination 
that the concern that a reasonable person may question the integrity of 
the agency's decisionmaking process outweighs the Government's interest 
in the employee's participation in the particular matter.

    Example 1: An employee of the Securities and Exchange Commission was 
relieved of responsibility for an investigation of a broker-dealer while 
seeking employment with the law firm representing the broker-dealer in 
that matter. The firm did not offer her the partnership position she 
sought. Even though she is no longer seeking employment with the firm, 
she may continue to be disqualified from participating in the 
investigation based on a determination by the agency designee that the 
concern that a reasonable person might question whether, in view of the 
history of the employment negotiations, she could act impartially in the 
matter outweighs the Government's interest in her participation.

[[Page 505]]



                      Subpart G--Misuse of Position



Sec. 2635.701  Overview.

    This subpart contains provisions relating to the proper use of 
official time and authority, and of information and resources to which 
an employee has access because of his Federal employment. This subpart 
sets forth standards relating to:
    (a) Use of public office for private gain;
    (b) Use of nonpublic information;
    (c) Use of Government property; and
    (d) Use of official time.



Sec. 2635.702  Use of public office for private gain.

    An employee shall not use his public office for his own private 
gain, for the endorsement of any product, service or enterprise, or for 
the private gain of friends, relatives, or persons with whom the 
employee is affiliated in a nongovernmental capacity, including 
nonprofit organizations of which the employee is an officer or member, 
and persons with whom the employee has or seeks employment or business 
relations. The specific prohibitions set forth in paragraphs (a) through 
(d) of this section apply this general standard, but are not intended to 
be exclusive or to limit the application of this section.
    (a) Inducement or coercion of benefits. An employee shall not use or 
permit the use of his Government position or title or any authority 
associated with his public office in a manner that is intended to coerce 
or induce another person, including a subordinate, to provide any 
benefit, financial or otherwise, to himself or to friends, relatives, or 
persons with whom the employee is affiliated in a nongovernmental 
capacity.

    Example 1: Offering to pursue a relative's consumer complaint over a 
household appliance, an employee of the Securities and Exchange 
Commission called the general counsel of the manufacturer and, in the 
course of discussing the problem, stated that he worked at the SEC and 
was responsible for reviewing the company's filings. The employee 
violated the prohibition against use of public office for private gain 
by invoking his official authority in an attempt to influence action to 
benefit his relative.
    Example 2: An employee of the Department of Commerce was asked by a 
friend to determine why his firm's export license had not yet been 
granted by another office within the Department of Commerce. At a 
department-level staff meeting, the employee raised as a matter for 
official inquiry the delay in approval of the particular license and 
asked that the particular license be expedited. The official used her 
public office in an attempt to benefit her friend and, in acting as her 
friend's agent for the purpose of pursuing the export license with the 
Department of Commerce, may also have violated 18 U.S.C. 205.

    (b) Appearance of governmental sanction. Except as otherwise 
provided in this part, an employee shall not use or permit the use of 
his Government position or title or any authority associated with his 
public office in a manner that could reasonably be construed to imply 
that his agency or the Government sanctions or endorses his personal 
activities or those of another. When teaching, speaking, or writing in a 
personal capacity, he may refer to his official title or position only 
as permitted by Sec. 2635.807(b). He may sign a letter of recommendation 
using his official title only in response to a request for an employment 
recommendation or character reference based upon personal knowledge of 
the ability or character of an individual with whom he has dealt in the 
course of Federal employment or whom he is recommending for Federal 
employment.

    Example 1: An employee of the Department of the Treasury who is 
asked to provide a letter of recommendation for a former subordinate on 
his staff may provide the recommendation using official stationery and 
may sign the letter using his official title. If, however, the request 
is for the recommendation of a personal friend with whom he has not 
dealt in the Government, the employee should not use official stationery 
or sign the letter of recommendation using his official title, unless 
the recommendation is for Federal employment. In writing the letter of 
recommendation for his personal friend, it may be appropriate for the 
employee to refer to his official position in the body of the letter.

    (c) Endorsements. An employee shall not use or permit the use of his 
Government position or title or any authority associated with his public 
office to endorse any product, service or enterprise except:
    (1) In furtherance of statutory authority to promote products, 
services or enterprises; or

[[Page 506]]

    (2) As a result of documentation of compliance with agency 
requirements or standards or as the result of recognition for 
achievement given under an agency program of recognition for 
accomplishment in support of the agency's mission.

    Example 1: A Commissioner of the Consumer Product Safety Commission 
may not appear in a television commercial in which she endorses an 
electrical appliance produced by her former employer, stating that it 
has been found by the CPSC to be safe for residential use.
    Example 2: A Foreign Commercial Service officer from the Department 
of Commerce is asked by a United States telecommunications company to 
meet with representatives of the Government of Spain, which is in the 
process of procuring telecommunications services and equipment. The 
company is bidding against five European companies and the statutory 
mission of the Department of Commerce includes assisting the export 
activities of U.S. companies. As part of his official duties, the 
Foreign Commercial Service officer may meet with Spanish officials and 
explain the advantages of procurement from the United States company.
    Example 3: The Administrator of the Environmental Protection Agency 
may sign a letter to an oil company indicating that its refining 
operations are in compliance with Federal air quality standards even 
though he knows that the company has routinely displayed letters of this 
type in television commercials portraying it as a ``trustee of the 
environment for future generations.''
    Example 4: An Assistant Attorney General may not use his official 
title or refer to his Government position in a book jacket endorsement 
of a novel about organized crime written by an author whose work he 
admires. Nor may he do so in a book review published in a newspaper.

    (d) Performance of official duties affecting a private interest. To 
ensure that the performance of his official duties does not give rise to 
an appearance of use of public office for private gain or of giving 
preferential treatment, an employee whose duties would affect the 
financial interests of a friend, relative or person with whom he is 
affiliated in a nongovernmental capacity shall comply with any 
applicable requirements of Sec. 2635.502.
    (e) Use of terms of address and ranks. Nothing in this section 
prohibits an employee who is ordinarily addressed using a general term 
of address, such as ``The Honorable'', or a rank, such as a military or 
ambassadorial rank, from using that term of address or rank in 
connection with a personal activity.



Sec. 2635.703  Use of nonpublic information.

    (a) Prohibition. An employee shall not engage in a financial 
transaction using nonpublic information, nor allow the improper use of 
nonpublic information to further his own private interest or that of 
another, whether through advice or recommendation, or by knowing 
unauthorized disclosure.
    (b) Definition of nonpublic information. For purposes of this 
section, nonpublic information is information that the employee gains by 
reason of Federal employment and that he knows or reasonably should know 
has not been made available to the general public. It includes 
information that he knows or reasonably should know:
    (1) Is routinely exempt from disclosure under 5 U.S.C. 552 or 
otherwise protected from disclosure by statute, Executive order or 
regulation;
    (2) Is designated as confidential by an agency; or
    (3) Has not actually been disseminated to the general public and is 
not authorized to be made available to the public on request.

    Example 1: A Navy employee learns in the course of her duties that a 
small corporation will be awarded a Navy contract for electrical test 
equipment. She may not take any action to purchase stock in the 
corporation or its suppliers and she may not advise friends or relatives 
to do so until after public announcement of the award. Such actions 
could violate Federal securities statutes as well as this section.
    Example 2: A General Services Administration employee involved in 
evaluating proposals for a construction contract cannot disclose the 
terms of a competing proposal to a friend employed by a company bidding 
on the work. Prior to award of the contract, bid or proposal information 
is nonpublic information specifically protected by 41 U.S.C. 423.
    Example 3: An employee is a member of a source selection team 
assigned to review the proposals submitted by several companies in 
response to an Army solicitation for spare parts. As a member of the 
evaluation team, the employee has access to proprietary information 
regarding the production methods of Alpha Corporation, one of the 
competitors. He may not use that information to assist Beta Company in 
drafting a proposal to compete for a Navy spare parts contract. The

[[Page 507]]

Federal Acquisition Regulation in 48 CFR parts 3, 14 and 15 restricts 
the release of information related to procurements and other contractor 
information that must be protected under 18 U.S.C. 1905 and 41 U.S.C. 
423.
    Example 4: An employee of the Nuclear Regulatory Commission 
inadvertently includes a document that is exempt from disclosure with a 
group of documents released in response to a Freedom of Information Act 
request. Regardless of whether the document is used improperly, the 
employee's disclosure does not violate this section because it was not a 
knowing unauthorized disclosure made for the purpose of furthering a 
private interest.
    Example 5: An employee of the Army Corps of Engineers is actively 
involved in the activities of an organization whose goals relate to 
protection of the environment. The employee may not, other than as 
permitted by agency procedures, give the organization or a newspaper 
reporter nonpublic information about long-range plans to build a 
particular dam.



Sec. 2635.704  Use of Government property.

    (a) Standard. An employee has a duty to protect and conserve 
Government property and shall not use such property, or allow its use, 
for other than authorized purposes.
    (b) Definitions. For purposes of this section:
    (1) Government property includes any form of real or personal 
property in which the Government has an ownership, leasehold, or other 
property interest as well as any right or other intangible interest that 
is purchased with Government funds, including the services of contractor 
personnel. The term includes office supplies, telephone and other 
telecommunications equipment and services, the Government mails, 
automated data processing capabilities, printing and reproduction 
facilities, Government records, and Government vehicles.
    (2) Authorized purposes are those purposes for which Government 
property is made available to members of the public or those purposes 
authorized in accordance with law or regulation.

    Example 1: Under regulations of the General Services Administration 
at 41 CFR 201-21.601, an employee may make a personal long distance call 
charged to her personal calling card.
    Example 2: An employee of the Commodity Futures Trading Commission 
whose office computer gives him access to a commercial service providing 
information for investors may not use that service for personal 
investment research.
    Example 3: In accordance with chapter 252 of the Federal Personnel 
Manual, an attorney employed by the Department of Justice may be 
permitted to use her office word processor and agency photocopy 
equipment to prepare a paper to be presented at a conference sponsored 
by a professional association of which she is a member.



Sec. 2635.705  Use of official time.

    (a) Use of an employee's own time. Unless authorized in accordance 
with law or regulations to use such time for other purposes, an employee 
shall use official time in an honest effort to perform official duties. 
An employee not under a leave system, including a Presidential appointee 
exempted under 5 U.S.C. 6301(2), has an obligation to expend an honest 
effort and a reasonable proportion of his time in the performance of 
official duties.

    Example 1: An employee of the Social Security Administration may use 
official time to engage in certain representational activities on behalf 
of the employee union of which she is a member. Under 5 U.S.C. 7131, 
this is a proper use of her official time even though it does not 
involve performance of her assigned duties as a disability claims 
examiner.
    Example 2: A pharmacist employed by the Department of Veterans 
Affairs has been granted excused absence to participate as a speaker in 
a conference on drug abuse sponsored by the professional association to 
which he belongs. Although excused absence granted by an agency in 
accordance with guidance in chapter 630 of the Federal Personnel Manual 
allows an employee to be absent from his official duties without charge 
to his annual leave account, such absence is not on official time.

    (b) Use of a subordinate's time. An employee shall not encourage, 
direct, coerce, or request a subordinate to use official time to perform 
activities other than those required in the performance of official 
duties or authorized in accordance with law or regulation.

    Example 1: An employee of the Department of Housing and Urban 
Development may not ask his secretary to type his personal 
correspondence during duty hours. Further, directing or coercing a 
subordinate to perform such activities during nonduty hours constitutes 
an improper use of public office for private gain in violation of 
Sec. 2635.702(a). Where the arrangement is entirely voluntary and 
appropriate compensation is paid, the secretary may type the 
correspondence at

[[Page 508]]

home on her own time. Where the compensation is not adequate, however, 
the arrangement would involve a gift to the superior in violation of the 
standards in subpart C of this part.



                      Subpart H--Outside Activities



Sec. 2635.801  Overview.

    (a) This subpart contains provisions relating to outside employment, 
outside activities and personal financial obligations of employees that 
are in addition to the principles and standards set forth in other 
subparts of this part. Several of these provisions apply to 
uncompensated as well as to compensated outside activities.
    (b) An employee who wishes to engage in outside employment or other 
outside activities must comply with all relevant provisions of this 
subpart, including, when applicable:
    (1) The prohibition on outside employment or any other outside 
activity that conflicts with the employee's official duties;
    (2) Any agency-specific requirement for prior approval of outside 
employment or activities;
    (3) The limitations on receipt of outside earned income by certain 
Presidential appointees and other noncareer employees;
    (4) The limitations on paid and unpaid service as an expert witness;
    (5) The limitations on participation in professional organizations;
    (6) The limitations on paid and unpaid teaching, speaking, and 
writing; and
    (7) The limitations on fundraising activities.
    (c) Outside employment and other outside activities of an employee 
must also comply with applicable provisions set forth in other subparts 
of this part and in supplemental agency regulations. These include the 
principle that an employee shall endeavor to avoid actions creating an 
appearance of violating any of the ethical standards in this part and 
the prohibition against use of official position for an employee's 
private gain or for the private gain of any person with whom he has 
employment or business relations or is otherwise affiliated in a 
nongovernmental capacity.
    (d) In addition to the provisions of this and other subparts of this 
part, an employee who wishes to engage in outside employment or other 
outside activities must comply with applicable statutes and regulations. 
Relevant provisions of law, many of which are listed in subpart I of 
this part, may include:
    (1) 18 U.S.C. 201(b), which prohibits a public official from 
seeking, accepting or agreeing to receive or accept anything of value in 
return for being influenced in the performance of an official act or for 
being induced to take or omit to take any action in violation of his 
official duty;
    (2) 18 U.S.C. 201(c), which prohibits a public official, otherwise 
than as provided by law for the proper discharge of official duty, from 
seeking, accepting, or agreeing to receive or accept anything of value 
for or because of any official act;
    (3) 18 U.S.C. 203(a), which prohibits an employee from seeking, 
accepting, or agreeing to receive or accept compensation for any 
representational services, rendered personally or by another, in 
relation to any particular matter in which the United States is a party 
or has a direct and substantial interest, before any department, agency, 
or other specified entity. This statute contains several exceptions, as 
well as standards for special Government employees that limit the scope 
of the restriction;
    (4) 18 U.S.C. 205, which prohibits an employee, whether or not for 
compensation, from acting as agent or attorney for anyone in a claim 
against the United States or from acting as agent or attorney for 
anyone, before any department, agency, or other specified entity, in any 
particular matter in which the United States is a party or has a direct 
and substantial interest. It also prohibits receipt of any gratuity, or 
any share of or interest in a claim against the United States, in 
consideration for assisting in the prosecution of such claim. This 
statute contains several exceptions, as well as standards for special 
Government employees that limit the scope of the restrictions;

[[Page 509]]

    (5) 18 U.S.C. 209, which prohibits an employee, other than a special 
Government employee, from receiving any salary or any contribution to or 
supplementation of salary from any source other than the United States 
as compensation for services as a Government employee. The statute 
contains several exceptions that limit its applicability;
    (6) The Emoluments Clause of the United States Constitution, article 
I, section 9, clause 8, which prohibits anyone holding an office of 
profit or trust under the United States from accepting any gift, office, 
title or emolument, including salary or compensation, from any foreign 
government except as authorized by Congress. In addition, 18 U.S.C. 219 
generally prohibits any public official from being or acting as an agent 
of a foreign principal, including a foreign government, corporation or 
person, if the employee would be required to register as a foreign agent 
under 22 U.S.C. 611 et seq.;
    (7) The Hatch Act Reform Amendments, 5 U.S.C. 7321 through 7326, 
which govern the political activities of executive branch employees;
    (8) The honorarium prohibition, 5 U.S.C. App. (Ethics in Government 
Act of 1978), which prohibits an employee, other than a special 
Government employee, from receiving any compensation for an appearance, 
speech or article. Implementing regulations are contained in 
Secs. 2636.201 through 2636.205 of this chapter; and
    (9) The limitations on outside employment, 5 U.S.C. App. (Ethics in 
Government Act of 1978), which prohibit a covered noncareer employee's 
receipt of compensation for specified activities and provide that he 
shall not allow his name to be used by any firm or other entity which 
provides professional services involving a fiduciary relationship. 
Implementing regulations are contained in Secs. 2636.305 through 
2636.307 of this chapter.

[57 FR 35041, Aug. 7, 1992; 57 FR 48557, Oct. 27, 1992; 61 FR 50691, 
Sept. 27, 1996]



Sec. 2635.802  Conflicting outside employment and activities.

    An employee shall not engage in outside employment or any other 
outside activity that conflicts with his official duties. An activity 
conflicts with an employee's official duties:
    (a) If it is prohibited by statute or by an agency supplemental 
regulation; or
    (b) If, under the standards set forth in Secs. 2635.402 and 
2635.502, it would require the employee's disqualification from matters 
so central or critical to the performance of his official duties that 
the employee's ability to perform the duties of his position would be 
materially impaired.
    Employees are cautioned that even though an outside activity may not 
be prohibited under this section, it may violate other principles or 
standards set forth in this part or require the employee to disqualify 
himself from participation in certain particular matters under either 
subpart D or subpart E of this part.

    Example 1: An employee of the Environmental Protection Agency has 
just been promoted. His principal duty in his new position is to write 
regulations relating to the disposal of hazardous waste. The employee 
may not continue to serve as president of a nonprofit environmental 
organization that routinely submits comments on such regulations. His 
service as an officer would require his disqualification from duties 
critical to the performance of his official duties on a basis so 
frequent as to materially impair his ability to perform the duties of 
his position.
    Example 2: An employee of the Occupational Safety and Health 
Administration who was and is expected again to be instrumental in 
formulating new OSHA safety standards applicable to manufacturers that 
use chemical solvents has been offered a consulting contract to provide 
advice to an affected company in restructuring its manufacturing 
operations to comply with the OSHA standards. The employee should not 
enter into the consulting arrangement even though he is not currently 
working on OSHA standards affecting this industry and his consulting 
contract can be expected to be completed before he again works on such 
standards. Even though the consulting arrangement would not be a 
conflicting activity within the meaning of Sec. 2635.802, it would 
create an appearance that the employee had used his official position to 
obtain the compensated outside business opportunity and it would create 
the further appearance of using his public office for the private gain 
of the manufacturer.



Sec. 2635.803  Prior approval for outside employment and activities.

    When required by agency supplemental regulation, an employee shall

[[Page 510]]

obtain prior approval before engaging in outside employment or 
activities. Where it is determined to be necessary or desirable for the 
purpose of administering its ethics program, an agency shall, by 
supplemental regulation, require employees or any category of employees 
to obtain prior approval before engaging in specific types of outside 
activities, including outside employment.

    Note: Any requirement for prior approval of employment or activities 
contained in any agency regulation, instruction, or other issuance in 
effect prior to the effective date of this part shall constitute a 
requirement for prior approval for purposes of this section for one year 
after the effective date of this part or until issuance of an agency 
supplemental regulation, whichever occurs first. Provided, that for 
those agencies listed in appendix A to this part, the grace period for 
any such existing provisions shall be extended for an additional year 
until February 3, 1995 (for a total of two years after the effective 
date of this part) or until issuance by each individual agency concerned 
of a supplemental regulation, whichever occurs first. Provided further, 
that for those agencies listed in appendix B to this part, the grace 
period for any such existing provisions shall be further extended for an 
additional eleven months until January 3, 1996 (for a total of two years 
and eleven months after the effective date of this part) or until 
issuance by each individual agency concerned of a supplemental 
regulation, whichever occurs first. Provided still further, that for 
those agencies listed in appendix C to this part, the grace period for 
any such existing provisions shall be further extended until August 7, 
1996 or until issuance by each individual agency concerned of a 
supplemental regulation, whichever occurs first. Provided still further, 
that for those agencies listed in appendix D to this part, the grace 
period for any such existing provisions shall be further extended until 
November 1, 1996 or until issuance by each individual agency concerned 
of a supplemental regulation, whichever occurs first.

[57 FR 35042, Aug. 7, 1992, as amended at 59 FR 4780, Feb. 2, 1994; 60 
FR 6391, Feb. 2, 1995; 60 FR 66858, Dec. 27, 1995; 61 FR 40951, Aug. 7, 
1996]



Sec. 2635.804  Outside earned income limitations applicable to certain Presidential appointees and other noncareer employees.

    (a) Presidential appointees to full-time noncareer positions. A 
Presidential appointee to a full-time noncareer position shall not 
receive any outside earned income for outside employment, or for any 
other outside activity, performed during that Presidential appointment. 
This limitation does not apply to any outside earned income received for 
outside employment, or for any other outside activity, carried out in 
satisfaction of the employee's obligation under a contract entered into 
prior to April 12, 1989.
    (b) Covered noncareer employees. Covered noncareer employees, as 
defined in Sec. 2636.303(a) of this chapter, may not, in any calendar 
year, receive outside earned income attributable to that calendar year 
which exceeds 15 percent of the annual rate of basic pay for level II of 
the Executive Schedule under 5 U.S.C. 5313, as in effect on January 1 of 
such calendar year. Employees should consult the regulations 
implementing this limitation, which are contained in Secs. 2636.301 
through 2636.304 of this chapter.

    Note: In addition to the 15 percent limitation on outside earned 
income, covered noncareer employees are prohibited from receiving any 
compensation for: practicing a profession which involves a fiduciary 
relationship; affiliating with or being employed by a firm or other 
entity which provides professional services involving a fiduciary 
relationship; serving as an officer or member of the board of any 
association, corporation or other entity; or teaching without prior 
approval. Implementing regulations are contained in Secs. 2636.305 
through 2636.307 of this chapter.

    (c) Definitions. For purposes of this section:
    (1) Outside earned income has the meaning set forth in 
Sec. 2636.303(b) of this chapter, except that Sec. 2636.303(b)(8) shall 
not apply.
    (2) Presidential appointee to a full-time noncareer position means 
any employee who is appointed by the President to a full-time position 
described in 5 U.S.C. 5312 through 5317 or to a position that, by 
statute or as a matter of practice, is filled by Presidential 
appointment, other than:
    (i) A position filled under the authority of 3 U.S.C. 105 or 3 
U.S.C. 107(a) for which the rate of basic pay is less than that for GS-
9, step 1 of the General Schedule;
    (ii) A position, within a White House operating unit, that is 
designated as

[[Page 511]]

not normally subject to change as a result of a Presidential transition;
    (iii) A position within the uniformed services; or
    (iv) A position in which a member of the foreign service is serving 
that does not require advice and consent of the Senate.

    Example 1: A career Department of Justice employee who is detailed 
to a policy-making position in the White House Office that is ordinarily 
filled by a noncareer employee is not a Presidential appointee to a 
full-time noncareer position.
    Example 2: A Department of Energy employee appointed under 
Sec. 213.3301 of this title to a Schedule C position is appointed by the 
agency and, thus, is not a Presidential appointee to a full-time 
noncareer position.



Sec. 2635.805  Service as an expert witness.

    (a) Restriction. An employee shall not serve, other than on behalf 
of the United States, as an expert witness, with or without 
compensation, in any proceeding before a court or agency of the United 
States in which the United States is a party or has a direct and 
substantial interest, unless the employee's participation is authorized 
by the agency under paragraph (c) of this section. Except as provided in 
paragraph (b) of this section, this restriction shall apply to a special 
Government employee only if he has participated as an employee or 
special Government employee in the particular proceeding or in the 
particular matter that is the subject of the proceeding.
    (b) Additional restriction applicable to certain special Government 
employees. (1) In addition to the restriction described in paragraph (a) 
of this section, a special Government employee described in paragraph 
(b)(2) of this section shall not serve, other than on behalf of the 
United States, as an expert witness, with or without compensation, in 
any proceeding before a court or agency of the United States in which 
his employing agency is a party or has a direct and substantial 
interest, unless the employee's participation is authorized by the 
agency under paragraph (c) of this section.
    (2) The restriction in paragraph (b)(1) of this section shall apply 
to a special Government employee who:
    (i) Is appointed by the President;
    (ii) Serves on a commission established by statute; or
    (iii) Has served or is expected to serve for more than 60 days in a 
period of 365 consecutive days.
    (c) Authorization to serve as an expert witness. Provided that the 
employee's testimony will not result in compensation for an appearance 
in violation of Sec. 2636.201 of this chapter or violate any of the 
principles or standards set forth in this part, authorization to provide 
expert witness service otherwise prohibited by paragraphs (a) and (b) of 
this section may be given by the designated agency ethics official of 
the agency in which the employee serves when:
    (1) After consultation with the agency representing the Government 
in the proceeding or, if the Government is not a party, with the 
Department of Justice and the agency with the most direct and 
substantial interest in the matter, the designated agency ethics 
official determines that the employee's service as an expert witness is 
in the interest of the Government; or
    (2) The designated agency ethics official determines that the 
subject matter of the testimony does not relate to the employee's 
official duties within the meaning of Sec. 2635.807(a)(2)(i).
    (d) Nothing in this section prohibits an employee from serving as a 
fact witness when subpoenaed by an appropriate authority.
Sec. 2635.806  Participation in professional associations. [Reserved]



Sec. 2635.807  Teaching, speaking and writing.

    (a) Compensation for teaching, speaking or writing. Except as 
permitted by paragraph (a)(3) of this section, an employee, including a 
special Government employee, shall not receive compensation from any 
source other than the Government for teaching, speaking or writing that 
relates to the employee's official duties.
    (1) Relationship to other limitations on receipt of compensation. 
The compensation prohibition contained in this section is in addition to 
any other limitation on receipt of compensation set forth in this 
chapter, including:

[[Page 512]]

    (i) The honorarium prohibition on receipt of compensation for an 
appearance, speech or article, which is implemented in Secs. 2636.201 
through 2636.205 of this chapter;
    (ii) The requirement contained in Sec. 2636.307 of this chapter that 
covered noncareer employees obtain advance authorization before engaging 
in teaching for compensation; and
    (iii) The prohibitions and limitations in Sec. 2635.804 and in 
Sec. 2636.304 of this chapter on receipt of outside earned income 
applicable to certain Presidential appointees and to other covered 
noncareer employees.

    Example 1. A personnel specialist employed by the Department of 
Labor has been asked by the publisher of a magazine to write an article 
on his hobby of collecting arrowheads. Even though the subject matter is 
unrelated to his official duties, he may not accept the publisher's 
offer of $200 for the article. Because the compensation offered is for 
an article, its receipt would violate the honorarium prohibition 
contained in Secs. 2636.201 through 2636.205 of this chapter.

    (2) Definitions. For purposes of this paragraph:
    (i) Teaching, speaking or writing relates to the employee's official 
duties if:
    (A) The activity is undertaken as part of the employee's official 
duties;
    (B) The circumstances indicate that the invitation to engage in the 
activity was extended to the employee primarily because of his official 
position rather than his expertise on the particular subject matter;
    (C) The invitation to engage in the activity or the offer of 
compensation for the activity was extended to the employee, directly or 
indirectly, by a person who has interests that may be affected 
substantially by performance or nonperformance of the employee's 
official duties;
    (D) The information conveyed through the activity draws 
substantially on ideas or official data that are nonpublic information 
as defined in Sec. 2635.703(b); or
    (E) Except as provided in paragraph (a)(2)(i)(E)(4) of this section, 
the subject of the activity deals in significant part with:
    (1) Any matter to which the employee presently is assigned or to 
which the employee had been assigned during the previous one-year 
period;
    (2) Any ongoing or announced policy, program or operation of the 
agency; or
    (3) In the case of a noncareer employee as defined in 
Sec. 2636.303(a) of this chapter, the general subject matter area, 
industry, or economic sector primarily affected by the programs and 
operations of his agency.
    (4) The restrictions in paragraphs (a)(2)(i)(E) (2) and (3) of this 
section do not apply to a special Government employee. The restriction 
in paragraph (a)(2)(i)(E)(1) of this section applies only during the 
current appointment of a special Government employee; except that if the 
special Government employee has not served or is not expected to serve 
for more than 60 days during the first year or any subsequent one year 
period of that appointment, the restriction applies only to particular 
matters involving specific parties in which the special Government 
employee has participated or is participating personally and 
substantially.

    Note: Section 2635.807(a)(2)(i)(E) does not preclude an employee, 
other than a covered noncareer employee, from receiving compensation for 
teaching, speaking or writing on a subject within the employee's 
discipline or inherent area of expertise based on his educational 
background or experience even though the teaching, speaking or writing 
deals generally with a subject within the agency's areas of 
responsibility.

    Example 1: The Director of the Division of Enforcement at the 
Commodity Futures Trading Commission has a keen interest in stamp 
collecting and has spent years developing his own collection as well as 
studying the field generally. He is asked by an international society of 
philatelists to give a series of four lectures on how to assess the 
value of American stamps. Because the subject does not relate to his 
official duties, the Director may accept compensation for the lecture 
series. He could not, however, accept a similar invitation from a 
commodities broker.
    Example 2: A scientist at the National Institutes of Health, whose 
principal area of Government research is the molecular basis of the 
development of cancer, could not be compensated for writing a book which 
focuses specifically on the research she conducts in her position at 
NIH, and thus, relates to her official duties. However, the scientist 
could receive compensation for writing or editing a textbook on the 
treatment of all cancers, provided that the book does not focus on 
recent research at NIH, but rather

[[Page 513]]

conveys scientific knowledge gleaned from the scientific community as a 
whole. The book might include a chapter, among many other chapters, 
which discusses the molecular basis of cancer development. Additionally, 
the book could contain brief discussions of recent developments in 
cancer treatment, even though some of those developments are derived 
from NIH research, as long as it is available to the public.
    Example 3: On his own time, a National Highway Traffic Safety 
Administration employee prepared a consumer's guide to purchasing a safe 
automobile that focuses on automobile crash worthiness statistics 
gathered and made public by NHTSA. He may not receive royalties or any 
other form of compensation for the guide. The guide deals in significant 
part with the programs or operations of NHTSA and, therefore, relates to 
the employee's official duties. On the other hand, the employee could 
receive royalties from the sale of a consumer's guide to values in used 
automobiles even though it contains a brief, incidental discussion of 
automobile safety standards developed by NHTSA.
    Example 4: An employee of the Securities and Exchange Commission may 
not receive compensation for a book which focuses specifically on the 
regulation of the securities industry in the United States, since that 
subject concerns the regulatory programs or operations of the SEC. The 
employee may, however, write a book about the advantages of investing in 
various types of securities as long as the book contains only an 
incidental discussion of any program or operation of the SEC.
    Example 5: An employee of the Department of Commerce who works in 
the Department's employee relations office is an acknowledged expert in 
the field of Federal employee labor relations, and participates in 
Department negotiations with employee unions. The employee may receive 
compensation from a private training institute for a series of lectures 
which describe the decisions of the Federal Labor Relations Authority 
concerning unfair labor practices, provided that her lectures do not 
contain any significant discussion of labor relations cases handled at 
the Department of Commerce, or the Department's labor relations 
policies. Federal Labor Relations Authority decisions concerning Federal 
employee unfair labor practices are not a specific program or operation 
of the Department of Commerce and thus do not relate to the employee's 
official duties. However, an employee of the FLRA could not give the 
same presentations for compensation.
    Example 6: A program analyst employed at the Environmental 
Protection Agency may receive royalties and other compensation for a 
book about the history of the environmental movement in the United 
States even though it contains brief references to the creation and 
responsibilities of the EPA. A covered noncareer employee of the EPA, 
however, could not receive compensation for writing the same book 
because it deals with the general subject matter area affected by EPA 
programs and operations. Neither employee could receive compensation for 
writing a book that focuses on specific EPA regulations or otherwise on 
its programs and operations.
    Example 7: An attorney in private practice has been given a one year 
appointment as a special Government employee to serve on an advisory 
committee convened for the purpose of surveying and recommending 
modification of procurement regulations that deter small businesses from 
competing for Government contracts. Because his service under that 
appointment is not expected to exceed 60 days, the attorney may accept 
compensation for an article about the anticompetitive effects of certain 
regulatory certification requirements even though those regulations are 
being reviewed by the advisory committee. The regulations which are the 
focus of the advisory committee deliberations are not a particular 
matter involving specific parties. Because the information is nonpublic, 
he could not, however, accept compensation for an article which recounts 
advisory committee deliberations that took place in a meeting closed to 
the public in order to discuss proprietary information provided by a 
small business.
    Example 8: A biologist who is an expert in marine life is employed 
for more than 60 days in a year as a special Government employee by the 
National Science Foundation to assist in developing a program of grants 
by the Foundation for the study of coral reefs. The biologist may 
continue to receive compensation for speaking, teaching and writing 
about marine life generally and coral reefs specifically. However, 
during the term of her appointment as a special Government employee, she 
may not receive compensation for an article about the NSF program she is 
participating in developing. Only the latter would concern a matter to 
which the special Government employee is assigned.
    Example 9: An expert on international banking transactions has been 
given a one-year appointment as a special Government employee to assist 
in analyzing evidence in the Government's fraud prosecution of owners of 
a failed savings and loan association. It is anticipated that she will 
serve fewer than 60 days under that appointment. Nevertheless, during 
her appointment, the expert may not accept compensation for an article 
about the fraud prosecution, even though the article does not reveal 
nonpublic information. The prosecution is a particular matter that 
involves specific parties.


[[Page 514]]


    (ii) Agency has the meaning set forth in Sec. 2635.102(a), except 
that any component of a department designated as a separate agency under 
Sec. 2635.203(a) shall be considered a separate agency.
    (iii) Compensation includes any form of consideration, remuneration 
or income, including royalties, given for or in connection with the 
employee's teaching, speaking or writing activities. Unless accepted 
under specific statutory authority, such as 31 U.S.C. 1353, 5 U.S.C. 
4111 or 7342, or an agency gift acceptance statute, it includes 
transportation, lodgings and meals, whether provided in kind, by 
purchase of a ticket, by payment in advance or by reimbursement after 
the expense has been incurred. It does not include:
    (A) Items offered by any source that could be accepted from a 
prohibited source under subpart B of this part;
    (B) Meals or other incidents of attendance such as waiver of 
attendance fees or course materials furnished as part of the event at 
which the teaching or speaking takes place; or
    (C) Copies of books or of publications containing articles, reprints 
of articles, tapes of speeches, and similar items that provide a record 
of the teaching, speaking or writing activity.
    (iv) Receive means that there is actual or constructive receipt of 
the compensation by the employee so that the employee has the right to 
exercise dominion and control over the compensation and to direct its 
subsequent use. Compensation received by an employee includes 
compensation which is:
    (A) Paid to another person, including a charitable organization, on 
the basis of designation, recommendation or other specification by the 
employee; or
    (B) Paid with the employee's knowledge and acquiescence to his 
parent, sibling, spouse, child, or dependent relative.
    (v) Particular matter involving specific parties has the meaning set 
forth in Sec. 2637.102(a)(7) of this chapter.
    (vi) Personal and substantial participation has the meaning set 
forth in Sec. 2635.402(b)(4).
    (3) Exception for teaching certain courses. Notwithstanding that the 
activity would relate to his official duties under paragraphs (a)(2)(i) 
(B) or (E) of this section, an employee may accept compensation for 
teaching a course requiring multiple presentations by the employee if 
the course is offered as part of:
    (i) The regularly established curriculum of:
    (A) An institution of higher education as defined at 20 U.S.C. 
1141(a);
    (B) An elementary school as defined at 20 U.S.C. 2891(8); or
    (C) A secondary school as defined at 20 U.S.C. 2891(21); or
    (ii) A program of education or training sponsored and funded by the 
Federal Government or by a State or local government which is not 
offered by an entity described in paragraph (a)(3)(i) of this section.

    Example 1: An employee of the Cost Accounting Standards Board who 
teaches an advanced accounting course as part of the regular business 
school curriculum of an accredited university may receive compensation 
for teaching the course even though a substantial portion of the course 
deals with cost accounting principles applicable to contracts with the 
Government. Moreover, his receipt of a salary or other compensation for 
teaching this course does not violate the honorarium prohibition on 
receipt of compensation for any speech, which is implemented in 
Secs. 2636.201 through 2636.205 of this chapter.
    Example 2: An attorney employed by the Equal Employment Opportunity 
Commission may accept compensation for teaching a course at a state 
college on the subject of Federal employment discrimination law. The 
attorney could not accept compensation for teaching the same seminar as 
part of a continuing education program sponsored by her bar association 
because the subject of the course is focused on the operations or 
programs of the EEOC and the sponsor of the course is not an accredited 
educational institution.
    Example 3: An employee of the National Endowment for the Humanities 
is invited by a private university to teach a course that is a survey of 
Government policies in support of artists, poets and writers. As part of 
his official duties, the employee administers a grant that the 
university has received from the NEH. The employee may not accept 
compensation for teaching the course because the university has 
interests that may be substantially affected by the performance or 
nonperformance of the employee's duties. Likewise, an employee may not 
receive compensation for any teaching that is undertaken as part of his 
official duties or that involves the use of nonpublic information.

    (b) Reference to official position. An employee who is engaged in 
teaching,

[[Page 515]]

speaking or writing as outside employment or as an outside activity 
shall not use or permit the use of his official title or position to 
identify him in connection with his teaching, speaking or writing 
activity or to promote any book, seminar, course, program or similar 
undertaking, except that:
    (1) An employee may include or permit the inclusion of his title or 
position as one of several biographical details when such information is 
given to identify him in connection with his teaching, speaking or 
writing, provided that his title or position is given no more prominence 
than other significant biographical details;
    (2) An employee may use, or permit the use of, his title or position 
in connection with an article published in a scientific or professional 
journal, provided that the title or position is accompanied by a 
reasonably prominent disclaimer satisfactory to the agency stating that 
the views expressed in the article do not necessarily represent the 
views of the agency or the United States; and
    (3) An employee who is ordinarily addressed using a general term of 
address, such as ``The Honorable,'' or a rank, such as a military or 
ambassadorial rank, may use or permit the use of that term of address or 
rank in connection with his teaching, speaking or writing.

    Note: Some agencies may have policies requiring advance agency 
review, clearance, or approval of certain speeches, books, articles or 
similar products to determine whether the product contains an 
appropriate disclaimer, discloses nonpublic information, or otherwise 
complies with this section.

    Example 1: A meteorologist employed with the National Oceanic and 
Atmospheric Administration is asked by a local university to teach a 
graduate course on hurricanes. The university may include the 
meteorologist's Government title and position together with other 
information about his education and previous employment in course 
materials setting forth biographical data on all teachers involved in 
the graduate program. However, his title or position may not be used to 
promote the course, for example, by featuring the meteorologist's 
Government title, Senior Meteorologist, NOAA, in bold type under his 
name. In contrast, his title may be used in this manner when the 
meteorologist is authorized by NOAA to speak in his official capacity.
    Example 2: A doctor just employed by the Centers for Disease Control 
has written a paper based on his earlier independent research into cell 
structures. Incident to the paper's publication in the Journal of the 
American Medical Association, the doctor may be given credit for the 
paper, as Dr. M. Wellbeing, Associate Director, Centers for Disease 
Control, provided that the article also contains a disclaimer, concurred 
in by the CDC, indicating that the paper is the result of the doctor's 
independent research and does not represent the findings of the CDC.
    Example 3: An employee of the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation 
has been asked to give a speech in his private capacity, without 
compensation, to the annual meeting of a committee of the American 
Bankers Association on the need for banking reform. The employee may be 
described in his introduction at the meeting as an employee of the 
Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation provided that other pertinent 
biographical details are mentioned as well.

[57 FR 35041, Aug. 7, 1992; 57 FR 48557, Oct. 27, 1992]



Sec. 2635.808  Fundraising activities.

    An employee may engage in fundraising only in accordance with the 
restrictions in part 950 of this title on the conduct of charitable 
fundraising in the Federal workplace and in accordance with paragraphs 
(b) and (c) of this section.
    (a) Definitions. For purposes of this section: (1) Fundraising means 
the raising of funds for a nonprofit organization, other than a 
political organization as defined in 26 U.S.C. 527(e), through:
    (i) Solicitation of funds or sale of items; or
     (ii) Participation in the conduct of an event by an employee where 
any portion of the cost of attendance or participation may be taken as a 
charitable tax deduction by a person incurring that cost.
    (2) Participation in the conduct of an event means active and 
visible participation in the promotion, production, or presentation of 
the event and includes serving as honorary chairperson, sitting at a 
head table during the event, and standing in a reception line. The term 
does not include mere attendance at an event provided that, to the 
employee's knowledge, his attendance is not used by the nonprofit 
organization to promote the event. While the term generally includes any 
public speaking

[[Page 516]]

during the event, it does not include the delivery of an official speech 
as defined in paragraph (a)(3) of this section or any seating or other 
participation appropriate to the delivery of such a speech. Waiver of a 
fee for attendance at an event by a participant in the conduct of that 
event does not constitute a gift for purposes of subpart B of this part.

    Note: This section does not prohibit fundraising for a political 
party, candidate for partisan political office, or partisan political 
group. However, there are statutory restrictions that apply to political 
fundraising. For example, under the Hatch Act Reform Amendments of 1993, 
at 5 U.S.C. 7323(a), employees may not knowingly solicit, accept, or 
receive a political contribution from any person, except under limited 
circumstances. In addition, employees are prohibited by 18 U.S.C. 607 
from soliciting or receiving political contributions in Federal offices, 
and, except as permitted by the Hatch Act Reform Amendments, are 
prohibited by 18 U.S.C. 602 from knowingly soliciting political 
contributions from other employees.

    Example 1: The Secretary of Transportation has been asked to serve 
as master of ceremonies for an All-Star Gala. Tickets to the event cost 
$150 and are tax deductible as a charitable donation, with proceeds to 
be donated to a local hospital. By serving as master of ceremonies, the 
Secretary would be participating in fundraising.

    (3) Official speech means a speech given by an employee in his 
official capacity on a subject matter that relates to his official 
duties, provided that the employee's agency has determined that the 
event at which the speech is to be given provides an appropriate forum 
for the dissemination of the information to be presented and provided 
that the employee does not request donations or other support for the 
nonprofit organization. Subject matter relates to an employee's official 
duties if it focuses specifically on the employee's official duties, on 
the responsibilities, programs, or operations of the employee's agency 
as described in Sec. 2635.807(a)(2)(i)(E), or on matters of 
Administration policy on which the employee has been authorized to 
speak.

    Example 1: The Secretary of Labor is invited to speak at a banquet 
honoring a distinguished labor leader, the proceeds of which will 
benefit a nonprofit organization that assists homeless families. She 
devotes a major portion of her speech to the Administration's Points of 
Light initiative, an effort to encourage citizens to volunteer their 
time to help solve serious social problems. Because she is authorized to 
speak on Administration policy, her remarks at the banquet are an 
official speech. However, the Secretary would be engaged in fundraising 
if she were to conclude her official speech with a request for donations 
to the nonprofit organization.
    Example 2: A charitable organization is sponsoring a two-day tennis 
tournament at a country club in the Washington, DC area to raise funds 
for recreational programs for learning disabled children. The 
organization has invited the Secretary of Education to give a speech on 
federally funded special education programs at the awards dinner to be 
held at the conclusion of the tournament and a determination has been 
made that the dinner is an appropriate forum for the particular speech. 
The Secretary may speak at the dinner and, under Sec. 2635.204(g)(1), he 
may partake of the meal provided to him at the dinner.

    (4) Personally solicit means to request or otherwise encourage 
donations or other support either through person-to-person contact or 
through the use of one's name or identity in correspondence or by 
permitting its use by others. It does not include the solicitation of 
funds through the media or through either oral remarks, or the 
contemporaneous dispatch of like items of mass-produced correspondence, 
if such remarks or correspondence are addressed to a group consisting of 
many persons, unless it is known to the employee that the solicitation 
is targeted at subordinates or at persons who are prohibited sources 
within the meaning of Sec. 2635.203(d). It does not include behind-the-
scenes assistance in the solicitation of funds, such as drafting 
correspondence, stuffing envelopes, or accounting for contributions.

    Example 1: An employee of the Department of Energy who signs a 
letter soliciting funds for a local private school does not ``personally 
solicit'' funds when 500 copies of the letter, which makes no mention of 
his DOE position and title, are mailed to members of the local 
community, even though some individuals who are employed by Department 
of Energy contractors may receive the letter.

    (b) Fundraising in an official capacity. An employee may participate 
in fundraising in an official capacity if, in accordance with a statute, 
Executive order, regulation or otherwise as determined by the agency, he 
is authorized to engage in the fundraising activity as

[[Page 517]]

part of his official duties. When authorized to participate in an 
official capacity, an employee may use his official title, position and 
authority.

    Example 1: Because participation in his official capacity is 
authorized under part 950 of this title, the Secretary of the Army may 
sign a memorandum to all Army personnel encouraging them to donate to 
the Combined Federal Campaign.

    (c) Fundraising in a personal capacity. An employee may engage in 
fundraising in his personal capacity provided that he does not:
    (1) Personally solicit funds or other support from a subordinate or 
from any person:
    (i) Known to the employee, if the employee is other than a special 
Government employee, to be a prohibited source within the meaning of 
Sec. 2635.203(d); or
    (ii) Known to the employee, if the employee is a special Government 
employee, to be a prohibited source within the meaning of 
Sec. 2635.203(d)(4) that is a person whose interests may be 
substantially affected by performance or nonperformance of his official 
duties;
    (2) Use or permit the use of his official title, position or any 
authority associated with his public office to further the fundraising 
effort, except that an employee who is ordinarily addressed using a 
general term of address, such ``The Honorable,'' or a rank, such as a 
military or ambassadorial rank, may use or permit the use of that term 
of address or rank for such purposes; or
    (3) Engage in any action that would otherwise violate this part.

    Example 1: A nonprofit organization is sponsoring a golf tournament 
to raise funds for underprivileged children. The Secretary of the Navy 
may not enter the tournament with the understanding that the 
organization intends to attract participants by offering other entrants 
the opportunity, in exchange for a donation in the form of an entry fee, 
to spend the day playing 18 holes of golf in a foursome with the 
Secretary of the Navy.
    Example 2: An employee of the Merit Systems Protection Board may not 
use the agency's photocopier to reproduce fundraising literature for her 
son's private school. Such use of the photocopier would violate the 
standards at Sec. 2635.704 regarding use of Government property.
    Example 3: An Assistant Attorney General may not sign a letter 
soliciting funds for a homeless shelter as ``John Doe, Assistant 
Attorney General.'' He also may not sign a letter with just his 
signature, ``John Doe,'' soliciting funds from a prohibited source, 
unless the letter is one of many identical, mass-produced letters 
addressed to a large group where the solicitation is not known to him to 
be targeted at persons who are either prohibited sources or 
subordinates.

[57 FR 35041, Aug. 7, 1992; 57 FR 48557, Oct. 27, 1992; 61 FR 50691, 
Sept. 27, 1996]



Sec. 2635.809  Just financial obligations.

    Employees shall satisfy in good faith their obligations as citizens, 
including all just financial obligations, especially those such as 
Federal, State, or local taxes that are imposed by law. For purposes of 
this section, a just financial obligation includes any financial 
obligation acknowledged by the employee or reduced to judgment by a 
court. In good faith means an honest intention to fulfill any just 
financial obligation in a timely manner. In the event of a dispute 
between an employee and an alleged creditor, this section does not 
require an agency to determine the validity or amount of the disputed 
debt or to collect a debt on the alleged creditor's behalf.



                Subpart I--Related Statutory Authorities



Sec. 2635.901  General.

    In addition to the standards of ethical conduct set forth in 
subparts A through H of this part, there are a number of statutes that 
establish standards to which an employee's conduct must conform. The 
list set forth in Sec. 2635.902 references some of the more significant 
of those statutes. It is not comprehensive and includes only references 
to statutes of general applicability. While it includes references to 
several of the basic conflict of interest statutes whose standards are 
explained in more detail throughout this part, it does not include 
references to statutes of more limited applicability, such as statutes 
that apply only to officers and employees of the Department of Defense.

[[Page 518]]



Sec. 2635.902  Related statutes.

    (a) The prohibition against solicitation or receipt of bribes (18 
U.S.C. 201(b)).
    (b) The prohibition against solicitation or receipt of illegal 
gratuities (18 U.S.C. 201(c)).
    (c) The prohibition against seeking or receiving compensation for 
certain representational services before the Government (18 U.S.C. 203).
    (d) The prohibition against assisting in the prosecution of claims 
against the Government or acting as agent or attorney before the 
Government (18 U.S.C. 205).
    (e) The post-employment restrictions applicable to former employees 
(18 U.S.C. 207, with implementing regulations at parts 2637 and 2641 of 
this chapter).
    (f) The post-employment restrictions applicable to former 
procurement officials (41 U.S.C. 423(f)).
    (g) The prohibition against participating in matters affecting an 
employee's own financial interests or the financial interests of other 
specified persons or organizations (18 U.S.C. 208).
    (h) The prohibition on a procurement official's negotiating for 
employment with competing contractors (41 U.S.C. 423(b)(1)).
    (i) The prohibition against receiving salary or any contribution to 
or supplementation of salary as compensation for Government service from 
a source other than the United States (18 U.S.C. 209).
    (j) The prohibition against gifts to superiors (5 U.S.C. 7351).
    (k) The prohibition against solicitation or receipt of gifts from 
specified prohibited sources (5 U.S.C. 7353).
    (l) The prohibition against solicitation or receipt of gifts from 
competing contractors (41 U.S.C. 423(b)(2)).
    (m) The provisions governing receipt and disposition of foreign 
gifts and decorations (5 U.S.C. 7342).
    (n) The Code of Ethics for Government Service (Pub. L. 96-303, 94 
Stat. 855).
    (o) The prohibitions against certain political activities (5 U.S.C. 
7321 et seq. and 18 U.S.C. 602, 603, 606 and 607).
    (p) The prohibitions against disloyalty and striking (5 U.S.C. 7311 
and 18 U.S.C. 1918).
    (q) The general prohibition against acting as the agent of a foreign 
principal required to register under the Foreign Agents Registration Act 
(18 U.S.C. 219).
    (r) The prohibition against employment of a person convicted of 
participating in or promoting a riot or civil disorder (5 U.S.C. 7313).
    (s) The prohibition against employment of an individual who 
habitually uses intoxicating beverages to excess (5 U.S.C. 7352).
    (t) The prohibition against misuse of a Government vehicle (31 
U.S.C. 1344).
    (u) The prohibition against misuse of the franking privilege (18 
U.S.C. 1719).
    (v) The prohibition against fraud or false statements in a 
Government matter (18 U.S.C. 1001).
    (w) The prohibition against concealing, mutilating or destroying a 
public record (18 U.S.C. 2071).
    (x) The prohibition against counterfeiting or forging transportation 
requests (18 U.S.C. 508).
    (y) The restrictions on disclosure of certain sensitive Government 
information under the Freedom of Information Act and the Privacy Act (5 
U.S.C. 552 and 552a).
    (z) The prohibitions against disclosure of classified information 
(18 U.S.C. 798 and 50 U.S.C. 783(b)).
    (aa) The prohibition against disclosure of proprietary information 
and certain other information of a confidential nature (18 U.S.C. 1905).
    (bb) The prohibition against unauthorized disclosure of certain 
procurement sensitive information, including proprietary or source 
selection information (41 U.S.C. 423(b) (3) and (d)).
    (cc) The prohibition against unauthorized use of documents relating 
to claims from or by the Government (18 U.S.C. 285).
    (dd) The prohibition against certain personnel practices (5 U.S.C. 
2302).
    (ee) The prohibition against interference with civil service 
examinations (18 U.S.C. 1917).
    (ff) The restrictions on use of public funds for lobbying (18 U.S.C. 
1913).
    (gg) The prohibition against participation in the appointment or 
promotion of relatives (5 U.S.C. 3110).
    (hh) The prohibition against solicitation or acceptance of anything 
of value

[[Page 519]]

to obtain public office for another (18 U.S.C. 211).
    (ii) The prohibition against conspiracy to commit an offense against 
or to defraud the United States (18 U.S.C. 371).
    (jj) The prohibition against embezzlement or conversion of 
Government money or property (18 U.S.C. 641).
    (kk) The prohibition against failing to account for public money (18 
U.S.C. 643).
    (ll) The prohibition against embezzlement of the money or property 
of another person that is in the possession of an employee by reason of 
his employment (18 U.S.C. 654).

Appendix A to Part 2635--Agencies Entitled to Additional One-Year Grace 
   Period Extension Pursuant to Notes Following Secs. 2635.403(a) and 
                                2635.803

1. Department of the Treasury
2. Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation
3. Department of Energy
4. Federal Energy Regulatory Commission
5. Department of the Interior
6. Department of Commerce
7. Department of Justice
8. Federal Communications Commission
9. Department of Veterans Affairs
10. Farm Credit Administration
11. ACTION
12. Securities and Exchange Commission
13. Office of Personnel Management
14. Thrift Depositor Protection Oversight Board
15. United States Information Agency
16. Occupational Safety and Health Review Commission
17. Department of State
18. Department of Labor
19. National Science Foundation
20. Small Business Administration
21. Department of Health and Human Services
22. Nuclear Regulatory Commission
23. Federal Labor Relations Authority
24. Department of Transportation
25. Pension Benefit Guaranty Corporation
26. Export-Import Bank of the United States
27. Department of Education
28. Environmental Protection Agency
29. Committee for Purchase from People Who Are Blind or Severely
Disabled
30. National Transportation Safety Board
31. General Services Administration
32. Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System
33. National Aeronautics and Space Administration
34. United States Postal Service
35. National Labor Relations Board
36. Equal Employment Opportunity Commission
37. Inter-American Foundation
38. Resolution Trust Corporation
39. Department of Housing and Urban Development
40. National Archives and Records Administration
41. Peace Corps
42. Federal Maritime Commission
43. Tennessee Valley Authority
44. Defense Nuclear Facilities Safety Board
45. Consumer Product Safety Commission
46. Executive Office of the President
47. Department of Agriculture
48. Federal Mine Safety and Health Review Commission
49. National Endowment for the Humanities
50. Federal Retirement Thrift Investment Board
51. Office of Management and Budget
52. Agency for International Development

[59 FR 4780, Feb. 2, 1994]

 Appendix B to Part 2635--Agencies Entitled to a Further (Second) Grace 
   Period Extension Pursuant to Notes Following Secs. 2635.403(a) and 
                                2635.803

 1. Department of the Treasury
 2. Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation
 3. Department of Energy
 4. Federal Energy Regulatory Commission
 5. Department of the Interior
 6. Department of Commerce
 7. Department of Justice
 8. Federal Communications Commission
 9. Farm Credit Administration
10. Securities and Exchange Commission
11. Office of Personnel Management
12. Thrift Depositor Protection Oversight Board
13. United States Information Agency
14. Occupational Safety and Health Review Commission
15. Department of State
16. Department of Labor
17. National Science Foundation
18. Small Business Administration
19. Department of Health and Human Services
20. Federal Labor Relations Authority
21. Department of Transportation
22. Pension Benefit Guaranty Corporation
23. Export-Import Bank of the United States
24. Department of Education
25. Environmental Protection Agency
26. National Transportation Safety Board
27. General Services Administration
28. Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System
29. United States Postal Service
30. National Labor Relations Board

[[Page 520]]

31. Equal Employment Opportunity Commission
32. Resolution Trust Corporation
33. Department of Housing and Urban Development
34. National Archives and Records Administration
35. Peace Corps
36. Tennessee Valley Authority
37. Consumer Product Safety Commission
38. Executive Office of the President
39. Department of Agriculture
40. Federal Mine Safety and Health Review Commission
41. Office of Management and Budget
42. Agency for International Development

[60 FR 6391, Feb. 2, 1995]

 Appendix C to Part 2635--Agencies Entitled to Another Further (Third) 
Grace Period Extension Pursuant to Notes Following Secs. 2635.403(a) and 
                                2635.803

 1. Department of the Treasury
 2. Department of Energy
 3. Federal Energy Regulatory Commission
 4. Department of the Interior
 5. Department of Commerce
 6. Department of Justice
 7. Federal Communications Commission
 8. Securities and Exchange Commission
 9. Office of Personnel Management
10. Thrift Depositor Protection Oversight Board
11. United States Information Agency
12. Occupational Safety and Health Review Commission
13. Department of State
14. Department of Labor
15. National Science Foundation
16. Small Business Administration
17. Department of Health and Human Services
18. Department of Transportation
19. Pension Benefit Guaranty Corporation
20. Environmental Protection Agency
21. National Transportation Safety Board
22. General Services Administration
23. Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System
24. National Labor Relations Board
25. Equal Employment Opportunity Commission
26. Department of Housing and Urban Development
27. National Archives and Records Administration
28. Peace Corps
29. Tennessee Valley Authority
30. Consumer Product Safety Commission
31. Executive Office of the President
32. Department of Agriculture
33. Federal Mine Safety and Health Review Commission
34. Agency for International Development
35. Social Security Administration

[60 FR 66858, Dec. 27, 1995]

 Appendix D to Part 2635--Agencies Entitled to Another Further (Fourth) 
Grace Period Extension Pursuant to Notes Following Secs. 2635.403(a) and 
                                2635.803

1. Department of the Treasury
2. Federal Energy Regulatory Commission
3. Department of the Interior
4. Department of Commerce
5. Department of Justice
6. Federal Communications Commission
7. Securities and Exchange Commission
8. United States Information Agency
9. Occupational Safety and Health Review Commission
10. Department of State
11. Department of Labor
12. National Science Foundation
13. Small Business Administration
14. Department of Transportation
15. National Transportation Safety Board
16. General Services Administration
17. Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System
18. National Labor Relations Board
19. Peace Corps
20. Consumer Product Safety Commission
21. Executive Office of the President
22. Department of Agriculture
23. Agency for International Development
24. Social Security Administration

[61 FR 40952, Aug. 7, 1996]



PART 2636--LIMITATIONS ON OUTSIDE EMPLOYMENT AND PROHIBITION OF HONORARIA; CONFIDENTIAL REPORTING OF PAYMENTS TO CHARITIES IN LIEU OF HONORARIA--Table of Contents




                      Subpart A--General Provisions

Sec.
2636.101  Purpose.
2636.102  Definitions.
2636.103  Advisory opinions.
2636.104  Civil, disciplinary and other action.

[[Page 521]]

    Subpart B--The Honorarium Prohibition; Confidential Reporting of 
               Payments to Charities in Lieu of Honoraria

2636.201  General standard.
2636.202  Relationship to other laws and regulations.
2636.203  Definitions.
2636.204  Payments to charitable organizations in lieu of honoraria.
2636.205  Reporting payments to charitable organizations in lieu of 
          honoraria.

     Subpart C--Outside Earned Income Limitation and Employment and 
   Affiliation Restrictions Applicable to Certain Noncareer Employees

2636.301  General standards.
2636.302  Relationship to other laws and regulations.
2636.303  Definitions.
2636.304  The 15 percent limitation on outside earned income.
2636.305  Compensation and other restrictions relating to professions 
          involving a fiduciary relationship.
2636.306  Compensation restriction applicable to service as an officer 
          or member of a board.
2636.307  Requirement for advance authorization to engage in teaching 
          for compensation.

    Authority: 5 U.S.C. App. (Ethics in Government Act of 1978); E.O. 
12674, 54 FR 15159, 3 CFR, 1989 Comp., p. 215, as modified by E.O. 
12731, 55 FR 42547, 3 CFR, 1990 Comp., p. 306.

    Source: 56 FR 1723, Jan. 17, 1991, unless otherwise noted.



                      Subpart A--General Provisions



Sec. 2636.101  Purpose.

    This part is issued under authority contained in titles II and VI of 
the Ethics Reform Act of 1989 (Pub. L. 101-194, as amended), amending 
the Ethics in Government Act of 1978, and contains regulations that 
implement the following:
    (a) The prohibition at 5 U.S.C. app. 501(b) against receipt of 
honoraria and the provisions of 5 U.S.C. app. 501(c) whereby payments 
may be made to charitable organizations in lieu of honoraria;
    (b) The confidential reporting requirement at 5 U.S.C. app. 
102(a)(1)(A) applicable to payments made to charitable organizations in 
lieu of honoraria; and
    (c) The 15 percent outside earned income limitation at 5 U.S.C. app. 
501(a) and the limitations at 5 U.S.C. app. 502 on outside employment 
and affiliation applicable to certain noncareer employees.



Sec. 2636.102  Definitions.

    The definitions listed below are of general applicability to this 
part. Additional definitions of narrower applicability appear in the 
subparts or sections of subparts to which they apply. For purposes of 
this part:
    (a) Agency ethics official refers to the designated agency ethics 
official and to any deputy ethics official described in Sec. 2638.204 of 
this subchapter to whom authority to issue advisory opinions under 
Sec. 2636.103 of this part or to receive and review reports of honoraria 
recipients under Sec. 2636.204 of this part has been delegated by the 
designated agency ethics official.
    (b) Designated agency ethics official refers to the official 
described in Sec. 2638.201 of this subchapter.
    (c) Employee means any officer or employee of the executive branch, 
other than a special Government employee as defined in 18 U.S.C. 202. It 
includes officers but not enlisted members of the uniformed services as 
defined in 5 U.S.C. 2101(3). It does not include the President or Vice 
President.
    (d) Executive branch includes each executive agency as defined in 5 
U.S.C. 105 and any other entity or administrative unit in the executive 
branch. However, it does not include any agency that is defined by 5 
U.S.C. app. 109(11) as within the legislative branch.
    (e) The terms he, his, and him include ``she,'' ``hers'' and 
``her.''



Sec. 2636.103  Advisory opinions.

    (a) Request for an advisory opinion. (1) An employee may request an 
advisory opinion from an agency ethics official as to whether specific 
conduct which has not yet occurred would violate any provision contained 
in this part.
    (2) An advisory opinion may not be obtained for the purpose of 
establishing:
    (i) Whether a particular entity qualifies as a charitable 
organization to which an honorarium may be paid pursuant to 
Sec. 2636.204 of this part; or

[[Page 522]]

    (ii) Whether a noncareer employee who is subject to the restrictions 
in subpart C of this part may receive compensation for teaching. An 
advisory opinion issued under this section may not be substituted for 
the advance written approval required by Sec. 2636.307 of this part.
    (3) The employee's request for an advisory opinion shall be 
submitted in writing, shall be dated and signed, and shall include all 
information reasonably available to the employee that is relevant to the 
inquiry. Where, in the opinion of the agency ethics official, complete 
information has not been provided, that official may request the 
employee to furnish additional information necessary to issue an 
opinion.
    (b) Issuance of advisory opinion. As soon as practicable after 
receipt of all necessary information, the agency ethics official shall 
issue a written opinion as to whether the conduct in issue would violate 
any provision contained in this part. Where conduct which would not 
violate this part would violate another statute relating to conflicts of 
interest or applicable standards of conduct, the advisory opinion shall 
so state and shall caution the employee against engaging in the conduct.
    (1) For the purpose of issuing an advisory opinion, the agency 
ethics official may request additional information from agency sources, 
including the requesting employee's supervisor, and may rely upon the 
accuracy of information furnished by the requester or any agency source 
unless he has reason to believe that the information is fraudulent, 
misleading or otherwise incorrect.
    (2) A copy of the request and advisory opinion shall be retained for 
a period of 6 years.
    (c) Good faith reliance on an advisory opinion. An employee who 
engages in conduct in good faith reliance upon an advisory opinion 
issued to him under this section shall not be subject to civil or 
disciplinary action for having violated this part. Where an employee 
engages in conduct in good faith reliance upon an advisory opinion 
issued by an ethics official of his agency to another, neither the 
Office of Government Ethics nor the employing agency shall initiate 
civil or disciplinary action under this part for conduct that is 
indistinguishable in all material aspects from the conduct described in 
the advisory opinion. However, an advisory opinion issued under this 
section shall not insulate the employee from other civil or disciplinary 
action if his conduct violates any other laws, rule, regulation or 
lawful management policy or directive. Where an employee has actual 
knowledge or reason to believe that the opinion is based on fraudulent, 
misleading, or otherwise incorrect information, the employee's reliance 
on the opinion will not be deemed to be in good faith.
    (d) Revision of an ethics opinion. Nothing in this section prohibits 
an agency ethics official from revising an ethics opinion on a 
prospective basis where he determines that the ethics opinion previously 
issued is incorrect, either as a matter of law or because it is based on 
erroneous information.



Sec. 2636.104  Civil, disciplinary and other action.

    (a) Civil action. Except when the employee engages in conduct in 
good faith reliance upon an advisory opinion issued under Sec. 2636.103 
of this subpart, an employee who accepts an honorarium or engages in any 
other conduct in violation of the prohibitions, limitations and 
restrictions contained in this part may be subject to civil action under 
5 U.S.C. app. 504(a) and a civil penalty of not more than $10,000 or the 
amount of compensation the individual received for the prohibited 
conduct, whichever is greater. Knowing and willful failure to file the 
report required by Sec. 2636.205 of this part or falsification of 
information thereon may subject an employee to a civil penalty of not 
more than $10,000 under 5 U.S.C. app. 104(a).
    (b) Disciplinary and corrective action. An agency may initiate 
disciplinary or corrective action against an employee who violates any 
provision of this part, which may be in addition to any civil penalty 
prescribed by law. When an employee engages in conduct in good faith 
reliance upon an advisory opinion issued under Sec. 2636.103 of this 
subpart, an agency may not initiate disciplinary or corrective action 
for violation

[[Page 523]]

of this part. Disciplinary action includes reprimand, suspension, 
demotion and removal. Corrective action includes any action necessary to 
remedy a past violation or prevent a continuing violation of this part, 
including but not limited to restitution or termination of an activity. 
It is the responsibility of the employing agency to initiate 
disciplinary or corrective action in appropriate cases. However, the 
Director of the Office of Government Ethics may order corrective action 
or recommend disciplinary action under the procedures at part 2638 of 
this subchapter. The imposition of disciplinary action is at the 
discretion of the employing agency.
    (c) Late Filing Fee. An employee may be assessed a late filing fee 
of $200 under 5 U.S.C. app. 104(d) for any report of payments to 
charitable organizations in lieu of honoraria required by Sec. 2636.205 
of this part that is filed more than 30 days after the date the report 
is due.
    (d) Criminal penalties. An employee who knowingly and willfully 
falsifies information on a report of payments to charitable 
organizations in lieu of honoraria required by Sec. 2636.205 of this 
part may be subject to criminal prosecution and sentencing under 18 
U.S.C. 1001 and 3571.



    Subpart B--The Honorarium Prohibition; Confidential Reporting of 
               Payments to Charities in Lieu of Honoraria



Sec. 2636.201  General standard.

    An individual may not receive any honorarium while that individual 
is an employee.



Sec. 2636.202  Relationship to other laws and regulations.

    The honorarium prohibition described in this subpart is in addition 
to any restriction on appearances, speaking or writing or the receipt of 
compensation therefor to which an employee is subject under applicable 
standards of conduct or by reason of any statute or regulation relating 
to conflicts of interests. Even though compensation for an activity is 
not prohibited by this subpart, an employee should accept compensation, 
including travel expenses, or engage in the activity for which 
compensation is offered, only after determining that it is not 
prohibited by the following:
    (a) An employee is prohibited by criminal statute and by the 
standards of conduct at part 735 of this title and agency implementing 
regulations from accepting compensation for an appearance or speech made 
or an article written in his official capacity or as part of his 
official duties. Unless specifically authorized by a statute, such as 5 
U.S.C. 4111, 5 U.S.C. 7342, or 31 U.S.C. 1353, this prohibition applies 
to the acceptance of travel expenses paid other than by the United 
States Government.
    (b) An employee is prohibited by the standards of conduct from 
receiving compensation, including travel expenses, for speaking or 
writing on subject matter that focuses specifically on his official 
duties or on the responsibilities, policies and programs of his 
employing agency.
    (c) As described in subpart C of this part, certain noncareer 
employees are subject to limitations on their receipt of outside earned 
income and may not engage in compensated teaching activities without 
advance approval under Sec. 2636.307 of that subpart.



Sec. 2636.203  Definitions.

    For purposes of this subpart:
    (a) Honorarium means a payment of money or anything of value for an 
appearance, speech or article. The term does not include:
    (1) Items that may be accepted under applicable standards of conduct 
gift regulations if they were offered by a prohibited source;
    (2) Meals or other incidents of attendance, such as waiver of 
attendance fees or course materials furnished as part of the event at 
which an appearance or speech is made;
    (3) Copies of publication containing articles, reprints of articles, 
tapes of appearances or speeches, and similar items that provide a 
record of the appearance, speech or article;
    (4) Actual and necessary travel expenses for the employee and one 
relative incurred in connection with an appearance or speech or the 
writing or publication of an article. Such travel expenses, when paid, 
reimbursed or

[[Page 524]]

provided in kind by another, shall not be counted as part of an 
honorarium. Where such expenses are not paid or reimbursed, the amount 
of an honorarium shall be determined by subtracting the actual and 
necessary travel expenses incurred in connection with the appearance or 
speech or the writing or publication of the article;
    (5) Actual expenses in the nature of typing, editing and 
reproduction costs incurred in connection with the making of an 
appearance or speech or the writing or publication of an article, when 
paid or reimbursed by another;
    (6) Compensation for goods or services other than appearing, 
speaking or writing, even though making an appearance or speech or 
writing an article may be an incidental task associated with provision 
of the goods or services;
    (7) Salary, wages and other compensation pursuant to an employer's 
usual employee compensation plan when paid by the employer for services 
on a continuing basis that involve appearing, speaking or writing. For 
these purposes, the term ``employment'' refers to services rendered in 
the context of an employer-employee relationship. It does not include 
any arrangement entered into by the employee or another as an 
independent contractor or with an agent, speakers bureau or similar 
entity that facilitates appearances or speaking or writing 
opportunities;
    (8) Compensation for teaching a course involving multiple 
presentations by the employee offered as part of a program of education 
or training sponsored and funded by the Federal government or by a state 
or local government;
    (9) Compensation for teaching a course involving multiple 
presentations by the employee offered as part of the regularly 
established curriculum of an institution of higher education as defined 
at 20 U.S.C. 1141(a);
    (10) An award for artistic, literary or oratorical achievement made 
on a competitive basis under established criteria;
    (11) Witness fees credited under 5 U.S.C. 5515 against compensation 
payable by the United States; or
    (12) Compensation received for any appearance or speech made or 
article accepted for publication prior to January 1, 1991, or for any 
appearance or speech made or article written in satisfaction of the 
employee's obligation under a contract entered into prior to January 1, 
1991.
    (13) Payment for a series of three or more different but related 
appearances, speeches or articles, provided that the subject matter is 
not directly related to the employee's official duties and that the 
payment is not made because of the employee's status with the 
Government.

    Example 1. An employee of the Department of Agriculture has entered 
into a contract to develop a complex software package for a private 
company. The contract, which is for a single fee for all work to be 
provided under the contract, requires the employee to provide 2 hours of 
oral instruction on use of the program. He may accept the entire fee for 
performance under the contract. No part of the fee is an honorarium 
since the 2 hours of instruction is only incidental to his development 
and delivery of the software package. He could not, however, receive a 
fee specifically for 2 hours of oral instruction on the use of a program 
he had earlier provided under a contract that required only his 
development of a program.
    Example 2. A management trainee employed by the Bureau of Indian 
Affairs is employed two nights a week as a reporter on a local 
newspaper. He may receive a salary for his continuing employment even 
though it is in a profession characterized by the writing of articles. 
He may not, however, accept compensation for newspaper or magazine 
articles written on a freelance basis or pursuant to a contract to 
furnish 5 articles over a one year period.
    Example 3. An economist employed by the Department of the Treasury 
has entered into an agreement with a speakers bureau to give 10 
unrelated after-dinner speeches to be arranged by the speakers bureau 
with various organizations over a six-month period. The employee may not 
receive the contract fee of $10,000. The 10 speeches do not constitute a 
series of speeches, but 10 individual speeches.
    Example 4. An attorney employed by the Department of the Air Force 
may not accept compensation for teaching a two-day seminar on Federal 
procurement law presented by a publishing company under the sponsorship 
of an accredited law school. He may, however, accept compensation for 
teaching procurement law as part of the law school's regular curriculum 
of courses.
    Example 5. An air traffic controller employed by the Federal 
Aviation Administration has entered into a contract with a magazine 
publisher to write an article on sheep ranching in New Zealand. In 
addition to a fee

[[Page 525]]

of $500 for the article, the contract provides that the publisher will 
provide expenses for the employee to travel to New Zealand to conduct 
research on sheep ranching. The employee may accept the travel expenses, 
but not the $500 fee. In lieu of the $500 fee, he could not accept 
expenses to travel to and stay for a weekend in Sydney, Australia after 
the completion of his research.
    Example 6. An employee of the National Aeronautics and Space 
Administration may accept compensation for a series of three articles on 
white collar crime she has agreed to write for a local newspaper. While 
she could not accept compensation for just two articles on white collar 
crime, she could accept a national journalism award for two articles she 
had written on an uncompensated basis.
    Example 7. A physicist employed by the Department of Energy to 
conduct research on laser technology may not accept a contract fee for a 
series of three lectures on lasers where one of the lectures is to focus 
on the research he is conducting for DOE.

    (b) Appearance means attendance at a public or private conference, 
convention, meeting, hearing, event or other gathering and the 
incidental conversation or remarks made at that time. Unless the 
opportunity was extended to the employee wholly or in part because of 
his official position, the term does not include performances using an 
artistic, athletic or other such skill or talent or primarily for the 
purpose of demonstration or display.

    Example 1. Because the fee is for an ``appearance'', an employee of 
the Securities and Exchange Commission who was responsible for a major 
securities fraud investigation may not accept a fee for standing in the 
reception line at the premier of a movie entitled ``Junk Bond Scandal.''
    Example 2. A staff member of the National Security Council does not 
make an ``appearance'' by playing the piano and singing at a wedding 
reception and may accept a fee for his performance.
    Example 3. An employee of the Forest Service does not make an 
``appearance'' by modeling in a fashion show and may accept a modeling 
fee.

    (c) Speech means an address, oration, or other form of oral 
presentation, whether made in person, recorded or broadcast. Unless the 
opportunity was extended to the employee wholly or in part because of 
his official position, the term does not include the recitation of 
scripted material, as for a live or recorded theatrical production, or 
any oral presentation that is an incident of any performance that is 
excluded from the definition of an appearance in paragraph (b) of this 
section. It does not include the conduct of worship services or 
religious ceremonies.

    Example 1. An attorney employed by the Department of Justice may not 
receive a $50 honorarium for her informal talk to a local gardening club 
on how to design and grow a Victorian rose garden. Her talk, though 
informal, is a ``speech.''
    Example 2. A nutritionist employed by the National Institutes of 
Health who is a stand-up comedian by avocation may accept a fee for 
performing a comedy routine at a dinner theater. His oral remarks do not 
constitute a speech because they are an incident of his performance 
using his talent as a comedian. He could not, however, accept 
compensation for a speech simply because he tells an introductory joke 
or otherwise amuses his audience.
    Example 3. A statistician employed by the Department of Labor who is 
a lay minister may accept a gratuitous payment of $50 for performing a 
funeral service since it involves his conduct of a religious ceremony. 
However, he may not accept a payment for a talk on theology given to 
other ministers, for offering a prayer at the opening of a convention or 
for delivering a sermon during a worship service conducted by another 
minister. He could accept payment for his own conduct of worship 
services.
    Example 4. A price analyst employed by the Defense Fuel Supply 
Agency may accept a fee of $100 for writing a speech to be delivered by 
another. The term ``speech'' includes only oral presentations and does 
not include writing a speech to be delivered by someone other than the 
employee. Moreover, the text of a speech is not an article.
    Example 5. The stage portrayal of Hamlet by an employee of the 
Department of State does not involve the making of a ``speech.'' He may 
be paid for his role in the Shakespearean production.

    (d) Article means a writing, other than a book or a chapter of a 
book, which has been or is intended to be published or republished in a 
journal, newspaper, magazine or similar collection of writings. The term 
does not include works of fiction, poetry, lyrics, or script.

    Example 1. An employee of the Office of Personnel Management who has 
reviewed a new book about the New York Yankees may not accept a $50 
honorarium from the publisher of a sports magazine. The book review is 
an ``article.''
    Example 2. The lyrics and music for a college song written by two 
Department of the

[[Page 526]]

Navy attorneys does not constitute an ``article.'' The attorneys could 
each accept a gratuitous payment of $50 if the song were selected by 
their alma mater for publication in its compendium of college songs.
    Example 3. An engineer employed by the National Aeronautics and 
Space Administration has entered into a contract with an association of 
electrical component manufacturers to proofread and edit articles 
submitted by members of the association for publication in its monthly 
newsletter. The employee may accept the contract fee since the 
compensation is not for the writing of articles.
    Example 4. An accountant employed by the Federal Deposit Insurance 
Corporation may accept compensation for writing a chapter of a textbook 
on corporate accounting. A chapter of a book is not an ``article.''

    (e) Receive means that there is actual or constructive receipt of 
the honorarium by the employee so that the employee has a right to 
exercise dominion and control over the honorarium and direct its 
subsequent use. For purposes of this subpart, an honorarium is received 
while an employee if it is for an appearance or speech made or any 
article submitted for publication by that individual while he was an 
employee. Except when it is paid to a charitable organization in 
accordance with Sec. 2636.204 of this subpart, an honorarium is received 
by an employee:
    (1) If it is paid to another person on
the basis of designation, recommendation or other specification by the 
employee; or
    (2) If, with the employee's knowledge and acquiescence, it is paid 
to his parent, sibling, spouse, child or dependent relative.

    Example 1. At the suggestion of the Army officer who authored an 
article selected for publication in a popular magazine, the publisher 
paid the amount of its usual honorarium to the officer's husband. The 
officer has ``received'' an honorarium.
    Example 2. An employee of the Department of Housing and Urban 
Development has been offered a $500 honorarium for a speech to be given 
during the week before his scheduled date of retirement from Federal 
service. Since it is for a speech to be made while he is an employee, he 
will have ``received'' the offered honorarium while an employee even 
though actual payment may not occur until after his retirement.

    (f) Charitable organization means an organization which is qualified 
with respect to deductible charitable contributions under 26 U.S.C. 
170(c) because it is organized or operated exclusively for religious, 
charitable, scientific, literary, educational or another specified 
purpose. It includes, but is not limited to, an organization exempt from 
Federal taxation under the authority of 26 U.S.C. 501(c)(3).
    (g) Travel expenses means the actual and necessary cost of 
transportation, lodging and meals incurred while away from the 
employee's residence or principal place of employment in connection with 
an appearance, speech or article. Where the lodgings and meals portion 
of travel expenses are paid or reimbursed by another in the form of a 
per diem or subsistence expense allowance, that allowance shall be 
treated as actual and necessary travel expenses if the allowance is no 
more than that customarily paid by the payor to its own officers or 
employees, provided the employee in fact incurs costs for commercial 
meals and lodgings on each day for which the allowance is received.

[56 FR 1723, Jan. 17, 1991, as amended at 57 FR 602, Jan. 8, 1992]



Sec. 2636.204  Payment to charitable organizations in lieu of honoraria.

    (a) Effect of payment to a charitable organization. An honorarium 
which, but for this subpart, could be paid to an employee but is paid 
instead on behalf of the employee to a charitable organization is deemed 
not to be received by the employee. An employee may suggest that an 
honorarium that he is prohibited from receiving solely by application of 
this subpart be paid in his name to a charitable organization. An 
honorarium received and later donated to a charitable organization by 
the employee does not qualify as a payment to a charitable organization 
in lieu of an honorarium made in accordance with this section.

    Note: An employee on whose behalf a payment in lieu of an honorarium 
has been made to a charitable organization may not take a tax deduction 
on account of the payment under any provision of the Internal Revenue 
Code or under any tax law of a State or political subdivision thereof.

    (b) Nonqualifying payments to charitable organizations. No payment 
may be made to a charitable organization pursuant to this section:

[[Page 527]]

    (1) If the employee would be prohibited from receiving and retaining 
the honorarium by any conflict of interest statute or regulation or 
applicable standards of conduct other than this subpart. Honoraria that 
the employee is prohibited from receiving and retaining would include, 
for example, any honorarium that is for:
    (i) An appearance or speech made or article written by the employee 
in an official capacity or as part of his official duties; or
    (ii) A speech or article, the subject matter of which focuses 
specifically on agency responsibilities, policies or programs.
    (2) In an amount in excess of $2,000 per appearance, speech, or 
article; or
    (3) If the employee, the employee's parent, sibling, spouse, child, 
or dependent relative derives any direct financial benefit from the 
charitable organization that is separate from and beyond any general 
benefit conferred by the organization's activities.

    Example 1. An Assistant U.S. Attorney who has successfully 
prosecuted an espionage case may not suggest that an honorarium offered 
for his speech about the prosecution be given to his law school. Because 
the topic of the speech relates to his official duties, he is prohibited 
from accepting any compensation by applicable standards of conduct. He 
could, however, suggest that an honorarium offered for his speech on 
training sheepdogs, be paid to his school.
    Example 2. A personnel specialist employed by the Department of 
Labor whose spouse is employed by the Red Cross may not suggest that an 
honorarium for his speech about his vacation spent bicycling through 
China be donated in his name to the Red Cross.
    Example 3. A claims examiner employed by the Department of Veterans 
Affairs whose mother suffers from Parkinson's Disease may suggest that 
an honorarium for her article on historic preservation be donated to a 
charitable organization that funds research seeking a cure for 
Parkinson's Disease. She may not suggest, however, that it be donated to 
a charitable organization that provides her mother with in-home nursing 
services.



Sec. 2636.205  Reporting payments to charitable organizations in lieu of honoraria.

    (a) Who must file. A current or former employee, other than a new 
entrant, who is required to file a financial disclosure report, either 
on a confidential or public basis, shall at the same time file a 
confidential report of payments to charitable organizations in lieu of 
honoraria if:
    (1) Payments in lieu of honoraria aggregating more than $200 were 
made on his behalf by any one source to one or more charitable 
organizations during the reporting period covered by the financial 
disclosure statement; or
    (2) In the case of an individual filing a termination report, there 
is an understanding between the reporting individual and any other 
person that payments in lieu of honoraria will be made on his behalf for 
an appearance or speech made or article submitted for publication while 
the individual was a Government employee which, together with any 
payments in lieu of honoraria made by that source during the reporting 
period, will aggregate more than $200.

This reporting requirement is in addition to any other requirement to 
disclose on a public or confidential financial disclosure report the 
source, date and amount of an honorarium paid to a charitable 
organization on the employee's behalf. It does not apply to any payment 
in lieu of an honorarium made to a charitable organization on behalf of 
the current or former employee's spouse or dependent child.
    (b) Where and when to file. The report required by this section 
shall be filed with the agency ethics official by the date the current 
or former employee is required to file a confidential or public 
financial disclosure report. Any grant of an extension to file a 
financial disclosure report shall automatically extend the date for 
filing the report of payments to charitable organizations in lieu of 
honoraria and the agency ethics official may, for good cause shown by 
the employee, grant a separate extension of the date for filing the 
report required by this section. The total of all extensions for filing 
the report required by this section shall not exceed 90 days.
    (c) Reporting period. The report of payments to charitable 
organizations in lieu of honoraria shall cover the same period that 
applies to the confidential or public financial disclosure report the 
individual is required to file. For employees filing annual financial 
disclosure reports, the reporting period

[[Page 528]]

is the preceding calendar year or, if the employee commenced Government 
service during that year, the portion of the preceding calendar year 
beginning with the date the employee entered on duty. For those filing 
termination reports, the reporting period is the portion of the calendar 
year in which he terminated Government service up to the date of 
termination and, if he has not yet filed an annual financial disclosure 
report covering that period, the preceding calendar year or other period 
required for the annual report.
    (d) What to report. Each report shall be filed on the standard form 
prescribed by the Office of Government Ethics and made available through 
the General Services Administration. Each report filed shall include the 
following information for each payment to a charitable organization in 
lieu of an honorarium, regardless of amount, made on the employee's 
behalf by any source from whom such payments made during the reporting 
period aggregate more than $200:
    (1) The date of the payment (if payment has been made);
    (2) The date of the appearance or speech for which the honorarium 
was paid or, where the honorarium is for an article, the date the 
article was submitted by the employee for publication;
    (3) The name of the person or entity making the payment to the 
charitable organization;
    (4) The name and the tax status of charitable purpose of the 
recipient;
    (5) The subject matter of the speech or article or, where the 
honorarium is for an appearance, the reason for the appearance; and
    (6) The amount of the payment;

An individual filing a termination report who is reporting with respect 
to payments which have not yet been made should write ``Not Applicable'' 
in the space provided for the date of payment and should provide the 
remainder of the information required on the basis of his best knowledge 
and belief as to payments which he understands will be made to 
charitable organizations on his behalf.
    (e) Effect of signing the form. By signing the form the employee 
certifies that the information he has reported is true, complete and 
correct to the best of his knowledge and that neither he nor his parent, 
sibling, spouse, child or dependent relative receives from the recipient 
charitable organization a benefit that is separate and distinct from any 
general benefit conferred by the organization's activities.
    (f) Review of reports. Within 60 days after receipt, the agency 
ethics official shall review each report of payments to charitable 
organizations in lieu of honoraria to determine that the reporting 
requirements of this section have been met and that each payment 
reported meets the standards at Sec. 2636.204 of this subpart.
    (1) The agency ethics official need not audit the report to 
ascertain whether the disclosures are correct; disclosures are to be 
taken at face value unless there is a patent omission or ambiguity or 
the official has independent knowledge of matters outside the report.
    (2) If the agency ethics official determines that the report is 
complete and that each payment is proper, he shall sign and date the 
report.
    (3) If the agency ethics official determines that the form is not 
complete, he shall request that the employee complete the form by a 
specific date and annotate each addition or change with the employee's 
signature and the date the annotation was made. The 60 day period for 
review shall run from the date the completed form is filed.
    (4) If the agency ethics official determines that additional 
information is needed to determine whether a payment to a charitable 
organization meets the standards at Sec. 2636.204 of this subpart, he 
shall request that the employee furnish such information by a specific 
date and shall date and append to the report any information obtained in 
writing or annotate the report to reflect any information obtained other 
than in writing and the date it was furnished. The 60 day period for 
review shall run from the date the additional information is furnished.
    (5) If the agency ethics official determines that the employee has 
failed to file a report or a complete report or has received an 
honorarium in violation of Sec. 2636.201 of this subpart because a 
reported payment does not meet the

[[Page 529]]

standards at Sec. 2636.204 of this subpart, he shall give the individual 
written notice of the deficiency and 10 days in which to submit a 
written response and, therafter, shall refer the case for appropriate 
action as described in Sec. 2636.104 of this subpart and annotate the 
report to reflect that referral.
    (g) Filing of reports with the Office of Government Ethics. On 
August 15 of each year, the designated agency ethics official shall 
forward to the Office of Government Ethics all reports reviewed within 
his agency during the preceding one-year period.
    (h) Review of reports by the Office of Government Ethics. Within 60 
days after receiving the reports forwarded under paragraph (g) of this 
section, reports of payments to charitable organizations in lieu of 
honoraria filed by individuals whose public financial disclosure reports 
are required to be filed with the Director of the Office of Government 
shall be reviewed and signed by the Director.
    (i) Retention of reports. Reports of payments to charitable 
organizations in lieu of honoraria shall be retained by the Office of 
Government Ethics for a period of 6 years. Unless needed in an ongoing 
investigation, the reports shall be destroyed after 6 years.
    (j) Confidentiality of reports. Reports of payments to charitable 
organization in lieu of honoraria filed pursuant to this section are not 
available to members of the public and are to be treated with the 
confidentiality afforded confidential financial disclosure reports.

(Approved by the Office of Management and Budget under control number 
3209-0004)

[56 FR 1723, Jan. 17, 1991, as amended at 56 FR 21589, May 10, 1991; 56 
FR 51319, Oct. 11, 1991; 59 FR 34756, July 7, 1994]

    Effective Date Note: At 57 FR 5369, Feb. 14, 1992, the effective 
date of Sec. 2636.205 was further deferred until the form to actually 
collect the information required under that section is approved by OMB.



     Subpart C--Outside Earned Income Limitation and Employment and 
   Affiliation Restrictions Applicable to Certain Noncareer Employees



Sec. 2636.301  General standards.

    A covered noncareer employee shall not:
    (a) Receive outside earned income in excess of the 15 percent 
limitation described in Sec. 2636.304 of this subpart;
    (b) Receive compensation or allow the use of his name in violation 
of the restrictions relating to professions involving a fiduciary 
relationship described in Sec. 2636.305 of this subpart;
    (c) Receive compensation for serving as an officer or board member 
in violation of the restriction described in Sec. 2636.306 of this 
subpart; or
    (d) Receive compensation for teaching without having first obtained 
advance authorization as required by Sec. 2636.307 of this subpart.



Sec. 2636.302  Relationship to other laws and regulations.

    The limitations and restrictions contained in this section are in 
addition to any limitations and restrictions imposed upon an employee by 
applicable standards of conduct or by reason of any statute or 
regulation relating to conflicts of interest. Even though conduct or the 
receipt of compensation is not prohibited by this subpart, an employee 
should accept compensation or engage in the activity for which 
compensation is offered only after determining that it is otherwise 
permissible. In particular, a covered noncareer employee should accept 
compensation only after determining that its receipt does not violate 
the following prohibitions:
    (a) A covered noncareer employee who is a Presidential appointee to 
a full-time noncareer position is prohibited by section 102 of Executive 
Order 12674, as amended, from receiving any

[[Page 530]]

outside earned income for outside employment or any other activity 
performed during that Presidential appointment.
    (b) An individual is prohibited from receiving any honorarium while 
he is an employee. The honoraria prohibition, described in subpart B of 
this part, applies to any compensation for an appearance or speech made 
or article submitted for publication while the individual is an 
employee.



Sec. 2636.303  Definitions.

    For purposes of this section:
    (a) Covered noncareer employee means an employee, other than a 
special Government employee as defined in 18 U.S.C. 202, whose rate of 
basic pay is equal to or greater than the annual rate of basic pay in 
effect for GS-16, step 1 of the General Schedule under 5 U.S.C. 5332 and 
who is:
    (1) Appointed by the President to a position described in the 
Executive Schedule, 5 U.S.C. 5312 through 5317, or to a position that, 
by statute or as a matter of practice, is filled by Presidential 
appointment, other than:
    (i) A position within the uniformed services; or
    (ii) A position within the foreign service below the level of 
Assistant Secretary or Chief of Mission;
    (2) A noncareer member of the Senior Executive Service or of another 
SES-type system, such as the Senior Foreign Service;
    (3) Appointed to a Schedule C position or to a position under an 
agency-specific statute that establishes appointment criteria 
essentially the same as those set forth in Sec. 213.3301 of this title 
for Schedule C positions; or
    (4) Appointed to a noncareer executive assignment position or to a 
position under an agency-specific statute that establishes appointment 
criteria essentially the same as those set forth in Sec. 305.601 of this 
title for noncareer executive assignment positions.

For purposes of applying this definition to an individual who holds a 
General Schedule or other position that provides several rates of pay or 
steps per grade, his rate of basic pay shall be the rate of pay for the 
lowest step of the grade at which he is employed.

