[Privacy Act Issuances (2003)]
[From the U.S. Government Publishing Office, www.gpo.gov]

NATIONAL LABOR RELATIONS BOARD

   Table of contents

       NLRB-1  Accounting Records--Financial.
       -Appendix
       NLRB-2  Applicant Files for Attorney and Field Examiner 
   Positions.
       -Appendix
       NLRB-3  Biographical Data File--Presidential Appointees.
       -Appendix
       NLRB-4  Claim Records.
       NLRB-5  Employment and Performance Records, Attorneys and Field 
   Examiners.
       NLRB-6  Employment and Performance Records, Nonprofessionals and 
   Nonlegal Professionals.
       NLRB-7  Grievances, Appeals, Complaints, and Related Litigation 
   Records.
       NLRB-8  Health Maintenance Program Records.
       NLRB-9  Occupational Injury and Illness Records.
       NLRB-10  Payroll/Personnel Records.
       NLRB-12  Prefiling Communications.
       NLRB-14  Equal Employment Opportunity Program Management System.
       NLRB-15  Employee Counseling Services Program Records.
       NLRB-16  Investigative Services Case Files.
       NLRB-17  Personnel Security Files.
       NLRB-18  Office of Inspector General Investigative Files.
       NLRB-19  Telephone Call Detail Records.
       NLRB-29  Agency Disciplinary Case Files.

   NLRB-1

   System name: 

       Accounting Records--Financial.
     Security classification: 
       None.
     System location: 
       Current records are maintained in: Finance Branch, NLRB, 1099 
   14th Street, NW, Washington, DC 20570-0001. Each Washington and Field 
   Office is authorized to maintain copies of records relating to 
   reimbursements to employees of that office and other individuals 
   covered within the system. See the attached appendix for addresses of 
   these offices. Inactive records are stored in the Washington National 
   Records Center in accordance with regulations issued by the National 
   Archives and Records Administration (36 CFR 1228.152).
     Categories of individuals covered by the system: 
       Individuals reimbursed for expenses in connection with the 
   official functions of the NLRB; i.e., travel on official business, 
   witness fees, FOIA Request, and transportation expenses, and 
   miscellaneous expenses.
     Categories of records in the system: 
       Records may include name; home or office address; organizational 
   unit number, purpose, duration, and cost for travel assignment of 
   Agency employees; purpose, duration, points of travel, and cost for 
   witnesses used by the Agency; and purpose, category, and cost of 
   miscellaneous expenses incurred by Agency employees.
     Authority for maintenance of the system: 
       5 U.S.C., 5701 et seq.; 29 U.S.C. 153, 155, 159, 106, and 161(4).
   Purpose(s): 
       These records document financial transactions regarding 
   reimbursement of expenses in connection with official NLRB functions.
     Routine uses of records maintained in the system, including 
   categories of users and the purposes of such uses: 
       These records or information therefrom is disclosed to:
       1. Individuals who need the information in connection with the 
   processing of an appeal, grievance, or complaint.
       2. The U.S. General Accounting Office for audit purposes or 
   determination of validity claims.
       3. The U.S. Department of Treasury for issuance of checks, or 
   direct deposit.
       4. Other agencies, offices, establishments, and authorities, 
   whether Federal, state, or local, authorized or charged with the 
   responsibility to investigate, litigate, prosecute, enforce, or 
   implement a statute, rule, regulation, or order, where the record or 
   information, by itself or in connection with other records or 
   information, indicates a violation or potential violation of law, 
   whether criminal, civil, administrative, or regulatory in nature, and 
   whether arising by general statute, or particular program statute, or 
   by regulation, rule, or order issued pursuant thereto.
       5. Another agency, whether Federal, State, or local, or private 
   organization where reimbursable arrangements exits between this 
   Agency and such other agency or private organization.
       6. A Member of Congress or to a Congressional staff member in 
   response to an inquiry of the Congressional office made at the 
   written request of the constituent about whom the record is 
   maintained.
       7. Officials of labor organizations recognized under 5 U.S.C. 
   Chapter 71, when disclosure is not prohibited by law; and the data is 
   normally maintained by the Agency in the regular course of business 
   and is reasonably available and necessary for full and proper 
   discussion. The foregoing shall have the identical meaning as 5 
   U.S.C. 7114(b)(4) as interpreted by the FLRA and the courts.
       8. The Department of Justice for use in litigation, when either: 
   (a) The NLRB or any component thereof; (b) any employee of the NLRB 
   in his or her official capacity; (c) any employee of the NLRB in his 
   or her individual capacity, where the Department of Justice has 
   agreed to represent the employee; or (d) the United States Government 
   where the NLRB determines that litigation is likely to affect the 
   NLRB or any of its components, is a party to litigation or has an 
   interest in such litigation, and the use of such records by the 
   Department of Justice is deemed by the NLRB to be relevant and 
   necessary to the litigation, provided that in each case the Agency 
   determines that disclosure of the records to the Department of 
   Justice is a use of the information contained in the records that is 
   compatible with the purpose for which the records were collected.
       9. A court, magistrate, administrative tribunal, or other 
   adjudicatory body in the course of presenting evidence or argument, 
   including disclosure to opposing counsel or witnesses in the course 
   of civil discovery, litigation, or settlement negotiations, or in 
   connection with criminal law proceedings, when: (a) The NLRB or any 
   component thereof; or (b) any employee of the NLRB in his or her 
   official capacity; or (c) any employee of the NLRB in his or her 
   individual capacity where the NLRB has agreed to represent the 
   employee; or (d) the United States Government, is a party to 
   litigation or has interest in such litigation, and determines that 
   such disclosure is relevant and necessary to the litigation and that 
   the use of such records is therefore deemed by the NLRB to be for a 
   purpose that is compatible with the purpose for which the records 
   were collected.
       10. The Defense Manpower Data Center, Department of Defense, and 
   to the U.S. Postal Service, to conduct computer matching programs for 
   the purpose of identifying and locating individuals who are receiving 
   Federal salaries or benefit payments and are delinquent in their 
   repayment of debts owed to the U.S. Government under certain programs 
   administered by the NLRB in order to collect the debts under the 
   provisions of the Debt Collection Act of 1982 (Pub. L. 97-365), and 
   Debt Collection Act of 1996 (Pub. L. 104-134) by voluntary repayment, 
   or by administrative or salary offset procedures, and
       Any other Federal agency for the purpose of effecting 
   administrative or salary offset procedures against a person employed 
   by that agency or receiving or eligible to receive some benefit 
   payments from the agency when NLRB as a creditor has a claim against 
   that person.
       Disclosure of information about persons who are receiving Federal 
   salaries or benefit payments and are delinquent in their repayment of 
   debts owed to the U.S. Government under certain programs administered 
   by NLRB may be made to other Federal agencies, only to the extent of 
   determining whether or not the person is employed by that agency and, 
   if so, effecting administrative or salary offset procedures against 
   that person.
   Disclosure to consumer reporting agencies:
       For the purpose of collecting delinquent debt, these records may 
   be reported to a credit bureau to add to credit history.
     Policies and practices for storing, retrieving, accessing, 
   retaining, and disposing of records in the system:  
     Storage: 
       Maintained on original source documents except travel summary 
   cards, some of which are also maintained on microfilm, and electronic 
   storage for computer matching programs.
     Retrievability: 
       Chronologically by year, and within each year alphabetically by 
   name.
     Safeguards: 
       Original source documents and microfiche are maintained in file 
   cabinets. During duty hours cabinets and computers are under 
   surveillance of personnel charged with custody of the records, and 
   after duty hours are behind locked doors. Access is limited to 
   personnel with a need for access in order to perform their official 
   functions.
     Retention and disposal: 
       Maintained and disposed of in accordance with the provisions of 
   applicable General Records Schedules issued by the National Archives 
   and Records Administration.
     System manager(s) and address:
       Finance Officer, NLRB, 1099 14th Street, NW, Washington, DC 
   20570-0001.
       See the attached appendix for the titles and addresses of 
   officials at other locations responsible for this system at their 
   locations.
     Notification procedure: 
       An individual may inquire as to whether this system contains a 
   record pertaining to him or her by directing a request to the 
   appropriate System Manager in accordance with the procedures set 
   forth in 29 CFR 102.117(f).
     Record access procedures:
       An individual seeking to gain access to records in this system 
   pertaining to him or her should contact the appropriate System 
   Manager in accordance with the procedures set forth in 29 CFR 102.117 
   (g) and (h).
     Contesting record procedures: 
       An individual may request amendment of a record pertaining to 
   such individual maintained in this system by directing a request to 
   the appropriate System Manager in accordance with the procedures set 
   forth in 29 CFR 102.117(i).
     Record source categories: 
       Travel vouchers, witness vouchers, and lodging and miscellaneous 
   receipts submitted by the individual; travel orders submitted by 
   Agency officials; subpoenas; claims for reimbursements; and 
   miscellaneous correspondence and information related thereto.

