BNUMBER: B-270446
DATE: February 11, 1997
TITLE: Customs Service
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Matter of:Customs Service
File: B-270446
Date:February 11, 1997
DIGEST
The Customs Service may use its operating appropriation to cover the
cost of extending its psychological assessment and referral services
to its employees' family members adversely affected by work-related
incidents arising from law enforcement activities or traumatic
incidents involving death or serious injury to its employees in the
line of duty.
DECISION
BACKGROUND
The United States Customs Service (Customs Service) asks whether it
may use its operating appropriation to pay for psychological
assessment and referral services for family members of its employees
under certain circumstances. For the reasons explained below, we
conclude that it may.
The Customs Service Employee Assistance Program provides psychological
assessment, short-term counseling and referral services to its
employees for work-related or personal problems affecting employees'
work performance and morale.[1] The Customs Service proposes to extend
assessment and referral services, but not counselling, to family
members of employees who are adversely affected by work-related
incidents associated with their law enforcement activities, such as,
for example, an inherently dangerous assignment. The Customs Service
also propose to extend such services to family members of its
employees adversely affected by traumatic incidents involving death or
serious injury to Customs Service employees in the line of duty.
Customs Service employees perform a variety of law enforcement
activities ranging from the routine to the inherently dangerous.
During the course of their law enforcement duties, Customs Service
employees may be subject to death threats and/or threats of violence.
Apart from the stress and anxiety normally associated with law
enforcement work, death threats or threats of violence directed at
Customs Service employees or members of their families can have a
significant impact on an employee and the performance of his or her
duties and be the source of stress and anxiety for their families. To
help mitigate these concerns, the Customs Service proposes to provide
psychological assessment and referral services to family members. The
Customs Service believes that the provision of such services would
reassure employees that their families will receive necessary
assistance obtaining help, thereby benefiting employee morale,
recruitment, retention, and performance.
The bombing of the federal building in Oklahoma City exemplifies
another situation where the Customs Service proposes to offer
psychological assessment and referral services to family members of
its employees. Not surprisingly, the impact of "traumatic incidents"
where Customs Service employees suffer death or serious injury in the
line of duty falls particularly hard not only on fellow workers, but
also on their families. In the face of such tragedies, the Customs
Service believes that it is important that its employees and their
families feel that the Customs Service is responding to such tragedies
in a humane and helpful fashion. Accordingly, the Customs Service
believes that even apart from the basic humaneness of its proposal,
the extension of psychological assessment and referral services to
employees' family members in such a situation would rebound to its
benefit through improved employee retention, performance, and
recruitment.
ANALYSIS
A basic tenet of appropriation law is that appropriated funds may only
be used for the purposes for which appropriated. 31 U.S.C. sec. 1301(a)
(1994). This does not mean that an agency may incur only those
expenses specified explicitly in an appropriation. To so require
would be clearly impractical given the relative levels of generality
that Congress uses to provide funding for the various agency programs
and activities. Thus, our decisions are replete with examples of
authorized expenditures that are neither specifically nor explicitly
authorized in an appropriation act but which are reasonably necessary
to carry out an authorized function or which materially contribute to
the effective accomplishment of an authorized function. 65 Comp. Gen.
738, 740 (1986) (Refreshments may be considered a necessary expense
incident to an agency's awards ceremony); B-223608, Dec. 19, 1988
(Appropriated funds may not be used to purchase ice scrapers imprinted
with a safety slogan to promote agency safety programs); and 1 United
States General Accounting Office Principles of Federal Appropriations
Law, p. 4-14, (2d ed. 1991). The "necessary expense" doctrine that
supports the holdings in these decisions reflects a respect for an
agency's legitimate exercise of discretion to determine how best to
accomplish the objects of its appropriation. Although not unlimited,
it is a rule of reason and of deference.
Part and parcel of any necessary expense analysis is whether the
expenditure in question is a personal or official one. With respect
to psychological assessments and referrals, we have generally
considered such medical services as personal to the employee. Hence,
absent statutory authority to the contrary, appropriated funds
generally may not be used for such expenses. B-253159, November 22,
1993.
We have, however, recognized exceptions to the general rule. We have
not objected to expenditures for employee medical expenses where the
agency can demonstrate that the expenses in question primarily benefit
the agency. For example, prior to the enactment of the preventive
health statute, 5 U.S.C. sec. 7901, authorizing agencies to use available
appropriations to establish programs to promote and maintain the
physical and mental health and fitness of their employees, we held
that the Army's Chemical Warfare Service may pay for periodic physical
examinations to detect early signs of arsenic poisoning in its
laboratory employees. 22 Comp. Gen. 32 (1942). We rationalized the
expense as primarily for the benefit of the government in order to
avoid work interruptions resulting from absenteeism due to illness or
the inability to recruit and retain qualified personnel. Id. See
also 41 Comp. Gen. 387 (1961); 30 Comp. Gen. 387 (1951); 26 Comp.
Gen. 544 (1947); and 23 Comp. Gen. 888 (1944).
We have extended this rationale to cases where the recipient of the
medical services is not a government employee. 65 Comp. Gen. 677
(1986); 29 Comp. Gen. 111 (1949); and 23 Comp. Gen. 746 (1944). In
each of the cited decisions, we concluded that the government was the
principal or primary beneficiary of the expenditure. We have reached
the same result in cases not involving medical expenses. In 71 Comp.
Gen. 9 (1991), we concluded that the Federal Aviation Administration
could reimburse the travel expenses of an employee's spouse who
attended State Department security training prior to a permanent duty
assignment overseas. We viewed the travel and training as directly
serving the government's interest. Id. at 11. Similarly, in 69 Comp.
Gen. 38 (1989), we held that an agency could reimburse as a necessary
expense of an awards ceremony the expenses of an employee's spouse to
attend an awards ceremony honoring the employee. The agency's
determination that the spouse's attendance at the ceremony would
further the purposes of the awards program was adequate to qualify the
expense as necessary under the "necessary expense" doctrine as we have
developed that concept in our decisions and as Congress has
incorporated it in the Government Employees' Incentive Awards Act, 5
U.S.C. sec. 4503 (1994).
In light of the above decisions, we believe that the Customs Service
may reasonably conclude that the extension of psychological assessment
and referral services to family members of Customs Service employees
in the circumstances described above will primarily benefit the
Customs Service. The Customs Service has determined that its law
enforcement activities and traumatic incidents involving death or
serious injury to employees in the line of duty are the source of
stress and anxiety to its employee's family members. The Customs
Service has further concluded that if not addressed, the stress and
anxiety suffered by its employees' family members negatively impacts
the accomplishment of its mission through reduced job performance,
reduced employee retention, and increased difficulty recruiting
qualified employees. Accordingly, based on these determinations, so
long as the Customs Service limits the circumstances in which it
provides psychological assessment and referral services to those
determined to be work-related, we would not object to the provision of
these services to its employees' family members.
Comptroller General
of the United States
1. See 5 U.S.C. sec. 7901 which authorizes the use of appropriated funds
for preventive health measures for federal employees in certain
circumstance. The Custom Service proposes to provide service to
employees' family members who are not covered by section 7901.