    Example 1. A Schedule C appointee to a position with the United 
States Information Agency who holds a GS-15 position and who is 
compensated at the rate for GS-15, Step 9 is not a covered noncareer 
employee even though the pay he receives in a calendar year exceeds the 
annual pay for GS-16, Step 1. Notwithstanding that he is compensated at 
Step 9, the basic rate of pay for the GS-15 position he holds is the 
rate in effect for GS-15, Step 1 of the General Schedule, which is lower 
than the rate for GS-16, Step 1.
    Example 2. An employee of the Environmental Protection Agency who 
has been a career GS-15 employee for 10 years and who is offered a non-
career SES position with the Federal Aviation Administration will, if he 
accepts the offer, become a covered noncareer employee by reason of that 
appointment, regardless of his former status.
    Example 3. A Department of Justice employee who holds a Schedule A 
appointment is not a covered noncareer employee even though he does not 
have competitive status within the meaning of Sec. 212.301 of this 
title.

    (b) Outside earned income and compensation both mean wages, 
salaries, honoraria, commissions, professional fees and any other form 
of compensation for services other than salary, benefits and allowances 
paid by the United States Government. Neither term includes:
    (1) Items that may be accepted under applicable standards of conduct 
gift regulations if they were offered by a prohibited source;
    (2) Income attributable to service with the military reserves or 
national guard;
    (3) Income from pensions and other continuing benefits attributable 
to previous employment or services;
    (4) Income from investment activities where the individual's 
services are not a material factor in the production of income;
    (5) Copyright royalties, fees, and their functional equivalent, from 
the use or sale of copyright, patent and similar forms of intellectual 
property rights, when received from established users or purchasers of 
those rights;
    (6) Actual and necessary expenses incurred by the employee in 
connection with an outside activity. Where such expenses are paid or 
reimbursed by another person, the amount of any such payment shall not 
be counted as compensation or outside earned income. Where such expenses 
are not paid or reimbursed, the amount of compensation

[[Page 531]]

or earned income shall be determined by subtracting the actual and 
necessary expenses incurred by the employee from any payment received 
for the activity;
    (7) An honorarium paid to a charitable organization pursuant to 
Sec. 2636.204 of this part; or
    (8) Compensation for:
    (i) Services rendered prior to January 1, 1991, or prior to becoming 
a covered noncareer employee;
    (ii) Services rendered in satisfaction of a covered noncareer 
employee's obligation under a contract entered into prior to January 1, 
1991; or
    (iii) Services which the covered noncareer employee first undertook 
to provide prior to January 1, 1991, where the standards of the 
applicable profession require the employee to complete the case or other 
undertaking.

    Example 1. A covered noncareer employee is a limited partner in a 
partnership that invests in commercial real estate. Because he does not 
take an active role in the management of the partnership, his share of 
the partnership income is neither ``outside earned income'' nor 
``compensation.''
    Example 2. A covered noncareer employee of the Civil Rights 
Commission serves without compensation as a member of the Board of 
Visitors for a university. The roundtrip airfare and hotel expenses paid 
by the university to permit him to attend quarterly meetings of the 
Board are neither ``outside earned income'' or ``compensation.''
    Example 3. Where a covered noncareer employee pays for transcripts 
of a hearing in which he is providing pro bono legal representation, 
reimbursements for those expenses by a legal aid organization are 
neither ``outside earned income'' nor ``compensation.''
    Example 4. During the term of his appointment, a Deputy Assistant 
Secretary of Labor enters into a contract to write a book of fictional 
short stories. Royalties based on actual sales of the book after 
publication are investment income attributable to the property interest 
he retains in the book and, as such, are neither ``outside earned 
income'' nor ``compensation.''

    (c) Receive means that the employee has the right to exercise 
dominion and control over the compensation or outside earned income and 
direct its subsequent use. Compensation or outside earned income is 
received by an employee if it is for his conduct and:
    (1) If it is paid to any other person on the basis of designation, 
recommendation or other specification by the employee; or
    (2) If, with the employee's knowledge and acquiescence, it is paid 
to his parent, sibling, spouse, child or dependent relative.
    Compensation that is prohibited by Sec. 2636.305 through 
Sec. 2636.307 of this subpart is received while an individual is an 
employee if it is for conduct by him that occurs while an employee, even 
though actual payment may be deferred until after Federal employment has 
terminated. Payments made to charitable organizations in lieu of 
honoraria under Sec. 2636.204 of this part are not compensation or 
outside earned income and thus are not received in violation of any of 
the limitations contained in his subpart. However, other compensation or 
outside earned income donated to a charitable organization is received 
by the employee.



Sec. 2636.304  The 15 percent limitation on outside earned income.

    (a) Limitation applicable to individuals who are covered noncareer 
employees on January 1 of any calendar year. A covered noncareer 
employee may not, in any calendar year, receive outside earned income 
attributable to that calendar year which exceeds 15 percent of the 
annual rate of basic pay for level II of the Executive Schedule under 5 
U.S.C. 5313, as in effect on January 1 of such calendar year. The 
effective date of a change in the rate for level II of the Executive 
Schedule shall be the date on which a new rate of basic pay for level II 
first becomes applicable to any level II position.

    Note: Notwithstanding the 15 percent limitation described in this 
section, a covered noncareer employee who is a Presidential appointee to 
a full-time noncareer position is prohibited by section 102 of Executive 
Order 12674, as amended, from receiving any outside earned income for 
outside employment or any other activity performed during that 
Presidential appointment.
    Example 1. Notwithstanding that the compensation he will receive 
would not exceed 15 percent of the rate for level II of the Executive 
Schedule, a covered noncareer employee of the Department of Energy may 
not receive any compensation for teaching a university course unless he 
first receives the authorization required by Sec. 2636.307 of this 
subpart.


[[Page 532]]


    (b) Limitation applicable to individuals who become covered 
noncareer employees after January 1 of any calendar year. The outside 
earned income limitation that applies to an individual who becomes a 
covered noncareer employee during a calendar year shall be determined on 
a pro rata basis. His outside earned income while so employed in that 
calendar year shall not exceed 15 percent of the annual rate of basic 
pay for level II of the Executive Schedule in effect on January 1 of the 
calendar year divided by 365 and multiplied by the number of days during 
that calendar year that he holds the covered noncareer position.

    Example 1. A former college professor received an appointment to a 
noncareer Senior Executive Service position on November 1, 1991. The 
rate of basic pay in effect for Executive Level II on January 1, 1991 
was $125,100. For the 61 day period from November 1, 1991 through 
December 31, 1991, the amount of outside income he may earn is limited 
to $3,129. That amount is determined as follows:
    Step 1. The rate of basic pay for Executive Level II as in effect on 
January 1 of that year ($125,100) is divided by 365. That quotient is 
$342;
    Step 2. The dollar amount determined by Step 1 ($342) is then 
multiplied by the 61 days the employee held the covered noncareer 
position. That product is $20,862;
    Step 3. The dollar amount determined by Step 2 ($20,862) is 
multiplied by .15 or 15 percent. The product ($3,129) is the maximum 
outside earned income the employee may have in the particular year 
attributable to the period of his service in a covered noncareer 
position.

    (c) Computation principle. For purposes of any computation required 
by this section, any amount of $.50 or more shall be rounded up to the 
next full dollar and any amount less than $.50 shall be rounded down to 
the next full dollar.
    (d) Year to which outside earned income is attributable. Regardless 
of when it is paid, outside earned income is attributable to the 
calendar year in which the services for which it is paid were provided.



Sec. 2636.305  Compensation and other restrictions relating to professions involving a fiduciary relationship.

    (a) Applicable restrictions. A covered noncareer employee shall not:
    (1) Receive compensation for:
    (i) Practicing a profession which involves a fiduciary relationship; 
or
    (ii) Affiliating with or being employed to perform professional 
duties by a firm, partnership, association, corporation, or other entity 
which provides professional services involving a fiduciary relationship; 
or
    (2) Permit his name to be used by any firm, partnership, 
association, corporation, or other entity which provides professional 
services involving a fiduciary relationship.

    Example 1. A covered noncareer employee of the White House Office 
who is an attorney may not receive compensation for drafting a will for 
her friend. She may, however, participate in her bar association's pro 
bono program by providing free legal services for the elderly, provided 
her participation in the program is otherwise proper. For example, 18 
U.S.C. 205 would prohibit her from representing her pro bono client in a 
hearing before the Social Security Administration.
    Example 2. An accountant named C.B. Debit who is offered a covered 
noncareer appointment must terminate his partnership in the accounting 
firm of Delight, Waterhose and Debit upon appointment. Because his 
deceased father, J.R. Debit, was the founding partner for whom the firm 
is named, the name Debit need not be deleted from the firm's name. 
However, the name C.B. Debit may not appear on the firm's letterhead 
after the individual enters on duty as a covered noncareer employee.

    (b) Definitions. For purposes of this section:
    (1) Profession means a calling requiring specalized knowledge and 
often long and intensive preparation including instruction in skills and 
methods as well as in the scientific, historical or scholarly principles 
underlying such skills and methods. It is characteristic of a profession 
that those in the profession, through force of organization or concerted 
opinion, establish and maintain high standards of achievement and 
conduct, and commit its practitioners to continued study of the field. 
Consulting and advising with respect to subject matter that is generally 
regarded as the province of practitioners of a profession shall be 
considered a profession.
    (2) Profession which involves a fiduciary relationship means a 
profession in which the nature of the services provided causes the 
recipient of those services to place a substantial degree

[[Page 533]]

of trust and confidence in the integrity, fidelity and specialized 
knowledge of the practitioner. Such professions are not limited to those 
whose practitioners are legally defined as fiduciaries and include 
practitioners in such areas as law, insurance, medicine, architecture, 
financial services and accounting. A covered noncareer employee who is 
uncertain whether a particular field of endeavor is a profession which 
involves a fiduciary relationship may request an advisory opinion under 
Sec. 2636.103.

    Example 1. In view of the standards of the profession which require 
a licensed real estate broker to act in the best interests of his 
clients, the selling of real estate by a licensed broker involves the 
practice of a profession involving a fiduciary relationship.
    Example 2. A covered noncareer employee may receive the customary 
fee for serving as the executor of his mother's estate, provided he does 
not violate the applicable limitation on the amount of outside earned 
income he may receive. Although the executor of an estate has fiduciary 
obligations, serving as an executor in these circumstances does not 
involve the practice of a profession and, therefore, is not prohibited. 
He could not, however, serve for compensation as attorney for the 
estate.

[56 FR 1723, Jan. 17, 1991, as amended at 58 FR 69176, Dec. 30, 1993]



Sec. 2636.306  Compensation restriction applicable to service as an officer or member of a board.

    (a) Applicable restriction. A covered noncareer employee shall not 
receive compensation for serving as an officer or member of the board of 
any association, corporation or other entity. Nothing in this section 
prohibits uncompensated service with any entity.
    (b) Definition. For purposes of this section, the phrase 
``association, corporation or other entity'' is not limited to for-
profit entities, but includes nonprofit entities, such as charitable 
organizations and professional associations, as well as any unit of 
state or local government.

    Example 1. A covered noncareer employee of the Environmental 
Protection Agency may not serve with compensation on the board of 
directors of his sister's closely-held computer software corporation.
    Example 2. A covered noncareer employee of the Department of the 
Navy may serve without compensation as an officer of a charitable 
organization that operates a hospice.
    Example 3. A covered noncareer employee of the Coast Guard appointed 
to serve as a member of the board of education of the county in which 
she is a resident may not receive compensation for that service.



Sec. 2636.307  Requirement for advance authorization to engage in teaching for compensation.

    (a) Authorization requirement. A covered noncareer employee may 
receive compensation for teaching only when specifically authorized in 
advance by the designated agency ethics official.
    (b) Definition. For purposes of this section ``teaching'' means any 
activity that involves oral presentation or personal interaction, the 
primary function of which is to instruct or otherwise impart knowledge 
or skill. It is not limited to teaching that occurs in a formal setting, 
such as a classroom, but extends to instruction on an individual basis 
or in an informal setting.
    (c) Request for authorization. An employee may request authorization 
to engage in compensated teaching activities by forwarding a written 
request to the designated agency ethics official. The request shall 
describe the employee's official duties, the subject matter of the 
teaching activity, the entity sponsoring the course, and the student, 
class or audience to be taught. In addition, it shall set forth the 
terms of the compensation arrangement and identify the source of the 
payment. The request shall be accompanied by any contract or employment 
agreement and any literature describing, publicizing or otherwise 
promoting the class, classes or course.
    (d) Standard for authorization. Compensated teaching may be approved 
by the designated agency ethics official only when:
    (1) The teaching will not interfere with the performance of the 
employee's official duties or give rise to an appearance that the 
teaching opportunity was extended to the employee principally because of 
his official position;
    (2) The employee's receipt of compensation does not violate any of 
the limitations and prohibitions on honoraria, compensation or outside 
earned income contained in this part; and

[[Page 534]]

    (3) Neither the teaching activity nor the employee's receipt of 
compensation therefor will violate applicable standards of conduct or 
any statute or regulation related to conflicts of interests.
    (e) Determination and authorization. The determination by the 
designated agency ethics official to grant or deny authorization to 
engage in teaching for compensation shall be in writing and shall be 
final. The authority of the designated agency ethics official to 
authorize compensated teaching may not be delegated to any person other 
than the alternate designated agency ethics official described in 
Sec. 2638.202(b).



PART 2637--REGULATIONS CONCERNING POST EMPLOYMENT CONFLICT OF INTEREST--Table of Contents




                      Subpart A--General Provisions

Sec.
2637.101  Purpose and policy.
2637.102  Definitions.

                    Subpart B--Substantive Provisions

2637.201  Restrictions on any former Government employee's acting as 
          representative as to a particular matter in which the employee 
          personally and substantially participated.
2637.202  Two-year restriction on any former Government employee's 
          acting as representative as to a particular matter for which 
          the employee had official responsibility.
2637.203  Two-year restriction on a former senior employee's assisting 
          in representing as to a matter in which the employee 
          participated personally and substantially.
2637.204  One-year restriction on a former senior employee's 
          transactions with former agency on a particular matter, 
          regardless of prior involvement.
2637.205  Limitation of restrictions of 18 U.S.C. 207(c) to less than 
          that whole of a department or agency.
2637.206  Exemption for scientific and technological information.
2637.207  Exemption for persons with special qualification in a 
          technical discipline.
2637.208  Testimony and statements under oath or subject to penalty of 
          perjury.
2637.209  Partners of present or former Government employees.
2637.210  Officials of a State; officials of corporations created by an 
          Act of Congress and public international organizations.
2637.211  Standards and procedures for designating senior employee 
          positions pursuant to 18 U.S.C. 207(d).
2637.212  Administrative enforcement proceedings.
2637.213  Effective date of restrictions.
2637.214  Separate statutory agencies: Designations.
2637.215  Separate components of agencies or bureaus: Designations.
2637.216  ``Senior Employee'' designations.

    Authority: 5 U.S.C. App. (Ethics in Government Act of 1978); 18 
U.S.C. 207 (1988).


    Source: 45 FR 7406, Feb. 1, 1980; 45 FR 9253, Feb. 12, 1980, unless 
otherwise noted. Redesignated at 54 FR 50231, Dec. 5, 1989.

    Note: The post-employment conflict of interest restrictions of 18 
U.S.C. 207 were substantially revised effective January 1, 1991, by the 
Ethics Reform Act of 1989, Pub. L. 101-194, 103 Stat. 1716, with 
technical amendments enacted by Pub. L. 101-280, 104 Stat. 149 (1990). 
The Office of Government Ethics has published substantive guidance for 
the executive branch concerning the amended version of 18 U.S.C. 207 in 
part 2641 of this subchapter. This part 2637 will continue to provide 
guidance concerning the previous version of section 207, which will 
continue to apply to individuals terminating Government service prior to 
January 1, 1991.

    Editorial Note: The following index of paragraphs is provided for 
the convenience of the reader:

                      Subpart A--General Provisions

Sec.
2637.101  Purpose and policy.
    (a) Authority.
    (b) Consultation with the Attorney General.
    (c) Policy and limitations.
2637.102  Definitions.
    (a) Statutory definitions.
    (b) Interpretative definitions.

                    Subpart B--Substantive Provisions

2637.201  Restrictions on any former government employee's acting as 
          representative as to a particular matter in which the employee 
          personally and substantially participated.
    (a) 18 U.S.C. 207(a).
    (b) Representation.
    (1) Attorneys and agents.
    (2) Others.
    (3) Appearances; communications made with intent to influence.
    (4) Government visits to other premises.
    (5) Elements of ``influence'' and potential controversy required.
    (6) Assistance.
    (7) Project responses not included.
    (c) ``Particular matter involving a specific party or parties''.

[[Page 535]]

    (1) Specific matters vs. policy matters.
    (2) Technical matters.
    (3) Relationship of personal participation to specificity.
    (4) The same particular matter must be involved.
    (5) United States must be a party or have an interest.
    (d) ``Participate personally and substantially''.
    (1) Basic requirements.
    (2) Participation on ancillary matters.
    (3) Role of official responsibility in determining substantial 
participation.
    (e) Agency responsibility in complex cases.
2637.202  Two-year restriction on any former government employee's 
          acting as representative as to a particular matter for which 
          the employee had official responsibility.
    (a) 18 U.S.C. 207(b)(i).
    (b) Official responsibility.
    (1) Definition.
    (2) Determining official responsibility.
    (3) Ancillary matters and official responsibility.
    (4) Knowledge of matter pending required.
    (5) Self-disqualification.
    (c) ``Actually pending.''
    (d) Other essential requirements.
    (e) Measurement of two-year restriction period.
2637.203  Two-year restriction on a former senior employee's assisting 
          in representing as to a matter in which the employee 
          participated personally and substantially.
    (a) 18 U.S.C. 207(b)(ii).
    (b) Limitation to ``representational'' assistance by ``personal 
presence'' at an appearance.
    (c) Managerial and other off-scene assistance.
    (d) Representational assistance.
    (e) Measurement of restriction period.
    (f) Other essential requirements.
    (g) General examples.
2637.204  One-year restriction on a former senior employee's 
          transactions with former agency on a particular matter, 
          regardless of prior involvement.
    (a) 18 U.S.C. 207(c).
    (b) Transactions exempted from 18 U.S.C. 207(c).
    (c) No prior involvement required.
    (d) Specific parties unnecessary.
    (e) Element of controversy or influence required.
    (f) Agency activity or interest in matter.
    (g) Application or proposals for funding of research.
    (h) Personal matters.
    (i) Statements based on special knowledge.
    (j) Measurement of one-year restriction period.
2637.205  Limitation of restrictions of 18 U.S.C. 207(c) to less than 
          the whole of a department or agency.
    (a) Authority.
    (b) Distinctions between 18 U.S.C. 207(e) and 207(d)(1)(C).
    (c) Separate Statutory Components.
    (1) Procedure.
    (2) Standards.
    (3) Effect of designation.
    (d) Separate nonstatutory components.
    (1) Procedure.
    (2) Standards.
    (3) Effect of determination.
2637.206  Exemption for scientific and technological information.
    (a) Exemption.
    (b) Necessary information.
    (c) Intent to influence.
    (d) Expert testimony.
    (e) Agency responsibility for procedures.
2637.207  Exemption for persons with special qualifications in a 
          technical discipline.
    (a) Applicability.
    (b) When appropriate.
    (c) Certification authority.
    (d) Agency registry.
2637.208  Testimony and statements under oath or subject to penalty of 
          perjury.
    (a) Statutory basis.
    (b) Applicability.
    (c) Statements under penalty of perjury.
2637.209  Partners of present or former government employees.
    (a) Scope.
    (b) Imputation.
2637.210  Officials of a state; officials of corporations created by an 
          act of Congress and public international organizations.
2637.211  Senior employee designations.
    (a) Definitions.
    (b) Designation procedures.
    (1) Positions at GS-17 and 18 level, SES and pay grades 0-7 and 0-8.
    (2) Standards for designation and exemption.
    (3) Senior Executive Service.
    (4) ``Rate of pay''.
    (c) Differential designation.
    (d) Fair notice of designation.
    (e) ``Acting'' or temporary positions.
    (f) Special Government Employee.
    (g) Publication.
    (h) Computation of time.
    (i) Position Shifting.
    (j) Revocation of designations.
2637.212  Administrative enforcement proceedings.
    (a) Basic Procedures.
    (1) Delegation.
    (2) Initiation of administative disciplinary hearing.
    (3) Adequate notice.
    (4) Presiding official.
    (5) Time, date and place.
    (6) Hearing rights.
    (7) Burden of proof.
    (8) Hearing decision.
    (9) Administrative sanctions.
    (10) Judicial review.

[[Page 536]]

    (11) Consultation and review.
2637.213  Effective date of restrictions.
    (a) Persons affected.
    (b) Fair notice of substantive changes.
2637.214  Separate statutory agencies: Designations.
2637.215  Separate components of agencies or bureaus: Designations.
2637.216  ``Senior Employee'' designations.



                      Subpart A--General Provisions



Sec. 2637.101  Purpose and policy.

    (a) Authority. Section 401(a) of the Ethics in Government Act of 
1978 (the ``Act''), as amended by Public Law 100-598 (Nov. 3, 1988), 
established the Office of Government Ethics (``OGE'') as a separate 
agency in the executive branch, effective October 1, 1989. (OGE was 
formerly a part of the Office of Personnel Management (``OPM'')). 
Sections 402 (a) and (b) of the Act, as amended, provide that the 
Director of the Office of Goverment Ethics (``the Director'') shall 
provide, in consultation with OPM, overall direction of executive branch 
policies related to preventing conflicts of interest on the part of 
officers and employees of any executive agency as defined in section 105 
of title 5, United State Code, and shall propose, in consultation with 
the Attorney General and OPM, rules and regulations to be promulgated by 
the President or by OGE pertaining to conflicts of interest and ethics 
in the executive branch. The purpose of this part is to issue 
regulations prepared by the Director which give content to the 
restrictions on post employment activity established by title V of the 
Act (18 U.S.C. 207) for administrative enforcement with respect to 
former officers and employees of the executive branch; generally to 
guide agencies in exercising the administrative enforcement authority 
reflected in section 18 U.S.C. 207(j); to set forth the procedures to be 
employed in making certain determinations and designations pursuant to 
the Act; and to provide guidance to individuals who must conform to the 
law. Criminal enforcement of the provisions of 18 U.S.C. 207 remains the 
exclusive responsibility of the Attorney General.
    (b) Consultation with the Attorney General. In proposing these 
regulations, the Director consulted with the Attorney General as to the 
content of regulations governing substantive prohibitions as well as 
other matters. The Attorney General has advised that such regulations 
are consistent with his opinion as to the interpretation of the Act.
    (c) Policy and limitations. These regulations bar certain acts by 
former Government employees which may reasonably give the appearance of 
making unfair use of prior Government employment and affiliations.
    (1) When a former Government employee who has been involved with a 
particular matter decides to act as the representative for another 
person on that matter, such ``switching of sides'' undermines confidence 
in the fairness of proceedings and creates the impression that personal 
influence, gained by Government affiliation, is decisive.
    (2) Similarly, when a former high-level employee assists in 
representing another by personal presence at an appearance before the 
Government regarding a matter which is in dispute, such assistance 
suggests an attempt to use personal influence and the possible unfair 
use of information unavailable to others. Different considerations are 
involved, however, with respect to assistance given as part of customary 
supervisory participation in a project funded by a Government contract 
or grant, since a former employee's knowledge may benefit the project 
and thus the Government, and regular communications with associates may 
properly be regarded as inherent in managerial responsibility. Such 
assistance, when not rendered by personal presence during an appearance, 
is not covered by the statute.
    (3) When a former Senior Employee returns to argue a particular 
matter to the employee's former agency in the period immediately 
following the termination of official employment, it appears that 
Government-based relationships are being used for private ends.
    (4) Former officers and employees may fairly be required to avoid 
such activities in the circumstances specified by statute and in these 
regulations.
    (5) The provisions of 18 U.S.C. 207 do not, however, bar any former 
Government employee, regardless of rank,

[[Page 537]]

from employment with any private or public employer after Government 
service. Nor do they effectively bar employment even on a particular 
matter in which the former Government employee had major official 
involvement except in certain circumstances involving persons engaged in 
professional advocacy. Former Government employees may be fully active 
in high-level supervisory positions whether or not the work is funded by 
the United States and includes matters in which the employee was 
involved while employed by the Government. The statutory provisions are 
not intended to discourage the movement of skilled professionals in 
Government, to and from positions in industry, research institutions, 
law and accounting firms, universities and other major sources of 
expertise. Such a flow of skills can promote efficiency and 
communication between the Government and private activities, and it is 
essential to the success of many Government programs. Instead, only 
certain acts which are detrimental to public confidence in the 
Government are prohibited.
    (6) Departments and agencies have primary responsibility for the 
administrative enforcement of the post employment restrictions found in 
the Act. The Department of Justice may initiate criminal enforcement in 
cases involving aggravated circumstances; agency heads are required to 
report substantiated allegations of violations of 18 U.S.C. 207 to the 
Department of Justice and the Director, OGE. It is essential that title 
V of the Act be enforced so as to advance its objectives, which include 
improvement in government efficiency, equal treatment for equal claims, 
greater public confidence in the integrity of their government, 
elimination of the use of public office for private gain, and securing 
the integrity of the government's policy-making processes. Departments 
and agencies should avoid enforcement actions that do not advance these 
objectives but instead frustrate the Government's ability to employ the 
skilled persons who are needed to make the programs of the Federal 
Government succeed. Special attention should be given to the need to 
preserve the free flow of expertise, especially in scientific, 
technological and other technical areas, from private activities to the 
government.
    (7) The examples contained in these regulations are intended to give 
guidance, but are illustrative, not comprehensive. Each agency may 
provide additional illustration and guidance in its own regulations, 
consistent with that contained herein, in order to address specific 
problems arising in the context of a particular agency's operations.
    (8) Agencies have the responsibility to provide assistance promptly 
to former Government employees who seek advice on specific problems. The 
Office of Government Ethics will provide advice, promptly, upon request, 
to designated agency ethics officials in such situations, but will first 
coordinate with the Department of Justice on unresolved or difficult 
issues.
    (9) These regulations do not supplant restrictions that may be 
contained in laws other than 18 U.S.C. 207 and do not incorporate 
restrictions contained in the code of conduct of a profession of which 
an employee may be a member.

[45 FR 7406, Feb. 1, 1980; 45 FR 9253, Feb. 12, 1980, as amended at 49 
FR 33118, Aug. 21, 1984; 50 FR 1203, Jan. 10, 1985. Redesignated at 54 
FR 50230, Dec. 5, 1989; 55 FR 27179, July 2, 1990; 55 FR 27933, July 6, 
1990]



Sec. 2637.102  Definitions.

    (a) Statutory definitions. The following are defined terms which 
largely repeat portions of the text of the statute. They are set out 
here to permit a simplified presentation of statutory requirements in 
the regulations which follow. Other definitions, which supplement the 
statutory language, are listed in paragraph (b) of this section and are 
set forth in detail in the substantive regulations.
    (1) United States or Government means any department, agency, court, 
court-martial, or any civil, military or naval commission of the United 
States, the District of Columbia, or any officer or employee thereof.
    (2) Agency includes an Executive Department, a Government 
corporation and an independent establishment of the executive branch, 
which includes an independent commission. (See 18 U.S.C. 6.)

[[Page 538]]

    (3) Government Employee includes any officer or employee of the 
Executive Branch (as defined in 18 U.S.C. 202 and, e.g., 5 U.S.C. 2104 
and 2105); those appointed or detailed under 5 U.S.C. 3374, and a 
Special Government Employee, but shall not include an individual 
performing services for the United States as an independent contractor 
under a personal service contract.
    (4) Former Government Employee means one who was, and is no longer, 
a Government employee.
    (5) Special Government Employee means an officer or employee of an 
agency who is retained, designated, appointed, or employed to perform, 
with or without compensation, for not to exceed 130 days during any 
period of three hundred and sixty five consecutive days, temporary 
duties either on a full time or intermittent basis (18 U.S.C. 202).
    (6) Senior Employee means an officer or employee named in, or 
designated by the Director pursuant to, section 207(d) of title 18 
U.S.C. to whom 207(b)(ii) and (c) shall apply (See Sec. 2637.211 of this 
part.)
    (7) Particular Government matter involving a specific party means 
any judicial or other proceeding, application, request for a ruling or 
other determination, contract, claim, controversy, investigation, 
charge, accusation, arrest or other particular matter involving a 
specific party or parties in which the United States is a party or has a 
direct and substantial interest.
    (b) Interpretative definitions. Other terms defined and interpreted 
in the substantive regulations are:
    (1) Acting as Agent or Attorney: (See Sec. 2637.201(b).)
    (2) Actually Pending: (See Sec. 2637.202(c).)
    (3) Communicating with Intent to Influence: (See Sec. 2637.201(b).)
    (4) Direct and Substantial Interest: (See Sec. 2637.204(f).)
    (5) Participate Personally and Substantially: (See 
Sec. 2637.201(d).)
    (6) Particular Matter Involving a Specific Party or Parties: (See 
Sec. 2637.201(c).)
    (7) Particular Matter (without parties): (See Sec. 2637.204(d).)
    (8) Official Responsibility: (See Sec. 2637.202(b).)
    (9) Rate of Pay: (See Sec. 2637.211(b)(4).)



                    Subpart B--Substantive Provisions



Sec. 2637.201  Restrictions on any former Government employee's acting as representative as to a particular matter in which the employee personally and 
          substantially participated.

    (a) Basic prohibition of 18 U.S.C. 207(a). No former Government 
employee, after terminating Government employment, shall knowingly act 
as agent or attorney for, or otherwise represent any other person in any 
formal or informal appearance before, or with the intent to influence, 
make any oral or written communication on behalf of any other person (1) 
to the United States, (2) in connection with any particular Government 
matter involving a specific party, (3) in which matter such employee 
participated personally and substantially as a Government employee.
    (b) Representation: Acting as agent or attorney, or other 
representative in an appearance, or communicating with intent to 
influence--(1) Attorneys and agents. The target of this provision is the 
former employee who participates in a particular matter while employed 
by the Government and later ``switches sides'' by representing another 
person on the same matter.

    [Note: The examples in these regulations do not incorporate the 
special statutory restrictions on Senior Employees, except where the 
terms ``Senior Employee'' or ``Senior'' are expressly used.]

    Example 1: A lawyer in the Department of Justice personally works on 
an antitrust case involving Q Company. After leaving the Department, he 
is asked by Q Company to represent it in that case. He may not do so.

    (2) Others. The statutory prohibition covers any other former 
employee, including managerial and technical personnel, who represents 
another person in an appearance or, by other communication, attempts to 
influence the Government concerning a particular matter in which he or 
she was involved. For example, a former technical employee may not act 
as a manufacturer's promotional or contract representative to the 
Government on a particular matter in which he or she participated. Nor 
could such employee appear as an expert witness against the Government 
in connection with such a

[[Page 539]]

matter. (See Sec. 2637.208 for specific rules relating to expert 
witnesses.)
    (3) Appearances; communications made with intent to influence. An 
appearance occurs when an individual is physically present before the 
United States in either a formal or informal setting or conveys material 
to the United States in connection with a formal proceeding or 
application. A communication is broader than an appearance and includes 
for example, correspondence, or telephone calls.

    Example 1: An appearance occurs when a former employee meets with an 
agency employee personally to discuss a matter; or when he submits a 
brief in an agency administrative proceeding in his own name.
    Example 2: A former employee makes a telephone call to a present 
employee to discuss a particular matter that is not the subject of a 
formal proceeding. She has made a communication.

    (4) Government visits to others premises. Neither a prohibited 
appearance nor communication occurs when a former Government employee 
communicates with a Government employee who, at the instance of the 
United States, visits or is assigned to premises leased to, or owned or 
occupied by, a person other than the United States which are or may be 
used for performance under an actual or proposed contract or grant, when 
such communication concerns work performed or to be performed and occurs 
in the ordinary course of evaluation, administration, or performance of 
the actual or proposed contract or grant.
    (5) Elements of ``influence'' and potential controversy required. 
Communications which do not include an ``intent to influence'' are not 
prohibited. Moreover, acting as agent or attorney in connection with a 
routine request not involving a potential controversy is not prohibited. 
For example, the following are not prohibited: a question by an attorney 
as to the status of a particular matter; a request for publicly 
available documents; or a communication by a former employee, not in 
connection with an adversary proceeding, imparting purely factual 
information. (See also Sec. 2637.204(d) of this part.)

    Example 1: A Government employee, who participated in writing the 
specifications of a contract awarded to Q Company for the design of 
certain education testing programs, joins Q Company and does work under 
the contract. She is asked to accompany a company vice-president to a 
meeting to state the results of a series of trial tests, and does so. No 
violation occurs when she provides the information to her former agency. 
During the meeting a dispute arises as to some terms of the contract, 
and she is called upon to support Q Company's position. She may not do 
so. If she had reason to believe that the contractual dispute would be a 
subject of the meeting, she should not have attended.

    (6) Assistance. A former employee is not prohibited from providing 
in-house assistance in connection with the representation of another 
person.

    Example 1: A Government employee administered a particular contract 
for agricultural research with Q Company. Upon termination of her 
Government employment, she is hired by Q Company. She works on the 
matter covered by the contract, but has no direct contact with the 
Government. At the request of a company vice-president, she prepares a 
paper describing the persons at her former agency who should be 
contacted and what should be said to them in an effort in increase the 
scope of funding of the contract and to resolve favorably a dispute over 
a contract clause. She may do so.

    (7) Project responses not included. In a context not involving a 
potential controversy involving the United States no finding of a 
``intent to influence'' shall be based upon whatever influential effect 
inheres in an attempt to formulate a meritorious proposal or program.

    Example 1: The employee of Q Company in the previous example is 
asked to design an educational testing program, which she does and 
transmits it to the Government. This is not prohibited despite the fact 
that her well-designed program may be inherently influential on a 
question of additional funding under the contract. She may not argue for 
its acceptance.

    (c) ``Particular matter involving a specific party or parties''--(1) 
Specific matters vs. policy matters. The prohibitions of subsections (a) 
and (b) of 18 U.S.C. 207, are based on the former Government employee's 
prior participation in or responsibility for a ``judicial or other 
proceeding, application, request for a ruling or other determination, 
contract, claim, controversy, investigation, charge, accusation, arrest, 
or other particular matter involving a specific party or parties'' in 
which the United States is a party or has a direct and substantial 
interest. Such a matter

[[Page 540]]

typically involves a specific proceeding affecting the legal rights of 
the parties or an isolatable transaction or related set of transactions 
between identifiable parties. Rulemaking, legislation, the formulation 
of general policy, standards or objectives, or other action of general 
application is not such a matter. Therefore, a former Government 
employee may represent another person in connection with a particular 
matter involving a specific party even if rules or policies which he or 
she had a role in establishing are involved in the proceeding.

    Example 1: A Government employee formulated the policy objectives of 
an energy conservation program. He is not restricted from later 
representing a university which seeks a grant or contract for work 
emerging from such a program.
    Example 2: A Government employee reviews and approves a specific 
city's application for Federal assistance for a renewal project. After 
leaving Government service, she may not represent the city in relation 
to that project.
    Example 3: An employee is regularly involved in the formulation of 
policy, procedures and regulations governing departmental procurement 
and acquisition functions. Participation in such activities does not 
restrict the employee after leaving the Government as to particular 
cases involving the application of such policies, procedures, or 
regulations.
    Example 4: An employee of the Office of Management and Budget 
participates substantially on the merits of a decision to reduce the 
funding level of a program, which has the effect of reducing the amount 
of money which certain cities receive to conduct youth work programs. 
After leaving the Government she may represent any of the cities in 
securing funds for its youth program, since her participation was in 
connection with a program, not a particular matter involving specific 
parties.
    Example 5: An agency attorney participates in drafting a standard 
form contract and certain ``standard terms and clauses'' for use in 
future contracts. He is not thereafter barred from representing a person 
in a dispute involving the application of such a ``standard term or 
clause'' in a particular contract in which he did not participate as a 
Government employee.

    (2) Technical matters. In connection with technical work, 
participation in projects generally involving one or more scientific or 
engineering concepts, in feasibility studies, or in proposed programs 
prior to the formulation of a contract will not restrict former 
Government employees with respect to a contract or specific programs 
entered into at a later date.

    Example 1: A Government employee participates significantly in 
formulating the ``mission need'' of a project pursuant to OMB Circular 
No. A-109, and the award of a contract to Z Company, the purpose of 
which is to propose alternative technical approaches. He is not barred, 
after leaving Government service, from representing Q Company which 
later seeks a contract to manufacture one of the systems suggested by 
the Z Company.
    Example 2: A Government employee, who has worked for years on the 
design of a new satellite communications system, joins C Company. Later, 
the Government issues a ``request for proposals'' (``rfp'') to construct 
the new system, which is circulated generally to industry. The employee 
proposes to act as C Company's representative in connection with its 
anticipated proposals for the contract. He may do so. The satellite 
contract became a particular matter when the rfp was being formulated; 
it would ordinarily not become one involving a specific party or parties 
until initial proposals or indications of interest therein by 
contractors were first received. Moreover, if the employee's work for C 
Company were limited to the formulation and communication of a proposal 
in response to the rfp, it would not be prohibited to the extent it 
involved a communication for the purpose of furnishing scientific or 
technological information to the Government, exempt under 18 U.S.C. 
207(f). See Sec. 2637.206 below. (See paragraph (3) below as to a case 
where the employee's own participation may cause a different result.)

    (3) Relationship of personal participation to specificity. In 
certain cases, whether a matter should be treated as a ``particular 
matter involving specific parties'' may depend on the employee's own 
participation in events which give particularity and specificity to the 
matter in question. For example, if a Government employee (i) personally 
participated in that stage of the formulation of a proposed contract 
where significant requirements were discussed and one or more persons 
was identified to perform services thereunder and (ii) actively urged 
that such a contract be awarded, but the contract was actually awarded 
only after the employee left, the contract may nevertheless be a 
particular matter involving a specific party as to such former 
Government employee.

    Example 1: A Government employee advises her agency that it needs 
certain work done

[[Page 541]]

and meets with private firm X to discuss and develop requirements and 
operating procedures. Thereafter, the employee meets with agency 
officials and persuades them of the need for a project along the lines 
discussed with X. She leaves the Government and the project is awarded 
by other employees to firm X. The employee is asked by X to represent it 
on the contract. She may not do so.

    (4) The same particular matter must be involved. The requirement of 
a ``particular matter involving a specific party'' applies both at the 
time that the Government employee acts in an official capacity and at 
the time in question after Government service. The same particular 
matter may continue in another form or in part. In determining whether 
two particular matters are the same, the agency should consider the 
extent to which the matters involve the same basic facts, related 
issues, the same or related parties, time elapsed, the same confidential 
information, and the continuing existence of an important Federal 
interest.

    Example 1: A Government employee was substantially involved in the 
award of a long-term contract to Z Company for the development of 
alternative energy sources. Six years after he terminates Government 
employment, the contract is still in effect, but much of the technology 
has changed as have many of the personnel. The Government proposes to 
award a ``follow on'' contract, involving the same objective, after 
competitive bidding. The employee may represent Q Company in its 
proposals for the follow-on contract, since Q Company's proposed 
contract is a different matter from the contract with Z Company. He may 
also represent Z Company in its efforts to continue as contractor, if 
the agency determines on the basis of facts referred to above, that the 
new contract is significantly different in its particulars from the old. 
The former employee should first consult his agency and request a 
written determination before undertaking any representation in the 
matter.
    Example 2: A Government employee reviewed and approved certain 
wiretap applications. The prosecution of a person overheard during the 
wiretap, although not originally targeted, must be regarded as part of 
the same particular matter as the initial wiretap application. The 
reason is that the validity of the wiretap may be put in issue and many 
of the facts giving rise to the wiretap application would be involved. 
Other examples: See Sec. 2637.201(b)(1), Example 1, and (c), Example 2.

    (5) United States must be a party or have an interest. The 
particular matter must be one in which the United States is a party, 
such as in a judicial or administrative proceeding or a contract, or in 
which it has a direct and substantial interest. The importance of the 
Federal interest in a matter can play a role in determining whether two 
matters are the same particular matter.

    Example 1: An attorney participated in preparing the Government's 
antitrust action against Z Company. After leaving the Government, she 
may not represent Z Company in a private antitrust action brought 
against it by X Company on the same facts involved in the Government 
action. Nor may she represent X Company in that matter. The interest of 
the United States in preventing both inconsistent results and the 
appearance of impropriety in the same factual matter involving the same 
party, Z Company, is direct and substantial. However, if the 
Government's antitrust investigation or case is closed, the United 
States no longer has a direct and substantial interest in the case.
    Example 2: A member of a Government team providing technical 
assistance to a foreign country leaves and seeks to represent a private 
contractor in making arrangements with the Government to perform the 
same service. The proposed new contract may or may not be considered a 
separate matter, depending upon whether the United States has a national 
interest in maintaining the original contract. The agency involved must 
be consulted by the former employee before the representation can be 
undertaken.

    (d) ``Participate personally and substantially''--(1) Basic 
requirements. The restrictions of section 207(a) apply only to those 
matters in which a former Government employee had ``personal and 
substantial participation,'' exercised ``through decision, approval, 
disapproval, recommendation, the rendering of advice, investigation or 
otherwise.'' To participate ``personally'' means directly, and includes 
the participation of a subordinate when actually directed by the former 
Government employee in the matter. ``Substantially,'' means that the 
employee's involvement must be of significance to the matter, or form a 
basis for a reasonable appearance of such significance. It requires more 
than official responsibility, knowledge, perfunctory involvement, or 
involvement on an administrative or peripheral issue. A finding of 
substantiality should be based not only on the effort devoted to a 
matter, but on the importance of the effort. While a series of 
peripheral involvements may be insubstantial, the

[[Page 542]]

single act of approving or participation in a critical step may be 
substantial. It is essential that the participation be related to a 
``particular matter involving a specific party.'' (See paragraph (c) of 
this section.) (See also Sec. 2637.203(f) of this part.)

    Example 1: If an officer personally approves the departmental 
budget, he does not participate substantially in the approval of all 
items contained in the budget. His participation is substantial only in 
those cases where a budget item is actually put in issue. Even then, the 
former Government employee is not disqualified with respect to an item 
if it is a general program rather than a particular matter involving a 
specific party. The former Government employee may, however, have 
official responsibility for such matters. (See Sec. 2637.202(b).)
    Example 2: A Government lawyer is not in charge of, nor has official 
responsibility for a particular case, but is frequently consulted as to 
filings, discovery, and strategy. Such an individual has personally and 
substantially participated in the matter.

    (2) Participation on ancillary matters. An employee's participation 
on subjects not directly involving the substantive merits of a matter 
may not be ``substantial,'' even if it is time-consuming. An employee 
whose responsibility is the review of a matter solely for compliance 
with administrative control or budgetary considerations and who reviews 
a particular matter for such a purpose should not be regarded as having 
participated substantially in the matter, except when such 
considerations also are the subject of the employee's proposed 
representation. (See Sec. 2637.202(b)(3) of this part.) Such an employee 
could theoretically cause a halt in a program for noncompliance with 
standards under his or her jurisdiction, but lacks authority to initiate 
a program or to disapprove it on the basis of its substance.
    (3) Role of official responsibility in determining substantial 
participation. ``Official responsibility'' is defined in 
Sec. 2637.202(b)(1). ``Personal and substantial participation'' is 
different from ``official responsibility.'' One's responsibility may, 
however, play a role in determining the ``substantiality'' of an 
employee's participation. For example, ordinarily an employee's 
forbearance on a matter is not substantial participation. If, however, 
an employee is charged with responsibility for review of a matter and 
action cannot be undertaken over his or her objection, the result may be 
different. If the employee reviews a matter and passes it on, his or her 
participation may be regarded as ``substantial'' even if he or she 
claims merely to have engaged in inaction.
    (e) Agency responsibility in complex cases. In certain complex 
factual cases, the agency with which the former Government employee was 
associated is likely to be in the best position to make a determination 
as to certain issues, for example, the identity or existence of a 
particular matter. Designated agency ethics officials should provide 
advice promptly to former Government employees who make inquiry on any 
matter arising under these regulations.



Sec. 2637.202  Two-year restriction on any former Government employee's acting as representative as to a particular matter for which the employee had official 
          responsibility.

    (a) Basic prohibition of 18 U.S.C. 207(b)(i). No former Government 
employee, within two years after terminating employment by the United 
States, shall knowingly act as agent or attorney for, or otherwise 
represent any other person in any formal or informal appearance before, 
or with the intent to influence, make any oral or written communication 
on behalf of any other person (1) to the United States, (2) in 
connection with any particular Government matter involving a specific 
party (3) if such matter was actually pending under the employee's 
responsibility as an officer or employee within period of one year prior 
to the termination of such responsibility.
    (b) ``Official responsibility''--(1) Definition. ``Official 
responsibility'' is defined in 18 U.S.C. 202 as, ``the direct 
administrative or operating authority, whether intermediate or final, 
and either exercisable alone or with others, and either personally or 
through subordinates, to approve, disapprove, or otherwise direct 
Government actions.''
    (2) Determining official responsibility. Ordinarily, the scope of an 
employee's ``official responsibility'' is determined by those areas 
assigned by statute, regulation, Executive Order, job description or 
delegation of authority. All particular matters under consideration

[[Page 543]]

in an agency are under the ``official responsibility'' of the agency 
head, and each is under that of any intermediate supervisor having 
responsibility for an employee who actually participates in the matter 
within the scope of his or her duties.
    (3) Ancillary matters and official responsibility. 
``Administrative'' authority as used in the foregoing definition means 
authority for planning, organizing and controlling matters rather than 
authority to review or make decisions on ancillary aspects of a matter 
such as the regularity of budgeting procedures, public or community 
relations aspects, or equal employment opportunity considerations. 
Responsibility for such an ancillary consideration does not constitute 
responsibility for the particular matter, except when such a 
consideration is also the subject of the employee's proposed 
representation.

    Example 1: An agency's comptroller would not have official 
responsibility for all programs in the agency, even though she must 
review the budget, and all such programs are contained in the budget.
    Example 2: Within two years after terminating employment, an 
agency's former comptroller is asked to represent Q Company in a dispute 
arising under a contract which was in effect during the comptroller's 
tenure. The dispute concerns an accounting formula, under the contract, 
a matter as to which a subordinate division of the comptroller's office 
was consulted. She may not represent Q Company on this matter.

    (4) Knowledge of matter pending required. In order for a former 
employee to be barred from representing another as to a particular 
matter, he or she need not have known, while employed by the Government, 
that the matter was pending under his or her official responsibility. 
However, the former employee is not subject to the restriction unless at 
the time of the proposed representation of another, he or she knows or 
learns that the matter had been under his or her responsibility. 
Ordinarily, a former employee who is asked to represent another on a 
matter will become aware of facts sufficient to suggest the relationship 
of the prior matter to his or her former agency. If so, he or she is 
under a duty to make further inquiry, including direct contact with an 
agency's designated ethics official where the matter is in doubt.
    (5) Self-disqualification. A former employee cannot avoid the 
restrictions of this section on the ground by self-disqualification with 
respect to a matter for which he or she otherwise had official 
responsibility. However, self-disqualification is effective to eliminate 
the restriction of section 207(a).
    (c) ``Actually pending.'' ``Actually pending'' means that the matter 
was in fact referred to or under consideration by persons within the 
employee's area of responsibility, not that it merely could have been.

    Example 1: A staff lawyer in a department's Office of General 
Counsel is consulted by procurement officers on the correct resolution 
of a contractual matter involving Q Company. The lawyer renders an 
opinion resolving the question. The same legal question arises later in 
several contracts with other companies, but none of the disputes with 
such companies is referred to the Office of the General Counsel. The 
General Counsel has official responsibility for the determination of the 
Q Company matter. The other matters were never ``actually pending'' 
under that responsibility, although as a theoretical matter, such 
responsibility extended to all legal matters within the department.

    (d) Other essential requirements. All other requirements of the 
statute must be met before the restriction on representation applies. 
The same considerations apply in determining the existence of a 
``particular matter involving a specific party,'' a representation in an 
``appearance,'' or ``intent to influence,'' and so forth as set forth 
under Sec. 2637.201 of this part.

    Example 1: During her tenure as head of an agency, an officer's 
subordinates undertook major changes in agency enforcement standards 
involving occupational safety. Eighteen months after terminating 
Government employment, she is asked to represent Z Company which 
believes it is being unfairly treated under the enforcement program. The 
Z Company matter first arose on a complaint filed after the agency head 
terminated her employment. She may represent Z Company because the 
matter pending under her official responsibility was not one involving 
``a specific party.'' (Moreover, the time-period covered by 18 U.S.C. 
207(c) has elapsed.)

    (e) Measurement of two-year restriction period. The statutory two-
year period is measured from the date when the employee's responsibility 
in a particular area ends, not from the termination

[[Page 544]]

of Government service, unless the two occur simultaneously. The 
prohibition applies to all particular matters subject to such 
responsibility in the one-year period before termination of such 
responsibility.

    Example 1: The Director, Import/Export Division of A Agency retires 
after 26 years of service and enters private industry as a consultant. 
He will be restricted for two years with respect to all matters which 
were actually pending under his official responsibility in the year 
before his retirement.
    Example 2: An employee transfers from a position in A Agency to a 
position in B Agency, and she leaves B Agency for private employment 9 
months later. In 15 months she will be free of restriction insofar as 
matters which were pending under her responsibility in A Agency in the 
year before her transfer. She will be restricted for two years in 
respect of B Agency matters which were pending in the year before her 
departure for private employment.



Sec. 2637.203  Two-year restriction on a former senior employee's assisting in representing as to a matter in which the employee participated personally and 
          substantially.

    (a) Basic prohibition of 18 U.S.C. 207(b)(ii). No former Senior 
Employee (see Sec. 2637.102(a)(6)), within two years after terminating 
employment by the United States, shall knowingly represent or aid, 
counsel, advise, consult, or assist in representing any other person by 
personal presence at any formal or informal appearance, (1) before the 
United States, (2) in connection with any particular Government matter 
involving a specific party, (3) in which matter he or she participated 
personally and substantially.
    (b) Limitation to ``representational'' assistance by ``personal 
presence'' at an appearance. Section 207(b)(ii) is limited to assistance 
``in representing'' another person by ``personal presence'' at an 
``appearance'' before the United States. Different in scope from 
sections 207(a) and 207(b)(i), it does not apply to assistance in 
connection with an oral or written communication made with an intent to 
influence which does not involve an appearance. Nor does it bar 
assistance in preparation for either a formal or informal personal 
appearance or an appearance by written submission in a formal proceeding 
where the former employee is not personally present before the 
Government or a Government employee. The provision is designed to 
prevent the former Senior Employee from playing any auxiliary role 
during a negotiation proceeding or similar transaction with the 
Government so that he or she does not appear to be lending personal 
influence to the resolution of a matter and cannot do so in fact.

    Example 1: A former Senior Employee makes suggestions as to the 
content of a letter to be sent to the Government on a matter in which he 
had participated. No violation occurs.

    (c) Managerial and other off-scene assistance. The statute does not 
prohibit a former Senior Employee's advice and assistance to his or her 
organization's representatives which does not involve his or her 
personal presence at an appearance before the Government. The former 
Senior Employee's preparation of documents to be presented in any formal 
or informal proceeding does not constitute personal presence at an 
appearance, even where submission of such a document might technically 
constitute an appearance.

    Example 1: A former Senior Employee attends a hearing on a matter in 
which she had participated personally and substantially while in the 
Government. She speaks with the representative of a private party during 
the hearing. A violation occurs if the former Senior Employee lends 
assistance to the representative in that conversation.
    Example 2: A Senior Justice Department lawyer personally works on an 
antitrust case against Z Company. After leaving the Department, she is 
asked to discuss legal strategy with lawyers representing Z Company on 
that same antitrust case, to write portions of a brief and to direct the 
research of the staff working on the case. Any such aid would not be 
prohibited by the statute, but would likely be prohibited by 
professional disciplinary rules.

    (d) Representational assistance. The statute seeks to prevent a 
former Senior Employee from making unfair use of his or her prior 
governmental position by prohibiting all forms of assistance in the 
representation of another when personally present at an appearance, 
including giving advice as to how the representation in an appearance 
should be conducted, supplying information, participating in drafting 
materials, or dealing with forensic or argumentative matters (such as 
testimony,

[[Page 545]]

methods of persuasion, or strategy of presentation).
    (e) Measurement of restriction period. The statutory two-year period 
is measured from the date of termination of employment in the Senior 
Employee position held by the former employee when he or she 
participated personally and substantially in the matter involved. (cf. 
Sec. 2637.202(e))
    (f) Other Essential Requirements. All conditions of the statutory 
prohibition must be met. Specifically, the former employee, (1) must 
have been a ``Senior Employee,'' (2) who ``participated personally and 
substantially'' (See Sec. 2637.201(d) of this part) in (3) a 
``particular matter involving a specific party.'' (See subpart 
Sec. 2637.201(c) of this part.)
    (g) General Examples:

    Example 1: A Senior Federal Trade Commission Employee, an economist 
by profession, participates in an investigation involving X Company, and 
a proceeding is commenced against X Company based on the investigation. 
After leaving the Commission, he offers to serve as a consultant to the 
lawyers for X Company on certain economic matters involved in the 
proceeding. He attends the proceeding and at the close of each day, 
meets in the lawyers' office to advise them. Such conduct violates the 
statute.
    Example 2: A Senior Employee of the Department of the Treasury 
participates in a number of projects with universities and financial 
research institutions funded by Government grants. After leaving the 
Government, she becomes dean of a graduate school of business which 
performs work under a number of such grants. She may, in the discharge 
of her duties, supervise research and advise as to how funds under such 
a contract should be allocated, whether or not these matters are, as is 
likely, communicated to her former Department by the graduate school's 
representatives. (See Sec. 2637.204.)
    Example 3: A Senior Defense Department official participated 
personally and substantially in a contract award to F Company for 
fighter planes. After leaving the Department, the former official goes 
to work for F Company. Subsequently, F Company desires to renegotiate 
prices and a pension provision on the fighter plane contract, matters in 
which dispute is anticipated. The former official could not attend a 
meeting with Government employees at which such matters will be 
discussed and give assistance to those representing F Company in the 
negotiations. He could generally render advice as long as he remained 
absent from the negotiations.
    Example 4: A Senior Justice Department lawyer participated in an 
antitrust case against Q Company, which is represented by Y law firm. 
Immediately after leaving, the Department, she goes to work with Y law 
firm, and assists at a trial representing Q Company in a different 
antitrust case, not involving the allegations in the Government case. 
Such assistance would not be barred because it does not occur in 
connection with the same particular matter.
    Example 5: A Senior Employee of the Department of Health and Human 
Services leaves to take a university position. The former official's new 
duties include various HHS contracts which the university holds. Some of 
the contracts were awarded by a division within HHS which was under her 
official responsibility. She is not barred from assistance in 
negotiations with respect to such contracts, because the restriction 
applies only to those matters in which she had participated personally 
and substantially, not to those matters for which she had official 
responsibility. Note, however, that any participation by her as a 
representative would be barred by 18 U.S.C. 207(b)(i) as described in 
Sec. 2637.202 of this part. (But see Sec. 2637.204.)
    Example 6: A Senior scientist with the Food and Drug Administration 
was personally and substantially involved in a licensing proceeding 
concerning a specific drug. After leaving the FDA, he is employed by the 
manufacturer of the drug. There he engages in research, indicating that 
the drug is safe and effective, which his employer later presents to FDA 
in connection with the proceeding. He assists during this presentation. 
Such assistance would normally be restricted but may be allowed to the 
extent that the former official is furnishing scientific information to 
the Government. (See 18 U.S.C. 207(f) and Sec. 2637.206 of this part.)
    Example 7: A former Senior Employee of the Federal Communications 
Commission leaves the agency to join a graduate school faculty. In one 
of his courses, which from time to time includes Government employees, 
he discusses, unfavorably to the Commission, a specific licensing case 
in which he was personally and substantially involved. The restriction 
does not apply because the conduct does not occur in connection with any 
representational activities.



Sec. 2637.204  One-year restriction on a former senior employee's transactions with former agency on a particular matter, regardless of prior involvement.

    (a) Basic prohibition of 18 U.S.C. 207(c). For a period of one year 
after terminating employment by the United States, no former Senior 
Employee (other than a special Government employee who serves for fewer 
than sixty

[[Page 546]]

days in a calendar year) shall knowingly act as an agent or attorney 
for, or otherwise represent, anyone in any formal or informal appearance 
before, or with the intent to influence, make any written or oral 
communication on behalf of anyone to (1) his or her former department or 
agency, or any of its officers or employees, (2) in connection with any 
particular Government matter, whether or not involving a specific party, 
which is pending before such department or agency, or in which it has a 
direct and substantial interest.
    (b) Transactions exempted from the basic prohibition of 18 U.S.C. 
207(c). The prohibition set forth above shall not apply to an 
appearance, a communication, or representation by a former Senior 
Employee, who is:
    (1) An elected official of a State or local government, acting on 
behalf of such government, or
    (2) Whose principal occupation or employment is with (i) an agency 
or instrumentality of a State or local government, (ii) an accredited, 
degree-granting institution of higher education, as defined in section 
1201(a) of the Higher Education Act of 1965, or (iii) a hospital or 
medical research organization, exempted and defined under section 
501(c)(3) of the Internal Revenue Code of 1954, and the appearance, 
communication, or representation is on behalf of such government, 
institution, hospital or organization.

    Example 1: A former Senior Employee of the Federal Highway 
Administration is appointed to the position of Secretary of 
Transportation for the State of Kansas. He would not be prohibited from 
transacting business with his former agency concerning new matters on 
behalf of the State. He would, however, be restricted as to 207(a) and 
207(b) matters.
    Example 2: A former Senior Employee of the Department of Housing and 
Urban Development establishes a consulting firm and is engaged by the 
City of Los Angeles to aid it in procuring a particular grant. He may 
not represent Los Angeles before his former Department because his 
``principal occupation or employment'' is not with such city.
    Example 3: A former Senior Employee of the Department of Education 
founds a vocational school for the training of legal paraprofessionals 
and associated staff. He desires to communicate with officials at his 
former Department for the purpose of establishing a program of 
assistance to such institutions. He may not do so, since the vocational 
school is not an ``accredited, degree granting institution of higher 
education.''

    (c) No prior involvement required. The prohibition contained in this 
section applies without regard to whether the former Senior Employee had 
participated in, or had responsibility for, the particular matter and 
includes matters which first arise after the employee leaves Government 
service. The section aims at the possible use of personal influence 
based upon past Governmental affiliations to facilitate the transaction 
of business.
    (d) Specific parties unnecessary. The particular matter in which the 
former Senior Employee proposes to act before his or her former agency 
need not be one ``involving specific parties,'' and thus is not limited 
to disputed proceedings or contracts in which a party has already been 
identified. However, the restriction does not encompass every kind of 
matter, but only a particular one similar to those cited in the 
statutory language, i.e., any judicial or other proceeding, application, 
request for a ruling or determination, contract, claim, controversy, 
investigation, charge, accusation, or arrest. Rulemaking is specifically 
included. Thus such matters as the proposed adoption of a regulation or 
interpretive ruling, or an agency's determination to undertake a 
particular project or to open such a project to competitive bidding are 
covered. Not included are broad technical areas and policy issues and 
conceptual work done before a program has become particularized into one 
or more specific projects. The particular matter must be pending before 
the agency or be one in which the agency has a ``direct and substantial 
interest.''

    (Note: Each post employment activity in the examples in this section 
is assumed to take place within one year of termination of Government 
employment.)

    Example 1: A Senior Employee of the Department of Health and Human 
Services leaves Government employment for private practice, and shortly 
thereafter telephones a former associate urging that the Department (a) 
adopt a new procedure to put a ceiling on hospital costs; (b) not adopt 
a particular rule proposed for drug testing; and (c) oppose a bill 
pending in Congress relating to such drug testing. He is prohibited from 
attempting to influence his former co-worker on any of these matters. 
The first, not yet pending, is of interest to the Department; the second

[[Page 547]]

is pending in the Department; and the third is pending elsewhere, and is 
of interest to the Department. Note that the former Senior Employee may, 
however, communicate the same views to Congress, other agencies, the 
public or the press.
    Example 2: A recently retired Senior Employee of the Department of 
Defense believes that the Department's general emphasis on manned 
aircraft is not in the national interest. After his departure, he may 
continue to argue the point to the Department.

    (e) Element of controversy or influence required. The prohibition on 
acting as a representative or attempting to influence applies to 
situations in which there is an appreciable element of actual or 
potential dispute or an application or submission to obtain Government 
rulings, benefits or approvals, and not to a situation merely involving, 
for example: the transmission or filing of a document that does not 
involve an application for Government benefit, approval or ruling; a 
request for information; purely social or informational communications; 
or those required by law or regulations (in situations other than 
adversary proceedings). Each agency should, after consulting with the 
Director or the Attorney General, as appropriate, give guidance on the 
kinds of applications, filings and other matters which are not 
prohibited by section 207(c).

    Example 1: A former Senior Employee of the Internal Revenue Service 
prepares and mails a client's tax return. This is not a prohibited act. 
Should any controversy arise in connection with the tax return, the 
former employee may not represent the client, but may be called upon to 
state how the return was prepared.
    Example 2: A former Senior Employee of the Securities and Exchange 
Commission prepared and transmitted for filing to the Commission a 
client's annual report on form 10-K. This is not a violation, because 
the 10-K is a disclosure report, not intended to obtain a Government 
benefit or ruling.
    Example 3: A former Senior Employee of the Securities and Exchange 
Commission becomes executive vice-president of a major industrial 
corporation, registered under the Securities Exchange Act of 1934. 
Pursuant to Commission regulations, the officers of the corporation are 
required to sign certain filings on behalf of the corporation, which are 
transmitted to the Commission. The employee may review, concur or 
request changes in, and sign any such filing required to be transmitted 
to the Commission.

    (f) Agency activity or interest in matter. The restriction applies 
to the former employee's contacts with his or her former agency in 
connection with a matter before or of ``direct and substantial 
interest'' to the agency.

    Example 1: A former Senior Employee of the Securities and Exchange 
Commission is asked to represent Z Company in a new matter before the 
Commission, one in which the former employee had no prior involvement. 
He may not do so.
    Example 2: The matter in the foregoing example is referred to the 
Department of Justice for prosecution, and the former employee is asked 
for the first time to represent Z Company in the criminal proceeding. 
The matter is likely to be of direct and substantial interest to the 
Commission. If so, the former employee may not communicate with the 
Commission in the matter. However, the former Senior Employee may 
communicate with the Commission in order to determine whether it asserts 
a direct and substantial interest in the criminal proceeding. In the 
event of a negative answer to the question, the former Senior Employee 
may communicate with the Commission.
    Example 3: In connection with an entirely new matter a former Senior 
Employee of the Securities and Exchange Commission undertakes the 
representation of Z Company in private litigation brought by Q Company, 
(e.g., a private action arising under the Securities Exchange Act of 
1934). Before the suit was commenced, there was no actual expression of 
interest by the Commission in the matter. As the litigation develops, an 
important question of statutory interpretation is raised, and the 
Commission files a brief as amicus curiae (friend of the court). The 
former Senior Employee may respond to the brief and need not withdraw 
from representation of Z Company, but he may not otherwise communicate 
with the Commission in the matter. If the Commission were to commence a 
proceeding or investigation again, Z Company on the basis of the same 
facts involved in the private litigation, the former employee could 
continue his representation in the private litigation, but could not 
represent Z Company in the Commission's proceeding until after the 
expiration of one year from the termination of his employment with the 
Commission.

[Note: Where an agency becomes a party to a proceeding subsequent to its 
commencement, the question whether a former Senior Employee may continue 
representation should ordinarily be decided by the court on a motion for 
disqualification in the particular circumstances.]

    Example 4: In connection with a new matter, a former Senior Employee 
of the Federal Food and Drug Administration, since retired

[[Page 548]]

to private law practice, is asked to consult and assist in the 
preparation of briefs to be filed with the Administration on a new 
particular matter. He may do so, but he should not sign briefs or other 
communications or take any other action that might constitute an 
appearance.

    (g) Application or proposals for funding of research. In connection 
with any application or proposal for Government funding of research, the 
restrictions of this section do not prevent a former Senior Employee 
from assuming responsibility for the direction or conduct of such 
research and from providing scientific or technological information to 
the Senior Employee's former agency regarding such research. The former 
Senior Employee may not, however, submit the application on behalf of 
the applicant or argue for its approval or funding by the agency.

    Example 1: A former Senior Employee of the National Institute of 
Health (NIH), employed by a non-exempt research institute, prepares an 
application to NIH for a research contract. The application is submitted 
to NIH by the institute and lists the Senior Employee as principal 
investigator. The Senior Employee does not violate 18 U.S.C. 207(c) by 
preparing the application or by being listed as principal investigator, 
since these are not representational activities. He may also sign an 
assurance to NIH, as part of the application, that he will be 
responsible for the scientific and technical direction and conduct of 
the project if an award is made. He may also communicate with NIH to 
provide scientific or technical information on the application, 
including presentation to NIH personnel at the research site, so long as 
he does not argue for approval or funding of the application.

    (h) Personal matters. Unlike the provisions of subsections 207(a) 
and (b) the restrictions of this section apply when the former Senior 
Employee seeks to represent himself or herself. However, they do not 
apply to appearances or communications concerning matters of a personal 
and individual nature, such as personal income taxes, pension benefits, 
or the application of any provision of these regulations to an 
undertaking proposed by a Senior Employee. (See 18 U.S.C. 207(i).) A 
former Senior Employee may also appear pro se (on his or her own behalf) 
in any litigation or administrative proceeding, involving the 
individual's former agency. The former employee may not contact his or 
her former agency in order to secure an item of business, except for (1) 
discussions in contemplation of being employed by the agency as a 
consultant or otherwise; or (2) a proposal to furnish scientific or 
technological information to the Government.

    Example 1: Any former Government Employee may contact his or her 
former agency to seek information or determinations as to matters in 
question under these regulations or under 18 U.S.C. 207, such as whether 
a particular matter is considered to have been under the employee's 
official responsibility, whether a matter is one in which the agency 
asserts a direct and substantial interest, or whether a current matter 
is considered to be the same as that in which the employee had been 
involved.

    (i) Statements based on special knowledge. The restrictions of the 
section do not prevent a former Senior Employee from making or providing 
a statement, which is based on the former Senior Employee's own special 
knowledge in the particular area that is the subject matter of the 
statement, provided that no compensation is thereby received, other than 
that regularly provided by law or regulation for witnesses. (See 18 
U.S.C. 207(i).)

    Example 1: A former Senior Employee may make any statement of his 
own views to his former agency on any subject matter in which he has no 
substantial pecuniary interests, acting on his own behalf.
    Example 2: A former Senior Employee is called by his successor at 
the agency for the purpose of eliciting some information on a matter in 
which he had been involved in an official capacity. His response is not 
prohibited.
    Example 3: A former Senior Employee may recommend an individual to 
her former agency for employment, based on her own personal knowledge of 
the individual's qualifications and character.

    (j) Measurement of one-year restriction period. The statutory one-
year period is measured from the date when the individual's 
responsibility as a Senior Employee in a particular agency ends, not 
from the termination of Government service, unless the two occur 
simultaneously. (See Sec. 2637.202(e).)



Sec. 2637.205  Limitation of restrictions of 18 U.S.C. 207(c) to less than that whole of a department or agency.

    (a) Authority. There are two methods by which the application of the 
one-year ``cooling-off'' prohibition of 18

[[Page 549]]

U.S.C. 207(c) may be limited to less than the entirety of a department 
or agency. First, 18 U.S.C. 207(e) provides that the Director may by 
rule designate as ``separate'' a statutory agency or bureau which 
exercises functions that are distinct and separate from the remaining 
functions of the parent department or agency of which it is part. (see 
Sec. 2637.214) Second, under the provisions of 18 U.S.C. 207(d)(1)(C), 
the Director may restrict the application of the prohibition as to a 
former employee (other than one who served in an Executive Level 
position or at a uniformed service grade level of 0-9 and above) insofar 
as it affects his or her communications with persons in an unrelated 
agency or bureau within his former parent department or agency which has 
separate and distinct subject matter jurisdiction from the agency or 
bureau in which he or she served. (see Sec. 2637.215)
    (b) Distinctions between the 18 U.S.C. 207(e) and 207(d)(1)(C) 
provisions. (1) The authority granted by 18 U.S.C. 207(e) is applicable 
solely to a separate statutory agency or bureau, that is, one created by 
statute or the functions of which are expressly referred to by statute 
in such a way that is appears that Congress intended that its functions 
were to be separable. A determination made under this 18 U.S.C. 207(e) 
does not, however, benefit former heads of the separate statutory agency 
or bureau. Such a determination does, however, work to the benefit of 
other employees at Executive Level or at uniformed service grade level 
of 0-9 or above.
    (2) The determination made pursuant to section 207(d)(1)(C) is 
intended to provide similar recognition of separability where the 
subordinate agency or bureau has been administratively created. A 
determination of such separability does inure to the benefit of the head 
of the separate component if he is a Senior Employee designated by the 
Director. However, the determination is not beneficial to persons, 
including the head of a separate component, in positions at Executive 
Level or serving at uniformed service grade level of 0-9 above.
    (c) Separate Statutory Components--(1) Procedure. Each agency shall 
notify the Director, in writing, of any separate statutory agency or 
bureau which it desires to submit for such designation under 18 U.S.C. 
207(e), providing:
    (i) A description of the functions of the agency or bureau, 
indicating the basis on which such functions are claimed to be distinct 
and separate from the parent organization;
    (ii) The separate statutory basis of the agency or bureau; and
    (iii) Identification of those positions in the parent agency with 
official responsibility for supervision of such separate statutory 
agency or bureau.
    (2) Standards. A parent agency may propose as a ``separate'' 
statutory agency an agency or bureau (i) created specifically by 
statute, (ii) the functions of which are expressly referred to by 
statute in such a way as to indicate that a separate component was 
intended or (iii) which is the successor to either of the foregoing; but 
a decision as to the sufficiency of the statutory authority as well as 
the separability of functions shall be reserved to the Director, OGE.
    (3) Effect of designation. If a subordinate part of an agency is 
designated as ``separate'' by the Director, then Senior Employees of 
such separate agency and those of the parent agency are not subject to 
the restrictions of section 207(c) as to each others' agencies--except 
that the prohibition of section 207(c) remains applicable to the former 
head of a ``separate'' subordinate agency and to former Senior Employees 
of the parent agency whose official responsibility included supervision 
of the subordinate agency.

    Example 1: A former Senior Employee of the Product Agency in 
Executive Department leaves and joins a law firm which represents Q 
Corporation. Product Agency has been designated by the Director as 
separate from Executive Department. The former employee is not 
restricted from representing the Q Corporation on a new matter before 
the Executive Department.

    (d) Separate Nonstatutory Components--(1) Procedure. Each agency may 
notify the Director, in writing, of a component agency, bureau or office 
having separate and distinct subject matter jurisdiction which it 
desires to submit for designation under 18 U.S.C. 207(d)(1)(C), 
providing:

[[Page 550]]

    (i) A description of the subject matter jurisdiction of such 
component, indicating the basis on which such jurisdiction is claimed to 
be separate and distinct from certain other agencies, bureaus and 
offices of the parent agency;
    (ii) A description of the nature of the connections and interactions 
between such component and certain other agencies, bureaus or offices of 
the parent agency indicating the basis on which the component is claimed 
to be unrelated;
    (iii) A statement of the basis on which it is claimed that no 
potential exists for use by former Senior Employees of such component of 
undue influence or unfair advantage with respect to the named other 
agencies, bureaus or offices of the parent agency, based on past 
Government service; and
    (iv) Identification of those organizational units of the parent 
agency having administrative or operational authority over such 
component agency, bureau or office.
    (2) Standards. (i) A parent agency may propose as ``separate'' from 
other parts of a department or agency any agency or bureau having 
subject matter jurisdiction separate and distinct from one or more other 
portions of the department or agency accompanied by a showing that there 
would be no potential for use of undue influence or unfair advantage 
based upon past Government service if a former employee of one such 
subordinate agency or bureau communicated with employees of such other 
portions of the department or agency.
    (ii) A determination under this section rests solely with the 
Director, OGE, and is available only for those subordinate components 
which would, but for the lack of a statutory basis, qualify for separate 
agency treatment under 18 U.S.C. 207(e).
    (iii) Where one component has supervisory authority over another, 
the two components may not be considered separate and distinct for 
purposes of this section.
    (iv) The requirement of ``separate and distinct subject matter 
jurisdiction'' may be met in at least two ways. First, the substantive 
areas of coverage may be distinct. For example, an office or bureau 
within the parent agency may handle only maritime matters. Second, the 
regional area of coverage may be different. For example, one regional 
office may, on appropriate facts, be considered separate and distinct 
from other regional offices and from the parent agency--except for the 
bureau or office in the parent agency which is responsible for its 
supervision.
    (v) It is necessary to specify the ``unrelated agency or bureau 
within the same department or agency'' as to which it is recommended 
that post employment communication be permitted. For example, one bureau 
may involve a subject matter distinct from some, but not all, parts of 
the parent department. Attempts to fractionalize a department could, 
however, become deeply complicated and involve difficult judgments and 
fact-finding. OGE will not usually act on such cases, and submissions 
should be confined to relatively clear cases.
    (3) Effect of determination. If a component agency, bureau or office 
is determined to be separate by the Director, then Senior Employees of 
such component are not subject to the restrictions of 18 U.S.C. 207(c) 
and Sec. 2637.204 as to the remaining agencies, bureaus or offices of 
the parent agency (except certain such agencies, bureaus or offices as 
specified in Sec. 2637.215)--except that the prohibition of section 
207(c) and Sec. 2637.204 shall remain applicable (i) to those former 
Senior Employees of such component who served in positions designated by 
18 U.S.C. 207(d)(1)(A) and (B) and (ii) to former Senior Employees of 
such component with respect to the parent agency (as defined in 
Sec. 2637.205(e)). Such limited application of 18 U.S.C. 207(c) may be 
available for the head of a separate component, unlike the limitation of 
18 U.S.C. 207(e), as determined by the Director.

    Example 1: In the Department of Justice, while the Antitrust 
Division may be ``separate'' from other Divisions, it is not separate 
from the immediate office of the Attorney General.

[[Page 551]]



Sec. 2637.206  Exemption for scientific and technological information.

    (a) Exemption. The making of communications solely for the purpose 
of furnishing scientific or technological information pursuant to agency 
procedures is exempt from all prohibitions and restrictions set forth in 
Secs. 2637.201--2637.204 of these regulations (subsections (a), (b), and 
(c) of 18 U.S.C. 207). This exemption allows the free exchange of such 
information regardless of a former Government employee's prior 
participation in or responsibility for the matter. The former Senior 
Employee should not argue for the acceptance of a proposal. The 
exemption is not limited to communications constituting the furnishing 
of information, but includes those ``for the purpose of'' doing so. No 
violation occurs when, for example, a former Government employee working 
on a project makes contact to determine the kind and form of information 
required, or the adequacy of information already supplied, so long as 
agency procedures are satisfied.

    Example 1: A project manager, regardless of prior involvement in a 
particular matter, may contact the Government to determine deficiencies 
in system design or performance, furnish scientific or technological 
information relating to a solution or approach to a problem, seek 
related information from the Government; advise and supervise others who 
are involved as to such matters; and meet with Government technical 
experts for such purpose; provided in each case that there is compliance 
with such agency regulations as have been issued.

    (b) Necessary information. Scientific and technological information 
includes feasibility, risk, cost, and speed of implementation, when 
necessary to appreciate fairly the practical significance of the 
information. The Government may and should be fully informed of the 
significance of scientific and technological alternatives.
    (c) Intent to influence. The furnishing of meritorious or convincing 
scientific or technological proposals does not constitute an intent to 
influence. (See Sec. 2637.201(b)(7) of this part.)
    (d) Expert testimony. This exemption does not include testimony as 
an ``expert'' in adversary proceedings in a matter in which the United 
States is involved or has an interest. Such testimony is governed by 
regulations set forth in Sec. 2637.208. As to assistance as an expert or 
consultant, see Sec. 2637.203(g), Example 7.
    (e) Agency responsibility for procedures. The primary responsibility 
for developing procedures to guide activity under this exemption lies 
with each agency, so that such procedures comport with the particular 
characteristics of agency programs and needs. Such procedures will be 
reviewed periodically by the Director. In promulgating procedures, an 
agency may take into consideration: Limiting communications to certain 
formats which are least conducive to the use of personal influence; 
segregating, to the extent possible, meetings and presentations 
involving matters of technical substance from those involving other 
aspects of the relationship; requiring that the designated agency ethics 
official be informed of instances where the exemption is used; or 
employing more restrictive practices in circumstances involving either 
immediate competition for contracts or applications for grants than in 
those involving an ongoing project.



Sec. 2637.207  Exemption for persons with special qualification in a technical discipline.

    (a) Applicability. A former Government employee may be exempted from 
the restrictions on post employment practices if the head of the agency 
concerned with the particular matter, in consultation with the Director, 
executes a certification published in the Federal Register that such 
former Government employee has outstanding qualifications in a 
scientific, technological, or other technical discipline; is acting with 
respect to a particular matter which requires such qualifications; and 
that the national interest would be served by such former Government 
employee's participation.
    (b) When appropriate. This exemption should generally be utilized 
only where the former Government employee's involvement is needed on so 
continuous and comprehensive a basis that compliance with the procedures 
adopted for the communication of technical information (see 
Sec. 2637.206), or other actions

[[Page 552]]

to isolate the former Government employee from other aspects of the 
matter, would be burdensome and impractical.
    (c) Certification authority. Certification should take place at no 
lower level than the head of the agency, the deputy thereof, or in the 
absence of both, the acting agency head. Consultation with the Director 
shall precede any certification. The exemption takes place upon the 
execution of the certification, provided that it is transmitted to the 
Federal Register for publication.
    (d) Agency registry. An agency may establish a registry for current 
employees, wherein the nature of their qualifications in one or more 
technical fields is certified after review by a supervisor, as a basis 
for establishing such qualifications in connection with, and to 
expedite, a later request for certification, should the necessity for 
such request arise.



Sec. 2637.208  Testimony and statements under oath or subject to penalty of perjury.

    (a) Statutory basis. Section 207(h) provides:

    ``Nothing in this section shall prevent a former officer or employee 
from giving testimony under oath, or from making statements required to 
be made under penalty of perjury.''

    (b) Applicability. A former Government employee may testify before 
any court, board, commission, or legislative body with respect to 
matters of fact within the personal knowledge of the former Government 
employee. This provision does not, however, allow a former Government 
employee, otherwise barred under 18 U.S.C. 207 (a), (b), or (c) to 
testify on behalf of another as an expert witness except: (1) To the 
extent that the former employee may testify from personal knowledge as 
to occurrences which are relevant to the issues in the proceeding, 
including those in which the former Government employee participated, 
utilizing his or her expertise, or (2) in any proceeding where it is 
determined that another expert in the field cannot practically be 
obtained; that it is impracticable for the facts or opinions on the same 
subject to be obtained by other means, and that the former Government 
employee's testimony is required in the interest of justice.
    (c) Statements under penalty of perjury. A former Government 
employee may make any statement required to be made under penalty of 
perjury, such as those required in registration statements for 
securities, tax returns, or security clearances. The exception does not, 
however, permit a former employee to submit pleadings, applications, or 
other documents in a representational capacity on behalf of another 
merely because the attorney or other representative must sign the 
documents under oath or penalty of perjury.



Sec. 2637.209  Partners of present or former Government employees.

    (a) Scope. Section 207(g) of 18 U.S.C. prohibits a partner of a 
current Government employee from acting as agent or attorney before the 
United States in a particular Government matter in which such Government 
employee participates, or did participate, personally and substantially. 
To the extent such section involves the activities of current Government 
employees and their partners, it is beyond the scope of these 
regulations.
    (b) Imputation. Neither the Act nor these regulations impute the 
restrictions on former employees to partners or associates of such 
employees. Imputation of the restrictions of sections 207 (b)(ii) and 
(c) to partners of former employees would be inappropriate for the 
additional reason that section 207(b)(ii) itself restricts secondary-
level activity, and section 207(c) is directed at the exercise of 
influence personal to the former Senior Employee.



Sec. 2637.210  Officials of a State; officials of corporations created by an Act of Congress and public international organizations.

    For purposes of sections 207 (a), (b) and (c) of title 18 U.S.C.:
    (a) An official whose powers are established by the constitution of 
any State of the United States does not act on behalf of ``any other 
person'' or ``anyone'' when acting in his or her official capacity, but 
rather constitutes the official authority of the State; and

[[Page 553]]

    (b) A former employee does not engage in unlawful activity when he 
or she acts on behalf of (1) a corporation specifically created by an 
Act of Congress if any of its directors is currently appointed by the 
United States; or (2) any public international organization if he or she 
serves by nomination or request of the United States or on temporary 
assignment from any agency.



Sec. 2637.211  Standards and procedures for designating senior employee positions pursuant to 18 U.S.C. 207(d).

    (a) Definitions. As used in these regulations, Senior Employee 
refers to any person specified in or designated pursuant to 18 U.S.C. 
207(d)(1); that is, employed by the United States:
    (1) At a rate of pay specified or fixed according to subchapter II 
of chapter 53 of title 5, U.S.C., generally known as ``Executive 
Level;'' or
    (2) On active duty as a commissioned officer of a uniformed service 
in a pay grade of 0-9 or above as described in 37 U.S.C. 201; or
    (3) In a position in any pay system for which the basic rate of pay 
is equal to or greater than that for GS-17 as prescribed by 5 U.S.C. 
5332 or positions which are established within the Senior Executive 
Service (SES) pursuant to the Civil Service Reform Act of 1978, or 
positions of active duty commissioned officers of the uniformed services 
assigned to pay grade 0-7 and 0-8, as described in 37 U.S.C. 201, and 
who has significant decision-making or supervisory responsibilities, as 
designated by the Director, pursuant to paragraph (b) of this section.
    (b) Designation procedures. The following procedures will be 
followed in designation of Senior Employee positions pursuant to 18 
U.S.C. 207(d)(1)(C):
    (1) Positions at GS-17 and 18 level, Senior Executive Service, and 
pay grades 0-7 and 0-8 of the uniformed services. The following are 
designated effective February 28, 1980, unless exempted as provided in 
paragraph (b)(2) of this section: All positions classified at GS-17 or 
above in the General Schedule; those in any other pay system, the rate 
of pay for which is at least that of grade GS-17; those in the Senior 
Executive Service; and those active duty uniformed service officers 
serving in pay grades 0-7 and 0-8. Each agency head shall submit to the 
Director, by May 15, 1979 and on every May 15 thereafter, a report 
consisting of: (i) a description of all positions as set forth in this 
paragraph; (ii) the agency's recommendation as to those positions that 
should not be designated, based on standards established in these 
regulations or any other reason; and (iii) the basis and reasons for 
each such recommendation. After making such additional inquiries as 
appear desirable, the Director will determine which positions should be 
exempt. Notwithstanding the foregoing, the effective date for Executive 
Level positions, whether or not included in the Senior Executive 
Service, is July 1, 1979.
    (2) Standards for designation and exemption. Positions, or classes 
of positions, which do not have significant decision-making or 
supervisory responsibility will be exempted from designation. Initial 
exemptions will be retroactive. Classes of positions which may be 
considered for exemption are those in which decision-making 
responsibility does not regularly extend to major policy issues within 
the agency or in which supervisory responsibility extends to less than 
all of a directorate, bureau or department which has major policy or 
operational responsibility. The foregoing may include, without 
limitation, special assistants, technical and professional advisors to 
persons who make policy decisions, those involved primarily in research 
and technical work, and administrative law judges.
    (3) Senior Executive Service. The establishment of positions within 
the Senior Executive Service pursuant to the Civil Service Reform Act of 
1978 is the responsibility of the Office of Personnel Management. The 
choice of an individual to enter or not to enter the Senior Executive 
Service is not a relevant factor in the designation under these 
regulations of a position held by such person.
    (4) ``Rate of pay.'' As used in the definition of Senior Employee, 
the ``rate of pay'' is that specified by or pursuant to law without 
regard to the ceiling limitations of section 5308 or section 5373 of 
title 5 U.S.C.; except that an individual

[[Page 554]]

in an executive level or GS-17 or 18 position is deemed to be employed 
at the rate of pay specified for that position. Increases in pay due to 
``steps'' are not considered in determining pay grade or level.
    (c) Differential designation. Where appropriate, the Director may 
designate positions for purposes of 18 U.S.C. 207(c) without designating 
the positions for purposes of 18 U.S.C. 207(b)(ii).

    Example 1: It may be determined that a given position or class of 
positions will be restricted as to contact in the first post employment 
year, but not as to assisting in representation.

    (d) Fair notice of designation. No Senior Employee designation made 
pursuant to 18 U.S.C. 207(d)(1)(C) will be effective until the last day 
of the fifth full calendar month after the first publication of a notice 
by the Director of intention to designate; except as indicated in 
paragraph (i) of this section, and as to a person first occupying the 
position after such notice is published. The designation in paragraph 
(b)(1) of this section and the comparable designation in the interim 
regulations of April 3, 1979 (44 FR 19974) constitutes notice.
    (e) ``Acting'' or temporary positions. An individual may serve in a 
position designated pursuant to 18 U.S.C. 207(d) for up to 60 days in an 
``acting'' or temporary capacity without being subject to those 
restrictions which specially apply to such positions, unless such 
individual (1) was transferred or detailed from another designated 
position, or (2) without a significant break in continuity, is named 
permanently to such position.
    (f) Special Government Employee. A Special Government Employee who 
serves on 60 days or less in a given calendar year may serve in a 
designated position without being subject to the restrictions which 
specially apply to such position. A Special Government Employee is 
deemed to serve only on those days actually engaged in work for the 
Government under his or her Special Government Employee arrangement.
    (g) Publication. Positions designated by the Director pursuant to 18 
U.S.C. 207(d)(1)(C) and not exempted will be published in the Federal 
Register.
    (h) Computation of time. An individual who transfers from a 
designated position to one that is not designated shall compute the 
commencement of the time periods contained in 18 U.S.C. 207 (b)(ii) and 
(c) from the time of such transfer, except as indicated in paragraph (i) 
of this section. (See Sec. 2637.202(e).)
    (i) Position shifting. In any case where a person transfers from a 
designated position to one that is not, the agency head shall within one 
month transmit to the Director a report reciting the functions of each 
position, the reason for the transfer, and the identities of the prior 
holder of the position assumed and the successor, if any, to the 
position departed. If the Director designates the newly assumed position 
pursuant to section 207(d)(1)(C) of title 18 U.S.C., such designation 
shall be effective retroactively to the date of transfer notwithstanding 
paragraph (d) of this section.
    (j) Revocation of Designations. In the event the Director determines 
that a position previously designated should not have been, the 
designation will be revoked. Except for designations made under 
paragraph (i) of this section, the revocation may be made retroactive if 
the initial designation is determined to have been erroneous or if there 
is a change in standards for designation applicable to the position. 
Retroactive effect will not be given where the basis for revocation is a 
change in the functions or importance of a position.



Sec. 2637.212  Administrative enforcement proceedings.

    (a) Basic procedures. The following basic guidelines for 
administrative enforcement of restrictions on post employment activities 
are designed to expedite consultation with the Director as required 
pursuant to section 207(j) of title 18 U.S.C.
    (1) Delegation. The head of an agency may delegate his or her 
authority under this subpart.
    (2) Initiation of administrative disciplinary hearing. (i) On 
receipt of information regarding a possible violation of 18 U.S.C. 207, 
and after determining that such information appears substantiated, the 
agency head shall expeditiously provide such information, along

[[Page 555]]

with any comments or agency regulations, to the Director and to the 
Criminal Division, Department of Justice. The agency should coordinate 
any investigation on administrative action with the Department of 
Justice to avoid prejudicing criminal proceedings, unless the Department 
of Justice communicates to the Agency that it does not intend to 
initiate criminal prosecution.
    (ii) Whenever an agency has determined after appropriate review that 
there is reasonable cause to believe that a former Government employee 
has violated any of these regulations or 18 U.S.C. 207(a), (b), or (c), 
it may initiate an administrative disciplinary proceeding by providing 
the former Government employee with notice as defined in paragraph 
(a)(3) of this section. Agencies may establish procedures to protect the 
privacy of former employees as to allegations made prior to a 
determination of sufficient cause to initiate an administrative 
disciplinary hearing.
    (3) Adequate notice. (i) An agency must provide a former Government 
employee with adequate notice of an intention to institute a proceeding 
and an opportunity for a hearing.
    (ii) Notice to the former Government employee must include:
    (A) A statement of allegations (and the basis thereof) sufficiently 
detailed to enable the former Government employee to prepare an adequate 
defense;
    (B) Notification of the right to a hearing; and
    (C) An explanation of the method by which a hearing may be 
requested.
    (4) Presiding official. (i) The presiding official at proceedings 
under this subpart shall be the agency head or an individual to whom the 
agency head has delegated authority to make an initial decision 
(hereinafter referred to as ``examiner'').
    (ii) Appropriate qualifications shall be established for examiners.
    (iii) An examiner shall be impartial. No individual who has 
participated in any manner in the decision to initiate the proceedings 
may serve as an examiner in those proceedings.
    (5) Time, date and place. (i) The hearing shall be conducted at a 
reasonable time, date, and place.
    (ii) In setting a hearing date, the presiding official shall give 
due regard to the former Government employee's need for:
    (A) Adequate time to prepare a defense properly, and
    (B) An expeditious resolution of allegations that may be damaging to 
his or her reputation.
    (6) Hearing rights. A hearing shall include, at a minimum, the 
following rights:
    (i) To represent oneself or to be represented by counsel,
    (ii) To introduce and examine witnesses and to submit physical 
evidence,
    (iii) To confront and cross-examine adverse witnesses,
    (iv) To present oral argument, and
    (v) To receive a transcript or recording of the proceedings, on 
request.
    (7) Burden of proof. In any hearing under this subpart, the agency 
has the burden of proof and must establish substantial evidence of a 
violation.
    (8) Hearing decision. (i) The presiding official shall make a 
determination exclusively on matters of record in the proceeding, and 
shall set forth in the decision all findings of fact and conclusions of 
law relevant to the matters at issue.
    (ii) Within a reasonable period of the date of an initial decision, 
as set by the agency, either party may appeal the decision to the agency 
head. The agency head shall base his or her decision on such appeal 
solely on the record of the proceedings or those portions thereof cited 
by the parties to limit the issues.
    (iii) If the agency head modifies or reverses the initial decision, 
he or she shall specify such findings of fact and conclusions of law as 
are different from those of the hearing examiner.
    (9) Administrative sanctions. The agency head may take appropriate 
action in the case of any individual who was found in violation of 18 
U.S.C. 207 (a), (b), or (c) of these regulations after a final 
administrative decision or who failed to request a hearing after 
receiving adequate notice, by:
    (i) Prohibiting the individual from making, on behalf of any other 
person except the United States, any formal or informal appearance 
before, or, with the intent to influence, any oral or

[[Page 556]]

written communication to, such department or agency on any matter of 
business for a period not to exceed five years, which may be 
accomplished by directing agency employees to refuse to participate in 
any such appearance or to accept any such communication; or
    (ii) Taking other appropriate disciplinary action.
    (10) Judicial review. Any person found to have participated in a 
violation of 18 U.S.C. 207 (a), (b), or (c) of these regulations may 
seek judicial review of the administrative determination.
    (11) Consultation and review. Each agency shall submit a copy of its 
procedures for administrative enforcement to the Director.



Sec. 2637.213  Effective date of restrictions.

    (a) Persons affected. Any person who holds a Government position 
after June 30, 1979, becomes subject to any additional restrictions 
relating to the holder of that position contained in the amendments to 
18 U.S.C. 207 as set forth in these regulations. Restrictions which 
depend on the designation of a position by the Director shall become 
applicable on the date such designation becomes effective.
    (b) Fair notice of substantive changes. No change in the substance 
of these regulations shall become effective with respect to a Government 
employee who is adversely affected by such change until and unless such 
employee remains in a position to which such change is applicable for a 
period of five months following the first publication of a regulation in 
final form, reflecting or prescribing such change, or unless such 
employee accepts such a position after the publication.



Sec. 2637.214  Separate statutory agencies: Designations.

    Note: Part 2637 provides guidance concerning the prior version of 18 
U.S.C. 207 (1988) as it continues to apply to individuals who terminated 
Government service (or a ``Senior'' Government position) before January 
1, 1991. However, since no former ``Senior Employee'' who terminated 
service before that date could any longer be subject to the one-year 
restriction of section 207(c) of 18 U.S.C. as it existed prior to its 
amendment by the Ethics Reform Act of 1989, the listing of separate 
statutory agencies that previously appeared in Sec. 2637.214 has been 
deleted.

[57 FR 62468, Dec. 31, 1992]



Sec. 2637.215  Separate components of agencies or bureaus: Designations.

    Note: Part 2637 provides guidance concerning the prior version of 18 
U.S.C. 207 (1988) as it continues to apply to individuals who terminated 
Government service (or a ``Senior'' Government position) before January 
1, 1991. However, since no former ``Senior Employee'' who terminated 
service before that date could any longer be subject to the one-year 
restriction of section 207(c) of 18 U.S.C. as it existed prior to its 
amendment by the Ethics Reform Act of 1989, the listing of separate 
components that previously appeared in Sec. 2637.215 has been deleted.

[57 FR 62468, Dec. 31, 1992]



Sec. 2637.216  ``Senior Employee'' designations.

    Note: Part 2637 provides guidance concerning the prior version of 18 
U.S.C. 207 (1988) as it continues to apply to individuals who terminated 
Government service (or a ``Senior'' Government position) before January 
1, 1991. However, since no former ``Senior Employee'' who terminated 
service before that date could any longer be subject to either the two-
year restriction of section 207(b)(ii) or the one-year restriction of 
section 207(c) of 18 U.S.C. as they existed prior to their amendment by 
the Ethics Reform Act of 1989, the listing of ``Senior Employee'' 
positions that previously appeared in Sec. 2637.216 has been deleted.

[57 FR 62468, Dec. 31, 1992]



PART 2638--OFFICE OF GOVERNMENT ETHICS AND EXECUTIVE AGENCY ETHICS PROGRAM RESPONSIBILITIES--Table of Contents




                      Subpart A--General Provisions

Sec.
2638.101  Authority and purpose.
2638.102  General policies.
2638.103  Agency regulations.
2638.104  Definitions.

              Subpart B--Designated Agency Ethics Official

2638.201  In general.
2638.202  Responsibility of agency head.
2638.203  Duties of designated agency ethics official.
2638.204  Deputy ethics official.

[[Page 557]]

               Subpart C--Formal Advisory Opinion Service

2638.301  In general.
2638.302  Who may request a formal advisory opinion.
2638.303  Subject matter of formal advisory opinions.
2638.304  Form of requests for formal advisory opinions.
2638.305  Acceptance of requests for formal advisory opinions.
2638.306  Notice of requests.
2638.307  Written comment on requests.
2638.308  Issuance.
2638.309  Reliance on formal advisory opinions.
2638.310  Public availability and publication of formal advisory 
          opinions.
2638.311  Copies of published formal advisory opinions.
2638.312  Referral of requests.
2638.313  Agency opinions.

    Subpart D--Correction of Executive Branch Agency Ethics Programs

2638.401  In general.
2638.402  Corrective orders.
2638.403  Agency compliance.
2638.404  Report of noncompliance.

Subpart E--Corrective and Remedial Action in Cases Involving Individual 
                       Executive Agency Employees

2638.501  In general.
2638.502  Recommendations and advice.
2638.503  Agency investigations.
2638.504  Director's finding.
2638.505  Director's decision and order.
2638.506  Director's recommendation.

               Subpart F--Executive Branch Agency Reports

2638.601  In general.
2638.602  Annual agency reports.
2638.603  Reports of referral for possible prosecution.

          Subpart G--Executive Agency Ethics Training Programs

2638.701  Executive agency ethics training programs; generally.
2638.702  Responsibilities of the designated agency ethics official; 
          review by the Office of Government Ethics.
2638.703  Initial agency ethics orientation.
2638.704  Annual agency ethics training.

    Authority: 5 U.S.C. App. (Ethics in Government Act of 1978); E.O. 
12674, 54 FR 15159, 3 CFR, 1989 Comp., p. 215, as modified by E.O. 
12731, 55 FR 42547, 3 CFR, 1990 Comp., p. 306.

    Source: 46 FR 2583, Jan. 9, 1981, unless otherwise noted. 
Redesignated at 54 FR 50231, Dec. 5, 1989.



                      Subpart A--General Provisions



Sec. 2638.101  Authority and purpose.

    (a) Authority. The regulations of this part are issued pursuant to 
the authority of titles II and IV of the Ethics in Government Act of 
1978 (Pub. L. 95-521, as amended) (``the Act'').
    (b) Purpose. These regulations supplement and implement titles II, 
IV and V of the Act, set forth more specifically certain procedures 
provided in those titles, and furnish examples, where appropriate.



Sec. 2638.102  General policies.

    (a) The Office of Government Ethics (``the Office'') provides 
overall direction and leadership concerning executive branch policies 
related to preventing conflicts of interest. The head of each agency has 
primary responsibility for the administration of the ``ethics in 
government'' program within his or her agency. The Office carries out 
its leadership role by:
    (1) Providing information on and promoting ethical standards in 
executive agencies;
    (2) Consulting with agencies regarding their agency ethics programs 
and assisting them in interpreting ethics rules and regulations;
    (3) Developing rules and regulations pertaining to conflicts of 
interests and standards of conduct;
    (4) Monitoring compliance with the public and confidential financial 
disclosure requirements;
    (5) Establishing a formal advisory opinion service; and
    (6) Evaluating the effectiveness of programs designed to prevent 
conflicts of interests.



Sec. 2638.103  Agency regulations.

    Each agency may, subject to the prior approval of the Office of 
Government Ethics, issue regulations not inconsistent with this part.



Sec. 2638.104  Definitions.

    For the purposes of this part:
    Act means the Ethics in Government Act of 1978 (Pub. L. 95-521, as 
amended).

[[Page 558]]

    Agency means any executive department, military department, 
Government corporation, independent establishment or agency, including 
the United States Postal Service and Postal Rate Commission.
    Designated agency ethics official means an officer or employee who 
is designated by the head of the agency to coordinate and manage the 
agency's ethics program in accordance with the provisions of 
Sec. 2638.203 of this part.
    Director means the Director of the Office of Government Ethics.
    Executive branch includes each executive department, military 
department, Government corporation, independent establishment, and any 
other entity or administrative unit in the executive branch unless such 
agency, entity or unit is specifically included in the coverage of title 
I (relating to the legislative branch) or title III (relating to the 
judicial branch) of the Act.
    Person includes an individual, partnership, corporation, 
association, government agency, or public or private organization.



              Subpart B--Designated Agency Ethics Official



Sec. 2638.201  In general.

    Each agency shall have a designated agency ethics official who is 
the officer or employee designated by the head of the agency to 
administer the provisions of title II of the Act within that agency, to 
coordinate and manage the agency's ethics program and to provide liaison 
to the Office of Government Ethics with regard to all aspects of such 
ethics program. The agency's ethics program shall be designed to 
implement titles II, IV and V of the Act and regulations promulgated 
thereunder, Executive Order 11222 (relating to standards of conduct for 
officers and employees within the executive branch) and regulations 
promulgated thereunder, and other statutes and regulations applicable to 
agency ethics matters.



Sec. 2638.202  Responsibilities of agency head.

    (a) In general. The head of each agency is responsible for and shall 
exercise personal leadership in establishing, maintaining, and carrying 
out the agency's ethics program. He or she shall make available to the 
ethics program sufficient resources (including investigative, audit, 
legal, and administrative staff as necessary) to enable the agency to 
administer its program in a positive and effective manner.
    (b) Selection of a designated agency ethics official. The head of 
each agency shall appoint an individual to serve as the designated 
agency ethics official and an individual to serve in an acting capacity 
in the absence of the primary designated agency ethics official 
(alternate agency ethics official). In selecting these two individuals 
the head of an agency should ensure that the experience of such 
appointees in administrative, legal, managerial, or analytical work 
demonstrates the ability to--
    (1) Review the financial disclosure reports submitted by officers or 
employees within the agency, assessing the application of conflict of 
interest laws and regulations to the information reported and counseling 
those officers or employees with regard to resolving actual or potential 
conflicts of interests, or appearances thereof;
    (2) Review the financial disclosure reports submitted by 
Presidential appointees for confirmation purposes and counsel those 
appointees with regard to resolving potential conflicts of interest, or 
appearances thereof, before the confirmation hearing;
    (3) Counsel agency personnel concerning ethics standards and 
programs;
    (4) Counsel departing and former agency officials on post-employment 
conflict of interest standards;
    (5) Assist managers and supervisors in understanding and 
implementing agency ethics programs;
    (6) Administer a system for periodic evaluation of the ethics 
program; and
    (7) Select deputy ethics officials if necessary and manage the 
ethics program through them.
    (c) Designation. The head of each agency shall formally delegate 
functional authority to coordinate and manage the ethics program as set 
forth in Sec. 2638.203 to the designated and alternate agency ethics 
officials. Within 30 days of any such delegation of authority the head 
of the agency shall submit to the Office of Government Ethics a

[[Page 559]]

formal written designation. The designation shall include:
    (1) The names of the individuals so designated;
    (2) The title of the position held by each designee; and
    (3) A copy of the delegation of authority.



Sec. 2638.203  Duties of the designated agency ethics official.

    (a) In general. The designated agency ethics official shall 
coordinate and manage the agency's ethics program. The program consists 
generally of:
    (1) Liaison with the Office of Government Ethics;
    (2) Review of financial disclosure reports;
    (3) Initiation and maintenance of ethics education and training 
programs; and
    (4) Monitoring administrative actions and sanctions.
    (b) Program elements. In carrying out this program on behalf of the 
head of the agency, the designated agency ethics official shall ensure 
that:
    (1) Close liaison with the Office of Government Ethics concerning 
the agency's ethics program is developed and maintained;
    (2) An effective system and procedure for the collection, filing, 
review, and, when applicable, public inspection of the financial 
disclosure reports as required by title II of the Act, Executive Order 
11222, and other applicable statutes and regulations is developed and 
properly administered;
    (3) The financial disclosure reports of Presidential nominees to 
agency positions submitted prior to Senate confirmation hearings 
pursuant to Sec. 2634.605(c) of part 2634 are certified personally by 
him or herself or alternate designated agency ethics official in his or 
her absence;
    (4) All financial disclosure reports submitted by employees and 
filed in bureaus and regional offices, as well as those submitted and 
filed at the agency's headquarters, are properly maintained and 
effectively and consistently reviewed for conformance with all 
applicable laws and statutes;
    (5) A list of those circumstances or situations which have resulted 
or may result in noncompliance with ethics laws and regulations is 
developed, maintained and published within the agency as required by 
Sec. 206(b)(7) of the Act and made available for public inspection;
    (6) An education program for agency employees concerning all ethics 
and standards of conduct matters is developed and conducted in 
accordance with subpart G, Executive Agency Ethics Training Programs, of 
this part.
    (7) A counseling program for agency employees concerning all ethics 
and standards of conduct matters including post employment matters, is 
developed and conducted;
    (8) Records are kept, when appropriate, on advice rendered;
    (9) Prompt and effective action including administrative action is 
undertaken to remedy:
    (i) Violations or potential violations, or appearances thereof, of 
the agency's standards of conduct including post employment regulations;
    (ii) The failure to file a financial disclosure report or portions 
thereof;
    (iii) Potential or actual conflicts of interests, or appearances 
thereof, which were disclosed on a financial disclosure report; and
    (iv) Potential or actual violations of other laws governing the 
conduct or financial holdings of officers or employees of that agency, 
and

that a follow-up is made to ensure that actions ordered, including 
divestiture and disqualification, have been taken;
    (10) The agency's standards of conduct regulations, financial 
disclosure systems, and post-employment enforcement systems are 
evaluated periodically to determine their adequacy and effectiveness in 
relation to current agency responsibilities;
    (11) Information developed by internal audit and review staff, the 
Office of the Inspector General, if any, or other audit groups is 
reviewed to determine whether such information discloses a need for 
revising agency standards of conduct or for taking prompt corrective 
action to remedy actual or potential conflict of interest situations;
    (12) The services of the agency's Office of the Inspector General, 
if any, are utilized when appropriate, including the referral of matters 
to and acceptance of matters from that Office;

[[Page 560]]

    (13) A list of those persons to whom delegations of authority are 
made pursuant to Sec. 2638.204(a) is maintained and made available to 
the Office of Government Ethics, upon request; and
    (14) Information required by the Act or requested by the Office of 
Government Ethics in the performance of its responsibilities is provided 
in a complete and timely manner.

[46 FR 2583, Jan. 9, 1981. Redesignated at 54 FR 50231, Dec. 5, 1989, 
and amended at 58 FR 69176, Dec. 30, 1993; 59 FR 12148, Mar. 16, 1994]



Sec. 2638.204  Deputy ethics official.

    (a) Functions. A designated agency ethics official may, if 
necessary, delegate to one or more deputy ethics officials any of the 
duties referred to in Sec. 2638.203, except for those functions set 
forth in Sec. 2634.605(c)(2) of part 2634 and referred to in 
Sec. 2638.203(b)(3) (certification of nominee statements). A deputy 
ethics official shall work under the supervision of the designated 
agency ethics official in carrying out such delegated functions.
    (b) Dual status. A deputy ethics official may also be designated 
pursuant to Sec. 2638.202 to serve as the alternate agency ethics 
official. During the absence of the designated agency ethics official a 
deputy ethics official who has also been designated as the alternate 
ethics official shall perform the functions set forth in 
Sec. 2634.605(c)(2) of part 2634 and referred to in Sec. 2638.203(b)(3).

[46 FR 2583, Jan. 9, 1981. Redesignated at 54 FR 50231, Dec. 5, 1989, 
and amended at 58 FR 69176, Dec. 30, 1993]



               Subpart C--Formal Advisory Opinion Service



Sec. 2638.301  In general.

    (a) The Director of the Office of Government Ethics has the 
authority and responsibility to render formal advisory opinions pursuant 
to Section 402(b)(8) of the Act. This service is available to any person 
who has a question about a matter over which the Office of Government 
Ethics has jurisdiction. Formal advisory opinions will be issued when a 
two-pronged test is met. First, the person making the request must meet 
the requirements of Sec. 2638.302 and, second, the subject matter of the 
request must meet the criteria set forth in Sec. 2638.303.
    (b) Normally, formal advisory opinions will not be issued to 
individuals who wish to obtain general advice concerning their own 
specific present or proposed activities or financial transactions. Such 
questions should be directed to the designated ethics official of the 
agency in which the individual will serve, serves or served. If a 
designated agency ethics official receives a request which he or she 
believes should be answered by the Office of Government Ethics, a 
referral procedure is available.
    (c) The Office of Government Ethics will provide interested parties, 
to the extent practicable, with an opportunity to comment on any 
question which will be the subject of a formal advisory opinion issued 
by the Office. These opinions will be published in a form which will not 
identify specific individuals unless necessary to the understanding of 
the opinion. Copies will be sent to the designated ethics officials of 
each agency and be available at the Office of Government Ethics in that 
same form.



Sec. 2638.302  Who may request a formal advisory opinion.

    Any person (as defined in Sec. 2638.104) may request an opinion with 
respect to a situation in which that person is directly involved. A 
designated agency ethics official, representative, or attorney may 
request an opinion on behalf of the person. Notwithstanding this direct 
involvement requirement, a designated agency ethics official may always 
request an opinion concerning a situation about which he or she has 
knowledge.



Sec. 2638.303  Subject matter of formal advisory opinions.

    Formal advisory opinions will be rendered on matters of general 
applicability or on important matters of first impression concerning the 
application of the Act, Executive Order 11222 and regulations 
promulgated pursuant to such Act and Executive Order, and the laws 
embodied in 18 U.S.C. 202-209. The Director will respond to those 
requests

[[Page 561]]

which in his or her discretion fall within this category taking into 
consideration:
    (a) The unique nature of the question and its precedential value,
    (b) The potential number of officers or employees throughout the 
Government affected by the question,
    (c) The frequency with which the question arises, and
    (d) The likelihood or presence of inconsistent interpretations on 
the same question by different agencies.

Except in unusual circumstances, opinions will not be rendered with 
respect to hypothetical situations posed in requests. Opinions may be 
rendered, however, on proposed activities or transactions.



Sec. 2638.304  Form of requests for formal advisory opinions.

    (a) A request for a formal advisory opinion should be directed to 
the Director of the Office of Government Ethics, Suite 500, 1201 New 
York Avenue NW., Washington, DC 20005-3917.
    (b)(1) A request should be in writing and signed by the individual 
making the request or by a representative of that person. A request 
shall state all material facts necessary for the Director to render a 
complete and correct opinion.
    (2) In addition, it should also include the following information:
    (i) the name, mailing address, and daytime telephone contact of the 
individual making the request, and
    (ii) a copy of the position, description of the position involved, 
if available.
    (c) If the request is submitted by a representative, he or she must 
show his or her representative status, list a mailing address and 
daytime telephone contact.

[46 FR 2583, Jan. 9, 1981. Redesignated at 54 FR 50231, Dec. 5, 1989, 
and amended at 55 FR 27180, July 2, 1990]



Sec. 2638.305  Acceptance of requests for formal advisory opinions.

    (a) Subject to the provisions of paragraph (d) of this section, the 
Director shall review each request for a formal advisory opinion and 
take one of the following actions:
    (1) If the Director determines that the person making the request 
meets the requirements of Sec. 2638.302 and that the subject matter of 
the request qualifies under the criteria established in Sec. 2638.303, 
he or she shall assign an identifying number to the request and notify 
the person that a formal advisory opinion will be rendered; or
    (2) If the Director determines that the person making the request is 
not a person who is eligible to receive a formal advisory opinion as 
provided in Sec. 2638.302, or that the subject of the request is not a 
matter upon which the Office issues formal advisory opinions as outlined 
by Sec. 2638.303, he or she shall so notify the person making the 
request.

When a formal advisory opinion will not be rendered, the Office of 
Government Ethics may provide other informational assistance to the 
person as appropriate. (See also Sec. 2638.312.)
    (b) If at any time after receipt of a request for a formal advisory 
opinion, the Director believes that additional relevant information is 
needed, he or she may seek such information directly from the person 
requesting the opinion or from other sources which may include the 
agency involved.
    (c) The person requesting the opinion may furnish the Office of 
Government Ethics with legal memoranda or other material relevant to the 
opinion requested.
    (d)(1) In the case of a request which involves an actual or apparent 
violation of any conflict of interest law embodied in 18 U.S.C. 202-209, 
the Director shall consult with the Criminal Division of the Department 
of Justice.
    (2) If after such consultation the Criminal Division determines that 
a criminal investigation will be undertaken, the Director shall take no 
further action with regard to that request pending a determination by 
the Criminal Division not to prosecute.
    (3) Upon receipt of a determination by the Criminal Division not to 
prosecute, the Director shall then follow the procedures for all other 
requests for formal advisory opinions set forth in this part.

[[Page 562]]



Sec. 2638.306  Notice of requests.

    The Director shall provide notice to interested parties identified 
in a request which will be the subject of a formal advisory opinion that 
such an opinion will be rendered. Generally, the designated agency 
ethics official of the agency involved shall be notified of the request.



Sec. 2638.307  Written comment on requests.

    (a) To the extent practicable, the Director shall provide interested 
parties with an opportunity to submit written comment on a request for a 
formal advisory opinion. A time by which the comment should be received 
to be considered will be indicated with the notice that the request has 
been made.
    (b) Additional time in which to comment may be granted upon written 
request to or at the discretion of the Director. Such requests and all 
written comments shall be sent to the Office of Government Ethics, Suite 
500, 1201 New York Avenue NW., Washington, DC 20005-3917.

[46 FR 2583, Jan. 9, 1981. Redesignated at 54 FR 50231, Dec. 5, 1989, 
and amended at 55 FR 27180, July 2, 1990]



Sec. 2638.308  Issuance.

    (a) A formal advisory opinion,

    (1) Which involves the application of any conflict of interest law 
embodied in 18 U.S.C. 202-209 to a transaction or activity which does 
not raise a question of an actual or apparent violation of this law but 
which raises an important matter of first impression, or
    (2) Which is issued following the procedure set forth in 
Sec. 2638.305(d),

requires consultation by the Office of Government Ethics with the Office 
of Legal Counsel of the Department of Justice before it is issued.
    (b) An advisory opinion shall be considered issued when it is dated, 
numbered, and signed by the Director. Unless released by the person who 
made the request, the opinion will not become publicly available until 
information which identifies individuals involved and which is 
unnecessary to the complete understanding of the opinion has been 
deleted from the opinion and this version of the opinion is placed in a 
public reading file at the Office of Government Ethics. (See 
Sec. 2638.310)



Sec. 2638.309  Reliance on formal advisory opinions.

    (a) Any formal advisory opinion referred to in Sec. 2638.308(a) or 
any provisions or finding of a formal advisory opinion involving the 
application of the Act, Executive Order 11222 and the regulations 
promulgated pursuant to the Act or Executive Order, may be relied upon 
by:
    (1) Any person directly involved in the specific transaction or 
activity with respect to which such advisory opinion has been rendered, 
and
    (2) Any person directly involved in any specific transaction or 
activity which is indistinguishable in all its material aspects from the 
transaction or activity with respect to which such advisory opinion was 
rendered.
    (b) Any person who relies upon any provision or finding of any 
formal advisory opinion in accordance with paragraph (a) of this section 
and who acts in good faith in accordance with the provisions and 
findings of such opinion, shall not, as a result of such act, be subject 
to prosecution under 18 U.S.C. 202-209 or, in the case where the opinion 
is exculpatory, be subject to any administrative adverse action or civil 
action based upon legal authority cited in that opinion.



Sec. 2638.310  Public availability and publication of formal advisory opinions.

    (a) The Director shall make sufficient deletions in any formal 
advisory opinion so that unless necessary to the complete understanding 
of the opinion, the identity of any person involved is not disclosed. No 
deletion shall in any way affect the substance of the opinion.
    (b) A copy of this version of the opinion shall then be made 
available for public inspection within 10 working days after the 
issuance of the opinion at the Office of Government Ethics, Suite 500, 
1201 New York Avenue NW., Washington, DC 20005-3917.

[[Page 563]]

    (c) The Director shall thereafter publish this version of the 
opinion.

[46 FR 2583, Jan. 9, 1981. Redesignated at 54 FR 50231, Dec. 5, 1989, 
and amended at 55 FR 27180, July 2, 1990]



Sec. 2638.311  Copies of published formal advisory opinions.

    Each designated agency ethics official shall receive a copy of each 
published opinion. Copies will also be available to the public from the 
Office of Government Ethics upon request at no more than cost.



Sec. 2638.312  Referral of requests.

    (a) If a designated agency ethics official receives a request for 
advice from a person and determines that the request may come within the 
criteria set forth in Sec. 2638.303, he or she shall contact the Office 
of Government Ethics concerning the request before referring the request 
to the Office. If after such consultation the Office of Government 
Ethics determines that the request should be the subject of a formal 
advisory opinion, the designated agency ethics official shall notify the 
person making the request of that determination and request the person's 
permission to refer the request to the Office of Government Ethics.
    (b) If the Director receives a request for an opinion which does not 
fulfill the criteria set forth in Sec. 2638.303, he or she may:
    (1) Furnish informational assistance to the person as provided in 
Sec. 2638.305(a), or
    (2) Refer the request to the appropriate designated agency ethics 
official.
    (c) In all instances covered by paragraphs (a) and (b) of this 
section, a referral will not be made in the case of questions regarding 
possible future employment plans of an individual making the request 
unless he or she is first notified and gives his or her consent or the 
request itself indicates that such a referral may be made.



Sec. 2638.313  Agency opinions.

    If the designated agency ethics official issues a written opinion 
concerning the application of 18 U.S.C. 202-209, he or she shall 
transmit a copy of that opinion to the Office of Government Ethics.



    Subpart D--Correction of Executive Branch Agency Ethics Programs

    Source: 55 FR 1666, Jan. 18, 1990, unless otherwise noted.



Sec. 2638.401  In general.

    The Director of the Office of Government Ethics has authority under 
subsections 402(b)(9) and 402(f)(1) of the Ethics in Government Act to 
order action to correct deficiencies in agency ethics programs. These 
procedures are intended to be used to correct deficiencies in agency 
ethics programs that are not being addressed adequately by the agency. 
They are not intended to be used to deal with cases involving individual 
employees or former employees. See subpart E of this part. For purposes 
of this section, an agency ethics program shall include those matters 
that are the responsibility of agency heads and designated agency ethics 
officials under subpart B of this part and shall include the 
requirements under part 2634 of this chapter and part 735 of this title 
to establish public and nonpublic financial disclosure systems. In 
implementing these procedures, the Director may use any authority 
contained in the Ethics Act.



Sec. 2638.402  Corrective orders.

    (a) Notice. Where the Director has information indicating that an 
agency ethics program is not in full compliance with the requirements 
set forth in applicable statutes or regulations, the Director may issue 
a Notice of Deficiency to the designated agency ethics official and 
request an agency report under paragraph (b) of this section.
    (b) Agency report. Within such time as may be set forth in the 
Notice of Deficiency, the designated agency ethics official shall 
provide a written report to the Director that shall include relevant 
information about the agency's ethics program. The ethics official's 
report may include:
    (1) Information establishing that there is no deficiency;

[[Page 564]]

    (2) An explanation of how any deficiency is being corrected; or
    (3) A plan for correcting any deficiency within a reasonable period 
of time.
    (c) Director's determination. The Director will make a determination 
based on the agency report.
    (1) If the Director determines that there is no deficiency, the 
designated agency ethics official will be so notified.
    (2) If the Director determines that appropriate steps are being 
taken or that the agency has presented an adequate plan for correcting 
the deficiency, the Director will so notify the designated agency ethics 
official and, in consultation with the designated agency ethics 
official, establish requirements for status reports, if necessary, and 
for notification when the deficiency has been corrected.
    (3) If the Director determines that a deficiency is not being 
corrected, the Director will issue an Order under paragraph (d) of this 
section.
    (d) Orders. An order issued by the Director will be addressed to the 
head of the agency with a copy to the designated agency ethics official 
and shall specify:
    (1) The deficiency in the agency ethics program that requires 
correction;
    (2) The basis upon which the Director has determined that a 
deficiency exists;
    (3) The corrective action required to remedy the deficiency; and
    (4) Any reporting requirements necessary to establish that 
corrective action has been accomplished.



Sec. 2638.403  Agency compliance.

    Within such time as may be set forth in the order, the agency head 
shall file a report with the Director detailing the corrective action 
taken. If corrective action cannot be accomplished within that time, the 
agency head shall submit a plan of corrective action for approval by the 
Director providing for appropriate status reports and notification of 
compliance. In either case, if the agency report or plan is deemed 
satisfactory, the Director will so inform the agency head. If the agency 
report or plan is insufficient, but only in minor respects, the Director 
may inform the agency head of the adjustments needed to bring the report 
or plan into compliance and a timeframe therefor; otherwise, the 
procedures under Sec. 2638.404 of this subpart will be invoked.



Sec. 2638.404  Report of noncompliance.

    If the agency fails to comply with an order issued under 
Sec. 2638.402(d), the Director shall:
    (a) Notify the head of the agency of intent to furnish a report of 
noncompliance to the President and the Congress;
    (b) Provide the agency 14 calendar days within which to furnish 
written comments for submission with the report of noncompliance; and
    (c) Report the agency's noncompliance to the President and to the 
Congress.



Subpart E--Corrective and Remedial Action in Cases Involving Individual 
                       Executive Agency Employees

    Source: 55 FR 1667, Jan. 18, 1990, unless otherwise noted.



Sec. 2638.501  In general.

    (a) Authority. The Director of the Office of Government Ethics has 
authority under subsections 402(b)(9) and 402(f)(2) of the Act to order 
corrective and remedial action with respect to individual employees to 
bring about compliance with applicable ethics provisions. Nothing in 
this subpart relieves an agency of its primary responsibility to ensure 
compliance.
    (b) Definitions. For the purpose of this subpart:
    (1) Ethics provision includes any rule, regulation or executive 
order relating to conflicts of interest or standards of conduct in the 
executive branch. The term excludes any statute that is contained in 
title 18 of the United States Code or which imposes a criminal penalty 
as well as any statute made applicable to a specific agency that 
mandates or proscribes conduct not otherwise the subject of 
Governmentwide standards. It excludes any matter covered by sections 101 
(k) and (m) of Executive Order 12674 that are within the

[[Page 565]]

cognizance of agency Inspectors General, the Office of Special Counsel 
or the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission.
    (2) Employee means any officer or employee, including a special 
Government employee, covered by any of the provisions contained in part 
735 of this title.
    (3) Head of an agency, in the case of an agency that is headed by a 
board, committee or other group of individuals, refers to the employee's 
appointing authority.
    (4) Corrective action means any action necessary to remedy a 
violation of an ethics provision including, but not limited to, recusal, 
divestiture, termination of an activity, restitution, or the creation of 
a qualified blind or diversified trust.
    (5) Disciplinary action includes the full range of disciplinary 
actions provided for by Office of Personnel Management regulations and 
instructions implementing authorities contained in title 5 of the United 
States Code or provided for in comparable authorities applicable to 
employees not subject to title 5.
    (6) The terms he, his and him include ``she,'' ``hers'' and ``her.''
    (c) Violations of criminal statutes. Nothing contained in this part 
gives the Director or any agency official authority to make a finding 
that any criminal statute relating to conflicts of interest is being or 
has been violated. If facts elicited under these procedures indicate 
that a criminal violation of any such provision is occurring or has 
occurred, the suspected violation will be referred for possible 
prosecution in accordance with 28 U.S.C. 535 and the reporting 
requirements set forth in Sec. 2638.603 of this chapter shall apply. 
Subsequent to referral, proceedings under this subpart may be initiated 
or continued at the discretion of the Director, after consultation with 
the appropriate investigatory or prosecutorial authorities.
    (d) National security. Proceedings under this subpart shall be 
conducted in accordance with applicable national security requirements.

[55 FR 1667, Jan. 18, 1990; as amended at 55 FR 21846, May 30, 1990]



Sec. 2638.502  Recommendations and advice.

    The Director may make recommendations and provide advice to 
agencies, designated agency ethics officials and employees for the 
purpose of ensuring an employee's compliance with applicable ethics 
provisions. This authority may be used where there is doubt or a dispute 
regarding the applicability of an ethics provision or where the Director 
has information indicating that an ethics provision is being improperly 
interpreted. Recommendations may be made or advice provided on the 
Director's own initiative or at the Director's discretion in response to 
a written or oral request. As determined by the Director, the 
recommendation may be made or the advice given either orally or in 
writing. In addition, the Director shall afford an employee the 
opportunity for personal consultation, if practicable, regarding action 
required to be taken by the employee to achieve compliance with 
applicable ethics provisions.



Sec. 2638.503  Agency investigations.

    (a) Recommendation of investigation. If the Director has reason to 
believe that an employee is violating or has violated any ethics 
provision, the Director may recommend to the head of the agency that the 
agency conduct such investigation as is necessary to determine whether, 
in fact, a violation is occurring or has occurred and, where warranted, 
take appropriate disciplinary or corrective action. If the matter 
already has been investigated or if the facts are fully known to the 
agency and, in the opinion of the agency head, require no further 
investigation, the head of the agency shall notify the Director of that 
determination and shall promptly file the agency report required by 
paragraph (c) of this section.
    (1) If the employee involved is the head of an agency, the 
recommendation shall be made to the President and the procedures set 
forth in this section shall serve as guidance only.
    (2) Where there is reason to believe that an employee has given 
preferential treatment or failed to act impartially, this authority will 
not be used to initiate an investigation in the

[[Page 566]]

nature of a review or audit of the agency program in which the employee 
participated.
    (b) Initiation of investigation. The head of the agency shall notify 
the Director when the agency has initiated an investigation. Where it is 
anticipated that the investigation will not be completed within 60 
calendar days, the head of the agency will notify the Director of that 
fact and provide an explanation reasonably justifying additional time.
    (c) Agency report. The head of the agency shall file a report with 
the Director detailing findings of fact and disciplinary and/or 
corrective actions taken, if any.
    (d) Director's determination. The Director will make a determination 
based on the agency investigation and report.
    (1) If the Director determines that the agency has conducted an 
adequate investigation and has taken appropriate corrective and/or 
disciplinary action, the Director shall notify the agency that the 
matter is closed.
    (2) If the Director determines that the agency has conducted an 
adequate investigation and has recommended appropriate corrective and/or 
disciplinary action, the Director shall notify the agency that the 
matter will be closed upon notification that such action has been taken.
    (3) If the Director determines that the agency has not conducted an 
adequate investigation, the Director may recommend that the agency 
undertake further investigative effort.
    (4) If the Director determines that the agency has improperly 
interpreted an ethics provision or improperly applied an ethics 
provision to the facts of the case, the Director may, in accordance with 
Sec. 2638.502, provide advice and recommendations necessary to ensure 
compliance.
    (5) If the Director determines that the agency has taken or 
recommended inappropriate corrective or disciplinary action, the 
Director may notify the head of the agency of intent to institute 
proceedings under Sec. 2638.504 or Sec. 2638.505.
    (e) Notice of noncompliance. If the Director determines that the 
head of an agency has failed to conduct an adequate investigation within 
a reasonable period of time, the Director shall notify the President of 
that determination. A Notice of Noncompliance will not be based upon a 
determination that the agency has improperly interpreted or applied an 
ethics provision or that the agency has taken or recommended 
inappropriate corrective or disciplinary action.



Sec. 2638.504   Director's finding.

    (a) In general. If the Director has reason to believe that an 
employee is violating or has violated an ethics provision, the Director 
may initiate proceedings under this section for the purpose of making a 
finding as to whether there is or has been such a violation. In the 
context of such proceedings, the Office of Government Ethics has the 
burden of proof to establish that the employee is violating or has 
violated an ethics provision. The procedures contained in this section 
do not apply to findings or orders for action made to obtain compliance 
with the financial disclosure requirements in title II of the Ethics 
Act. For those findings and orders, the procedures contained in section 
206 of the Act shall apply.
    (b) Investigation. The Director may initiate such investigation as 
is necessary to determine whether proceedings under this section are 
warranted. Ordinarily, a determination to proceed will be based upon an 
agency report of investigation filed under Sec. 2638.503(c) and a 
determination by the Director under Sec. 2638.503(d)(5) that the agency 
has taken or recommended inappropriate corrective or disciplinary 
action.
    (c) Notice. The employee shall be served personally or by United 
States mail with written notice of commencement of proceedings under 
this section. A copy of the notice shall be provided to the head of the 
agency and to the designated agency ethics official. The notice shall be 
signed by the Director and shall include the following:
    (1) A brief statement setting forth the basis for a possible ethics 
violation;
    (2) A copy of this section; and
    (3) The date by which the employee's comments must be submitted.
    (d) Employee comments. The respondent employee has the right to 
comment on the alleged violation of an ethics provision by submission of 
evidence or

[[Page 567]]

arguments. As determined by the Director, the submission may be made 
orally or in writing. In the absence of an extension granted by the 
Director for good cause shown, comments shall be submitted within the 
time set forth in the notice
    (e) Finding. The Director will make a written finding as to whether 
a violation of any ethics provision has occured or is occurring. The 
finding will include a statement of the facts upon which the finding is 
based and a reference to the specific ethics provision in issue. A copy 
of the finding will be provided to the respondent employee, the head of 
the agency and the designated agency ethics official.



Sec. 2638.505   Director's decision and order.

    (a) In general. Where the Director has reason to believe that an 
employee is violating an ethics provision, the Director may, subject to 
the procedures set forth in this section, issue an order that the 
employee take specific corrective action to remedy the violation. 
Ordinarily, a determination to proceed under this paragraph (a) will be 
based on the Director's finding under Sec. 2638.504(e) that an ethics 
violation has occurred or is occurring and reason to believe that the 
violation is continuing. The procedures contained in this section do not 
apply to findings or orders for action made to obtain compliance with 
the financial disclosure requirements in title II of the Ethics Act. For 
those findings and orders, the procedures contained in section 206 of 
the Act shall apply.
    (b) Notice. The employee will be served, personally or by United 
States mail, with notice of proceedings to determine whether a violation 
of an ethics provision is occurring and whether corrective action is 
necessary to end the violation. A copy of the notice shall be provided 
to the head of the employee's agency and the designated agency ethics 
official thereof. The notice shall specify the employee's right to 
present evidence or arguments either in writing or, at the employee's 
written request, at a hearing conducted on the record. The notice shall 
be signed by the Director and shall include:
    (1) A brief statement setting forth the basis for a possible ethics 
violation;
    (2) Where applicable, a copy of the Director's finding under 
Sec. 2638.504(e);
    (3) A statement of the authority under which proceedings are to be 
conducted, together with a copy of this section; and
    (4) The date by which the employee must, by written notification to 
the Director, elect to present evidence and arguments either at a 
hearing or in writing.
    (c) Separation of functions. Once the Director has issued a notice 
of proceedings and if the respondent employee has elected to have a 
hearing conducted on the record, the General Counsel of the Office of 
Government Ethics shall designate attorneys of the Office of Government 
Ethics to participate on behalf of the Office in the proceedings, 
including the investigation and presentation of the evidence at the 
hearing. During this time period, the General Counsel of the Office of 
Government Ethics shall serve as Advisor to the Director and will not 
supervise Office of Government Ethics attorneys who are charged with the 
investigation and presentation of the evidence in the pending matter. A 
Deputy General Counsel shall supervise the Office attorneys responsible 
for the investigation and presentation of the evidence during this time 
period. No officer, employee, or agent engaged in the performance of 
investigative or advocacy functions for the Office of Government Ethics 
shall, in that or a factually related case, participate or advise in the 
decision, recommended decision or Office review except as witness or 
counsel in the proceedings. The Deputy General Counsel may request the 
views or report of the designated agency ethics official of the 
employee's agency when necessary to develop the record.
    (d) Written submissions. Where the respondent employee elects to 
submit evidence and arguments in writing, he will be given a period of 
30 calendar days from the date of the notice within which to make a 
submission.
    (e) Hearings. If the respondent employee demands a hearing conducted 
on

[[Page 568]]

the record, he will be given written notice of the time and place of the 
hearing. The hearing will be convened within a reasonable period of time 
and will be conducted on the record. An administrative law judge who has 
been appointed under 5 U.S.C. 3105 shall act as the presiding official 
at the hearing. Hearings will be as informal as may be reasonably 
appropriate under all the circumstances. Evidence and testimony, 
although not ordinarily admissible under rules of evidence, may be 
received subject to the discretion of the administrative law judge. 
Immaterial, irrelevant or unduly repetitious evidence may be excluded. 
The parties may stipulate as to any facts or testimony. The testimony of 
witnesses shall be under oath and witnesses shall be subject to cross-
examination. The administrative law judge shall make such rulings with 
respect to the conduct of the hearings as circumstances may require to 
ensure the orderly and expeditious presentation of evidence in a manner 
fair to the parties and consistent with these regulations and 
requirements of due process of law. The following procedures will apply 
to the hearing:
    (1) Conference. The respondent employee or the designated attorney 
for the Office of Government Ethics may request, and the administrative 
law judge, on his own initiative or in response to a request, may set a 
prehearing conference for such purposes as the administrative law judge 
deems necessary.
    (2) Public hearings. Hearings shall generally be open to the public. 
However, the administrative law judge may order a hearing or any part 
thereof closed, on his own initiative or upon motion of a party or other 
affected person, where to do so would be in the best interests of 
national security, the respondent employee, a witness, the public or 
other affected persons. Unless specifically excluded by the 
administrative law judge, the designated agency ethics official of the 
employee's agency shall be permitted to attend a closed hearing. Any 
order closing the hearing or any part thereof shall set forth the 
reasons for the administrative law judge's decision. Any objections 
thereto shall be made a part of the record. If a party or affected 
person's request to close the hearing or any part thereof is denied by 
the administrative law judge, that request shall be immediately 
appealable to the Director and the hearing shall be held in abeyance 
pending resolution of the appeal. The notice of appeal shall be filed in 
writing, not to exceed 10 pages exclusive of attachments, with the 
Director within 3 working days of the administrative law judge's denial 
of the request. The Director shall provide an opportunity for an oral 
hearing on the appeal conducted on the record and shall decide the 
appeal within 3 working days following receipt of the notice of appeal.
    (3) Continuances and delays. The authority to adjourn the hearing 
shall rest with the administrative law judge. Continuances will be 
allowed only for the most compelling reasons.
    (4) Hearing record. Testimony and arguments shall be recorded 
verbatim and preserved for a reasonable period of time. When requested, 
transcripts of the testimony and arguments and copies of all documentary 
exhibits will be made available to the respondent employee upon the 
payment of the reasonable costs thereof.
    (5) Representation. A party is entitled to appear in person or by or 
with counsel.
    (6) Witnesses. The administrative law judge does not have the 
authority to subpoena witnesses. However, the respondent employee and 
the Office of Government Ethics may call witnesses whose testimony is 
relevant and necessary to the proceedings. Witnesses who are to testify 
or to produce documents in their official capacities will be assigned to 
do so by their agencies pursuant to 5 U.S.C. 6322 and will be paid 
travel expenses under 5 U.S.C. 5702. Witnesses who are not Federal 
employees may be issued invitational travel orders under 5 U.S.C. 5703 
based on a determination by the administrative law judge that their 
testimony is essential to the proceedings.
    (7) Proof. The Office of Government Ethics has the burden of proof 
to establish that the respondent employee is committing a violation of 
an ethics provision and that corrective action is necessary to end the 
violation.

[[Page 569]]

    (8) Evidence. A party is entitled to present his case or defense by 
oral or documentary evidence, to submit rebuttal evidence, and to 
conduct cross-examination. The respondent employee and the designated 
attorney for the Office of Government Ethics may offer evidence, 
arguments, testimony of witnesses, affidavits or sworn statements.
    (f) Recommended decision. At the conclusion of the hearing, the 
administrative law judge may request that the parties submit proposed 
findings and conclusions within a reasonable period of time. After 
receipt of the proposed findings and conclusions, if any, the 
administrative law judge shall certify the entire record to the Director 
for decision. When so certifying the record, the administrative law 
judge shall make a recommended decision that includes his written 
findings of fact and conclusions of law with respect to material issues.
    (g) Decision and order. The Director's decision shall include 
written findings and conclusions with respect to all material issues and 
shall be supported by substantial evidence of record. The order shall 
state the corrective action, if any, to be taken by the respondent 
employee in order to remedy a violation of an ethics provision and shall 
establish a reasonable period of time within which the respondent 
employee must commence and complete the corrective action. A copy of the 
decision and order shall be furnished to the respondent employee and to 
the head of the agency and the designated agency ethics official, or 
where the respondent employee is the head of an agency, to the 
President.
    (1) Preliminary to issuing a decision and order, the Director may 
request that comments on the recommended decision be provided by the 
designated agency ethics official of the employee's agency.
    (2) Where the respondent employee has elected to have a hearing 
conducted on the record, the Director shall issue a decision and order 
as soon as practicable following receipt of the certified record and the 
administrative law judge's recommended decision.
    (3) Where the respondent employee has elected to make a written 
submission under paragraph (d) of this section or has chosen to make no 
submission and has not requested a hearing, the Director will issue a 
decision and order as soon as practicable following receipt of all 
materials of record.
    (4) In addition to the decision and order and any finding issued 
under Sec. 2638.504(e), the record will include, where applicable, all 
written submission under Sec. 2638.504(d) and Sec. 2638.505(d), a record 
of the hearing, all documentary evidence introduced at the hearing, any 
proposed findings and conclusions submitted by the parties and the 
administrative law judge's recommended decision.
    (h) Compliance with the order. The respondent employee shall comply 
with the Director's order by commencing and completing the corrective 
action within the time specified in the order and by furnishing the 
Director with satisfactory evidence of compliance.
    (i) Notice of noncompliance. Where the respondent employee fails to 
comply with the Director's order within the time specified in the order, 
the Director will provide the head of the respondent employee's agency 
with written notice of the respondent employee's failure to comply. 
Where the respondent employee is the head of the agency, the Director 
shall submit such notification to the President.

[55 FR 1667, Jan. 18, 1990, as amended at 55 FR 21846, May 30, 1990]



Sec. 2638.506  Director's recommendation.

    (a) Where the Director has made a finding under Sec. 2638.504(e) or 
has issued a decision and order under Sec. 2638.505(g) that an ethics 
provision is being or has been violated, the Director may recommend to 
the head of the respondent employee's agency that appropriate 
disciplinary action be taken. If the respondent employee is the head of 
an agency, the Director shall make any such recommendation to the 
President and the procedures contained in this section will serve as 
guidance only.
    (b) Agency response. Within the time specified by the Director in 
his recommendation, the head of the agency shall notify the Director in 
writing of the action taken. If the action cannot be accomplished within 
the time specified, the head of the agency shall notify the Director in 
writing of the time

[[Page 570]]

needed for the action to be taken, and, thereafter, will provide 
appropriate notice of the disciplinary action taken.
    (c) Notice of noncompliance. If the Director determines that the 
head of an agency has not taken appropriate disciplinary action within a 
reasonable period of time after the Director has recommended such 
action, the Director may notify the President of that determination in 
writing.



               Subpart F--Executive Branch Agency Reports

    Source: 55 FR 1670, Jan. 18, 1990, unless otherwise noted.



Sec. 2638.601  In general.

    Agencies are required by section 402(b)(10) of the Act to file such 
reports as the Director of the Office of Government Ethics deems 
necessary. Section 402(e) contains specific requirements for annual 
reports and for reporting cases referred for possible prosecution under 
28 U.S.C. 535. Reporting requirements imposed under this subpart are in 
addition to any requirements for reports or opinions contained in part 
735 of this title, parts 2633 through 2637 of this chapter, or otherwise 
under this chapter, and in other subparts of this part.



Sec. 2638.602  Annual agency reports.

    (a) On or before February 1 of each year, each agency shall file 
with the Office of Government Ethics a report containing information 
about the agency's ethics program. Detailed reporting requirements will 
be specified in instructions to be issued by the Director in advance of 
the first day of the period to be covered by the annual report. Annual 
agency reports will cover the prior calendar year and, as a minimum, 
will include the following:
    (1) The name, position, title and duties of each official who 
performs any or all of the duties of the designated agency ethics 
official or alternate;
    (2) Statistics regarding public and nonpublic (confidential) 
financial disclosure report filings;
    (3) A description and evaluation of the agency's program of ethics 
education, training and counseling, including the number of training 
courses given, the subject matters covered, training materials 
distributed and counseling services offered.
    (b) Failure to timely file the report required by paragraph (a) of 
this section may be cause to invoke the procedures at subpart D of this 
part for correction of agency programs.



Sec. 2638.603  Reports of referral for possible prosecution.

    (a) In general. Section 535 of title 28 of the United States Code 
imposes upon every agency a duty to report to the Attorney General any 
information, allegations or complaints relating to violations of title 
18 of the United States Code involving Government officers and 
employees, including possible violations of 18 U.S.C. 207 by former 
officers and employees. Guidelines issued by the Attorney General 
require reporting of such allegations or complaints to the local office 
of the appropriate investigative agency, the United States Attorney for 
the district in which the violation occurred or is occurring and the 
appropriate division of the Department of Justice.
    (b) Report of referral. When any matter involving an alleged 
violation of Federal conflict of interest law is referred pursuant to 28 
U.S.C. 535, the agency shall concurrently notify the Director of the 
Office of Government Ethics of the referral and provide a copy of the 
referral document, unless such notification or disclosure would 
otherwise be prohibited by law.
    (c) Disposition reports. (1) Where there has been notice that the 
matter reported under paragraph (b) of this section will not be 
prosecuted, the agency shall promptly notify the Director of that fact, 
the date of the decision and any disciplinary or corrective action 
initiated, taken or to be taken by the agency.
    (2) When the agency is notified or learns from the Department of 
Justice that an indictment has been handed up and signed or an 
information has been filed, the agency shall promptly report that fact 
to the Director. Thereafter, the agency shall promptly notify the 
Director of the final disposition of the prosecution and of any 
disciplinary or corrective action initiated, taken or to be taken by the 
agency.

[[Page 571]]

    (3) When disciplinary or corrective action is initiated or is to be 
taken, the agency will notify the Director of the final disposition of 
the matter.

[55 FR 1670, Jan. 18, 1990, as amended at 55 FR 21847, May 30, 1990]



          Subpart G--Executive Agency Ethics Training Programs

    Source: 57 FR 11890, Apr. 7, 1992, unless otherwise noted.



Sec. 2638.701  Executive agency ethics training programs; generally.

    Each executive branch agency shall maintain a program of ethics 
training designed to ensure that all of its employees are aware of the 
Federal conflict of interest statutes and principles of ethical conduct. 
As a minimum, each agency program shall consist of initial ethics 
orientation required by Sec. 2638.703 of this subpart and annual ethics 
training required by Sec. 2638.704 of this subpart. For purposes of this 
subpart, the term ``employee'' shall include special Government 
employees (as defined in 18 U.S.C. 202(a)) and officers of the uniformed 
services.



Sec. 2638.702  Responsibilities of the designated agency ethics official; review by the Office of Government Ethics.

    (a) It shall be the responsibility of the designated agency ethics 
official of each executive agency or his or her designee to make any 
written determinations provided for in this subpart and to:
    (1) Direct the agency ethics training program to ensure that it 
meets the requirements of E.O. 12674 (as modified by E.O. 12731) and of 
this subpart and that the course content is legally correct;
    (2) Ensure the availability of qualified individuals to meet the 
annual ethics training requirements of Sec. 2638.704 of this subpart. 
For the purposes of this subpart, the following shall be considered 
qualified individuals:
    (i) The designated agency ethics official described in 
Sec. 2638.201;
    (ii) The alternate agency ethics official described in 
Sec. 2638.202(b);
    (iii) A deputy ethics official described in Sec. 2638.204;
    (iv) Any employee of the Office of Government Ethics whose services 
are made available by the Office of Government Ethics; and
    (v) An individual determined by the designated agency ethics 
official or his or her designee to possess sufficient familiarity with 
the conflict of interest statutes and standards of ethical conduct 
regulations applicable to agency employees to respond to routine 
questions raised during training; and
    (3) Furnish to the Office of Government Ethics by August 31 of each 
year a written plan for annual ethics training by the agency for the 
following calendar year. Each training plan shall include:
    (i) An estimate of the total number of agency employees described in 
Sec. 2638.704(b) of this subpart who must be provided annual ethics 
training;
    (ii) An estimate of the number of agency employees to whom the 
annual ethics training course will be provided by means of written 
materials under the exception provided at Sec. 2638.704(d)(2)(i) of this 
subpart, together with a written description of the basis for allowing 
an exception;
    (iii) Estimates of the number of special Government employees and 
the number of officers in the uniformed services to whom the annual 
ethics training course will be presented by means of written materials 
under the exceptions provided at Sec. 2638.704(d)(2) (ii) and (iii) of 
this subpart;
    (iv) An estimate of the number of training classes to be provided 
during the calendar year;
    (v) An estimate of the average class size; and
    (vi) Any other information that the designated agency ethics 
official believes will facilitate OGE's review of the agency's planned 
program of ethics training.
    (b) Each agency's annual ethics training plan will be reviewed by 
the Office of Government Ethics and any deficiencies shall be 
communicated in writing to the designated agency ethics official 
concerned by November 15 of each year, or 75 days after receipt of

[[Page 572]]

the agency plan, whichever occurs later.

[57 FR 11890, Apr. 7, 1992, as amended at 59 FR 12148, Mar. 16, 1994]



Sec. 2638.703  Initial agency ethics orientation.

    (a) Each new agency employee who enters on duty shall, within 90 
days of the date of his or her entrance on duty, be given:
    (1) Except as provided in paragraph (b) of this section, a copy of 
part 2635 of this chapter, Standards of Ethical Conduct for Employees of 
the Executive Branch, and any supplemental regulation of the concerned 
agency;
    (2) The names, titles, office addresses, and telephone numbers of 
the Designated Agency Ethics Official and other agency ethics officials 
available to answer questions regarding the employee's ethical 
responsibilities; and
    (3) A minimum of one hour of official duty time for the purpose of 
permitting the employee to review the written materials furnished 
pursuant to this section. If the agency provides an ethics training 
course during official duty time, including annual ethics training 
provided under Sec. 2638.704, or a nominee or other new entrant receives 
ethics training provided by the Office of Government Ethics or the White 
House Office, the period of official duty time set aside for individual 
review may be reduced by the time spent in training.
    (b) An agency may meet the requirement of paragraph (a)(1) of this 
section by:
    (1) Furnishing each employee a copy of part 2635 of this chapter for 
the purposes of review only, provided that copies of the complete text 
of part 2635 are retained and readily accessible in the employee's 
immediate office for use by several employees; or
    (2) Providing employees with materials that summarize part I of 
Executive Order 12674, as modified by Executive Order 12731, 3 CFR, 1990 
Comp., p. 306, and part 2635 of this chapter. In order to ensure that 
employees have access to all of the information contained in part I of 
Executive Order 12674, as modified, and part 2635, an agency using this 
alternative must ensure that copies of the complete text of part 2635 
are retained and readily accessible in the employees' immediate office 
area.

[59 FR 12148, Mar. 16, 1994]



Sec. 2638.704  Annual agency ethics training.

    (a) Annual ethics training. Executive branch agencies must provide 
each employee identified in paragraph (b) of this section with ethics 
training every calendar year. This training must meet the content 
requirements contained in paragraph (c) of this section and the 
presentation requirements contained in paragraph (d) of this section. 
Except as provided in paragraphs (d)(2)(ii) and (d)(2)(iii) of this 
section, employees must be provided a minimum of one hour of official 
duty time for this training.
    (b) Employees covered. Executive branch agency employees to whom 
this section applies include all of the following:
    (1) Employees appointed by the President;
    (2) Employees employed within the Executive Office of the President;
    (3) Employees required to file public financial disclosure reports 
under part 2634 of this chapter;
    (4) Employees required to file confidential (nonpublic) financial 
disclosure reports under subpart I of part 2634 of this chapter or any 
supplemental regulation or addendum of the concerned agency (agency 
employees who are excluded from the confidential financial disclosure 
requirements through the use of an alternative procedure approved by the 
Office of Government Ethics pursuant to Sec. 2634.905(c) of this chapter 
must also receive annual ethics training from their agency pursuant to 
this paragraph);
    (5) Contracting officers within the meaning of 41 U.S.C. 423(p)(4);
    (6) Procurement officials within the meaning of 41 U.S.C. 423(p)(3); 
and
    (7) Other agency employees designated by the head of the agency or 
his or her designee based on a determination that such training is 
desirable in view of their particular official duties.
    (c) Course content. Agencies are encouraged to vary the emphasis and 
course content of annual agency ethics training courses from year to 
year as

[[Page 573]]

necessary within the context of their ethics programs. However, each 
training course must include, as a minimum:
    (1) A reminder of the employees' responsibilities under part I of 
Executive Order 12674, as modified, the Standards of Ethical Conduct for 
Employees of the Executive Branch, part 2635 of this chapter, and any 
supplemental regulation thereto by the concerned agency;
    (2) A reminder of the employees' responsibilities under the conflict 
of interest statutes contained in 18 U.S.C. chapter 11; and
    (3) The names, titles, office addresses, and telephone numbers of 
the designated agency ethics official and other agency ethics officials 
available to answer questions regarding the employees' ethical 
responsibilities.
    (d) Course presentation. The training course shall be presented in 
accordance with the following requirements:
    (1) Except as provided in paragraph (d)(2) of this section, annual 
ethics training shall be presented verbally, either in person or by 
telecommunications, computer-based methods or recorded means. A 
qualified individual, as defined in Sec. 2638.702(a)(2) of this subpart, 
shall:
    (i) Present the training, if the training is presented in person; or
    (ii) Prepare the recorded materials or presentation, if the training 
is presented by telecommunication, computer-based methods or recorded 
means.
    (2) An agency may provide annual ethics training by means other than 
those specified in paragraph (d)(1) of this section under the following 
circumstances:
    (i) Where the Designated Agency Ethics Official, or his or her 
designee, has made a written determination that circumstances make it 
impractical to provide training to a particular employee or group of 
employees in accordance with paragraph (d)(1) of this section. In such 
cases, annual ethics training may be provided by means of written 
materials, provided that a minimum of one hour of official duty time is 
set aside for employees to attend the presentation or review written 
materials;
    (ii) In the case of special Government employees covered by 
paragraph (b) of this section, an agency may meet the annual training 
requirement by distribution of written materials, or by other means at 
the agency's discretion. For special Government employees who are 
expected to work fewer than 60 days in a calendar year, the requirement 
that the employee be provided with one hour of official duty time for 
annual ethics training is waived; and
    (iii) In the case of officers in the uniformed services who serve on 
active duty for 30 or fewer consecutive days and who are covered by 
paragraph (b) of this section, an agency may meet the annual training 
requirement by distribution of written materials, or by other means at 
the agency's discretion. For these officers, the requirement that the 
officer be provided with one hour of official duty time for annual 
ethics training is waived.

[57 FR 11890, Apr. 1992, as amended at 59 FR 12149, Mar. 16, 1994]



PART 2640--INTERPRETATION, EXEMPTIONS AND WAIVER GUIDANCE CONCERNING 18 U.S.C. 208 (ACTS AFFECTING A PERSONAL FINANCIAL INTEREST)--Table of Contents




                      Subpart A--General Provisions

Sec.
2640.101  Purpose.
2640.102  Definitions.
2640.103  Prohibition.

          Subpart B--Exemptions Pursuant to 18 U.S.C. 208(b)(2)

2640.201  Exemptions for interests in mutual funds, unit investment 
          trusts, and employee benefit plans.
2640.202  Exemptions for interests in securities.
2640.203  Miscellaneous exemptions.
2640.204  Prohibited financial interests.
2640.205  Employee responsibility.
2640.206  Existing agency exemptions.

                      Subpart C--Individual Waivers

2640.301  Waivers issued pursuant to 18 U.S.C. 208(b)(1).
2640.302  Waivers issued pursuant to 18 U.S.C. 208(b)(3).
2640.303  Consultation and notification regarding waivers.

[[Page 574]]

2640.304  Public availability of agency waivers.

    Authority: 5 U.S.C. App. (Ethics in Government Act of 1978); 18 
U.S.C. 208; E.O. 12674, 54 FR 15159, 3 CFR, 1989 Comp., p. 215, as 
modified by E.O. 12731, 55 FR 42547, 3 CFR, 1990 Comp., p. 306.

    Source: 61 FR 66841, Dec. 18, 1996, unless otherwise noted.

    Effective Date Note: At 61 FR 66841, Dec. 18, 1996, part 2640 was 
revised, effective Jan. 17, 1997. For the convenience of the user, part 
2640 remaining in effect until Jan. 17, 1997, follows the text of this 
new part.



                      Subpart A--General Provisions



Sec. 2640.101  Purpose.

    18 U.S.C. 208(a) prohibits an officer or employee of the executive 
branch, of any independent agency of the United States, of the District 
of Columbia, or Federal Reserve bank director, officer, or employee, or 
any special Government employee from participating in an official 
capacity in particular matters in which he has a personal financial 
interest, or in which certain persons or organizations with which he is 
affiliated have a financial interest. The statute is intended to prevent 
an employee from allowing personal interests to affect his official 
actions, and to protect governmental processes from actual or apparent 
conflicts of interests. However, in certain cases, the nature and size 
of the financial interest and the nature of the matter in which the 
employee would act are unlikely to affect an employee's official 
actions. Accordingly, the statute permits waivers of the 
disqualification provision in certain cases, either on an individual 
basis or pursuant to general regulation. Section 208(b)(2) provides that 
the Director of the Office of Government Ethics may, by regulation, 
exempt from the general prohibition, financial interests which are too 
remote or too inconsequential to affect the integrity of the services of 
the employees to which the prohibition applies. The regulations in this 
part describe those financial interests. This part also provides 
guidance to agencies on the factors to consider when issuing individual 
waivers under 18 U.S.C. 208 (b)(1) or (b)(3), and provides an 
interpretation of 18 U.S.C. 208(a).



Sec. 2640.102  Definitions.

    For purposes of this part:
    (a) Diversified means that the fund, trust or plan does not have a 
stated policy of concentrating its investments in any industry, 
business, single country other than the United States, or bonds of a 
single State within the United States and, in the case of an employee 
benefit plan, means that the plan's trustee has a written policy of 
varying plan investments.

    Note to paragraph (a): A mutual fund is diversified for purposes of 
this part if it does not have a policy of concentrating its investments 
in an industry, business, country other than the United States, or 
single State within the United States. Whether a mutual fund meets this 
standard may be determined by checking the fund's prospectus or by 
calling a broker or the manager of the fund. An employee benefit plan is 
diversified if the plan manager has a written policy of varying assets. 
This policy might be found in materials describing the plan or may be 
obtained in a written statement from the plan manager. It is important 
to note that a mutual fund or employee benefit plan that is diversified 
for purposes of this part may not necessarily be an excepted investment 
fund (EIF) for purposes of reporting financial interests pursuant to 5 
CFR 2634.310(c). In some cases, an employee may have to report the 
underlying assets of a fund or plan on his financial disclosure 
statement even though an exemption set forth in this part would permit 
the employee to participate in a matter affecting the underlying assets 
of the fund or plan. Conversely, there may be situations in which no 
exemption in this part is applicable to the assets of a fund or plan 
which is properly reported as an EIF on the employee's financial 
disclosure statement.

    (b) Employee means an officer or employee of the executive branch of 
the United States, or of any independent agency of the United States, a 
Federal Reserve bank director, officer, or employee, or an officer or 
employee of the District of Columbia. The term also includes a special 
Government employee as defined in 18 U.S.C. 202.
    (c) Employee benefit plan means a plan as defined in section 3(3) of 
the Employee Retirement Income Security Act of 1974, 29 U.S.C. 1002(3), 
and that has more than one participant. An employee benefit plan is any 
plan, fund or program established or maintained by

[[Page 575]]

an employer or an employee organization, or both, to provide its 
participants medical, disability, death, unemployment, or vacation 
benefits, training programs, day care centers, scholarship funds, 
prepaid legal services, deferred income, or retirement income.
    (d) He, his, and him include she, hers, and her.
    (e) Holdings means portfolio of investments.
    (f) Independent trustee means a trustee who is independent of the 
sponsor and the participants in a plan, or is a registered investment 
advisor.
    (g) Institution of higher education means an educational institution 
as defined in 20 U.S.C. 1141(a).
    (h) Issuer means a person who issues or proposes to issue any 
security, or has any outstanding security which it has issued.
    (i) Long-term Federal Government security means a bond or note, 
except for a U.S. Savings bond, with a maturity of more than one year 
issued by the United States Treasury pursuant to 31 U.S.C. chapter 31.
    (j) Municipal security means direct obligation of, or obligation 
guaranteed as to principal or interest by, a State (or any of its 
political subdivisions, or any municipal corporate instrumentality of 
one or more States), or the District of Columbia, Puerto Rico, the 
Virgin Islands, or any other possession of the United States.
    (k) Mutual fund means an entity which is registered as a management 
company under the Investment Company Act of 1940, as amended (15 U.S.C. 
80a-1 et seq.). For purposes of this part, the term mutual fund includes 
open-end and closed-end mutual funds and registered money market funds.
    (l) Particular matter involving specific parties includes any 
judicial or other proceeding, application, request for a ruling or other 
determination, contract, claim, controversy, investigation, charge, 
accusation, arrest or other particular matter involving a specific party 
or parties. The term typically involves a specific proceeding affecting 
the legal rights of the parties, or an isolatable transaction or related 
set of transactions between identified parties.
    (m) Particular matter of general applicability means a particular 
matter that is focused on the interests of a discrete and identifiable 
class of persons, but does not involve specific parties.
    (n) Pension plan means any plan, fund or program maintained by an 
employer or an employee organization, or both, to provide retirement 
income to employees, or which results in deferral of income for periods 
extending to, or beyond, termination of employment.
    (o) Person means an individual, corporation, company, association, 
firm, partnership, society or any other organization or institution.
    (p) Publicly traded security means a security as defined in 
paragraph (r) of this section and which is:
    (1) Registered with the Securities and Exchange Commission pursuant 
to section 12 of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934 (15 U.S.C. 78l) and 
listed on a national or regional securities exchange or traded through 
NASDAQ;
    (2) Issued by an investment company registered pursuant to section 8 
of the Investment Company Act of 1940, as amended (15 U.S.C. 80a-8); or
    (3) A corporate bond registered as an offering with the Securities 
and Exchange Commission under section 12 of the Securities Exchange Act 
of 1934 (15 U.S.C. 78l) and issued by an entity whose stock is a 
publicly traded security.

    Note to paragraph (p): National securities exchanges include the 
American Stock Exchange and the New York Stock Exchange. Regional 
exchanges include Boston, Cincinnati, Intermountain (Salt Lake City), 
Midwest (Chicago), Pacific (Los Angeles and San Francisco), Philadelphia 
(Philadelphia and Miami), and Spokane stock exchanges.

    (q) Sector mutual fund means a mutual fund that concentrates its 
investments in an industry, business, single country other than the 
United States, or bonds of a single State within the United States.
    (r) Security means common stock, preferred stock, corporate bond, 
municipal security, mutual fund, long-term Federal Government security, 
and limited partnership interest.
    (s) Short-term Federal Government security means a bill with a 
maturity of one year or less issued by the United

[[Page 576]]

States Treasury pursuant to 31 U.S.C. chapter 31.
    (t) Special Government employee means those executive branch 
officers or employees specified in 18 U.S.C. 202(a). A special 
Government employee is retained, designated, appointed or employed to 
perform temporary duties either on a full-time or intermittent basis, 
with or without compensation, for a period not to exceed 130 days during 
any consecutive 365-day period.
    (u) Unit investment trust means an investment company as defined in 
15 U.S.C. 80a-4(2) that is a regulated investment company under 26 
U.S.C. 851.
    (v) United States Savings bond means a savings bond issued by the 
United States Treasury pursuant to 31 U.S.C. 3105.



Sec. 2640.103   Prohibition.

    (a) Statutory prohibition. Unless permitted by 18 U.S.C. 208(b) (1)-
(4), an employee is prohibited by 18 U.S.C. 208(a) from participating 
personally and substantially in an official capacity in any particular 
matter in which, to his knowledge, he or any other person specified in 
the statute has a financial interest, if the particular matter will have 
a direct and predictable effect on that interest. The restrictions of 18 
U.S.C. 208 are described more fully in 5 CFR 2635.401 and 2635.402.
    (1) Particular matter. The term ``particular matter'' includes only 
matters that involve deliberation, decision, or action that is focused 
upon the interests of specific persons, or a discrete and identifiable 
class of persons. The term may include matters which do not involve 
formal parties and may extend to legislation or policy making that is 
narrowly focused on the interests of a discrete and identifiable class 
of persons. It does not, however, cover consideration or adoption of 
broad policy options directed to the interests of a large and diverse 
group of persons. The particular matters covered by this part include a 
judicial or other proceeding, application or request for a ruling or 
other determination, contract, claim, controversy, charge, accusation or 
arrest.

    Example 1: The Overseas Private Investment Corporation decides to 
hire a contractor to conduct EEO training for its employees. The award 
of a contract for training services is a particular matter.
    Example 2: The spouse of a high level official of the Internal 
Revenue Service (IRS) requests a meeting on behalf of her client (a 
major U.S. corporation) with IRS officials to discuss a provision of IRS 
regulations governing depreciation of equipment. The spouse will be paid 
a fee by the corporation for arranging and attending the meeting. The 
consideration of the spouse's request and the decision to hold the 
meeting are particular matters in which the spouse has a financial 
interest.
    Example 3: A regulation published by the Department of Agriculture 
applicable only to companies that operate meat packing plants is a 
particular matter.
    Example 4: A change by the Department of Labor to health and safety 
regulations applicable to all employers in the United States is not a 
particular matter. The change in the regulations is directed to the 
interests of a large and diverse group of persons.
    Example 5: The allocation of additional resources to the 
investigation and prosecution of white collar crime by the Department of 
Justice is not a particular matter. Similarly, deliberations on the 
general merits of an omnibus bill such as the Tax Reform Act of 1986 are 
not sufficiently focused on the interests of specific persons, or a 
discrete and identifiable group of persons to constitute participation 
in a particular matter.
    Example 6: The recommendations of the Council of Economic Advisors 
to the President about appropriate policies to maintain economic growth 
and stability are not particular matters. Discussions about economic 
growth policies are directed to the interests of a large and diverse 
group of persons.
    Example 7: The formulation and implementation of the response of the 
United States to the military invasion of a U.S. ally is not a 
particular matter. General deliberations, decisions and actions 
concerning a response are based on a consideration of the political, 
military, diplomatic and economic interests of every sector of society 
and are too diffuse to be focused on the interests of specific 
individuals or entities. However, at the time consideration is given to 
actions focused on specific individuals or entities, or a discrete and 
identifiable class of individuals or entities, the matters under 
consideration would be particular matters. These would include, for 
example, discussions whether to close a particular oil pumping station 
or pipeline in the area where hostilities are taking place, or a 
decision to seize a particular oil field or oil tanker.
    Example 8: A legislative proposal for broad health care reform is 
not a particular matter because it is not focused on the interests of 
specific persons, or a discrete and identifiable class of persons. It is 
intended to affect every person in the United States. However,

[[Page 577]]

consideration and implementation, through regulations, of a section of 
the health care bill limiting the amount that can be charged for 
prescription drugs is sufficiently focused on the interests of 
pharmaceutical companies that it would be a particular matter.

    (2) Personal and substantial participation. To participate 
``personally'' means to participate directly. It includes the direct and 
active supervision of the participation of a subordinate in the matter. 
To participate ``substantially'' means that the employee's involvement 
is of significance to the matter. Participation may be substantial even 
though it is not determinative of the outcome of a particular matter. 
However, it requires more than official responsibility, knowledge, 
perfunctory involvement, or involvement on an administrative or 
peripheral issue. A finding of substantiality should be based not only 
on the effort devoted to the matter, but also on the importance of the 
effort. While a series of peripheral involvements may be insubstantial, 
the single act of approving or participating in a critical step may be 
substantial. Personal and substantial participation may occur when, for 
example, an employee participates through decision, approval, 
disapproval, recommendation, investigation or the rendering of advice in 
a particular matter.

    Example 1: An agency's Office of Enforcement is investigating the 
allegedly fraudulent marketing practices of a major corporation. One of 
the agency's personnel specialists is asked to provide information to 
the Office of Enforcement about the agency's personnel ceiling so that 
the Office can determine whether new employees can be hired to work on 
the investigation. The employee personnel specialist owns $10,000 worth 
of stock in the corporation that is the target of the investigation. She 
does not have a disqualifying financial interest in the matter (the 
investigation and possible subsequent enforcement proceedings) because 
her involvement is on a peripheral personnel issue and her participation 
cannot be considered ``substantial'' as defined in the statute.

    (3) Direct and predictable effect. (i) A particular matter will have 
a ``direct'' effect on a financial interest if there is a close causal 
link between any decision or action to be taken in the matter and any 
expected effect of the matter on the financial interest. An effect may 
be direct even though it does not occur immediately. A particular matter 
will not have a direct effect on a financial interest, however, if the 
chain of causation is attenuated or is contingent upon the occurrence of 
events that are speculative or that are independent of, and unrelated 
to, the matter. A particular matter that has an effect on a financial 
interest only as a consequence of its effects on the general economy 
does not have a direct effect within the meaning of this part.
    (ii) A particular matter will have a ``predictable'' effect if there 
is a real, as opposed to a speculative, possibility that the matter will 
affect the financial interest. It is not necessary, however, that the 
magnitude of the gain or loss be known, and the dollar amount of the 
gain or loss is immaterial.

    Example 1: An attorney at the Department of Justice is working on a 
case in which several large companies are defendants. If the Department 
wins the case, the defendants may be required to reimburse the Federal 
Government for their failure to adequately perform work under several 
contracts with the Government. The attorney's spouse is a salaried 
employee of one of the companies, working in a division that has no 
involvement in any of the contracts. She does not participate in any 
bonus or benefit plans tied to the profitability of the company, nor 
does she own stock in the company. Because there is no evidence that the 
case will have a direct and predictable effect on whether the spouse 
will retain her job or maintain the level of her salary, or whether the 
company will undergo any reorganization that would affect her interests, 
the attorney would not have a disqualifying financial interest in the 
matter. However, the attorney must consider, under the requirements of 
Sec. 2635.502 of this chapter, whether his impartiality would be 
questioned if he continues to work on the case.
    Example 2: A special Government employee (SGE) whose principal 
employment is as a researcher at a major university is appointed to 
serve on an advisory committee that will evaluate the safety and 
effectiveness of a new medical device to regulate arrhythmic heartbeats. 
The device is being developed by Alpha Medical Inc., a company which 
also has contracted with the SGE's university to assist in developing 
another medical device related to kidney dialysis. There is no evidence 
that the advisory committee's determinations concerning the medical 
device

[[Page 578]]

under review will affect Alpha Medical's contract with the university to 
develop the kidney dialysis device. The SGE may participate in the 
committee's deliberations because those deliberations will not have a 
direct and predictable effect on the financial interests of the 
researcher or his employer.
    Example 3: The SGE in the preceding example is instead asked to 
serve on an advisory committee that has been convened to conduct a 
preliminary evaluation of the new kidney dialysis device developed by 
Alpha Medical under contract with the employee's university. Alpha's 
contract with the university requires the university to undertake 
additional testing of the device to address issues raised by the 
committee during its review. The committee's actions will have a direct 
and predictable effect on the university's financial interest.
    Example 4: An engineer at the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) 
was formerly employed by Waste Management, Inc., a corporation subject 
to EPA's regulations concerning the disposal of hazardous waste 
materials. Waste Management is a large corporation, with less than 5% of 
its profits derived from handling hazardous waste materials. The 
engineer has a vested interest in a defined benefit pension plan 
sponsored by Waste Management which guarantees that he will receive 
payments of $500 per month beginning at age 62. As an employee of EPA, 
the engineer has been assigned to evaluate Waste Management's compliance 
with EPA hazardous waste regulations. There is no evidence that the 
engineer's monitoring activities will affect Waste Management's ability 
or willingness to pay his pension benefits when he is entitled to 
receive them at age 62. Therefore, the EPA's monitoring activities will 
not have a direct and predictable effect on the employee's financial 
interest in his Waste Management pension. However, the engineer should 
consider whether, under the standards set forth in 5 CFR 2635.502, a 
reasonable person would question his impartiality if he acts in a matter 
in which Waste Management is a party.

    (b) Disqualifying financial interests. For purposes of 18 U.S.C. 
208(a) and this part, the term financial interest means the potential 
for gain or loss to the employee, or other person specified in section 
208, as a result of governmental action on the particular matter. The 
disqualifying financial interest might arise from ownership of certain 
financial instruments or investments such as stock, bonds, mutual funds, 
or real estate. Additionally, a disqualifying financial interest might 
derive from a salary, indebtedness, job offer, or any similar interest 
that may be affected by the matter.

    Example 1: An employee of the Department of the Interior owns 
transportation bonds issued by the State of Minnesota. The proceeds of 
the bonds will be used to fund improvements to certain State highways. 
In her official position, the employee is evaluating an application from 
Minnesota for a grant to support a State wildlife refuge. The employee's 
ownership of the transportation bonds does not create a disqualifying 
financial interest in Minnesota's application for wildlife funds because 
approval or disapproval of the grant will not in any way affect the 
current value of the bonds or have a direct and predictable effect on 
the State's ability or willingness to honor its obligation to pay the 
bonds when they mature.
    Example 2: An employee of the Bureau of Land Management owns 
undeveloped land adjacent to Federal lands in New Mexico. A portion of 
the Federal land will be leased by the Bureau to a mining company for 
exploration and development, resulting in an increase in the value of 
the surrounding privately owned land, including that owned by the 
employee. The employee has a financial interest in the lease of the 
Federal land to the mining company and, therefore, cannot participate in 
Bureau matters involving the lease unless he obtains an individual 
waiver pursuant to 18 U.S.C. 208(b)(1).
    Example 3: A special Government employee serving on an advisory 
committee studying the safety and effectiveness of a new arthritis drug 
is a practicing physician with a specialty in treating arthritis. The 
drug being studied by the committee would be a low cost alternative to 
current treatments for arthritis. If the drug is ultimately approved, 
the physician will be able to prescribe the less expensive drug. The 
physician does not own stock in, or hold any position, or have any 
business relationship with the company developing the drug. Moreover, 
there is no indication that the availability of a less expensive 
treatment for arthritis will increase the volume and profitability of 
the doctor's private practice. Accordingly, the physician has no 
disqualifying financial interest in the actions of the advisory 
committee.

    (c) Interests of others. The financial interests of the following 
persons will serve to disqualify an employee to the same extent as the 
employee's own interests:
    (1) The employee's spouse;
    (2) The employee's minor child;
    (3) The employee's general partner;
    (4) An organization or entity which the employee serves as officer, 
director, trustee, general partner, or employee; and

[[Page 579]]

    (5) A person with whom the employee is negotiating for, or has an 
arrangement concerning, prospective employment.

    Example 1: An employee of the Consumer Product Safety Commission 
(CPSC) has two minor children who have inherited shares of stock from 
their grandparents in a company that manufactures small appliances. 
Unless an exemption is applicable under Sec. 2640.202 or he obtains a 
waiver under 18 U.S.C. 208(b)(1), the employee is disqualified from 
participating in a CPSC proceeding to require the manufacturer to remove 
a defective appliance from the market.
    Example 2: A newly appointed employee of the Department of Housing 
and Urban Development (HUD) is a general partner with three former 
business associates in a partnership that owns a travel agency. The 
employee knows that his three general partners are also partners in 
another partnership that owns a HUD-subsidized housing project. Unless 
he receives a waiver pursuant to 18 U.S.C. 208(b)(1) permitting him to 
act, the employee must disqualify himself from particular matters 
involving the HUD-subsidized project which his general partners own.
    Example 3: The spouse of an employee of the Department of Health and 
Human Services (HHS) works for a consulting firm that provides support 
services to colleges and universities on research projects they are 
conducting under grants from HHS. The spouse is a salaried employee who 
has no direct ownership interest in the firm such as through 
stockholding, and the award of a grant to a particular university will 
have no direct and predictable effect on his continued employment or his 
salary. Because the award of a grant will not affect the spouse's 
financial interest, section 208 would not bar the HHS employee from 
participating in the award of a grant to a university to which the 
consulting firm will provide services. However, the employee should 
consider whether her participation in the award of the grant would be 
barred under the impartiality provision in the Standards of Ethical 
Conduct for Employees of the Executive Branch at 5 CFR 2635.502.

    (d) Disqualification. Unless the employee is authorized to 
participate in the particular matter by virtue of an exemption or waiver 
described in subpart B or subpart C of this part, or the interest has 
been divested in accordance with paragraph (e) of this section, an 
employee shall disqualify himself from participating in a particular 
matter in which, to his knowledge, he or any other person specified in 
the statute has a financial interest, if the particular matter will have 
a direct and predictable effect on that interest. Disqualification is 
accomplished by not participating in the particular matter.
    (1) Notification. An employee who becomes aware of the need to 
disqualify himself from participation in a particular matter to which he 
has been assigned should notify the person responsible for his 
assignment. An employee who is responsible for his own assignments 
should take whatever steps are necessary to ensure that he does not 
participate in the matter from which he is disqualified. Appropriate 
oral or written notification of the employee's disqualification may be 
made to coworkers by the employee or a supervisor to ensure that the 
employee is not involved in a matter from which he is disqualified.
    (2) Documentation. An employee need not file a written 
disqualification statement unless he is required by part 2634 of this 
chapter to file written evidence of compliance with an ethics agreement 
with the Office of Government Ethics, is asked by an agency ethics 
official or the person responsible for his assignment to file a written 
disqualification statement, or is required to do so by agency 
supplemental regulation issued pursuant to 5 CFR 2635.105. However, an 
employee may elect to create a record of his actions by providing 
written notice to a supervisor or other appropriate official.

    Example 1: The supervisor of an employee of the Department of 
Education asks the employee to attend a meeting on his behalf on 
developing national standards for science education in secondary 
schools. When the employee arrives for the meeting, she realizes one of 
the participants is the president of Education Consulting Associates 
(ECA), a firm which has been awarded a contract to prepare a bulletin 
describing the Department's policies on science education standards. The 
employee's spouse has a subcontract with ECA to provide the graphics and 
charts that will be used in the bulletin. Because the employee realizes 
that the meeting will involve matters relating to the production of the 
bulletin, the employee properly decides that she must disqualify herself 
from participating in the discussions. After withdrawing from the 
meeting, the employee should notify her supervisor about the reason for 
her disqualification. She may elect to put her disqualification 
statement in writing, or to simply notify her supervisor

[[Page 580]]

orally. She may also elect to notify appropriate coworkers about her 
need to disqualify herself from this matter.

    (e) Divestiture of a disqualifying financial interest. Upon sale or 
other divestiture of the asset or other interest that causes his 
disqualification from participation in a particular matter, an employee 
is no longer prohibited from acting in the particular matter.
    (1) Voluntary divestiture. An employee who would otherwise be 
disqualified from participation in a particular matter may voluntarily 
sell or otherwise divest himself of the interest that causes the 
disqualification.
    (2) Directed divestiture. An employee may be required to sell or 
otherwise divest himself of the disqualifying financial interest if his 
continued holding of that interest is prohibited by statute or by agency 
supplemental regulation issued in accordance with Sec. 2635.403(a) of 
this chapter, or if the agency determines in accordance with 
Sec. 2635.403(b) of this chapter that a substantial conflict exists 
between the financial interest and the employee's duties or 
accomplishment of the agency's mission.
    (3) Eligibility for special tax treatment. An employee who is 
directed to divest an interest may be eligible to defer the tax 
consequences of divestiture under subpart J of part 2634 of this 
chapter. An employee who divests before obtaining a certificate of 
divestiture will not be eligible for this special tax treatment.
    (f) Official duties that give rise to potential conflicts. Where an 
employee's official duties create a substantial likelihood that the 
employee may be assigned to a particular matter from which he is 
disqualified, the employee should advise his supervisor or other person 
responsible for his assignments of that potential so that conflicting 
assignments can be avoided, consistent with the agency's needs.



          Subpart B--Exemptions Pursuant to 18 U.S.C. 208(b)(2)



Sec. 2640.201  Exemptions for interests in mutual funds, unit investment trusts, and employee benefit plans.

    (a) Diversified mutual funds and unit investment trusts. An employee 
may participate in any particular matter affecting one or more holdings 
of a diversified mutual fund or a diversified unit investment trust 
where the disqualifying financial interest in the matter arises because 
of the ownership of an interest in the fund or trust.

    Example 1: An employee owns shares worth $100,000 in several mutual 
funds whose portfolios contain stock in a small computer company. Each 
mutual fund prospectus describes the fund as a ``management company,'' 
but does not characterize the fund as having a policy of concentrating 
its investments in any particular industry, business, single country 
(other than the U.S.) or bonds of a single State. The employee may 
participate in agency matters affecting the computer company.
    Example 2: A nonsupervisory employee of the Department of Energy 
owns shares in a mutual fund that expressly concentrates its holdings in 
the stock of utility companies. The employee may not rely on the 
exemption in paragraph (a) of this section to act in matters affecting a 
utility company whose stock is part of the mutual fund's portfolio 
because the fund is not a diversified fund as defined in 
Sec. 2640.102(a). The employee may, however, seek an individual waiver 
under 18 U.S.C. 208(b)(1) permitting him to act. Moreover, depending 
upon the value of the employee's interest in the fund and the type of 
particular matter in which he would participate, one of the exemptions 
at Sec. 2640.202(a) or (b) for interests arising from publicly traded 
securities may be applicable.

    (b) Sector mutual funds. An employee may participate in any 
particular matter affecting one or more holdings of a sector mutual fund 
where the affected holding is not invested in the sector in which the 
fund concentrates, and where the disqualifying financial interest in the 
matter arises because of ownership of an interest in the fund.

    Example 1: An employee of the Federal Reserve owns shares in the 
mutual fund described in the preceding example. In addition to holdings 
in utility companies, the mutual fund contains stock in certain regional 
banks and bank holding companies whose financial interests would be 
affected by an investigation in which the Federal Reserve employee would 
participate. The employee is not disqualified from participating in the 
investigation because the banks that would be affected are not part of 
the sector in which the fund concentrates.

    (c) Employee benefit plans. An employee may participate in:
    (1) Any particular matter affecting one or more holdings of an 
employee

[[Page 581]]

benefit plan, where the disqualifying financial interest in the matter 
arises from membership in:
    (i) The Thrift Savings Plan for Federal employees described in 5 
U.S.C. 8437;
    (ii) A pension plan established or maintained by a State government 
or any political subdivision of a State government for its employees; or
    (iii) A diversified employee benefit plan, provided:
    (A) The investments of the plan are administered by an independent 
trustee, and the employee, or other person specified in section 208(a) 
does not participate in the selection of the plan's investments or 
designate specific plan investments (except for directing that 
contributions be divided among several different categories of 
investments, such as stocks, bonds or mutual funds, which are available 
to plan participants); and
    (B) The plan is not a profit-sharing or stock bonus plan.

    Note to paragraph (a)(1): Employee benefit plans that are tax 
deferred under 26 U.S.C. 401(k) are not considered profit-sharing plans 
for purposes of this section. However, for the exemption to apply, 
401(k) plans must meet the requirements of paragraph (c)(1)(iii)(A) of 
this section.

    (2) Particular matters of general applicability, such as rulemaking, 
affecting the State or local government sponsor of a State or local 
government pension plan described in paragraph (c)(1)(ii) of this 
section where the disqualifying financial interest in the matter arises 
because of participation in the plan.

    Example 1: An attorney terminates his position with a law firm to 
take a position with the Department of Justice. As a result of his 
employment with the firm, the employee has interests in a 401(k) plan, 
the assets of which are invested primarily in stocks chosen by an 
independent financial management firm. He also participates in a defined 
contribution pension plan maintained by the firm, the assets of which 
are stocks, bonds, and financial instruments. The plan is managed by an 
independent trustee. Assuming that the manager of the pension plan has a 
written policy of diversifying plan investments, the employee may act in 
matters affecting the plan's holdings. The employee may also participate 
in matters affecting the holdings of his 401(k) plan if the individual 
financial management firm that selects the plan's investments has a 
written policy of diversifying the plan's assets. Employee benefit plans 
that are tax deferred under 26 U.S.C. 401(k) are not considered profit-
sharing or stock bonus plans for purposes of this part.
    Example 2: An employee of the Department of Agriculture who is a 
former New York State employee has a vested interest in a pension plan 
established by the State of New York for its employees. She may 
participate in an agency matter that would affect a company whose stock 
is in the pension plan's portfolio. She also may participate in a matter 
of general applicability affecting all States, including the State of 
New York, such as the drafting and promulgation of a rule requiring 
States to expend additional resources implementing the Food Stamp 
program. Unless she obtains an individual waiver under 18 U.S.C. 
208(b)(1), she may not participate in a matter involving the State of 
New York as a party, such as an application by the State for additional 
Federal funding for administrative support services, if that matter 
would affect the State's ability or willingness to honor its obligation 
to pay her pension benefits.



Sec. 2640.202  Exemptions for interests in securities.

    (a) De minimis exemption for matters involving parties. An employee 
may participate in any particular matter involving specific parties in 
which the disqualifying financial interest arises from the ownership by 
the employee, his spouse or minor children of securities issued by one 
or more entities affected by the matter, if:
    (1) The securities are publicly traded, or are long-term Federal 
Government, or are municipal securities; and
    (2) The aggregate market value of the holdings of the employee, his 
spouse, and his minor children in the securities of all entities does 
not exceed $5,000.

    Example 1: An employee owns 100 shares of publicly traded stock 
valued at $3,000 in XYZ Corporation. As part of his official duties, the 
employee is evaluating bids for performing computer maintenance services 
at his agency and discovers that XYZ Corporation is one of the companies 
that has submitted a bid. The employee is not required to recuse himself 
from continuing to evaluate the bids.
    Example 2: In the preceding example, the employee and his spouse 
each own 100 shares of stock in XYZ Corporation, resulting in ownership 
of $6,000 worth of stock by the employee and his spouse. The exemption 
in paragraph (a) of this section would not permit the employee to 
participate in the evaluation of bids because the aggregate market

[[Page 582]]

value of the holdings of the employee, spouse and minor children in XYZ 
Corporation exceeds $5,000. The employee could, however, seek an 
individual waiver under 18 U.S.C. 208(b)(1) in order to participate in 
the evaluation of bids.
    Example 3: An employee is assigned to monitor XYZ Corporation's 
performance of a contract to provide computer maintenance services at 
the employee's agency. At the time the employee is first assigned these 
duties, he owns publicly traded stock in XYZ Corporation valued at less 
than $5,000. During the time the contract is being performed, however, 
the value of the employee's stock increases to $7,500. When the employee 
knows that the value of his stock exceeds $5,000, he must disqualify 
himself from any further participation in matters affecting XYZ 
Corporation or seek an individual waiver under 18 U.S.C. 208(b)(1). 
Alternatively, the employee may divest the portion of his XYZ stock that 
exceeds $5,000. This can be accomplished through a standing order with 
his broker to sell when the value of the stock exceeds $5,000.

    (b) De minimis exemption for matters of general applicability. An 
employee may participate in any particular matter of general 
applicability, such as rulemaking, in which the disqualifying financial 
interest arises from the ownership by the employee, his spouse or minor 
children of securities issued by one or more entities affected by the 
matter, if:
    (i) The securities are publicly traded, or are municipal securities, 
the market value of which does not exceed:
    (A) $25,000 in any one such entity; and
    (B) $50,000 in all affected entities; or
    (ii) The securities are long-term Federal Government securities, the 
market value of which does not exceed $50,000.
    (2) For purposes of this paragraph (b), the value of securities 
owned by the employee, his spouse, and minor children must be aggregated 
in applying the exemption.

    Example 1: The Bureau of Export Administration at the Department of 
Commerce is in the process of formulating a regulation concerning 
exportation of portable computers. The regulation will affect all 
domestic companies that sell portable computers. An employee of the 
Department who is assisting in drafting the regulation owns $17,000 
worth of stock in CompAmerica and $20,000 worth of stock in XYZ Computer 
Inc. Even though the employee owns $37,000 worth of stock in companies 
that will be affected by the regulation, she may participate in drafting 
the regulation because the value of the securities she owns does not 
exceed $25,000 in any one affected company and the total value of stock 
owned in all affected companies does not exceed $50,000.
    Example 2: A health scientist administrator employed in the Public 
Health Service at the Department of Health and Human Services is 
assigned to serve on a Department-wide task force that will recommend 
changes in how Medicare reimbursements will be made to health care 
providers. The employee owns $10,000 worth of shares in a sector mutual 
fund invested primarily in health-related companies such as 
pharmaceuticals, developers of medical instruments and devices, managed 
care health organizations, and acute care hospitals. Because the fund is 
not a ``diversified mutual fund'' as defined in Sec. 2640.102(a), the 
exemption at Sec. 2640.201(a) is not applicable. However, because the 
fund is a ``publicly traded security'' as defined in Sec. 2640.102(p), 
the exemption for financial interests arising from ownership of a de 
minimis amount of securities at paragraph (b) of this section will 
permit the employee to participate on the task force.

    (c) Exemption for certain Federal Government securities. An employee 
may participate in any particular matter in which the disqualifying 
financial interest arises from the ownership of short-term Federal 
Government securities or from U.S. Savings bonds.
    (d) Exemption for interests of tax-exempt organizations. An employee 
may participate in any particular matter in which the disqualifying 
financial interest arises from the ownership of publicly traded or 
municipal securities, or long-term Federal Government securities by an 
organization which is tax-exempt pursuant to 26 U.S.C. 501(c) (3) or 
(4), and of which the employee is an unpaid officer, director, or 
trustee, or an employee, if:
    (1) The matter affects only the organization's investments, not the 
organization directly;
    (2) The employee plays no role in making investment decisions for 
the organization, except for participating in the decision to invest in 
several different categories of investments such as stocks, bonds, or 
mutual funds; and
    (3) The organization's only relationship to the issuer, other than 
that which arises from routine commercial transactions, is that of 
investor.


[[Page 583]]


    Example 1: An employee of the Federal Reserve is a director of the 
National Association to Save Trees (NAST), an environmental organization 
that is tax-exempt under section 501(c)(3) of the Internal Revenue Code. 
The employee knows that NAST has an endowment fund that is partially 
invested in the publicly traded stock of Computer Inc. The employee's 
position at the Federal Reserve involves the procurement of computer 
software, including software marketed by Computer Inc. The employee may 
participate in the procurement of software from Computer Inc. provided 
that he is not involved in selecting NAST's investments, and that NAST 
has no relationship to Computer Inc. other than as an investor in the 
company and routine purchaser of Computer Inc. software.

    (e) Exemption for certain interests of general partners. An employee 
may participate in any particular matter in which the disqualifying 
financial interest arises from:
    (1) The ownership of publicly traded securities, long-term Federal 
Government securities, or municipal securities by the employee's general 
partner, provided:
    (i) Ownership of the securities is not related to the partnership 
between the employee and his general partner, and
    (ii) The value of the securities does not exceed $200,000; or
    (2) Any interest of the employee's general partner if the employee's 
relationship to the general partner is as a limited partner in a 
partnership that has at least 100 limited partners.

    Example 1: An employee of the Department of Transportation is a 
general partner in a partnership that owns commercial property. The 
employee knows that one of his partners owns stock in an aviation 
company valued at $100,000 because the stock has been pledged as 
collateral for the purchase of the commercial property by the 
partnership. In the absence of an individual waiver under 18 U.S.C. 
208(b)(1), the employee may not act in a matter affecting the aviation 
company. Because the stock has been pledged as collateral, ownership of 
the securities is related to the partnership between the employee and 
his general partner.
    Example 2: An employee of the Pension Benefit Guaranty Corporation 
(PBGC) has a limited partnership interest in Ambank Partners, a large 
partnership with more than 500 limited partners. The partnership assets 
are invested in the securities of various financial institutions. 
Ambank's general partner is Capital Investment Services, an investment 
firm whose pension plan for its own employees is being examined by the 
PBGC for possible unfunded liabilities. Even though the employee's 
general partner (Capital Investment Services) has a financial interest 
in PBGC's review of the pension plan, the employee may participate in 
the review because his relationship with his general partner is that of 
a limited partner in a partnership that has at least 100 limited 
partners.



Sec. 2640.203  Miscellaneous exemptions.

    (a) Hiring decisions. An employee may participate in a hiring 
decision involving an applicant who is currently employed by a 
corporation that issues publicly traded securities, if the disqualifying 
financial interest arises from:
    (1) Ownership of publicly traded securities issued by the 
corporation; or
    (2) Participation in a vested pension plan sponsored by the 
corporation.
    (b) Employees on leave from institutions of higher education. An 
employee on a leave of absence from an institution of higher education 
may participate in any particular matter of general applicability 
affecting the financial interests of the institution from which he is on 
leave, provided that the matter will not have a special or distinct 
effect on that institution other than as part of a class.

    Example 1: An employee at the Department of Defense (DOD) is on a 
leave of absence from his position as a tenured Professor of Engineering 
at the University of California (UC) at Berkeley. While at DOD, he is 
assigned to assist in developing a regulation which will contain new 
standards for the oversight of grants given by DOD. Even though the 
University of California at Berkeley is a DOD grantee, and will be 
affected by these new monitoring standards, the employee may participate 
in developing the standards because UC Berkeley will be affected only as 
part of the class of all DOD grantees. However, if the new standards 
would affect the employee's own financial interest, such as by affecting 
his tenure or his salary, the employee could not participate in the 
matter unless he first obtains an individual waiver under section 
208(b)(1).
    Example 2: An employee on leave from a university could not 
participate in the development of an agency program of grants 
specifically designed to facilitate research in jet propulsion systems 
where the employee's university is one of just two or three universities 
likely to receive a grant under the new

[[Page 584]]

program. Even though the grant announcement is open to all universities, 
the employee's university is among the very few known to have facilities 
and equipment adequate to conduct the research. The matter would have a 
distinct effect on the institution other than as part of a class.

    (c) Multi-campus institutions of higher education. An employee may 
participate in any particular matter affecting one campus of a State 
multi-campus institution of higher education, if the employee's 
disqualifying financial interest is employment in a position with no 
multi-campus responsibilities at a separate campus of the same multi-
campus institution.

    Example 1: A special Government employee (SGE) member of an advisory 
committee convened by the National Science Foundation is a full-time 
professor in the School of Engineering at one campus of a State 
university. The SGE may participate in formulating the committee's 
recommendation to award a grant to a researcher at another campus of the 
same State university system.
    Example 2: A member of the Board of Regents at a State university is 
asked to serve on an advisory committee established by the Department of 
Health and Human Services to consider applications for grants for human 
genome research projects. An application from another university that is 
part of the same State system will be reviewed by the committee. Unless 
he receives an individual waiver under section 208(b)(1) or (b)(3), the 
advisory committee member may not participate in matters affecting the 
second university that is part of the State system because as a member 
of the Board of Regents, he has duties and responsibilities that affect 
the entire State educational system.

    (d) Exemptions for financial interests arising from Federal 
Government employment or from Social Security or veterans' benefits. An 
employee may participate in any particular matter where the 
disqualifying financial interest arises from Federal Government or 
Federal Reserve Bank salary or benefits, or from Social Security or 
veterans' benefits, except an employee may not:
    (1) Make determinations that individually or specially affect his 
own salary and benefits; or
    (2) Make determinations, requests, or recommendations that 
individually or specially relate to, or affect, the salary or benefits 
of any other person specified in section 208.

    Example 1: An employee of the Office of Management and Budget may 
vigorously and energetically perform the duties of his position even 
though his outstanding performance would result in a performance bonus 
or other similar merit award.
    Example 2: A policy analyst at the Defense Intelligence Agency may 
request promotion to another grade or salary level. However, the analyst 
may not recommend or approve the promotion of her general partner to the 
next grade.
    Example 3: An engineer employed by the National Science Foundation 
may request that his agency pay the registration fees and appropriate 
travel expenses required for him to attend a conference sponsored by the 
Engineering Institute of America. However, the employee may not approve 
payment of his own travel expenses and registration fees unless he has 
been delegated, in advance, authority to make such approvals in 
accordance with agency policy.
    Example 4: A GS-14 attorney at the Department of Justice may review 
and make comments about the legal sufficiency of a bill to raise the pay 
level of all Federal employees paid under the General Schedule even 
though her own pay level, and that of her spouse who works at the 
Department of Labor, would be raised if the bill were to become law.
    Example 5: An employee of the Department of Veterans Affairs (VA) 
may assist in drafting a regulation that will provide expanded hospital 
benefits for veterans, even though he himself is a veteran who would be 
eligible for treatment in a hospital operated by the VA.
    Example 6: An employee of the Office of Personnel Management may 
participate in discussions with various health insurance providers to 
formulate the package of benefits that will be available to Federal 
employees who participate in the Government's Federal Employees Health 
Benefits Program, even though the employee will obtain health insurance 
from one of these providers through the program.
    Example 7: An employee of the Federal Supply Service Division of the 
General Services Administration (GSA) may participate in GSA's 
evaluation of the feasibility of privatizing the entire Federal Supply 
Service, even though the employee's own position would be eliminated if 
the Service were privatized.
    Example 8: Absent an individual waiver under section 208(b)(1), the 
employee in the preceding example could not participate in the 
implementation of a GSA plan to create an employee-owned private 
corporation which would carry out Federal Supply Service functions under 
contract with GSA. Because implementing the plan would result not only 
in the elimination of the employee's Federal position, but also in the 
creation of

[[Page 585]]

a new position in the new corporation to which the employee would be 
transferred, the employee would have a disqualifying financial interest 
in the matter arising from other than Federal salary and benefits, or 
Social Security or veterans benefits.
    Example 9: A career member of the Senior Executive Service (SES) at 
the Internal Revenue Service (IRS) may serve on a performance review 
board that makes recommendations about the performance awards that will 
be awarded to other career SES employees at the IRS. The amount of the 
employee's own SES performance award would be affected by the board's 
recommendations because all SES awards are derived from the same limited 
pool of funds. However, the employee's activities on the board involve 
only recommendations, and not determinations that individually or 
specially affect his own award. Additionally, 5 U.S.C. 5384(c)(2) 
requires that a majority of the board's members be career SES employees.
    Example 10: In carrying out a reorganization of the Office of 
General Counsel (OGC) of the Federal Trade Commission, the Deputy 
General Counsel is asked to determine which of five Senior Executive 
Service (SES) positions in the OGC to abolish. Because her own position 
is one of the five SES positions being considered for elimination, the 
matter is one that would individually or specially affect her own salary 
and benefits and, therefore, the Deputy may not decide which position 
should be abolished.

    Note to paragraph (d): This exemption does not permit an employee to 
take any action in violation of any other statutory or regulatory 
requirement, such as the prohibition on the employment of relatives at 5 
U.S.C. 3110.

    (e) Commercial discount and incentive programs. An employee may 
participate in any particular matter affecting the sponsor of a 
discount, incentive, or other similar benefit program if the 
disqualifying financial interest arises because of participation in the 
program, provided:
    (1) The program is open to the general public; and
    (2) Participation in the program involves no other financial 
interest in the sponsor, such as stockholding.

    Example 1: An attorney at the Pension Benefit Guaranty Corporation 
who is a member of a frequent flier program sponsored by Alpha Airlines 
may assist in an action against Alpha for failing to make required 
payments to its employee pension fund, even though the agency action 
will cause Alpha to disband its frequent flier program.

    (f) Mutual insurance companies. An employee may participate in any 
particular matter affecting a mutual insurance company if the 
disqualifying financial interest arises because of an interest as a 
policyholder, unless the matter would affect the company's ability to 
pay claims required under the terms of the policy or to pay the cash 
value of the policy.
    Example 1: An administrative law judge at the Department of Labor 
receives dividends from a mutual insurance company which he takes in the 
form of reduced premiums on his life insurance policy. The amount of the 
dividend is based upon the company's overall profitability. 
Nevertheless, he may preside in a Department hearing involving a major 
corporation insured by the same company even though the insurance 
company will have to pay the corporation's penalties and other costs if 
the Department prevails in the hearing.
    Example 2: An employee of the Department of Justice is assigned to 
prosecute a case involving the fraudulent practices of an issuer of junk 
bonds. While developing the facts pertinent to the case, the employee 
learns that the mutual life insurance company from which he holds a life 
insurance policy has invested heavily in these junk bonds. If the 
Government succeeds in its case, the bonds will be worthless and the 
corresponding decline in the insurance company's investments will impair 
the company's ability to pay claims under the policies it has issued. 
The employee may not continue assisting in the prosecution of the case 
unless he obtains an individual waiver pursuant to section 208(b)(1).

    (g) Exemption for employment interests of special Government 
employees serving on advisory committees. A special Government employee 
serving on an advisory committee within the meaning of the Federal 
Advisory Committee Act (5 U.S.C. app.) may participate in any particular 
matter of general applicability where the disqualifying financial 
interest arises from his non-Federal employment or non-Federal 
prospective employment, provided that the matter will not have a special 
or distinct effect on the employee or employer other than as part of a 
class. For purposes of this paragraph, ``disqualifying financial 
interest'' arising from non-Federal employment does not include the 
interests of a special Government employee arising from the ownership of 
stock in his employer or prospective employer.


[[Page 586]]


    Example 1: A chemist employed by a major pharmaceutical company has 
been appointed to serve on an advisory committee established to develop 
recommendations for new standards for AIDS vaccine trials involving 
human subjects. Even though the chemist's employer is in the process of 
developing an experimental AIDS vaccine and therefore will be affected 
by the new standards, the chemist may participate in formulating the 
advisory committee's recommendations. The chemist's employer will be 
affected by the new standards only as part of the class of all 
pharmaceutical companies and other research entities that are attempting 
to develop an AIDS vaccine.
    Example 2: The National Cancer Institute (NCI) has established an 
advisory committee to evaluate a university's performance of an NCI 
grant to study the efficacy of a newly developed breast cancer drug. An 
employee of the university may not participate in the evaluation of the 
university's performance because it is not a matter of general 
applicability.
    Example 3: An engineer whose principal employment is with a major 
Department of Defense (DOD) contractor is appointed to serve on an 
advisory committee established by DOD to develop concepts for the next 
generation of laser-guided missiles. The engineer's employer, as well as 
a number of other similar companies, has developed certain missile 
components for DOD in the past, and has the capability to work on 
aspects of the newer missile designs under consideration by the 
committee. The engineer owns $20,000 worth of stock in his employer. 
Because the exemption for the employment interests of special Government 
employees serving on advisory committees does not extend to financial 
interests arising from the ownership of stock, the engineer may not 
participate in committee matters affecting his employer unless he 
receives an individual waiver under section 208(b)(1) or (b)(3), or 
determines whether the exemption for interests in securities at 
Sec. 2640.202(b) applies.

    (h) Directors of Federal Reserve Banks. A Director of a Federal 
Reserve Bank or a branch of a Federal Reserve Bank may participate in 
the following matters, even though they may be particular matters in 
which he, or any other person specified in section 208(a), has a 
disqualifying financial interest:
    (1) Establishment of rates to be charged for all advances and 
discounts by Federal Reserve Banks;
    (2) Consideration of monetary policy matters, regulations, statutes 
and proposed or pending legislation, and other matters of broad 
applicability intended to have uniform application to banks within the 
Reserve Bank district;
    (3) Approval or ratification of extensions of credit, advances or 
discounts to a depository institution that has not been determined to be 
in a hazardous financial condition by the President of the Reserve Bank; 
or
    (4) Approval or ratification of extensions of credit, advances or 
discounts to a depository institution that has been determined to be in 
a hazardous financial condition by the President of the Reserve Bank, 
provided that the disqualifying financial interest arises from the 
ownership of stock in, or service as an officer, director, trustee, 
general partner or employee, of an entity other than the depository 
institution, or its parent holding company or subsidiary of such holding 
company.
    (i) Medical products. A special Government employee serving on an 
advisory committee within the meaning of the Federal Advisory Committee 
Act (5 U.S.C. app.) may participate in Federal advisory committee 
matters concerning medical products if the disqualifying financial 
interest arises from:
    (1) Employment with a hospital or other similar medical facility 
whose only interest in the medical product or device is purchase of it 
for use by, or sale to, its patients; or
    (2) The use or prescription of medical products for patients.
    (j) Nonvoting members of standing technical advisory committees 
established by the Food and Drug Administration. A special Government 
employee serving as a nonvoting representative member of an advisory 
committee established by the Food and Drug Administration pursuant to 
the requirements of the Federal Advisory Committee Act (5 U.S.C. app.) 
and appointed under a statutory authority requiring the appointment of 
representative members, may participate in any particular matter 
affecting a disqualifying financial interest in the class which the 
employee represents. Nonvoting representative members of Food and Drug 
Administration advisory committees are described in 21 CFR 14.80(b)(2), 
14.84, 14.86, and 14.95(a).

    Example 1: The FDA's Medical Devices Advisory Committee is 
established pursuant to 21 U.S.C. 360c(b), which requires that each

[[Page 587]]

panel of the Committee include one nonvoting industry representative and 
one nonvoting consumer representative. An industry representative on the 
Ophthalmic Devices Panel of this Committee has been appointed as a 
special Government employee, in accordance with the procedures described 
at 14 CFR 14.84. The special Government employee may participate in 
Panel discussions concerning the premarket approval application for a 
silicone posterior chamber intraocular lens manufactured by MedInc, even 
though she is employed by, and owns stock in, another company that 
manufactures a competing product. However, a consumer representative who 
serves as a special Government employee on the same Panel may not 
participate in Panel discussions if he owns $30,000 worth of stock in 
MedInc unless he first obtains an individual waiver under 18 U.S.C. 208 
(b)(1) or (b)(3).

    (k) Employees of the Tennessee Valley Authority. An employee of the 
Tennessee Valley Authority (TVA) may participate in developing or 
approving rate schedules or similar matters affecting the general cost 
of electric power sold by TVA, if the disqualifying financial interest 
arises from use of such power by the employee or by any other person 
specified in section 208(a).



Sec. 2640.204  Prohibited financial interests.

    None of the exemptions set forth in Secs. 2640.201, 2640.202, or 
2640.203 apply to any financial interest held or acquired by an 
employee, his spouse, or minor child in violation of a statute or agency 
supplemental regulation issued in accordance with 5 CFR 2635.105, or 
that is otherwise prohibited under 5 CFR 2635.403(b).

    Example 1: The Office of the Comptroller of the Currency (OCC), in a 
regulation that supplements part 2635 of this chapter, prohibits certain 
employees from owning stock in commercial banks. If an OCC employee 
purchases stock valued at $2,000 in contravention of the regulation, the 
exemption at Sec. 2640.202(a) for interests arising from the ownership 
of no more than $5,000 worth of publicly traded stock will not apply to 
the employee's participation in matters affecting the bank.



Sec. 2640.205  Employee responsibility.

    Prior to taking official action in a matter which an employee knows 
would affect his financial interest or the interest of another person 
specified in 18 U.S.C. 208(a), an employee must determine whether one of 
the exemptions in Secs. 2640.201, 2640.202, or 2640.203 would permit his 
action notwithstanding the existence of the disqualifying interest. An 
employee who is unsure whether an exemption is applicable in a 
particular case, should consult an agency ethics official prior to 
taking action in a particular matter.



Sec. 2640.206  Existing agency exemptions.

    An employee who, prior to January 17, 1997, acted in an official 
capacity in a particular matter in which he had a financial interest, 
will be deemed to have acted in accordance with applicable regulations 
if he acted in reliance on an exemption issued by his employing 
Government agency pursuant to 18 U.S.C. 208(b)(2), as in effect prior to 
November 30, 1989.



                      Subpart C--Individual Waivers



Sec. 2640.301  Waivers issued pursuant to 18 U.S.C. 208(b)(1).

    (a) Requirements for issuing an individual waiver under 18 U.S.C. 
208(b)(1). Pursuant to 18 U.S.C. 208(b)(1), an agency may determine in 
an individual case that a disqualifying financial interest in a 
particular matter or matters is not so substantial as to be deemed 
likely to affect the integrity of the employee's services to the 
Government. Upon making that determination, the agency may then waive 
the employee's disqualification notwithstanding the financial interest, 
and permit the employee to participate in the particular matter. Waivers 
issued pursuant to section 208(b)(1) should comply with the following 
requirements:
    (1) The disqualifying financial interest, and the nature and 
circumstances of the particular matter or matters, must be fully 
disclosed to the Government official responsible for appointing the 
employee to his position (or other Government official to whom authority 
to issue such a waiver for the employee has been delegated);
    (2) The waiver must be issued in writing by the Government official 
responsible for appointing the employee to his position (or other 
Government official to whom the authority to issue such a waiver for the 
employee has been delegated);

[[Page 588]]

    (3) The waiver should describe the disqualifying financial interest, 
the particular matter or matters to which it applies, the employee's 
role in the matter or matters, and any limitations on the employee's 
ability to act in such matters;
    (4) The waiver shall be based on a determination that the 
disqualifying financial interest is not so substantial as to be deemed 
likely to affect the integrity of the employee's services to the 
Government. Statements concerning the employee's good character are not 
material to, nor a basis for making, such a decision;
    (5) The waiver must be issued prior to the employee taking any 
action in the matter or matters; and
    (6) The waiver may apply to both present and future financial 
interests, provided the interests are described with sufficient 
specificity.

    Note to paragraph (a): The disqualifying financial interest, the 
particular matter or matters to which the waiver applies, and the 
employee's role in such matters do not need to be described with any 
particular degree of specificity. For example, if a waiver were to apply 
to all matters which an employee would undertake as part of his official 
duties, the waiver document would not have to enumerate those duties. 
The information contained in the waiver, however, should provide a clear 
understanding of the nature and identity of the disqualifying financial 
interest, the matters to which the waiver will apply, and the employee's 
role in such matters.

    (b) Agency determination concerning substantiality of the 
disqualifying financial interest. In determining whether a disqualifying 
financial interest is sufficiently substantial to be deemed likely to 
affect the integrity of the employee's services to the Government, the 
responsible official may consider the following factors:
    (1) The type of interest that is creating the disqualification (e.g. 
stock, bonds, real estate, other securities, cash payment, job offer, or 
enhancement of a spouse's employment);
    (2) The identity of the person whose financial interest is involved, 
and if the interest is not the employee's, the relationship of that 
person to the employee;
    (3) The dollar value of the disqualifying financial interest, if it 
is known or can be estimated (e.g. the amount of cash payment which may 
be gained or lost, the salary of the job which will be gained or lost, 
the predictable change in either the market value of the stock or the 
actual or potential profit or loss or cost of the matter to the company 
issuing the stock, the change in the value of real estate or other 
securities);
    (4) The value of the financial instrument or holding from which the 
disqualifying financial interest arises (e.g. the face value of the 
stock, bond, other security or real estate) and its value in 
relationship to the individual's assets. If the disqualifying financial 
interest is that of a general partner or organization specified in 
section 208, this information must be provided only to the extent that 
it is known by the employee; and
    (5) The nature and importance of the employee's role in the matter, 
including the extent to which the employee is called upon to exercise 
discretion in the matter.
    (6) Other factors which may be taken into consideration include:
    (i) The sensitivity of the matter;
    (ii) The need for the employee's services in the particular matter; 
and
    (iii) Adjustments that may be made in the employee's duties that 
would reduce or eliminate the likelihood that the integrity of the 
employee's services would be questioned by a reasonable person.



Sec. 2640.302  Waivers issued pursuant to 18 U.S.C. 208(b)(3).

    (a) Requirements for issuing an individual waiver under 18 U.S.C. 
208(b)(3). Pursuant to 18 U.S.C. 208(b)(3), an agency may determine in 
an individual case that the prohibition of 18 U.S.C. 208(a) should not 
apply to a special Government employee serving on, or an individual 
being considered for, appointment to an advisory committee established 
under the Federal Advisory Committee Act, notwithstanding the fact that 
the individual has one or more financial interests that would be 
affected by the activities of the advisory committee. The agency's 
determination must be based on a certification that the need for the 
employee's services outweighs the potential for a

[[Page 589]]

conflict of interest created by the financial interest involved. Waivers 
issued pursuant to 18 U.S.C. 208(b)(3) should comply with the following 
requirements:
    (1) The advisory committee upon which the individual is serving, or 
will serve, is an advisory committee within the meaning of the Federal 
Advisory Committee Act, 5 U.S.C. app.;
    (2) The waiver must be issued in writing by the Government official 
responsible for the individual's appointment (or other Government 
official to which authority to issue such waivers has been delegated) 
after the official reviews the financial disclosure report filed by the 
individual pursuant to the Ethics in Government Act of 1978;
    (3) The waiver must include a certification that the need for the 
individual's services on the advisory committee outweighs the potential 
for a conflict of interest;
    (4) The facts upon which the certification is based should be fully 
described in the waiver, including the nature of the financial interest, 
and the particular matter or matters to which the waiver applies;
    (5) The waiver should describe any limitations on the individual's 
ability to act in the matter or matters;
    (6) The waiver must be issued prior to the individual taking any 
action in the matter or matters; and
    (7) The waiver may apply to both present and future financial 
interests of the individual, provided the interests are described with 
sufficient specificity.
    (b) Agency certification concerning need for individual's services. 
In determining whether the need for an individual's services on an 
advisory committee outweighs the potential for a conflict of interest 
created by the disqualifying financial interest, the responsible 
official may consider the following factors:
    (1) The type of interest that is creating the disqualification (e.g. 
stock, bonds, real estate, other securities, cash payment, job offer, or 
enhancement of a spouse's employment);
    (2) The identity of the person whose financial interest is involved, 
and if the interest is not the individual's, the relationship of that 
person to the individual;
    (3) The uniqueness of the individual's qualifications;
    (4) The difficulty of locating a similarly qualified individual 
without a disqualifying financial interest to serve on the committee;
    (5) The dollar value of the disqualifying financial interest, if it 
is known or can be estimated (e.g. the amount of cash payment which may 
be gained or lost, the salary of the job which will be gained or lost, 
the predictable change in either the market value of the stock or the 
actual or potential profit or loss or cost of the matter to the company 
issuing the stock, the change in the value of real estate or other 
securities);
    (6) The value of the financial instrument or holding from which the 
disqualifying financial interest arises (e.g. the face value of the 
stock, bond, other security or real estate) and its value in 
relationship to the individual's assets. If the disqualifying financial 
interest is that of a general partner or organization specified in 
section 208, this information must be provided only to the extent that 
it is known by the employee; and
    (7) The extent to which the disqualifying financial interest will be 
affected individually or particularly by the actions of the advisory 
committee.



Sec. 2640.303  Consultation and notification regarding waivers.

    When practicable, an official is required to consult formally or 
informally with the Office of Government Ethics prior to granting a 
waiver referred to in Secs. 2640.301 and 2640.302. A copy of each such 
waiver is to be forwarded to the Director of the Office of Government 
Ethics.



Sec. 2640.304  Public availability of agency waivers.

    (a) Availability. A copy of an agency waiver issued pursuant to 18 
U.S.C. 208 (b)(1) or (b)(3) shall be made available upon request to the 
public by the issuing agency. Public release of waivers shall be in 
accordance with the procedures set forth in section 105 of the Ethics in 
Government Act of 1978, as amended. Those procedures are described in 5 
CFR 2634.603.

[[Page 590]]

    (b) Limitations on availability. In making a waiver issued pursuant 
to 18 U.S.C. 208 (b)(1) or (b)(3) publicly available, an agency:
    (1) May withhold from public disclosure any information contained in 
the waiver that would be exempt from disclosure pursuant to 5 U.S.C. 
552; and
    (2) Shall withhold from public disclosure information in a waiver 
issued pursuant to 18 U.S.C. 208(b)(3) concerning an individual's 
financial interest which is more extensive than that required to be 
disclosed by the individual in his financial disclosure report under the 
Ethics in Government Act of 1978, as amended, or which is otherwise 
subject to a prohibition on public disclosure under law.

    Effective Date Note: At 61 FR 66841, Dec. 18, 1996, part 2640 was 
revised effective Jan. 17, 1997. For the convenience of the user, the 
text remaining in effect until Jan. 17, 1997 follows:

  PART 2640--MISCELLANEOUS EXEMPTIONS UNDER 18 U.S.C. 208(b)(2) (ACTS 
                AFFECTING A PERSONAL FINANCIAL INTEREST)

    Authority: 5 U.S.C. App. (Ethics in Government Act of 1978); 18 
U.S.C. 208; E.O. 12674, 54 FR 15159, 3 CFR, 1989 Comp., p. 215, as 
modified by E.O. 12731, 55 FR 42547, 3 CFR, 1990 Comp., p. 306.
Sec. 2640.101  Exemptions for financial interests arising from Federal 
Government employment or from Social Security or veterans' benefits.
    An employee may participate in any particular matter, whether of 
general applicability or involving specific parties, where the 
disqualifying financial interest arises from Federal Government salary 
or benefits, or from Social Security or veterans' benefits, except an 
employee may not:
    (a) Make determinations that individually or specially affect his 
own Government salary and benefits, or Social Security or veterans' 
benefits; or
    (b) Make determinations, requests, or recommendations that 
individually or specially relate to, or affect, the Government salary or 
benefits, or Social Security or veterans' benefits of any other person 
specified in section 208.

    Note: This exemption does not permit an employee to take any action 
in violation of any other statutory or regulatory requirement, such as 
the prohibition on the employment of relatives at 5 U.S.C. 3110.

    Example 1: An employee of the Office of Management and Budget may 
vigorously and energetically perform the duties of his position even 
though his outstanding performance would result in a performance bonus 
or other similar merit award.
    Example 2: A policy analyst at the Defense Intelligence Agency may 
request promotion to another grade or salary level. However, the analyst 
may not recommend or approve the promotion of her general partner to the 
next grade.
    Example 3: An engineer employed by the National Science Foundation 
may request that his agency pay the registration fees and appropriate 
travel expenses required for him to attend a conference sponsored by the 
Engineering Institute of America. However, the employee may not approve 
payment of his own travel expenses and registration fees.
    Example 4: A GS-14 attorney at the Department of Justice may review 
and make comments about the legal sufficiency of a bill to raise the pay 
level of all Federal employees paid under the General Schedule even 
though her own pay level, and that of her spouse who works at the 
Department of Labor, would be raised if the bill were to become law.
    Example 5: An employee of the Department of Veterans Affairs (VA) 
may assist in drafting a regulation that will provide expanded hospital 
benefits for veterans, even though he himself is a veteran who would be 
eligible for treatment in a hospital operated by the VA.
    Example 6: An employee of the Office of Personnel Management may 
participate in discussions with various health insurance providers to 
formulate the package of benefits that will be available to Federal 
employees who participate in the Government's Federal Employees Health 
Benefits Program, even though the employee will obtain health insurance 
from one of these providers through the program.
    Example 7: An employee of the Federal Supply Service Division of the 
General Services Administration (GSA) may participate in GSA's 
evaluation of the feasibility of privatizing the entire Federal Supply 
Service, even though the employee's own position would be eliminated if 
the Service were privatized.
    Example 8: Absent an individual waiver under section 208(b)(1), the 
employee in the preceding example could not participate in the 
implementation of a GSA plan to create an employee-owned private 
corporation which would carry out Federal Supply Service functions under 
contract with GSA. Because implementing the plan would result not only 
in the elimination of the employee's Federal position, but also in the 
creation of a new position in the new corporation to which the employee 
would be transferred, the employee would have a disqualifying financial 
interest in the matter arising from other than Federal salary and 
benefits, or Social Security or veterans' benefits.

[[Page 591]]

    Example 9: A career member of the Senior Executive Service (SES) at 
the Internal Revenue Service (IRS) may serve on a performance review 
board that makes recommendations about the performance awards that will 
be awarded to other career SES employees at the IRS. The amount of the 
employee's own SES performance award would be affected by the board's 
recommendations because all SES awards are derived from the same limited 
pool of funds. However, the employee's activities on the board involve 
only recommendations, and not determinations that individually or 
specially affect his own award. Additionally, 5 U.S.C. 5384(c)(2) 
requires that a majority of the board's members be career SES employees.
    Example 10: In carrying out a reorganization of the Office of 
General Counsel (OGC) of the Federal Trade Commission, the Deputy 
General Counsel is asked to determine which of five Senior Executive 
Service (SES) positions in the OGC to abolish. Because her own position 
is one of the five SES positions being considered for elimination, the 
matter is one that would individually or specially affect her own salary 
and benefits and, therefore, the Deputy may not decide which position 
should be abolished.

[60 FR 44709, Aug. 28, 1995]



PART 2641--POST-EMPLOYMENT CONFLICT OF INTEREST RESTRICTIONS--Table of Contents




                      Subpart A--General Provisions

Sec.
2641.101  Definitions.

                    Subpart B--Substantive Provisions

2641.201  One-year restriction on a former senior employee's 
          representations to employees of former agency concerning 
          matter, regardless of prior involvement.

Appendix A to Part 2641--Positions Exempted from 18 U.S.C. 207(c)
Appendix B to Part 2641--Agency Components for Purposes of 18 U.S.C. 
          207(c)

     Authority: 5 U.S.C. App. (Ethics in Government Act of 1978); 18 
U.S.C. 207; E.O. 12674, 54 FR 15159, 3 CFR, 1989 Comp., p. 215, as 
modified by E.O. 12731, 55 FR 42547, 3 CFR, 1990 Comp., p. 306.

    Source: 56 FR 3963, Feb. 1, 1991, unless otherwise noted.



                      Subpart A--General Provisions



Sec. 2641.101  Definitions.

    The following terms are defined for purposes of this part:
    Agency includes any department, independent establishment, 
commission, administration, authority, board, or bureau of the United 
States, and includes a Government corporation. 18 U.S.C. 202(e)(1); 5 
U.S.C. 105.
    Department means one of the executive departments enumerated in 5 
U.S.C. 101.
    Designated agency ethics official means an officer or employee who 
is designated by the head of an agency to coordinate and manage an 
agency's ethics program in accordance with Sec. 2638.203 of this 
subchapter. 5 CFR 2638.202.
    Employee means any officer or employee of the executive branch as 
that term is defined in this section. Unless otherwise indicated, the 
term does not include the President or the Vice President. 18 U.S.C. 
202(c). It does not include an individual performing services for the 
United States as an independent contractor under a personal services 
contract or an enlisted member of the armed forces as defined in 5 
U.S.C. 2101(2). 18 U.S.C. 202(a). Unless otherwise indicated, the term 
encompasses senior employees, very senior employees, and special 
Government employees as defined in this section.
    Executive branch includes each executive agency as defined in 5 
U.S.C. 105, other than the General Accounting Office, and also includes 
any other entity or administrative unit in the executive branch. 18 
U.S.C. 202(e)(1).
    Former employee, former senior employee, or former very senior 
employee means one who was, and is no longer, an employee, senior 
employee, or very senior employee.
    Senior employee means an employee, other than a very senior 
employee, who is:
    (1) Employed in a position for which the rate of pay is specified in 
or fixed according to 5 U.S.C. 5311-5318 (the Executive Schedule);
    (2) Employed in a position for which the basic rate of pay, 
exclusive of any locality-based pay adjustment under 5 U.S.C. 5304 (or 
any comparable adjustment pursuant to interim authority of the 
President) is equal to or greater than the rate of basic pay payable for 
Level V of the Executive Schedule (including any such position in the 
Senior

[[Page 592]]

Executive Service or other SES-type systems, e.g., the Senior Foreign 
Service);
    (3) Appointed by the President to a position under 3 U.S.C. 
105(a)(2)(B);
    (4) Appointed by the Vice President to a position under 3 U.S.C. 
106(a)(1)(B);
    (5) Employed in a position which is held by an active duty 
commissioned officer of the uniformed services who is serving in a grade 
or rank for which the pay grade (as specified in 37 U.S.C. 201) is pay 
grade O-7 or above; or
    (6) Detailed to any such position.
    Special Government employee includes an officer or employee of an 
agency who is retained, designated, appointed, or employed to perform, 
with or without compensation, for not to exceed 130 days during any 
period of three hundred and sixty-five consecutive days, temporary 
duties either on a full-time or intermittent basis. See 18 U.S.C. 
202(a).
    Very senior employee means an employee who is:
    (1) Serving in the position of Vice President of the United States;
    (2) Employed in a position at a rate of pay payable for Level I of 
the Executive Schedule;
    (3) Employed in a position in the Executive Office of the President 
at a rate of pay payable for Level II of the Executive Schedule;
    (4) Appointed by the President to a position under 3 U.S.C. 
105(a)(2)(A);
    (5) Appointed by the Vice President to a position under 3 U.S.C. 
106(a)(1)(A); or
    (6) Detailed to any such position.

[56 FR 3963, Feb. 1, 1991, as amended at 59 FR 34756, July 7, 1994]



                    Subpart B--Substantive Provisions



Sec. 2641.201  One-year restriction on a former senior employee's representations to employees of former agency concerning matter, regardless of prior 
          involvement.

    (a) Basic Prohibition of 18 U.S.C. 207(c). For one year after 
service in a ``senior'' position terminates, no former ``senior'' 
employee may knowingly make, with the intent to influence, any 
communication to or appearance before an employee of a department or 
agency in which he served in any capacity during the one-year period 
prior to termination from ``senior'' service, if that communication or 
appearance is made on behalf of any other person (except the United 
States) in connection with any matter on which he seeks official action 
by any employee.
    (b) Applicability. 18 U.S.C. 207(c) applies to all former ``senior 
employees'' as defined in Sec. 2641.101 of this part. Certain 
individuals who served in ``very senior'' positions are subject to the 
one-year bar set forth in section 207(d) in lieu of that set forth in 
section 207(c). See definition of ``very senior employee'' in 
Sec. 2641.101.
    (1) Special Government Employees. 18 U.S.C. 207(c) does not apply to 
an individual as a result of service as a special Government employee 
unless the individual:
    (i) Served in a senior employee position while serving as a special 
Government employee; and
    (ii) Served 60 or more days as a special Government employee during 
the one-year period before terminating service as a senior employee.
    (2) Exemption from 18 U.S.C. 207(c). 18 U.S.C. 207(c) does not apply 
to an individual as a result of service in a senior position if that 
position has been exempted from section 207(c) pursuant to the waiver 
procedures set forth in Sec. 2641.201(d) of this part.
    (c) Measurement of Restriction. 18 U.S.C. 207(c) is a one-year 
restriction. The one-year period is measured from the date when the 
employee ceases to be a senior employee, not from the termination of 
Government service, unless the two occur simultaneously.
    (d) Waiver of 18 U.S.C. 207(c). Certain positions or categories of 
positions can be exempted from 18 U.S.C. 207(c) through the grant of a 
waiver by the Director of the Office of Government Ethics. 18 U.S.C. 
207(c)(2)(C).
    (1) Effect of Exemption. When an eligible position is exempted from 
18 U.S.C. 207(c) by the Director of the Office of Government Ethics, the 
one-year restriction of section 207(c) will not be triggered upon any 
employee's termination from the position.
    (2) Eligible Senior Employee Positions. Any senior employee position 
is eligible for exemption except the following:

[[Page 593]]

    (i) Positions for which the rate of pay is specified in or fixed 
according to 5 U.S.C. 5311-5318 (the Executive Schedule);
    (ii) Positions whose occupants are appointed by the President 
pursuant to 3 U.S.C. 105(a)(2)(B); or
    (iii) Positions whose occupants are appointed by the Vice President 
pursuant to 3 U.S.C. 106(a)(1)(B).
    (3) Procedure. An exemption shall be granted in accordance with the 
following procedure:
    (i) Initial Exemption. An agency's designated agency ethics official 
shall forward to the Director of the Office of Government Ethics a 
written request that a certain senior employee position or category of 
positions be exempted from 18 U.S.C. 207(c). Any such request shall 
address the criteria set forth in paragraph (d)(5) of this section. A 
designated agency ethics official may also request that a current 
exemption be revoked.
    (ii) Agency Update. Designated agency ethics officials shall by 
November 30 of each year forward to the Office of Government Ethics a 
letter stating whether positions or categories of positions currently 
exempted should remain exempt from the application of 18 U.S.C. 207(c) 
in light of the criteria set forth in paragraph (d)(5) of this section.
    (iii) Action by Office of Government Ethics. The Director of the 
Office of Government Ethics shall promptly provide to the designated 
agency ethics official a written response to each initial request for 
exemption or revocation. The Director shall annually publish in appendix 
A to this part an updated compilation of all exempted positions or 
categories of positions. The Director shall publish notice in the 
Federal Register when he determines to revoke an exemption based on his 
finding that the position or positions no longer qualify for exemption.
    (4) Effective Date of Exemption. Exemptions issued under paragraph 
(d) of this section shall be effective as of the date of the Director's 
written response to the designated agency ethics official indicating 
that the request for exemption has been granted. An exemption shall 
inure to the benefit of the individual who holds the position when the 
exemption takes effect, as well as to his successors, but shall not 
benefit individuals who terminated senior service prior to the effective 
date of the exemption. Revocation of an exemption shall be effective 90 
days after the date that the Director publishes notice of the revocation 
in the Federal Register. Individuals who formerly served in an exempted 
position will not become subject to 18 U.S.C. 207(c) in the event the 
position's exempted status is revoked subsequent to the individual's 
termination from the position.
    (5) Criteria for Exemption. Before exempting a position or positions 
from 18 U.S.C. 207(c), the Director of the Office of Government Ethics 
must find that with respect to the position or category of positions:
    (i) The granting of the exemption would not create the potential for 
use by former senior employees of undue influence or unfair advantage 
based on past Government service; and
    (ii) The imposition of the restrictions would create an undue 
hardship on the department or agency in obtaining qualified personnel to 
fill such position or positions as shown by relevant factors which may 
include, but are not limited to:
    (A) The payment of a special rate of pay to the incumbent of the 
position pursuant to specific statutory authority; or
    (B) The requirement that the incumbent of the position have 
outstanding qualifications in a scientific, technological, or other 
technical discipline.
    (e) Separate Departmental or Agency Components. For purposes of 18 
U.S.C. 207(c) only, the Director of the Office of Government Ethics is 
authorized by 18 U.S.C. 207(h) to designate departmental and agency 
``components'' that are distinct and separate from the ``parent'' 
department or agency and from each other. Absent such designation, the 
representational bar of section 207(c) extends to the whole of the 
department or agency in which the former senior employee served.
    (1) Effect of Designation. An eligible former senior employee who 
served in a ``parent'' department or agency is not barred by 18 U.S.C. 
207(c) from making communications to or appearances before any employee 
of any designated component of that parent, but is barred

[[Page 594]]

as to employees of that parent or of other components that have not been 
designated. An eligible former senior employee who served in an 
designated component of a parent department or agency is barred from 
communicating to or making an appearance before any employee of that 
component, but is not barred as to any employee of the parent or of any 
other component.
    (2) Eligible Senior Employees. All former senior employees are 
eligible to benefit from this procedure except those who were senior 
employees by virtue of having been:
    (i) Employed in a position for which the rate of pay is specified in 
or fixed according to 5 U.S.C. 5311-5318 (the Executive Schedule);
    (ii) Appointed by the President to a position under 3 U.S.C. 
105(a)(2)(B); or
    (iii) Appointed by the Vice President to a position under 3 U.S.C. 
106(a)(1)(B).
    (3) Procedure. Distinct and separate components shall be designated 
in accordance with the following procedure:
    (i) Initial Designation. Initial designations of departmental and 
agency components are set forth in appendix B to this part and are 
effective as of January 1, 1991.
    (ii) Agency Update. A designated agency ethics official may at any 
time recommend the designation of an additional component or the 
revocation of a current designation by forwarding a written request to 
the Director addressing the criteria set forth in paragraph (e)(6) of 
this section. Designated agency ethics officials shall by November 30 of 
each year forward to the Office of Government Ethics a letter stating 
whether components currently designated should remain designated in 
light of the criteria set forth in paragraph (e)(6).
    (iii) Action of Office of Government Ethics. The Director of the 
Office of Government Ethics shall by rule make or revoke a component 
designation after considering the recommendation of the designated 
agency ethics official. The Director shall annually publish in appendix 
B to this part an updated compilation of all designated departmental or 
agency components.
    (4) Effective Date of Designation. Initial component designations 
shall be effective as of January 1, 1991. Any subsequent designation 
shall be effective as of the effective date of the rule that creates the 
designation, but shall not be effective as to employees who terminated 
senior service prior to that date. Revocation of a component designation 
shall be effective 90 days after the effective date of the rule that 
revokes the designation, but shall not be effective as to individuals 
who terminated senior service prior to the expiration of such 90-days 
period.
    (5) Unauthorized Designations. No. agency or bureau within the 
Executive Office of the President may be designated as a separate 
departmental or agency component.
    (6) Criteria for Designation. Before designating an agency component 
as distinct and separate for purposes of 18 U.S.C. 207(c), the Director 
of the Office of Government Ethics must find that:
    (i) There exists no potential for use by former senior employees of 
undue influence or unfair advantage based on past Government service; 
and
    (ii) The component is an agency or bureau, within a department or 
agency, that exercises functions which are distinct and separate from 
the functions of the parent department or agency and from the functions 
of other components of that parent as shown by relevant factors which 
may include, but are not limited to:
    (A) The component's creation by statute or a statutory reference 
indicating that it exercises functions which are distinct and separate; 
or
    (B) The component's exercise of separate and distinct subject matter 
or geographical jurisdiction.
    (7) Supervisory Relationship. Provided that a component has a 
separate statutory basis or exercises distinct and separate subject 
matter or geographical jurisdiction, the parent will generally be deemed 
by the Director of the Office of Government Ethics to be distinct and 
separate from that component notwithstanding that the parent may 
exercise general supervisory authority over the component. However, the 
degree of a parent's supervision over a component will be a factor in 
determining whether subject matter or geographical jurisdiction is in 
fact distinct and separate. The Director will

[[Page 595]]

not ordinarily consider two components as distinct and separate from one 
another where one component exercises supervisory authority over 
another.

 Appendix A to 5 CFR Part 2641--Positions Exempted from 18 U.S.C. 207(c)

    Pursuant to the provisions of 18 U.S.C. 207(c)(2)(C), each of the 
following positions is exempt from the provisions of 18 U.S.C. 207(c). 
All exemptions are effective as of the date indicated.
    Agency: Securities and Exchange Commission.
    Positions: Solicitor, Office of General Counsel (effective October 
29, 1991); Chief Litigation Counsel, Division of Enforcement (effective 
October 29, 1991).

[57 FR 3116, Jan. 28, 1992]

  Appendix B to Part 2641--Agency Components for Purposes of 18 U.S.C. 
                                 207(c)

    Pursuant to the provisions of 18 U.S.C. 207(h), each of the 
following departments or agencies is determined, for purposes of 18 
U.S.C. 207(c), to have within it distinct and separate components as set 
forth below. Except as otherwise indicated, all designations are 
effective as of January 1, 1991.

                     Parent: Department of Commerce

Components:
    Bureau of the Census
    Bureau of Export Administration (effective January 28, 1992)
    Economic Development Administration
    International Trade Administration
    Minority Business Development Administration
    National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration
    National Telecommunications and Information Administration
    Patent and Trademark Office
    Technology Administration (effective January 28, 1992)
    United States Travel and Tourism Administration (effective January 
28, 1992)

                      Parent: Department of Defense

Components:
    Department of the Air Force
    Department of the Army
    Department of the Navy
    Defense Information Systems Agency
    Defense Intelligence Agency
    Defense Logistics Agency
    Defense Mapping Agency
    Defense Nuclear Agency
    National Security Agency

                      Parent: Department of Energy

Component:
    Federal Energy Regulatory Commission

             Parent: Department of Health and Human Services

Components:
    Administration for Children and Families (effective January 28, 
1992)
    Health Care Financing Administration
    Food and Drug Administration
    Public Health Service
    Social Security Administration

                   Parent: Department of the Interior

Components:\1\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \1\ All designated components under the jurisdiction of a particular 
Assistant Secretary shall be considered a single component for purposes 
of determining the scope of 18 U.S.C. 207(c) as applied to senior 
employees serving on the immediate staff of that Assistant Secretary.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    Bureau of Indian Affairs (effective January 28, 1992)
    Bureau of Land Management (effective January 28, 1992)
    Bureau of Mines (effective January 28, 1992)
    Bureau of Reclamation (effective January 28, 1992)
    Minerals Management Service (effective January 28, 1992)
    National Park Service (effective January 28, 1992)
    Office of Surface Mining (effective January 28, 1992)
    Office of Territorial and International Affairs (effective January 
28, 1992)
    U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service (effective January 28, 1992)
    U.S. Geological Survey (effective January 28, 1992)

                      Parent: Department of Justice

Components:
    Antitrust Division
    Bureau of Prisons (including Federal Prison Industries, Inc.)
    Civil Division
    Civil Rights Division
    Community Relations Service
    Criminal Division
    Drug Enforcement Administration
    Environment and Natural Resources Division
    Executive Office for United States Attorneys \2\ (effective January 
28, 1992)
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \2\ The Executive Office for United States Attorneys shall not be 
considered separate from any Office of the United States Attorney for a 
judicial district, but only from other designated components of the 
Department of Justice.

---------------------------------------------------------------------------

[[Page 596]]

    Executive Office for United States Trustees \3\ (effective January 
28, 1992)
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \3\ The Executive Office for United States Trustees shall not be 
considered separate from any Office of the United States Trustee for a 
region, but only from other designated components of the Department of 
Justice.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    Federal Bureau of Investigation
    Foreign Claims Settlement Commission
    Immigration and Naturalization Service
    Independent Counsel
    Office of Justice Programs
    Office of the Pardons Attorney (effective January 28, 1992)
    Offices of the United States Attorney (94) \4\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \4\ Each Office of the United States Attorney for a judicial 
district shall be considered a separate component from each other such 
office. However, the Office of the United States Attorney for a judicial 
district shall not be considered separate from the Office of United 
States Marshal for the same judicial district.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    Offices of the United States Marshal (94) \5\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \5\ Each Office of the United States Marshal for a judicial district 
shall be considered a separate component from each other such office. 
However, the Office of the United States Marshal for a judicial district 
shall not be considered separate from the Office of United States 
Attorney for the same judicial district.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    Offices of the United States Trustee (21) \6\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \6\ Each Office of the United States Trustee for a region shall be 
considered a separate component from each other such office.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    Tax Division
    United States Parole Commission

                       Parent: Department of Labor

Components:
    Bureau of Labor Statistics
    Employment and Training Administration
    Employment Standards Administration
    Mine Safety and Health Administration
    Occupational Safety and Health Administration

                       Parent: Department of State

Components:
    Foreign Service Grievance Board
    International Joint Commission, United States and Canada (American 
Section)

                  Parent: Department of Transportation

Components:
    Federal Aviation Administration
    Federal Highway Administration
    Federal Railroad Administration
    Federal Transit Administration
    Maritime Administration
    National Highway Traffic Safety Administration
    Saint Lawrence Seaway Development Corporation
    United States Coast Guard

                   Parent: Department of the Treasury

Components:
    Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco and Firearms
    Bureau of Engraving and Printing
    Bureau of the Mint
    Bureau of the Public Debt
    Comptroller of the Currency
    Federal Law Enforcement Training Center
    Financial Management Center
    Internal Revenue Service
    Office of Thrift Supervision
    United States Customs Service
    United States Savings Bonds Division
    (effective April 7, 1992)
    United States Secret Service

              Parent: National Credit Union Administration

Component:
    Central Liquidity Facility

[56 FR 3963, Feb. 1, 1991, as amended at 57 FR 3116, Jan. 28, 1992; 57 
FR 11673, Apr. 7, 1992; 58 FR 33755, June 21, 1993]

[[Page 597]]



                 CHAPTER XXI--DEPARTMENT OF THE TREASURY




  --------------------------------------------------------------------
Part                                                                Page
3101            Supplemental standards of ethical conduct 
                    for employees of the Department of the 
                    Treasury................................         598

[[Page 598]]





PART 3101--SUPPLEMENTAL STANDARDS OF ETHICAL CONDUCT FOR EMPLOYEES OF THE DEPARTMENT OF THE TREASURY--Table of Contents




Sec.
3101.101  General.
3101.102  Designation of separate agency components.
3101.103  Prohibition on purchase of certain assets.
3101.104  Outside employment.
3101.105  Additional rules for Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco and Firearms 
          employees.
3101.106  Additional rules for Internal Revenue Service employees.
3101.107  Additional rules for Legal Division employees.
3101.108  Additional rules for Office of the Comptroller of the Currency 
          employees.
3101.109  Additional rules for Office of Thrift Supervision employees.
3101.110  Additional rules for United States Customs Service employees.
3101.111  Additional rules for United States Secret Service employees. 
          [Reserved]

    Authority: 5 U.S.C. 301, 7301, 7353; 5 U.S.C. App. (Ethics in 
Government Act of 1978); 26 U.S.C. 7214(b); E.O. 12674, 54 FR 15159, 3 
CFR, 1989 Comp., p. 215, as modified by E.O. 12731, 55 FR 42547, 3 CFR, 
1990 Comp., p. 306.; 5 CFR 2635.105, 2635.203(a), 2635.403(a), 2635.803, 
2635.807(a)(2)(ii).

    Source: 60 FR 22251, May 5, 1995, unless otherwise noted.



Sec. 3101.101  General.

    (a) Purpose. In accordance with 5 CFR 2635.105, the regulations in 
this part apply to employees of the Department of the Treasury and 
supplement the Standards of Ethical Conduct for Employees of the 
Executive Branch contained in 5 CFR part 2635. Employees are required to 
comply with 5 CFR part 2635, this part, and bureau guidance and 
procedures established pursuant to this section. Department employees 
are also subject to any additional rules of conduct that the Department 
or their employing bureaus are authorized to issue. See 31 CFR part 0, 
Department of the Treasury Employee Rules of Conduct.
    (b) Bureau instructions. With the concurrence of the Designated 
Agency Ethics Official (DAEO), bureaus of the Department of the Treasury 
are authorized to issue instructions or manual issuances providing 
explanatory guidance and establishing procedures necessary to implement 
this part and part 2635 of this title. See 5 CFR 2635.105(c).
    (c) Definition of ``agency designee''. As used in this part and in 
part 2635 of this title, the term ``agency designee'' refers to any 
employee who has been delegated authority by an instruction or manual 
issuance issued by a bureau under paragraph (b) of this section to make 
a determination, give an approval, or take other action required or 
permitted by this part or part 2635 of this title with respect to 
another employee. See 5 CFR 2635.102(b).



Sec. 3101.102  Designation of separate agency components.

    Pursuant to 5 CFR 2635.203(a), each of the following components of 
the Department of the Treasury is designated as a separate agency for 
purposes of the regulations contained in subpart B of 5 CFR part 2635 
governing gifts from outside sources and 5 CFR 2635.807 governing 
teaching, speaking or writing:
    (a) Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco and Firearms (ATF);
    (b) Bureau of Engraving and Printing;
    (c) Bureau of the Public Debt;
    (d) Federal Law Enforcement Training Center;
    (e) Financial Management Service;
    (f) Internal Revenue Service (IRS);
    (g) Office of the Comptroller of the Currency (OCC);
    (h) Office of the Inspector General;
    (i) Office of Thrift Supervision (OTS);
    (j) United States Customs Service (USCS);
    (k) United States Mint; and
    (l) United States Secret Service.
    For purposes of this section, employees in the Legal Division shall 
be considered to be part of the bureaus or offices in which they serve.

    Note: As a result of the designations contained in this section, 
employees of the remaining parts of the Department of the Treasury 
(e.g., employees in Departmental Offices, including the Financial Crimes 
Enforcement Network) will also be treated as employees of an agency that 
is separate from all of the above listed bureaus and offices for 
purposes of determining whether the donor of a gift is a prohibited 
source under 5 CFR 2635.203(d) and for identifying an employee's 
``agency'' under 5 CFR 2635.807 governing teaching, speaking and 
writing.

[[Page 599]]



Sec. 3101.103  Prohibition on purchase of certain assets.

    (a) General prohibition. Except as provided in paragraph (b) of this 
section, no employee of the Department of the Treasury shall purchase, 
directly or indirectly, property:
    (1) Owned by the Government and under the control of the employee's 
bureau (or a bureau over which the employee exercises supervision); or
    (2) Sold under the direction or incident to the functions of the 
employee's bureau.
    (b) Exceptions. The prohibition in paragraph (a) of this section 
does not apply to the purchase of Government securities or items sold 
generally to the public at fixed prices, such as numismatic items 
produced by the United States Mint or foreign gifts deposited with the 
Department pursuant to 5 U.S.C. 7342 that an employee may purchase 
pursuant to 41 CFR part 101-49.
    (c) Waiver. An employee may make a purchase otherwise prohibited by 
this section where a written waiver of the prohibition has been given to 
the employee by an agency designee with the advice and legal clearance 
of the DAEO, or the appropriate Office of Chief or Legal Counsel. Such a 
waiver may be granted only on a determination that the waiver is not 
otherwise prohibited by law and that, in the mind of a reasonable person 
with knowledge of the particular circumstances, the purchase of the 
asset will not raise a question as to whether the employee has used his 
or her official position or inside information to obtain an advantageous 
purchase or create an appearance of loss of impartiality in the 
performance of the employee's duties.

    Note: Employees of the OCC and OTS are subject to additional 
limitations on the purchase of assets that are set out in bureau-
specific rules contained in Secs. 3101.108 and 3101.109.



Sec. 3101.104  Outside employment.

    (a) General requirement for prior approval. All Department of the 
Treasury employees shall obtain prior written approval before engaging 
in any outside employment or business activities, with or without 
compensation, except to the extent that the employing bureau issues an 
instruction or manual issuance pursuant to paragraph (b) of this section 
exempting an activity or class of activities from this requirement. 
Approval shall be granted only on a determination that the employment or 
activity is not expected to involve conduct prohibited by statute, part 
2635 of this title, or any provision of this part.

    Note: Employees of the ATF, IRS, Legal Division, OCC, USCS and 
United States Secret Service are subject to additional limitations on 
outside employment and activities that are set out in bureau-specific 
rules contained in this part.

    (b) Bureau responsibilities. Each bureau, which for the purposes of 
this section includes the Departmental Offices and the Office of the 
Inspector General, shall issue instructions or manual issuances 
governing the submission of requests for approval of outside employment 
or business activities and designating appropriate officials to act on 
such requests. The instructions or manual issuances may exempt 
categories of employment or activities from the prior approval 
requirement based on a determination that employment or activities 
within those categories would generally be approved and are not likely 
to involve conduct prohibited by statute, part 2635 of this title or any 
provision of this part. Bureaus may include in their instructions or 
issuances examples of outside employment or activities that are 
permissible or impermissible consistent with this part and part 2635 of 
this title. Bureaus shall retain in employees' Official Personnel 
Folders (temporary side) all requests for approval whether granted or 
denied.



Sec. 3101.105  Additional rules for Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco and Firearms employees.

    The following rules apply to the employees of the Bureau of Alcohol, 
Tobacco and Firearms and are in addition to Secs. 3101.101 through 
3101.104:
    (a) Prohibited financial interests. Except as provided in this 
section, no employee of the ATF, or spouse or minor child of an ATF 
employee, shall have, directly or indirectly, any financial interest, 
including compensated employment, in the alcohol, tobacco, firearms

[[Page 600]]

or explosives industries. The term financial interest is defined in 
Sec. 2635.403(c) of this title.
    (b) Waiver. An agency designee, with the advice and legal clearance 
of the DAEO or Office of the Chief Counsel, may grant a written waiver 
of the prohibition in paragraph (a) of this section on a determination 
that the financial interest is not prohibited by 26 U.S.C. 7214(b) and 
that, in the mind of a reasonable person with knowledge of the 
particular circumstances, the financial interest will not create an 
appearance of misuse of position or loss of impartiality, or call into 
question the impartiality and objectivity with which the ATF's programs 
are administered. A waiver under this paragraph may require appropriate 
conditions, such as execution of a written disqualification.



Sec. 3101.106  Additional rules for Internal Revenue Service employees.

    The following rules apply to the employees of the Internal Revenue 
Service and are in addition to Secs. 3101.101 through 3101.104:
    (a) Prohibited recommendations. Employees of the IRS shall not 
recommend, refer or suggest, specifically or by implication, any 
attorney, accountant, or firm of attorneys or accountants to any person 
in connection with any official business which involves or may involve 
the IRS.
    (b) Prohibited outside employment. Involvement by an employee of the 
IRS in the following types of outside employment or business activities 
is prohibited and shall constitute a conflict with the employee's 
official duties pursuant to 5 CFR 2635.802:
    (1) Performance of legal services involving Federal, State or local 
tax matters;
    (2) Appearing on behalf of any taxpayer as a representative before 
any Federal, State, or local government agency, in an action involving a 
tax matter except on written authorization of the Commissioner of 
Internal Revenue;
    (3) Engaging in accounting, or the use, analysis, and interpretation 
of financial records when such activity involves tax matters;
    (4) Engaging in bookkeeping, the recording of transactions, or the 
record-making phase of accounting, when such activity is directly 
related to a tax determination; and
    (5) Engaging in the preparation of tax returns for compensation, 
gift, or favor.
    (c) Seasonal employees. Seasonal employees of the IRS while in non-
duty status may engage in outside employment or activities other than 
those prohibited by paragraph (b) of this section without obtaining 
prior written permission.



Sec. 3101.107  Additional rules for Legal Division employees.

    The following rules apply to the employees of the Legal Division and 
are in addition to Secs. 3101.101 through 3101.104:
    (a) Application of rules of other bureaus. In addition to the rule 
contained in paragraph (b) of this section, employees in the Legal 
Division shall be covered by the rules contained in this part that are 
applicable to employees of the bureaus or offices in which the Legal 
Division employees serve, subject to any instructions which the General 
Counsel or appropriate Chief or Legal Counsel may issue in accordance 
with Sec. 3101.101(b).
    (b) Prohibited outside employment. Pursuant to 5 CFR 2635.802, it is 
prohibited and shall constitute a conflict with the employee's official 
duties for an attorney employed in the Legal Division to engage in the 
outside practice of law that might require the attorney to:
    (1) Take a position that is or appears to be in conflict with the 
interests of the Department of the Treasury which is the client to whom 
the attorney owes a professional responsibility; or
    (2) Interpret any statute, regulation or rule administered or issued 
by the Department.



Sec. 3101.108  Additional rules for Office of the Comptroller of the Currency employees.

    The following rules apply to the employees of the Office of the 
Comptroller of the Currency and are in addition to Secs. 3101.101-
3101.104:
    (a) Prohibited financial interests--(1) Prohibition. Except as 
provided in paragraphs (a)(3) and (g) of this section, no OCC employee, 
or spouse or minor child of an OCC employee, shall own,

[[Page 601]]

directly or indirectly, securities of any commercial bank (including 
both national and State-chartered banks) or commercial bank affiliate, 
including a bank holding company.
    (2) Definition of ``securities''. For purposes of paragraphs (a)(1) 
and (a)(3) of this section, the term ``securities'' includes all 
interests in debt or equity instruments. The term includes, without 
limitation, secured and unsecured bonds, debentures, notes, securitized 
assets and commercial paper, as well as all types of preferred and 
common stock. The term encompasses both current and contingent ownership 
interests, including any beneficial or legal interest derived from a 
trust. It extends to any right to acquire or dispose of any long or 
short position in such securities and includes, without limitation, 
interests convertible into such securities, as well as options, rights, 
warrants, puts, calls, and straddles with respect thereto.
    (3) Exceptions. Nothing in this section prohibits an OCC employee, 
or spouse or minor child of an OCC employee, from:
    (i) Investing in a publicly traded or publicly available mutual fund 
or other collective investment fund or in a widely held pension or 
similar fund provided that the fund does not invest more than 25 percent 
of its assets in securities of one or more commercial banks (including 
both national and State-chartered banks) and commercial bank affiliates 
(including bank holding companies) and the employee neither exercises 
control over nor has the ability to exercise control over the financial 
interests held in the fund;
    (ii) Investing in the publicly traded securities of a holding 
company of a nonbank bank or of a retailing firm that owns or sponsors a 
credit card bank as defined by the Competitive Equality Banking Act of 
1987, except that an employee who owns such an interest must be 
disqualified from participating in the regulation or supervision of the 
nonbank bank or the credit card bank;
    (iii) Using a commercial bank or commercial bank affiliate as 
custodian or trustee of accounts containing tax-deferred retirement 
funds; or
    (iv) Owning any security pursuant to a waiver granted under 
paragraph (g) of this section.
    (b) Prohibited borrowing--(1) Prohibition on employee borrowing. 
Except as provided in this section, no covered OCC employee shall seek 
or obtain any loan or extension of credit, including credit obtained 
through the use of a credit card, from any national bank or from an 
officer, director, employee, or subsidiary of any national bank.
    (2) Prohibition on borrowing by a spouse or minor child. The 
prohibition in paragraph (b)(1) of this section shall apply to the 
spouse or minor child of a covered OCC employee unless the loan or 
extension of credit:
    (i) Is supported only by the income or independent means of the 
spouse or minor child;
    (ii) Is obtained on terms and conditions no more favorable than 
those offered to the general public; and
    (iii) The covered OCC employee does not participate in the 
negotiation for the loan or serve as co-maker, endorser, or guarantor of 
the loan.
    (3) Covered OCC employee. For purposes of the prohibitions on 
borrowing contained in paragraphs (b)(1) and (b)(2) of this section, 
``covered OCC employee'' means:
    (i) An OCC bank examiner; and
    (ii) Any other OCC employee specified in an OCC instruction or 
manual issuance whose duties and responsibilities, as determined by the 
Comptroller of the Currency or his or her designee, require application 
of the prohibition on borrowing contained in this section to ensure 
public confidence that the OCC's programs are conducted impartially and 
objectively.
    (4) Exceptions. Nothing in this section prohibits a covered OCC 
employee, or the spouse or minor child of a covered OCC employee, from 
obtaining a loan or extension of credit described in paragraphs 
(b)(4)(i) through (b)(4)(iii) of this section from a national bank if 
the loan or extension of credit is obtained on terms and conditions no 
more favorable than those offered to the general public, the employee is 
not assigned to examine the bank at the time the loan or extension of 
credit is obtained, and the employee submits to the Chief

[[Page 602]]

Counsel or designee a written disqualification from examining or 
otherwise participating in the supervision of the bank. The exceptions 
provided by this paragraph are for loans or extensions of credit 
obtained:
    (i) Through use of a credit card issued by a national bank where:
    (A) The employee is assigned to a district office and the bank is 
not headquartered in the employee's district;
    (B) The employee is assigned to the Multinational Division and the 
bank is not supervised by that Division; or
    (C) The employee is assigned to the Washington office (other than 
the Multinational Division);
    (ii) Through use of a national bank credit card sponsored by a 
retailing firm (e.g., Nordstrom, Lord and Taylor, Amoco Oil Company); or
    (iii) Through assumption of a mortgage loan on the employee's 
residence which is liquidated in accordance with its original terms 
without renewal or renegotiation.
    (5) Pre-existing credit. This section does not prohibit a covered 
OCC employee, or spouse or minor child of a covered OCC employee, from 
retaining a loan from a national bank on its original terms if the loan 
was incurred prior to employment by the OCC or as a result of the sale 
or transfer of a loan to a national bank or the conversion or merger of 
the lender into a national bank. Any renewal or renegotiation of a pre-
existing loan or extension of credit will be treated as a new loan 
subject to the prohibitions in paragraphs (b)(1) and (b)(2) of this 
section.
    (c) Restrictions arising from third party relationships. If any of 
the entities listed in paragraphs (c)(1) through (c)(7) of this section 
have securities that an OCC employee would be prohibited from having by 
paragraph (a) of this section, or loans or extensions of credit that a 
covered OCC employee would be prohibited from obtaining under paragraph 
(b) of this section, the employee shall promptly report such interests 
to the Chief Counsel or designee. The Chief Counsel or designee may 
require the employee to terminate the third party relationship, 
undertake an appropriate disqualification, or take other appropriate 
action necessary, under the particular circumstances, to avoid a 
statutory violation or a violation of part 2635 of this title, or this 
part, including an appearance of misuse of position or loss of 
impartiality. This paragraph applies to any:
    (1) Partnership in which the employee, or spouse or minor child of 
the employee, is a general partner;
    (2) Partnership in which the employee, or spouse or minor child of 
the employee, individually or jointly holds more than a 10 percent 
limited partnership interest;
    (3) Closely held corporation in which the employee, or spouse or 
minor child of the employee, individually or jointly holds more than a 
10 percent equity interest;
    (4) Trust in which the employee, or spouse or minor child of the 
employee, has a legal or beneficial interest;
    (5) Investment club or similar informal investment arrangement 
between the employee, or spouse or minor child of the employee, and 
others;
    (6) Qualified profit sharing, retirement or similar plan in which 
the employee, or spouse or minor child of the employee, has an interest; 
or
    (7) Other entity if the employee, or spouse or minor child of the 
employee, individually or jointly holds more than a 25 percent equity 
interest.
    (d) Prohibited recommendations. Employees of the OCC shall not make 
recommendations or suggestions, directly or indirectly, concerning the 
acquisition or sale or other divestiture of securities of any commercial 
bank or commercial bank affiliate, including a bank holding company.
    (e) Prohibited purchase of assets. No employee of the OCC, or spouse 
or minor child of an OCC employee, shall purchase, directly or 
indirectly, an asset (e.g., real property, automobiles, furniture, or 
similar items) from a national bank or national bank affiliate, 
including a bank holding company, unless it is sold at a public auction 
or by other means which assure that the selling price is the asset's 
fair market value.
    (f) Outside employment--(1) Prohibition on outside employment. No 
covered OCC employee shall perform services for compensation for any 
bank, banking or

[[Page 603]]

loan association, or national bank affiliate, or for any officer, 
director or employee of, or for any person connected in any capacity 
with a bank, banking or loan association or national bank affiliate.
    (2) Covered OCC employee. For purposes of the prohibitions on 
outside employment contained in paragraph (f)(1) of this section, 
``covered OCC employee'' means:
    (i) An OCC bank examiner; and
    (ii) Any other OCC employee specified in an OCC instruction or 
manual issuance whose duties and responsibilities, as determined by the 
Comptroller of the Currency or his or her designee, require application 
of the prohibition on outside employment contained in this section to 
ensure public confidence that the OCC's programs are conducted 
impartially and objectively.
    (g) Waivers. An agency designee may grant a written waiver from any 
provision of this section based on a determination made with the advice 
and legal clearance of the DAEO or Office of the Chief Counsel that the 
waiver is not inconsistent with part 2635 of this title or otherwise 
prohibited by law and that, under the particular circumstances, 
application of the prohibition is not necessary to avoid the appearance 
of misuse of position or loss of impartiality or otherwise to ensure 
confidence in the impartiality and objectivity with which agency 
programs are administered. A waiver under this paragraph may impose 
appropriate conditions, such as requiring execution of a written 
disqualification.



Sec. 3101.109  Additional rules for Office of Thrift Supervision employees.

    The following rules apply to the employees of the Office of Thrift 
Supervision and are in addition to Secs. 3101.101 through 3101.104:
    (a) Covered OTS employee. For purposes of this section, the term 
``covered OTS employee'' means:
    (1) An OTS examiner;
    (2) An employee in a position at OTS grade 17 or above; and
    (3) Any other OTS employee specified in an OTS instruction or manual 
issuance whose duties and responsibilities, as determined by the 
Director of the OTS or his or her designee, require application of the 
prohibitions contained in this section to ensure public confidence that 
the OTS's programs are conducted impartially and objectively.
    (b) Prohibited financial interests--(1) Prohibition. Except as 
provided in paragraphs (b)(3) and (g) of this section, no covered OTS 
employee, or spouse or minor child of a covered OTS employee, shall own, 
directly or indirectly, securities of any OTS-regulated savings 
association or savings association holding company.
    (2) Definition of ``securities''. For purposes of paragraphs (b)(1) 
and (b)(3) of this section, the term ``securities'' includes all 
interests in debt or equity instruments. The term includes, without 
limitation, secured and unsecured bonds, debentures, notes, securitized 
assets and commercial paper, as well as all types of preferred and 
common stock. The term encompasses both current and contingent ownership 
interests, including any beneficial or legal interest derived from a 
trust. It extends to any right to acquire or dispose of any long or 
short position in such securities and includes, without limitation, 
interests convertible into such securities, as well as options, rights, 
warrants, puts, calls, and straddles with respect thereto.
    (3) Exceptions. Nothing in this section prohibits a covered OTS 
employee, or spouse or minor child of a covered OTS employee, from:
    (i) Investing in a publicly traded or publicly available mutual fund 
or other collective investment fund or in a widely held pension or 
similar fund provided that the fund does not invest more than 25 percent 
of its assets in securities of one or more OTS-regulated savings 
associations or savings association holding companies and the employee 
neither exercises control over nor has the ability to exercise control 
over the financial interests held in the fund;
    (ii) Investing in certain non-financial holding companies whose 
principal business is unrelated to the financial services industry and 
which are identified as such on a list maintained by the Chief Counsel 
of the OTS;

[[Page 604]]

    (iii) Using a savings association as custodian or trustee of 
accounts containing tax-deferred retirement funds; or
    (iv) Owning any security pursuant to a waiver granted under 
paragraph (g) of this section.
    (c) Prohibited borrowing--(1) Prohibition on employee borrowing. 
Except as provided in this section, no covered OTS employee shall seek 
or obtain any loan or extension of credit, including credit obtained 
through the use of a credit card, from any OTS-regulated savings 
association or an officer, director, employee, or subsidiary of any such 
association.
    (2) Prohibition on borrowing by a spouse or minor child. The 
prohibition in paragraph (c)(1) of this section shall apply to the 
spouse or minor child of a covered OTS employee unless the loan or 
extension of credit:
    (i) Is supported only by the income or independent means of the 
spouse or minor child;
    (ii) Is obtained on terms and conditions no more favorable than 
those offered to the general public; and
    (iii) The covered OTS employee does not participate in the 
negotiation for the loan or serve as co-maker, endorser, or guarantor of 
the loan.
    (3) Exceptions. Nothing in this section prohibits a covered OTS 
employee, or the spouse or minor child of a covered OTS employee, from 
obtaining a loan or extension of credit described in paragraphs 
(c)(3)(i) through (c)(3)(iii) of this section from an OTS-regulated 
savings association if the loan or extension of credit is obtained on 
terms and conditions no more favorable than those offered to the general 
public, the employee is not assigned to examine the savings association 
at the time the loan or extension of credit is obtained, and the 
employee submits to the Chief Counsel or designee a written 
disqualification from examining or otherwise participating in the 
supervision of the savings association. The exceptions provided by this 
paragraph are for loans or extensions of credit obtained:
    (i) Through use of a credit card issued by a savings association 
where:
    (A) The employee is assigned to a regional office and the savings 
association is not headquartered in the employee's region; or
    (B) The employee is assigned to the Washington office;
    (ii) Through use of a savings association credit card sponsored by a 
retailing firm (e.g., Sears); or
    (iii) Through assumption of a mortgage loan on the employee's 
residence which is liquidated in accordance with its original terms 
without renewal or renegotiation, with prior approval from the Chief 
Counsel, a Regional Director, Regional Deputy Director or designee.
    (4) Pre-existing credit. This section does not prohibit a covered 
OTS employee, or spouse or minor child of a covered OTS employee, from 
retaining a loan from an OTS-regulated savings association on its 
original terms if the loan was incurred prior to April 30, 1991, or 
employment by the OTS, whichever date is later, or as a result of the 
sale or transfer of the loan to a savings association or the conversion 
or merger of the lender into an OTS-regulated savings association. Any 
renewal or renegotiation of a pre-existing loan or extension of credit 
is covered by paragraphs (c)(1) and (c)(2) of this section.
    (d) Restrictions arising from third party relationships. If any of 
the entities listed in paragraphs (d)(1) through (d)(7) of this section 
have securities that a covered OTS employee would be prohibited from 
having by paragraph (b) of this section, or loans or extensions of 
credit that a covered OTS employee would be prohibited from obtaining 
under paragraph (c) of this section, the employee shall promptly report 
such interests to the Chief Counsel or designee. The Chief Counsel or 
designee may require the employee to terminate the third party 
relationship, undertake an appropriate disqualification, or take other 
appropriate action necessary, under the particular circumstances, to 
avoid a statutory violation or a violation of part 2635 of this title or 
this part, including an appearance of misuse of position or loss of 
impartiality. This paragraph (d) applies to any:
    (1) Partnership in which the employee, or spouse or minor child of 
the employee, is a general partner;
    (2) Partnership in which the employee, or spouse or minor child of 
the

[[Page 605]]

employee, individually or jointly holds more than a 10 percent limited 
partnership interest;
    (3) Closely held corporation in which the employee, or spouse or 
minor child of the employee, individually or jointly holds more than a 
10 percent equity interest;
    (4) Trust in which the employee, or spouse or minor child of the 
employee, has a legal or beneficial interest;
    (5) Investment club or similar informal investment arrangement 
between the employee, or spouse or minor child of the employee, and 
others;
    (6) Qualified profit sharing, retirement or similar plan in which 
the employee, or spouse or minor child of the employee, has an interest; 
or
    (7) Other entity if the employee, or spouse or minor child of the 
employee, individually or jointly holds more than a 25 percent equity 
interest.
    (e) Prohibited recommendations. Employees of the OTS shall not make 
recommendations or suggestions, directly or indirectly, concerning the 
acquisition or sale, or other divestiture of securities of any OTS-
regulated savings association or savings association holding company.
    (f) Prohibited purchase of assets. No covered OTS employee, or 
spouse or minor child of a covered OTS employee, shall purchase, 
directly or indirectly, an asset (e.g., real property, automobiles, 
furniture, or similar items) from a savings association or savings 
association affiliate, including a savings association holding company, 
unless it is sold at a public auction or by other means which assure 
that the selling price is the asset's fair market value.
    (g) Waivers. An agency designee may grant a written waiver from any 
provision of this section based on a determination made with the advice 
and legal clearance of the DAEO or Office of the Chief Counsel that the 
waiver is not inconsistent with part 2635 of this title or otherwise 
prohibited by law and that, under the particular circumstances, 
application of the prohibition is not necessary to avoid the appearance 
of misuse of position or loss of impartiality, or otherwise to ensure 
confidence in the impartiality and objectivity with which agency 
programs are administered. A waiver under this paragraph may impose 
appropriate conditions, such as requiring execution of a written 
disqualification.



Sec. 3101.110  Additional rules for United States Customs Service employees.

    The following rules apply to the employees of the United States 
Customs Service and are in addition to Secs. 3101.101 through 3101.104:
    (a) Prohibition on outside employment. No employee of the USCS shall 
work for a customs broker, international carrier, bonded warehouse, 
foreign trade zone, cartman, law firm engaged in the practice of customs 
law or importation department of a business, nor be employed in any 
private capacity related to the importation or exportation of 
merchandise.
    (b) Restrictions arising from employment of relatives. If the spouse 
of a USCS employee, or other relative who is dependent on or resides 
with a USCS employee, is employed in a position that the employee would 
be prohibited from occupying by paragraph (a) of this section, the 
employee shall file a report of family member employment with his or her 
supervisor. Supervisors shall forward such reports to the appropriate 
Regional Counsel for transmittal to the Chief Counsel. The employee 
shall be disqualified from participation in any matter involving the 
relative or the relative's employer unless an agency designee, with the 
advice and legal clearance of the DAEO or Office of the Chief Counsel, 
authorizes the employee to participate in the matter using the standard 
in Sec. 2635.502(d) of this title.
Sec. 3101.111  Additional rules for United States Secret Service 
employees. [Reserved]

[[Page 607]]



           CHAPTER XXII--FEDERAL DEPOSIT INSURANCE CORPORATION




  --------------------------------------------------------------------
Part                                                                Page
3201            Supplemental standards of ethical conduct 
                    for employees of the Federal Deposit 
                    Insurance Corporation...................         608

[[Page 608]]



PART 3201--SUPPLEMENTAL STANDARDS OF ETHICAL CONDUCT FOR EMPLOYEES OF THE FEDERAL DEPOSIT INSURANCE CORPORATION--Table of Contents




Sec.
3201.101  General.
3201.102  Extensions of credit from FDIC-insured depository 
          institutions.
3201.103  Prohibitions on ownership of securities of FDIC-insured 
          depository institutions.
3201.104  Restrictions concerning the purchase of property held by the 
          Corporation or the RTC as conservator, receiver, or liquidator 
          of the assets of an insured depository institution, or by a 
          bridge bank organized by the Corporation.
3201.105  Prohibition on dealings with former employers, associates, and 
          clients.
3201.106  Employment of family members outside the Corporation.
3201.107  Outside employment and other activities.
3201.108  Related statutory and regulatory authorities.
3201.109  Provisions of 5 CFR part 2635 not applicable to Corporation 
          employees.

    Authority: 5 U.S.C. 7301; 5 U.S.C. App. (Ethics in Government Act of 
1978); 12 U.S.C. 1819(a), 1822; 26 U.S.C. 1043; E.O. 12674, 54 FR 15159, 
3 CFR, 1989 Comp., p. 215, as modified by E.O. 12731, 55 FR 42547, 3 
CFR, 1990 Comp., p. 306; 5 CFR 2635.105, 2635.403, 2635.502, and 
2635.803.

    Source: 60 FR 20174, Apr. 25, 1995, unless otherwise noted.



Sec. 3201.101  General.

    (a) Purpose. The regulations in this part apply to employees of the 
Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation (Corporation) and supplement the 
Standards of Ethical Conduct for Employees of the Executive Branch 
contained in 5 CFR part 2635. Where specified, these regulations also 
apply to the Comptroller of the Currency and the Director of the Office 
of Thrift Supervision in connection with their activities as members of 
the Corporation's Board of Directors.
    (b) Corporation ethics officials. The Executive Secretary of the 
Corporation shall act as the Corporation's Ethics Counselor and as its 
Designated Agency Ethics Official under 5 CFR part 2638. The Assistant 
Executive Secretary (Ethics) shall act as the Corporation's Alternate 
Ethics Counselor and as the Alternate Agency Ethics Official.
    (1) The Ethics Counselor or Alternate Ethics Counselor may delegate 
authority to one or more employees to serve as Deputy Ethics Counselors.
    (2) The delegation to a Deputy Ethics Counselor shall be in writing 
and cannot be redelegated.
    (c) Agency designees. The Ethics Counselor and Alternate Ethics 
Counselor shall serve as the agency designees for purposes of making the 
determinations, granting the approvals, and taking other actions 
required by an agency designee under part 2635 and this part. The Ethics 
Counselor or Alternate Ethics Counselor may delegate authority to Deputy 
Ethics Counselors or to other employees to serve as agency designees for 
specified purposes. The delegation to any agency designee shall be in 
writing and cannot be redelegated.
    (d) Definitions. For purposes of this part:
    (1) Affiliate, as defined in 12 U.S.C. 1841(k), means any company 
that controls, is controlled by, or is under common control with another 
company.
    (2) Appropriate director means the head of a Washington office or 
division or the highest ranking official assigned to a regional office 
in each division or the Ethics Counselor.
    (3)(i) Assisted entity means:
    (A) Any FDIC-insured depository institution which has received 
financial assistance from the FDIC to prevent its failure;
    (B) Any FDIC-insured depository institution resulting from a merger 
or consolidation with any institution described in paragraph (d)(3)(i) 
of this section; and
    (C) Any holding company of an FDIC-insured depository institution 
described in paragraphs (d)(3)(i) or (d)(3)(ii) of this section.
    (ii) An assisted entity retains its status as an assisted entity for 
such time as there is an ongoing financial relationship with the FDIC 
including, but not limited to, a loan repayment obligation, the 
servicing of assets on behalf of the FDIC, or the retention by the FDIC 
of stock or stock warrants in the assisted entity.
    (4)(i) Assuming entity means:

[[Page 609]]

    (A) Any FDIC-insured depository institution or FDIC-insured 
depository institution holding company which has entered into a 
transaction with the FDIC to purchase some or all of the assets and 
assume some or all of the liabilities of a failed FDIC-insured 
depository institution;
    (B) Any FDIC-insured depository institution resulting from the 
transaction described in paragraph (d)(4)(i) of this section and its 
wholly owned subsidiaries; and
    (C) Any branches and the wholly owned subsidiaries of the 
institutions described in paragraph (d)(4)(i) of this section.
    (ii) An assuming entity retains its status as an assuming entity for 
a period of one year after the failure of the FDIC-insured depository 
institution.
    (5) Covered employee means an employee of the Corporation required 
to file a public or confidential financial disclosure report under 5 CFR 
part 2634 or 5 CFR part 3202.
    (6) Employee means an officer or employee, other than a special 
Government employee, of the Corporation including a member of the Board 
of Directors appointed under the authority of 12 U.S.C. 1812(a)(1)(C), 
and a liquidation graded employee. For purposes of 5 CFR part 2635 and 
Secs. 3201.103 and 3201.104, employee includes any individual who, 
pursuant to a contract or any other arrangement, performs functions or 
activities of the Corporation, under the direct supervision of an 
officer or employee of the Corporation.
    (7) Security includes an interest in debt or equity instruments. The 
term includes, without limitation, a secured or unsecured bond, 
debenture, note, securitized assets, commercial paper, and all types of 
preferred and common stock. The term includes an interest or right in a 
security, whether current or contingent, a beneficial or legal interest 
derived from a trust, the right to acquire or dispose of any long or 
short position, an interest convertible into a security, and an option, 
right, warrant, put, or call with respect to a security. The term 
security does not include a deposit account.
    (8) State nonmember bank means any State bank as defined in 12 
U.S.C. 1813(e) which is not a member of the Federal Reserve System.
    (9) Subsidiary, as defined in 12 U.S.C. 1813(w), means any company 
which is owned or controlled directly or indirectly by another company.



Sec. 3201.102  Extensions of credit from FDIC-insured depository institutions.

    (a) Credit subject to this section. The prohibition, 
disqualification, and retention provisions of this section apply to a 
current or contingent financial obligation of the employee. For purposes 
of this section, a current or contingent financial obligation of an 
employee's spouse or minor child is considered to be an obligation of 
the employee.
    (b) Prohibition on acceptance of credit from FDIC-insured State 
nonmember banks applicable to certain high-level officials. (1) An 
employee described in paragraph (b)(2) of this section shall not, 
directly or indirectly, accept or become obligated on an extension of 
credit from an FDIC-insured State nonmember bank or its subsidiary, 
except credit extended through the use of a credit card under the same 
terms and conditions as are offered to the general public.
    (2) The prohibition in paragraph (b)(1) of this section applies to:
    (i) An employee who is a member of the Board of Directors, an 
assistant or deputy to the Board of Directors or to an appointed Board 
member, and a covered employee who is an assistant to such person; and
    (ii) The director of a Washington office or of a division, other 
than the Division of Supervision and the Division of Compliance and 
Consumer Affairs, and a covered employee who holds a position 
immediately subordinate to such director.
    (c) Prohibition on acceptance of credit from FDIC-insured State 
nonmember banks for employees assigned to the Division of Supervision 
and employees assigned to the Division of Compliance and Consumer 
Affairs. (1) An employee described in paragraph (c)(2) of this section 
shall not, directly or indirectly, accept or become obligated on an 
extension of credit from an FDIC-insured

[[Page 610]]

State nonmember bank or from an officer, director, employee, or 
subsidiary of such bank, except:
    (i) For an employee assigned to the Washington office, credit 
extended through the use of a credit card on the same terms and 
conditions as are offered to the general public; and
    (ii) For an employee assigned to other than the Washington office, 
credit extended by an FDIC-insured State nonmember bank headquartered 
outside the employee's region of official assignment through the use of 
a credit card on the same terms and conditions as are offered to the 
general public.
    (2) The prohibition in paragraph (c)(1) of this section applies to 
the Executive Director for Supervision, Resolutions, and Compliance, the 
Director of the Division of Supervision, the Director of the Division of 
Compliance and Consumer Affairs, a covered employee immediately 
subordinate to the Executive Director for Supervision, Resolutions, and 
Compliance, the Director of the Division of Supervision, or the Director 
of the Division of Compliance and Consumer Affairs, and the following 
employees assigned to the Division of Supervision and the Division of 
Compliance and Consumer Affairs: an Assistant Director, Regional 
Director, Deputy Regional Director, Assistant Regional Director, 
Regional Manager, examiner, assistant examiner, review examiner, 
compliance examiner, assistant compliance examiner, and a covered 
employee.
    (3) Upon accepting credit extended by a credit card in accordance 
with paragraph (c)(1)(i) or (c)(1)(ii) of this section, the employee 
shall be disqualified in accordance with paragraph (f)(1) of this 
section, and, within 30 days of accepting such credit, shall file with 
the appropriate director a Statement of Credit Card Obligation in 
Insured State Nonmember Bank and Acknowledgement of Conditions for 
Retention--Notice of Disqualification.
    (d) Two-year prohibition on acceptance of credit from FDIC-insured 
depository institutions. (1) An employee described in paragraph (d)(2) 
of this section shall not, directly or indirectly, accept or become 
obligated on an extension of credit from an FDIC-insured depository 
institution or its subsidiary for a period of two years from the date of 
the employee's last personal and substantial participation in an audit, 
resolution, liquidation, supervisory proceeding, or internal agency 
deliberation affecting that particular institution, its predecessor or 
successor, or any subsidiary of such institution. This prohibition does 
not apply to credit obtained through the use of a credit card under the 
same terms and conditions as are offered to the general public.
    (2) The prohibition in paragraph (d)(1) of this section applies to 
an employee in the Division of Finance, Division of Depositor and Asset 
Services, Division of Resolutions, Legal Division, or who is a member of 
a standing committee of the Board of Directors whose official duties 
include:
    (i) Audit of insured depository institutions for deposit insurance 
assessment purposes;
    (ii) Resolution or liquidation of failed or failing insured 
depository institutions;
    (iii) Participation in the supervision of insured depository 
institutions or enforcement proceedings under the Federal Deposit 
Insurance Act; or
    (iv) Internal agency deliberations affecting a particular insured 
depository institution, its predecessor or successor, or a subsidiary of 
such institution.
    (e) Prohibition on acceptance of credit from an assisted or assuming 
entity for employees of the Division of Depositor and Asset Services. 
(1) An employee described in paragraph (e)(2) of this section shall not, 
directly or indirectly, accept or become obligated on any extension of 
credit from an assisted or assuming entity located in the employee's 
region of official assignment. This prohibition does not apply to credit 
obtained through the use of a credit card under the same terms and 
conditions as are offered to the general public.
    (2) The prohibition in paragraph (e)(1) of this section applies to a 
regional director, deputy regional director, and any other covered 
employee in the Division of Depositor and Asset Services assigned to a 
service center or other field office.
    (f) Employee disqualification. (1) An employee described in 
paragraph (c)(2) of this section shall not participate in

[[Page 611]]

an examination, audit, visitation, review, or investigation, or other 
particular matter involving an FDIC-insured depository institution or 
other person with whom the employee has an outstanding extension of 
credit.
    (2) A covered employee, other than an employee who is described in 
paragraph (c)(2) of this section, shall not participate in any 
particular matter involving an FDIC-insured depository institution or 
other person with whom the employee has an outstanding extension of 
credit.
    (3) Disqualification is not required under paragraph (f)(2) of this 
section:
    (i) If the credit was extended through the use of a credit card on 
the same terms and conditions as are offered to the general public; or
    (ii) When the agency designee, with the concurrence of the 
appropriate director, has authorized the employee to participate in the 
matter using the standard set forth in 5 CFR 2635.502(d).
    (4) The Comptroller of the Currency and the Director of the Office 
of Thrift Supervision shall be disqualified from matters pending before 
the Board of Directors to the same extent as a covered employee subject 
to paragraph (f)(2) of this section.
    (g) Retention and renegotiation of pre-existing extensions of 
credit. (1) Nothing in this section prohibits the retention of a pre-
existing extension of credit that an employee would be prohibited from 
accepting by Sec. 3201.102(b) or (c) if the extension of credit was 
permitted to be retained under 12 CFR part 336 prior to the adoption of 
this regulation or if the employee's acceptance of the extension of 
credit was proper at the time the obligation was incurred, as in the 
case of an extension of credit incurred prior to commencement of 
employment or reassignment to another division or location. Subsequent 
action affecting the status of the creditor, such as merger, 
acquisition, or transaction under 12 U.S.C. 1823, does not change the 
character of an extension of credit that was proper when incurred. An 
employee who retains a pre-existing extension that he or she would be 
prohibited from accepting by Sec. 3201.102(b) or (c) shall report the 
pre-existing extension of credit to the appropriate director or agency 
designee within 30 days from the following event, as appropriate:
    (i) Adoption of this part;
    (ii) Commencement of employment;
    (iii) Assignment to another division or location; or
    (iv) Action affecting the status of the creditor.
    (2) Any renegotiation of a pre-existing extension of credit shall be 
treated as a new extension of credit that is subject to the prohibitions 
contained in Sec. 3201.102(b) through (d). An employee may request that 
an exception be made to the prohibitions to permit renegotiation of a 
pre-existing extension of credit. Any such request shall be made in 
writing to the appropriate director and agency designee, or in the case 
of an employee described in paragraph (b)(2)(i) and (ii) of this 
section, to the Ethics Counselor, stating:
    (i) The purpose of the renegotiation;
    (ii) The terms and conditions of the original extension of credit;
    (iii) The terms and conditions now available to the general public;
    (iv) The terms and conditions now offered to the employee;
    (v) The action the employee has taken to move the loan to an 
institution from which an employee would not be prohibited from 
accepting an extension of credit; and
    (vi) The financial hardship, if any, denial of the request will 
cause.
    (3) After submission of the request, the appropriate director and 
agency designee, or the Ethics Counselor, may grant the employee's 
request based upon a written determination that the request is not 
inconsistent with 5 CFR part 2635 or otherwise prohibited by law and 
that, under the particular circumstances, application of the prohibition 
is not necessary to avoid the appearance of the misuse of position or 
loss of impartiality, or otherwise to ensure confidence in the 
impartiality and objectivity with which agency programs are 
administered.



Sec. 3201.103  Prohibitions on ownership of securities of FDIC-insured depository institutions.

    (a) Prohibition on ownership. Except as permitted by this section, 
an employee or the spouse or minor child of an employee, shall not 
acquire, own, or

[[Page 612]]

control, directly or indirectly, a security of an FDIC-insured 
depository institution, or an affiliate of an FDIC-insured depository 
institution.
    (b) Exception to prohibition for certain interests. Nothing in this 
section prohibits an employee, or the spouse or minor child of an 
employee, from:
    (1) Acquiring, owning or controlling the securities of certain 
publicly traded bank holding companies or their nonbank subsidiaries 
where the bank holding company is not primarily engaged in banking and 
either the bank holding company or the bank it holds is exempt under the 
provisions of the Bank Holding Company Act of 1956 and which are 
identified as such by the Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve 
System (a list of exempt institutions can be obtained from the 
Corporation's Ethics Section);
    (2) Acquiring, owning, or controlling the securities of certain 
nonfinancial savings association holding companies whose principal 
business is unrelated to the financial services industry and which are 
identified as such by the Office of Thrift Supervision pursuant to 5 CFR 
3101.109(b)(3)(ii) (a list of such institutions can be obtained from the 
Corporation's Ethics Section);
    (3) Retaining a security of an FDIC-insured depository institution 
or an affiliate of an FDIC-insured depository institution if the 
security was permitted to be retained by the employee under 12 CFR part 
336 prior to the adoption of this regulation, was obtained prior to 
commencement of employment with the Corporation, or was acquired by a 
spouse prior to marriage to the employee;
    (4) Acquiring, owning, or controlling a security of an FDIC-insured 
depository institution or the affiliate of an FDIC-insured depository 
institution where the security was acquired by inheritance, gift, stock 
split, involuntary stock dividend, merger, acquisition, or other change 
in corporate ownership, exercise of preemptive right, or otherwise 
without specific intent to acquire the security, or, by an employee's 
spouse or minor child as part of a compensation package in connection 
with his or her employment. This provision permits the retention of any 
such interest only where:
    (i) The employee makes full, written disclosure on FDIC form 2410/07 
to the Ethics Counselor within 30 days of commencing employment or 
acquiring the interest; and
    (ii) The employee is disqualified in accordance with 5 CFR part 
2635, subpart D, from participating in any particular matter that 
affects his or her financial interests, or that of his or her spouse or 
minor child;
    (5) Acquiring, owning, or controlling an interest in a publicly 
traded or publicly available investment fund provided that, upon initial 
or subsequent investment by the employee (excluding ordinary dividend 
reinvestment), the fund does not have invested, or indicate in its 
prospectus the intent to invest, more than 30 percent of its assets in 
the securities of one or more FDIC-insured depository institutions or 
FDIC-insured depository institution holding companies and the employee 
neither exercises control nor has the ability to exercise control over 
the financial interests held in the fund; or
    (6) Using an FDIC-insured depository institution or an affiliate of 
an FDIC-insured depository institution as custodian or trustee of 
accounts containing tax-deferred retirement funds.
    (c) Divestiture. Based upon a determination of substantial conflict 
under 5 CFR 2635.403(b), the Ethics Counselor may require an employee, 
or the spouse or minor child of an employee, to divest a security he or 
she is otherwise authorized to retain under paragraph (b) of this 
section.

[60 FR 20174, Apr. 25, 1995, as amended at 61 FR 35915, July 9, 1996]



Sec. 3201.104  Restrictions concerning the purchase of property held by the Corporation or the RTC as conservator, receiver, or liquidator of the assets of an 
          insured depository institution, or by a bridge bank organized 
          by the Corporation.

    (a) Prohibition on purchase of property. An employee, and an 
employee's spouse or minor child shall not, directly or indirectly, 
purchase or acquire any property held or managed by the Corporation or 
the Resolution Trust Corporation (RTC) as conservator, receiver, or 
liquidator of the assets of an insured depository institution, or by a 
bridge

[[Page 613]]

bank organized by the Corporation, regardless of the method of 
disposition of the property.
    (b) Disqualification. An employee who is involved in the disposition 
of assets held by the Corporation or the RTC as conservator, receiver, 
or liquidator of the assets of an insured depository institution, or by 
a bridge bank organized by the Corporation shall not participate in the 
disposition of assets held in such capacities when the employee knows 
that any party with whom the employee has a covered relationship, as 
defined in 5 CFR 2635.502(b)(1), is or will be attempting to acquire 
such assets. The employee shall provide written notification of the 
disqualification to his or her immediate supervisor and the agency 
designee.



Sec. 3201.105  Prohibition on dealings with former employers, associates, and clients.

    (a) An employee is prohibited for one year from the date of entry on 
duty with the Corporation from participating in a particular matter when 
an employer, or the successor to the employer, for whom the employee 
worked at any time during the one year preceding the employee's entrance 
on duty is a party or represents a party to the matter.
    (b) For purposes of this section, the term employer means a person 
with whom the employee served as officer, director, trustee, general 
partner, agent, attorney, accountant, consultant, contractor, or 
employee.
    (c) The one-year prohibition imposed by paragraph (a) of this 
section, and the one-year period preceding the employee's entrance on 
duty specified in paragraph (a) of this section, may each be extended in 
an individual case based on a written determination by the agency 
designee that, under the particular circumstances, the employee's 
participation in the particular matter would cause a reasonable person 
with knowledge of the facts to question his or her impartiality.



Sec. 3201.106  Employment of family members outside the Corporation.

    (a) Disqualification of employees. An employee shall not participate 
in an examination, audit, investigation, application, contract, or other 
particular matter if the employer of the employee's spouse, child, 
parent, brother, sister, or a member of the employee's household is a 
party or represents a party to the matter, unless an agency designee 
authorizes the employee to participate using the standard in 5 CFR 
2635.502(d).
    (b) Reporting certain relationships. A covered employee shall make a 
written report to an agency designee within 30 days of the employment of 
the employee's spouse, child, parent, brother, sister, or a member of 
the employee's household by:
    (1) An FDIC-insured depository institution or its affiliate;
    (2) A firm or business with which, to the employee's knowledge, the 
Corporation has a contractual or other business or financial 
relationship; or
    (3) A firm or business which, to the employee's knowledge, is 
seeking a business or contractual relationship with the Corporation.



Sec. 3201.107  Outside employment and other activities.

    (a) Prohibition on employment with FDIC-insured depository 
institutions. An employee shall not provide service for compensation, in 
any capacity, to an FDIC-insured depository institution or an employee 
or person employed by or connected with such institution.
    (b) Use of professional licenses. A covered employee who holds a 
license related to real estate, appraisals, securities, or insurance and 
whose official duties with the Corporation require personal and 
substantial involvement in matters related to, respectively, real 
estate, appraisal, securities, or insurance is prohibited from using 
such license, other than in the performance of his or her official 
duties, for the production of income. The appropriate director, in 
consultation with an agency designee, may grant exceptions to this 
prohibition based on a finding that the specific transactions which 
require use of the license will not create an appearance of loss of 
impartiality or use of public office for private gain.
    (c) Responsibility to consult with agency designee. An employee who 
engages in, or intends to engage in, any outside

[[Page 614]]

employment or other activity that may require disqualification from the 
employee's official duties shall consult with an agency designee prior 
to engaging in or continuing to engage in the activity.



Sec. 3201.108  Related statutory and regulatory authorities.

    (a) 18 U.S.C. 213, which prohibits an examiner from accepting a loan 
or gratuity from an FDIC-insured depository institution examined by him 
or her or from any person connected with such institution.
    (b) 18 U.S.C. 1906, which prohibits disclosure of information from a 
bank examination report except as authorized by law.
    (c) 17 CFR 240.10b-5 which prohibits the use of manipulative or 
deceptive devices in connection with the purchase or sale of any 
security.
    (d) 18 U.S.C. 1909, which prohibits examiners from providing any 
service for compensation for any bank or person connected therewith.



Sec. 3201.109  Provisions of 5 CFR part 2635 not applicable to Corporation employees.

    The following provisions of 5 CFR part 2635 are not applicable to 
employees of the Corporation:
    (a) Because of the restrictions imposed by 18 U.S.C. 213 on 
examiners accepting loans or gratuities, an examiner in the Division of 
Supervision or Division of Compliance and Consumer Affairs may not use 
any of the gift exceptions at 5 CFR 2635.204 to accept a gift from an 
FDIC-insured depository institution examined by him or her or from any 
person connected with such institution.
    (b) Provisions of 41 U.S.C. 423 (Procurement integrity) and the 
implementing regulations at 48 CFR 3.104 (of the Federal Acquisition 
Regulation) applicable to procurement officials referred to in:
    (1) 5 CFR 2635.202(c)(4)(iii);
    (2) The note following 5 CFR 2635.203(b)(7);
    (3) Example 5 following 5 CFR 2635.204(a);
    (4) Examples 2 and 3 following 5 CFR 2635.703(b)(3);
    (5) 5 CFR 2635.902(f), (h), (l), and (bb);
    (c) Provisions of 31 U.S.C. 1353 (Acceptance of travel and related 
expenses from non-Federal sources) and the implementing regulations at 
41 CFR part 304-1 (Acceptance of payment from a non-Federal source for 
travel expenses) referred to in 5 CFR 2635.203(b)(8)(i).
    (d) Provisions of 41 CFR Chapter 101 (Federal Property Management 
Regulations) referred to in 5 CFR 2635.205(a)(4).
    (e) Provisions of 41 CFR Chapter 201 (Federal Information Resources 
Management Regulation) referred to in Example 1 following 5 CFR 
2635.704(b)(2).

[[Page 615]]



                   CHAPTER XXIII--DEPARTMENT OF ENERGY




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PART 3301--SUPPLEMENTAL STANDARDS OF ETHICAL CONDUCT FOR EMPLOYEES OF THE DEPARTMENT OF ENERGY--Table of Contents




Sec.
3301.101  General.
3301.102  Procedure for accomplishing disqualification.
3301.103  Prior approval for outside employment.

    Authority: 5 U.S.C. 301, 7301; 5 U.S.C. App. (Ethics in Government 
Act); E.O. 12674, 54 FR 15159, 3 CFR, 1989 Comp., p. 215, as modified by 
E.O. 12731, 55 FR 42547, 3 CFR, 1990 Comp., p. 306; 5 CFR 2635.105, 
2635.402(c), 2635.502(e), 2635.604, 2635.802, 2635.803.

    Source: 61 FR 35087, July 5, 1996, unless otherwise noted.



Sec. 3301.101  General.

    (a) Purpose. The regulations in this part apply to employees of the 
Department of Energy (DOE), excluding employees of the Federal Energy 
Regulatory Commission, and supplement the Standards of Ethical Conduct 
for Employees of the Executive Branch contained in 5 CFR part 2635. DOE 
employees are also subject to the regulations on financial disclosure 
contained in 5 CFR part 2634, and to additional regulations on 
responsibilities and conduct at 5 CFR part 735, and DOE specific 
provisions contained in 10 CFR part 1010.
    (b) Definitions. Unless a term is otherwise defined in this part, 
the definitions set forth in 5 CFR part 2635 apply to terms used in this 
part. In addition, for purposes of this part:
    Agency designee, as used also in 5 CFR part 2635, means the 
employee's immediate supervisor and, for purposes of the approval 
required by Sec. 3301.103(a), includes the Counselor.
    Counselor means the DOE's designated agency ethics official or his 
delegates.



Sec. 3301.102  Procedure for accomplishing disqualification.

    (a) Disqualifying financial interests. A DOE employee who is 
required, in accordance with 5 CFR 2635.402(c), to disqualify himself 
from participation in a particular matter to which he has been assigned 
shall, notwithstanding the guidance in 5 CFR 2635.402(c)(1) and (2), 
provide written notice of disqualification to his supervisor and 
counselor upon determining that he will not participate in the matter.
    (b) Disqualification to ensure impartiality. A DOE employee who is 
required, in accordance with 5 CFR 2635.502(e), to disqualify himself 
from participation in a particular matter involving specific parties to 
which he has been assigned shall, notwithstanding the guidance in 5 CFR 
2635.502(e)(1) and (2), provide written notice of disqualification to 
his supervisor and counselor upon determining that he will not 
participate in the matter.
    (c) Disqualification from matter effecting prospective employers. A 
DOE employee who is required, in accordance with 5 CFR 2635.604(a), to 
disqualify himself from participation in a particular matter to which he 
has been assigned shall, notwithstanding the guidance in 5 CFR 
2635.604(b) and (c), provide written notice of disqualification to his 
supervisor and counselor upon determining that he will not participate 
in the matter.
    (d) Withdrawal of notification. A DOE employee may withdraw written 
notice under paragraphs (a), (b), or (c) of this section upon deciding 
that disqualification from participation in the matter is no longer 
required. A withdrawal of notification shall be in writing and provided 
to the employee's supervisor and counselor.



Sec. 3301.103  Prior approval for outside employment.

    (a) Prior approval requirement. Before engaging in any outside 
employment, whether or not for compensation, an employee, other than a 
special Government employee, must obtain written approval of his 
immediate supervisor and the Counselor. Requests for approval shall 
include the name of the person, group or organization for whom the work 
is to be performed; the type of work to be performed; and the proposed 
hours of work and approximate dates of employment.
    (b) Standard for approval. Approval shall be granted unless there is 
a determination that the outside employment is expected to involve 
conduct prohibited by statute or Federal regulation, including 5 CFR 
part 2635.

[[Page 617]]

    (c) Definition of employment. For purposes of this section, 
``employment'' means any form of non-Federal employment or business 
relationship involving the provision of personal services by the 
employee. It includes but is not limited to personal services as an 
officer, director, trustee, general partner, agent, attorney, 
consultant, contractor, employee, advisor, or teacher. It does not 
include participating in the activities of a nonprofit, charitable, 
religious, public service or civic organization, unless such activities 
involve the provision of professional services or are for compensation.

[[Page 619]]



           CHAPTER XXIV--FEDERAL ENERGY REGULATORY COMMISSION




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PART 3401--SUPPLEMENTAL STANDARDS OF ETHICAL CONDUCT FOR EMPLOYEES OF THE FEDERAL ENERGY REGULATORY COMMISSION--Table of Contents




Sec.
3401.101  General.
3401.102  Prohibited financial interests.
3401.103  Procedures for accomplishing disqualification.
3401.104  Prior approval for outside employment.

    Authority: 5 U.S.C. 7301; 5 U.S.C. App. (Ethics in Government Act of 
1978); 42 U.S.C. 7171, 7172; E.O. 12674, 54 FR 15159, 3 CFR, 1989 Comp., 
p. 215, as modified by E.O. 12731, 55 FR 42547, 3 CFR, 1990 Comp., p. 
306; 5 CFR 2635.105, 2635.402(c), 2635.403, 2635.502(e), 2635.604, 
2635.803.
    Source: 61 FR 43414, Aug. 23, 1996, unless otherwise noted.



Sec. 3401.101  General.

    In accordance with 5 CFR 2635.105, the regulations in this part 
apply to employees of the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission 
(Commission) and supplement the Standards of Ethical Conduct for 
Employees of the Executive Branch contained in 5 CFR part 2635. In 
addition to the standards in 5 CFR part 2635 and this part, employees 
are subject to the executive branch financial disclosure regulations 
contained in 5 CFR part 2634, additional regulations on responsibilities 
and conduct at 5 CFR part 735, and Commission specific provisions 
contained in 18 CFR part 3c.



Sec. 3401.102  Prohibited financial interests.

    (a) General prohibition. Except as provided in paragraphs (b) and 
(c) of this section, an employee, or the spouse or minor child of an 
employee, shall not acquire or hold any securities of:
    (1) A natural gas company;
    (2) An interstate oil pipeline;
    (3) A hydroelectric licensee or exemptee;
    (4) A public utility;
    (5) Any electric utility engaged in the wholesale sale or 
transmission of electricity or having obtained an interconnection or 
wheeling order under Part II of the Federal Power Act; or
    (6) The parent company of an entity identified in paragraphs (a)(1) 
through (a)(5) of this section.
    (b) Waiver. The DAEO may grant a written waiver from this section 
based on a determination that the waiver is not inconsistent with part 
2635 of this title or otherwise prohibited by law and that, under the 
particular circumstances, application of the provision is not necessary 
to avoid the appearance of misuse of position or loss of impartiality, 
or otherwise to ensure confidence in the impartiality and objectivity 
with which Commission programs are administered. A waiver under this 
paragraph may impose appropriate conditions, such as requiring execution 
of a written disqualification.
    (c) Definitions. For purposes of this section:
    (1) The term securities includes all interests in debt or equity 
instruments. The term includes, without limitation, secured and 
unsecured bonds, debentures, notes, securitized assets, and commercial 
paper, as well as all types of preferred and common stock. The term 
encompasses both current and contingent ownership interests, including 
any beneficial or legal interest derived from a trust. It extends to any 
right to acquire any long or short position in such securities and 
includes, without limitation, interests convertible into such 
securities, as well as options, rights, warrants, puts, calls and 
straddles with respect thereto. It does not include an interest in a 
publicly traded or publicly available mutual fund or other collective 
investment fund, or in a widely held pension or similar fund, provided 
that the fund's prospectus does not indicate the objective or practice 
of concentrating its investments in entities identified in paragraphs 
(a)(1) through (a)(6) of this section, and the employee neither 
exercises control nor has the ability to exercise control over the 
financial interests held in the fund.
    (2) The term parent means a company that possesses, directly or 
indirectly, the power to direct or cause the direction of the management 
and policies of an entity identified in paragraphs (a)(1) through (a)(5) 
of this section.

[[Page 621]]



Sec. 3401.103  Procedures for accomplishing disqualification.

    (a) An employee, other than a member of the Commission, who is 
required, in accordance with 5 CFR 2635.402(c), 2635.502(e), or 
2635.604(a), to disqualify himself from participation in a particular 
matter before the Commission shall provide written notice of 
disqualification to his supervisor and to the DAEO when he becomes aware 
of the need to disqualify himself from participation in the matter. This 
procedure is required notwithstanding the guidance in 5 CFR 
2635.402(c)(2), 2635.502(e)(2), and 2635.604(c).
    (b) An employee may withdraw written notice under paragraph (a) of 
this section upon determining that disqualification from participation 
in the matter is no longer required. A withdrawal of disqualification 
shall be in writing and shall be provided to the employee's supervisor 
and to the DAEO.



Sec. 3401.104  Prior approval for outside employment.

    (a) Prior approval requirement. An employee, other than a special 
Government employee, must obtain written approval from the DAEO through 
normal supervisory channels before engaging in outside employment with 
any person who is a ``prohibited source'' as that term is defined at 5 
CFR 2635.203(d).
    (b) Approval of requests. Approval under this section shall be 
denied only upon a determination by the DAEO that the outside activity 
is expected to involve conduct prohibited by statute or Federal 
regulations, including 5 CFR part 2635.
    (c) Definitions. For purposes of this section, ``employment'' means 
any form of non-Federal employment or business relationship or activity 
involving the provision of personal services by the employee for 
compensation other than reimbursement of actual and necessary expenses. 
It includes, but is not limited to, personal services as an officer, 
director, employee, agent, attorney, consultant, contractor, general 
partner, or trustee.

[[Page 623]]



                   CHAPTER XXVI--DEPARTMENT OF DEFENSE




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                    Defense.................................         624

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PART 3601--SUPPLEMENTAL STANDARDS OF ETHICAL CONDUCT FOR EMPLOYEES OF THE DEPARTMENT OF DEFENSE--Table of Contents




Sec.
3601.101  Purpose.
3601.102  Designation of separate agency components.
3601.103  Additional exceptions for gifts from outside sources.
3601.104  Additional limitations on gifts between DoD employees.
3601.105  Standards for accomplishing disqualification.
3601.106  Limitation on solicited sales.
3601.107  Prior approval for outside employment and business activities.
3601.108  Disclaimer for speeches and writing devoted to agency matters.

    Authority: 5 U.S.C. 301, 7301, 7351, 7353; 5 U.S.C. App. (Ethics in 
Government Act of 1978); E.O. 12674, 54 FR 15159, 3 CFR, 1989 Comp., p. 
215, as modified by E.O. 12731, 55 FR 42547, 3 CFR, 1990 Comp., p. 306; 
5 CFR 2635.105, 2635.203(a), 2635.204(k), 2635.803.

    Source: 58 FR 47622, Sept. 10, 1993, unless otherwise noted.



Sec. 3601.101  Purpose.

    In accordance with 5 CFR 2635.105, the regulations in this part 
apply to employees of the Department of Defense (DoD) and supplement the 
Standards of Ethical Conduct for Employees of the Executive Branch 
contained in 5 CFR part 2635. DoD employees are required to comply with 
part 2635, this part, and implementing guidance and procedures.



Sec. 3601.102  Designation of separate agency components.

    (a) Pursuant to 5 CFR 2635.203(a), each of the following components 
of DoD is designated as a separate agency for purposes of the 
regulations in subpart B of 5 CFR part 2635 governing gifts from outside 
sources and 5 CFR 2635.807 governing teaching, speaking and writing:
    (1) Department of the Army;
    (2) Department of the Navy;
    (3) Department of the Air Force;
    (4) Defense Commissary Agency;
    (5) Defense Contract Audit Agency;
    (6) Defense Finance and Accounting Service;
    (7) Defense Information Systems Agency;
    (8) Defense Intelligence Agency;
    (9) Defense Investigative Service;
    (10) Defense Logistics Agency;
    (11) Defense Mapping Agency;
    (12) Defense Nuclear Agency;
    (13) National Security Agency;
    (14) Office of the Inspector General; and
    (15) Uniformed Services University of the Health Sciences.
    (b) Employees of DoD components not designated as separate agencies, 
including employees of the Office of the Secretary of Defense, will be 
treated as employees of DoD which shall be treated as a single agency 
that is separate from the above listed agencies for purposes of 
determining whether the donor of a gift is a prohibited source under 5 
CFR 2635.203(d) and for identifying the DoD employee's agency under 5 
CFR 2635.807 governing teaching, speaking and writing.



Sec. 3601.103  Additional exceptions for gifts from outside sources.

    In addition to the gifts which come within the exceptions set forth 
in 5 CFR 2635.204, and subject to all provisions of 5 CFR 2635.201 
through 2635.205, a DoD employee may accept gifts from outside sources 
otherwise prohibited by 5 CFR 2635.202(a) as follows:
    (a) Events sponsored by States, local governments or civic 
organizations. A DoD employee may accept a sponsor's unsolicited gift of 
free attendance for himself and an accompanying spouse at an event 
sponsored by a State or local government or by a civic organization 
exempt from taxation under 26 U.S.C. 501(c)(4) when:
    (1) The agency designee has determined that the community relations 
interests of the agency will be served by the DoD employee's attendance;
    (2) The cost of the DoD employee's and the spouse's attendance is 
provided by the sponsor in accordance with 5 CFR 2635.204(g)(5); and
    (3) The gift of free attendance meets the definition in 5 CFR 
2635.204(g)(4).
    (b) Scholarships and grants. A DoD employee, or the dependent of a 
DoD employee, may accept an educational scholarship or grant from an 
entity that does not have interests that may

[[Page 625]]

be substantially affected by the performance or non-performance of the 
involved DoD employee's official duties, or from an association or 
similar entity that does not have a majority of members with such 
interests, if the designated agency ethics official or designee 
determines that:
    (1) The scholarship or grant is made as part of an established 
program of grants or awards that is funded, wholly or in part, to ensure 
its continuation on a regular basis and under which recipients are 
selected pursuant to written standards; or
    (2) The scholarship or grant is established for the benefit of DoD 
employees, or the dependents of DoD employees, and recipients are 
selected pursuant to written standards approved by the Secretary of 
Defense or, where the scholarship or grant is available only to military 
members or their dependents, by the Secretary of the military department 
concerned.



Sec. 3601.104  Additional limitations on gifts between DoD employees.

    The following limitations shall apply to gifts from groups of DoD 
employees that include a subordinate and to voluntary contributions to 
gifts for superiors permitted under 5 CFR 2635.304(c)(1):
    (a) Gifts from a group that includes a subordinate. Regardless of 
the number of DoD employees contributing to a gift on a special, 
infrequent occasion as permitted by 5 CFR 2635.304(c)(1), a DoD employee 
may not accept a gift or gifts from a donating group if the market value 
exceeds an aggregate of $300 and if the DoD employee knows or has reason 
to know that any member of the donating group is his subordinate.
    (1) The cost of items excluded from the definition of a gift by 5 
CFR 2635.203(b) and the cost of food, refreshments and entertainment 
provided to the DoD employee and his personal guests to mark the 
occasion for which the gift is given shall not be included in 
determining whether the value of a gift or gifts exceeds the $300 
aggregate limit.
    (2) The value of a gift or gifts from two or more donating groups 
shall be aggregated and shall be considered to be from a single donating 
group if the DoD employee offered the gift knows or has reason to know 
that an individual who is his subordinate is a member of more than one 
of the donating groups.
    (b) Voluntary contribution. For purposes of 5 CFR 2635.304(c)(1), 
the nominal amount of a voluntary contribution that a DoD employee may 
solicit from another DoD employee for a group gift to the contributing 
DoD employee's superior for any special, infrequent occasion shall not 
exceed $10. A voluntary contribution of a nominal amount for food, 
refreshments and entertainment for the superior, the personal guests of 
the superior and other attendees at an event to mark the occasion for 
which a group gift is given may be solicited as a separate, voluntary 
contribution not subject to the $10 limit.



Sec. 3601.105  Standards for accomplishing disqualification.

    (a) Disqualifying financial interests. A DoD employee who is 
required, in accordance with 5 CFR 2635.402(c), to disqualify himself 
from participation in a particular matter to which he has been assigned 
shall, notwithstanding the guidance in 5 CFR 2635.4029(c) (1) and (2), 
provide written notice of disqualification to his supervisor upon 
determining that he will not participate in the matter.
    (b) Disqualification to ensure impartiality. A DoD employee who is 
required, in accordance with 5 CFR 2635.502(e), to disqualify himself 
from participation in a particular matter involving specific parties to 
which he has been assigned shall, notwithstanding the guidance in 5 CFR 
2635.502(e) (1) and (2), provide written notice of disqualification to 
his supervisor upon determining that he will not participate in the 
matter.
    (c) Disqualification from matter effecting prospective employees. A 
DoD employee who is required, in accordance with 5 CFR 2635.604(a), to 
disqualify himself from participation in a particular matter to which he 
has been assigned shall, notwithstanding the guidance in 5 CFR 2635.604 
(b) and (c), provide written notice of disqualification to his 
supervisor upon determining that he will not participate in the matter.

[[Page 626]]

    (d) Withdrawal of notification. A DoD employee may withdraw written 
notice under paragraphs (a), (b) or (c) of this section upon deciding 
that disqualification from participation in the matter is no longer 
required.



Sec. 3601.106  Limitation on solicited sales.

    A DoD employee shall not knowingly solicit or make solicited sales 
to DoD personnel who are junior in rank, grade or position, or to the 
family members of such personnel, on or off duty. In the absence of 
coercion or intimidation, this does not prohibit the sale or lease of a 
DoD employee's noncommercial personal or real property or commercial 
sales solicited and made in a retail establishment during off-duty 
employment. The posting of an advertisement in accordance with Federal 
building management policies does not constitute solicitation for 
purposes of this section.



Sec. 3601.107  Prior approval for outside employment and business activities.

    (a) A DoD employee, other than a special Government employee, who is 
required to file a financial disclosure report (SF 450 or SF 278) shall 
obtain written approval from the agency designee before engaging in a 
business activity or compensated outside employment with a prohibited 
source, unless general approval has been given in accordance with 
paragraph (b) of this section. Approval shall be granted unless a 
determination is made that the business activity or compensated outside 
employment is expected to involve conduct prohibited by statute or 
regulation. For purposes of this section, the following definitions 
apply:
    (1) Business activity. Any business, contractual or other financial 
relationship not involving the provision of personal services by the DoD 
employee. It does not include a routine commercial transaction or the 
purchase of an asset or interest, such as common stock, that is 
available to the general public;
    (2) Employment. Any form of non-Federal employment or business 
relationship involving the provision of personal services by the DoD 
employee. It includes, but is not limited to, personal services as an 
officer, director, employee, agent, attorney, consultant, contractor, 
general partner or trustee; and
    (3) Prohibited source. See 5 CFR 2635.203(d) (modified by the 
separate DoD component agency designations in Sec. 3601.102 of this 
part).
    (b) The DoD component designated agency ethics official or designee 
may, by a written notice, exempt categories of business activities or 
employment from the requirement of paragraph (a) of this section, for 
prior approval based on a determination that business activities or 
employment within those categories would generally be approved and are 
not likely to involve conduct prohibited by statute or regulation.



Sec. 3601.108  Disclaimer for speeches and writings devoted to agency matters.

    A DoD employee who uses or permits the use of his military rank or 
who includes or permits the inclusion of his title or position as one of 
several biographical details given to identify himself in connection 
with teaching, speaking or writing, in accordance with 5 CFR 
2635.807(b), shall make a disclaimer if the subject of the teaching, 
speaking or writing deals in significant part with any ongoing or 
announced policy, program or operation of the DoD employee's agency, as 
defined in Sec. 3601.102, and the DoD employee has not been authorized 
by appropriate agency authority to present that material as the agency's 
position. The disclaimer shall be made as follows:
    (a) The required disclaimer shall expressly state that the views 
presented are those of the speaker or author and do not necessarily 
represent the views of DoD or its components.
    (b) Where a disclaimer is required for an article, book or other 
writing, the disclaimer will be printed in a reasonably prominent 
position in the writing itself.
    (c) Where a disclaimer is required for a speech or other oral 
presentation, the disclaimer may be given orally provided it is given at 
the beginning of the oral presentation.

[[Page 627]]



                  CHAPTER XXVIII--DEPARTMENT OF JUSTICE




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Part                                                                Page
3801            Supplemental standards of ethical conduct 
                    for employees of the Department of 
                    Justice.................................         628

[[Page 628]]



PART 3801--SUPPLEMENTAL STANDARDS OF ETHICAL CONDUCT FOR EMPLOYEES OF THE DEPARTMENT OF JUSTICE--Table of Contents




Sec.
3801.101  General.
3801.102  Detailed or assigned special agents of certain Departmental 
          components.
3801.103  Designation of separate Departmental components.
3801.104  Purchase or use of certain forfeited and other property.
3801.105  Personal use of Government property.
3801.106  Outside employment.

    Authority: 5 U.S.C. 301, 7301; 5 U.S.C. App. (Ethics in Government 
Act of 1978); E.O. 12674, 54 FR 15159, 3 CFR, 1989 Comp., p. 215, as 
modified by E.O. 12731, 55 FR 42547, 3 CFR, 1990 Comp., p. 306; E.O. 
12988, 61 FR 4729; 5 CFR 2635.105, 2635.203(a), 2635.403(a), 2635.701-
2635.705, 2635.803, 2635.807(a)(2)(ii); and DOJ Order 1735.1.

    Source: 61 FR 59814, Nov. 25, 1996, unless otherwise noted.



Sec. 3801.101   General.

    In accordance with Sec. 2635.105 of this title, the regulations in 
this part apply to employees of the Department of Justice and supplement 
the Standards of Ethical Conduct for Employees of the Executive Branch 
in part 2635 of this title. In addition to the regulations contained in 
part 2635 of this title and in this part, employees are subject to the 
conduct regulations contained in part 735 of this title and 28 CFR part 
45.



Sec. 3801.102   Detailed or assigned special agents of certain Departmental components.

    Notwithstanding a detail or assignment to another entity, any 
special agent of the Federal Bureau of Investigation or Drug Enforcement 
Administration who is subject to the regulations or standards of ethical 
conduct of that entity pursuant to Sec. 2635.104 of this title shall 
also remain subject to the regulations in this part.



Sec. 3801.103   Designation of separate Departmental components.

    (a) Pursuant to Sec. 2635.203(a) of this title, each of the 
following components is designated as a separate agency for purposes of 
the regulations contained in subpart B of part 2635 of this title 
governing gifts from outside sources, and, accordingly, Sec. 2635.807 of 
this title governing teaching, speaking, and writing:

Antitrust Division
Bureau of Prisons (including Federal Prison Industries, Inc.)
Civil Division
Civil Rights Division
Community Relations Service
Criminal Division
Drug Enforcement Administration
Environment and Natural Resources Division
Executive Office for Immigration Review
Executive Office for United States Attorneys (The Executive Office for 
United States Attorneys shall not be considered separate from any Office 
of the United States Attorney for a judicial district, but only from 
other designated components of the Department of Justice.)
Executive Office for United States Trustees (The Executive Office for 
United States Trustees shall not be considered separate from any Office 
of the United States Trustee for a region, but only from other 
designated components of the Department of Justice.)
Federal Bureau of Investigation
Foreign Claims Settlement Commission
Immigration and Naturalization Service
Independent Counsel appointed by the Attorney General
INTERPOL
National Drug Intelligence Center
Justice Management Division
Office of Information and Privacy
Office of Intelligence Policy and Review
Office of Community Oriented Policing Services
Office of Justice Programs
Office of the Pardon Attorney
Office of Policy Development
Offices of the United States Attorney (94) (Each Office of the United 
States Attorney for a judicial district shall be considered a separate 
component from each other such office.)
Offices of the United States Trustee (21) (Each Office of the United 
States Trustee for a region shall be considered a separate component 
from each other such office.)
Tax Division
United States Marshals Service
United States Parole Commission

    (b) Employees serving in positions within the Department but outside 
of the components designated in paragraph (a) of this section must 
continue to treat the entire Department of Justice as their employing 
agency for purposes of the gift rules of subpart B of

[[Page 629]]

part 2635 of this title and the application of the teaching, speaking 
and writing provisions found in Sec. 2635.807 of this title.



Sec. 3801.104  Purchase or use of certain forfeited and other property.

    (a) In the absence of prior approval by the agency designee, no 
employee shall purchase, directly or indirectly, from the Department of 
Justice or its agents property forfeited to the United States and no 
employee shall use property forfeited to the United States which has 
been purchased, directly or indirectly, from the Department of Justice 
or its agents by his spouse or minor child. Approval may be granted only 
on the basis of a written determination by the agency designee that in 
the mind of a reasonable person with knowledge of the circumstances, 
purchase or use by the employee of the asset will not raise a question 
as to whether the employee has used his official position or nonpublic 
information to obtain or assist in an advantageous purchase or create an 
appearance of loss of impartiality in the performance of the employee's 
duties. A copy of the written determination shall be filed with the 
Deputy Attorney General.
    (b) No employee of the United States Marshals Service, Federal 
Bureau of Investigation, or Drug Enforcement Administration shall 
purchase, directly or indirectly, from his component, the General 
Services Administration, or the agent of either, property formerly used 
by that component and no such employee shall use property formerly used 
by his component which has been purchased, directly or indirectly, by 
his spouse or minor child from his component, the General Services 
Administration, or the agent of either.



Sec. 3801.105  Personal use of Government property.

    Employees are prohibited by part 2635 of this title from using 
Government property for other than authorized purposes. On April 21, 
1995, the Department issued an internal policy authorizing limited 
personal use of Department of Justice office and library equipment and 
facilities by its employees. Employees with questions concerning this 
policy may seek advice and obtain a copy of the policy from their agency 
designee, who for this purpose shall be the Deputy Designated Agency 
Ethics Official for the employee's component.



Sec. 3801.106  Outside employment.

    (a) Definition. For purposes of this section, outside employment 
means any form of employment, business relationship or activity, 
involving the provision of personal services whether or not for 
compensation, other than in the discharge of official duties. It 
includes, but is not limited to, services as a lawyer, officer, 
director, trustee, employee, agent, consultant, contractor, or general 
partner. Speaking, writing and serving as a fact witness are excluded 
from this definition, so long as they are not combined with the 
provision of other services that do fall within this definition, such as 
the practice of law. Employees who wish to engage in compensated 
speaking and writing should review Sec. 2635.807 of this title.
    (b) Prohibited outside employment. (1) No employee may engage in 
outside employment that involves:
    (i) The practice of law, unless it is uncompensated and in the 
nature of community service, or unless it is on behalf of himself, his 
parents, spouse, or minor children;
    (ii) Any criminal or habeas corpus matter, be it Federal, State, or 
local; or
    (iii) Litigation, investigations, grants or other matters in which 
the Department of Justice is or represents a party, witness, litigant, 
investigator or grant-maker.
    (2) Where application of the restrictions of paragraph (b)(1) of 
this section will cause undue personal or family hardship; unduly 
prohibit an employee from completing a professional obligation entered 
into prior to Government service; or unduly restrict the Department from 
securing necessary and uniquely specialized services, the restrictions 
may be waived in writing based upon a determination that the activities 
covered by the waiver are not expected to involve conduct prohibited by 
statute or Federal regulation. Employees should refer to DOJ Order 
1735.1 on obtaining waivers. The Order

[[Page 630]]

is available from the agency designee which, for purposes of this rule, 
shall be the Deputy Designated Agency Ethics Official for the component.
    (c) Prior approval for outside employment. (1) An employee must 
obtain written approval before engaging in outside employment, not 
otherwise prohibited by paragraph (b) of this section that involves:
    (i) The practice of law; or
    (ii) A subject matter, policy, or program that is in his component's 
area of responsibility.
    (2) Employees should refer to DOJ Order 1735.1 for procedures on 
obtaining prior approval. A waiver granted pursuant to paragraph (b)(2) 
of this section will be sufficient to satisfy this prior approval 
requirement.
    (3) Approval shall be granted only upon a determination that the 
outside employment is not expected to involve conduct that is prohibited 
by statute or Federal regulation.

[[Page 631]]



             CHAPTER XXIX--FEDERAL COMMUNICATIONS COMMISSION




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Part                                                                Page
3901            Supplemental standards of ethical conduct 
                    for employees of the Federal 
                    Communications Commission...............         632
3902            Supplemental financial disclosure 
                    requirements for employees of the 
                    Federal Communications Commission.......         632

[[Page 632]]



PART 3901--SUPPLEMENTAL STANDARDS OF ETHICAL CONDUCT FOR EMPLOYEES OF THE FEDERAL COMMUNICATIONS COMMISSION--Table of Contents




Sec.
3901.101  General.
3901.102  Prior approval for practice of a profession.

    Authority: 5 U.S.C. 7301; 5 U.S.C. App. (Ethics in Government Act of 
1978); 47 U.S.C. 303(r); E.O. 12674, 54 FR 15159, 3 CFR, 1989 Comp., p. 
215, as modified by E.O. 12731, 55 FR 42547, 3 CFR, 1990 Comp., p. 306; 
5 CFR 2635.105, 2635.803.
    Source: 61 FR 56111, Oct. 31, 1996, unless otherwise noted.



Sec. 3901.101  General.

    In accordance with 5 CFR 2635.105, the regulations in this part 
apply to employees of the Federal Communications Commission (FCC) and 
supplement the Standards of Ethical Conduct for Employees of the 
Executive Branch contained in 5 CFR part 2635. In addition to the 
standards in 5 CFR part 2635 and this part, employees are subject to the 
Executive Branch Financial Disclosure Regulations contained in 5 CFR 
part 2634, the FCC's regulations at 5 CFR part 3902 supplementing 5 CFR 
part 2634, and to FCC regulations regarding their responsibilities and 
conduct in 47 CFR part 19.



Sec. 3901.102  Prior approval for practice of a profession.

    (a) Prior approval requirement. A professional employee of the FCC 
shall obtain approval before engaging in the outside practice of the 
same profession as that of the employee's official position, whether or 
not for compensation. As used in this section, ``profession'' has the 
meaning set forth in Sec. 2636.305(b)(1) of this title, and 
``professional employee'' means an employee whose official FCC position 
is in a profession as defined in Sec. 2636.305(b)(1) of this title.
    (b) Procedures for requesting approval. (1) A request for approval 
shall be in writing and shall be submitted, through the following 
Commission officials, to the Designated Agency Ethics Official or his 
designee:
    (i) For Heads of Bureaus and Offices, through the Chairman;
    (ii) For employees in the immediate Office of a Commissioner, 
through the Commissioner; or
    (iii) For all other employees, through the Head of the Bureau or 
Office to which the employee is assigned.
    (2) A request for approval shall include, at a minimum:
    (i) A full description of the services to be performed in practicing 
the profession;
    (ii) The name and address of the person or organization for which 
services are to be provided; and
    (iii) The estimated total time that will be devoted to practicing 
the profession.
    (3) Upon a significant change in the nature or scope of the 
employee's FCC position or the services to be provided in practicing the 
profession, the employee shall submit a revised request for approval.
    (c) Standard for approval. Approval shall be granted only upon a 
determination that the proposed outside practice of the employee's 
profession is not expected to involve conduct prohibited by statute or 
Federal regulation, including 5 CFR 2635.



PART 3902--SUPPLEMENTAL FINANCIAL DISCLOSURE REQUIREMENTS FOR EMPLOYEES OF THE FEDERAL COMMUNICATIONS COMMISSION--Table of Contents




Sec.
3902.101  General.
3902.102  Employees required to submit FCC Form A54A, ``Confidential 
          Supplemental Statement of Employment and Financial 
          Interests.''
3902.103  Submission and review of employees' statements.
3902.104  Confidentiality of employees' statements.

    Authority: 5 U.S.C. 7301; 5 U.S.C. App. (Ethics in Government Act of 
1978); 47 U.S.C. 154(b), (j), (i) and 303(r); E.O. 12674, 54 FR 15159, 3 
CFR, 1989 Comp., p. 215, as modified by E.O. 12731, 55 FR 42547, 3 CFR, 
1990 Comp., p. 306; 5 CFR 2634.103, 2634.601(b), 2634.901(b).

    Source: 61 FR 56111, Oct. 31, 1996, unless otherwise noted.

[[Page 633]]



Sec. 3902.101  General.

    The regulations in this part apply to employees of the Federal 
Communications Commission (FCC) and supplement the Executive Branch 
Financial Disclosure Regulations contained in 5 CFR part 2634.



Sec. 3902.102  Employees required to submit FCC Form A54A, ``Confidential Supplemental Statement of Employment and Financial Interests.''

    All employees, including special Government employees, who are 
required to file a Standard Form (SF) 278, ``Public Financial Disclosure 
Report,'' or a SF/OGE Form 450, ``Confidential Financial Disclosure 
Report,'' are also required to file FCC Form A54A, ``Confidential 
Supplemental Statement of Employment and Financial Interests.'' The 
purpose of FCC Form A54A is to require disclosure of income and interest 
in property and assets valued below the minimum reporting limits for the 
SF 278 and SF/OGE Form 450 in order to meet the separate requirements of 
section 4(b) of the Communications Act of 1934, at 47 U.S.C. 154(b).



Sec. 3902.103  Submission and review of employees' statements.

    (a) An employee required to submit a statement of employment and 
financial interests will be notified individually of his or her 
obligation to file.
    (b) An employee required to submit an FCC Form A54A, ``Confidential 
Supplemental Statement of Employment and Financial Interests'' pursuant 
to Sec. 3902.102 shall submit such statement to the Designated Agency 
Ethics Official, on the prescribed form, not later than 30 days after 
his or her entrance on duty, and annually thereafter at the time the 
employee submits his or her SF 278 or SF/OGE Form 450.
    (c) Financial statements submitted under this subpart shall be 
reviewed by the Designated Agency Ethics Official.
    (d) When a statement submitted under this subpart or information 
from other sources indicates a potential violation of applicable laws 
and regulations, such as a conflict between the interests of an employee 
or special Government employee and the performance of his or her 
services for the Government, the employee concerned shall be provided an 
opportunity to explain and resolve the potential violation.
    (e) When, after explanation by the employee involved, the potential 
violation of law or regulation is not resolved, the information 
concerning the potential violation shall be reported to the Chairman by 
the Designated Agency Ethics Official for appropriate action.



Sec. 3902.104  Confidentiality of employees' statements.

    Each supplemental statement of employment and financial interests 
shall be held in confidence and shall be retained in the Office of the 
Designated Agency Ethics Official. Each employee charged with reviewing 
a statement is responsible for maintaining the statements in confidence 
and shall not allow access to or allow information to be disclosed from 
a statement except to carry out the purpose of this part or as otherwise 
required by law. Information from these statements shall not be 
disclosed except as the Chairman may determine in accordance with law or 
regulation.

[[Page 635]]



          CHAPTER XXX--FARM CREDIT SYSTEM INSURANCE CORPORATION




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Part                                                                Page
4001            Supplemental standards of ethical conduct 
                    for employees of the Farm Credit System 
                    Insurance Corporation...................         636

[[Page 636]]



PART 4001--SUPPLEMENTAL STANDARDS OF ETHICAL CONDUCT FOR EMPLOYEES OF THE FARM CREDIT SYSTEM INSURANCE CORPORATION--Table of Contents




Sec.
4001.101  General.
4001.102  Definitions.
4001.103  Prohibited financial interests.
4001.104  Prohibited borrowing.
4001.105  Purchase of System institution assets.
4001.106  Restrictions arising from the employment of relatives.
4001.107  Involvement in System institution board member elections.
4001.108  Outside employment and business activity.
4001.109  Waivers.

    Authority: 5 U.S.C. 7301, 7353; 5 U.S.C. App. (Ethics in Government 
Act of 1978); 12 U.S.C. 2277a-7, 2277a-8; E.O. 12674, 3 CFR, 1989 Comp., 
p. 215, as modified by E.O. 12731, 3 CFR, 1990 Comp., p. 306; 5 CFR 
2635.105, 2635.403(a), 2635.502, 2635.702, 2635.802(a), 2635.803.

    Source: 60 FR 30776, June 12, 1995, unless otherwise noted.



Sec. 4001.101  General.

    In accordance with 5 CFR 2635.105, the regulations in this part 
apply to Farm Credit System Insurance Corporation (Corporation) 
employees and supplement the Standards of Ethical Conduct for Employees 
of the executive branch contained in 5 CFR part 2635. Employees are 
required to comply with 5 CFR part 2635, this part, and Corporation 
guidance and procedures established pursuant to 5 CFR 2635.105.



Sec. 4001.102  Definitions.

    For purposes of this part:
    (a) Covered employee means:
    (1) All examiners who perform work for the Corporation; and
    (2) Any other employee specified by Corporation directive whose 
duties and responsibilities require application of these supplemental 
regulations to ensure public confidence that the Corporation's programs 
are conducted impartially and objectively. The Corporation Designated 
Agency Ethics Official (DAEO) or his or her designee, in consultation 
with the Chief Operating Officer, will determine which employees are 
covered for the purpose of this part.
    (b) Related entity means:
    (1) Affiliates defined in section 8.5(e) of the Farm Credit Act of 
1971, as amended (Act), 12 U.S.C. 2001 et seq., 12 U.S.C. 2279aa-5;
    (2) Affiliates defined in section 8.11(e) of the Act, 12 U.S.C. 
2279aa-11;
    (3) Service organizations authorized by section 4.25 of the Act, 12 
U.S.C. 2211; and
    (4) Any other entity owned or controlled by one or more Farm Credit 
System (System) institution that is not chartered by the Farm Credit 
Administration (FCA).
    (c) System institution refers to:
    (1) All institutions chartered and regulated by the FCA as described 
in section 1.2 of the Act, 12 U.S.C. 2002;
    (2) The Federal Farm Credit Banks Funding Corporation, established 
pursuant to section 4.9 of the Act, 12 U.S.C. 2160; and
    (3) The Federal Agricultural Mortgage Corporation, established 
pursuant to section 8.1 of the Act, 12 U.S.C. 2279aa-1.



Sec. 4001.103  Prohibited financial interests.

    (a) Prohibition. Except as provided in paragraph (c) of this section 
and Sec. 4001.109, no covered employee, or spouse or minor child of a 
covered employee, shall own, directly or indirectly, securities issued 
by a System institution or related entity.
    (b) Definition of securities. For purposes of this section, the term 
``securities'' includes all interests in debt or equity instruments. The 
term includes, without limitation, secured and unsecured bonds, 
debentures, notes, securitized assets and commercial paper, as well as 
all types of preferred and common stock. The term encompasses both 
current and contingent ownership interests, including any beneficial or 
legal interest derived from a trust. It extends to any right to acquire 
or dispose of any long and short position in such securities and 
includes, without limitation, interests convertible into such 
securities, as well as options, rights, warrants, puts, calls, and 
straddles relating to such securities.
    (c) Exceptions. Nothing in this section prohibits a covered 
employee, or spouse

[[Page 637]]

or minor child of a covered employee, from:
    (1) Investing in a publicly traded or publicly available investment 
fund which, in its prospectus, does not indicate the objective or 
practice of concentrating its investments in the securities of System 
institutions or related entities, if the employee neither exercises 
control over nor has the ability to exercise control over the financial 
interests held in the fund;
    (2) Having a legal or beneficial interest in a qualified profit 
sharing, retirement, or similar plan, provided that the plan does not 
invest more than 25 percent of its funds in securities of System 
institutions or related entities, and the employee neither exercises 
control over nor has the ability to exercise control over the financial 
interests held in the plan;
    (3) Owning securities of System institutions held as a result of 
pre-existing credit, as specified in Sec. 4001.104(b); or
    (4) Owning any security pursuant to a waiver granted under 
Sec. 4001.109.



Sec. 4001.104  Prohibited borrowing.

    (a) Prohibition on employee borrowing. Except as provided in 
paragraph (b) of this section, no covered employee, or spouse or minor 
child of a covered employee, shall seek or obtain any loan or extension 
of credit from a System institution or from an officer, director, 
employee, or related entity of a System institution.
    (b) Exception. This section does not prohibit a covered employee, or 
spouse or minor child of a covered employee, from retaining a loan from 
a System institution on its original terms if the loan was obtained 
prior to appointment to a covered employee position. For loans retained 
pursuant to this paragraph, a covered employee shall submit to his or 
her immediate supervisor, the ethics liaison in his or her office, and 
the DAEO, a written disqualification from examining, auditing, visiting, 
reviewing, investigating, or otherwise participating in the regulation 
or supervision of the System institution that is providing the retained 
credit. Written disqualification shall be made within 30 days of 
appointment to a covered employee position on a form prescribed by the 
DAEO. Any renewal or renegotiation of a pre-existing loan or extension 
of credit will be treated as a new loan subject to the prohibition in 
paragraph (a) of this section.



Sec. 4001.105  Purchase of System institution assets.

    (a) Prohibition on purchasing assets owned by a System institution. 
No employee, or spouse or minor child of an employee, shall purchase, 
directly or indirectly, an asset (such as real property, vehicles, 
furniture, or similar items) from a System institution or related 
entity, regardless of how the asset is sold.
    (b) Assets held or managed by the Corporation or a receiver or 
conservator--(1) Prohibition on purchase. No employee, or spouse or 
minor child of an employee, shall purchase, directly or indirectly, an 
asset (such as real property, vehicles, furniture, or similar items) 
that is held or managed by a receiver or conservator for a System 
institution or that is held by the Corporation as a result of its 
provision of open bank assistance to troubled System banks, regardless 
of how the asset is sold.
    (2) Disqualification. An employee who is involved in the disposition 
of receivership or conservatorship assets, or assets acquired by the 
Corporation as a result of its provision of open bank assistance to 
troubled System banks, shall disqualify himself or herself from 
participation in the disposition of such assets when the employee 
becomes aware that anyone with whom the employee has a covered 
relationship, as defined in Sec. 2635.502(b)(1) of the Executive Branch-
wide Standards, is or will be attempting to acquire such assets. The 
employee shall provide written notification of the disqualification to 
his or her immediate supervisor, the ethics liaison in his or her 
office, and the DAEO.



Sec. 4001.106  Restrictions arising from the employment of relatives.

    When the spouse of a covered employee, or other relative who is 
dependent on or resides with a covered employee, is employed in a 
position that the employee would be prohibited from occupying by 
Sec. 4001.108(a), the employee shall file a report of family member 
employment with his or her immediate

[[Page 638]]

supervisor, the ethics liaison in his or her office, and the DAEO on a 
form prescribed by the DAEO. Notice shall be made as soon as possible 
after learning about employment already in existence or in advance of 
known prospective employment. The employee shall be disqualified from 
participation in any matter involving the employee's spouse or relative, 
or the employing entity, unless the DAEO authorizes the employee to 
participate in the matter using the standard in Sec. 2635.502(d) of the 
Executive Branch-wide Standards.



Sec. 4001.107  Involvement in System institution board member elections.

    No covered employee who is able to participate in a System 
institution board election because of System securities owned by virtue 
of retaining a pre-existing loan or extension of credit from a System 
institution in accordance with Sec. 4001.104(b) shall take any part, 
directly or indirectly, in the nomination or election of a board member 
of a System institution, other than by exercising the right to vote. In 
addition, a covered employee shall not make any oral or written 
statement that may be reasonably construed as intending to influence any 
vote in such nominations or elections.



Sec. 4001.108  Outside employment and business activity.

    (a) Prohibition. No covered employee shall perform services, either 
on a paid or unpaid basis, for any System institution or related entity, 
or any officer, director, employee, or person connected with a System 
institution or related entity. Nothing in this section would prohibit 
covered employees from providing any service that is a part of their 
official duties.
    (b) General requirement for prior approval. All employees shall 
obtain prior written approval before engaging in any outside employment 
or business activity, with or without compensation, unless the outside 
activity is exempt from the definition of ``employment'' as set forth in 
paragraph (c) of this section. An employee proposing to engage in 
outside employment and business activities is required, prior to 
commencement, to send a written notice of the proposed employment or 
activity to the DAEO on a form prescribed by the DAEO. Approval shall be 
granted only upon a determination that the employment or activity is not 
expected to involve conduct prohibited by statute, part 2635 of this 
title, or paragraph (a) of this section.
    (c) Definition. For purposes of this section, ``employment'' means 
any form of non-Federal employment, business relationship or activity 
involving the provision of personal services by the employee, whether or 
not for compensation. It includes, but is not limited to, personal 
services as an officer, director, employee, agent, attorney, consultant, 
contractor, general partner, trustee, teacher, or speaker. It includes 
writing when done under an arrangement with another person for 
production or publication of the written product. It does not, however, 
include participation in the activities of a nonprofit charitable, 
religious, professional, social, fraternal, educational, recreational, 
public service, or civic organization for which no compensation is 
received other than reimbursement for necessary expenses.



Sec. 4001.109  Waivers.

    The DAEO may grant a written waiver from any provision of this part 
based on a determination that the waiver is not inconsistent with part 
2635 of this title or otherwise prohibited by law and that, under the 
particular circumstances, application of the provision is not necessary 
to avoid the appearance of misuse of position or loss of impartiality, 
or otherwise to ensure confidence in the impartiality and objectivity 
with which Corporation programs are administered. A waiver under this 
paragraph may impose appropriate conditions, such as requiring execution 
of a written disqualification.

[[Page 639]]



                CHAPTER XXXI--FARM CREDIT ADMINISTRATION




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Part                                                                Page
4101            Supplemental standards of ethical conduct 
                    for employees of the Farm Credit 
                    Administration..........................         640

[[Page 640]]



PART 4101--SUPPLEMENTAL STANDARDS OF ETHICAL CONDUCT FOR EMPLOYEES OF THE FARM CREDIT ADMINISTRATION--Table of Contents




Sec.
4101.101  General.
4101.102  Definitions.
4101.103  Prohibited financial interests.
4101.104  Prohibited borrowing.
4101.105  Purchase of System institution assets.
4101.106  Restrictions arising from the employment of relatives.
4101.107  Involvement in System institution board member elections.
4101.108  Outside employment and business activity.
4101.109  Waivers.

    Authority: 5 U.S.C. 7301, 7353; 5 U.S.C. App. (Ethics in Government 
Act of 1978); 12 U.S.C. 2245(c)(2)(C), 2252; E.O. 12674, 3 CFR, 1989 
Comp., p. 215, as modified by E.O. 12731, 3 CFR, 1990 Comp., p. 306; 5 
CFR 2635.105, 2635.403(a), 2635.502, 2635.702, 2635.802(a), 2635.803.

    Source: 60 FR 30781, June 12, 1995, unless otherwise noted.



Sec. 4101.101  General.

    In accordance with 5 CFR 2635.105, the regulations in this part 
apply to Farm Credit Administration (FCA) employees and supplement the 
Standards of Ethical Conduct for Employees of the executive branch 
contained in 5 CFR part 2635. Employees are required to comply with 5 
CFR part 2635, this part, and Agency guidance and procedures established 
pursuant to 5 CFR 2635.105.



Sec. 4101.102  Definitions.

    For purposes of this part:
    (a) Covered employee means:
    (1) Examiners; and
    (2) Any other employee specified by FCA directive whose duties and 
responsibilities require application of these supplemental regulations 
to ensure public confidence that the FCA's programs are conducted 
impartially and objectively. The FCA Designated Agency Ethics Official 
(DAEO) or his or her designee, in consultation with the Office 
Directors, will determine which employees are covered for the purpose of 
this part.
    (b) Related entity means:
    (1) Affiliates defined in section 8.5(e) of the Farm Credit Act of 
1971, as amended (Act), 12 U.S.C. 2001 et seq., 12 U.S.C. 2279aa-5;
    (2) Affiliates defined in section 8.11(e) of the Act, 12 U.S.C. 
2279aa-11;
    (3) Service organizations authorized by section 4.25 of the Act, 12 
U.S.C. 2211; and
    (4) Any other entity owned or controlled by one or more Farm Credit 
System (System) institution that is not chartered by the FCA.
    (c) System institution refers to:
    (1) All institutions chartered and regulated by the FCA as described 
in section 1.2 of the Act, 12 U.S.C. 2002;
    (2) The Federal Farm Credit Banks Funding Corporation, established 
pursuant to section 4.9 of the Act, 12 U.S.C. 2160; and
    (3) The Federal Agricultural Mortgage Corporation, established 
pursuant to section 8.1 of the Act, 12 U.S.C. 2279aa-1.



Sec. 4101.103  Prohibited financial interests.

    (a) Prohibition. Except as provided in paragraph (c) of this section 
and Sec. 4101.109, no covered employee, or spouse or minor child of a 
covered employee, shall own, directly or indirectly, securities issued 
by a System institution or related entity.
    (b) Definition of securities. For purposes of this section, the term 
``securities'' includes all interests in debt or equity instruments. The 
term includes, without limitation, secured and unsecured bonds, 
debentures, notes, securitized assets and commercial paper, as well as 
all types of preferred and common stock. The term encompasses both 
current and contingent ownership interests, including any beneficial or 
legal interest derived from a trust. It extends to any right to acquire 
or dispose of any long and short position in such securities and 
includes, without limitation, interests convertible into such 
securities, as well as options, rights, warrants, puts, calls, and 
straddles relating to such securities.
    (c) Exceptions. Nothing in this section prohibits a covered 
employee, or spouse or minor child of a covered employee, from:

[[Page 641]]

    (1) Investing in a publicly traded or publicly available investment 
fund which, in its prospectus, does not indicate the objective or 
practice of concentrating its investments in the securities of System 
institutions or related entities, and the employee neither exercises 
control over nor has the ability to exercise control over the financial 
interests held in the fund;
    (2) Having a legal or beneficial interest in a qualified profit 
sharing, retirement, or similar plan, provided that the plan does not 
invest more than 25 percent of its funds in securities of System 
institutions or related entities, and the employee neither exercises 
control over nor has the ability to exercise control over the financial 
interests held in the plan;
    (3) Owning securities of System institutions held as a result of 
pre-existing credit, as specified in Sec. 4101.104(b); or
    (4) Owning any security pursuant to a waiver granted under 
Sec. 4101.109.



Sec. 4101.104  Prohibited borrowing.

    (a) Prohibition on employee borrowing. Except as provided in 
paragraph (b) of this section, no covered employee, or spouse or minor 
child of a covered employee, shall seek or obtain any loan or extension 
of credit from a System institution or from an officer, director, 
employee, or related entity of a System institution.
    (b) Exception. This section does not prohibit a covered employee, or 
spouse or minor child of a covered employee, from retaining a loan from 
a System institution on its original terms if the loan was obtained 
prior to appointment to a covered employee position. For loans retained 
pursuant to this paragraph, a covered employee shall submit to his or 
her immediate supervisor, the ethics liaison in his or her office, and 
the DAEO, a written disqualification from examining, auditing, visiting, 
reviewing, investigating, or otherwise participating in the supervision 
of the System institution that is providing the retained credit. Written 
disqualification shall be made within 30 days of appointment to a 
covered employee position on a form prescribed by the DAEO. Any renewal 
or renegotiation of a pre-existing loan or extension of credit will be 
treated as a new loan subject to the prohibition in paragraph (a) of 
this section.



Sec. 4101.105  Purchase of System institution assets.

    (a) Prohibition on purchasing assets owned by a System institution. 
No covered employee, or spouse or minor child of a covered employee, 
shall purchase, directly or indirectly, an asset (such as real property, 
vehicles, furniture, or similar items) from a System institution or 
related entity, unless it is sold at a public auction or by other means 
which assure that the selling price is the asset's fair market value. A 
covered employee shall obtain concurrence from the DAEO about whether a 
proposed purchase of a System institution asset is proper.
    (b) Assets held or managed by the Farm Credit System Insurance 
Corporation or a receiver or conservator--(1) Prohibition on purchase. 
No covered employee, or spouse or minor child of a covered employee, 
shall purchase, directly or indirectly, an asset (such as real property, 
vehicles, furniture, or similar items) that is held or managed by a 
receiver or conservator for a System institution or that is held by the 
Farm Credit System Insurance Corporation (Corporation) as a result of 
its provision of open bank assistance to troubled System banks 
regardless of how the asset is sold.
    (2) Disqualification. A covered employee who is involved in the 
disposition of receivership or conservatorship assets, or assets 
acquired by the Corporation as a result of its provision of open bank 
assistance to troubled System banks, shall disqualify himself or herself 
from participation in the disposition of such assets when the employee 
becomes aware that anyone with whom the employee has a covered 
relationship, as defined in Sec. 2635.502(b)(1) of the Executive Branch-
wide Standards, is or will be attempting to acquire such assets. The 
employee shall provide written notification of the disqualification to 
his or her immediate supervisor, the ethics liaison in his or her 
office, and the DAEO.

[[Page 642]]



Sec. 4101.106  Restrictions arising from the employment of relatives.

    When the spouse of a covered employee, or other relative who is 
dependent on or resides with a covered employee, is employed in a 
position that the employee would be prohibited from occupying by 
Sec. 4101.108(a), the employee shall file a report of family member 
employment with his or her immediate supervisor, the ethics liaison in 
his or her office, and the DAEO on a form prescribed by the DAEO. Notice 
shall be made as soon as possible after learning about employment 
already in existence or in advance of known prospective employment. The 
employee shall be disqualified from participation in any matter 
involving the employee's spouse or relative, or the employing entity, 
unless the DAEO authorizes the employee to participate in the matter 
using the standard in Sec. 2635.502(d) of the Executive Branch-wide 
Standards.



Sec. 4101.107  Involvement in System institution board member elections.

    No covered employee who is able to participate in a System 
institution board election because of System securities owned by virtue 
of retaining a pre-existing loan or extension of credit from a System 
institution in accordance with Sec. 4101.104(b) shall take any part, 
directly or indirectly, in the nomination or election of a board member 
of a System institution, other than by exercising the right to vote. In 
addition, a covered employee shall not make any oral or written 
statement that may be reasonably construed as intending to influence any 
vote in such nominations or elections.



Sec. 4101.108  Outside employment and business activity.

    (a) Prohibition. No covered employee shall perform services, either 
on a paid or unpaid basis, for any System institution or related entity, 
or any officer, director, employee, or person connected with a System 
institution or related entity. Nothing in this section would prohibit 
covered employees from providing any service that is a part of their 
official duties.
    (b) General requirement for prior approval. All employees shall 
obtain prior written approval before engaging in any outside employment 
or business activity, with or without compensation, unless the outside 
activity is exempt from the definition of ``employment'' as set forth in 
paragraph (c) of this section. An employee proposing to engage in 
outside employment and business activities is required, prior to 
commencement, to send a written notice of the proposed employment or 
activity to the DAEO on a form prescribed by the DAEO. Approval shall be 
granted only upon a determination that the employment or activity is not 
expected to involve conduct prohibited by statute, part 2635 of this 
title, or paragraph (a) of this section.
    (c) Definition. For purposes of this section, ``employment'' means 
any form of non-Federal employment, business relationship or activity 
involving the provision of personal services by the employee, whether or 
not for compensation. It includes, but is not limited to, personal 
services as an officer, director, employee, agent, attorney, consultant, 
contractor, general partner, trustee, teacher, or speaker. It includes 
writing when done under an arrangement with another person for 
production or publication of the written product. It does not, however, 
include participation in the activities of a nonprofit charitable, 
religious, professional, social, fraternal, educational, recreational, 
public service, or civic organization for which no compensation is 
received other than reimbursement for necessary expenses.



Sec. 4101.109  Waivers.

    The DAEO may grant a written waiver from any provision of this part 
based on a determination that the waiver is not inconsistent with part 
2635 of this title or otherwise prohibited by law and that, under the 
particular circumstances, application of the provision is not necessary 
to avoid the appearance of misuse of position or loss of impartiality, 
or otherwise to ensure confidence in the impartiality and objectivity 
with which Agency programs are administered. A waiver under this 
paragraph may impose appropriate conditions, such as requiring execution 
of a written disqualification.

[[Page 643]]



         CHAPTER XXXIII--OVERSEAS PRIVATE INVESTMENT CORPORATION




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4301            Supplemental standards of ethical conduct 
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                    Investment Corporation..................         644

[[Page 644]]



PART 4301--SUPPLEMENTAL STANDARDS OF ETHICAL CONDUCT FOR EMPLOYEES OF THE OVERSEAS PRIVATE INVESTMENT CORPORATION--Table of Contents




    Authority: 5 U.S.C. 7301; 5 U.S.C. App. (Ethics in Government Act of 
1978); E.O. 12674, 54 FR 15159, 3 CFR, 1989 Comp., p. 215, as modified 
by E.O. 12731, 55 FR 42547, 3 CFR, 1990 Comp., p. 306; 5 CFR 2635.105, 
2635.803.



Sec. 4301.101  Prior approval for outside employment.

    Any employee of the Overseas Private Investment Corporation who is 
interested in engaging in outside employment must first obtain approval 
from the Designated Agency Ethics Official before engaging in such 
employment activity. For this purpose, employment has the meaning set 
forth in Sec. 2635.603(a) of this title.

[58 FR 33320, June 17, 1993]

[[Page 645]]



              CHAPTER XXXV--OFFICE OF PERSONNEL MANAGEMENT




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4501            Supplemental standards of ethical conduct 
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                    Management..............................         646

[[Page 646]]



PART 4501--SUPPLEMENTAL STANDARDS OF ETHICAL CONDUCT FOR EMPLOYEES OF THE OFFICE OF PERSONNEL MANAGEMENT--Table of Contents




Sec.
4501.101  General.
4501.102  Examination information.
4501.103  Prior approval for certain outside activities.

    Authority: 5 U.S.C. 7301; 5 U.S.C. App. (Ethics in Government Act of 
1978); E.O. 12674, 54 FR 15159, 3 CFR, 1989 Comp., p. 215, as modified 
by E.O. 12731, 55 FR 42547, 3 CFR, 1990 Comp., p. 306; 5 CFR 2635.105, 
2635.702, 2635.703, 2635.-802, 2635.803, 2635.805.

    Source: 61 FR 36996, July 16, 1996, unless otherwise noted.



Sec. 4501.101  General.

    In accordance with 5 CFR 2635.105, the regulations in this part 
apply to employees of the Office of Personnel Management (OPM) and 
supplement the Standards of Ethical Conduct for Employees of the 
Executive Branch contained in 5 CFR part 2635. In addition to the 
regulations in 5 CFR part 2635 and this part, OPM employees are subject 
to the responsibilities and conduct regulations contained in 5 CFR parts 
735 and 1001, the executive branch-wide financial disclosure regulations 
contained in 5 CFR part 2634, and the executive branch regulations 
regarding outside employment at 5 CFR part 2636.



Sec. 4501.102  Examination information.

    (a) An employee of OPM who takes part in the construction of written 
tests or any other assessment device, has access to such material, or is 
involved in the examination rating process, shall notify his supervisor, 
in writing, when he intends to file for a competitive examination, an 
internal competitive examination, or an Armed Services entrance 
examination. The employee also must give such notice if he knows that 
his spouse, minor child, or business general partner intends to take any 
of these examinations.
    (b) The employee's supervisor or other appropriate authority will 
arrange the employee's duty assignments to prevent his contact with 
materials related to the examination or examinations that will be taken. 
If the test material involved in the forthcoming examination has already 
been exposed to the employee, arrangements will be made for the employee 
or other person concerned to be given an alternate test.
    (c) The employee's supervisor is responsible for seeing that 
notifications given by employees under this section are transmitted 
promptly to the Test Security Officer in OPM's Employment Service.



Sec. 4501.103  Prior approval for certain outside activities.

    (a) Prior approval requirement. An employee, other than a special 
Government employee, shall obtain written approval before engaging--with 
or without compensation--in the following outside activities:
    (1) Providing professional services involving the application of the 
same specialized skills or the same educational background as 
performance of the employee's official duties;
    (2) Teaching, speaking, or writing that relates to the employee's 
official duties;
    (3) Serving as an officer, director, trustee, general partner, 
employee, agent, attorney, consultant, contractor, or active participant 
for a prohibited source, except that prior approval is not required by 
this paragraph (a)(3) to provide such service without compensation 
(other than reimbursement of expenses) for a prohibited source that is a 
nonprofit charitable, religious, professional, social, fraternal, 
educational, recreational, public service, or civic organization, unless 
prior approval for the activity is required by paragraph (a)(1), (a)(2), 
or (a)(4) of this section, or unless the organization receives or seeks 
to receive fundraising support through the Combined Federal Campaign 
(CFC) under 5 CFR part 950 and the employee's official duties involve 
the administration of the CFR program; or
    (4)(i) Except as provided in paragraph (a)(4)(ii) of this section, 
providing services, other than clerical services or service as a fact 
witness, on behalf of any other person in connection with a particular 
matter:
    (A) In which the United States is a party;

[[Page 647]]

    (B) In which the United States has a direct and substantial 
interest; or
    (C) If the provision of services involves the preparation of 
materials for submission to, or representation before, a Federal court 
or executive branch agency.
    (ii) Prior approval is not required by paragraph (a)(4)(i) of this 
section for OPM employees acting on behalf of the labor organization 
that is the exclusive representative of the OPM employees in the unit it 
represents to provide services as an agent or attorney for, or otherwise 
to represent, such an OPM employee who is the subject of disciplinary, 
loyalty, or other personnel administration proceedings in connection 
with those proceedings.
    (b) Submission of requests for approval. (1) Requests for approval 
shall be submitted in writing to the agency designee, through normal 
supervisory channels. Such requests shall include, at a minimum, the 
following:
    (i) The employee's name and position title;
    (ii) The name and address of the person or organization for whom the 
outside activity is to be performed;
    (iii) A description of the proposed outside activity, including the 
duties and services to be performed while engaged in the activity; and
    (iv) The proposed hours that the employee will engage in the outside 
activity, and the approximate dates of the activity.
    (2) Together with his request for approval, the employee shall 
provide a certification that:
    (i) The outside activity will not depend in any way on nonpublic 
information;
    (ii) No official duty time or Government property, resources, or 
facilities not available to the general public will be used in 
connection with the outside activity; and
    (iii) The employee has read subpart H (``Outside Activities'') of 5 
CFR part 2635.
    (3) Upon a significant change in the nature or scope of the outside 
activity or in the employee's official position, the employee shall 
submit a revised request for approval.
    (c) Approval of requests. Approval shall be granted only upon a 
determination by the agency designee, in consultation with an agency 
ethics official when such consultation is deemed necessary by the agency 
designee, that the outside activity is not expected to involve conduct 
prohibited by statute or Federal regulation, including 5 CFR part 2635.
    (d) Definitions. For purposes of this section:
    (1) Active participant has the meaning set forth in 5 CFR 
2635.502(b)(1)(v).
    (2) Nonpublic information has the meaning set forth in 5 CFR 
2635.703(b).
    (3) Professional services means the provision of personal services 
by an employee, including the rendering of advice or consultation, which 
involves application of the skills of a profession as defined in 5 CFR 
2636.305(b)(1).
    (4) Prohibited source has the meaning set forth in 5 CFR 
2635.203(d).
    (5) Relates to the employee's official duties has the meaning set 
forth in 5 CFR 2635.807(a)(2)(i)(B) through (a)(2)(i)(E).

[[Page 649]]



               CHAPTER XL--INTERSTATE COMMERCE COMMISSION




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                    Commission..............................         650

[[Page 650]]



PART 5001--SUPPLEMENTAL STANDARDS OF ETHICAL CONDUCT FOR EMPLOYEES OF THE INTERSTATE COMMERCE COMMISSION--Table of Contents




Sec.
5001.101  General.
5001.102  Prohibited financial interests in for-hire transportation 
          companies.
5001.103  Impartiality determinations for members of the Interstate 
          Commerce Commission.
5001.104  Prior approval for outside employment.

    Authority: 5 U.S.C. 7301; 5 U.S.C. App. (Ethics in Government Act of 
1978); 49 U.S.C. 10301, 10306, 10321; E.O. 12674, 54 FR 15159, 3 CFR, 
1989 Comp. at 215, as modified by E.O. 12731, 55 FR 42547, 3 CFR, 1990 
Comp., at 306; 5 CFR 2635.105, 2635.403, 2635.803.

    Source: 58 FR 41990, Aug. 6, 1993, unless otherwise noted.



Sec. 5001.101  General.

    In accordance with 5 CFR 2635.105, the regulations in this part 
apply to members and other employees of the Interstate Commerce 
Commission and supplement the Standards of Ethical Conduct for Employees 
of the Executive Branch contained in 5 CFR part 2635. In addition to the 
standards in 5 CFR part 2635 and and this part, members and other 
employee are subject to the executive branch financial disclosure 
regulations contained in 5 CFR part 2635 and to additional regulations 
regarding their conduct contained in 49 CFR part 1019.



Sec. 5001.102  Prohibited financial interests in for-hire transportation companies.

    (a) General prohibition. Except as provided in paragraph (c) of this 
section, no member or other employee of the Interstate Commerce 
Commission shall, directly or indirectly:
    (1) Be employed by or hold any other official relationship with any 
for-hire transportation company whether or not subject to the Interstate 
Commerce Act; or
    (2) Own securities of or be in any manner pecuniarily interested in 
any for-hire transportation company whether or not subject to the 
Interstate Commerce Act.
    (b) Indirect relationships and interests. (1) For the purposes of 
paragraph (a) of this section, an indirect relationship with or interest 
in a for-hire transportation company includes, but is not limited to, an 
interest in:
    (i) Any company that owns or controls and has more than two percent 
of its assets directly invested in or dervices more than two percent of 
its income directly from a for-hire transportation company whether or 
not subject to the Interstate Commerce Act; or
    (ii) Any company, mutual fund or other enterprise which has an 
interest of more than ten percent of its assets directly invested in or 
derives more than ten percent of its income directly from for-hire 
transportation companies whether or not subject to the Interstate 
Commerce Act.
    (2) For the purposes of determining the applicability of this 
paragraph, an employee may rely on the most recent financial statement 
issued to its security holders by the company, fund or other enterprise.
    (c) Exceptions. (1) Where a previously proper holding of a member or 
other employee becomes prohibited because of the enterprise's 
acquisition of an interest in a for-hire transportation company, the 
employee shall have nine months within which to dispose of the interest.
    (2) In cases of financial hardship where the relationship or 
interest is not prohibited by 49 U.S.C. 10301(d) or 10306(e), the 
Designated Agency Ethics Official may grant a written waiver of the 
prohibition in paragraph (a) of this section based on a determination 
that application of the prohibition is not necessary to ensure public 
confidence in the impartiality and objectivity with which the 
Commission's programs are administered or to avoid a violation of part 
2635 of this title.



Sec. 5001.103  Impartiality determinations for members of the Interstate Commerce Commission.

    A member is an ``agency designee'' for the purposes of making an 
impartiality disqualification determination under 5 CFR 2635.502(d) with 
respect to the member's own participation in a Commission proceeding. 
This determination must be made in consultation

[[Page 651]]

with the Designated Agency Ethics Official.



Sec. 5001.104  Prior approval for outside employment.

    (a) Before engaging in any outside employment, whether or not for 
compensation, an employee of the Interstate Commerce Commission, other 
than a Commissioner, must obtain the written approval of his or her 
supervisor and the Designated Agency Ethics Official (DAEO). Requests 
for approval shall be forwarded through normal supervisory channels to 
the DAEO and shall include, at a minimum, the following:
    (1) A statement of the name of the person, group, or other 
organization for whom the work is to be performed; the type of work to 
be performed; and the proposed hours of work and approximate dates of 
employment;
    (2) The employee's certification that the outside employment will 
not depend in any way on information obtained as a result of the 
employee's official Government position;
    (3) The employee's certification that no official duty time or 
Government property, resources, or facilities not available to the 
general public will be used in connection with the outside employment;
    (4) The employee's certification that he or she has read, is 
familiar with, and will abide by the restrictions contained in all 
applicable Federal laws and regulations, including those found in 18 
U.S.C. chapter 11 and those found or referenced in subpart H (``Outside 
Activities'') of 5 CFR part 2635 (Standards of Ethical Conduct for 
Employees of the Executive Branch); and
    (5) The written approval of the employee's immediate supervisor.
    (b) Approval shall be granted only upon a determination that the 
outside employment is not expected to involve conduct prohibited by 
statute or Federal regulation.
    (c) For purposes of this section, ``employment'' means any form of 
non-Federal employment, business relationship or activity involving the 
provision of personal services by the employee, whether or not for 
compensation. It includes but is not limited to personal services as an 
officer, director, employee, agent, attorney, consultant, contractor, 
general partner, trustee, teacher or speaker. It includes writing when 
done under an arrangement with another person for production or 
publication of the written product. Prior approval is not required, 
however, to participate in the activities of a nonprofit charitable, 
religious, professional, social, fraternal, educational, recreational, 
public service, or civic organization, unless such activities involve 
the provision of professional services or advice or are for compensation 
other than reimbursement for expenses.

[[Page 653]]



            CHAPTER XLI--COMMODITY FUTURES TRADING COMMISSION




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5101            Supplemental standards of ethical conduct 
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                    Trading Commission......................         654

[[Page 654]]



PART 5101--SUPPLEMENTAL STANDARDS OF ETHICAL CONDUCT FOR EMPLOYEES OF THE COMMODITY FUTURES TRADING COMMISSION--Table of Contents




Sec.
5101.101  General.
5101.102  Prohibited financial interests and transactions.
5101.103  Outside employment and activities.

    Authority: 5 U.S.C. 7301, 7353; 5 U.S.C. App. (Ethics in Government 
Act of 1978); 7 U.S.C. 4a(f) and (j); E.O. 12674, 54 FR 15159, 3 CFR, 
1989 Comp., p. 215, as modified by E.O. 12731, 55 FR 42547, 3 CFR, 1990 
Comp., p. 306; 5 CFR 2635.105, 2635.403(a), 2635.802(a), 2635.803.

    Source: 58 FR 52638, Oct. 12, 1993, unless otherwise noted.



Sec. 5101.101  General.

    In accordance with 5 CFR 2635.105, the regulations in this part 
apply to members and other employees of the Commodity Futures Trading 
Commission and supplement the Standards of Ethical Conduct for Employees 
of the Executive Branch contained in 5 CFR part 2635. Members and other 
employees are required to comply with 5 CFR part 2635 and this part. 
Commission members and other employees are also subject to the 
Regulation Concerning Conduct of Members and Employees and Former 
Members and Employees of the Commission at 17 CFR part 140.



Sec. 5101.102  Prohibited financial interests and transactions.

    In accordance with 5 CFR 2635.403(a), no Commission member or other 
employee shall engage in business or financial transactions, or hold 
business or financial interests, prohibited by the Commodity Exchange 
Act, as set forth in 17 CFR 140.735-2.



Sec. 5101.103  Outside employment and activities.

    (a) Subject to the restrictions and requirements contained in 5 CFR 
part 2635 and this part, Commission members and other employees are 
encouraged to engage in teaching, speaking, and writing activities and, 
when qualified, to participate without compensation in programs to 
provide legal assistance and representation to indigents.
    (b) Prohibitions. A Commission member or other employee shall not 
engage in non-Federal employment or any other outside activity that:
    (1) Involves the rendering of advice concerning any legal, 
accounting or economic matter, or any agricultural, mining, foreign 
currency market or other commodity-related matter, in which the 
Commission may be significantly interested, except that this prohibition 
shall not apply to a special Government employee unless the special 
Government employee
    (i) Has participated personally and substantially as an employee or 
special Government employee in the same matter; or
    (ii) Has served with the Commission 60 days or more during the 
immediately preceding period of 365 consecutive days.
    (2) Involves an appearance in court or on a brief in a 
representative capacity in relation to any matter which relates to any 
policy, program or operation of the Commission; or
    (3) Is prohibited by section 2(a)(7) of the Commodity Exchange Act, 
as incorporated in 17 CFR 140.735-2 and 140.735-3. That statute provides 
that no Commission member or employee shall accept employment or 
compensation from any person, exchange or clearinghouse subject to 
regulation by the Commission, or participate, directly or indirectly, in 
any contract market operations or transactions of a character subject to 
regulation by the Commission.
    (c) Prior approval for outside employment. (1) Before engaging in 
any outside employment, with or without compensation, an employee of the 
Commission, other than a special Government employee, must obtain 
written approval from his or her division or office head and the 
Executive Director, who may seek the concurrence of the General Counsel.
    (2) In addition to the approval under paragraph (c)(1) of this 
section, an employee, including a special Government employee, must 
obtain written approval from the Commission to appear in court or on a 
brief in a representative capacity.
    (3) Approval shall be granted only upon a determination that the 
outside

[[Page 655]]

employment is not expected to involve conduct prohibited by statute or 
Federal regulation, including 5 CFR part 2635 and this part.
    (4) The approval required by paragraph (c)(1) or (c)(2) of this 
section shall be requested in writing in advance of engaging in outside 
employment. The request shall be submitted to the employee's division or 
office head, through the employee's immediate supervisor, and shall set 
forth all pertinent facts regarding the anticipated employment, 
including the name of the employer, the nature of the work to be 
performed, its estimated duration and the amount of compensation to be 
received. If approved by the division or office head, the request shall 
be forwarded by the division or office head to the Executive Director. 
In granting or denying approval, the Executive Director may seek the 
concurrence of the General Counsel. If approved by the Executive 
Director, a request for permission to appear in court or on a brief in a 
representational capacity shall be forwarded to the Commission for final 
decision.
    (5) For purposes of this section, ``employment'' means any form of 
non-Federal employment or business relationship involving the provision 
of personal services by the employee. It includes, but is not limited to 
personal services as an officer, director, employee, agent, attorney, 
consultant, contractor, general partner, trustee, teacher or speaker. It 
includes writing when done under an arrangement with another person for 
production or publication of the written product. It does not, however, 
include participation in the activities of a nonprofit charitable, 
religious, professional, social, fraternal, educational, recreational, 
public service, or civic organization, unless such activities involve 
the provision of professional services or advice or are for compensation 
other than reimbursement of expenses.

[[Page 657]]



                    CHAPTER XLII--DEPARTMENT OF LABOR




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PART 5201--SUPPLEMENTAL STANDARDS OF ETHICAL CONDUCT FOR EMPLOYEES OF THE DEPARTMENT OF LABOR--Table of Contents




Sec.
5201.101  General.
5201.102  Designation of separate agency components.
5201.103  Fundraising activities.
5201.104  Additional rules for Office of the Inspector General 
          employees.
5201.105  Additional rules for Mine Safety and Health Administration 
          employees.

    Authority: 5 U.S.C. 301, 7301, 7353; 5 U.S.C. App. (Ethics in 
Government Act); E.O. 12674, 54 FR 15159, 3 CFR, 1989 Comp., p. 215, as 
modified by E.O. 12731, 55 FR 42547, 3 CFR, 1990 Comp., p. 306; 5 CFR 
2635.105, 2635.203(a), 2635.403(a), 2635.803.

    Source: 61 FR 57284, Nov. 6, 1996, unless otherwise noted.



Sec. 5201.101  General.

    In accordance with 5 CFR 2635.105, the regulations in this part 
apply to employees of the Department of Labor (Department) and 
supplement the Standards of Ethical Conduct for Employees of the 
Executive Branch contained in 5 CFR part 2635.



Sec. 5201.102  Designation of separate agency components.

    (a) Separate agency components of the Department of Labor. Pursuant 
to 5 CFR 2635.203(a), each of the ten components of the Department 
listed below is designated as an agency separate from each of the other 
nine listed components and, for employees of that component, as an 
agency distinct from the remainder of the Department. However, the 
components listed below are not deemed to be separate agencies for 
purposes of applying any provision of 5 CFR part 2635 or this part to 
employees of the remainder of the Department:
    (1) Benefits Review Board;
    (2) Employees Compensation Appeals Board;
    (3) Mine Safety and Health Administration (MSHA);
    (4) Veterans' Employment and Training Service;
    (5) Occupational Safety and Health Administration (OSHA);
    (6) Pension and Welfare Benefits Administration (PWBA);
    (7) Bureau of International Labor Affairs;
    (8) Bureau of Labor Statistics;
    (9) Employment and Training Administration (ETA); and
    (10) Employment Standards Administration (ESA).
    (b) Separate agency subcomponents of ESA. Pursuant to 5 CFR 
2635.203(a), each of the four subcomponents of the Employment Standards 
Administration (ESA) listed in this paragraph is designated as an agency 
separate from each of the other three listed components and, for 
employees of that subcomponent, as an agency distinct from the remainder 
of ESA. However, the components listed in this paragraph are not deemed 
to be separate agencies for purposes of applying any provision of 5 CFR 
part 2635 or this part to employees of the remainder of ESA:
    (1) Wage and Hour Division;
    (2) Office of Federal Contract Compliance Programs;
    (3) Office of Workers Compensation Programs; and
    (4) Office of Labor-Management Standards.
    (c) Definitions. (1) Remainder of the Department means employees in 
the Office of the Secretary and any other employee of the Department not 
in one of the 10 components designated as separate agencies in paragraph 
(a) of this section.
    (2) Remainder of ESA means employees in the Office of the Assistant 
Secretary for Employment Standards and any other ESA employee not in one 
of the four subcomponents designated as separate agencies in paragraph 
(b) of this section.
    (d) Applicability of separate agency designations. The designations 
in paragraphs (a) and (b) of this section identify an employee's 
``agency'' for purposes of:
    (1) Determining when a person is a prohibited source within the 
meaning of 5 CFR 2635.203(d) for purposes of applying the regulations at 
subpart B of 5 CFR part 2635 governing gifts from outside sources;
    (2) Determining whether teaching, speaking or writing relates to the 
employee's official duties within the meaning of 5 CFR 
2635.807(a)(2)(i); and

[[Page 659]]

    (3) Determining when a person is a prohibited source for purposes of 
applying the regulations at 5 CFR 2635.808(c) governing fundraising in a 
personal capacity.
    Example 1: An employee of the Mine Safety and Health Administration 
attends a Saturday football game together with an employee of the Office 
of the Solicitor. By coincidence, they are seated next to a contract 
consultant to the Employment and Training Administration. They talk 
about the game and describe their jobs and personal interests to their 
new seat-mate. The consultant states that he and his wife will not be 
able to attend next week's game and would like to give their very 
expensive tickets to people who will really enjoy them. The MSHA 
employee may accept the ticket. MSHA is designated as a separate agency 
under Sec. 5201.102, and the ETA contractor is not a prohibited source 
of gifts for MSHA employees. The contractor is not regulated by and has 
no business dealings with MSHA. The Solicitor's Office employee may not 
accept the gift. The ETA contractor is a prohibited source for 
Solicitor's Office employees because the Solicitor's Office is a part of 
the ``Remainder of the Department of Labor.'' Any source which is 
prohibited for any component of the Department of Labor is a prohibited 
source for employees in the ``Remainder.''



Sec. 5201.103  Fundraising activities.

    Notwithstanding 5 CFR 2635.808(c)(1)(i), an employee of any separate 
agency component listed in this section may, in a personal capacity, 
personally solicit funds from a person who is a prohibited source if 
person is a prohibited source for employees of the component only under 
5 CFR 2635.203(d)(3) because the person conducts activities regulated by 
the component:
    (a) The Wage and Hour Division;
    (b) The Office of Federal Contract Compliance Programs;
    (c) The Remainder of the Employment Standards Administration, as 
defined in Sec. 5201.102(c);
    (d) Occupational Safety and Health Administration;
    (e) Pension and Welfare Benefits Administration;
    (f) Veterans' Employment and Training Service; and
    (g) The Remainder of the Department of Labor, as defined in 
Sec. 5201.102(c).
    Example 1: A training official in the Mine Safety and Health 
Administration is president of the local branch of her college alumni 
association. The association is seeking used computers from local 
businesses to upgrade the college's language lab. The employee may not 
seek a contribution from the vice president of a mining company which is 
regulated by MSHA. Even though the mining company is not currently under 
investigation, it is a prohibited source for the employment because it 
is subject to MSHA regulation and MSHA is not one of the agency 
components designated as separate for the purpose of fundraising in a 
personal capacity.
    Example 2: A typist in the Pension and Welfare Benefits 
Administration raises money for a local homeless shelter during his off-
duty hours. He may seek a contribution from a firm that is regulated by 
PWBA under the Employee Retirement Income Security Act but may not seek 
contributions from one that he knows is currently under investigation 
for a violation of the Act. While firms regulated by an agency would 
ordinarily be prohibited sources for purposes of an employee's 
fundraising in a personal capacity, Sec. 5201.103 provides that 
employees of PWBA and the other separate agency components listed in 
that section may seek charitable contributions from an entity that is a 
prohibited source only because its activities are subject to regulation 
by that separate agency component. On the other hand, the employee may 
not engage in fundraising from a person who he knows is a prohibited 
source for any other reason, such as an ongoing enforcement action.
    Example 3: An employee of the Employment and Training Administration 
may seek charitable contributions from a firm currently under 
investigation by the Occupational Safety and Health Administration 
(OSHA). ETA does not regulate this firm and has had no dealings or 
business with it of any kind. Since ETA has been designated as

[[Page 660]]

a separate agency under Sec. 5201.102, ETA employees need only consider 
their own official duties and activities and those of ETA in determining 
whether a person is a prohibited source for purposes of their 
fundraising in a personal capacity. The fact that a person may be a 
prohibited source of direct and indirect gifts for OSHA employees is not 
relevant in this instance.



Sec. 5201.104  Additional rules for Office of the Inspector General employees.

    The rules in this section apply to employees of the Office of the 
Inspector General (OIG) and are in addition to Secs. 5201.101, 5201.102, 
and 5201.103.
    (a) Prior approval for outside employment. (1) Before engaging in 
any outside employment, an OIG employee must obtain the written approval 
of the Inspector General or the Inspector General's designee.
    (2) Submission of requests for approval. (i) Requests for approval 
shall be submitted in writing to the Inspector General or the Inspector 
General's designee. Such requests shall include, at a minimum, the 
following:
    (A) The employee's name and position title;
    (B) The name and address of the person, group, or organization for 
whom the employee proposes to engage in outside employment; and
    (C) A description of the proposed outside employment, including the 
duties and services to be performed while engaged in the outside 
employment, and the approximate dates of the outside employment.
    (ii) Together with the employee's request for approval, the employee 
shall provide a certification that:
    (A) The outside employment will not depend in any way on nonpublic 
information, as defined at 5 CFR 2635.703(b);
    (B) No official duty time or Government property, resources, or 
facilities not available to the general public will be used in 
connection with the outside employment; and
    (C) The employee has read and is familiar with the Standards of 
Ethical Conduct for Employees of the Executive Branch (5 CFR part 2635), 
including subpart H. (``Outside Activities''), and the Department's 
supplemental standards of ethical conduct set forth in this part.
    (iii) Upon a significant change in the nature or scope of the 
outside employment or in the employee's official position, the employee 
shall submit a revised request for approval.
    (3) Standard for approval. Approval shall be granted only upon a 
determination that the outside employment is not expected to involve 
conduct prohibited by statute or Federal regulation, including 5 CFR 
part 2635 and this part.
    (4) Definitions. For purposes of this section, ``employment'' means 
any form of non-Federal employment or any business relationship 
involving the provision of personal services by the employee. It 
includes but is not limited to personal services as an officer, 
director, employee, agent, attorney, consultant, contractor, general 
partner, or trustee.



Sec. 5201.105  Additional rules for Mine Safety and Health Administration employees.

    The rules in this section apply to employees of the Mine Safety and 
Health Administration (MSHA) and are in addition to Secs. 5201.101, 
5201.102, and 5201.103.
    (a) Prohibited financial interests. Employees in the MSHA and their 
spouses and minor children are prohibited from having any financial 
interests (including compensated employment) in any company or other 
person engaged in mining activities subject to the Federal Mine Safety 
and Health Act of 1977 (Mine Safety and Health Act), 30 U.S.C. 801 et 
seq. A company or other person shall be deemed to be engaged in such 
mining activities if it owns 50 percent or more of the voting securities 
of another company or other person engaged in such mining activities. A 
company or other person shall not be deemed to be engaged in such mining 
activities solely because it is controlled by a company or other person 
which does engage in such activities.
    (b) Exceptions. (1) Nothing in this section prohibits an employee or 
the spouse or minor child of an employee from acquiring, owning or 
controlling

[[Page 661]]

an interest in a publicly traded or publicly available investment fund 
provided that, upon initial or subsequent investment by the employee 
(excluding ordinary dividend reinvestment), the fund does not have 
invested, or does not indicate in its prospectus the intent to invest, 
more than 30 percent of its assets in the securities of a company or 
other person engaged in mining activities subject to the Mine Safety and 
Health Act, and the employee, spouse, or minor child neither exercises 
control nor has the ability to exercise control over the financial 
interests held in the fund.
    (2) Nothing in this section prohibits an employee or the spouse or 
minor child of an employee from having a financial interest in a pension 
administered by, or which invests in, a company or other person engaged 
in mining activities subject to the Mine Safety and Health Act.
    Example: A mine inspector who was a former employee of mining 
company X could continue to participate in mine company X's pension plan 
without violating this section. However, he would have to disclose the 
interest on his financial disclosure report. Additionally, the inspector 
should not inspect or otherwise take official action on a matter 
affecting mine company X without checking with his ethics advisor to 
ensure that performance of his official duties would not violate the 
conflict of interest statute (18 U.S.C. 208) or any other ethics 
provisions.
    (c) Waiver. (1) The Assistant Secretary of labor for Mine Safety and 
Health or the Assistant Secretary's designee may grant an employee a 
written waiver from the prohibitions contained in paragraph (a) of this 
section, based on a determination that the waiver is not inconsistent 
with 5 CFR part 2635 or otherwise prohibited by law and that, under the 
particular circumstances, application of the prohibition is not 
necessary to avoid the appearance of misuse of position or loss of 
impartiality, or to ensure confidence in the impartiality and 
objectivity with which Mine Safety and Health Administration programs 
are administered.
    (2) The Assistant Secretary or the designee shall grant a waiver 
from the prohibitions in paragraph (a) of this section regarding spouses 
and minor children unless the Assistant Secretary or the designee 
determines that the covered relationship or interest is likely to be 
inconsistent with 5 CFR part 2635 or is otherwise prohibited by law.
    (3) A waiver under this section may be accompanied by appropriate 
conditions, such as requiring execution of a written statement of 
disqualification. A waiver may be withdrawn if it is later determined 
that such waiver does not meet the requirements for the granting of 
waivers under this paragraph. Notwithstanding the grant of any waiver, a 
covered employee remains subject to the disqualification requirements of 
5 CFR 2635.402 and 2635.502.
    (4) Factors which may be considered in connection with the granting 
or denial of waivers include the nature and extent of the financial 
interest, and the official position and duties of the employee.
    (d) Pre-existing interests. Notwithstanding paragraph (a) of this 
section, an employee of the Mine Safety and Health Administration, and a 
spouse or minor child of such an employee, may retain financial 
interests otherwise prohibited by paragraph (a) of this section which 
were approved in writing under procedures in effect before the effective 
date of this section, unless the approval is withdrawn, subject to the 
standards applicable to the withdrawal of waivers under paragraph (c) of 
this section.

[[Page 663]]



               CHAPTER XLIII--NATIONAL SCIENCE FOUNDATION




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5301            Supplemental standards of ethical conduct 
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                    Foundation..............................         664

[[Page 664]]



PART 5301--SUPPLEMENTAL STANDARDS OF ETHICAL CONDUCT FOR EMPLOYEES OF THE NATIONAL SCIENCE FOUNDATION--Table of Contents




Sec.
5301.101  General.
5301.102  Participation in proposals and awards.
5301.103  Outside employment and activities.
5301.104  Participation in NSF-supported conferences.
5301.105  Restrictions applicable to Members of the National Science 
          Board.

    Authority: 5 U.S.C. 7301; 5 U.S.C. App. (Ethics in Government Act of 
1978); 42 U.S.C. 1870(a); E.O. 12674, 54 FR 15159, 3 CFR, 1989 Comp., p. 
215, as modified by E.O. 12731, 55 FR 42547, 3 CFR 1990 Comp., p. 306; 5 
CFR 2635.105, 2635.502, 2635.802(a), 2635.803.

    Source: 61 FR 59818, Nov. 25, 1996, unless otherwise noted.



Sec. 5301.101  General.

    (a) Purpose. In accordance with 5 CFR 2635.105, the regulations in 
this part apply to employees of the National Science Foundation (NSF), 
including Members of the National Science Board. They supplement the 
Standards of Ethical Conduct for Employees of the Executive Branch 
contained in 5 CFR part 2635.
    (b) Definitions. For purposes of this part, unless a provision 
plainly indicates otherwise:
    (1) Award means any grant, contract, cooperative agreement, loan, or 
other arrangement made by the Government.
    (2) Employee has the meaning set forth in 5 CFR 2635.102(h), except 
that, for purposes of this part, it shall not include a special 
Government employee.
    (3) Institution means any university, college, business firm, 
research institute, professional society, or other organization. It 
includes all parts of a university or college, including all 
institutions in a multi-institution State or city system. It includes 
any university consortium or joint corporation, but not the individual 
universities that belong to such a consortium. Those universities shall 
be considered separate institutions for purposes of this part.
    (4) Proposal means an application for an award and includes a bid.



Sec. 5301.102  Participation in proposals and awards.

    (a) Participation in proposals and awards. (1) For the purpose of 
determining whether an employee or a special Government employee, other 
than a Member of the National Science Board, should participate as part 
of his official duties in a proposal or award, the affiliations and 
relationships listed in paragraph (a)(3) of this section shall be 
considered additional ``covered relationships'' for purposes of applying 
5 CFR 2635.502. Except as provided in paragraph (a)(2) of this section, 
they shall be treated as disqualifying to the same extent as the covered 
relationships listed in 5 CFR 2635.502(b)(1).
    (2) Where an affiliation or relationship is listed in paragraph 
(a)(3) of this section as ``automatically disqualifying,'' an employee 
shall not participate in a proposal or award in which the institution or 
other person with whom the employee has a covered relationship is or 
represents a party unless participation is authorized in accordance with 
5 CFR 2635.502(d) by the agency designee, with the concurrence of an 
ethics counselor in the Office of the General Counsel.
    (3) An employee has a covered relationship, within the meaning of 5 
CFR 2635.502(b)(1), with:
    (i) An institution with which the employee is affiliated through:
    (A) Membership on a visiting committee or similar body at the 
institution. The relationship is automatically disqualifying where the 
particular department, school, or faculty that the visiting committee or 
similar body advises originated the proposal or where a proposal from 
the department, school, or faculty formed the basis for the award;
    (B) Current enrollment of the employee or a member of the employee's 
household as a student;
    (C) Receipt and retention of an honorarium or other form of 
compensation, award, or off-duty travel payment from the institution 
within the last twelve months. The relationship is automatically 
disqualifying, unless the payment or award was received before beginning 
Government service; and
    (ii) A person who is an investigator or project director on or who 
otherwise

[[Page 665]]

is identified in a proposal as a party to the proposal or award and with 
whom the employee has:
    (A) A family relationship as sibling, parent, spouse, or child. Any 
such relationship is automatically disqualifying;
    (B) Associated, in the past or currently, as thesis advisor or 
thesis student;
    (C) Collaborated on a project, book, article, report, or paper 
within the last 48 months; or
    (D) Co-edited a journal, compendium, or conference proceedings 
within the last 24 months.
    (b) Reporting involvement of prospective, current, or recent 
employees. (1) When an employee who is participating in a proposal or 
award becomes aware that a prospective, current, or recent NSF employee 
or current National Science Board member is or is likely to become a 
member of the research group or project staff under that proposal or 
award, the employee shall bring that circumstance to the attention of an 
agency designee. For purposes of this paragraph:
    (i) A ``recent NSF employee'' is any former NSF employee who left 
the NSF within the year before submission of the proposal at issue or on 
which the award was based.
    (ii) A ``prospective NSF employee'' is any person being recruited by 
an NSF official for a specific opening and from whom the official has 
received an indication of mutual interest. Such a person is a 
``prospective NSF employee'' even though those recruiting have not 
extended an offer and even though the person might not accept an offer 
if it were extended.
    (2) The agency designee shall review the circumstances to determine 
what action, if any, should be taken to assure that the proposal or 
award is administered impartially and otherwise in compliance with 
applicable laws and regulations, including this part, 5 CFR part 2635, 
18 U.S.C. 207 and 208, and 45 CFR part 680.



Sec. 5301.103  Outside employment and activities.

    (a) Prohibited outside employment and activities. (1) An NSF 
employee may not receive, directly or indirectly, any salary, consulting 
fee, honorarium, or other form of compensation for services, or 
reimbursement of expenses, from an NSF award.
    (2) An NSF employee may not serve as principal investigator or 
project director under an NSF award.
    (3) An NSF employee may not receive, directly or indirectly, any 
honorarium or any other form of compensation, or reimbursement of 
expenses from anyone, other than the United States, for participating in 
an event supported by NSF funds.
    (b) Prior approval of outside employment and activities. (1) An 
employee shall obtain written approval from an agency designee before:
    (i) Engaging in compensated outside employment with any person or 
institution (including any for-profit, non-profit, or governmental 
organization) which does business or may reasonably be expected to do 
business with the NSF. For these purposes, ``employment'' means any form 
of non-Federal employment or business relationship involving the 
provision of personal services by the employee. It includes, but is not 
limited to, personal services as an officer, director, employee, agent, 
attorney, consultant, contractor, general partner, trustee, teacher, or 
speaker. It includes writing when done under an arrangement for 
publication of the written product; or
    (ii) Serving, with or without compensation, on a visiting committee 
with any institution that does business or may reasonably be expected to 
do business with NSF.
    (2) In addition to any prior approval required in paragraph (b)(1) 
of this section, an employee shall obtain prior written approval:
    (i) From an ethics counselor in the Office of the General Counsel 
before participating, with or without compensation, as a policymaking 
officer of any research or educational institution or any scientific 
society or professional association; and
    (ii) From his Assistant Director or Office head before serving in a 
personal capacity as an organizer, director, proceedings editor, or 
session chairperson for a conference, workshop, or similar

[[Page 666]]

event supported by NSF funds, or before presenting a paper at such an 
event.
    (3) The approvals required by paragraphs (b)(1) and (b)(2) of this 
section shall be granted only upon a determination by the appropriate 
NSF official that the outside employment or activity is not expected to 
involve conduct prohibited by statute or Federal regulations, including 
5 CFR part 2635 and this part.



Sec. 5301.104  Participation in NSF-supported conferences.

    An NSF employee may participate in conferences, workshops, and 
similar events supported by NSF funds provided that:
    (a) Where the employee's participation is undertaken in a personal 
capacity, his participation does not violate the restrictions on outside 
employment and activities of Sec. 5301.103(a), and the approval 
requirements of Sec. 5301.103(b) have been met.
    (b) Where the employee's participation is undertaken as part of his 
official duties as an NSF employee:
    (1) The employee shall obtain prior written approval from his 
Assistant Director or Office head before serving as an organizer, 
director, proceedings editor, or session chairperson for a conference, 
workshop, or similar event sponsored by NSF funds, or before presenting 
a paper at such an event. However, prior approval is not required where 
the primary purpose of the event is to plan, assess, or publicize NSF 
programs or needs, or where the subject of the paper or session to be 
presented focuses on NSF programs or needs.
    (2) The approval required by paragraph (b)(1) of this section shall 
be granted only upon a determination that the importance of the 
employee's participation outweighs any appearance of use of official 
position to enhance his personal credentials.



Sec. 5301.105  Restrictions applicable to Members of the National Science Board.

    (a) Participation in proposals and awards. (1) For the purpose of 
determining whether a Member of the National Science Board (Board) 
should participate as part of his official duties in a proposal or award 
coming before the Board or any of its committees, the affiliations and 
relationships listed in paragraph (a)(3) of this section shall be 
considered ``covered relationships'' for purposes of applying 5 CFR 
2635.502. Except as provided in paragraph (a)(2) of this section, they 
shall be treated as disqualifying to the same extent as the covered 
relationships listed in 5 CFR 2635.502(b)(1).
    (2) Where an affiliation or relationship is listed in paragraph 
(a)(3) of this section as ``automatically disqualifying,'' a Member of 
the National Science Board shall not participate in a proposal or award 
in which the institution or other person with whom the Member has a 
covered relationship is or represents a party, unless participation is 
authorized in accordance with 5 CFR 2635.502(d) by the Chairman of the 
National Science Board or by the Designated Agency Ethics Official.
    (3) A Member of the National Science Board has a covered 
relationship, within the meaning of 5 CFR 2635.502(b)(1), with:
    (i) An institution or other person with which the Member is 
affiliated through:
    (A) Membership on a visiting committee or similar body at the 
institution. The relationship is automatically disqualifying where the 
particular department, school, or faculty that the visiting committee or 
similar body advises originated the proposal or where a proposal from 
the department, school, or faculty formed the basis for the award; or
    (B) Current enrollment of the Member or a member of his household as 
a student; and
    (ii) A person who is an investigator or project director or who is 
otherwise identified in a proposal as a party to the proposal or award 
and with whom the Member has a family relationship as sibling, parent, 
spouse, or child. Any such relationship is automatically disqualifying.
    (b) Outside employment and activities. (1) A Member of the National 
Science Board shall not represent himself, herself, or any other person 
in negotiations or other dealings with an NSF official on any proposal, 
award, or other

[[Page 667]]

particular matter, as defined in 5 CFR 2635.402(b)(3).
    (2) A Member of the National Science Board may not receive 
compensation from any award made while serving on the Board. However, 
unless prohibited by law, an award may be charged, and a Member may be 
reimbursed, for actual expenses incurred by the Member in doing work 
supported by the award. If a Member was an investigator or consultant 
under an award before appointment to the Board, the award may be charged 
and the Member may continue to receive compensation to the extent 
established before the Member's nomination.

[[Page 669]]



          CHAPTER XLV--DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH AND HUMAN SERVICES




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                    Health and Human Services...............         670

[[Page 670]]



PART 5501--SUPPLEMENTAL STANDARDS OF ETHICAL CONDUCT FOR EMPLOYEES OF THE DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH AND HUMAN SERVICES--Table of Contents




Sec.
5501.101  General.
5501.102  Designation of HHS components as separate agencies.
5501.103  Gifts from federally recognized Indian tribes or Alaska Native 
          villages or regional or village corporations.
5501.104  Prohibited financial interests applicable to employees of the 
          Food and Drug Administration and the Office of the Chief 
          Counsel.
5501.105  Exemption for otherwise disqualifying financial interests 
          derived from Indian or Alaska Native birthrights.
5501.106  Outside employment and other outside activities.
5501.107  Teaching, speaking and writing by special Government employees 
          in the Public Health Service.
5501.108  Exception to the prohibition against assisting in the 
          prosecution of claims against, or acting as an agent or 
          attorney before, the Government, applicable only to employees 
          assigned to federally recognized Indian tribes or Alaska 
          Native villages or regional or village corporations pursuant 
          to the Intergovernmental Personnel Act.

    Authority: 5 U.S.C. 301, 7301, 7353; 5 U.S.C. App. (Ethics in 
Government Act of 1978); 25 U.S.C. 450i(f); 42 U.S.C. 216; E.O. 12674, 
54 FR 15159, 3 CFR, 1989 Comp., p. 215, as modified by E.O. 12731, 55 FR 
42547, 3 CFR, 1990 Comp., p. 306; 5 CFR 2635.105, 2635.203, 2635.403, 
2635.802, 2635.803.

    Source: 61 FR 39763, July 30, 1996, unless otherwise noted.



Sec. 5501.101  General.

    (a) Purpose. The regulations in this part apply to employees of the 
Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) and supplement the 
Standards of Ethical Conduct for Employees of the Executive Branch 
contained in 5 CFR part 2635. In addition to 5 CFR part 2635 and this 
part, employees are required to comply with implementing guidance and 
procedures issued by HHS components in accordance with 5 CFR 
2635.105(c). Employees are also subject to the executive branch-wide 
financial disclosure regulations at 5 CFR part 2634, the Employee 
Responsibilities and Conduct regulations at 5 CFR part 735, and the HHS 
regulations regarding conduct at 45 CFR part 73.
    (b) Applicability. The regulations in this part apply to individuals 
who are ``employees'' within the meaning of 5 CFR 2635.102(h). The 
regulations thus apply to special Government employees, except to the 
extent they are specifically excluded from certain provisions, and to 
uniformed service officers in the Public Health Service Commissioned 
Corps on active duty.
    (c) Definitions. Unless a term is otherwise defined in this part, 
the definitions set forth in 5 CFR part 2635 apply to terms in this 
part. In addition, for purposes of this part:
    (1) Federally recognized Indian tribe or Alaska Native village or 
regional or village corporation means any Indian tribe, band, nation, or 
other organized group or community, including any Alaska Native village 
or regional or village corporation as defined in or established pursuant 
to the Alaska Native Claims Settlement Act, 43 U.S.C. 1601 et seq., 
which is recognized as eligible for the special programs and services 
provided by the United States to Indians because of their status as 
Indians.
    (2) Significantly regulated organization means an organization for 
which the sales of products regulated by the Food and Drug 
Administration (FDA) constitute ten percent or more of annual gross 
sales in the organization's previous fiscal year; where an organization 
does not have a record of sales of FDA-regulated products, it will be 
deemed to be significantly regulated if its operations are solely in 
fields regulated by FDA.



Sec. 5501.102  Designation of HHS components as separate agencies.

    (a) Separate agency components of HHS. Pursuant to 5 CFR 
2635.203(a), each of the thirteen components of HHS listed below is 
designated as an agency separate from each of the other twelve listed 
components and, for employees of that component, as an agency distinct 
from the remainder of HHS. However, the components listed below are not 
deemed to be separate agencies for purposes of applying any provision of 
5 CFR part 2635 or this part to employees of the remainder of HHS:
    (1) Administration on Aging;

[[Page 671]]

    (2) Administration for Children and Families:
    (3) Agency for Health Care Policy and Research;
    (4) Agency for Toxic Substances and Disease Registry;
    (5) Centers for Disease Control and Prevention;
    (6) Food and Drug Administration;
    (7) Health Care Financing Administration;
    (8) Health Resources and Services Administration;
    (9) Indian Health Service;
    (10) National Institutes of Health;
    (11) Office of Consumer Affairs;
    (12) Program Support Center; and
    (13) Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration.
    (b) Definition--(1) Employee of a component includes, in addition to 
employees actually within a component, an employee in a division or 
region of the Office of the General Counsel that principally advises or 
represents that component.
    (2) Remainder of HHS means employees in the Office of the Secretary 
and Staff Divisions, employees of the Office of the General Counsel with 
Department-wide responsibility, and any HHS employee not in one of the 
13 components designated as separate agencies in paragraph (a) of this 
section.
    (c) Applicability of separate agency designations. The designations 
in paragraph (a) of this section identify an employee's ``agency'' for 
purposes of:
    (1) Determining when a person is a prohibited source within the 
meaning of 5 CFR 2635.203(d) for purposes of applying:
    (i) The regulations at subpart B of 5 CFR part 2635 governing gifts 
from outside sources; and
    (ii) The regulations at Sec. 5501.106 requiring prior approval of 
outside employment and other outside activities; and
    (2) Determining whether teaching, speaking or writing relates to the 
employee's official duties within the meaning of 5 CFR 
2635.807(a)(2)(i).



Sec. 5501.103  Gifts from federally recognized Indian tribes or Alaska Native villages or regional or village corporations.

    (a) Tribal or Alaska Native gifts. In addition to the gifts which 
come within the exceptions set forth in 5 CFR 2635.204, and subject to 
all provisions of 5 CFR 2635.201 through 2635.205, an employee may 
accept unsolicited gifts of native artwork or crafts from federally 
recognized Indian tribes or Alaska Native villages or regional or 
village corporations, provided that the aggregate market value of 
individual gifts received from any one tribe or village under the 
authority of this paragraph shall not exceed $200 in a calendar year.
    (b) Limitations on use of exception. If the donor is a tribe or 
village that has interests that may be substantially affected by the 
performance or nonperformance of an employee's official duties, the 
employee may accept the gifts authorized by paragraph (a) of this 
section only where there is a written finding by the agency designee 
that acceptance of the gift is in the agency's interest and will not 
violate any of the limitations on the use of exceptions contained in 5 
CFR 2635.202(c).



Sec. 5501.104  Prohibited financial interests applicable to employees of the Food and Drug Administration and the Office of the Chief Counsel.

    (a) General prohibition. Except as permitted by paragraph (b) of 
this section, no employee or spouse or minor child of an employee, other 
than a special Government employee or the spouse or minor child of a 
special Government employee, of the Food and Drug Administration or of 
the Office of the Chief Counsel shall have a financial interest in a 
significantly regulated organization.
    (b) Exceptions. Notwithstanding the prohibition in paragraph (a) of 
this section:
    (1) An employee or spouse or minor child of an employee may hold a 
pension arising from employment with a significantly regulated 
organization.
    (2) An employee who is not required to file a public or confidential 
financial disclosure report pursuant to 5 CFR part 2634, or the spouse 
or minor child of such employee, may hold a financial interest in a 
significantly regulated organization if:
    (i) The total cost or value, measured at the time of acquisition, of 
the combined interests of the employee and the

[[Page 672]]

employee's spouse and minor children in the regulated organization was 
$5,000 or less;
    (ii) The holding, if it represents an equity interest, constitutes 
less than 1 percent of the total outstanding equity of the organization; 
and
    (iii) The total holdings in significantly regulated organizations 
account for less than 50 percent of the total value of the combined 
investment portfolios of the employee and the employee's spouse and 
minor children.
    (3) An employee or spouse or minor child of an employee may have an 
interest in a significantly regulated organization that constitutes any 
interest in a publicly traded or publicly available investment fund 
(e.g., a mutual fund), or a widely held pension or similar fund, which, 
in the literature it distributes to prospective and current investors or 
participants, does not indicate the objective or practice of 
concentrating its investments in significantly regulated organizations, 
if the employee neither exercises control nor has the ability to 
exercise control over the financial interests held in the fund.
    (4) In cases involving exceptional circumstances, the Commissioner 
or the Commissioner's designee may grant a written exception to permit 
an employee, or the spouse or minor child of an employee, to hold a 
financial interest in a significantly regulated organization based upon 
a determination that the application of the prohibition in paragraph (a) 
of this section is not necessary to ensure public confidence in the 
impartiality or objectivity with which HHS programs are administered or 
to avoid a violation of part 2635 of this title.

    Note: With respect to any excepted financial interest, employees are 
reminded of their obligations under 5 CFR part 2635, and specifically 
their obligation under subpart D to disqualify themselves from 
participating in any particular matter in which they, their spouses or 
minor children have a financial interest. Furthermore, the agency may 
prohibit or restrict an individual employee from acquiring or holding 
any financial interest or a class of financial interests based on the 
agency's determination that the interest creates a substantial conflict 
with the employee's duties, within the meaning of 5 CFR 2635.403.



Sec. 5501.105  Exemption for otherwise disqualifying financial interests derived from Indian or Alaska Native birthrights.

    (a) Under 18 U.S.C. 208(b)(4), an employee who otherwise would be 
disqualified may participate in a particular matter where the otherwise 
disqualifying financial interest that would be affected results solely 
from the interest of the employee, or the employee's spouse or minor 
child, in birthrights:
    (1) In an Indian tribe, band, nation, or other organized group or 
community, including any Alaska Native village corporation as defined in 
or established pursuant to the Alaska Native Claims Settlement Act, 
which is recognized as eligible for the special programs and services 
provided by the United States to Indians because of their status as 
Indians;
    (2) In an Indian allotment the title to which is held in trust by 
the United States or which is inalienable by the allottee without the 
consent of the United States; or
    (3) In an Indian claims fund held in trust or administered by the 
United States.
    (b) The exemption described in paragraph (a) of this section applies 
only if the particular matter does not involve the Indian allotment or 
claims fund or the Indian tribe, band, nation, organized group or 
community, or Alaska Native village corporation as a specific party or 
parties.



Sec. 5501.106  Outside employment and other outside activities.

    (a) Applicability. This section does not apply to special Government 
employees.
    (b) Definitions. For purposes of this section:
    (1) Compensation has the meaning set forth in 5 CFR 
2635.807(a)(2)(iii).
    (2) Consultative services means the provision of personal services 
by an employee, including the rendering of advice or consultation, which 
requires advanced knowledge in a field of science or learning 
customarily acquired by a course of specialize instruction and study in 
an institution of higher education, hospital, or other similar facility.

[[Page 673]]

    (3) Professional services means the provision of personal services 
by an employee, including the rendering of advice or consultation, which 
involves the skills of a profession as defined in 5 CFR 2636.305(b)(1).
    (c) Prohibited outside employment and activities--(1) Prohibited 
assistance in the preparation of grant applications or contract 
proposals. An employee shall not provide consultative or professional 
services, for compensation, to or on behalf of any other person to 
prepare, or assist in the preparation of, any grant application, 
contract proposal, program report, or other document intended for 
submission to HHS.
    (2) Prohibited employment in HHS-funded activities. An employee 
shall not, for compensation, engage in employment, as defined in 5 CFR 
2635.603(a), with respect to a particular activity funded by an HHS 
grant, contract, cooperative agreement, cooperative research and 
development agreement, or other funding mechanism authorized by statute.
    (3) Prohibited outside activities applicable to employees of the 
Food and Drug Administration and the Office of the Chief Counsel. An 
employee of the Food and Drug Administration or the Office of the Chief 
Counsel who is required to file a public or confidential financial 
disclosure report pursuant to 5 CFR part 2634 shall not:
    (i) Engage in any self-employed business activity for which the sale 
or promotion of FDA-regulated products is expected to constitute ten 
percent or more of annual gross sales or revenues; or
    (ii) Engage in employment, as defined in 5 CFR 2635.603(a), whether 
or not for compensation, with a significantly regulated organization, as 
defined in Sec. 5501.101(c)(2), unless the employment meets either of 
the following exceptions:
    (A) The employment consists of the practice of medicine, dentistry, 
veterinary medicine, pharmacy, nursing, or similar practices, provided 
that the employment does not involve substantial unrelated non-
professional duties, such as personnel management, contracting and 
purchasing responsibilities (other than normal ``out-of-stock'' 
requisitioning), and does not involve employment by a medical product 
manufacturer in the conduct of biomedical research; or
    (B) The employment is limited to clerical or similar services (such 
as cashier or janitorial services) in retail stores, such as 
supermarkets, drug stores, or department stores.
    (4) Prohibited outside practice of law applicable to attorneys in 
the Office of the General Counsel.
    (i) An employee who serves as an attorney in or under the 
supervision of the Office of the General Counsel shall not engage in any 
outside practice of law that might require the attorney to:
    (A) Assert a legal position that is or appears to be in conflict 
with the interests of the Department of Health and Human Services, the 
client to which the attorney owes a professional responsibility; or
    (B) Interpret any statute, regulation or rule administered or issued 
by the Department.
    (ii) Exceptions. Nothing in this section prevents an employee from:
    (A) Acting, with or without compensation, as an agent or attorney 
for, or otherwise representing, the employee's parents, spouse, child, 
or any person for whom, or for any estate for which, the employee is 
serving as guardian, executor, administrator, trustee, or other personal 
fiduciary to the extent permitted by 18 U.S.C. 203 and 205, or from 
providing advice or counsel to such persons or estate; or
    (B) Acting, without compensation, as an agent or attorney for, or 
otherwise representing, any person who is the subject of disciplinary, 
loyalty, or other personnel administration proceedings in connection 
with those proceedings to the extent permitted by 18 U.S.C. 205, or from 
providing uncompensated advice or counsel to such person; or
    (C) Giving testimony under oath or from making statements required 
to be made under penalty for perjury or contempt.
    (iii) Specific approval procedures.
    (A) The exceptions to 18 U.S.C. 203 and 205 described in paragraph 
(c)(4)(ii)(A) of this section do not apply

[[Page 674]]

unless the employee obtained the approval of the Government official 
responsible for the appointment of the employee to a Federal position.
    (B) The exception to 18 U.S.C. 205 described in paragraph 
(c)(4)(ii)(B) of this section does not apply unless the employee has 
obtained the approval of a supervisory official who has authority to 
determine whether the employee's proposed representation of another 
person in a personnel administration matter is consistent with the 
faithful performance of the employee's duties.
    (d) Prior approval for outside employment and other outside 
activities--(1) General approval requirement. Except to the extent that 
an employment or other activity has been exempted under paragraph (d)(5) 
of this section, an employee shall obtain written approval prior to 
engaging, with or without compensation, in the following outside 
employment or activities:
    (i) Providing consultative or professional services, including 
service as an expert witness.
    (ii) Engaging in teaching, speaking, writing, or editing that:
    (A) Relates to the employee's official duties within the meaning of 
5 CFR 2635.807(a)(2)(i)(B) through (E); or
    (B) Would be undertaken as a result of an invitation to engage in 
the activity that was extended to the employee by a person who is a 
prohibited source within the meaning of 5 CFR 2635.203(d), as modified 
by Sec. 5501.102.
    (iii) Providing services to a non-Federal entity as an officer, 
director, or board member, or as a member of a group, such as a planning 
commission advisory council, editorial board, or scientific or technical 
advisory board or panel, which requires the provision of advice, 
counsel, or consultation, unless the service is provided without 
compensation other than reimbursement of expenses to a political, 
religious, social, fraternal, or recreational organization and the 
position held does not require the provision of professional services 
within the meaning of paragraph (b)(3) of this section.
    (2) Additional approval requirement for employees of the Food and 
Drug Administration and the Office of the Chief Counsel.
    (i) In addition to the general approval requirements set forth in 
paragraph (d)(1) of this section, an employee of the Food and Drug 
Administration or the Office of the Chief Counsel shall obtain written 
approval prior to engaging in any outside employment, as defined in 5 
CFR 2635.603(a), whether or not for compensation, or any self-employed 
business activity.
    (ii) The requirement of paragraph (d)(2)(i) of this section does not 
apply to participation in the activities of a political, religious, 
social, fraternal, or recreational organization, unless the position 
held requires the provision of professional services or is performed for 
compensation other than the reimbursement of expenses.
    (iii) The requirement of paragraph (d)(2)(i) of this section shall 
not apply to the extent that an employment activity has been exempted, 
pursuant to paragraph (d)(5) of this section.
    (3) Submission of requests for approval. An employee seeking to 
engage in any of the activities for which advance approval is required 
shall make a written request for approval a reasonable time before 
beginning the activity. This request should be directed to the 
employee's supervisor who will forward it to the official authorized to 
approve outside employment and activities requests for the employee's 
component. All requests for prior approval shall include the following 
information:
    (i) The employee's name, organizational location, occupational 
title, grade, and salary;
    (ii) The nature of the proposed outside employment or other outside 
activity, including a full description of the specific duties or 
services to be performed;
    (iii) A description of the employee's official duties that relate in 
any way to the proposed activity;
    (iv) The name and address of the person or organization for whom or 
with which the work or activity will be done, including the location 
where the services will be performed;
    (v) The estimated total time that will be devoted to the activity. 
If the proposed outside activity is to be performed on a continuing 
basis, a statement of the estimated number of hours per year; for other 
employment, a

[[Page 675]]

statement of the anticipated beginning and ending date;
    (vi) A statement as to whether the work can be performed entirely 
outside of the employee's regular duty hours and, if not, the estimated 
number of hours of absence from that will be required;
    (vii) The method of basis of any compensation (e.g., fee, per diem, 
honorarium, royalties, stock options, travel and expenses, or other);
    (viii) A statement as to whether the compensation is derived from an 
HHS grant, contract, cooperative agreement, or other source of HHS 
funding;
    (ix) For activities involving the provision of consultative or 
professional services, a statement indicating whether the client, 
employer, or other person on whose behalf the services are performed is 
receiving, or intends to seek, an HHS grant, contract, cooperative 
agreement, or other funding relationship; and
    (x) For activities involving teaching, speaking, writing or editing, 
the proposed text of any disclaimer required by 5 CFR 2635.807(b)(2) or 
by the instructions or manual issuances authorized under paragraph 
(d)(5) of this section.
    (4) Standard for approval. Approval shall be granted unless it is 
determined that the outside employment or other outside activity is 
expected to involve conduct prohibited by statute or Federal regulation, 
including 5 CFR part 2635 and this part.

    Note: The granting of granting of approval for an outside activity 
does not relieve the employee of the obligation to abide by all 
applicable laws governing employee conduct nor does approval constitute 
a sanction of any violation. Approval involves an assessment that the 
general activity as described on the submission does not appear likely 
to violate any criminal statutes or other ethics rules. Employees are 
reminded that during the course of an otherwise approvable activity, 
situations may arise, or actions may be contemplated, that, 
nevertheless, pose ethical concerns.

    Example 1: A clerical employee with a degree in library science 
volunteers to work on the acquisitions committee at a local public 
library. Serving on a panel that renders advice to a non-Federal entity 
is subject to prior approval. Because recommending books for the library 
collection normally would not pose a conflict with the typing duties 
assigned the employee, the request would be approved.
    Example 2: While serving on the library acquisitions committee, the 
clerical employee in the preceding example is asked to help the library 
business office locate a missing book order. Shipment of the order is 
delayed because the publisher has declared bankruptcy and its assets, 
including inventory in the warehouse, have been frozen to satisfy the 
claims of the Internal Revenue Service and other creditors. The employee 
may not contact the Federal bankruptcy trustee to seek, on behalf of the 
public library, the release of the books. Even though the employee's 
service on the acquisitions committee had been approved, a criminal 
statute, 18 U.S.C. 205, would preclude any representation by a Federal 
employee of an outside entity before a Federal court or agency with 
respect to a matter in which the United States is a party or has a 
direct and substantial interest.

    (5) Responsibilities of the designated agency ethics official and 
component agencies. (i) The designated agency ethics official or, with 
the concurrence of the designated agency ethics official, each of the 
separate agency components of HHS listed in Sec. 5501.102 may issue an 
instruction or manual issuance exempting categories of employment or 
other outside activities from a requirement of prior written approval 
based on a determination that the employment or activities within those 
categories would generally be approved and are not likely to involve 
conduct prohibited by statute or Federal regulations, including 5 CFR 
part 2635 and this part.
    (ii) HHS components may specify internal procedures governing the 
submission of prior approval requests and designate appropriate 
officials to act on such requests. The instructions or manual issuances 
may include examples of outside employment and other outside activities 
that are permissible or impermissible consistent with 5 CFR part 2635 
and this part. With respect to teaching, speaking, writing, or editing 
activities, the instructions or manual issuances may specify 
preclearance procedures and/or require disclaimers indicating that the 
views expressed do not necessarily represent the views of the agency or 
the United States.
    (iii) The officials within the respective HHS components who are 
responsible for the administrative aspects of these regulations and the 
maintenance

[[Page 676]]

of records shall make provisions for the filing and retention of 
requests for approval of outside employment and other outside activities 
and copies of the notification of approval or disapproval.



Sec. 5501.107  Teaching, speaking and writing by special Government employees in the Public Health Service.

    (a) Applicability. This section applies to special Government 
employees in the Public Health Service who otherwise are prohibited from 
accepting compensation for teaching, speaking or writing that is related 
to their official duties, within the meaning of 5 CFR 
2635.807(a)(2)(i)(C), because the invitation or the offer of 
compensation for the activity was extended at a time when the special 
Government employee was assigned to perform official duties that may 
substantially affect the interests of the inviter or offeror.
    (b) Permissible compensation. A special Government employee may 
accept compensation for teaching, speaking or writing in circumstances 
described in paragraph (a) of this section only where the special 
Government employee recuses from the official assignment that may 
substantially affect the interests of the person who extended the 
invitation to engage in the activity or the offer of compensation.



Sec. 5501.108  Exception to the prohibition against assisting in the prosecution of claims against, or acting as an agent or attorney before, the Government, 
          applicable only to employees assigned to federally recognized 
          Indian tribes or Alaska Native villages or regional or village 
          corporations pursuant to the Intergovernmental Personnel Act.

    (a) 18 U.S.C. 205. Section 205 of title 18 of the United States Code 
prohibits an employee, whether or not for compensation, from acting as 
an agent or attorney for anyone in a claim against the United States, or 
from acting in such capacity on behalf of another before any department, 
agency, or other specified entity, in any particular matter in which the 
United States is a party or has a direct and substantial interest.
    (b) Exception applicable only to employees assigned to federally 
recognized Indian tribes or Alaska Native villages or regional or 
village corporations pursuant to the Intergovernmental Personnel Act. 
Notwithstanding the provisions of 18 U.S.C. 205, the Indian Self-
Determination Act (25 U.S.C. 450i(f)) authorizes Federal employees 
detailed or assigned to Indian tribes or Alaska Native villages or 
regional or village corporations, pursuant to the Intergovernmental 
Personnel Act (5 U.S.C. 3372), to act as agents or attorneys for, or 
appear on behalf of, such tribes or Alaska Native villages or 
corporations in connection with any matter pending before any 
department, agency, court, or commission, in which the United States is 
a party or has a direct and substantial interest. Such employees must 
advise, in writing, the head of the agency, with which they are dealing 
on behalf of an Indian tribe or Alaska Native village or corporation, of 
any personal and substantial involvement they may have had as an officer 
or employee of the United States in connection with the matter 
concerned.

[[Page 677]]



                  CHAPTER XLVI--POSTAL RATE COMMISSION




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PART 5601--SUPPLEMENTAL STANDARDS OF ETHICAL CONDUCT FOR EMPLOYEES OF THE POSTAL RATE COMMISSION--Table of Contents




Sec.
5601.101  General.
5601.102  Prohibited financial interests.
5601.103  Notice of disqualification when seeking employment.
5601.104  Outside employment.

    Authority: 5 U.S.C. 7301; 5 U.S.C. App. (Ethics in Government Act of 
1978); 39 U.S.C. 3603; E.O. 12674, 54 FR 15159, 3 CFR, 1989 Comp., p. 
215, as modified by E.O. 12731, 55 FR 42547, 3 CFR, 1990 Comp., p. 306; 
5 CFR 2635.105, 2635.403(a), 2635.802(a), 2635.803.

    Source: 58 FR 42840, Aug. 12, 1993, unless otherwise noted.



Sec. 5601.101  General.

    (a) Purpose. In accordance with 5 CFR 2635.105, the regulations in 
this part apply to employees, including Commissioners, of the Postal 
Rate Commission and supplement the Standards of Ethical Conduct for 
Employees of the Executive Branch contained in 5 CFR part 2635.
    (b) Definition of affected persons. For purposes of this part, a 
person whose interests are significantly affected by rates of postage, 
fees for postal services, the classification of mail or the operations 
of the United States Postal Service (Postal Service):
    (1) Includes a company or other person:
    (i) Who is or, in the past 4 years, has been a party to a proceeding 
before the Postal Rate Commission;
    (ii) Whose primary business involves entering publications as 
second-class mail;
    (iii) Who is in the business of selling merchandise, and a 
substantial portion of whose orders are solicited, received, or 
delivered through the mails;
    (iv) Who is primarily engaged in the business of advertising through 
the mails;
    (v) Who is primarily engaged in the business of delivering 
merchandise or written communications, i.e., a person whose primary 
business is in competition with the Postal Service; or
    (vi) Who provides services or products to the Postal Service that 
can be expected to produce income that exceeds $100,000 and equals or 
exceeds 5 percent of its gross income for the current fiscal year; and
    (2) Does not include a company or other person whose use of the 
mails is merely an incidental or a minor factor in the general conduct 
of its business.



Sec. 5601.102  Prohibited financial interests.

    Any employee shall not, directly or indirectly, have any financial 
interest in a person whose interests are significantly affected by rates 
of postage, fees for postal services, the classification of mail, or the 
operations of the Postal Service.



Sec. 5601.103  Notice of disqualification when seeking employment.

    An employee who has been assigned to a particular matter which 
affects the financial interests of a prospective employer and who is 
required, in accordance with 5 CFR 2635.604(a), to disqualify himself 
from participation in that matter shall, notwithstanding the guidance in 
5 CFR 2635.604 (b) and (c), provide notice of disqualification to his 
supervisor upon determining that he will not participate in the matter.



Sec. 5601.104  Outside employment.

    (a) Prohibited outside employment. An employee shall not engage in 
outside employment, either on a paid or unpaid basis, with or for a 
company or other person whose interests are significantly affected by 
rates of postage, fees for postal services, the classification of mail, 
or the operations of the Postal Service.
    (b) Prior approval for outside employment. An employee who wishes to 
engage in outside employment, either on a paid or unpaid basis, shall 
obtain the prior written approval of the designated agency ethics 
official. A request for such approval shall be submitted in writing with 
sufficient description of the employment to enable the designated agency 
ethics official to give approval based on a determination that the 
outside employment is not expected to involve conduct prohibited by 
statute or Federal regulation, including paragraph (a) of this section 
and 5 CFR part 2635.

[[Page 679]]

    (c) Definition of employment. For purposes of this section 
employment means any form of non-Federal employment or business 
relationship involving the provision of personal services by the 
employee. It includes but is not limited to personal services as an 
officer, director, employee, agent, attorney, consultant, contractor, 
general partner or trustee. Employment does not include participation in 
the activities of a nonprofit charitable, religious, professional, 
social, fraternal, educational, recreational, public service or civic 
organizations unless such activities involve the practice of a 
profession within the meaning of 5 CFR 2636.305(b)(1), including the 
giving of professional advice, or are for compensation other than 
reimbursement of expenses.

[[Page 681]]



                 CHAPTER XLVII--FEDERAL TRADE COMMISSION




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PART 5701--SUPPLEMENTAL STANDARDS OF ETHICAL CONDUCT FOR EMPLOYEES OF THE FEDERAL TRADE COMMISSION--Table of Contents




    Authority: 5 U.S.C. 7301; 5 U.S.C. App. (Ethics in Government Act of 
1978); 15 U.S.C. 46(g); E.O. 12674, 57 FR 15159, 3 CFR, 1989 Comp., p. 
215, as modified by E.O. 12731, 55 FR 42547, 3 CFR, 1990 Comp., p. 306; 
5 CFR 2635.105, 2635.803.



Sec. 5701.101  Prior approval for outside employment.

    (a) Before engaging in any outside employment, whether or not for 
compensation, an employee of the Federal Trade Commission, other than a 
Commissioner, must obtain the written approval of his or her supervisor 
and the Designated Agency Ethics Official (DAEO) or his or her designee. 
Requests for approval shall be forwarded through normal supervisory 
channels to the DAEO and shall include, at a minimum, the following:
    (1) A statement of the name of the person, group, or organization 
for whom the work is to be performed; the type of work to be performed; 
and the proposed hours of work and approximate dates of employment;
    (2) The employee's certification that the outside employment will 
not depend in any way on information obtained as a result of the 
employee's official Government position;
    (3) The employee's certification that no official duty time or 
Government property, resource, or facilities not available to the 
general public will be used in connection with the outside employment;
    (4) The employee's certification that he has read, is familiar with, 
and will abide by the restrictions contained in all applicable Federal 
laws and regulations, including those found in 18 U.S.C. chapter 11 and 
those found or referenced in subpart H (``Outside Activities'') of 5 CFR 
part 2635 (Standards of Ethical Conduct for Employees of the Executive 
Branch); and
    (5) The written approval of the employee's immediate supervisor.
    (b) Approval shall be granted only upon a determination that the 
outside employment is not expected to involve conduct prohibited by 
statute or Federal regulation. In the case of an employee who wishes to 
practice a profession involving a fiduciary relationship, as defined in 
5 CFR 2636.305(b), approval will be granted only on a case-by-case 
basis.
    (c) For purposes of this section, ``employment'' means any form of 
non-Federal employment or business relationship involving the provision 
of personal services by the employee, whether or not for compensation. 
It includes but it is not limited to personal services as an officer, 
director, employee, agent, attorney, consultant, contractor, general 
partner, or trustee. Prior approval is not required, however, to 
participate in the activities of a nonprofit charitable, religious, 
professional, social, fraternal, educational, recreational, public 
service, or civic organization, unless such activities involve the 
provision of professional services or advice or are for compensation 
other than reimbursement of expenses.

[58 FR 30695, May 27, 1993]

[[Page 683]]



              CHAPTER XLVIII--NUCLEAR REGULATORY COMMISSION




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5801            Supplemental standards of ethical conduct 
                    for employees of the Nuclear Regulatory 
                    Commission..............................         684

[[Page 684]]



PART 5801--SUPPLEMENTAL STANDARDS OF ETHICAL CONDUCT FOR EMPLOYEES OF THE NUCLEAR REGULATORY COMMISSION--Table of Contents




Sec.
5801.101  General.
5801.102  Prohibited securities.
5801.103  Prior approval for outside employment.

    Authority: 5 U.S.C. 7301; 5 U.S.C. App. (Ethics in Government Act of 
1978); 42 U.S.C. 2201, 5841; E.O. 12674, 54 FR 15159, 3 CFR, 1989 Comp., 
p. 215, as modified by E.O. 12731, 55 FR 42547, 3 CFR, 1990 Comp., p. 
306, 5 CFR 2635.105, 2635.403, 2635.803.

    Source: 59 FR 17459, Apr. 13, 1994, unless otherwise noted.



Sec. 5801.101  General.

    In accordance with 5 CFR 2635.105, the regulations in this part 
apply to members and other employees of the Nuclear Regulatory 
Commission and supplement the Standards of Ethical Conduct for Employees 
of the Executive Branch contained in 5 CFR part 2635. In addition to the 
standards in 5 CFR part 2635 and this part, members and other employees 
are subject to the executive branch financial disclosure regulations 
contained in 5 CFR part 2634 and to additional regulations regarding 
their conduct contained in 10 CFR part 0.



Sec. 5801.102  Prohibited securities.

    (a) General prohibition. No covered employee, and no spouse or minor 
child of a covered employee, shall own securities issued by an entity on 
the list described in paragraph (b) of this section.
    (b) Prohibited securities list. Once a year, or on a more frequent 
basis, the Commission will publish and distribute to employees a list of 
entities whose securities a covered employee or the spouse or minor 
child of a covered employee may not own. The list shall consist of 
entities which are:
    (1) Applicants for or holders of early site permits, construction 
permits, operating licenses, or combined construction permits and 
operating licenses for facilities which generate electric energy by 
means of a nuclear reactor;
    (2) State or local governments, if the primary purpose of the 
security is to finance the construction or operation of a nuclear 
reactor or a low-level waste facility;
    (3) Entities manufacturing or selling nuclear power or test 
reactors;
    (4) Architectural-engineering companies providing services relating 
to a nuclear power reactor;
    (5) Applicants for, or holders of, a certified standard design;
    (6) Entities licensed or regulated by the Commission to mill, 
convert, enrich, fabricate, store, or dispose of source, byproduct, or 
special nuclear material, or applicants for such licenses that are 
designated by the Commission because they are or will be substantially 
engaged in such nuclear fuel cycle or disposal activities;
    (7) The parent corporation of any subsidiary described in paragraphs 
(b)(1)-(b)(6) of this section; and
    (8) An energy or utility sector investment fund which has more than 
25% of its assets invested in securities issued by entities described in 
paragraphs (b)(1)-(b)(7) of this section.
    (c) Definitions. For purposes of this section:
    (1) A covered employee means:
    (i) A member of the Commission;
    (ii) The Inspector General of the NRC;
    (iii) A member of the Senior Executive Service (SES);
    (iv) An employee who holds a non-SES position above GG-15; and
    (v) Any other employee, including a special Government employee, 
whose duties and responsibilities, as determined by the Commission or 
its designees, require application of the securities ownership 
prohibition contained in this section to ensure public confidence that 
NRC programs are conducted impartially and objectively. The positions of 
these employees are specified in NRC Management Handbook 7.7, which is 
available in the NRC Public Document Room; and
    (2) The term ``securities'' includes all interests in debts or 
equity instruments. The term includes, without limitation, secured and 
unsecured bonds, debentures, notes, securitized assets and commercial 
paper, as well as all types of preferred and common stock. The term 
encompasses both current

[[Page 685]]

and contingent ownership interests, including any beneficial or legal 
interest derived from a trust. It extends to any right to acquire or 
dispose of any long or short position in such securities and includes, 
without limitation, interests convertible into such securities, as well 
as options, rights, warrants, puts, calls, and straddles with respect 
thereto.
    (d) Divestiture and reporting of prohibited securities--(1) Newly 
covered employees. Upon promotion or other appointment to a position 
subject to the securities prohibition of this section, a covered 
employee shall sign a certification:
    (i) Identifying securities of an entity on the prohibited securities 
list which the employee, or the spouse or minor child of the employee, 
owns, or
    (ii) Stating that the employee, or the spouse or minor child of the 
employee, does not own any prohibited securities.

Except as provided in paragraph (d)(4) of this section, the newly 
covered employee, or the spouse or minor child of the employee, shall 
divest prohibited securities within 90 days after appointment to the 
covered position.
    (2) Newly prohibited securities. Within 30 days after publication of 
the prohibited securities list to which an entity's name has been added, 
a covered employee who owns, or whose spouse or minor child owns, 
prohibited securities shall make a written report of that ownership to 
the Office of the General Counsel. Except as provided in paragraph 
(d)(4) of this section, the covered employee, or the spouse or minor 
child of the covered employee, shall divest prohibited securities within 
90 days after publication of the prohibited securities list.
    (3) Securities acquired without specific intent. Within 30 days 
after a covered employee, or the spouse or minor child of a covered 
employee, acquires securities of an entity on the prohibited securities 
list as a result of marriage, inheritance, gift or otherwise without 
specific intent to acquire the securities, the covered employee shall 
make a written report of the acquisition to the Office of the General 
Counsel. Except as provided in paragraph (d)(4) of this section, a 
covered employee, or the spouse or minor child of a covered employee, 
shall divest prohibited securities within 90 days after the date of 
acquisition.
    (4) Extension of period to divest. Upon a showing of undue hardship, 
the Chairman of the Nuclear Regulatory Commission may extend the 90 day 
period for divestiture specified in paragraphs (d)(1) through (d)(3) of 
this section.
    (5) Disqualification pending divestiture. Pending divestiture of 
prohibited securities, a covered employee must disqualify himself or 
herself, in accordance with 5 CFR 2635.402, from participation in 
particular matters which, as a result of continued ownership of the 
prohibited securities, would affect the financial interests of the 
employee, or those of the spouse or minor child of the employee. 
Disqualification is not required where a waiver described in 5 CFR 
2635.402(d) applies. Procedures for obtaining individual waivers are 
contained in NRC Handbook 7.7, which is available in the NRC Public 
Document Room.
    (6) Tax treatment of gain on divested securities. Where divestiture 
is required by this section, the covered employee (except a special 
Government employee) may be eligible to defer the tax consequences of 
divestiture under subpart J of 5 CFR part 2634, pursuant to procedures 
in NRC Handbook 7.7, which is available in the NRC Public Document Room.
    (e) Waivers. (1) The Chairman may grant a waiver to permit a covered 
employee, or the spouse or minor child of a covered employee, to retain 
ownership of a security of an entity on the prohibited securities list 
upon a determination that the holding of the security is not 
inconsistent with 5 CFR part 2635 or otherwise prohibited by law, and 
that:
    (i) Under the circumstances, application of the prohibition is not 
necessary to ensure confidence in the impartiality and objectivity with 
which NRC programs are administered;
    (ii) Legal constraints prevent divestiture; or
    (iii) For a special Government employee, divestiture would result in 
substantial financial hardship.
    (2) Where a waiver has been granted under paragraph (e)(1) of this 
section, the covered employee must disqualify

[[Page 686]]

himself or herself, in accordance with 5 CFR 2635.402, from 
participation in particular matters which, as a result of continued 
ownership of the prohibited security, would affect the financial 
interests of the employee, or those of the spouse or minor child of the 
employee unless the employee has received a waiver described in 5 CFR 
2635.402(d), pursuant to procedures in NRC Handbook 7.9, which is 
available in the NRC Public Document Room.



Sec. 5801.103  Prior approval for outside employment.

    (a) An employee, other than a special Government employee, shall 
obtain written authorization before engaging in compensated outside 
employment with:
    (1) A Commission licensee;
    (2) An applicant for a Commission license;
    (3) An organization directly engaged in activities in the commercial 
nuclear field;
    (4) A Commission contractor;
    (5) A Commission supplier;
    (6) An applicant for or holder of a license issued by a State 
pursuant to an agreement between the Commission and the State;
    (7) A trade association which represents clients concerning nuclear 
matters; or
    (8) A law firm or other organization which is participating in an 
NRC proceeding or which regularly represents itself or clients before 
the NRC.
    (b) Requests for approval shall be submitted in writing to the 
agency designee specified in NRC Management Directive 7.8, which is 
available in the NRC Public Document Room, in accordance with procedures 
set forth in the accompanying NRC Handbook.
    (c) Approval of outside employment shall be granted in writing only 
upon a determination by the agency designee that the proposed outside 
employment would not violate a Federal statute or regulation, including 
5 CFR 2635.
    (d) For purposes of this section, ``outside employment'' means any 
form of non-Federal employment, business relationship or activity, 
involving the provision of personal services by the employee. It 
includes, but is not limited to, personal services as an officer, 
director, employee, agent, attorney, consultant, contractor, general 
partner, trustee, teacher or speaker.

[[Page 687]]



                 CHAPTER L--DEPARTMENT OF TRANSPORTATION




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Part                                                                Page
6001            Supplemental standards of ethical conduct 
                    for employees of the Department of 
                    Transportation..........................         688

[[Page 688]]



PART 6001--SUPPLEMENTAL STANDARDS OF ETHICAL CONDUCT FOR EMPLOYEES OF THE DEPARTMENT OF TRANSPORTATION--Table of Contents




6001.101  General.
6001.102  Agency designees.
6001.103  Designation of separate agency components.
6001.104  Prohibited financial interests.

    Authority: 5 U.S.C. 301, 7301; 5 U.S.C. App. (Ethics in Government 
Act of 1978); 49 U.S.C. 322; E.O. 12674, 54 FR 15159, 3 CFR, 1989 Comp., 
p. 215, as modified by E.O. 12731, 55 FR 42547, 3 CFR, 1990 Comp., p. 
306; 5 CFR 2635.105, 2635.203(a), 2635.403(a), 2635.807.

    Source: 61 FR 39903, July 31, 1996, unless otherwise noted.



Sec. 6001.101  General.

    In accordance with 5 CFR 2635.105, the regulations in this part 
apply to employees of the Department of Transportation and supplement 
the Standards of Ethical Conduct for Employees of the Executive Branch 
contained in 5 CFR part 2635. In addition to the standards in 5 CFR part 
2635, employees are subject to the executive branch financial disclosure 
regulations contained in 5 CFR part 2634.



Sec. 6001.102  Agency designees.

    For purposes of 5 CFR part 2635, the following Department of 
Transportation officials are agency designees within the meaning of 5 
CFR 2635.102(b):
    (a) The Designated Agency Ethics Official;
    (b) The Alternate Agency Ethics Official;
    (c) The Deputy Ethics Officials; and
    (d) As designated by Deputy Ethics Officials, legal counsel in 
regional and other offices.



Sec. 6001.103  Designation of separate agency components.

    (a) Pursuant to 5 CFR 2635.203(a), each of the following components 
of the Department of Transportation is designated as a separate agency 
for purpose of the regulations in subpart B of 5 CFR part 2635 governing 
gifts from outside sources and Sec. 2635.807 of this title governing 
teaching, speaking, or writing:
    (1) Federal Aviation Administration;
    (2) Federal Highway Administration;
    (3) Federal Railroad Administration;
    (4) Federal Transit Administration;
    (5) Maritime Administration;
    (6) National Highway Traffic Safety Administration;
    (7) Saint Lawrence Seaway Development Corporation; and
    (8) United States Coast Guard.
    (b) Employees of Department of Transportation components not 
designated as separate agencies, including employees of the Office of 
the Secretary of Transportation, the Research and Special Programs 
Administration, and the Bureau of Transportation Statistics, will be 
treated as employees of DOT which shall be treated as a single agency 
that is separate from the above listed agencies for purposes of 
determining whether the donor of a gift is a prohibited source under 5 
CFR 2635.203(d) and for identifying the DOT employee's agency under 5 
CFR 2635.807 governing teaching, speaking, and writing.



Sec. 6001.104  Prohibited financial interests.

    (a) Federal Railroad Administration (FRA). (1) Except as provided in 
paragraph (c) of this section, no FRA employee shall hold stock or have 
any other financial interest, including outside employment, in a 
railroad company subject to FRA regulation.
    (2) No FRA employee appointed after December 1991 shall hold 
reemployment rights with a railroad company subject to FRA regulation 
after his or her first year of employment.
    (3) No spouse or minor child of an FRA employee shall hold stock or 
any other securities interest in a railroad company subject to FRA 
regulation.
    (b) Federal Aviation Administration (FAA). Except as provided in 
paragraph (c) of this section, no FAA employee, or spouse or minor child 
of the employee, may hold stock or have any other securities interest in 
an airline or aircraft manufacturing company, or in a supplier of 
components or parts to an airline or aircraft manufacturing company.
    (c) Exception. The prohibitions in paragraphs (a)(1) and (b) of this 
section do not apply to a financial interest in a publicly traded or 
publicly available

[[Page 689]]

investment fund, provided that, at the time of the employee's 
appointment or upon initial investment in the fund, whichever occurs 
later, the fund does not have invested, or indicate in its prospectus 
the intent to invest more than 30 percent of its assets in a particular 
transportation or geographic sector and the employee neither exercises 
control nor has the ability to exercise control over the financial 
interests held in the fund.
    (d) Period to divest. An individual subject to this section who 
acquires a financial interest subject to this section, as a result of 
gift, inheritance, or marriage, shall divest the interest within a 
period set by the agency designee. Until divestiture, the 
disqualification requirements of 5 CFR 2635.402 and 2635.502 remain in 
effect.

[[Page 691]]



          CHAPTER LII--EXPORT-IMPORT BANK OF THE UNITED STATES




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Part                                                                Page
6201            Supplemental standards of ethical conduct 
                    for employees of the Export-Import Bank 
                    of the United States....................         692

[[Page 692]]



PART 6201--SUPPLEMENTAL STANDARDS OF ETHICAL CONDUCT FOR EMPLOYEES OF THE EXPORT-IMPORT BANK OF THE UNITED STATES--Table of Contents




Sec.
6201.101  General.
6201.102  Prohibited financial interests.
6201.103  Prior approval for outside employment.

    Authority: 5 U.S.C. 7301; 5 U.S.C. App. (Ethics in Government Act of 
1978); E.O. 12674, 54 FR 15159, 3 CFR, 1989 Comp., p. 215, as modified 
by E.O. 12731, 55 FR 42547, 3 CFR, 1990 Comp., p. 306; 5 CFR 2635.105, 
2635.403(a), 2635.803.

    Source: 60 FR 17626, Apr. 7, 1995, unless otherwise noted.



Sec. 6201.101  General.

    In accordance with 5 CFR 2635.105, the regulations in this part 
apply to employees of the Export-Import Bank of the United States (Bank) 
and supplement the Standards of Ethical Conduct for Employees of the 
Executive Branch contained in 5 CFR part 2635. In addition to the 
standards in 5 CFR part 2635 and this part, employees of the Bank are 
subject to the executive branch financial disclosure regulations 
contained in 5 CFR part 2634.



Sec. 6201.102  Prohibited financial interests.

    (a) Prohibition. Except as provided in paragraph (f) of this 
section, no covered employee or covered family member shall own 
securities issued by an exporter or lending institution appearing on the 
List of Designated Entities under paragraph (b) of this section.
    (b) List of Designated Entities--(1) Compilation of list of 
designated entities. Once each fiscal year, the designated agency ethics 
official (DAEO) shall compile a List of Designated Entities based upon 
the following criteria:
    (i) All exporters that, during the preceding two fiscal years, 
exported an aggregate dollar volume of goods and services supported by 
the Bank in excess of four hundred million dollars ($400,000,000);
    (ii) All exporters that, during the preceding two fiscal years, had 
seven (7) or more aggregate export transactions supported by the Bank;
    (iii) All lending institutions that, during the preceding two fiscal 
years, financed an aggregate dollar volume of export transactions 
supported by the Bank in excess of one hundred fifty million dollars 
($150,000,000); and
    (iv) All lending institutions that, during the preceding two fiscal 
years, financed twenty (20) or more aggregate export transactions 
supported by the Bank.
    (2) Distribution of list of designated entities. The DAEO shall 
distribute the List of Designated Entities to all covered employees 
promptly after it is compiled, and shall ensure that each new covered 
employee receives a copy of the current List of Designated Entities 
promptly after becoming a covered employee.
    (c) Definitions. For purposes of this section:
    (1) Covered employee means an employee of the Bank, other than a 
special Government employee, who is required to file a public or a 
confidential financial disclosure report (Form SF 278 or SF 450) under 5 
CFR part 2634.
    (2) Covered family member means the spouse or minor child of a 
covered employee.
    (3) Securities means all financial interests evidenced by debt or 
equity instruments. The term includes, without limitation, bonds, 
debentures, notes, securitized assets and commercial paper, as well as 
all types of preferred and common stock. The term encompasses both 
present and contingent ownership interests, including any beneficial or 
legal interest derived from a trust. It extends to any right to acquire 
or dispose of any long or short position in such securities and 
includes, without limitation, interests convertible into such 
securities, as well as options, rights, warrants, puts, calls, and 
straddles with respect thereto. It does not include:
    (i) An investment in a publicly traded or publicly available mutual 
fund or other collective investment fund or in a widely held pension or 
similar fund, provided that the fund does not invest more than ten 
percent (10%) of the value of its portfolio in securities of

[[Page 693]]

any one entity on the List of Designated Entities and the covered 
employee or covered family member neither exercises control over nor has 
the ability to exercise control over the financial interests held in the 
fund; or
    (ii) Certificates of deposit, checking accounts, savings accounts 
and other deposit accounts.
    (4) Support by the Bank means:
    (i) Direct loans made by the Bank;
    (ii) Guarantees by the Bank of loans from lending institutions; or
    (iii) Insurance policies issued by the Bank under any of its 
insurance programs.
    (d) Restrictions arising from third party relationships. If a 
covered employee has knowledge that any of the entities described in 
paragraphs (d)(1) through (d)(6) of this section own any security that a 
covered employee or covered family member would be prohibited from 
owning by paragraph (a) of this section, the covered employee shall 
promptly report such interests to the DAEO. The DAEO may require the 
covered employee to terminate the third party relationship, undertake an 
appropriate disqualification, or take other appropriate action 
necessary, under the particular circumstances, to avoid a statutory 
violation or a violation of part 2635 of this title or of this part, 
including an appearance of misuse of position or loss of impartiality. 
This paragraph applies to any:
    (1) Partnership in which the covered employee or covered family 
member is a general partner;
    (2) Partnership in which the covered employee and/or covered family 
member(s) in the aggregate holds more than a ten percent limited 
partnership interest;
    (3) Closely held corporation in which the covered employee and/or 
covered family member(s) in the aggregate holds more than a ten percent 
(10%) equity interest;
    (4) Trust in which the covered employee or covered family member has 
a legal or beneficial interest;
    (5) Investment club or similar informal investment arrangement 
between the covered employee or covered family member and others; or
    (6) Other entity if the covered employee and/or covered family 
member(s) in the aggregate holds more than a ten percent (10%) equity 
interest.
    (e) Period to Divest. Unless a waiver is granted pursuant to 
paragraph (f) of this section, a covered employee or covered family 
member who owns securities of a designated entity as of the date that 
the initial List of Designated Entities is circulated to covered 
employees, the date that a revised List of Designated Entities is 
circulated to covered employees, or the first day that an individual 
becomes a covered employee, shall divest the securities within six (6) 
months of such date. The DAEO may, in certain cases of unusual hardship, 
grant a written extension of up to an additional six (6) months within 
which a covered employee or covered family member must divest securities 
of a designated entity. Notwithstanding the grant of an extension, a 
covered employee remains subject to the disqualification requirements of 
5 CFR 2635.402 and 2635.502. A covered employee or covered family member 
who must divest securities pursuant to this section should refer to 
section 1043 of the Internal Revenue Code and to the regulations of 
subpart J of 5 CFR part 2634 under which the covered employee or covered 
family member may be eligible to defer the recognition of taxable gain 
on the sale or other divestiture.
    (f) Waivers. The DAEO may grant a written waiver from the securities 
prohibition contained in this section based on a determination that the 
waiver is not inconsistent with 5 CFR part 2635 or otherwise prohibited 
by law and that, under the particular circumstances, application of the 
prohibition is not necessary to avoid the appearance of misuse of 
position or loss of impartiality, or otherwise to ensure confidence in 
the impartiality and objectivity with which Bank programs are 
administered. A waiver under this paragraph may be accompanied by 
appropriate conditions, such as requiring execution of a written 
statement of disqualification. Notwithstanding the grant of any waiver, 
a covered employee remains subject to the disqualification requirements 
of 5 CFR 2635.402 and 2635.502.

[[Page 694]]

    (g) Agency determinations of substantial conflict. Nothing in this 
section prevents the Bank from prohibiting or restricting an individual 
Bank employee from acquiring or holding a financial interest or a class 
of financial interests based upon the Bank's determination of 
substantial conflict pursuant to 5 CFR 2635.403(b).



Sec. 6201.103  Prior approval for outside employment.

    (a) Prior approval requirement. Before engaging in any outside 
employment, whether or not for compensation, an employee, other than a 
special Government employee, must obtain the written approval of the 
employee's immediate supervisor and the DAEO. Requests for approval 
shall be forwarded through normal supervisory channels to the DAEO and 
shall include the name of the person, group, or organization for whom 
the work is to be performed; the type of work to be performed; and the 
proposed hours of work and approximate dates of employment.
    (b) Standard for approval. Approval shall be granted only upon a 
determination that the outside employment is not expected to involve 
conduct prohibited by statute or Federal regulation (including 5 CFR 
part 2635). In the case of an employee who wishes to practice a 
profession involving a fiduciary relationship, as defined in 5 CFR 
2636.305(b), approval will be granted only for each individual matter in 
the course of practicing such profession.
    (c) Definition of employment. For purposes of this section, 
``employment'' means any form of non-Federal employment or business 
relationship involving the provision of personal services by the 
employee. It includes but is not limited to personal services as an 
officer, director, employee, agent, attorney, consultant, contractor, 
general partner, trustee or teacher. It also includes writing when done 
under an arrangement with another person for production or publication 
of the written product. It does not, however, include participation in 
the activities of a nonprofit charitable, religious, professional, 
social, fraternal, educational, recreational, public service or civic 
organization, unless such activities involve the provision of 
professional services or advice or are for compensation other than 
reimbursement of expenses.

[[Page 695]]



                  CHAPTER LIII--DEPARTMENT OF EDUCATION




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Part                                                                Page
6301            Supplemental standards of ethical conduct 
                    for employees of the Department of 
                    Education...............................         696

[[Page 696]]



PART 6301--SUPPLEMENTAL STANDARDS OF ETHICAL CONDUCT FOR EMPLOYEES OF THE DEPARTMENT OF EDUCATION--Table of Contents




Sec.
6301.101 General.
6301.102 Prior approval for certain outside activities.

    Authority: 5 U.S.C. 301, 7301; 5 U.S.C. App. (Ethics in Government 
Act of 1978); E.O. 12674, 3 CFR, 1989 Comp., p. 215, as modified by E.O. 
12731, 3 CFR, 1990 Comp., p. 306; 5 CFR 2635.105, 2635.803.



Sec. 6301.101  General.

    In accordance with 5 CFR 2635.105, the regulations in this part 
apply to employees of the Department of Education and supplement the 
Standards of Ethical Conduct for Employees of the Executive Branch 
contained in 5 CFR part 2635.

[60 FR 5817, Jan. 30, 1995]



Sec. 6301.102  Prior approval for certain outside activities.

    (a) An employee, other than a special Government employee, must 
obtain written approval prior to engaging--with or without 
compensation--in the following outside activities:
    (1) Except as provided in paragraph (b)(1) of this section, 
providing services, other than clerical services or service as a fact 
witness, on behalf of any other person in connection with a particular 
matter:
    (i) In which the United States is a party;
    (ii) In which the United States has a direct and substantial 
interest; or
    (iii) If the provision of services involves the preparation of 
materials for submission to, or representation before, a Federal court 
or executive branch agency.
    (2) Except as provided in paragraph (b)(2) of this section:
    (i) Serving as an officer, director, trustee, general partner, 
agent, attorney, consultant, contractor, employee, advisory committee 
member, or active participant for a prohibited source; or
    (ii) Engaging in teaching, speaking, consulting, or writing that 
relates to the employee's official duties.
    (b) Unless the services are to be provided for compensation, 
including reimbursement for transportation, lodging and meals:
    (1) Prior approval is not required by paragraph (a)(1) of this 
section to provide services as an agent or attorney for, or otherwise to 
represent, another Department of Education employee who is the subject 
of disciplinary, loyalty, or other personnel administration proceedings 
in connection with those proceedings; and
    (2) Prior approval is not required by paragraph (a)(2) of this 
section:
    (i) To participate in the activities of a:
    (A) Social, fraternal, civic, or political entity;
    (B) Religious entity that is not a prohibited source; or
    (C) Parent-Teacher Association or similar parent organization at the 
employee's child's school or day care center, other than as a member of 
a board of directors or other governing body of the school or center, or 
the educational agency of which it is a part; or
    (ii) To provide direct instructional, social, or medical services to 
students or other individuals.
    (c) An employee who is required by paragraph (a) of this section to 
obtain prior written approval shall submit a written request for 
approval in accordance with Department procedures.
    (d) The cognizant reviewing official shall grant approval unless he 
or she determines that the outside activity is expected to involve 
conduct prohibited by statute or Federal regulations, including 5 CFR 
part 2635.
    (e) For the purposes of this section:
    (1) ``Active participant'' has the meaning set forth in 5 CFR 
2635.502(b)(1)(v).
    (2) ``Prohibited source'' has the meaning set forth in 5 CFR 
2635.203(d).
    (3) ``Relates to the employee's official duties'' means that the 
activity meets one or more of the tests described in 5 CFR 
2635.807(a)(2)(i) (B) through (E). It includes, in relevant part:
    (i) Activities an employee has been invited to participate in 
because of his or her official position rather than his or her expertise 
in the subject matter;
    (ii) A situation in which an employee has been asked to participate 
in an activity by a person or organization that

[[Page 697]]

has interests that may be substantially affected by the performance or 
nonperformance of the employee's official duties;
    (iii) Activities that convey information derived from nonpublic 
information gained during the course of Government employment; and
    (iv) Activities that deal in significant part with any matter to 
which the employee is or has been officially assigned in the last year, 
any ongoing or announced Department policy, program or operation, or--in 
the case of certain noncareer employees--any matter that is generally 
related to education or vocational rehabilitation.

    Example 1: A Department employee witnessed an automobile accident 
involving two privately owned cars on her way to work. Some time later 
she is served with a subpoena at home to appear in Federal court as a 
fact witness on behalf of the plaintiff, who was injured in the car 
accident, in a civil case alleging negligence. The Department employee 
is not required to obtain prior approval to comply with the subpoena 
because this civil case is not a matter in which the United States is a 
party or has a direct and substantial interest.
    Example 2: A Department employee would like to prepare Federal tax 
returns for clients on his own time. He is required to obtain prior 
approval to participate in this outside activity because it involves the 
provision of personal services in the preparation of materials for 
submission to the Internal Revenue Service, an executive branch agency.
    Example 3: Arlene, a Department employee, has been asked by a 
Department colleague to represent him, without compensation, in an equal 
employment opportunity complaint he filed alleging that his supervisor 
failed to promote him because he is over 40 years old. Arlene is not 
required to obtain prior approval under this regulation before providing 
such representation because it involves services for another Department 
of Education employee in connection with a personnel administration 
proceeding. However, under 18 U.S.C. section 205, she may only provide 
such representation if it is not inconsistent with faithful performance 
of her duties.
    Example 4: A local school board offers a Department employee a paid 
position as a referee of high school football games. The employee must 
seek prior approval to accept this outside employment because the local 
school board is a prohibited source. If, on the other hand, the employee 
volunteered to coach soccer, without pay, in a sports program sponsored 
by the local school board, no prior approval is required because she 
would be engaging in direct instructional services to students.
    Example 5: A Department program specialist in the Office of 
Elementary and Secondary Education actively pursues an interest in 
painting. The community art league, where he has taken evening art 
classes, asks him if he would be interested in teaching an evening 
course on painting with acrylics. The employee is not required to obtain 
approval prior to accepting this employment. The community art league is 
not a prohibited source, and the subject matter of the course is not 
related to his duties.
    Example 6: A Department employee helps organize local tennis 
tournaments. A national tennis magazine calls and asks her to write a 
monthly column about recreational tennis in her area. The magazine 
offers to pay the employee $500 for each column. The subject matter is 
not related to her duties, and the employee is not required to seek 
prior approval to write this column. However, the employee is still 
subject to all of the Standards of Conduct and other laws that may 
apply, including the limitation on outside earned income for certain 
noncareer employees, as well as the prohibition on using Government 
resources to pursue outside activities and employment.
    Example 7: An employee's elderly parent is retired and receiving 
Social Security benefits. The employee would like to represent his 
parent in an administrative hearing before the Social Security 
Administration concerning a dispute over benefits. The employee must 
obtain prior approval to undertake the activity of representing his 
parent because he is providing services to his parent in a particular 
matter in which the United States is a party. Moreover, the services 
will involve representation before a Federal agency.

[60 FR 5817, Jan. 30, 1995]

[[Page 699]]



              CHAPTER LIV--ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION AGENCY




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                    Protection Agency.......................         700

[[Page 700]]



PART 6401--SUPPLEMENTAL STANDARDS OF ETHICAL CONDUCT FOR EMPLOYEES OF THE ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION AGENCY--Table of Contents




Sec.
6401.101  General.
6401.102  Prohibited financial interests.
6401.103  Prior approval for outside employment.

    Authority: 5 U.S.C. 7301; 5 U.S.C. App. (Ethics in Government Act of 
1978); 42 U.S.C. 203(c)(1); E.O. 12674, 54 FR 15159, 3 CFR, 1989 Comp., 
p. 215, as modified by E.O. 12731, 55 FR 42547, 3 CFR, 1990 Comp., p. 
306; 5 CFR 2635.105, 2635.403(a), 2635.802(a), 2635.803.

    Source: 61 FR 40502, Aug. 2, 1996, unless otherwise noted.



Sec. 6401.101  General.

    In accordance with 5 CFR 2635.105, the regulations in this part 
apply to employees of the Environmental Protection Agency and supplement 
the Standards of Ethical Conduct for Employees of the Executive Branch 
contained in 5 CFR part 2635.



Sec. 6401.102  Prohibited financial interests.

    (a) The following employees are prohibited from holding the types of 
financial interests described in this section:
    (1) Employees in the Office of Mobile Sources are prohibited from 
having outside employment with or holding stock or any other financial 
interest in manufacturers of automobiles and mobile source pollution 
control equipment.
    (2) Employees in the Office of Pesticide Programs are prohibited 
from having outside employment with or holding stock or any other 
financial interest in companies that manufacture or provide wholesale 
distribution of pesticide products registered by the EPA. These 
restrictions apply to companies with subsidiaries in these areas but do 
not include retail distributors to the general public.
    (3) Employees in the Office of Information Resources Management 
involved with data management contracting or computer contracting are 
prohibited from having outside employment with or holding stock or any 
other financial interest in data management, computer, or information 
processing firms.
    (4) Employees who perform functions or duties under the Surface 
Mining Control and Reclamation Act (such as reviewing Environmental 
Impact Statements of the Office of Surface Mining in the Department of 
Interior) are prohibited by 30 U.S.C. 1211(f) from holding direct or 
indirect interests in underground or surface coal mining operations.
    (i) Implementing regulations of the Office of Surface Mining at 30 
CFR 706.3 define the terms ``direct financial interest'' and ``indirect 
financial interest'' as follows:
    (A) Direct financial interest means ownership or part ownership by 
an employee of land, stocks, bonds, debentures, warrants, a partnership, 
shares, or other holding and also means any other arrangement where the 
employee may benefit from his or her holding in or salary from coal 
mining operations. Direct financial interests include employment, 
pensions, creditor, real property and other financial relationships.
    (B) Indirect financial interest means the same financial 
relationships as for direct ownership but where the employee reaps the 
benefits of such interests, including interests held by the employee's 
spouse, minor child or other relatives, including in-laws, residing in 
the employee's home. The employee will not be deemed to have an indirect 
financial interest if there is no relationship between the employee's 
functions or duties and the coal mining operation in which the spouse, 
minor child or other resident relative holds a financial interest.
    (ii) Violation of the restrictions in this section is punishable by 
a fine of up to $2,500 or imprisonment for not more that one year, or 
both.
    (iii) Employees who perform functions or duties under the Surface 
Mining Control and Reclamation Act are not prohibited thereunder from 
holding interests in excepted investment funds as defined at 5 CFR 
2634.310(c)(2) provided that such funds are widely diversified, that is, 
hold no more than 5% of the value of their portfolios in the securities 
of any one issuer (other than the United States Government) and no

[[Page 701]]

more than 20% in any particular economic or geographic sector.
    (5) Members of the Interagency Testing Committee established under 
section 4(e) of the Toxic Substances Control Act (15 U.S.C. 2603(e)) are 
prohibited thereunder from holding any stocks or bonds, or having any 
substantial pecuniary interest, in any person engaged in the 
manufacture, processing, or distribution in commerce of any substance or 
mixture subject to any requirement of the Act or any rule or order 
issued under the Act and, for a period of twelve months after their 
committee service has ceased, are prohibited thereunder from accepting 
employment or compensation from any person subject to any requirement of 
the Act or to any rule or order issued under the Act.
    (i) The statutory prohibitions in this section are enforceable by an 
action for a court order to restrain violations.
    (ii) Members of the Interagency Testing Committee are not prohibited 
thereunder from holding interests in excepted investment funds as 
defined at 5 CFR 2634.310(c)(2) provided that such fund are widely 
diversified, that is, hold no more than 5% of the value of their 
portfolios in the securities of any one issuer (other than the United 
States Government) and no more than 20% in any particular economic 
sector.
    (b) The Designated Agency Ethics Official or the cognizant Deputy 
Ethics Official may grant a written waiver from the prohibitions in 
paragraph (a)(1) through (a)(3) of this section based on a determination 
that the waiver is not inconsistent with part 2635 of this title or 
otherwise prohibited by law and that, under the particular 
circumstances, application of the prohibition is not necessary to avoid 
the appearance of misuse of position or loss of impartiality, or 
otherwise to ensure confidence in the impartiality and objectivity with 
which agency programs are administered. A waiver under this paragraph 
may impose appropriate conditions, such as requiring execution of a 
written disqualification.



Sec. 6401.103  Prior approval for outside employment.

    (a) Requirement for approval. An employee shall obtain approval from 
his or her Deputy Ethics Official before engaging in outside employment, 
with or without compensation, that involves:
    (1) Consulting services;
    (2) The practice of a profession as defined in 5 CFR 2636.305(b)(1);
    (3) Holding State or local public office;
    (4) Subject matter that deals in significant part with the policies, 
programs or operations of EPA or any matter to which the employee 
presently is assigned or to which the employee has been assigned during 
the previous one-year period; or
    (5) The provision of services to or for:
    (i) An EPA contractor or subcontractor;
    (ii) The holder of an EPA assistance agreement or subagreement; or
    (iii) A firm regulated by the EPA office or Region in which the 
employee serves.
    (b) Form and content of request. The employee's request for approval 
of outside employment shall be submitted in writing to his or her Deputy 
Ethics Official. The request shall be sent through the employee's 
immediate supervisor (for the supervisor's information) and shall 
include:
    (1) Employee's name, title and grade;
    (2) Nature of the outside activity, including a full description of 
the services to be performed and the amount of compensation expected;
    (3) The name and business of the person or organization for which 
the work will be done (in cases of self-employment, indicate the type of 
services to be rendered and estimate the number of clients or customers 
anticipated during the next 6 months);
    (4) The estimated time to be devoted to the activity;
    (5) Whether the service will be performed entirely outside of normal 
duty hours (if not, estimate the number of hours of absence from work 
required);
    (6) The employee's statement that no official duty time or 
Government property, resources, or facilities not available to the 
general public will be used

[[Page 702]]

in connection with the outside employment;
    (7) The basis for compensation (e.g., fee, per diem, per annum, 
etc.);
    (8) The employee's statement that he or she has read, is familiar 
with, and will abide by the restrictions described in 5 CFR part 2635 
and Sec. 6401.102; and
    (9) An identification of any EPA assistance agreements or contracts 
held by a person to or for whom services would be provided.
    (c) Standard for approval. Approval shall be granted only upon a 
determination that the outside employment is not expected to involve 
conduct prohibited by statute or Federal regulation, including 5 CFR 
part 2635 and Sec. 6401.102. The decision must be in writing.
    (d) Keeping the record up-to-date. If there is a change in the 
nature or scope of the duties or services performed or the nature of the 
employee's business, the employee must submit a revised request for 
approval. Where an employee transfers to an organization for which a 
different Deputy Ethics Official has responsibility, the employee must 
obtain approval from the new Deputy Ethics Official. In addition, each 
approved request is valid only for five years unless the employee's 
Deputy Ethics Official specifies a longer time period.
    (e) Definition of employment. For purposes of this section, 
``employment'' means any form of non-Federal employment, business 
relationship, or activity involving the provision of personal services 
by the employee, whether or not for compensation. It includes but is not 
limited to personal services as an officer, director, employee, agent, 
attorney, consultant, contractor, general partner, trustee, teacher, or 
speaker. It includes writing when done under an arrangement with another 
person for production or publication of the written product. It does 
not, however, include participation in the activities of nonprofit 
charitable, religious, professional, social, fraternal, educational, 
recreational, public service, or civic organizations, unless such 
activities are for compensation other than reimbursement for expenses.

[[Page 703]]



              CHAPTER LVII--GENERAL SERVICES ADMINISTRATION




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PART 6701--SUPPLEMENTAL STANDARDS OF ETHICAL CONDUCT FOR EMPLOYEES OF THE GENERAL SERVICES ADMINISTRATION--Table of Contents




Sec.
6701.101  General.
6701.102  Prohibition on solicited sales to subordinates.
6701.103  Prohibited purchases of property sold by GSA.
6701.104  Prohibited purchases of real estate by certain GSA employees 
          involved in the acquisition or disposal of real estate.
6701.105  Taking or disposing of Government property.
6701.106  Prior approval for outside employment.
6701.107  Reporting waste, fraud, abuse and corruption.

    Authority: 5 U.S.C. 7301; 5 U.S.C. App. (Ethics in Government Act of 
1978); E.O. 12674, 54 FR 15159, 3 CFR, 1989 Comp., p. 215, as modified 
by E.O. 12731, 55 FR 42547, 3 CFR, 1990 Comp., p. 306; 5 CFR 2635.105, 
2635.702, 2635.703, 2635.802, 2635.803.

    Source: 61 FR 56401, Nov. 1, 1996, unless otherwise noted.



Sec. 6701.101  General.

    In accordance with 5 CFR 2635.105, the regulations in this part 
apply to employees of the General Services Administration (GSA) and 
supplement the Standards of Ethical Conduct for Employees of the 
Executive Branch (Standards) contained in 5 CFR part 2635. In addition 
to the executive branch-wide Standards in 5 CFR part 2635 and this part, 
GSA employees are subject to the executive branch financial disclosure 
regulations contained in 5 CFR part 2634.



Sec. 6701.102  Prohibition on solicited sales to subordinates.

    A GSA employee shall not engage in solicitation of sales, on or off 
duty, to any GSA employee under his supervision, at any level. This 
prohibition applies, but is not limited to, solicitation for the sale of 
insurance, stock, mutual funds, real estate, computer equipment and any 
other commodities, goods or services except:
    (a) The one-time sale of the employee's personal property or 
privately owned dwelling; or
    (b) Sales made in the course of outside employment of GSA employees 
in retail stores and under other circumstances not involving 
solicitation.



Sec. 6701.103  Prohibited purchases of property sold by GSA.

    (a) General prohibition. Except as provided in paragraphs (b) and 
(c) of this section, no GSA employee, or spouse or minor child of a GSA 
employee, shall purchase, directly or indirectly Government property, 
real or personal, being sold by GSA.
    (b) Exception. The prohibition in paragraph (a) of this section does 
not apply to the purchase of foreign gifts deposited with the agency 
pursuant to 5 U.S.C. 7342, that an employee may purchase pursuant to 41 
CFR part 101-49.
    (c) Waiver. An employee may make a purchase otherwise prohibited by 
paragraph (a) of this section where a written waiver of the prohibition 
has been given to the employee by the Administrator of GSA or his 
designee. Such a waiver may be granted only upon a determination that 
the waiver is not otherwise prohibited by law and that, in the mind of a 
reasonable person with knowledge of the particular circumstances, the 
purchase of the property will not raise a question as to whether the 
employee has used his official position or nonpublic information to 
obtain an advantageous purchase or create an appearance of loss of 
impartiality in the performance of the employee's duties.



Sec. 6701.104  Prohibited purchases of real estate by certain GSA employees involved in the acquisition or disposal of real estate.

    (a) General prohibition. Except as provided in paragraphs (b) and 
(c) of this section, employees who personally and substantially 
participate in or have official responsibility for the acquisition or 
disposal of real estate or interests therein, shall not directly or 
indirectly purchase or participate as an agent or otherwise in the 
purchase of any real estate or interest therein.
    (b) Exception. The prohibition in paragraph (a) of this section does 
not apply to an employee's purchase of real estate for use as his 
personal or other residential property, such as a vacation home.

[[Page 705]]

    (c) Waiver. An employee may make a purchase otherwise prohibited by 
this section where a written waiver of the prohibition has been given to 
the employee by the employee's immediate supervisor, with the advice of 
a Deputy Standards of Conduct Counsellor or the Designated Agency Ethics 
Official. Such a waiver may be granted only if a determination is made 
that the waiver is not otherwise prohibited by law or regulation, and 
that in the mind of a reasonable person with knowledge of the particular 
circumstances, the purchase of such real estate or interest therein will 
not raise a question as to whether the employee will use his official 
position or nonpublic information to obtain an advantageous purchase or 
create an appearance of loss of impartiality in the performance of the 
employee's duties.



Sec. 6701.105  Taking or disposing of Government property.

    An employee shall not, directly or indirectly, take or dispose of, 
or allow the taking or disposal of, Government property, unless 
authorized to do so. For purposes of this section, property remains 
Government property until disposed of in accordance with applicable 
rules and regulations.



Sec. 6701.106  Prior approval for outside employment.

    (a) Approval requirement. A GSA employee, other than a special 
Government employee, shall obtain written approval from his immediate 
supervisor prior to engaging in outside employment with a prohibited 
source, with or without compensation.
    (b) Form of request for approval. A request for approval of outside 
employment shall include, at a minimum, the following:
    (1) The employee's name, location and occupational title;
    (2) A brief description of the employee's official duties;
    (3) The nature of the outside employment, including a full 
description of the specific duties or services to be performed;
    (4) The name and address of the prospective outside employer for 
which work will be done; and
    (5) A statement that the employee currently has no official duties 
involving a matter that affects the outside employer and will disqualify 
himself from future participation in matters that could directly affect 
the outside employer.
    (c) Standard for approval. Approval shall be granted unless a 
determination is made that the outside employment is expected to involve 
conduct prohibited by statute or regulation, including 5 CFR part 2635 
and this part.
    (d) Definitions. For purposes of this section:
    (1) Employment means any form of non-Federal employment or business 
relationship involving the provision of personal services by the 
employee. It includes but is not limited to personal services as an 
officer, director, employee, agent, attorney, consultant, contractor, 
general partner, trustee, teacher, or speaker. It includes writing done 
under an arrangement with another person for production or publication 
of the written product. It does not, however, include participation in 
the activities of a nonprofit charitable, religious, professional, 
social, fraternal, educational, recreational, public service, or civic 
organization, unless the participation involves the provision of 
professional services or advice for compensation other than 
reimbursement for actual expenses.
    (2) Prohibited source has the meaning in 5 CFR 2635.203(d), and 
includes any person who:
    (i) Is seeking official action by GSA;
    (ii) Does business or seeks to do business with GSA;
    (iii) Conducts activities regulated by GSA;
    (iv) Has interests that may be substantially affected by performance 
or nonperformance of the employee's official duties; or
    (v) Is an organization a majority of whose members are described in 
paragraphs (d)(2)(i) through (iv) of this section.

    Note to Sec. 6701.106: An employee may obtain advice from an agency 
ethics official as to whether a potential employer is a prohibited 
source.

[[Page 706]]



Sec. 6701.107  Reporting waste, fraud, abuse and corruption.

    GSA employees shall disclose imme-
diately any waste, fraud, abuse, and corruption to appropriate 
authorities, such as the Office of Inspector General.

[[Page 707]]



     CHAPTER LVIII--BOARD OF GOVERNORS OF THE FEDERAL RESERVE SYSTEM




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                    for employees of the Board of Governors 
                    of the Federal Reserve System...........         708

[[Page 708]]



PART 6801--SUPPLEMENTAL STANDARDS OF ETHICAL CONDUCT FOR EMPLOYEES OF THE BOARD OF GOVERNORS OF THE FEDERAL RESERVE SYSTEM--Table of Contents




Sec.
6801.101  Purpose.
6801.102  Definitions.
6801.103  Prohibited financial interests.
6801.104  Speculative dealings. [Reserved]
6801.105  Prohibition on preferential terms from regulated institutions.
6801.106  Prohibition on supervisory employees' seeking credit from 
          institutions involved in work assignments.
6801.107  Disqualification of supervisory employees from matters 
          involving lenders.
6801.108  Restrictions resulting from employment of family members.
6801.109  Prior approval for compensated outside employment.

    Authority: 5 U.S.C. 7301; 5 U.S.C. App. (Ethics in Government Act of 
1978); 12 U.S.C. 244, 248; E.O. 12674, 54 FR 15159, 3 CFR, 1989 Comp., 
p.215, as modified by E.O. 12731, 55 FR 42547, 3 CFR, 1990 Comp., p.306; 
5 CFR 2635.105, 2635.403(a), 2635.502, 2635.803.

    Source: 61 FR 53828, Oct. 16, 1996, unless otherwise noted.



Sec. 6801.101  Purpose.

    In accordance with 5 CFR 2635.105, the regulations in this part 
supplement the Standards of Ethical Conduct for Employees of the 
Executive Branch found at 5 CFR part 2635. They apply to members and 
other employees of the Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System 
(``Board'').



Sec. 6801.102  Definitions.

    For purposes of this part:
    (a) Affiliate means any company that controls, is controlled by, or 
is under common corporate control with another company.
    (b) (1) Debt or equity interest includes secured and unsecured 
bonds, debentures, notes, securitized assets, commercial paper, and 
preferred and common stock. The term encompasses both current and 
contingent ownership interests therein; any such beneficial or legal 
interest derived from a trust; any right to acquire or dispose of any 
long or short position in debt or equity interests; any interests 
convertible into debt or equity interests; and any options, rights, 
warrants, puts, calls, straddles, and derivatives with respect thereto.
    (2) Debt or equity interest does not include deposits; credit union 
shares; any future interest created by someone other than the employee, 
his or her spouse, or dependent; or any right as a beneficiary of an 
estate that has not been settled.
    (c) Dependent child means an employee's son, daughter, stepson, or 
stepdaughter if:
    (1) Unmarried, under the age of 21, and living in the employee's 
household; or
    (2) Claimed as a ``dependent'' on the employee's income tax return.
    (d) Depository institution means a bank, trust company, thrift 
institution, or any institution that accepts deposits, including a bank 
chartered under the laws of a foreign country.
    (e) Employee means an officer or employee of the Board, including a 
Board member. It does not include a special Government employee.
    (f) Primary government securities dealer means a firm with which the 
Federal Reserve conducts its open market operations.
    (g) Supervisory employee means an employee who is a member of the 
professional staff at the Board with responsibilities in the area of 
banking supervision and regulation.



Sec. 6801.103  Prohibited financial interests.

    (a) Prohibited interests. Except as permitted by this section, an 
employee, or an employee's spouse or minor child, shall not own or 
control, directly or indirectly, any debt or equity interest in:
    (1) A depository institution or any of its affiliates; or
    (2) A primary government securities dealer or any of its affiliates.
    (b) Exceptions. The prohibition in paragraph (a) of this section 
does not apply to the ownership or control of a debt or equity interest 
in the following:
    (1) Nonbanking holding companies. A publicly traded holding company 
that:
    (i) Owns a bank and either the holding company or the bank is exempt 
under the Bank Holding Company Act of 1956, 12 U.S.C. 1841 et seq., (for 
example, a credit card bank, a nonbank

[[Page 709]]

bank or a grandfathered bank holding company), and the holding company's 
predominant activity is not the ownership or operation of banks and 
thrifts;
    (ii) Owns a thrift and its predominant activity is not the ownership 
or operation of banks and thrifts; or
    (iii) Owns a primary government securities dealer and its 
predominant activity is not the ownership or operation of banks, thrifts 
or securities firms.
    (2) Mutual funds. A publicly traded or publicly available mutual 
fund or other collective investment fund if:
    (i) The fund does not have a stated policy of concentration in the 
financial services industry; and
    (ii) Neither the employee nor the employee's spouse exercises or has 
the ability to exercise control over the financial interests held by the 
fund or their selection.
    (3) Pension plans. A widely held, diversified pension or other 
retirement fund that is administered by an independent trustee.
    (c) Waivers. The Board's Designated Agency Ethics Official, in 
consultation with Division management, may grant a written waiver 
permitting the employee to own or control a debt or equity interest 
prohibited by paragraph (a) of this section if:
    (1) Extenuating circumstances exist, such as that ownership or 
control was acquired:
    (i) Through inheritance, gift, merger, acquisition, or other change 
in corporate structure, or otherwise without specific intent on the part 
of the employee, spouse, or minor child to acquire the debt or equity 
interest; or
    (ii) By an employee's spouse as part of a compensation package in 
connection with the spouse's employment or prior to marriage to the 
employee;
    (2) The employee makes a prompt and complete written disclosure of 
the interest;
    (3) The employee's disqualification from participating in any 
particular matter having a direct and predictable effect on the 
institution or any of its affiliates does not unduly interfere with the 
full performance of the employee's duties; and
    (4) Granting the waiver would be consistent with Division policy.
    (d) Disqualification. If an employee or an employee's spouse or 
minor child holds an interest in an entity under paragraph (b)(1) or (c) 
of this section, the employee must consult the Designated Agency Ethics 
Official in order to determine whether the employee must be disqualified 
from participating in any particular matter involving that entity or 
affiliate under the conflicts of interest rules of the Office of 
Government Ethics.



Sec. 6801.104  Speculative dealings. [Reserved]



Sec. 6801.105  Prohibition on preferential terms from regulated institutions.

    An employee may not accept a loan from, or enter into any other 
financial relationship with, an institution regulated by the Board, if 
the loan or financial relationship is governed by terms more favorable 
than would be available in like circumstances to members of the public.



Sec. 6801.106  Prohibition on supervisory employees' seeking credit from institutions involved in work assignments.

    (a) Prohibition on supervisory employee's seeking credit. (1) A 
supervisory employee may not, on his or her own behalf, or on behalf of 
his or her spouse or child or anyone else (including any business or 
nonprofit organization), seek or accept credit from, or renew or 
renegotiate credit with, a depository institution or any of its 
affiliates if the institution or affiliate is a party to an application, 
enforcement action, investigation, or other particular matter involving 
specific parties pending before the Board and:
    (i) The supervisory employee is assigned to the matter; or
    (ii) The supervisory employee is aware of the pendency of the matter 
and knows that he or she will participate in the matter by action, 
advice or recommendation.
    (2) The prohibition in paragraph (a)(1) of this section also applies 
for three months after the supervisory employee's participation in the 
matter has ended.
    (b) Credit sought by spouse and other related persons. A supervisory 
employee must disqualify himself or herself from

[[Page 710]]

participating (by action, advice or recommendation) in any application, 
enforcement action, investigation or other particular matter involving 
specific parties to which a depository institution or any of its 
affiliates is a party as soon as the supervisory employee learns that 
any of the following related persons are seeking or have sought or 
accepted credit from, or have renewed or renegotiated credit with, the 
depository institution or any of its affiliates while the matter is 
pending before the Board:
    (1) The employee's spouse or dependent child;
    (2) A company or business if the employee or the employee's spouse 
or dependent child owns or controls more than 10 percent of its equity; 
or
    (3) A partnership if the employee, or the employee's spouse or 
dependent child is a general partner.
    (c) Exception. The prohibition in paragraph (a) of this section and 
the disqualification requirement in paragraph (b) of this section do not 
apply with respect to credit obtained through the use of a credit card 
or overdraft protection on terms and conditions available to the public.
    (d) Waivers. The Board's Designated Agency Ethics Official, after 
consulting with the relevant division director, may grant a written 
waiver from the prohibition in paragraph (a) of this section, or the 
disqualification requirement in paragraph (b) of this section, based on 
a determination that participation in matters otherwise prohibited by 
this section would not create an appearance of loss of impartiality or 
use of public office for private gain, and would not otherwise be 
inconsistent with the Office of Government Ethics' Standards of Ethical 
Conduct for Employees of the Executive Branch (5 CFR part 2635) or 
prohibited by law.



Sec. 6801.107  Disqualification of supervisory employees from matters involving lenders.

    (a) Disqualification required. A supervisory employee may not 
participate by action, advice or recommendation in any application, 
enforcement action, investigation, or other particular matter involving 
specific parties to which a depository institution or its affiliate is a 
party if any of the following are indebted to the depository institution 
or any of its affiliates:
    (1) The employee;
    (2) The spouse or dependent child of the employee;
    (3) A company or business if the employee or the employee's spouse 
or dependent child owns or controls more than 10 percent of its equity; 
or
    (4) A partnership if the employee or the employee's spouse or 
dependent child is a general partner.
    (b) Exceptions--(1) Consumer credit on nonpreferential terms. 
Disqualification of a supervisory employee is not required by paragraph 
(a) of this section for the following types of indebtedness if payment 
on the indebtedness is current and the indebtedness is on terms and 
conditions offered to the public:
    (i) Credit extended through the use of a credit card;
    (ii) Credit extended through use of an overdraft protection line;
    (iii) Amortizing consumer credit (e.g., home mortgage loans, 
automobile loans); and
    (iv) Credit extended under home equity lines of credit.
    (2) Indebtedness of a spouse or dependent child. Disqualification is 
not required with respect to any indebtedness of the employee's spouse 
or dependent child, or a company, business or partnership in which the 
spouse or dependent child has an interest described in paragraphs (a)(3) 
and (a)(4) of this section, if:
    (i) The indebtedness represents the sole financial interest or 
responsibility of the spouse, child, company, business or partnership 
and is not derived from the employee's income, assets or activities; and
    (ii) The employee has no knowledge of the identity of the lender.
    (c) Waivers. The Board's Designated Agency Ethics Official, after 
consulting with the relevant Division director, may grant a written 
waiver from the disqualification requirement in paragraph (a) of this 
section using the authorization process set forth in the Office of 
Government Ethics' Standards of Ethical Conduct at 5 CFR 2635.502(d).

[[Page 711]]



Sec. 6801.108  Restrictions resulting from employment of family members.

    A supervisory employee may not participate in any particular matter 
to which a depository institution or its affiliate is a party if the 
depository institution or affiliate employs his or her spouse, child, 
parent or sibling unless the supervising officer, with the concurrence 
of the Board's Designated Agency Ethics Official, has authorized the 
employee to participate in the matter using the authorization process 
set forth in the Office of Government Ethics' Standards of Ethical 
Conduct at 5 CFR 2635.502(d).



Sec. 6801.109  Prior approval for compensated outside employment.

    (a) Approval requirement. An employee shall obtain prior written 
approval from his or her Division director (or the Division director's 
designee) and the concurrence of the Board's Designated Agency Ethics 
Official before engaging in compensated outside employment.
    (b) Standard for approval. Approval will be granted unless a 
determination is made that the prospective outside employment is 
expected to involve conduct prohibited by statute or Federal regulation, 
including 5 CFR part 2635 and this part.
    (c) Definition of employment. For purposes of this section, the term 
compensated outside employment means any form of compensated non-Federal 
employment or business relationship involving the provision of personal 
services by the employee. It includes, but is not limited to, personal 
services as an officer, director, employee, agent, attorney, consultant, 
contractor, general partner, trustee, teacher or speaker.

[[Page 713]]



       CHAPTER LIX--NATIONAL AERONAUTICS AND SPACE ADMINISTRATION




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Part                                                                Page
6901            Supplemental standards of ethical conduct 
                    for employees of the National 
                    Aeronautics and Space Administration....         714

[[Page 714]]



PART 6901--SUPPLEMENTAL STANDARDS OF ETHICAL CONDUCT FOR EMPLOYEES OF THE NATIONAL AERONAUTICS AND SPACE ADMINISTRATION--Table of Contents




Sec.
6901.101  General.
6901.102  Designation of responsible officials.
6901.103  Outside employment.

    Authority: 5 U.S.C. 7301; 5 U.S.C. App. (Ethics in Government Act of 
1978); 42 U.S.C. 203(c)(1); E.O. 12674, 54 FR 15159, 3 CFR, 1989 Comp., 
p. 215, as modified by E.O. 12731, 55 FR 42547, 3 CFR, 1990 Comp., p. 
306; 5 CFR 2635.105, 2635.403(a), 2635.802(a), 2635.803.

    Source: 59 FR 49336, Sept. 28, 1994, unless otherwise noted.



Sec. 6901.101  General.

    In accordance with 5 CFR 2635.105, the regulations in this part 
apply to employees of the National Aeronautics and Space Administration 
(NASA) and supplement the Standards of Ethical Conduct for Employees of 
the Executive Branch contained in 5 CFR part 2635. In addition to the 
standards in 5 CFR part 2635 and this part, employees are subject to the 
executive branch financial disclosure regulations contained in 5 CFR 
part 2634, and to additional regulations regarding their conduct 
contained in 5 CFR part 735 and 14 CFR part 1207.



Sec. 6901.102   Designation of responsible officials.

    (a) Designated Agency Ethics Official. The General Counsel of NASA 
is the Designated Agency Ethics Official (DAEO) and as such has the 
responsibilities, authorities, and duties set forth in 5 CFR 2638.203.
    (b) Alternate Designated Agency Ethics Official. The Associate 
General Counsel (General) shall serve as the Alternate Designated Agency 
Ethics Official in accordance with 5 CFR 2638.202(b).
    (c) Deputy Ethics Officials. (1) The following officials are 
designated as NASA Deputy Ethics Officials pursuant to 5 CFR 
2638.202(b)(7):
    (i) Deputy General Counsel;
    (ii) Associate General Counsel (General);
    (iii) Senior Ethics Attorney assigned to the Associate General 
Counsel (General); and
    (iv) Chief Counsel at each NASA Field or Component Installation.
    (2) Deputy Ethics Officials may carry out responsibilities delegated 
to them through designated subordinates, but shall retain ultimate 
responsibility for the ethics functions assigned to them.
    (d) Agency Designee. As used in 5 CFR part 2635, the term ``Agency 
Designee'' at NASA refers to the following:
    (1) For employees at NASA Headquarters, the DAEO, the Alternate 
DAEO, or the Associate Administrator for Human Resources and Education; 
and
    (2) For employees at Field or Component Installations, the Director 
of the Installation, who may delegate specific responsibilities of the 
Agency Designee to the Installation's Chief Counsel or to another 
official who reports directly to the Director.



Sec. 6901.103   Outside employment.

    (a) General. A NASA employee shall not engage in outside employment 
prohibited by paragraph (c) of this section and shall obtain approval 
before engaging in the outside employment activities specified in 
paragraph (d) of this section.
    (b) Definitions. For purposes of this section:
    (1) Key official means an officer or employee, other than a special 
Government employee, who is required, in accordance with 5 CFR part 
2634, to file a public financial disclosure report or who holds a 
position as astronaut, astronaut candidate, procurement officer, or 
chief counsel.
    (2) Outside employment means any form of compensated or 
uncompensated non-Federal employment or business relationship involving 
the provision of personal services by the employee. It includes, but is 
not limited to, personal services as an officer, director, employee, 
agent, attorney, consultant, contractor, general partner, trustee, 
teacher, or speaker. It includes writing when done under an arrangement 
with another person for production or publication of the written 
product. It does not, however, include participation in the activities 
of a nonprofit charitable, religious, professional, social, fraternal, 
educational, recreational, public service, or civic organization, unless

[[Page 715]]

the organization is a prohibited source or unless such activities 
involve the provision of professional services or advice, or are for 
compensation other than reimbursement of expenses.
    (3) Profession has the meaning set forth in 5 CFR 2636.305(b)(1).
    (4) Prohibited source has the meaning set forth in 5 CFR 
2635.203(d).
    (c) Prohibited outside employment. A NASA employee, other than a 
special Government employee, shall not engage in outside employment with 
the following:
    (1) A NASA contractor, subcontractor, or grantee in connection with 
work performed by that entity for NASA; or
    (2) A party to a Space Act agreement, Commercial Launch Act 
agreement, or other agreement to which NASA is a party pursuant to 
specific statutory authority, if the employment is in connection with 
work performed under that agreement.
    (d) Prior approval for outside employment. A NASA employee, other 
than a special Government employee, shall request and obtain 
administrative approval before engaging in the following outside 
employment activities:
    (1) Teaching, speaking, writing, or editing, unless the subject 
matter pertains to the private interests of the employee, such as a 
hobby, cultural activity, or nonwork related professional pursuit;
    (2) The practice of a profession or the rendering of professional 
consulting services;
    (3) The management or conduct of a business in which the employee or 
the employee's spouse has an ownership interest;
    (4) Holding a State or local public office, whether by election or 
appointment;
    (5) Employment with a NASA contractor, subcontractor, or grantee;
    (6) Employment with a party to a Space Act agreement, Commercial 
Launch Act agreement, or other agreement to which NASA is a party 
pursuant to specific statutory authority;
    (7) Serving as an officer, trustee, or member of a board, 
directorate, or other such body of a for profit organization or of a 
nonprofit organization that is a prohibited source; or
    (8) Employment which involves the practice of a NASA-owned 
invention.
    (e) Prior approval requested by employee. Even when not required by 
paragraph (d) of this section, a NASA employee who is in doubt as to the 
propriety of outside employment or another outside activity may request 
prior approval using the procedures set forth in this section.
    (f) Form of request for approval. (1) A request for administrative 
approval of outside employment shall be in writing and shall include the 
following:
    (i) The employee's name and occupational title;
    (ii) The nature of the employment, including a full description of 
the specific duties or services to be performed;
    (iii) The name and address of the person or organization for which 
work will be done;
    (iv) The estimated total time that will be devoted to the activity. 
If the employment is on a continuing basis, indicate the estimated 
number of hours per year; for other employment, indicate the anticipated 
beginning and ending date;
    (v) A statement as to whether the work can be performed entirely 
outside of the employee's regular duty hours and, if not, the estimated 
number of hours of absence from work that will be required;
    (vi) The amount of compensation, if any, to be received; and
    (vii) A statement that the employee currently has no official duties 
involving a matter that affects the outside employer and will disqualify 
from future participation in matters that could directly affect the 
outside employer.
    (2) Locally prepared forms providing for collection of the 
information required by paragraph (f)(1) of this section may be used for 
submission of the request and subsequent approval or disapproval.
    (g) Approval of requests--(1) Key Officials. The Headquarters 
Associate Administrator for Human Resources and Education has authority 
to approve requests for approval of outside employment submitted by NASA 
Key Officials. Prior to approval or disapproval, Key Official requests 
shall be submitted to the appropriate Official-in- 

[[Page 716]]

charge of the Headquarters Office or to the Director of the appropriate 
Field or Component Installation, who shall add a recommendation and 
forward the request through the General Counsel to the Associate 
Administrator.
    (2) Employees other than Key Officials. The appropriate Official-in-
Charge of a Headquarters Office, or the Director of a Field or Component 
Installation, or a person designated to act for the Director, has 
authority to approve requests for approval of outside employment 
submitted by employees other than NASA Key Officials. Prior to approval 
or disapproval:
    (i) Requests by NASA Headquarters personnel shall be submitted to 
and reviewed by the employee's supervisor and by the Office of the 
Associate General Counsel (General); and
    (ii) Requests by Field or Component Installation personnel shall be 
submitted to and reviewed by the employee's supervisor and by a Deputy 
Ethics Official or designee.
    (3) Standard for approval. Approval will be granted unless a 
determination is made that the prospective outside employment is 
expected to involve conduct prohibited by statute or Federal regulation, 
including 5 CFR part 2635 and this part.
    (4) Scope of approval. Approval will be for a period not to exceed 3 
years. Upon a significant change in the nature or scope of the outside 
employment or in the employee's NASA position, the employee shall submit 
a revised request for approval.
    (5) Notification of approval or disapproval. Employees will be 
notified in writing of the action taken on their requests.
    (6) Records of requests. All requests for approval will be 
maintained in the local Human Resources/Personnel Office for the 
duration of the requester's NASA employment.

[59 FR 3772, Jan. 27, 1994]

[[Page 717]]



                CHAPTER LX--UNITED STATES POSTAL SERVICE




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7001            Supplemental standards of ethical conduct 
                    for employees of the United States 
                    Postal Service..........................         718

[[Page 718]]



PART 7001--SUPPLEMENTAL STANDARDS OF ETHICAL CONDUCT FOR EMPLOYEES OF THE UNITED STATES POSTAL SERVICE--Table of Contents




Sec.
7001.101  General.
7001.102  Restrictions on outside employment and business activities.
7001.103  Statutory prohibition against interests in contracts to carry 
          mail and acting as agent for contractors.

    Authority: 5 U.S.C. 7301; 5 U.S.C. App. (Ethics in Government Act of 
1978); 39 U.S.C. 401; E.O. 12674, 54 FR 15159, 3 CFR, 1989 Comp., p. 
215, as modified by E.O. 12731, 55 FR 42547, 3 CFR, 1990 Comp., p. 306; 
5 CFR 2635.105, 2635.802, and 2635.803.

    Source: 60 FR 47240, Sept. 11, 1995, unless otherwise noted.



Sec. 7001.101  General.

    In accordance with 5 CFR 2635.105, the regulations in this part 
supplement the Standards of Ethical Conduct for Employees of the 
Executive Branch contained in 5 CFR part 2635, as applied to employees 
of the United States Postal Service (Postal Service). Postal Service 
employees are subject, in addition to the standards in 5 CFR part 2635 
and this part, to the executive branch financial disclosure regulations 
contained in 5 CFR part 2634, and to any rules of conduct issued 
separately by the Postal Service, including but not limited to 
regulations contained in 39 CFR part 447, the Postal Service's Employee 
and Labor Relations Manual, and the Postal Service's Procurement Manual.



Sec. 7001.102  Restrictions on outside employment and business activities.

    (a) Prohibited outside employment and business activities. No Postal 
Service employee shall:
    (1) Engage in outside employment or business activities with or for 
a person, including oneself, engaged in:
    (i) The manufacture of any uniform or other product required by the 
Postal Service for use by its employees or customers;
    (ii) The transportation of mail under Postal Service contract to or 
from the postal facility at which the employee works, or to or from a 
postal facility within the delivery area of a post office in which the 
employee works;
    (iii) Providing consultation, advice, or any subcontracting service, 
with respect to the operations, programs, or procedures of the Postal 
Service, to any person who has a contract with the Postal Service or who 
the employee has reason to believe will compete for such a contract; or
    (iv) The operation of a commercial mail receiving agency registered 
with the Postal Service, or the delivery outside the mails of any type 
of mailable matter, except daily newspapers; or
    (2) Engage in any sales activity, including the solicitation of 
business or the receipt of orders, for oneself or any other person, 
while on duty or in uniform, or at any postal facility.
    (b) Prior approval for outside employment and business activities--
(1) Requirement for approval. A Postal Service employee shall obtain 
approval, in accordance with paragraph (b)(2) of this section, prior to:
    (i) Engaging in outside employment or business activities with or 
for any person with whom the employee has official dealings on behalf of 
the Postal Service; or
    (ii) Engaging in outside employment or business activities, with or 
for a person, including oneself, whose interests are:
    (A) Substantially dependent upon, or potentially affected to a 
significant degree by, postal rates, fees, or classifications; or
    (B) Substantially dependent upon providing goods or services to, or 
for use in connection with, the Postal Service.
    (2) Submission and contents of request for approval. An employee who 
wishes to engage in outside employment or business activities for which 
prior approval is required by paragraph (b)(1) of this section shall 
submit a written request for approval to the Postal Service Ethical 
Conduct Officer or appropriate delegate. The request shall be 
accompanied by a statement from the employee's supervisor briefly 
summarizing the employee's duties and stating any workplace concerns 
raised by the employee's request for approval. The request for approval 
shall include:

[[Page 719]]

    (i) A brief description of the employee's official duties;
    (ii) The name of the outside employer, or a statement that the 
employee will be engaging in employment or business activities on his or 
her own behalf;
    (iii) The type of employment or business activities in which the 
outside employer, if any, is engaged;
    (iv) The type of services to be performed by the employee in 
connection with the outside employment or business activities;
    (v) A description of the employee's official dealings, if any, with 
the outside employer on behalf of the Postal Service; and
    (vi) Any additional information requested by the Ethical Conduct 
Officer or delegate that is needed to determine whether approval should 
be granted.
    (3) Standard for approval. The approval required by paragraph (b)(1) 
of this section shall be granted only upon a determination that the 
outside employment or business activity will not involve conduct 
prohibited by statute or federal regulation, including 5 CFR part 2635, 
which includes, among other provisions, the principle stated at 5 CFR 
2635.101(b)(14) that employees shall endeavor to avoid any actions 
creating the appearance that they are violating the law or the ethical 
standards set forth in part 2635.
    (c) Definitions. For purposes of this section:
    (1) Outside employment or business activity means any form of 
employment or business, whether or not for compensation. It includes, 
but is not limited to, the provision of personal services as officer, 
employee, agent, attorney, consultant, contractor, trustee, teacher, or 
speaker. It also includes, but is not limited to, engagement as 
principal, proprietor, general partner, holder of a franchise, operator, 
manager, or director. It does not include equitable ownership through 
the holding of publicly traded shares of a corporation.
    (2) A person having interests substantially dependent upon, or 
potentially affected to a significant degree by, postal rates, fees, or 
classifications includes a person:
    (i) Primarily engaged in the business of publishing or distributing 
a publication mailed at second-class rates of postage;
    (ii) Primarily engaged in the business of sending advertising, 
promotional, or other material on behalf of other persons through the 
mails;
    (iii) Engaged in a business that depends substantially upon the 
mails for the solicitation or receipt of orders for, or the delivery of, 
goods or services; or
    (iv) Who is, or within the past 4 years has been, a party to a 
proceeding before the Postal Rate Commission.
    (3) A person having interests substantially dependent upon providing 
goods or services to or for use in connection with the Postal Service 
includes a person:
    (i) Providing goods or services under contract with the Postal 
Service that can be expected to provide revenue exceeding $100,000 over 
the term of the contract and that provides five percent or more of the 
person's gross income for the person's current fiscal year; or
    (ii) Substantially engaged in the business of preparing items for 
others for mailing through the Postal Service.



Sec. 7001.103  Statutory prohibition against interests in contracts to carry mail and acting as agent for contractors.

    Section 440 of title 18, United States Code, makes it unlawful for 
any Postal Service employee to become interested in any contract for 
carrying the mail, or to act as agent, with or without compensation, for 
any contractor or person offering to become a contractor in any business 
before the Postal Service.

[[Page 721]]



          CHAPTER LXII--EQUAL EMPLOYMENT OPPORTUNITY COMMISSION




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7201            Supplemental standards of ethical conduct 
                    for employees of the Equal Employment 
                    Opportunity Commission..................         722

[[Page 722]]



PART 7201--SUPPLEMENTAL STANDARDS OF ETHICAL CONDUCT FOR EMPLOYEES OF THE EQUAL EMPLOYMENT OPPORTUNITY COMMISSION--Table of Contents




Sec.
7201.101  General.
7201.102  Prohibited outside employment.
7201.103  Prior approval for outside employment.

    Authority:  5 U.S.C. 7301; 5 U.S.C. App. (Ethics in Government Act 
of 1978); E.O. 12674, 54 FR 15159, 3 CFR, 1989 Comp., p. 215, as 
modified by E.O. 12731, 55 FR 42547, 3 CFR, 1990 Comp., p. 306; 5 CFR 
2635.105, 2635.403(a), 2635.802 and 2635.803.

    Source: 61 FR 7066, Feb. 26, 1996, unless otherwise noted.



Sec. 7201.101  General.

    In accordance with 5 CFR 2635.105, the regulations in this part 
apply to all employees of the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission 
(EEOC), including members of the Commission and the General Counsel, and 
supplement the Standards of Ethical Conduct for Employees of the 
Executive Branch contained in 5 CFR part 2635.



Sec. 7201.102  Prohibited outside employment.

    (a) No employee of the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission may 
engage in outside employment with a person who is currently and 
substantially affected by the employee's performance of his or her 
official duties because the person is a party or representative of a 
party to a particular matter involving specific parties.
    (b) No employee of the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission, 
other than a special Government employee, may receive compensation for 
representational services, or the rendering of advice or analysis, 
regarding any equal employment law or its application.
    (c) No employee of the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission, 
other than a special Government employee, may engage in outside 
employment involving a particular matter pending at EEOC or an equal 
employment opportunity matter in which EEOC or the Federal Government is 
a party. An employee may, however, provide behind-the-scenes assistance 
to immediate family members in matters pending at EEOC or equal 
employment opportunity matters in which EEOC or the Federal government 
is a party.



Sec. 7201.103  Prior approval for outside employment.

    (a) Before engaging in any outside employment, with or without 
compensation, an employee of the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission 
must obtain written approval from his or her Deputy Ethics Counselor or 
designee.
    (b) In addition to approval under paragraph (a) of this section, an 
employee must obtain prior written approval from the Designated Agency 
Ethics Official or designee to engage in:
    (1) Compensated outside employment;
    (2) The uncompensated practice of law; or
    (3) Uncompensated outside employment that involves representation or 
the rendering of advice or analysis regarding any equal employment law, 
or serving as an officer or director of an organization whose activities 
are devoted substantially to equal employment opportunity matters.
    (c) Approval will not be granted if the outside employment is 
expected to involve conduct inconsistent with or prohibited by a statute 
or Federal regulation, including 5 CFR part 2635 and this part.
    (d) For purposes of this section, ``employment'' means any form of 
non-Federal employment or business relationship involving the provision 
of personal services by the employee. It includes, but is not limited to 
personal services as an officer, director, employee, agent, attorney, 
consultant, contractor, general partner, trustee, teacher or speaker. It 
includes writing when done under an arrangement with another person for 
production or publication of the written product. It does not, however, 
include participation in the activities of a nonprofit charitable, 
religious, professional, social, fraternal, educational, recreational, 
public service or civic organization unless:

[[Page 723]]

    (1) The employee's participation involves the provision of 
professional services or advice;
    (2) The employee will receive compensation other than reimbursement 
of expenses; or
    (3) The organization's activities are devoted substantially to 
matters relating to equal employment law and the employee will serve as 
officer or director of the organization.

[[Page 725]]



                CHAPTER LXIII--INTER-AMERICAN FOUNDATION




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7301            Supplemental standards of ethical conduct 
                    for employees of the Inter-American 
                    Foundation..............................         726

[[Page 726]]



PART 7301--SUPPLEMENTAL STANDARDS OF ETHICAL CONDUCT FOR EMPLOYEES OF THE INTER-AMERICAN FOUNDATION--Table of Contents




Sec.
7301.101  General.
7301.102  Prior approval for outside teaching, speaking and writing.

    Authority: 5 U.S.C. 7301; E.O. 12674, 54 FR 15159, 3 CFR, 1989 
Comp., p. 215, as modified by E.O. 12731, 55 FR 42547, 3 CFR, 1990 Comp. 
p. 306; 5 CFR 2635.105, 2635.803; 5 CFR 2638.202(b).



Sec. 7301.101  General.

    (a) Purpose. In accordance with 5 CFR 2635.105, the regulations in 
this part apply to employees of the Inter-American Foundation, with the 
exception of members of the Foundation's Board of Directors and Advisory 
Council, and supplement the Standards of Ethical Conduct for Employees 
of the Executive Branch contained in 5 CFR part 2635. In addition to the 
standards in 5 CFR part 2635, directors and other employees are subject 
to the executive branch financial disclosure regulations contained in 5 
CFR part 2634.
    (b) Designated agency ethics official. For purposes of this part and 
otherwise as required by 5 CFR 2638.202, the General Counsel of the 
Inter-American Foundation shall serve as the designated agency ethics 
official. The Deputy General Counsel shall serve as the alternate agency 
ethics official.

[59 FR 3772, Jan. 27, 1994]



Sec. 7301.102  Prior approval for outside teaching, speaking and writing.

    (a) Before engaging in outside teaching, speaking or writing, for 
compensation, an employee, with the exception of members of the 
Foundation's Board of Directors and Advisory Council, shall obtain prior 
written approval from the designated agency ethics official or the 
alternate agency ethics official.
    (b) Approval shall be granted only upon a determination that the 
outside teaching, speaking or writing is not expected to involve conduct 
prohibited by statute or Federal regulation, including 5 CFR part 2635.

[59 FR 3772, Jan. 27, 1994]

[[Page 727]]



        CHAPTER LXV--DEPARTMENT OF HOUSING AND URBAN DEVELOPMENT




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Part                                                                Page
7501            Supplemental standards of ethical conduct 
                    for employees of the Department of 
                    Housing and Urban Development...........         728

[[Page 728]]



PART 7501--SUPPLEMENTAL STANDARDS OF ETHICAL CONDUCT FOR EMPLOYEES OF THE DEPARTMENT OF HOUSING AND URBAN DEVELOPMENT--Table of Contents




Sec.
7501.101  Purpose.
7501.102  Definitions.
7501.103  Waivers.
7501.104  Prohibited financial interests.
7501.105  Outside employment.
7501.106  Additional rules for certain Department employees involved in 
          the regulation or oversight of Government sponsored 
          enterprises.

    Authority: 5 U.S.C. 301, 7301, 7351, 7353; 5 U.S.C. App. (Ethics in 
Government Act of 1978); E.O. 12674, 54 FR 15159, 3 CFR, 1989 Comp., p. 
215, as modified by E.O. 12731, 55 FR 42547, 3 CFR, 1990 Comp., p. 306; 
5 CFR 2635.105, 2635.203(a), 2635.403(a), 2635.803, 2635.807.

    Source: 61 FR 36248, July 9, 1996, unless otherwise noted.



Sec. 7501.101  Purpose.

    In accordance with 5 CFR 2635.105, the regulations in this part 
apply to employees of the Department of Housing and Urban Development 
(HUD or Department) and supplement the Standards of Ethical Conduct for 
Employees of the Executive Branch contained in 5 CFR part 2635. 
Employees are required to comply with 5 CFR part 2635, this part, and 
any additional rules of conduct that the Department is authorized to 
issue.



Sec. 7501.102  Definitions.

    For purposes of this part, and otherwise as indicated, the following 
definitions shall apply:
    Affiliate means any entity that controls, is controlled by, or is 
under common control with another entity.
    Agency designee, as used also in 5 CFR part 2635, means the 
Associate General Counsel for Human Resources Law, the Assistant General 
Counsel, Ethics Law Division, and the HUD Field Office Assistant General 
Counsels; the Inspector General, for employees assigned to the Office of 
the Inspector General; and the General Counsel, Office of Federal 
Housing Enterprise Oversight, for employees assigned to the Office of 
Federal Housing Enterprise Oversight.
    Agency ethics official, as used also in 5 CFR part 2635, means the 
agency designees as specified above.
    Assistance means any contract, grant, loan, subsidy, guarantee, 
cooperative agreement or other financial assistance under a program 
administered by the HUD Secretary, and includes ``assistance'' awarded 
by the Department that is competitively redistributed to a second tier 
of applicants or awardees. The term does not include single family 
mortgage insurance provided under a program administered by the 
Secretary.
    Designated Agency Ethics Official (DAEO) means the General Counsel 
of HUD or the Deputy General Counsel (Operations) in the absence of the 
General Counsel.
    Employment means any compensated or uncompensated form of non-
Federal employment or business relationship, including self employment, 
involving the provision of personal services by the employee. It 
includes, but is not limited to, personal services as an officer, 
director, employee, agent, attorney, consultant, contractor, general 
partner, trustee, teacher or speaker. It includes writing when done 
under an arrangement with another person for production or publication 
of the written product.
    Security means all interests in debt or equity instruments. The term 
includes, without limitation, secured and unsecured bonds, debentures, 
notes, securitized assets and commercial paper including loans 
securitized by mortgages or deeds of trust and securities backed by such 
instruments, as well as all types of preferred and common stock. The 
term encompasses current and contingent ownership interests including 
any beneficial or legal interest derived from a trust. Such interest 
includes any right to acquire or dispose of any long or short position 
in such securities and also includes, without limit, interests 
convertible into such securities, as well as options, rights, warrants, 
puts, calls and straddles with respect thereto. The term shall not, 
however, be construed to include deposit accounts.

[[Page 729]]



Sec. 7501.103  Waivers.

    The Designated Agency Ethics Official may waive any provision of 
this part upon finding that the waiver will not result in conduct 
inconsistent with 5 CFR part 2635 or otherwise prohibited by law and 
that application of the provision is not necessary to ensure public 
confidence in the impartiality and objectivity with which the 
Department's programs are administered. Each waiver shall be in writing 
and supported by a statement of the facts and findings upon which it is 
based and may impose appropriate conditions, such as requiring the 
employee's execution of a written disqualification statement.



Sec. 7501.104  Prohibited financial interests.

    (a) General requirement. This section applies to all HUD employees 
except special Government employees who are not ``covered employees'' as 
defined in Sec. 7501.106(b)(1) of this part. Except as provided in 
paragraph (b) of this section, an employee, or an employee's spouse or 
minor child, shall not directly or indirectly receive, acquire or own:
    (1) Securities issued by the Federal National Mortgage Association 
(FNMA) or securities collateralized by FNMA securities;
    (2) Securities issued by the Federal Home Loan Mortgage Corporation 
(FHLMC) or securities collateralized by FHLMC securities;
    (3) Federal Housing Administration debentures or certificates of 
claim;
    (4) Stock or another financial interest in a multifamily project or 
single family dwelling, cooperative unit, or condominium unit, which is 
owned or subsidized by the Department, or which is subject to a note or 
mortgage or other security interest insured by the Department, except to 
the extent that the stock or other interest represents the employee's 
principal residence. Employees who wish to purchase a Department-held 
property as a principal residence must adhere to the procedures 
established by the Assistant Secretary for Housing for the 
administration of the property disposition program set forth in HUD 
Handbook 4310.5;
    (5) Any Department subsidy provided pursuant to Section 8 of the 
United States Housing Act of 1937, as amended, (42 U.S.C. 1437f) to or 
on behalf of a tenant of property owned by the employee. However, an 
employee may receive such a subsidy when:
    (i) The employee acquires without specific intent, as through gift 
or inheritance, a property which at the time of acquisition has a tenant 
receiving such a subsidy, but only as long as that tenant continues to 
reside in the property;
    (ii) An incumbent tenant who has not previously received such a 
subsidy becomes the beneficiary thereof, but only if there is no 
increase in that tenant's rent upon the commencement of subsidy payments 
other than normal annual adjustments; or
    (iii) The tenant is the parent, child, grandchild, or sibling of the 
employee, but only if there is no increase in that tenant's rent upon 
the commencement of subsidy payments other than normal annual 
adjustments; or
    (6) Any direct creditor interest in a mortgage insured by the 
Department.
    (b) Exception to prohibition for certain interests. Nothing in this 
section prohibits an employee, or the spouse or minor child of an 
employee, from acquiring, owning, or controlling:
    (1) An interest in a publicly traded or publicly available 
investment fund which, in its prospectus, does not indicate the 
objective or practice of concentrating its investments in resi dential 
mortgages or securities backed by residential mortgages, except those of 
the Government National Mortgage Association (GNMA), and the employee 
neither exercises control nor has the ability to exercise control over 
the financial interests held in the fund;
    (2) A limited partnership interest in a partnership which has at 
least 5,000 partnership interests, and no more than 25% of the gross 
value of the partnership interest constitutes projects subject to HUD 
held or insured mortgages or projects currently receiving the benefit of 
HUD subsidies; or
    (3) Mortgage insurance provided pursuant to section 203 of the 
National Housing Act (12 U.S.C. 1709) on the employee's principal 
residence and any one other single family residence.
    (c) Reporting and divestiture. An employee must report, in writing, 
to the

[[Page 730]]

appropriate agency ethics official, any interest prohibited under 
paragraph (a) of this section acquired prior to the commencement of 
employment with the Department or without specific intent, as through 
gift, inheritance, or marriage, within 30 days from the start of 
employment or acquisition of such interest. Such interest must be 
divested within 90 days from the date reported unless waived by the 
Designated Agency Ethics Official in accordance with Sec. 7501.103.



Sec. 7501.105  Outside employment.

    (a) Prohibited outside employment. Subject to the exceptions set 
forth in paragraph (b) of this section, HUD employees, except special 
Government employees, shall not engage in:
    (1) Employment involving active participation in a business dealing 
with or related to real estate or manufactured housing including but not 
limited to real estate brokerage, management and sales, architecture, 
engineering, mortgage lending, property insurance, appraisal services, 
construction, construction financing, land planning, or real estate 
development;
    (2) Employment with a person, other than a State or local 
government, who engages in lobbying activities concerning Department 
programs or who is required to report expenditures for lobbying 
activities or register as a lobbyist under 42 U.S.C. 3537b or similar 
statutes which require the registration of persons who attempt to 
influence the decisions of officers or employees of the Department;
    (3) Employment as an officer or director of a person who is a 
Department-approved mortgagee, a lending institution or an organization 
which services securities for the Department; or
    (4) Employment with the Federal National Mortgage Association, the 
Federal Home Loan Mortgage Corporation, the Federal Home Loan Bank 
System or any affiliate thereof.
    (b) Exceptions to employment prohibitions. The prohibitions set 
forth in paragraph (a) of this section do not apply to serving as an 
officer or a member of the Board of Directors of:
    (1) A Federal Credit Union;
    (2) A cooperative or condominium association for a housing project 
which is not subject to regulation by the Department or, if so 
regulated, in which the employee personally resides; or
    (3) An entity designated in writing by the Designated Agency Ethics 
Official.
    (c) Prior approval requirement. (1) Employees, except special 
Government employees, shall obtain the prior written approval of an 
Agency Ethics Official before accepting compensated or uncompensated 
employment:
    (i) As an officer, director, trustee, or general partner of, or in 
any other position of authority with, either a for-profit or non profit 
organization which directly or indirectly receives assistance from the 
Department.
    (ii) With a State or local government; or
    (iii) In the same professional field as that of the employee's 
official position.
    (2) Approval shall be granted unless the conduct is inconsisent with 
5 CFR part 2635 or this part.
    (d) Voluntary services. Subject to the restrictions and requirements 
contained in the conflict of interest laws, 5 CFR part 2635, and this 
part, employees are encouraged to volunteer their personal time to 
nonprofit organizations.

    Note to Sec. 75.105: An employee assigned to serve in an official 
capacity as the Department's liaison representative to an outside 
organization is not engaged in an outside activity to which this section 
applies. Notwithstanding, an employee may be assigned to serve as the 
Department's liaison representative only as authorized by law, and as 
approved by the Department under applicable procedures.



Sec. 7501.106  Additional rules for certain Department employees involved in the regulation or oversight of Government sponsored enterprises.

    (a) The following rules apply to certain Department employees whose 
duties involve the regulation or oversight of Government Sponsored 
Enterprises, specifically the Federal National Mortgage Association 
(FNMA) and the Federal Home Loan Mortgage Corporation (FHLMC). This 
section is in addition to Secs. 7501.101 to 7501.105.
    (b) Definitions. For purposes of this section, the following 
definitions are applicable:

[[Page 731]]

    (1) Except as provided in paragraph (b)(2) of this section, 
``covered employee'' means all employees in the Office of Federal 
Housing Enterprise Oversight and employees required to file a public or 
confidential financial disclosure report under 5 CFR part 2634 in:
    (i) The Office of the HUD Secretary, with the exception of the 
Office of Lead-Based Paint Abatement and Poisoning Prevention;
    (ii) The Office of the Assistant Secretary for Housing--Federal 
Housing Commissioner;
    (iii) The Office of Financial Institutions Regulation in the Office 
of the Assistant Secretary for Policy Development and Research;
    (iv) The Offices of Investigation, Program Standards and Evaluation, 
and Regulatory Initiatives and Federal Coordination within the Office of 
the Assistant Secretary for Fair Housing and Equal Opportunity;
    (v) The Office of General Counsel's Offices of Insured Housing, 
Government Sponsored Enterprises/Real Estate Settlement and Procedures 
Act Division in Finance and Regulatory Enforcement, Legislation and 
Regulations, and the Fair Housing Enforcement Division;
    (vi) The Office of Inspector General;
    (vii) The official superiors of the employees listed in paragraphs 
(b)(1)(iii), (b)(1)(iv) and (b)(1)(v) of this section;
    (viii) Any other employee who is designated in writing by the 
Secretary, the Designated Agency Ethics Official, or the appropriate 
individual of Assistant Secretary rank, or his or her designee, to 
ensure compliance with the principles set forth in 5 CFR 2635.403 and 
who receives notice of such designation.
    (2) The DAEO, upon recommendation of the appropriate individual of 
Assistant Secretary rank, may exclude in writing an employee otherwise 
designated as a ``covered employee'' under Sec. 7501.106(b)(1)(i)-(vii) 
of this part if the employee's official duties do not substantially 
involve the regulation or oversight of Government sponsored enterprises 
and ownership of interests prohibited by Sec. 7501.106(c) would not 
cause a reasonable person to question the impartiality and objectivity 
with which the Department's programs are administered.
    (3) Mortgage institution means mortgage bankers, mortgage brokers, 
banks, savings and loans, and other institutions or entities that 
originate, insure, or service mortgages that are owned or guaranteed by 
the Federal National Mortgage Association (FNMA) or the Federal Home 
Loan Mortgage Corporation (FHLMC).
    (c) Prohibited financial interests. (1) Except as provided in 
paragraph (c)(2) of this section, a covered employee, or a spouse or 
minor child of a covered employee, shall not receive, acquire, or own 
securities of:
    (i) A mortgage institution if more than 20 percent of the 
institution's assets consist of mortgages;
    (ii) A mortgage institution in which 20 percent or less of the 
institution's assets consist of mortgages and more than 40 percent of 
the mortgages originated by the institution are issued, collateralized, 
sold or guaranteed by FNMA and/or FHLMC; or
    (iii) A mortgage institution which services or insures mortgages if 
more than 20 percent of the gross income of such institution is derived 
from either or both of these activities.
    (2) The prohibitions in paragraph (c)(1) of this section do not 
apply to ownership of securities held in a publicly traded or publicly 
available investment fund, or profit-sharing, retirement, or similar 
plan which in its prospectus or governing documents does not indicate 
the objective or practice of concentrating its investments in the 
financial services sector, and the employee neither exercises control 
nor has the ability to exercise control over the financial interests 
held in the fund.
    (3) The mortgage institution's most recent annual financial 
statement shall be used in determining the applicability of the 
prohibitions in paragraph (c)(1) of this section.
    (d) Restrictions arising from third party relationships. If any of 
the entities listed below has securities that a covered employee would 
be prohibited from owning by paragraph (c) of this section, the employee 
shall report such interest to the appropriate Agency Ethics Official. 
The Agency Ethics Official may require the employee to terminate the

[[Page 732]]

third party relationship, undertake an appropriate disqualification, or 
take other appropriate action determined to be necessary consistent with 
5 CFR part 2635 and this part. This paragraph applies to a:
    (1) Partnership in which the covered employee, or a spouse or minor 
child of the employee is a general partner;
    (2) Partnership in which the covered employee, or spouse or minor 
child of the employee, individually or jointly holds more than a 10 
percent limited partnership interest;
    (3) Closely held corporation in which the covered employee, or 
spouse or minor child of the employee, individually or jointly holds 
more than a 10 percent equity interest;
    (4) Trust in which the covered employee, or spouse or minor child of 
the employee, has a legal or beneficial interest;
    (5) Investment club or similar informal investment arrangement 
between the covered employee, or spouse or minor child of the employee, 
and others; or
    (6) Other entity in which the covered employee, or spouse or minor 
child of the employee, individually or jointly holds more than a 10 
percent equity interest.
    (e) Prohibited outside employment. Covered employees shall not 
engage in employment with or on behalf of the Federal National Mortgage 
Association, the Federal Home Loan Mortgage Corporation, a mortgage 
institution, or any of their affiliates.
    (f) Prohibited recommendations. Covered employees shall not make any 
recommendation or suggestion, directly or indirectly, concerning the 
acquisition, sale, or divestiture of securities of FHLMC or FNMA.
    (g) Prohibited purchase of assets. Covered employees, their spouses 
or minor children shall not purchase, directly or indirectly, any real 
or personal property from FHLMC or FNMA, unless it is sold at public 
auction or by other means which would assure that the selling price is 
the asset's fair market value.
    (h) Pre-existing interests. Covered employees must report, in 
writing, to the appropriate Agency Ethics Official, any interest 
prohibited under paragraph (c) of this section acquired prior to either 
the commencement of employment as a covered employee or the effective 
date of this part, or acquired without specific intent, as through gift, 
inheritance, or marriage, within 30 days from the start of covered 
employment or acquisition of such interest. Such interest must be 
divested within 90 days from the date it is reported unless waived by 
the Designated Agency Ethics Official in accordance with Sec. 7501.103.

[[Page 733]]



       CHAPTER LXVI--NATIONAL ARCHIVES AND RECORDS ADMINISTRATION




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[[Page 734]]



PART 7601--SUPPLEMENTAL STANDARDS OF ETHICAL CONDUCT FOR EMPLOYEES OF THE NATIONAL ARCHIVES AND RECORDS ADMINISTRATION--Table of Contents




Sec.
7601.101  General.
7601.102  Prior approval of outside employment.

    Authority: 5 U.S.C. 7301; 5 U.S.C. App. (Ethics in Government Act of 
1978); E.O. 12674, 54 FR 15159, 3 CFR, 1989 Comp., p. 215, as modified 
by, E.O. 12731, 55 FR 42547, 3 CFR, 1990 Comp., p. 306; 5 CFR 2635.105, 
2635.803.

    Source: 61 FR 40505, Aug. 5, 1996, unless otherwise noted.



Sec. 7601.101  General.

    In accordance with 5 CFR 2635.105, the regulations in this part 
apply to employees of the National Archives and Records Administration 
(NARA) and supplement the Standards of Ethical Conduct for Employees of 
the Executive Branch contained in 5 CFR part 2635. In addition to the 
standards in 5 CFR part 2635 and this part, employees of NARA are 
subject to the executive branch financial disclosure regulations 
contained in 5 CFR part 2634.



Sec. 7601.102  Prior approval of outside employment.

    (a) Prior approval requirement. An employee, other than a special 
Government employee, must obtain written approval before engaging in any 
outside employment, whether or not for compensation. Requests for 
approval shall be submitted in accordance with procedures set forth in 
the NARA Administrative Procedures Manual, ADMIN. 201, copies of which 
can be obtained from the NARA designated agency ethics official.
    (b) Standard of approval. Approval shall be granted only upon a 
determination that the outside employment is not expected to involve 
conduct prohibited by statute or Federal regulation, including 5 CFR 
part 2635.
    (c) Scope of approval. Approval will be for a period not to exceed 
three years, after which renewed approval must be sought in accordance 
with this section. Upon a significant change in the nature or scope of 
the outside employment or in the employee's NARA position, the employee 
shall submit a revised request for approval.
    (d) Definition of employment. For purposes of this section, 
employment means any form of non-Federal employment or business 
relationship involving the provision of personal services by the 
employee. It includes, but is not limited to, personal services as an 
officer, director, employee, agent, attorney, consultant, contractor, 
general partner, trustee, teacher, or speaker. It includes writing when 
done under an arrangement with another person for production or 
publication of the written product. It does not, however, include 
participation in the activities of a nonprofit charitable, religious, 
professional, social, fraternal, educational, recreational, public 
service, or civic organization, unless the participation involves the 
provision of professional services or advice for compensation other than 
reimbursement for actual expenses.

[[Page 735]]



                CHAPTER LXIX--TENNESSEE VALLEY AUTHORITY




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PART 7901--SUPPLEMENTAL STANDARDS OF ETHICAL CONDUCT FOR EMPLOYEES OF THE TENNESSEE VALLEY AUTHORITY--Table of Contents




Sec.
7901.101  General.
7901.102  Prior approval for outside employment.

    Authority: 5 U.S.C. App. (Ethics in Government Act of 1978); 16 
U.S.C. 831-831dd; E.O. 12674, 54 FR 15159, 3 CFR, 1989 Comp., p. 215, as 
modified by E.O. 12731, 55 FR 42547, 3 CFR, 1990 Comp., p. 306; 5 CFR 
2635.105, 2635.803.

    Source: 61 FR 20118, May 6, 1996, unless otherwise noted.



Sec. 7901.101  General.

    In accordance with 5 CFR 2635.105, the regulations in this part 
apply to employees of the Tennessee Valley Authority (TVA) and 
supplement the Standards of Ethical Conduct for Employees of the 
Executive Branch contained in 5 CFR part 2635. In addition, some TVA 
employees are subject to the executive branch financial disclosure 
regulations at 5 CFR part 2634.



Sec. 7901.102  Prior approval for outside employment.

    (a) Before engaging in outside employment, with or without 
compensation, an employee, other than a special Government employee, 
must obtain written approval from the supervising TVA vice president or 
designee. The written request shall be submitted through the employee's 
supervisor or human resource office and shall, at a minimum, identify 
the employer or other person for whom the services are to be provided, 
as well as the duties, hours of work, and compensation involved in the 
proposed outside employment.
    (b) Approval under paragraph (a) of this section shall be granted 
only upon a determination that the outside employment is not expected to 
involve conduct prohibited by statute or Federal regulation, including 5 
CFR part 2635.
    (c) Vice presidents or other officers of TVA may, after consultation 
with the Designated Agency Ethics Official, exempt specified classes of 
employees from this section based upon a determination that the official 
duties of employees in the class are such that their outside employment 
activities are not likely to raise issues of compliance with 5 CFR part 
2635.
    (d) For purposes of this section, employment means any form of non-
Federal employment or business relationship involving the provision of 
services by the employee. It includes, but is not limited to, personal 
services as an officer, director, employee, agent, attorney, consultant, 
contractor, general partner, trustee, teacher, or speaker. It includes 
writing when done under an arrangement with another person for 
production or publication of the written product. It does not, however, 
include participation in the activities of a nonprofit charitable, 
religious, professional, social, fraternal, educational, recreational, 
public service, or civic organization, unless such activities involve 
the provision of professional services or advice or are for compensation 
other than reimbursement for actual expenses.

[[Page 737]]



            CHAPTER LXXI--CONSUMER PRODUCT SAFETY COMMISSION




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                    Safety Commission.......................         738

[[Page 738]]



PART 8101--SUPPLEMENTAL STANDARDS OF ETHICAL CONDUCT FOR EMPLOYEES OF THE CONSUMER PRODUCT SAFETY COMMISSION--Table of Contents




Sec.
8101.101  General.
8101.102  Prohibitions applicable to Commissioners.
8101.103  Prior approval for outside employment.

    Authority: 5 U.S.C. 7301; 5 U.S.C. App. (Ethics in Government Act of 
1978); 15 U.S.C. 2053(c); E.O. 12674, 54 FR 15139, 3 CFR, 1989 Comp., p. 
215, as modified by E.O. 12731, 55 FR 42547, 3 CFR, 1990 Comp., p. 306; 
5 CFR 2635.105, 2635.803.

    Source: 61 FR 65458, Dec. 13, 1996, unless otherwise noted.



Sec. 8101.101  General.

    In accordance with 5 CFR 2635.105, the regulations in this part 
apply to employees of the Consumer Product Safety Commission (CPSC). 
These regulations supplement the Standards of Ethical Conduct for 
Employees of the Executive Branch contained in 5 CFR part 2635.



Sec. 8101.102  Prohibitions applicable to Commissioners.

    The Commissioners of the Consumer Product Safety Commission are 
subject to section 4(c) of the Consumer Product Safety Act, 15 U.S.C. 
2053(c). That statutory provision provides that a Commissioner may not 
engage in any other business, vocation, or employment.



Sec. 8101.103  Prior approval for outside employment.

    (a) Prior approval requirement. Before engaging in any outside 
employment, with or without compensation, an employee, other than a 
special Government employee. shall obtain prior written approval from 
his or her supervisor and the Designated Agency Ethics Official (DAEO) 
or Alternate DAEO. The Request for Approval of Outside Activity (CPSC 
Form 241), available from the DAEO or unit administrative officer, may 
be used to request approval. Requests for approval shall be forwarded 
through normal supervisory channels.
    (b) Standard of approval. Approval shall be granted only upon a 
determination that the outside employment is not expected to involve 
conduct prohibited by Federal statute or regulation, including 5 CFR 
part 2635.
    (c) Notification of action. Employees will be notified in writing of 
the action taken on their requests. All requests will be maintained in 
the files of the Designated Agency Ethics Official for the duration of 
the requester's CPSC employment.
    (d) Duration and scope of approval. Approval will be for a period 
not to exceed two years, after which renewal approval must be sought. An 
employment must submit a new request for approval after two years or 
earlier upon either a significant change in the nature or scope of the 
outside employment or a change in the employee's CPSC position.
    (e) Definition of employment. For purposes of this section, 
``employment'' means any form of non-Federal employment, business 
relationship or activity involving the provision of personal services by 
the employee, whether or not for compensation. Employment includes, but 
is not limited to, personal services as an officer, director, employee, 
agent, attorney, consultant, contractor, general partner, trustee, 
teacher or speaker. Employment also includes writing when done under an 
arrangement with another person for production or publication of the 
written product. Employment does not, however, include participation in 
the activities of a nonprofit charitable, religious, professional, 
social, fraternal, educational, recreational, public service, consumer 
or civic organization, unless such activities are for compensation other 
than reimbursement for expenses or involve the provision of professional 
services or advice to, or serving as an officer, trustee, or member of a 
board or other such body of, an organization that is a prohibited source 
as defined in 5 CFR 2635.203(d).

[[Page 739]]



     CHAPTER LXXIV--FEDERAL MINE SAFETY AND HEALTH REVIEW COMMISSION




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                    and Health Review Commission............         740

[[Page 740]]



PART 8401--SUPPLEMENTAL STANDARDS OF ETHICAL CONDUCT FOR EMPLOYEES OF THE FEDERAL MINE SAFETY AND HEALTH REVIEW COMMISSION--Table of Contents




Sec.
8401.101  General.
8401.102  Prohibited financial interests.
8401.103  Prior approval for outside employment.

    Authority: 5 U.S.C. 7301; 5 U.S.C. App. (Ethics in Government Act of 
1978); E.O. 12674, 54 FR 15159, 3 CFR, 1989 Comp., p. 215, as modified 
by E.O. 12731, 55 FR 42547, 3 CFR, 1990 Comp. p. 306; 5 CFR 2635.105, 
2635.403(a), 2635.802(a), 2635.803.

    Source: 61 FR 39871, July 31, 1996, unless otherwise noted.



Sec. 8401.101  General.

    In accordance with 5 CFR 2635.105, the regulations in this part 
apply to the employees of the Federal Mine Safety and Health Review 
Commission (Commission) and supplement the Standards of Ethical Conduct 
for Employees of the Executive Branch at 5 CFR part 2635. Commission 
employees also are subject to the executive branch financial disclosure 
regulations at 5 CFR part 2634.



Sec. 8401.102  Prohibited financial interests.

    (a) Prohibition. Except as provided in this section, no employee 
(other than a special Government employee), or spouse or minor child of 
such an employee, shall have a financial interest, including compensated 
employment or indebtedness, in any company or other person engaged in 
mining activities subject to the Federal Mine Safety and Health Act of 
1977 (Federal Mine Safety and Health Act), 30 U.S.C. 801 et seq.
    (b) Exceptions.  (1) This section does not prohibit an employee, or 
the spouse or minor child of an employee, from investing in a publicly 
traded or publicly available investment fund which, in its prospectus, 
does not indicate the objective or practice of concentrating its 
investments in the securities of any company or other person engaged in 
mining activities subject to the Federal Mine Safety and Health Act, 
provided that the employee neither:
    (i) Exercises control over the financial interests held in the fund; 
nor
    (ii) Has the ability to exercise control over the financial 
interests held in the fund.
    (2)(i) Unless divestiture is required by paragraph (c) of this 
section, this section does not prohibit an employee, or the spouse or 
minor child of an employee, from owning or controlling securities of any 
company or other person engaged in mining activities subject to the 
Federal Mine Safety and Health Act, whenever:
    (A) Ownership or control was acquired prior to the employee's 
commencement of employment, through a change in marital status, or 
through circumstances beyond the employee's control and without the 
appearance of attempting to circumvent the prohibitions in this section, 
such as acquisition by inheritance, gift, or merger, acquisition or 
other change in corporate ownership, provided that: (1) The employee 
makes full, written disclosure to the designated agency ethics official 
within 30 days after the security is acquired or the employment is 
commenced; and
    (2) The employee is disqualified from participating in any decision, 
examination, audit, or other particular matter having a direct and 
predictable effect on such company or other person, in which the 
employee holds a direct or indirect interest.
    (B) The securities result from a stock split, stock dividend or the 
exercise of preemptive rights arising out of securities permitted by 
paragraph (b)(2)(i)(A) of this section. This paragraph does not permit 
the holding of stocks purchased through voluntary reinvestment of cash 
dividends.
    (ii) For purposes of this section, the term ``securities'' includes 
all interests in debt or equity instruments. The term includes, without 
limitation, secured and unsecured bonds, debentures, notes, securitized 
assets and commercial paper, as well as all types of preferred and 
common stock. The term encompasses both current and contingent ownership 
interests, including any beneficial or legal interest derived from a 
trust. It extends to any right to acquire or dispose of any long or 
short

[[Page 741]]

position in such securities and includes, without limitation, interests 
convertible into such securities, as well as options, rights, warrants, 
puts, calls, and straddles with respect thereto.
    (c) Divestiture. The designated agency ethics official may require 
an employee to divest a security the employee is otherwise authorized to 
retain under paragraph (b)(2) of this section, based on a determination 
of substantial conflict under Sec. 2635.403(b) of this title.
    (d) Waivers. The designated agency ethics official may grant a 
written waiver from the prohibition contained in this section based on a 
determination that the waiver is not inconsistent with 5 CFR part 2635 
or otherwise prohibited by law and that, under the particular 
circumstances, application of the prohibition is not necessary to avoid 
the appearance of misuse of position or loss of impartiality, or 
otherwise to ensure confidence in the impartiality and objectivity with 
which Commission programs are administered. A waiver under this 
paragraph may be accompanied by appropriate conditions, such as 
requiring execution of a written statement of disqualification. 
Notwithstanding the grant of any waiver, an employee remains subject to 
the disqualification requirements of 5 CFR 2635.402 and 2635.502.



Sec. 8401.103  Prior approval for outside employment.

    (a) Prior approval requirement. (1) Before engaging in any outside 
employment, whether or not for compensation, a Commission employee who 
is classified at GS-13 or above, as well a Commission attorney at any 
grade level, must obtain the written approval of the employee's 
immediate supervisor and the designated agency ethics official. This 
requirement does not apply to a special Government employee of the 
Commission.
    (2) Requests for approval shall be forwarded through the employee's 
immediate supervisor to the designated agency ethics official and shall 
include at a minimum the name of the person, group, or organization for 
whom the work is to be performed; the type of work to be performed; and 
the proposed hours of work and approximate dates of employment.
    (b) Standard for approval. Approval shall be granted only upon a 
determination that outside employment is not expected to involve conduct 
prohibited by statute or Federal regulation, including 5 CFR 2635 and 
this part.
    (c) Definitions. For purposes of this section:
    (1) Employment means any form of non-Federal employment or business 
relationship involving the provision of personal services by the 
employee. It includes but is not limited to personal services as an 
officer, director, employee, agent, attorney, consultant, contractor, 
general partner, trustee or teacher. It also includes writing when done 
under an arrangement with another person for production or publication 
of the written product. It does not, however, include participation in 
the activities of a nonprofit charitable, religious, professional, 
social, fraternal, educational, recreational, public service or civic 
organization, unless such activities involve the provision of 
professional services or advice or are for compensation other than 
reimbursement expenses.
    (2) Professional services means the provision of personal services 
by an employee, including the rendering of advice or consultation, which 
involves application of the skills of a profession as defined in 5 CFR 
2636.305(b)(1).

[[Page 743]]



        CHAPTER LXXVI--FEDERAL RETIREMENT THRIFT INVESTMENT BOARD




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[[Page 744]]





PART 8601--SUPPLEMENTAL STANDARDS OF ETHICAL CONDUCT FOR EMPLOYEES OF THE FEDERAL RETIREMENT THRIFT INVESTMENT BOARD--Table of Contents




Sec.
8601.101  General.
8601.102  Prior approval for outside employment.

    Authority: 5 U.S.C. 7301; 5 U.S.C. App. (Ethics in Government Act of 
1978); E.O. 12674, 54 FR 15159, 3 CFR, 1989 Comp., p. 215, as modified 
by E.O. 12731, 55 FR 42547, 3 CFR, 1990 Comp., p. 306; 5 CFR 2635.105, 
2635.803.



Sec. 8601.101  General.

    In accordance with 5 CFR 2635.105, the regulations in this part 
apply to employees of the Federal Retirement Thrift Investment Board 
(Board) and supplement the Standards of Ethical Conduct for Employees of 
the Executive Branch contained in 5 CFR part 2635. In addition, Board 
employees are subject to the executive branch financial disclosure 
regulations at 5 CFR part 2634.

[59 FR 50817, Oct. 6, 1994]



Sec. 8601.102  Prior approval for outside employment.

    (a) Before engaging in outside employment, with or without 
compensation, an employee, other than a special Government employee, 
must obtain written approval from his or her office director. The 
written request shall be submitted through the employee's immediate 
supervisor, unless the supervisor is the employee's office director, and 
shall identify the employer or other person for whom the services are to 
be provided, as well as the duties, hours of work, and compensation 
involved in the proposed outside employment.
    (b) Approval under paragraph (a) of this section shall be granted 
only upon a determination that the outside employment is not expected to 
involve conduct prohibited by statute or Federal regulation, including 5 
CFR part 2635.
    (c) In addition to the approval required by paragraph (a) of this 
section, an employee whose outside employment involves teaching, 
speaking, or writing that relates to his or her official duties within 
the meaning of 5 CFR 2635.807(a)(2) shall obtain approval from the 
Executive Director of the Board to engage in the activity as an outside 
activity, rather than as part of the employee's official duties.
    (d) For purposes of this section, employment means any form of non-
Federal employment or business relationship involving the provision of 
personal services by the employee. It includes, but is not limited to, 
personal services as an officer, director, employee, agent, attorney, 
consultant, contractor, general partner, trustee, teacher or speaker. It 
includes writing when done under an arrangement with another person for 
production or publication of the written product. It does not, however, 
include participation in the activities of a nonprofit charitable, 
religious, professional, social, fraternal, educational, recreational, 
public service or civil organization, unless the participation involves 
the provision of professional services or advice for compensation other 
than reimbursement for actual expenses.

[59 FR 50817, Oct. 6, 1994]

[[Page 745]]



             CHAPTER LXXVII--OFFICE OF MANAGEMENT AND BUDGET




  --------------------------------------------------------------------
Part                                                                Page
8701            Supplemental standards of ethical conduct 
                    for employees of the Office of 
                    Management and Budget...................         746

[[Page 746]]



PART 8701--SUPPLEMENTAL STANDARDS OF ETHICAL CONDUCT FOR EMPLOYEES OF THE OFFICE OF MANAGEMENT AND BUDGET--Table of Contents




8701.101  General.
8701.102  Prior approval for outside employment.

    Authority: 5 U.S.C. 7301; 5 U.S.C. App. (Ethics in Government Act of 
1978); E.O. 12674, 54 FR 15159, 3 CFR, 1989 Comp. p. 215, as modified by 
E.O. 12731, 55 FR 42547, 3 CFR, 1990 Comp., p. 306; 5 CFR 2635.105, 
2635.803.



Sec. 8701.101  General.

    In accordance with 5 CFR 2635.105, the regulations in this part 
apply to the employees of the Office of Management and Budget and 
supplement the Standards of Ethical Conduct for Employees of the 
Executive Branch contained in 5 CFR part 2635. In addition to the 
standards in 5 CFR part 2635 and this part, OMB employees are subject to 
the executive branch financial disclosure regulations contained in 5 CFR 
part 2634.

[60 FR 12397, Mar. 7, 1995]



Sec. 8701.102  Prior approval for outside employment.

    (a) Before engaging in outside employment with or without 
compensation, an employee of the Office of Management and Budget, other 
than a special Government employee, must obtain the written approval of 
his or her division or office head, the General Counsel, and the 
Designated Agency Ethics Official (DAEO). Requests for approval shall be 
forwarded through normal supervisory channels to the division or office 
head, who shall forward the request to the General Counsel, to be 
forwarded with their successive approvals to the DAEO. The request for 
approval shall include, at a minimum, the following:
    (1) A statement of the name of the person, group, or other 
organization for whom the work is to be performed; the type of work to 
be performed; and the proposed hours of work and approximate dates of 
employment; and
    (2) A statement that the outside employment will not depend on 
information obtained as a result of the employee's official Government 
position and that no official duty time or Government property, 
resources, or facilities not available to the general public will be 
used in connection with the outside employment.
    (b) Approval shall be granted only upon a determination that the 
outside employment is not expected to involve conduct prohibited by 
statute or Federal regulation, including 5 CFR part 2635.
    (c) For purposes of this section, ``employment'' means any form of 
non-Federal employment or business relationship involving the provision 
of personal services by the employee. It includes, but is not limited 
to, personal services as an officer, director, employee, agent, 
attorney, consultant, contractor, general partner, trustee, teacher or 
speaker. It includes writing when done under an arrangement with another 
person for production or publication of the written product. It does 
not, however, include participation in the activities of a nonprofit 
charitable, religious, professional, social, fraternal, educational, 
recreational, public service, or civic organization, unless such 
activities involve the provision of professional services or advice or 
are for compensation other than reimbursement of expenses.

[60 FR 12397, Mar. 7, 1995]

[[Page 747]]






                            TITLE 6--ECONOMIC





                        STABILIZATION [RESERVED]




  --------------------------------------------------------------------

  Editorial Note: The Office of the Federal Register received a letter 
on December 24, 1981 from the Office of the General Counsel, Department 
of the Treasury which recommended that 6 CFR part 602 not be 
republished. The letter explained that part 602 was originally issued by 
Treasury to carry out the functions assigned to it by Executive Order 
11788--Providing for the Orderly Termination of Economic Stabilization 
Activities. The letter further explained those functions ``have been 
completed and that no Treasury personnel are asssigned any active 
Economic Stabilization functions.'' Thus, the Treasury Department 
concluded that 6 CFR part 602 was unnecessary and ought to be removed 
from the Code of Federal Regulations.
  The Council on Wage and Price Stability was established by authority 
of Pub. L. 93-387, as amended (12 U.S.C. 1904 note). Regulations 
establishing Chapter VII were published at 40 FR 7233, February 19, 
1975.
  The wage and price regulatory program was terminated on February 2, 
1981, by Executive Order 12288 of January 29, 1981 (46 FR 10135) and the 
Council on Wage and Price Stability was terminated as provided by Pub. 
L. 97-12 (95 Stat. 74) (46 FR 11229, Feb. 6, 1981).
  Since the Council on Wage and Price Stability has been terminated and 
the functions of the Department of the Treasury pursuant to E.O. 11788 
have been completed, the Director of the Office of the Federal Register, 
pursuant to 1 CFR 8.2 hereby removes from the Code of Federal 
Regulations Title 6, Chapter VI, Assistant Secretary for Administration, 
Department of the Treasury, consisting of part 602, and Chapter VII, 
Council on Wage and Price Stability, consisting of parts 701 through 704 
inclusive.
  Title 6, Code of Federal Regulations is hereby vacated.
[[Page 749]]



                              FINDING AIDS




  --------------------------------------------------------------------

  A list of CFR titles, subtitles, chapters, subchapters and parts and 
an alphabetical list of agencies publishing in the CFR are included in 
the CFR Index and Finding Aids volume to the Code of Federal Regulations 
which is published separately and revised annually.

  Table of CFR Titles and Chapters
  Alphabetical List of Agencies Appearing in the CFR
  Redesignation Tables
  List of CFR Sections Affected


                                                                    Chap.

[[Page 751]]



                    Table of CFR Titles and Chapters



                     (Revised as of January 1, 1997)

                      Title 1--General Provisions

         I  Administrative Committee of the Federal Register 
                (Parts 1--49)
        II  Office of the Federal Register (Parts 50--299)
        IV  Miscellaneous Agencies (Parts 400--500)

                          Title 2--[Reserved]

                        Title 3--The President

         I  Executive Office of the President (Parts 100--199)

                           Title 4--Accounts

         I  General Accounting Office (Parts 1--99)
        II  Federal Claims Collection Standards (General 
                Accounting Office--Department of Justice) (Parts 
                100--299)

                   Title 5--Administrative Personnel

         I  Office of Personnel Management (Parts 1--1199)
        II  Merit Systems Protection Board (Parts 1200--1299)
       III  Office of Management and Budget (Parts 1300--1399)
        IV  Advisory Committee on Federal Pay (Parts 1400--1499)
         V  The International Organizations Employees Loyalty 
                Board (Parts 1500--1599)
        VI  Federal Retirement Thrift Investment Board (Parts 
                1600--1699)
       VII  Advisory Commission on Intergovernmental Relations 
                (Parts 1700--1799)
      VIII  Office of Special Counsel (Parts 1800--1899)
        IX  Appalachian Regional Commission (Parts 1900--1999)
        XI  Armed Forces Retirement Home (Part 2100)
       XIV  Federal Labor Relations Authority, General Counsel of 
                the Federal Labor Relations Authority and Federal 
                Service Impasses Panel (Parts 2400--2499)
        XV  Office of Administration, Executive Office of the 
                President (Parts 2500--2599)
       XVI  Office of Government Ethics (Parts 2600--2699)
       XXI  Department of the Treasury (Parts 3100--3199)
      XXII  Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation (Part 3202)
     XXIII  Department of Energy (Part 3301)

[[Page 752]]

      XXIV  Federal Energy Regulatory Commission (Part 3401)
      XXVI  Department of Defense (Part 3601)
    XXVIII  Department of Justice (Part 3801)
      XXIX  Federal Communications Commission (Parts 3900--3999)
       XXX  Farm Credit System Insurance Corporation (Parts 4000--
                4099)
      XXXI  Farm Credit Administration (Parts 4100--4199)
    XXXIII  Overseas Private Investment Corporation (Part 4301)
      XXXV  Office of Personnel Management (Part 4501)
        XL  Interstate Commerce Commission (Part 5001)
       XLI  Commodity Futures Trading Commission (Part 5101)
      XLII  Department of Labor (Part 5201)
     XLIII  National Science Foundation (Part 5301)
       XLV  Department of Health and Human Services (Part 5501)
      XLVI  Postal Rate Commission (Part 5601)
     XLVII  Federal Trade Commission (Part 5701)
    XLVIII  Nuclear Regulatory Commission (Part 5801)
         L  Department of Transportation (Part 6001)
       LII  Export-Import Bank of the United States (Part 6201)
      LIII  Department of Education (Parts 6300--6399)
       LIV  Environmental Protection Agency (Part 6401)
      LVII  General Services Administration (Part 6701)
     LVIII  Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System (Part 
                6801)
       LIX  National Aeronautics and Space Administration (Part 
                6901)
        LX  United States Postal Service (Part 7001)
      LXII  Equal Employment Opportunity Commission (Part 7201)
     LXIII  Inter-American Foundation (Part 7301)
       LXV  Department of Housing and Urban Development (Part 
                7501)
      LXVI  National Archives and Records Administration (Part 
                7601)
      LXIX  Tennessee Valley Authority (Part 7901)
      LXXI  Consumer Product Safety Commission (Part 8101)
     LXXIV  Federal Mine Safety and Health Review Commission (Part 
                8401)
     LXXVI  Federal Retirement Thrift Investment Board (Part 8601)
    LXXVII  Office of Management and Budget (Part 8701)

                          Title 6--[Reserved]

                         Title 7--Agriculture

            Subtitle A--Office of the Secretary of Agriculture 
                (Parts 0--26)
            Subtitle B--Regulations of the Department of 
                Agriculture
         I  Agricultural Marketing Service (Standards, 
                Inspections, Marketing Practices), Department of 
                Agriculture (Parts 27--209)
        II  Food and Consumer Service, Department of Agriculture 
                (Parts 210--299)
       III  Animal and Plant Health Inspection Service, Department 
                of Agriculture (Parts 300--399)

[[Page 753]]

        IV  Federal Crop Insurance Corporation, Department of 
                Agriculture (Parts 400--499)
         V  Agricultural Research Service, Department of 
                Agriculture (Parts 500--599)
        VI  Natural Resources Conservation Service, Department of 
                Agriculture (Parts 600--699)
       VII  Farm Service Agency, Department of Agriculture (Parts 
                700--799)
      VIII  Grain Inspection, Packers and Stockyards 
                Administration (Federal Grain Inspection Service), 
                Department of Agriculture (Parts 800--899)
        IX  Agricultural Marketing Service (Marketing Agreements 
                and Orders; Fruits, Vegetables, Nuts), Department 
                of Agriculture (Parts 900--999)
         X  Agricultural Marketing Service (Marketing Agreements 
                and Orders; Milk), Department of Agriculture 
                (Parts 1000--1199)
        XI  Agricultural Marketing Service (Marketing Agreements 
                and Orders; Miscellaneous Commodities), Department 
                of Agriculture (Parts 1200--1299)
       XIV  Commodity Credit Corporation, Department of 
                Agriculture (Parts 1400--1499)
        XV  Foreign Agricultural Service, Department of 
                Agriculture (Parts 1500--1599)
       XVI  Rural Telephone Bank, Department of Agriculture (Parts 
                1600--1699)
      XVII  Rural Utilities Service, Department of Agriculture 
                (Parts 1700--1799)
     XVIII  Rural Housing Service, Rural Business-Cooperative 
                Service, Rural Utilities Service, and Farm Service 
                Agency, Department of Agriculture (Parts 1800--
                2099)
      XXVI  Office of Inspector General, Department of Agriculture 
                (Parts 2600--2699)
     XXVII  Office of Information Resources Management, Department 
                of Agriculture (Parts 2700--2799)
    XXVIII  Office of Operations, Department of Agriculture (Parts 
                2800--2899)
      XXIX  Office of Energy, Department of Agriculture (Parts 
                2900--2999)
       XXX  Office of Finance and Management, Department of 
                Agriculture (Parts 3000--3099)
      XXXI  Office of Environmental Quality, Department of 
                Agriculture (Parts 3100--3199)
     XXXII  [Reserved]
    XXXIII  Office of Transportation, Department of Agriculture 
                (Parts 3300--3399)
     XXXIV  Cooperative State Research, Education, and Extension 
                Service, Department of Agriculture (Parts 3400--
                3499)
      XXXV  Rural Housing Service, Department of Agriculture 
                (Parts 3500--3599)
     XXXVI  National Agricultural Statistics Service, Department 
                of Agriculture (Parts 3600--3699)

[[Page 754]]

    XXXVII  Economic Research Service, Department of Agriculture 
                (Parts 3700--3799)
   XXXVIII  World Agricultural Outlook Board, Department of 
                Agriculture (Parts 3800--3899)
       XLI  [Reserved]
      XLII  Rural Business-Cooperative Service and Rural Utilities 
                Service, Department of Agriculture (Parts 4200--
                4299)

                    Title 8--Aliens and Nationality

         I  Immigration and Naturalization Service, Department of 
                Justice (Parts 1--499)

                 Title 9--Animals and Animal Products

         I  Animal and Plant Health Inspection Service, Department 
                of Agriculture (Parts 1--199)
        II  Grain Inspection, Packers and Stockyards 
                Administration (Packers and Stockyards Programs), 
                Department of Agriculture (Parts 200--299)
       III  Food Safety and Inspection Service, Meat and Poultry 
                Inspection, Department of Agriculture (Parts 300--
                599)

                           Title 10--Energy

         I  Nuclear Regulatory Commission (Parts 0--199)
        II  Department of Energy (Parts 200--699)
       III  Department of Energy (Parts 700--999)
         X  Department of Energy (General Provisions) (Parts 
                1000--1099)
        XI  United States Enrichment Corporation (Parts 1100--
                1199)
        XV  Office of the Federal Inspector for the Alaska Natural 
                Gas Transportation System (Parts 1500--1599)
      XVII  Defense Nuclear Facilities Safety Board (Parts 1700--
                1799)

                      Title 11--Federal Elections

         I  Federal Election Commission (Parts 1--9099)

                      Title 12--Banks and Banking

         I  Comptroller of the Currency, Department of the 
                Treasury (Parts 1--199)
        II  Federal Reserve System (Parts 200--299)
       III  Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation (Parts 300--399)
        IV  Export-Import Bank of the United States (Parts 400--
                499)
         V  Office of Thrift Supervision, Department of the 
                Treasury (Parts 500--599)
        VI  Farm Credit Administration (Parts 600--699)
       VII  National Credit Union Administration (Parts 700--799)
      VIII  Federal Financing Bank (Parts 800--899)

[[Page 755]]

        IX  Federal Housing Finance Board (Parts 900--999)
        XI  Federal Financial Institutions Examination Council 
                (Parts 1100--1199)
       XIV  Farm Credit System Insurance Corporation (Parts 1400--
                1499)
        XV  Thrift Depositor Protection Oversight Board (Parts 
                1500--1599)
      XVII  Office of Federal Housing Enterprise Oversight, 
                Department of Housing and Urban Development (Parts 
                1700-1799)
     XVIII  Community Development Financial Institutions Fund, 
                Department of the Treasury (Parts 1800--1899)

               Title 13--Business Credit and Assistance

         I  Small Business Administration (Parts 1--199)
       III  Economic Development Administration, Department of 
                Commerce (Parts 300--399)

                    Title 14--Aeronautics and Space

         I  Federal Aviation Administration, Department of 
                Transportation (Parts 1--199)
        II  Office of the Secretary, Department of Transportation 
                (Aviation Proceedings) (Parts 200--399)
       III  Commercial Space Transportation, Federal Aviation 
                Administration, Department of Transportation 
                (Parts 400--499)
         V  National Aeronautics and Space Administration (Parts 
                1200--1299)

                 Title 15--Commerce and Foreign Trade

            Subtitle A--Office of the Secretary of Commerce (Parts 
                0--29)
            Subtitle B--Regulations Relating to Commerce and 
                Foreign Trade
         I  Bureau of the Census, Department of Commerce (Parts 
                30--199)
        II  National Institute of Standards and Technology, 
                Department of Commerce (Parts 200--299)
       III  International Trade Administration, Department of 
                Commerce (Parts 300--399)
        IV  Foreign-Trade Zones Board, Department of Commerce 
                (Parts 400--499)
       VII  Bureau of Export Administration, Department of 
                Commerce (Parts 700--799)
      VIII  Bureau of Economic Analysis, Department of Commerce 
                (Parts 800--899)
        IX  National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, 
                Department of Commerce (Parts 900--999)
        XI  Technology Administration, Department of Commerce 
                (Parts 1100--1199)
      XIII  East-West Foreign Trade Board (Parts 1300--1399)
       XIV  Minority Business Development Agency (Parts 1400--
                1499)
            Subtitle C--Regulations Relating to Foreign Trade 
                Agreements

[[Page 756]]

        XX  Office of the United States Trade Representative 
                (Parts 2000--2099)
            Subtitle D--Regulations Relating to Telecommunications 
                and Information
     XXIII  National Telecommunications and Information 
                Administration, Department of Commerce (Parts 
                2300--2399)

                    Title 16--Commercial Practices

         I  Federal Trade Commission (Parts 0--999)
        II  Consumer Product Safety Commission (Parts 1000--1799)

             Title 17--Commodity and Securities Exchanges

         I  Commodity Futures Trading Commission (Parts 1--199)
        II  Securities and Exchange Commission (Parts 200--399)
        IV  Department of the Treasury (Parts 400--499)

          Title 18--Conservation of Power and Water Resources

         I  Federal Energy Regulatory Commission, Department of 
                Energy (Parts 1--399)
       III  Delaware River Basin Commission (Parts 400--499)
        VI  Water Resources Council (Parts 700--799)
      VIII  Susquehanna River Basin Commission (Parts 800--899)
      XIII  Tennessee Valley Authority (Parts 1300--1399)

                       Title 19--Customs Duties

         I  United States Customs Service, Department of the 
                Treasury (Parts 1--199)
        II  United States International Trade Commission (Parts 
                200--299)
       III  International Trade Administration, Department of 
                Commerce (Parts 300--399)

                     Title 20--Employees' Benefits

         I  Office of Workers' Compensation Programs, Department 
                of Labor (Parts 1--199)
        II  Railroad Retirement Board (Parts 200--399)
       III  Social Security Administration (Parts 400--499)
        IV  Employees' Compensation Appeals Board, Department of 
                Labor (Parts 500--599)
         V  Employment and Training Administration, Department of 
                Labor (Parts 600--699)
        VI  Employment Standards Administration, Department of 
                Labor (Parts 700--799)
       VII  Benefits Review Board, Department of Labor (Parts 
                800--899)
      VIII  Joint Board for the Enrollment of Actuaries (Parts 
                900--999)

[[Page 757]]

        IX  Office of the Assistant Secretary for Veterans' 
                Employment and Training, Department of Labor 
                (Parts 1000--1099)

                       Title 21--Food and Drugs

         I  Food and Drug Administration, Department of Health and 
                Human Services (Parts 1--1299)
        II  Drug Enforcement Administration, Department of Justice 
                (Parts 1300--1399)
       III  Office of National Drug Control Policy (Parts 1400--
                1499)

                      Title 22--Foreign Relations

         I  Department of State (Parts 1--199)
        II  Agency for International Development, International 
                Development Cooperation Agency (Parts 200--299)
       III  Peace Corps (Parts 300--399)
        IV  International Joint Commission, United States and 
                Canada (Parts 400--499)
         V  United States Information Agency (Parts 500--599)
        VI  United States Arms Control and Disarmament Agency 
                (Parts 600--699)
       VII  Overseas Private Investment Corporation, International 
                Development Cooperation Agency (Parts 700--799)
        IX  Foreign Service Grievance Board Regulations (Parts 
                900--999)
         X  Inter-American Foundation (Parts 1000--1099)
        XI  International Boundary and Water Commission, United 
                States and Mexico, United States Section (Parts 
                1100--1199)
       XII  United States International Development Cooperation 
                Agency (Parts 1200--1299)
      XIII  Board for International Broadcasting (Parts 1300--
                1399)
       XIV  Foreign Service Labor Relations Board; Federal Labor 
                Relations Authority; General Counsel of the 
                Federal Labor Relations Authority; and the Foreign 
                Service Impasse Disputes Panel (Parts 1400--1499)
        XV  African Development Foundation (Parts 1500--1599)
       XVI  Japan-United States Friendship Commission (Parts 
                1600--1699)
      XVII  United States Institute of Peace (Parts 1700--1799)

                          Title 23--Highways

         I  Federal Highway Administration, Department of 
                Transportation (Parts 1--999)
        II  National Highway Traffic Safety Administration and 
                Federal Highway Administration, Department of 
                Transportation (Parts 1200--1299)
       III  National Highway Traffic Safety Administration, 
                Department of Transportation (Parts 1300--1399)

[[Page 758]]

                Title 24--Housing and Urban Development

            Subtitle A--Office of the Secretary, Department of 
                Housing and Urban Development (Parts 0--99)
            Subtitle B--Regulations Relating to Housing and Urban 
                Development
         I  Office of Assistant Secretary for Equal Opportunity, 
                Department of Housing and Urban Development (Parts 
                100--199)
        II  Office of Assistant Secretary for Housing-Federal 
                Housing Commissioner, Department of Housing and 
                Urban Development (Parts 200--299)
       III  Government National Mortgage Association, Department 
                of Housing and Urban Development (Parts 300--399)
         V  Office of Assistant Secretary for Community Planning 
                and Development, Department of Housing and Urban 
                Development (Parts 500--599)
        VI  Office of Assistant Secretary for Community Planning 
                and Development, Department of Housing and Urban 
                Development (Parts 600--699) [Reserved]
       VII  Office of the Secretary, Department of Housing and 
                Urban Development (Housing Assistance Programs and 
                Public and Indian Housing Programs) (Parts 700--
                799)
      VIII  Office of the Assistant Secretary for Housing--Federal 
                Housing Commissioner, Department of Housing and 
                Urban Development (Section 8 Housing Assistance 
                Programs and Section 202 Direct Loan Program) 
                (Parts 800--899)
        IX  Office of Assistant Secretary for Public and Indian 
                Housing, Department of Housing and Urban 
                Development (Parts 900--999)
         X  Office of Assistant Secretary for Housing--Federal 
                Housing Commissioner, Department of Housing and 
                Urban Development (Interstate Land Sales 
                Registration Program) (Parts 1700--1799)
       XII  Office of Inspector General, Department of Housing and 
                Urban Development (Parts 2000--2099)
        XX  Office of Assistant Secretary for Housing--Federal 
                Housing Commissioner, Department of Housing and 
                Urban Development (Parts 3200--3899)
       XXV  Neighborhood Reinvestment Corporation (Parts 4100--
                4199)

                           Title 25--Indians

         I  Bureau of Indian Affairs, Department of the Interior 
                (Parts 1--299)
        II  Indian Arts and Crafts Board, Department of the 
                Interior (Parts 300--399)
       III  National Indian Gaming Commission, Department of the 
                Interior (Parts 500--599)
        IV  Office of Navajo and Hopi Indian Relocation (Parts 
                700--799)
         V  Bureau of Indian Affairs, Department of the Interior, 
                and Indian Health Service, Department of Health 
                and Human Services (Part 900)
        VI  Office of the Assistant Secretary-Indian Affairs, 
                Department of the Interior (Part 1001)

[[Page 759]]

                      Title 26--Internal Revenue

         I  Internal Revenue Service, Department of the Treasury 
                (Parts 1--799)

           Title 27--Alcohol, Tobacco Products and Firearms

         I  Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco and Firearms, Department of 
                the Treasury (Parts 1--299)

                   Title 28--Judicial Administration

         I  Department of Justice (Parts 0--199)
       III  Federal Prison Industries, Inc., Department of Justice 
                (Parts 300--399)
         V  Bureau of Prisons, Department of Justice (Parts 500--
                599)
        VI  Offices of Independent Counsel, Department of Justice 
                (Parts 600--699)
       VII  Office of Independent Counsel (Parts 700--799)

                            Title 29--Labor

            Subtitle A--Office of the Secretary of Labor (Parts 
                0--99)
            Subtitle B--Regulations Relating to Labor
         I  National Labor Relations Board (Parts 100--199)
        II  Office of Labor-Management Programs, Department of 
                Labor (Parts 200--299)
       III  National Railroad Adjustment Board (Parts 300--399)
        IV  Office of Labor-Management Standards, Department of 
                Labor (Parts 400--499)
         V  Wage and Hour Division, Department of Labor (Parts 
                500--899)
        IX  Construction Industry Collective Bargaining Commission 
                (Parts 900--999)
         X  National Mediation Board (Parts 1200--1299)
       XII  Federal Mediation and Conciliation Service (Parts 
                1400--1499)
       XIV  Equal Employment Opportunity Commission (Parts 1600--
                1699)
      XVII  Occupational Safety and Health Administration, 
                Department of Labor (Parts 1900--1999)
        XX  Occupational Safety and Health Review Commission 
                (Parts 2200--2499)
       XXV  Pension and Welfare Benefits Administration, 
                Department of Labor (Parts 2500--2599)
     XXVII  Federal Mine Safety and Health Review Commission 
                (Parts 2700--2799)
        XL  Pension Benefit Guaranty Corporation (Parts 4000--
                4999)

                      Title 30--Mineral Resources

         I  Mine Safety and Health Administration, Department of 
                Labor (Parts 1--199)
        II  Minerals Management Service, Department of the 
                Interior (Parts 200--299)

[[Page 760]]

       III  Board of Surface Mining and Reclamation Appeals, 
                Department of the Interior (Parts 300--399)
        IV  Geological Survey, Department of the Interior (Parts 
                400--499)
        VI  Bureau of Mines, Department of the Interior (Parts 
                600--699)
       VII  Office of Surface Mining Reclamation and Enforcement, 
                Department of the Interior (Parts 700--999)

                 Title 31--Money and Finance: Treasury

            Subtitle A--Office of the Secretary of the Treasury 
                (Parts 0--50)
            Subtitle B--Regulations Relating to Money and Finance
         I  Monetary Offices, Department of the Treasury (Parts 
                51--199)
        II  Fiscal Service, Department of the Treasury (Parts 
                200--399)
        IV  Secret Service, Department of the Treasury (Parts 
                400--499)
         V  Office of Foreign Assets Control, Department of the 
                Treasury (Parts 500--599)
        VI  Bureau of Engraving and Printing, Department of the 
                Treasury (Parts 600--699)
       VII  Federal Law Enforcement Training Center, Department of 
                the Treasury (Parts 700--799)
      VIII  Office of International Investment, Department of the 
                Treasury (Parts 800--899)

                      Title 32--National Defense

            Subtitle A--Department of Defense
         I  Office of the Secretary of Defense (Parts 1--399)
         V  Department of the Army (Parts 400--699)
        VI  Department of the Navy (Parts 700--799)
       VII  Department of the Air Force (Parts 800--1099)
            Subtitle B--Other Regulations Relating to National 
                Defense
       XII  Defense Logistics Agency (Parts 1200--1299)
       XVI  Selective Service System (Parts 1600--1699)
       XIX  Central Intelligence Agency (Parts 1900--1999)
        XX  Information Security Oversight Office, National 
                Archives and Records Administration (Parts 2000--
                2099)
       XXI  National Security Council (Parts 2100--2199)
      XXIV  Office of Science and Technology Policy (Parts 2400--
                2499)
     XXVII  Office for Micronesian Status Negotiations (Parts 
                2700--2799)
    XXVIII  Office of the Vice President of the United States 
                (Parts 2800--2899)
      XXIX  Presidential Commission on the Assignment of Women in 
                the Armed Forces (Part 2900)

               Title 33--Navigation and Navigable Waters

         I  Coast Guard, Department of Transportation (Parts 1--
                199)
        II  Corps of Engineers, Department of the Army (Parts 
                200--399)

[[Page 761]]

        IV  Saint Lawrence Seaway Development Corporation, 
                Department of Transportation (Parts 400--499)

                          Title 34--Education

            Subtitle A--Office of the Secretary, Department of 
                Education (Parts 1--99)
            Subtitle B--Regulations of the Offices of the 
                Department of Education
         I  Office for Civil Rights, Department of Education 
                (Parts 100--199)
        II  Office of Elementary and Secondary Education, 
                Department of Education (Parts 200--299)
       III  Office of Special Education and Rehabilitative 
                Services, Department of Education (Parts 300--399)
        IV  Office of Vocational and Adult Education, Department 
                of Education (Parts 400--499)
         V  Office of Bilingual Education and Minority Languages 
                Affairs, Department of Education (Parts 500--599)
        VI  Office of Postsecondary Education, Department of 
                Education (Parts 600--699)
       VII  Office of Educational Research and Improvement, 
                Department of Education (Parts 700--799)
        XI  National Institute for Literacy (Parts 1100-1199)
            Subtitle C--Regulations Relating to Education
       XII  National Council on Disability (Parts 1200--1299)

                        Title 35--Panama Canal

         I  Panama Canal Regulations (Parts 1--299)

             Title 36--Parks, Forests, and Public Property

         I  National Park Service, Department of the Interior 
                (Parts 1--199)
        II  Forest Service, Department of Agriculture (Parts 200--
                299)
       III  Corps of Engineers, Department of the Army (Parts 
                300--399)
        IV  American Battle Monuments Commission (Parts 400--499)
         V  Smithsonian Institution (Parts 500--599)
       VII  Library of Congress (Parts 700--799)
      VIII  Advisory Council on Historic Preservation (Parts 800--
                899)
        IX  Pennsylvania Avenue Development Corporation (Parts 
                900--999)
        XI  Architectural and Transportation Barriers Compliance 
                Board (Parts 1100--1199)
       XII  National Archives and Records Administration (Parts 
                1200--1299)
       XIV  Assassination Records Review Board (Parts 1400-1499)

             Title 37--Patents, Trademarks, and Copyrights

         I  Patent and Trademark Office, Department of Commerce 
                (Parts 1--199)
        II  Copyright Office, Library of Congress (Parts 200--299)

[[Page 762]]

        IV  Assistant Secretary for Technology Policy, Department 
                of Commerce (Parts 400--499)
         V  Under Secretary for Technology, Department of Commerce 
                (Parts 500--599)

           Title 38--Pensions, Bonuses, and Veterans' Relief

         I  Department of Veterans Affairs (Parts 0--99)

                       Title 39--Postal Service

         I  United States Postal Service (Parts 1--999)
       III  Postal Rate Commission (Parts 3000--3099)

                  Title 40--Protection of Environment

         I  Environmental Protection Agency (Parts 1--799)
         V  Council on Environmental Quality (Parts 1500--1599)

          Title 41--Public Contracts and Property Management

            Subtitle B--Other Provisions Relating to Public 
                Contracts
        50  Public Contracts, Department of Labor (Parts 50-1--50-
                999)
        51  Committee for Purchase From People Who Are Blind or 
                Severely Disabled (Parts 51-1--51-99)
        60  Office of Federal Contract Compliance Programs, Equal 
                Employment Opportunity, Department of Labor (Parts 
                60-1--60-999)
        61  Office of the Assistant Secretary for Veterans 
                Employment and Training, Department of Labor 
                (Parts 61-1--61-999)
            Subtitle C--Federal Property Management Regulations 
                System
       101  Federal Property Management Regulations (Parts 101-1--
                101-99)
       105  General Services Administration (Parts 105-1--105-999)
       109  Department of Energy Property Management Regulations 
                (Parts 109-1--109-99)
       114  Department of the Interior (Parts 114-1--114-99)
       115  Environmental Protection Agency (Parts 115-1--115-99)
       128  Department of Justice (Parts 128-1--128-99)
            Subtitle D--Other Provisions Relating to Property 
                Management [Reserved]
            Subtitle E--Federal Information Resources Management 
                Regulations System
       201  Federal Information Resources Management Regulation 
                (Parts 201-1--201-99) [Reserved]
            Subtitle F--Federal Travel Regulation System
       301  Travel Allowances (Parts 301-1--301-99)
       302  Relocation Allowances (Parts 302-1--302-99)
       303  Payment of Expenses Connected with the Death of 
                Certain Employees (Parts 303-1--303-2)
       304  Payment from a Non-Federal Source for Travel Expenses 
                (Parts 304-1--304-99)

[[Page 763]]

                        Title 42--Public Health

         I  Public Health Service, Department of Health and Human 
                Services (Parts 1--199)
        IV  Health Care Financing Administration, Department of 
                Health and Human Services (Parts 400--499)
         V  Office of Inspector General-Health Care, Department of 
                Health and Human Services (Parts 1000--1999)

                   Title 43--Public Lands: Interior

            Subtitle A--Office of the Secretary of the Interior 
                (Parts 1--199)
            Subtitle B--Regulations Relating to Public Lands
         I  Bureau of Reclamation, Department of the Interior 
                (Parts 200--499)
        II  Bureau of Land Management, Department of the Interior 
                (Parts 1000--9999)
       III  Utah Reclamation Mitigation and Conservation 
                Commission (Parts 10000--10005)

             Title 44--Emergency Management and Assistance

         I  Federal Emergency Management Agency (Parts 0--399)
        IV  Department of Commerce and Department of 
                Transportation (Parts 400--499)

                       Title 45--Public Welfare

            Subtitle A--Department of Health and Human Services, 
                General Administration (Parts 1--199)
            Subtitle B--Regulations Relating to Public Welfare
        II  Office of Family Assistance (Assistance Programs), 
                Administration for Children and Families, 
                Department of Health and Human Services (Parts 
                200--299)
       III  Office of Child Support Enforcement (Child Support 
                Enforcement Program), Administration for Children 
                and Families, Department of Health and Human 
                Services (Parts 300--399)
        IV  Office of Refugee Resettlement, Administration for 
                Children and Families Department of Health and 
                Human Services (Parts 400--499)
         V  Foreign Claims Settlement Commission of the United 
                States, Department of Justice (Parts 500--599)
        VI  National Science Foundation (Parts 600--699)
       VII  Commission on Civil Rights (Parts 700--799)
      VIII  Office of Personnel Management (Parts 800--899)
         X  Office of Community Services, Administration for 
                Children and Families, Department of Health and 
                Human Services (Parts 1000--1099)
        XI  National Foundation on the Arts and the Humanities 
                (Parts 1100--1199)
       XII  ACTION (Parts 1200--1299)
      XIII  Office of Human Development Services, Department of 
                Health and Human Services (Parts 1300--1399)

[[Page 764]]

       XVI  Legal Services Corporation (Parts 1600--1699)
      XVII  National Commission on Libraries and Information 
                Science (Parts 1700--1799)
     XVIII  Harry S. Truman Scholarship Foundation (Parts 1800--
                1899)
       XXI  Commission on Fine Arts (Parts 2100--2199)
      XXII  Christopher Columbus Quincentenary Jubilee Commission 
                (Parts 2200--2299)
     XXIII  Arctic Research Commission (Part 2301)
      XXIV  James Madison Memorial Fellowship Foundation (Parts 
                2400--2499)
       XXV  Corporation for National and Community Service (Parts 
                2500--2599)

                          Title 46--Shipping

         I  Coast Guard, Department of Transportation (Parts 1--
                199)
        II  Maritime Administration, Department of Transportation 
                (Parts 200--399)
        IV  Federal Maritime Commission (Parts 500--599)

                      Title 47--Telecommunication

         I  Federal Communications Commission (Parts 0--199)
        II  Office of Science and Technology Policy and National 
                Security Council (Parts 200--299)
       III  National Telecommunications and Information 
                Administration, Department of Commerce (Parts 
                300--399)

           Title 48--Federal Acquisition Regulations System

         1  Federal Acquisition Regulation (Parts 1--99)
         2  Department of Defense (Parts 200--299)
         3  Department of Health and Human Services (Parts 300--
                399)
         4  Department of Agriculture (Parts 400--499)
         5  General Services Administration (Parts 500--599)
         6  Department of State (Parts 600--699)
         7  Agency for International Development (Parts 700--799)
         8  Department of Veterans Affairs (Parts 800--899)
         9  Department of Energy (Parts 900--999)
        10  Department of the Treasury (Parts 1000--1099)
        12  Department of Transportation (Parts 1200--1299)
        13  Department of Commerce (Parts 1300--1399)
        14  Department of the Interior (Parts 1400--1499)
        15  Environmental Protection Agency (Parts 1500--1599)
        16  Office of Personnel Management Federal Employees 
                Health Benefits Acquisition Regulation (Parts 
                1600--1699)
        17  Office of Personnel Management (Parts 1700--1799)
        18  National Aeronautics and Space Administration (Parts 
                1800--1899)

[[Page 765]]

        19  United States Information Agency (Parts 1900--1999)
        20  Nuclear Regulatory Commission (Parts 2000--2099)
        21  Office of Personnel Management, Federal Employees 
                Group Life Insurance Federal Acquisition 
                Regulation (Parts 2100--2199)
        23  Social Security Administration (Parts 2300--2399)
        24  Department of Housing and Urban Development (Parts 
                2400--2499)
        25  National Science Foundation (Parts 2500--2599)
        28  Department of Justice (Parts 2800--2899)
        29  Department of Labor (Parts 2900--2999)
        34  Department of Education Acquisition Regulation (Parts 
                3400--3499)
        35  Panama Canal Commission (Parts 3500--3599)
        44  Federal Emergency Management Agency (Parts 4400--4499)
        51  Department of the Army Acquisition Regulations (Parts 
                5100--5199)
        52  Department of the Navy Acquisition Regulations (Parts 
                5200--5299)
        53  Department of the Air Force Federal Acquisition 
                Regulation Supplement (Parts 5300--5399)
        54  Defense Logistics Agency, Department of Defense (Part 
                5452)
        57  African Development Foundation (Parts 5700--5799)
        61  General Services Administration Board of Contract 
                Appeals (Parts 6100--6199)
        63  Department of Transportation Board of Contract Appeals 
                (Parts 6300--6399)
        99  Cost Accounting Standards Board, Office of Federal 
                Procurement Policy, Office of Management and 
                Budget (Parts 9900--9999)

                       Title 49--Transportation

            Subtitle A--Office of the Secretary of Transportation 
                (Parts 1--99)
            Subtitle B--Other Regulations Relating to 
                Transportation
         I  Research and Special Programs Administration, 
                Department of Transportation (Parts 100--199)
        II  Federal Railroad Administration, Department of 
                Transportation (Parts 200--299)
       III  Federal Highway Administration, Department of 
                Transportation (Parts 300--399)
        IV  Coast Guard, Department of Transportation (Parts 400--
                499)
         V  National Highway Traffic Safety Administration, 
                Department of Transportation (Parts 500--599)
        VI  Federal Transit Administration, Department of 
                Transportation (Parts 600--699)
       VII  National Railroad Passenger Corporation (AMTRAK) 
                (Parts 700--799)
      VIII  National Transportation Safety Board (Parts 800--999)

[[Page 766]]

         X  Surface Transportation Board, Department of 
                Transportation (Parts 1000--1399)

                   Title 50--Wildlife and Fisheries

         I  United States Fish and Wildlife Service, Department of 
                the Interior (Parts 1--199)
        II  National Marine Fisheries Service, National Oceanic 
                and Atmospheric Administration, Department of 
                Commerce (Parts 200--299)
       III  International Fishing and Related Activities (Parts 
                300--399)
        IV  Joint Regulations (United States Fish and Wildlife 
                Service, Department of the Interior and National 
                Marine Fisheries Service, National Oceanic and 
                Atmospheric Administration, Department of 
                Commerce); Endangered Species Committee 
                Regulations (Parts 400--499)
         V  Marine Mammal Commission (Parts 500--599)
        VI  Fishery Conservation and Management, National Oceanic 
                and Atmospheric Administration, Department of 
                Commerce (Parts 600--699)

                      CFR Index and Finding Aids

            Subject/Agency Index
            List of Agency Prepared Indexes
            Parallel Tables of Statutory Authorities and Rules
            Acts Requiring Publication in the Federal Register
            List of CFR Titles, Chapters, Subchapters, and Parts
            Alphabetical List of Agencies Appearing in the CFR



[[Page 767]]





           Alphabetical List of Agencies Appearing in the CFR



                     (Revised as of January 1, 1997)

                                                  CFR Title, Subtitle or
                     Agency                               Chapter

ACTION                                            45, XII
Administrative Committee of the Federal Register  1, I
Advanced Research Projects Agency                 32, I
Advisory Commission on Intergovernmental          5, VII
     Relations
Advisory Committee on Federal Pay                 5, IV
Advisory Council on Historic Preservation         36, VIII
African Development Foundation                    22, XV
  Federal Acquisition Regulation                  48, 57
Agency for International Development              22, II
  Federal Acquisition Regulation                  48, 7
Agricultural Marketing Service                    7, I, IX, X, XI
Agricultural Research Service                     7, V
Agriculture Department
  Agricultural Marketing Service                  7, I, IX, X, XI
  Agricultural Research Service                   7, V
  Animal and Plant Health Inspection Service      7, III; 9, I
  Commodity Credit Corporation                    7, XIV
  Cooperative State Research, Education, and      7, XXXIV
       Extension Service
  Economic Research Service                       7, XXXVII
  Energy, Office of                               7, XXIX
  Environmental Quality, Office of                7, XXXI
  Farm Service Agency                             7, VII, XVIII
  Federal Acquisition Regulation                  48, 4
  Federal Crop Insurance Corporation              7, IV
  Finance and Management, Office of               7, XXX
  Food and Consumer Service                       7, II
  Food Safety and Inspection Service              9, III
  Foreign Agricultural Service                    7, XV
  Forest Service                                  36, II
  Grain Inspection, Packers and Stockyards        7, VIII; 9, II
       Administration
  Information Resources Management, Office of     7, XXVII
  Inspector General, Office of                    7, XXVI
  National Agricultural Library                   7, XLI
  National Agricultural Statistics Service        7, XXXVI
  Natural Resources Conservation Service          7, VI
  Operations, Office of                           7, XXVIII
  Rural Business-Cooperative Service              7, XVIII, XLII
  Rural Development Administration                7, XLII
  Rural Housing Service                           7, XVIII, XXXV
  Rural Telephone Bank                            7, XVI
  Rural Utilities Service                         7, XVII, XVIII, XLII
  Secretary of Agriculture, Office of             7, Subtitle A
  Transportation, Office of                       7, XXXIII
  World Agricultural Outlook Board                7, XXXVIII
Air Force Department                              32, VII
  Federal Acquisition Regulation Supplement       48, 53
Alaska Natural Gas Transportation System, Office  10, XV
     of the Federal Inspector
Alcohol, Tobacco and Firearms, Bureau of          27, I
AMTRAK                                            49, VII
American Battle Monuments Commission              36, IV
Animal and Plant Health Inspection Service        7, III; 9, I

[[Page 768]]

Appalachian Regional Commission                   5, IX
Architectural and Transportation Barriers         36, XI
     Compliance Board
Arctic Research Commission                        45, XXIII
Arms Control and Disarmament Agency, United       22, VI
     States
Army Department                                   32, V
  Engineers, Corps of                             33, II; 36, III
  Federal Acquisition Regulation                  48, 51
Assassination Records Review Board                36, XIV
Benefits Review Board                             20, VII
Bilingual Education and Minority Languages        34, V
     Affairs, Office of
Blind or Severely Disabled, Committee for         41, 51
     Purchase From People Who Are
Board for International Broadcasting              22, XIII
Census Bureau                                     15, I
Central Intelligence Agency                       32, XIX
Child Support Enforcement, Office of              45, III
Children and Families, Administration for         45, II, III, IV, X
Christopher Columbus Quincentenary Jubilee        45, XXII
     Commission
Civil Rights, Commission on                       45, VII
Civil Rights, Office for                          34, I
Coast Guard                                       33, I; 46, I; 49, IV
Commerce Department                               44, IV
  Census Bureau                                   15, I`
  Economic Affairs, Under Secretary               37, V
  Economic Analysis, Bureau of                    15, VIII
  Economic Development Administration             13, III
  Emergency Management and Assistance             44, IV
  Export Administration, Bureau of                15, VII
  Federal Acquisition Regulation                  48, 13
  Fishery Conservation and Management             50, VI
  Foreign-Trade Zones Board                       15, IV
  International Trade Administration              15, III; 19, III
  National Institute of Standards and Technology  15, II
  National Marine Fisheries Service               50, II, IV
  National Oceanic and Atmospheric                15, IX; 50, II, III, IV, 
       Administration                             VI
  National Telecommunications and Information     15, XXIII; 47, III
       Administration
  National Weather Service                        15, IX
  Patent and Trademark Office                     37, I
  Productivity, Technology and Innovation,        37, IV
       Assistant Secretary for
  Secretary of Commerce, Office of                15, Subtitle A
  Technology, Under Secretary for                 37, V
  Technology Administration                       15, XI
  Technology Policy, Assistant Secretary for      37, IV
Commercial Space Transportation                   14, III
Commodity Credit Corporation                      7, XIV
Commodity Futures Trading Commission              5, XLI; 17, I
Community Planning and Development, Office of     24, V, VI
     Assistant Secretary for
Community Services, Office of                     45, X
Comptroller of the Currency                       12, I
Construction Industry Collective Bargaining       29, IX
     Commission
Consumer Product Safety Commission                5, LXXI; 16, II
Cooperative State Research, Education, and        7, XXXIV
     Extension Service
Copyright Office                                  37, II
Cost Accounting Standards Board                   48, 99
Council on Environmental Quality                  40, V
Customs Service, United States                    19, I
Defense Contract Audit Agency                     32, I
Defense Department                                5, XXVI; 32, Subtitle A
  Advanced Research Projects Agency               32, I
  Air Force Department                            32, VII
  Army Department                                 32, V; 33, II; 36, III, 
                                                  48, 51
  Defense Intelligence Agency                     32, I

[[Page 769]]

  Defense Logistics Agency                        32, I, XII; 48, 54
  Defense Mapping Agency                          32, I
  Engineers, Corps of                             33, II; 36, III
  Federal Acquisition Regulation                  48, 2
  Navy Department                                 32, VI; 48, 52
  Secretary of Defense, Office of                 32, I
Defense Contract Audit Agency                     32, I
Defense Intelligence Agency                       32, I
Defense Logistics Agency                          32, XII; 48, 54
Defense Mapping Agency                            32, I
Defense Nuclear Facilities Safety Board           10, XVII
Delaware River Basin Commission                   18, III
Drug Enforcement Administration                   21, II
East-West Foreign Trade Board                     15, XIII
Economic Affairs, Under Secretary                 37, V
Economic Analysis, Bureau of                      15, VIII
Economic Development Administration               13, III
Economic Research Service                         7, XXXVII
Education, Department of                          5, LIII
  Bilingual Education and Minority Languages      34, V
       Affairs, Office of
  Civil Rights, Office for                        34, I
  Educational Research and Improvement, Office    34, VII
       of
  Elementary and Secondary Education, Office of   34, II
  Federal Acquisition Regulation                  48, 34
  Postsecondary Education, Office of              34, VI
  Secretary of Education, Office of               34, Subtitle A
  Special Education and Rehabilitative Services,  34, III
       Office of
  Vocational and Adult Education, Office of       34, IV
Educational Research and Improvement, Office of   34, VII
Elementary and Secondary Education, Office of     34, II
Employees' Compensation Appeals Board             20, IV
Employees Loyalty Board                           5, V
Employment and Training Administration            20, V
Employment Standards Administration               20, VI
Endangered Species Committee                      50, IV
Energy, Department of                             5, XXIII; 10, II, III, X
  Federal Acquisition Regulation                  48, 9
  Federal Energy Regulatory Commission            5, XXIV; 18, I
  Property Management Regulations                 41, 109
Energy, Office of                                 7, XXIX
Engineers, Corps of                               33, II; 36, III
Engraving and Printing, Bureau of                 31, VI
Enrichment Corporation, United States             10, XI
Environmental Protection Agency                   5, LIV; 40, I
  Federal Acquisition Regulation                  48, 15
  Property Management Regulations                 41, 115
Environmental Quality, Office of                  7, XXXI
Equal Employment Opportunity Commission           5, LXII; 29, XIV
Equal Opportunity, Office of Assistant Secretary  24, I
     for
Executive Office of the President                 3, I
  Administration, Office of                       5, XV
  Environmental Quality, Council on               40, V
  Management and Budget, Office of                25, III, LXXVII; 48, 99
  National Drug Control Policy, Office of         21, III
  National Security Council                       32, XXI; 47, 2
  Presidential Documents                          3
  Science and Technology Policy, Office of        32, XXIV; 47, II
  Trade Representative, Office of the United      15, XX
       States
Export Administration, Bureau of                  15, VII
Export-Import Bank of the United States           5, LII; 12, IV
Family Assistance, Office of                      45, II
Farm Credit Administration                        5, XXXI; 12, VI
Farm Credit System Insurance Corporation          5, XXX; 12, XIV
Farm Service Agency                               7, VII, XVIII
Federal Acquisition Regulation                    48, 1
Federal Aviation Administration                   14, I

[[Page 770]]

  Commercial Space Transportation                 14, III
Federal Claims Collection Standards               4, II
Federal Communications Commission                 5, XXIX; 47, I
Federal Contract Compliance Programs, Office of   41, 60
Federal Crop Insurance Corporation                7, IV
Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation             5, XXII; 12, III
Federal Election Commission                       11, I
Federal Emergency Management Agency               44, I
  Federal Acquisition Regulation                  48, 44
Federal Employees Group Life Insurance Federal    48, 21
     Acquisition Regulation
Federal Employees Health Benefits Acquisition     48, 16
     Regulation
Federal Energy Regulatory Commission              5, XXIV; 18, I
Federal Financial Institutions Examination        12, XI
     Council
Federal Financing Bank                            12, VIII
Federal Highway Administration                    23, I, II; 49, III
Federal Home Loan Mortgage Corporation            1, IV
Federal Housing Enterprise Oversight Office       12, XVII
Federal Housing Finance Board                     12, IX
Federal Inspector for the Alaska Natural Gas      10, XV
     Transportation System, Office of
Federal Labor Relations Authority, and General    5, XIV; 22, XIV
     Counsel of the Federal Labor Relations 
     Authority
Federal Law Enforcement Training Center           31, VII
Federal Maritime Commission                       46, IV
Federal Mediation and Conciliation Service        29, XII
Federal Mine Safety and Health Review Commission  5, LXXIV; 29, XXVII
Federal Pay, Advisory Committee on                5, IV
Federal Prison Industries, Inc.                   28, III
Federal Procurement Policy Office                 48, 99
Federal Property Management Regulations           41, 101
Federal Property Management Regulations System    41, Subtitle C
Federal Railroad Administration                   49, II
Federal Register, Administrative Committee of     1, I
Federal Register, Office of                       1, II
Federal Reserve System                            12, II
  Board of Governors                              5, LVIII
Federal Retirement Thrift Investment Board        5, VI, LXXVI
Federal Service Impasses Panel                    5, XIV
Federal Trade Commission                          5, XLVII; 16, I
Federal Transit Administration                    49, VI
Federal Travel Regulation System                  41, Subtitle F
Finance and Management, Office of                 7, XXX
Fine Arts, Commission on                          45, XXI
Fiscal Service                                    31, II
Fish and Wildlife Service, United States          50, I, IV
Fishery Conservation and Management               50, VI
Food and Drug Administration                      21, I
Food and Consumer Service                         7, II
Food Safety and Inspection Service                9, III
Foreign Agricultural Service                      7, XV
Foreign Assets Control, Office of                 31, V
Foreign Claims Settlement Commission of the       45, V
     United States
Foreign Service Grievance Board                   22, IX
Foreign Service Impasse Disputes Panel            22, XIV
Foreign Service Labor Relations Board             22, XIV
Foreign-Trade Zones Board                         15, IV
Forest Service                                    36, II
General Accounting Office                         4, I, II
General Services Administration                   5, LVII
  Contract Appeals, Board of                      48, 61
  Federal Acquisition Regulation                  48, 5
  Federal Property Management Regulations System  41, 101, 105
  Federal Travel Regulation System                41, Subtitle F
  Payment From a Non-Federal Source for Travel    41, 304
       Expenses
  Payment of Expenses Connected With the Death    41, 303
     of Certain Employees
[[Page 771]]

  Relocation Allowances                           41, 302
  Travel Allowances                               41, 301
Geological Survey                                 30, IV
Government Ethics, Office of                      5, XVI
Government National Mortgage Association          24, III
Grain Inspection, Packers and Stockyards          7, VIII; 9, II
     Administration
Great Lakes Pilotage                              46, III
Harry S. Truman Scholarship Foundation            45, XVIII
Health and Human Services, Department of          5, XLV; 45, Subtitle A
  Child Support Enforcement, Office of            45, III
  Children and Families, Administration for       45, II, III, IV, X
  Community Services, Office of                   45, X
  Family Assistance, Office of                    45, II
  Federal Acquisition Regulation                  48, 3
  Food and Drug Administration                    21, I
  Health Care Financing Administration            42, IV
  Human Development Services, Office of           45, XIII
  Indian Health Service                           25, V
  Inspector General (Health Care), Office of      42, V
  Public Health Service                           42, I
  Refugee Resettlement, Office of                 45, IV
Health Care Financing Administration              42, IV
Housing and Urban Development, Department of      5, LXV; 24, Subtitle B
  Community Planning and Development, Office of   24, V, VI
       Assistant Secretary for
  Equal Opportunity, Office of Assistant          24, I
       Secretary for
  Federal Acquisition Regulation                  48, 24
  Federal Housing Enterprise Oversight, Office    12, XVII
       of
  Government National Mortgage Association        24, III
  Housing--Federal Housing Commissioner, Office   24, II, VIII, X, XX
       of Assistant Secretary for
  Inspector General, Office of                    24, XII
  Public and Indian Housing, Office of Assistant  24, IX
       Secretary for
  Secretary, Office of                            24, Subtitle A, VII
Housing--Federal Housing Commissioner, Office of  24, II, VIII, X, XX
     Assistant Secretary for
Human Development Services, Office of             45, XIII
Immigration and Naturalization Service            8, I
Independent Counsel, Office of                    28, VII
Indian Affairs, Bureau of                         25, I, V
Indian Affairs, Office of the Assistant           25, VI
     Secretary
Indian Arts and Crafts Board                      25, II
Indian Health Service                             25, V
Information Agency, United States                 22, V
  Federal Acquisition Regulation                  48, 19
Information Resources Management, Office of       7, XXVII
Information Security Oversight Office, National   32, XX
     Archives and Records Administration
Inspector General
  Agriculture Department                          7, XXVI
  Health and Human Services Department            42, V
  Housing and Urban Development Department        24, XII
Institute of Peace, United States                 22, XVII
Inter-American Foundation                         5, LXIII; 22, X
Intergovernmental Relations, Advisory Commission  5, VII
     on
Interior Department
  Endangered Species Committee                    50, IV
  Federal Acquisition Regulation                  48, 14
  Federal Property Management Regulations System  41, 114
  Fish and Wildlife Service, United States        50, I, IV
  Geological Survey                               30, IV
  Indian Affairs, Bureau of                       25, I, V
  Indian Affairs, Office of the Assistant         25, VI
       Secretary
  Indian Arts and Crafts Board                    25, II
  Land Management, Bureau of                      43, II
  Minerals Management Service                     30, II
  Mines, Bureau of                                30, VI

[[Page 772]]

  National Indian Gaming Commission               25, III
  National Park Service                           36, I
  Reclamation, Bureau of                          43, I
  Secretary of the Interior, Office of            43, Subtitle A
  Surface Mining and Reclamation Appeals, Board   30, III
       of
  Surface Mining Reclamation and Enforcement,     30, VII
       Office of
Internal Revenue Service                          26, I
International Boundary and Water Commission,      22, XI
     United States and Mexico, United States 
     Section
International Development, Agency for             22, II
  Federal Acquisition Regulation                  48, 7
International Development Cooperation Agency,     22, XII
     United States
  International Development, Agency for           22, II; 48, 7
  Overseas Private Investment Corporation         5, XXXIII; 22, VII
International Fishing and Related Activities      50, III
International Investment, Office of               31, VIII
International Joint Commission, United States     22, IV
     and Canada
International Organizations Employees Loyalty     5, V
     Board
International Trade Administration                15, III; 19, III
International Trade Commission, United States     19, II
Interstate Commerce Commission                    5, XL
James Madison Memorial Fellowship Foundation      45, XXIV
Japan-United States Friendship Commission         22, XVI
Joint Board for the Enrollment of Actuaries       20, VIII
Justice Department                                5, XXVIII; 28, I
  Drug Enforcement Administration                 21, II
  Federal Acquisition Regulation                  48, 28
  Federal Claims Collection Standards             4, II
  Federal Prison Industries, Inc.                 28, III
  Foreign Claims Settlement Commission of the     45, V
       United States
  Immigration and Naturalization Service          8, I
  Offices of Independent Counsel                  28, VI
  Prisons, Bureau of                              28, V
  Property Management Regulations                 41, 128
Labor Department                                  5, XLII
  Benefits Review Board                           20, VII
  Employees' Compensation Appeals Board           20, IV
  Employment and Training Administration          20, V
  Employment Standards Administration             20, VI
  Federal Acquisition Regulation                  48, 29
  Federal Contract Compliance Programs, Office    41, 60
       of
  Federal Procurement Regulations System          41, 50
  Labor-Management Relations and Cooperative      29, II
       Programs, Bureau of
  Labor-Management Programs, Office of            29, IV
  Mine Safety and Health Administration           30, I
  Occupational Safety and Health Administration   29, XVII
  Pension and Welfare Benefits Administration     29, XXV
  Public Contracts                                41, 50
  Secretary of Labor, Office of                   29, Subtitle A
  Veterans' Employment and Training, Office of    41, 61; 20, IX
       the Assistant Secretary for
  Wage and Hour Division                          29, V
  Workers' Compensation Programs, Office of       20, I
Labor-Management Relations and Cooperative        29, II
     Programs, Bureau of
Labor-Management Programs, Office of              29, IV
Land Management, Bureau of                        43, II
Legal Services Corporation                        45, XVI
Library of Congress                               36, VII
  Copyright Office                                37, II
Management and Budget, Office of                  5, III, LXXVII; 48, 99
Marine Mammal Commission                          50, V
Maritime Administration                           46, II
Merit Systems Protection Board                    5, II

[[Page 773]]

Micronesian Status Negotiations, Office for       32, XXVII
Mine Safety and Health Administration             30, I
Minerals Management Service                       30, II
Mines, Bureau of                                  30, VI
Minority Business Development Agency              15, XIV
Miscellaneous Agencies                            1, IV
Monetary Offices                                  31, I
National Aeronautics and Space Administration     5, LIX; 14, V
  Federal Acquisition Regulation                  48, 18
National Agricultural Library                     7, XLI
National Agricultural Statistics Service          7, XXXVI
National Archives and Records Administration      5, LXVI; 36, XII
  Information Security Oversight Office           32, XX
National Bureau of Standards                      15, II
National Capital Planning Commission              1, IV
National Commission for Employment Policy         1, IV
National Commission on Libraries and Information  45, XVII
     Science
National and Community Service, Corporation for   45, XXV
National Council on Disability                    34, XII
National Credit Union Administration              12, VII
National Drug Control Policy, Office of           21, III
National Foundation on the Arts and the           45, XI
     Humanities
National Highway Traffic Safety Administration    23, II, III; 49, V
National Indian Gaming Commission                 25, III
National Institute for Literacy                   34, XI
National Institute of Standards and Technology    15, II
National Labor Relations Board                    29, I
National Marine Fisheries Service                 50, II, IV
National Mediation Board                          29, X
National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration   15, IX; 50, II, III, IV, 
                                                  VI
National Park Service                             36, I
National Railroad Adjustment Board                29, III
National Railroad Passenger Corporation (AMTRAK)  49, VII
National Science Foundation                       5, XLIII; 45, VI
  Federal Acquisition Regulation                  48, 25
National Security Council                         32, XXI
National Security Council and Office of Science   47, II
     and Technology Policy
National Telecommunications and Information       15, XXIII; 47, III
     Administration
National Transportation Safety Board              49, VIII
National Weather Service                          15, IX
Natural Resources Conservation Service            7, VI
Navajo and Hopi Indian Relocation, Office of      25, IV
Navy Department                                   32, VI
  Federal Acquisition Regulation                  48, 52
Neighborhood Reinvestment Corporation             24, XXV
Nuclear Regulatory Commission                     5, XLVIII; 10, I
  Federal Acquisition Regulation                  48, 20
Occupational Safety and Health Administration     29, XVII
Occupational Safety and Health Review Commission  29, XX
Offices of Independent Counsel                    28, VI
Operations Office                                 7, XXVIII
Overseas Private Investment Corporation           5, XXXIII; 22, VII
Panama Canal Commission                           48, 35
Panama Canal Regulations                          35, I
Patent and Trademark Office                       37, I
Payment From a Non-Federal Source for Travel      41, 304
     Expenses
Payment of Expenses Connected With the Death of   41, 303
     Certain Employees
Peace Corps                                       22, III
Pennsylvania Avenue Development Corporation       36, IX
Pension and Welfare Benefits Administration       29, XXV
Pension Benefit Guaranty Corporation              29, XL
Personnel Management, Office of                   5, I, XXXV; 45, VIII
  Federal Acquisition Regulation                  48, 17
  Federal Employees Group Life Insurance Federal  48, 21
     Acquisition Regulation
[[Page 774]]

  Federal Employees Health Benefits Acquisition   48, 16
       Regulation
Postal Rate Commission                            5, XLVI; 39, III
Postal Service, United States                     5, LX; 39, I
Postsecondary Education, Office of                34, VI
President's Commission on White House             1, IV
     Fellowships
Presidential Commission on the Assignment of      32, XXIX
     Women in the Armed Forces
Presidential Documents                            3
Prisons, Bureau of                                28, V
Productivity, Technology and Innovation,          37, IV
     Assistant Secretary
Public Contracts, Department of Labor             41, 50
Public and Indian Housing, Office of Assistant    24, IX
     Secretary for
Public Health Service                             42, I
Railroad Retirement Board                         20, II
Reclamation, Bureau of                            43, I
Refugee Resettlement, Office of                   45, IV
Regional Action Planning Commissions              13, V
Relocation Allowances                             41, 302
Research and Special Programs Administration      49, I
Rural Business-Cooperative Service                7, XVIII, XLII
Rural Development Administration                  7, XLII
Rural Housing Service                             7, XVIII, XXXV
Rural Telephone Bank                              7, XVI
Rural Utilities Service                           7, XVII, XVIII, XLII
Saint Lawrence Seaway Development Corporation     33, IV
Science and Technology Policy, Office of          32, XXIV
Science and Technology Policy, Office of, and     47, II
     National Security Council
Secret Service                                    31, IV
Securities and Exchange Commission                17, II
Selective Service System                          32, XVI
Small Business Administration                     13, I
Smithsonian Institution                           36, V
Social Security Administration                    20, III; 48, 23
Soldiers' and Airmen's Home, United States        5, XI
Special Counsel, Office of                        5, VIII
Special Education and Rehabilitative Services,    34, III
     Office of
State Department                                  22, I
  Federal Acquisition Regulation                  48, 6
Surface Mining and Reclamation Appeals, Board of  30, III
Surface Mining Reclamation and Enforcement,       30, VII
     Office of
Surface Transportation Board                      49, X
Susquehanna River Basin Commission                18, VIII
Technology Administration                         15, XI
Technology Policy, Assistant Secretary for        37, IV
Technology, Under Secretary for                   37, V
Tennessee Valley Authority                        5, LXIX; 18, XIII
Thrift Depositor Protection Oversight Board       12, XV
Thrift Supervision Office, Department of the      12, V
     Treasury
Trade Representative, United States, Office of    15, XX
Transportation, Department of                     5, L
  Coast Guard                                     33, I; 46, I; 49, IV
  Commercial Space Transportation                 14, III
  Contract Appeals, Board of                      48, 63
  Emergency Management and Assistance             44, IV
  Federal Acquisition Regulation                  48, 12
  Federal Aviation Administration                 14, I
  Federal Highway Administration                  23, I, II; 49, III
  Federal Railroad Administration                 49, II
  Federal Transit Administration                  49, VI
  Maritime Administration                         46, II
  National Highway Traffic Safety Administration  23, II, III; 49, V
  Research and Special Programs Administration    49, I
  Saint Lawrence Seaway Development Corporation   33, IV
  Secretary of Transportation, Office of          14, II; 49, Subtitle A
  Surface Transportation Board                    49, X

[[Page 775]]

Transportation, Office of                         7, XXXIII
Travel Allowances                                 41, 301
Treasury Department                               5, XXI; 17, IV
  Alcohol, Tobacco and Firearms, Bureau of        27, I
  Community Development Financial Institutions    12, XVIII
       Fund
  Comptroller of the Currency                     12, I
  Customs Service, United States                  19, I
  Engraving and Printing, Bureau of               31, VI
  Federal Acquisition Regulation                  48, 10
  Federal Law Enforcement Training Center         31, VII
  Fiscal Service                                  31, II
  Foreign Assets Control, Office of               31, V
  Internal Revenue Service                        26, I
  International Investment, Office of             31, VIII
  Monetary Offices                                31, I
  Secret Service                                  31, IV
  Secretary of the Treasury, Office of            31, Subtitle A
  Thrift Supervision, Office of                   12, V
Truman, Harry S. Scholarship Foundation           45, XVIII
United States and Canada, International Joint     22, IV
     Commission
United States and Mexico, International Boundary  22, XI
     and Water Commission, United States Section
United States Enrichment Corporation              10, XI
Utah Reclamation Mitigation and Conservation      43, III
     Commission
Veterans Affairs Department                       38, I
  Federal Acquisition Regulation                  48, 8
Veterans' Employment and Training, Office of the  41, 61; 20, IX
     Assistant Secretary for
Vice President of the United States, Office of    32, XXVIII
Vocational and Adult Education, Office of         34, IV
Wage and Hour Division                            29, V
Water Resources Council                           18, VI
Workers' Compensation Programs, Office of         20, I
World Agricultural Outlook Board                  7, XXXVIII

[[Page 777]]



                                     

                                     



                          Redesignation Table I



----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                Old Section                                                                      New Section    
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
1701.101..................................  Purpose.......................................              1720.101
1701.102..................................  Application...................................              1720.102
1701.103..................................  Definition....................................              1720.103
1701.104-1701.109.........................  Reserved......................................     1720.104-1720.109
1701.110..................................  Self-Evaluation...............................              1720.110
1701.111..................................  Notice........................................              1720.111
1701.112-1701.129.........................  Reserved......................................     1720.112-1720.129
1701.130..................................  General prohibition against discrimination....              1720.130
1701.131-1701.139.........................  [Reserved]....................................     1720.131-1720.139
1701.140..................................  Employment....................................              1720.140
1701.141-1701.148.........................  [Reserved]....................................     1720.141-1720.148
1701.149..................................  Program accessibility: Discrimination                       1720.149
                                             Prohibited.                                                        
1701.150..................................  Program accessibility: Existing Facilities....              1720.150
1701.151..................................  Program accessibility: New Construction and                 1720.151
                                             Alteration.                                                        
1701.152-1701.159.........................  [Reserved]....................................     1720.152-1720.159
1701.160..................................  Communications................................              1720.160
1701.161-1701.169.........................  [Reserved]....................................     1720.161-1720.169
1701.170..................................  Compliance Procedures.........................              1720.170
1701.171-1701.999.........................  [Reserved]....................................     1720.171-1720.999
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------


[[Page 779]]

                                     

                                     



                         Redesignation Table II



------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                                 5 CFR chapter XVI,     
5 CFR chapter I, subchapter B, old section    subchapter B, new section 
                  numbers                              numbers          
------------------------------------------------------------------------
                 Part 734                             Part 2634         
                 Subpart A                            Subpart A         
734.101...................................  2634.101                    
734.102...................................  2634.102                    
734.103...................................  2634.103                    
734.104...................................  2634.104                    
734.105...................................  2634.105                    
                 Subpart B                            Subpart B         
734.201...................................  2634.201                    
734.202...................................  2634.202                    
734.203...................................  2634.203                    
734.204...................................  2634.204                    
734.205...................................  2634.205                    
                 Subpart C                            Subpart C         
734.301...................................  2634.301                    
734.302...................................  2634.302                    
734.303...................................  2634.303                    
734.304...................................  2634.304                    
                 Subpart D                            Subpart D         
734.401...................................  2634.401                    
734.402...................................  2634.402                    
734.403...................................  2634.403                    
734.404...................................  2634.404                    
734.405...................................  2634.405                    
734.406...................................  2634.406                    
734.407...................................  2634.407                    
734.408...................................  2634.408                    
                 Subpart E                            Subpart E         
734.501...................................  2634.501                    
734.502...................................  2634.502                    
                 Subpart F                            Subpart F         
734.601...................................  2634.601                    
734.602...................................  2634.602                    
734.603...................................  2634.603                    
734.604...................................  2634.604                    
734.605...................................  2634.605                    
                 Subpart G                            Subpart G         
734.701...................................  2634.701                    
734.702...................................  2634.702                    
734.703...................................  2634.703                    
                 Subpart H                            Subpart H         
734.801...................................  2634.801                    
734.802...................................  2634.802                    
734.803...................................  2634.803                    
734.804...................................  2634.804                    
734.805...................................  2634.805                    
                 Subpart I                            Subpart I         
734.901...................................  2634.901                    
734.902...................................  2634.902                    
734.903...................................  2634.903                    
          Appendix A to Part 734               Appendix A to Part 2634  
          Appendix B to Part 734               Appendix B to Part 2634  
                 Part 737                             Part 2637         
                 Subpart A                            Subpart A         
737.1.....................................  2637.101                    
737.3.....................................  2637.102                    
                 Subpart B                            Subpart B         
737.5.....................................  2637.201                    
737.7.....................................  2637.202                    
737.9.....................................  2637.203                    
737.11....................................  2637.204                    
737.13....................................  2637.205                    
737.15....................................  2637.206                    
737.17....................................  2637.207                    
737.19....................................  2637.208                    
737.21....................................  2637.209                    
737.23....................................  2637.210                    
737.25....................................  2637.211                    
737.27....................................  2637.212                    
737.29....................................  2637.213                    
737.31....................................  2637.214                    
737.32....................................  2637.215                    
737.33....................................  2637.216                    
                 Part 738                             Part 2638         
                 Subpart A                            Subpart A         
738.101...................................  2638.101                    
738.102...................................  2638.102                    
738.103...................................  2638.103                    
738.104...................................  2638.104                    
                 Subpart B                            Subpart B         
738.201...................................  2638.201                    
738.202...................................  2638.202                    
738.203...................................  2638.203                    
738.204...................................  2638.204                    
                 Subpart C                            Subpart C         
738.301...................................  2638.301                    
738.302...................................  2638.302                    
738.303...................................  2638.303                    
738.304...................................  2638.304                    
738.305...................................  2638.305                    
738.306...................................  2638.306                    
738.307...................................  2638.307                    
738.308...................................  2638.308                    
738.309...................................  2638.309                    
738.310...................................  2638.310                    
738.311...................................  2638.311                    
738.312...................................  2638.312                    
738.313...................................  2638.313                    
------------------------------------------------------------------------


[[Page 781]]

                                     

                                     



                         Redesignation Table III



------------------------------------------------------------------------
   Interim regulation         Final regulation                          
         section                  section                  Action       
------------------------------------------------------------------------
1630.1..................  1630.1.................  No change.           
1630.2..................  1630.2.................  Revised.             
                          1630.3(a)..............  New.                 
1630.3..................  1630.3(b)..............  Same.                
1630.4 and 1630.5.......  1630.4.................  Merged and expanded. 
1630.6..................  1630.5.................  Same, renumbered.    
1630.7..................  1630.6.................  Renumbered and       
                                                    expanded.           
1630.8..................  1630.7.................  Renumbered and       
                                                    expanded.           
1630.9..................  1630.8.................  Renumbered and       
                                                    expanded.           
1630.10.................  1630.9.................  Renumbered.          
1630.11.................  1630.10................  Renumbered.          
1630.11(a)(3)...........  .......................  Deleted.             
1630.12.................  1630.11................  Renumbered and       
                                                    expanded.           
1630.13.................  1630.12................  Renumbered.          
1630.14.................  1630.13................  Renumbered.          
1630.15.................  1630.14................  Renumbered.          
1630.16.................  1630.15................  Renumbered.          
1630.17.................  1630.16................  Renumbered and       
                                                    revised.            
                          1630.17................  New.                 
1630.18.................  1630.18................  Same.                
------------------------------------------------------------------------


[[Page 783]]

                                     

                                     



                      Redesignation Table IVSecs. 



------------------------------------------------------------------------
 5 CFR chapter VI, part 1650, old section   5 CFR chapter VI, part 1650,
                  numbers                        new section numbers    
------------------------------------------------------------------------
                 Subpart C                            Subpart D         
1650.9....................................  1650.10                     
                 Subpart D                            Subpart E         
1650.10...................................  1650.11                     
                 Subpart E                            Subpart F         
1650.11-1650.14...........................  1650.12-1650.15             
                 Subpart F                            Subpart G         
1650.15-1650.21...........................  1650.16-1650.22             
                 Subpart G                            Subpart H         
1650.22-1650.24...........................  1650.24-1650.26             
                 Subpart H                            Subpart I         
1650.25-1650.41...........................  1650.27-1650.43             
                 Subpart I                            Subpart J         
1650.42-1650.45...........................  1650.44-1650.47             
                 Subpart J                            Subpart K         
1650.50-1650.52...........................  1650.50-1650.52             
------------------------------------------------------------------------


[[Page 785]]



List of CFR Sections Affected


All changes in this volume of the Code of Federal Regulations which were 
made by documents published in the Federal Register since January 1, 
1986, are enumerated in the following list. Entries indicate the nature 
of the changes effected. Page numbers refer to Federal Register pages. 
The user should consult the entries for chapters and parts as well as 
sections for revisions.
For the period before January 1, 1986, see the ``List of CFR Sections 
Affected, 1949-1963, 1964-1972, and 1973-1985,'' published in seven 
separate volumes.

                                  1986

5 CFR
                                                                   51 FR
                                                                    Page
Chapter II
1200  Revised.......................................................3321
1201  Revised......................................................25147
1201.27  (a) corrected.............................................28321
1201.56  (c)(3) corrected..........................................28321
1201.121  (b) corrected............................................28321
1201.126  (e)(3) corrected.........................................28321
1201.157  Corrected................................................28321
1201.165  (b) and (c)(2) corrected.................................28321
1201.173  (f)(3) corrected.........................................28321
1201.181--1201.183 (Subpart E)  Revised; interim....................6729
    Technical correction............................................7913
1201.183  Correctly designated; (c) corrected......................28321
1201.212  Corrected................................................28321
1201.213  Heading corrected........................................28321
1201.214  Introductory text corrected..............................28321
Chapter IV
1411  Added...................................................4573, 4579
1411.103  Corrected.................................................7543
1411.150  (c) corrected.............................................7543
1411.170  (c) revised...............................................4573
Chapter VII
1701  Added...................................................4574, 4579
    Redesignated as Part 1720; new Part 1701 added.................24800
1701.103  Corrected.................................................7543
1701.150  (c) corrected.............................................7543
1701.170  (c) revised...............................................4574
1702  Added........................................................24802
1703  Added........................................................24804
1720  Redesignated from Part 1701..................................24800
Chapter XIV
2400  Removed......................................................33837
2412.3  Revised....................................................33837
2412.4  (a)(2), (b) and (d) amended................................33837
2412.5  (b) amended................................................33837
2412.6  (a) and (c) amended........................................33837
2412.7  (b) amended................................................33837
2412.8  (a)(2) and (c) amended.....................................33837
2412.9  (a) amended................................................33837
2412.11  (a) amended...............................................33837
2412.12  Amended...................................................33837
2412.13  (b)(2) and (3) amended....................................33837
2422.2  (e)(4) added...............................................45751
2423.6  (c) added..................................................45751
2423.14  Heading revised; (a) and (b) redesignated as (b) and (c); 
        new (a) added..............................................45753
2424.4  (a)(2) revised; (c) added..................................45753
2424.6  (a)(2) revised.............................................45753
2425.2  (e) added..................................................45755
2429.8  Removed....................................................45755
2429.21  Revised...................................................45751
2429.23  (a) revised...............................................45752
2429.24  (a) and (e) revised.......................................45752
2430  Authority citation revised...................................33837
2430.1  Revised....................................................33837
2430.2  (a) and (b)(1) revised.....................................33837
Chapter XIV  Appendix A amended....................................4131,

[[Page 786]]

9173, 12595, 19161, 32623, 40121

                                  1987

5 CFR
                                                                   52 FR
                                                                    Page
Chapter II
1201.21  (c) and (d) revised; (e) removed..........................47547
1201.24  (a) (8) and (9), (c), and (d) revised; (a)(10) removed....47547
1201.25  (a)(5) removed; (a) (6) and (7) redesignated as (a) (5) 
        and (6) and revised........................................47548
1201.200--1201.222 (Subpart H)  Removed............................47548
1201  Appendix II revised..........................................10875
    Appendix III amended...........................................17919
1204  Revised; interim.............................................28123
    Revision confirmed.............................................45597
1260.1  Revised....................................................42421
1260.4  Revised....................................................42421
1260.5  Revised....................................................42423
1261.2  (a) revised................................................42423
Chapter III
1303  Authority citation revised...................................49152
1303.20  (c)(7) revised; eff. 1-29-88..............................49152
1303.30  Revised; eff. 1-29-88.....................................49153
1303.40  Added; eff. 1-29-88.......................................49153
1303.50  Added; eff. 1-29-88.......................................49154
1303.60  Added; eff. 1-29-88.......................................49154
1303.70  Added; eff. 1-29-88.......................................49155
Chapter VI
Chapter VI  Chapter established.....................................6127
1600  Added.........................................................6127
    Revised; interim...............................................45802
1600.2  (d) revised; interim.......................................20591
1603  Added; interim...............................................29835
1605  Added; interim...............................................17920
    Revised........................................................46318
1605.3  (b)(5) corrected...........................................19018
1605.9  Added; interim.............................................27527
1605.10  Added; interim............................................27528
1620  Added; interim...............................................26293
1630  Added; interim................................................8053
1631  Added; interim...............................................17923
1640  Added; interim...............................................20371
1650  Added; interim...............................................32281
    Effective date note corrected..................................32868
1650.16  Correctly revised.........................................38042
1650.18  (a) Corrected.............................................38042
1660  Added; interim...............................................38221
1690  Added; interim...............................................43315
Chapter XIV
2411.6  (b) (3) and (4) revised....................................26128
2411.10  Revised...................................................26128
Chapter XIV  Appendix A corrected...................................1313
    Appendix A amended.............................................45443

                                  1988

5 CFR
                                                                   53 FR
                                                                    Page
Chapter II
1200  Revised...............................................22465, 46843
1200.10  (g) corrected.............................................23850
1201  Appendix II amended.........................................40015,
                                                            47927, 48505
    Appendix II corrected..........................................49824
1205.16  Revised...................................................49649
1205.31  Revised...................................................49649
1205.32  Revised...................................................49649
1207  Added.................................................25881, 25885
1207.170  (c) revised..............................................25881
1253.1  Revised....................................................41149
1260.3  Revised....................................................41149
1262  Added.................................................25881, 25885
1262.170  (c) revised..............................................25881
Chapter III
1320  Revised......................................................16623
Chapter VI
1600.3  (d) revised................................................23379
1600.10  (d) revised...............................................23379
1600.13  (d) revised...............................................23379
1605.8  (b)(2) revised.............................................31629
1620  Authority citation added.....................................10038
1620.1 (Subpart A)  Heading added; interim
1620.10--1620.19 (Subpart B)  Added; interim.......................10038
1620.30--1620.40 (Subpart C)  Added; interim.......................10039
1620.34  Amended; interim..........................................17685
1620.50--1620.57 (Subpart D)  Added; interim.......................10041
1630.4  (a) revised................................................31629
1630.12  (a) revised...............................................31629
1630.14  (a) revised...............................................31629
1630.17  (c) revised...............................................31629
1631.3  (b) revised................................................31629
1631.4  (a) revised................................................31630
1631.6  (a) revised................................................31630
1631.10  (a) revised...............................................31630
1632  Added........................................................36777

[[Page 787]]

1633  Added; interim...............................................11815
    Added; final...................................................51223
1645  Added; interim...............................................15621
1650.26  (c) revised...............................................31630
1650.27  (e) revised...............................................31630
1650.50--1650.52 (Subpart J)  Added; interim........................8421
Chapter XIV
2416  Added.................................................25881, 25885
2416.170  (c) revised..............................................25881
Chapter XIV  Appendix A amended....................................25129

                                  1989

5 CFR
                                                                   54 FR
                                                                    Page
Chapter II
1201  Revised; interim.............................................28633
    Revised........................................................53504
1201.118  (b) revised...............................................2083
1202  Revised......................................................28658
1203  Revised...............................................23632; 28658
1203.1  (a) revised................................................28658
1203.2  (f) revised................................................28658
1203.5  Revised....................................................28658
1204  Authority citation revised.............................8725, 28658
    Authority citation corrected...................................18198
1204.14  Added......................................................8725
1205  Revised......................................................28662
1206  Revised......................................................20367
1206.7  (a)(2) corrected...........................................28664
1208  Added........................................................21397
1209  Added; interim...............................................28654
1210  Added........................................................50603
1250--1262 (Subchapter B)  Heading removed; interim................47345
1250  Removed; interim.............................................47345
1251  Removed; interim.............................................47345
1252  Removed; interim.............................................47345
1253  Removed; interim.............................................47345
1254  Removed; interim.............................................47345
1255  Removed; interim.............................................47345
1260  Removed; interim.............................................47345
1261  Removed; interim.............................................47345
1262  Redesignated as Part 1850 and heading amended; interim.......47345
Chapter VI
1620  Authority citation revised...................................32786
1620.70--1620.76 (Subpart E)  Added; interim.......................32786
1620.80--1620.86 (Subpart F)  Added; interim.......................32787
Chapter VIII
Chapter VIII  Chapter established; interim.........................47341
1800  Added; interim...............................................47341
1810  Added; interim...............................................47342
    Authority citation correctly added.............................50479
1820  Added; interim...............................................47342
1830  Added; interim...............................................47344
1840  Added; interim...............................................47345
1850  Redesignated from Part 1262 and heading amended; interim.....47345
1850.170  (c) amended; interim.....................................47345
Chapter XVI
Chapter XVI  Chapter established...................................50230
2600--2612 (Subchapter A)  Heading added...........................50230
2600  Heading added................................................50230
2602  Heading added................................................50230
2604  Heading added................................................50230
2608  Heading added................................................50230
2610  Heading added................................................50230
2612  Heading added................................................50230
2633--2638 (Subchapter B)  Heading added...........................50230
2633  Heading added................................................50230
2634  Redesignated from Part 734 and authority citation revised; 
        amended....................................................50230
2635  Heading added................................................50230
    Added..........................................................53311
2637  Redesignated from Part 737 and authority citation revised; 
        amended....................................................50231
2638  Redesignated from Part 738 and heading and authority 
        citation revised; amended..................................50231

                                  1990

5 CFR
                                                                   55 FR
                                                                    Page
Chapter II
1200  Revised......................................................21171
1201.26  (c) corrected...............................................548
1201  Appendix I corrected...........................................548
    Appendix II corrected............................................548
    Appendix II amended............................................29557
1204.21  Revised...................................................39911
1205.31  (a) revised...............................................39911
1205.32  Revised...................................................39911

[[Page 788]]

1209  Revised......................................................28592
Chapter III
1301  Removed......................................................28745
1312  Authority citation revised...................................28745
1312.1  Amended....................................................28745
1312.5  (a), (b), and (c) revised..................................28745
1312.32  Revised...................................................28745
Chapter VI
1601  Added; interim...............................................11881
1630  Revised......................................................18852
1631  Revised......................................................41052
1650.20  Revised; interim..........................................51099
1650.21  Revised; interim..........................................51099
1650.26  (d) amended; interim......................................52820
1650.27  Revised; interim..........................................52821
1650.28  Revised; interim..........................................52821
1650.29  Revised; interim..........................................52821
1650.30  Added; interim............................................52822
1655  Added..........................................................979
Chapter VIII
Chapter VIII  Regulation at 54 FR 47341 confirmed..................47839
1800  Regulation at 54 FR 47341....................................47839
1800.21  (b) introductory text and (1) revised.....................47839
1800.2  (b) introductory text and (1) revised......................47839
1810  Regulation at 54 FR 47342 and 50749 confirmed................47839
1820  Regulation at 54 FR 47342 confirmed..........................47839
1820.1  (a) revised................................................47839
1830  Regulation at 54 FR 47344 confirmed..........................47840
1840  Regulation at 54 FR 47345 confirmed..........................47840
1850  Regulation at 54 FR 47345 confirmed..........................50811
Chapter XIV
2429  Authority citation revised....................................2509
2429.18  Added......................................................2509
Chapter XIV  Appendix A revised....................................52831
Chapter XVI
2600  Added........................................................39589
2634  Authority citation revised...................................14407
2634.303  (h) added; interim.......................................14407
2634.1001--2634.1004 (Subpart J)  Added; interim...................14408
2637.101  (a) amended..............................................27179
    (a) corrected..................................................27933
2637.214  Revised...................................................4309
    Introductory text republished; amended.........................24856
2637.215  Revised...................................................4309
    Introductory text republished; amended.........................24856
2637.216  Revised...................................................4310
    Introductory text republished; amended.........................24856
    Corrected......................................................27330
2638  Authority citation revised...................................21846
2638.304  (a) revised..............................................27180
2638.307  (b) revised..............................................27180
2638.310  (b) revised..............................................27180
2638.401--2638.404 (Subpart D)  Added; interim......................1666
    Regulation at 55 FR 1666 confirmed; heading revised............21846
2638.501--2638.506 (Subpart E)  Added; interim......................1667
    Regulation at 55 FR 1667 confirmed; heading revised............21846
2638.501  (d) added................................................21846
2638.505  (b) introductory text revised; (c) and (e)(2) amended; 
        (g)(1) through (3) redesignated as (g)(2) through (4); new 
        (g)(1) added...............................................21846
2638.601--2638.603 (Subpart F)  Added; interim......................1670
    Regulation at 55 FR 1670 confirmed; heading revised............21846
2638.603  (b) and (c)(1) revised...................................21847

                                  1991

5 CFR
                                                                   56 FR
                                                                    Page
Chapter II
1200  Revised......................................................41747
1201.3  (a)(18) and (19) amended; (a)(20) revised..................41748
1201.56  (a)(1)(i) amended.........................................41748
1201  Appendix II amended..........................................41748
    Appendix II revised............................................52187
    Appendix I amended.............................................55599
1203.12  (c) removed...............................................41749
Chapter VI
1601  Revised; interim...............................................594
1603.1  Amended; interim.............................................600
1606  Added; interim.................................................606

[[Page 789]]

1620  Authority citation revised...................................26723
1620.90--1620.99 (Subpart G)  Added................................26723
1650  Authority citation revised.....................................614
1650.2  Amended; interim.............................................614
1650.4  Amended; interim.............................................614
1650.5  Introductory text amended; interim...........................614
    Introductory text, (a) and (b) amended; interim..................615
1650.7  Amended; interim.............................................615
1650.8  (a) amended; interim.........................................615
1650.9 (Subpart C)  Rededsignated as 1650.10 (Subpart D); interim 
                                                                     614
    Added; interim...................................................615
1650.10 (Subpart D)  Redesignated as 1650.11 (Subpart E); new 
        1650.10 (Subpart D) redesignated from 1650.11 (Subpart C); 
        interim......................................................614
    Amended; interim.................................................615
1650.11--1650.14 (Subpart E)  Redesignated as 1650.12--1650.15 
        (Subpart F); interim.........................................614
1650.11 (Subpart E)  Redesignated from 1650.10 (Subpart D); 
        interim......................................................614
1650.11  (a) amended; interim........................................615
1650.12--1650.15 (Subpart F)  Redesignated from 1650.11--1650.14 
        (Subpart E); interim.........................................614
1650.12  Amended.....................................................615
1650.13  (b)(5) amended; interim.....................................615
1650.15--1650.21 (Subpart F)  Redesignated as 1650.16--1650.22 
        (Subpart G); interim.........................................614
1650.16--1650.22 (Subpart G)  Redesignated from 1650.15--1650.21 
        (Subpart F); interim.........................................614
1650.17  (a) and (b) amended; interim................................615
1650.22--1650.24 (Subpart G)  Redesignated as 1650.24--1650.26 
        (Subpart H); interim.........................................614
1650.22  (a) amended; interim........................................615
1650.23  Added; interim..............................................615
1650.24--1650.26 (Subpart H)  Redesignated from 1650.22--1650.24 
        (Subpart G); interim.........................................614
1650.25--1650.41 (Subpart H)  Redesignated as 1650.27--1650.43 
        (Subpart I); interim.........................................614
1650.25  (a) and (b) amended; interim................................615
1650.26  (b), (c) and (d) amended; interim...........................615
1650.27--1650.43 (Subpart I)  Redesignated from 1650.25--1650.41 
        (Subpart H); interim.........................................614
1650.28  (d) amended; interim........................................615
1650.30  (a) and (b) amended; interim................................615
1650.31  (d), (e)(5), (f)(2) and (3) amended; interim................615
1650.42--1650.45 (Subpart I)  Redesignated as 1650.44--1650.47 
        (Subpart J); interim.........................................614
1650.43  (c) amended; interim........................................615
1650.44--1650.47 (Subpart J)  Redesignated from 1650.42--1650.45 
        (Subpart I); interim.........................................614
1650.47  Amended.....................................................615
1650.50--1650.52 (Subpart J)  Redesignated as Subpart K; interim 
                                                                     614
Chapter XIV
2412.16  Added.....................................................33189
Chapter XV
2500  Authority citation revised....................................8101
2500.7  (b) revised.................................................8101
2500.11  Amended....................................................8101
2502  Authority citation revised....................................5741
2502.3  (b) amended.................................................5741
    (a) revised.....................................................5742
2502.4  (a) amended.................................................5742
2502.6  (a) and (e) revised.........................................5742
2502.7  Amended.....................................................5742
2502.9  (b)(4) redesignated as (b)(5) and amended; new (b)(4) 
        added.......................................................5742
2502.10  Nomenclature change; (a) amended...........................5742
2502.11--2502.19  Undesignated center heading added.................5742
2502.11  Revised....................................................5742
2502.12  Revised....................................................5743
2502.13  Revised....................................................5743

[[Page 790]]

2502.14  Redesignated as 2502.16 and (b)(2)(i)(C) revised; new 
        2502.14 added...............................................5744
2502.15  Redesignated as 2502.17; new 2502.15 added.................5744
2502.16  Redesignated as 2502.18; new 2502.16 redesignated from 
        2502.14; (b)(2)(i)(C) revised...............................5744
2502.17  Redesignated as 2502.19; new 2502.17 redesignated from 
        2502.15.....................................................5744
2502.18  Redesignated from 2502.16..................................5744
2502.19  Redesignated from 2502.17..................................5744
2502.31  Nomenclature change........................................5744
2502.32  Nomenclature change........................................5744
2502.33  Nomenclature change........................................5744
Chapter XVI
2636  Added; interim................................................1723
2636.205  Effective date deferred to 10-15-91; interim......21589, 51319
    Effective date deferred to 2-18-92; interim....................51319
2637  Authority citation revised; Note added........................3963
2641  Added; interim................................................3963

                                  1992

5 CFR
                                                                   57 FR
                                                                    Page
Chapter II
1201  Appendix II revised..........................................21723
    Appendix II amended............................................32881
Chapter VI
1650.21  (a) and (b) revised; interim..............................57321
    (c)(1) and (2) redesignated as (b)(2)(i) and (ii); interim.....57322
    (c) introductory text correctly removed; interim...............60073
1650.22  (b) revised; interim......................................57322
Chapter XVI
2610  Added; interim...............................................33268
2633  Removed; interim.............................................11804
2634  Heading and authority citation revised.......................11804
2634.101--2634.105 (Subpart A)  Revised; interim...................11804
2634.101  Correctly designated.....................................21854
2634.105  (a), (b), (c), (e), (f), (h) through (l) and (n) 
        corrected..................................................21854
2634.201--2634.205 (Subpart B)  Revised; interim...................11806
2634.201  (a) introductory text, Example 2 and (d)(1) corrected....21854
2634.203  Heading corrected........................................21854
2634.301--2634.311 (Subpart C)  Revised; interim...................11808
2634.301  (c)(3) corrected.........................................21854
2634.302  (a)(1)(ii) corrected.....................................21854
2634.303  (a)(1) corrected.........................................21854
2634.304  (c) and (e)(2) corrected.................................62605
2634.307  (b) corrected............................................21854
2634.310  (b)(2)(ii) corrected.....................................21854
2634.401--2634.408 (Subpart D)  Revised; interim...................11814
2634.403  (b)(9)(ii)(D) corrected..................................21854
2634.404  (c)(9)(ii)(C) corrected..................................21854
2634.501--2634.503 (Subpart E)  Revised; interim...................11821
2634.601--2634.607 (Subpart F)  Revised; interim...................11821
2634.603  (c)(3) corrected.........................................21854
2634.604  (b) corrected............................................21854
2634.701--2634.704 (Subpart G)  Revised; interim...................11824
2634.801--2634.805 (Subpart H)  Revised; interim...................11825
2634.803  (a) introductory text corrected..........................21855
2634.804  (b)(1) corrected.........................................21855
2634.805  Heading corrected........................................21855
2634.901--2634.909 (Subpart I)  Revised; interim...................11826
2634.905  (c) Example 3 corrected..................................21855
2634  Appendix A revised; interim..................................11829
    Appendix B revised; appendix C added; interim..................11830
    Appendix B corrected...........................................21855
2635  Revised; eff. 2-3-93.........................................35041
    Technical correction...........................................52583
2635.202  (c)(4)(iii) corrected....................................48557
2635.204  (i)(1) corrected.........................................48557
2635.801  (d)(6) corrected.........................................48557
2635.807  (a) introductory text corrected..........................48557
2635.808  (c)(1)(ii) corrected.....................................48557
2636  Authority citation revised.....................................602
2636.203  (a)(13) and Example 7 added; (a) Examples 3 and 6 
        revised; interim.............................................602

[[Page 791]]

2636.205  Effective date deferred...................................5369
2637.214  Revised; eff. 1-1-93.....................................62468
2637.215  Revised; eff. 1-1-93.....................................62468
2637.216  Revised; eff. 1-1-93.....................................62468
2638  Authority citation revised...................................11890
2638.701--2638.704 (Subpart G)  Added..............................11890
    Heading corrected..............................................61612
    Technical correction...........................................15219
2638.703  (a) and (b) revised......................................58400
    (a)(1) corrected...............................................61612
2638.704  (b)(4) and (c)(1) revised................................58400
2641  Authority citation revised....................................3116
2641  Appendix A added; Appendix B amended..........................3116
    Appendix B amended.............................................11673

                                  1993

5 CFR
                                                                   58 FR
                                                                    Page
Chapter II
1201  Authority citation corrected.................................31234
1201.4  (i) and (l) amended........................................36345
1201.22  (d) amended...............................................36345
1201.26  (b)(2) amended............................................36345
1201.114  (c) amended..............................................36345
1201  appendix II revised..........................................28917
    appendix II corrected..........................................31234
1208  Removed......................................................61611
1209.8  (d) amended................................................36345
Chapter VI
1633  Authority citation revised...................................31332
1633.1--1633.83 (Subpart A)  Undesignated center headings removed 
                                                                   31332
1633.1  Removed....................................................31332
1633.2  Removed....................................................31332
1633.3  Removed....................................................31332
1633.5  Removed....................................................31332
1633.6  Removed....................................................31332
1633.7  Removed....................................................31332
1633.8  Removed....................................................31332
1633.9  Removed....................................................31332
1633.10  Removed...................................................31332
1633.20  Removed...................................................31332
1633.21  Removed...................................................31332
1633.30  Removed...................................................31332
1633.31  Removed...................................................31332
1633.32  Removed...................................................31332
1633.33  Removed...................................................31332
1633.34  Removed...................................................31332
1633.35  Removed...................................................31332
1633.36  Removed...................................................31332
1633.37  Revised...................................................31332
1633.38  (a), (c)(1), (3), (4) and (5)(ii) removed; (b) 
        redesignated as (a) and amended; (c)(2), (5) heading and 
        (5)(i) redesignated as (b)(2), (3) heading and text; (e) 
        redesignated as (c); new (b) added.........................31332
1633.39  Removed...................................................31332
1633.40  Removed...................................................31332
1633.41  Removed...................................................31332
1633.42  Removed...................................................31332
1633.43  Removed...................................................31332
1633.44  Removed...................................................31332
1633.45  Removed...................................................31332
1633.46  Removed...................................................31332
1633.47  Removed...................................................31332
1633.48  Removed...................................................31332
1633.49  Removed...................................................31332
1633.50  Removed...................................................31332
1633.51  Removed...................................................31332
1633.52  Removed...................................................31332
1633.53  Removed...................................................31332
1633.54  Removed...................................................31332
1633.55  Removed...................................................31332
1633.56  Removed...................................................31332
1633.70  Removed...................................................31332
1633.71  Removed...................................................31332
1633.72  Removed...................................................31332
1633.73  Removed...................................................31332
1633.74  Removed...................................................31332
1633.75  Removed...................................................31332
1633.76  Removed...................................................31332
1633.77  Removed...................................................31332
1633.78  Removed...................................................31332
1633.79  Removed...................................................31332
1633.80  Removed...................................................31332
1633.81  Removed...................................................31332
1633.82  Removed...................................................31332
1633.83  Removed...................................................31332
1633.200--1633.236 (Subpart B)  Removed............................31332
1633.250--1633.257 (Subpart C)  Undesignated center headings 
        removed....................................................31332
1633.250  Removed..................................................31332
1633.251  Removed..................................................31332
1633.252  (a), (c), (f) and (g) removed; (b), (d) and (e) 
        redesignated as (a), (b) and (c)...........................31332

[[Page 792]]

1633.253  Removed..................................................31332
1633.254  Removed..................................................31332
1633.255  Removed..................................................31332
1633.256  Removed..................................................31332
1633.257  Removed..................................................31332
1636  Added........................................................57696
1636.170  (c) revised..............................................57697
1650  Authority citation revised...................................45381
1650.2  Amended....................................................45381
1650.4  Heading revised............................................45381
1650.5  Revised....................................................45381
Chapter XI
Chapter  XI Removed; new Chapter XI heading added..................68505
Chapter XIV
2429.24  (a) revised...............................................53105
2471.2  Revised....................................................53105
2471.4  Revised....................................................53105
2472.5  Revised....................................................53105
Chapter  XIV appendix A amended....................................13695
Chapter XVI
2600  Authority citation revised...................................69176
2634.203  (c)(1) revised; interim..................................38912
2634.601  (a) revised; interim.....................................38912
2634.704  (f) added; interim.......................................38912
2634.903  (a) revised; (b)(2)(ii) amended; (b)(2)(iii) added; 
        interim....................................................38912
2634.907  (a)(1) and (2) revised...................................63024
2636.305  (b) heading revised......................................69176
2637  Authority citation revised...................................69176
2638.203  (b)(3) and (4) amended...................................69176
2638.204  (a) and (b) amended......................................69176
2641  appendix B amended...........................................33755
Chapter XXII
Chapter  XXII Established; interim.................................39627
Chapter XXVI
Chapter  XXVI Established; interim.................................47622
Chapter XXXIII
Chapter  XXXIII Established; interim...............................33320
Chapter XL
Chapter  XL Established............................................41990
Chapter XLI
Chapter  XLI Established...........................................52638
Chapter XLVI
Chapter  XLVI Established; interim.................................42840
Chapter XLVII
Chapter  XLVII Established; interim................................30695

                                  1994

5 CFR
                                                                   59 FR
                                                                    Page
Chapter II
1200.1  Heading revised............................................65233
1200.2  Heading revised............................................65233
1200.3  Added......................................................39937
1200.10  (l) amended; (m) revised..................................14739
    Revised........................................................65233
1201.3  (a)(6)  and (7) amended; (a)(21) added; (d) removed........65235
1201.4  (d) amended................................................65235
1201.22  (b) amended...............................................31109
    (a)  amended...................................................65235
1201.23  Example revised...........................................31109
1201.27  (b) amended...............................................31109
1201.37  (a)(3) amended.....................................31109, 65235
1201.112  Revised..................................................22125
1201.115  (b)(1) and (2) revised; (c) redesignated as (d); new (c) 
        added......................................................30863
1201.116  Redesignated as 1201.117; new 1201.116 added.............30864
1201.117  Redesignated as 1201.118; new 1201.117 redesignated from 
        1201.116...................................................30864
1201.118  Redesignated as 1201.119; new 1201.118 redesignated from 
        1201.117...................................................30864
1201.119  Redesignated as 1201.120; new 1201.119 redesignated from 
        1201.118...................................................30864
1201.120  Redesignated from 1201.119...............................30864
1201.122  (c) amended..............................................65235
1201.154  (a), (b)(1) and (d) amended..............................31109
1201.163  (c)(1) amended...........................................65235
1201.182  (a) and (c) amended......................................65235
1201  Appendix II revised..........................................14739
    Appendix III  amended..........................................14740
    Appendix I  amended............................................65235
    Appendixes  II and III amended.................................65242
1203.13  (d) amended...............................................65242
1203.14  (b) revised...............................................65242
1204.21  Amended...................................................65243

[[Page 793]]

1205.31  (a) amended...............................................65243
1205.32  (a), (b) and (c) amended..................................65243
1209.5  (c) amended................................................31110
1209.8  (b), (c) and (d) amended...................................65243
1209.9  (c)(1) amended.............................................65243
1209.10  (b)(1) amended............................................65243
Chapter III
1320  appendix A amended...........................................50815
Chapter VI
1600  Authority citation revised...................................55331
1600.2  (b) revised................................................55331
1605.8  (b)(2) amended.............................................55331
1620.72  (d) removed; interim.......................................1889
1620.73  Removed; new 1620.73 redesignated from 1620.74; interim 
                                                                    1889
1620.74  Redesignated as 1620.73; new 1620.74 redesignated from 
        1620.75; interim............................................1889
1620.75  Redesignated as 1620.74; new 1620.75 redesignated from 
        1620.76; interim............................................1889
1620.76  Redesignated as 1620.75; interim...........................1889
1620.83  (c) removed; interim.......................................1889
1620.84  Removed; new 1620.84 redesignated from 1620.85; interim 
                                                                    1890
1620.85  Redesignated as 1620.84; new 1620.85 redesignated from 
        1620.86; interim............................................1890
1620.86  Redesignated as 1620.85; interim...........................1890
1630.4  (b) amended................................................55331
1630.5  (a) revised................................................26409
1630.13  (a) amended...............................................55331
1631.3  (b) amended................................................55331
1631.4  (a) amended.........................................55331, 55332
1631.6  (a) amended................................................55331
1631.10  (a) amended...............................................55331
1632.4  (c) amended................................................55331
1632.11  (b) amended...............................................55331
1633  Revised......................................................50817
1650.28  (c) amended........................................55331, 55332
1650.32  (b) amended...............................................55331
1650.51  (b) amended...............................................55332
Chapter VIII
1800.1  (a) amended................................................64843
1800.2  (a) amended................................................64843
1800.3  Amended....................................................64843
1820.1  (b) amended................................................64843
1820.2  Amended....................................................64843
1820.8  Amended....................................................64843
1830.1  (a) amended................................................64844
1830.3  Amended....................................................64844
1850.170  (c) amended..............................................64844
Chapter XI
2100  Added........................................................30669
Chapter XIV
Chapter  XIV appendix A amended....................................30504
Chapter XVI
2610.201  (f) amended..............................................34755
2634.409  Added; OMB number........................................34756
2634.601  OMB number...............................................34756
2634.603  OMB number...............................................34756
2635.403  (a) amended...............................................4780
2635.803  Amended...................................................4780
2635  Appendix A added..............................................4780
2636  Authority citation revised...................................34756
2636.205  OMB number...............................................34756
2638.203  (b)(6) revised; interim..................................12148
2638.702  (a)(2) introductory text, (3) introductory text, (ii) 
        and (iii) revised; interim.................................12148
2638.703  Revised; interim.........................................12148
2638.704  (a), (b)(4), (c) and (d) revised; interim................12149
2641  Authority citation revised...................................34756
2641.101  Amended..................................................34756
Chapter XLVIII
Chapter XLVIII  Established........................................17459
Chapter LIX
Chapter LIX  Established...........................................49336
Chapter LXIII
Chapter LXIII  Established..........................................3772
Chapter LXXVI
Chapter LXXVI  Established.........................................50817

                                  1995

5 CFR
                                                                   60 FR
                                                                    Page
Chapter II
1201  Appendixes II and III revised................................40744
    Appendix II corrected...................................43001, 44254
    Appendix III corrected.........................................44255
Chapter III
1300  Revised......................................................12397
1320  Revised......................................................44984

[[Page 794]]

    Technical correction...........................................46149
Chapter VI
1601.1  Amended....................................................36633
1601.4  (c) removed................................................47837
1601.5  Revised....................................................36633
1601.6  Revised....................................................36633
1603  Authority citation revised...................................24535
1603.1  Amended; interim...........................................24535
1603.3  (a) and (b) amended; interim...............................24535
1620  Authority citation revised...................................19990
1620.100--1620.107 (Subpart H)  Added; interim.....................19990
1650  Revised.......................................................9603
1653  Added........................................................13609
    Authority citation revised.....................................45624
1653.20--1653.25 (Subpart B)  Added; interim.......................45624
    Regulation at 60 FR 45624 confirmed............................66061
Chapter IX
1900  Revised......................................................62702
1900.100  Technical correction.....................................63576
Chapter XIV
2421.11  Revised; eff. 3-15-96.....................................67291
2421.18  Added; eff. 3-15-96.......................................67291
2421.19  Added; eff. 3-15-96.......................................67291
2421.20  Added; eff. 3-15-96.......................................67291
2421.21  Added; eff. 3-15-96.......................................67291
2421.22  Added; eff. 3-15-96.......................................67291
2422  Revised; eff. 3-15-96........................................67291
2429.21  (a) and (b) revised; eff. 3-15-96.........................67298
2429.22  Revised; eff. 3-15-96.....................................67298
Chapter XIV  Appendix A amended....................................49493
Chapter XVI
2604  Added........................................................10007
2610.106  (a) amended..............................................38666
2635.203  (b)(7) note amended......................................51667
2635.403  (a) note amended..........................................6391
    (a) note amended; eff. 1-3-96..................................66858
2635.803  Note amended..............................................6391
    Note amended; eff. 1-3-96......................................66858
2635  Appendix B added..............................................6391
    Appendix C added; eff. 1-3-96..................................66858
2640  Added; interim...............................................44709
Chapter XXI
Chapter XXI  Established...........................................22251
Chapter XXII
3201  Added........................................................20174
Chapter XXX
Chapter XXX  Established; interim..................................30776
Chapter XXXI
Chapter XXXI  Established; interim (effective date pending)........30781
    Regulation at 60 FR 30781 confirmed; eff. 9-13-95..............47453
4101  Concurrence..................................................62319
Chapter XXXIII
Chapter XXXIII  Regulation at 58 FR 33320 confirmed................37556
Chapter LII
Chapter LII  Established; interim..................................17626
Chapter LIII
Chapter LIII  Established; interim..................................5817
Chapter LX
Chapter LX  Established............................................47240
Chapter LXXVII
Chapter LXXVII  Established........................................12397

                                  1996

5 CFR
                                                                   61 FR
                                                                    Page
Chapter II
1201.3  (a)(7), (8)(ii), (10), (12) and (13) amended...................1
1201.126  (c) amended..............................................49049
1201  Appendixes II and III revised.................................4586
Chapter VI
1600.1  Amended; interim...........................................58754
1605  Revised......................................................68472
1620  Authority citation revised......................2873, 41486, 55202
1620.72  (b)(1) amended; interim...................................58755
1620.83  (a) amended; interim......................................58755
1620.90--1620.99 (Subpart G)  Revised; interim.....................41486
1620.110--1620.119 (Subpart I)  Added; interim......................2873
1620.110  Revised; interim.........................................55202
1620.111  Amended; interim.........................................55202
1620.112  Revised; interim.........................................55202
1620.114  Revised; interim.........................................55202
1620.118  Revised; interim.........................................55202
1645.1  Amended....................................................58973

[[Page 795]]

1645.2  Revised....................................................58974
1645.3  Amended....................................................58974
1645.4  Revised....................................................58974
1645.5  Revised....................................................58974
1645.6  Revised....................................................58974
1645.7  Revised....................................................58974
1653.5  (a) revised................................................18912
1653.25  (a) revised...............................................18912
1655  Authority citation revised...................................58755
1655.1  Amended; interim...........................................58755
1655.2  Amended; interim...........................................58755
1655.3  Revised; interim...........................................58755
1655.4  Revised; interim...........................................58755
1655.9  (b) and (c) revised; interim...............................58755
1655.10  (c) revised; (d) removed; interim.........................58755
1655.11  (d) revised; interim......................................58755
1655.12  Revised; interim..........................................58755
1655.13  (a)(1), (2)(ii) and (3) revised; interim..................58756
1655.15  (b) revised; (c) amended; interim.........................58756
1655.16  (b) revised; (d) removed; interim.........................58757
1655.17  (a) and (b) amended; interim..............................58757
1655.18  Revised; interim..........................................58757
1655.19  Revised; interim..........................................58757
1655.21  Removed; interim..........................................58757
1655.22  Removed; interim..........................................58757
1655.23  Removed; interim..........................................58757
1655.24  Removed; interim..........................................58757
1660  Removed......................................................36610
Chapter IX
1900.100  Corrected................................................13051
Chapter XIV
2470.1  Amended....................................................41294
2471.2  Revised....................................................41294
2471.3  (a)(1), (b)(1) and (4) revised.............................41294
2471.4  Revised....................................................41294
2471.5  Heading, (a), (b), (d) and (e) revised.....................41294
2471.6  Heading, (a)(2) and (b) revised............................41294
2471.7  Heading and introductory text revised; (a) and (b) 
        introductory text removed; (b)(1) through (6) redesignated 
        as (a) through (f).........................................41295
2471.8  Heading revised............................................41295
2471.9  (a) revised................................................41295
2472  Authority citation revised...................................41295
2472.2  (d) through (n) redesignated as (e) through (o); new (d) 
        added; new (j) revised.....................................41295
2472.3  Revised....................................................41295
2472.4  (a)(1) and (6) revised.....................................41295
2472.5  Revised....................................................41295
2472.6  Removed; new 2472.6 redesignated from 2472.7; heading, 
        (a), (b), (d), (e) and (f) revised.........................41295
2472.7  Redesignated as 2472.6; new 2472.7 redesignated from 
        2472.8.....................................................41295
    (b) revised....................................................41296
2472.8  Redesignated as 2472.7; new 2472.8 redesignated from 
        2472.9.....................................................41295
    Revised........................................................41296
2472.9  Redesignated as 2472.8; new 2472.9 redesignated from 
        2472.10....................................................41295
2472.10  Redesignated as 2472.9; new 2472.10 redesignated from 
        2472.11....................................................41295
    Revised........................................................41296
2472.11  Redesignated as 2472.10; new 2472.11 redesignated from 
        2472.12....................................................41295
    (a) introductory text and (b) revised..........................41296
2472.12  Redesignated as 2472.11...................................41295
2473  Added........................................................41296
Chapter  XIV Appendix A amended..............................1697, 51207
    Appendix B amended.............................................16043
Chapter XVI
2634  Authority citation revised...................................32635
2634.1001  (b) amended.............................................32635
    Corrected......................................................35589
2634.1002  (b)(1)(i), (ii), (iv)(B), (v) and (c) revised; (d) and 
        (e) added..................................................32635
    (e)(1) corrected...............................................40145
2635.204  (g)(2) through (5) and (6) introductory text revised; 
        (g)(6) Examples 2, 3 and 4 redesignated as (g)(6) Examples 
        4, 5 and 6; new (g)(6) Examples 2 and 3 added..............42969
    (g)(2) corrected...............................................48733
    (f) amended; interim...........................................50691

[[Page 796]]

2635.403  (a) note amended.........................................40951
2635.801  (d)(7) revised; interim..................................50691
2635.803  Note amended.............................................40951
2635.808  (a)(2) note revised; interim.............................50691
2635  Appendix D added.............................................40952
2640  Revised; eff. 1-17-97........................................66841
Chapter XXII
3201.103  (b)(4) amended...........................................35915
3202  Removed......................................................50947
Chapter XXIII
Chapter  XXIII Established; interim................................35087
Chapter XXIV
Chapter  XXIV Established..........................................43414
Chapter XXVIII
Chapter  XXVIII Established; interim...............................59814
Chapter XXIX
Chapter  XXIX Established..........................................56111
Chapter XXX
Chapter  XXX Regulation at 60 FR 30776 confirmed....................4349
Chapter XXXV
Chapter  XXXV Established; interim.................................36996
Chapter XLII
Chapter  XLII Established; interim.................................57284
Chapter XLIII
Chapter  XLIII Established; interim................................59818
Chapter XLV
Chapter  XLV Established...........................................39763
Chapter L
Chapter  L Established.............................................39903
Chapter LIV
Chapter  LIV Established...........................................40502
Chapter LVII
Chapter  LVII Established..........................................56401
Chapter LVIII
Chapter  LVIII Established.........................................53828
Chapter LXII
Chapter  LXII Established; interim..................................7066
Chapter LXV
Chapter  LXV Established...........................................36248
Chapter LXVI
Chapter  LXVI Established..........................................40505
Chapter LXIX
Chapter  LXIX Established..........................................20118
Chapter LXXI
Chapter  LXXI Established..........................................65458
Chapter LXXIV
Chapter  LXXIV Established.........................................39871

                                  1997

                  (Correction published Jan. 17, 1997)

5 CFR
                                                                   62 FR
                                                                    Page
Chapter XIV
2473  Heading added.................................................2547