                                Appendix

       Names and Addresses of NLRB Offices referenced in Notice of 
   Records System shown above.

                        NLRB Headquarters Offices

           1099 14th Street, NW, Washington, DC 20570-0001

                           Offices of the Board

     Members of the Board, Executive Secretary, Office of 
             the Executive Secretary, Director, Office of 
            Representation Appeals, Director, Division of 
     Information, Solicitor, Inspector General, Office of 
                                         Inspector General
    Chief Administrative Law Judge, 1099 14th Street, NW, 
                                 Washington, DC 20570-0001
   Associate Chief Administrative Law Judge, San Francisco 
     Judges, 901 Market Street, Suite 300, San Francisco, 
                                     California 94103-1779
       Associate Chief Administrative Law Judge, New York 
   Judges, 120 West 45th Street, 11th Floor, New York, New 
                                           York 10036-5503
        Associate Chief Administrative Law Judge, Atlanta 
      Judges, Peachtree Summit Building, 401 W. Peachtree 
       Street, NE, Suite 1708, Atlanta, Georgia 30308-3510

                      Offices of the General Counsel

   General Counsel, Associate General Counsel, Division of 
        Operations Management, Associate General Counsel, 
   Division of Advice, Associate General Counsel, Division 
         of Enforcement Litigation, Director, Division of 
    Administration, Director, Equal Employment Opportunity

                            NLRB Field Offices

                               Regional Director, Region 1
        Thomas P. O'Neal, Jr. Federal Office Building, 10 
        Causeway Street--6th Floor, Boston, Massachusetts 
                                                02222-1072
                               Regional Director, Region 2
      Jacob K. Javits Federal Office Building, 26 Federal 
           Plaza, Room 3614, New York, New York 10278-0104
                               Regional Director, Region 3
     Dulski Federal Building, 111 West Huron Street, Room 
                         901, Buffalo, New York 14202-2387
                                          Resident Officer
           Albany Resident Office, Leo W. O'Brien Federal 
   Building, Clinton Avenue at N. Pearl Street--Room 342, 
                               Albany, New York 12207-2350
                               Regional Director, Region 4
   One Independence Mall, 615 Chestnut Street--7th Floor, 
                     Philadelphia, Pennsylvania 19106-4404
                               Regional Director, Region 5
   The Appraisers Store, 103 South Gay Street, 8th Floor, 
                            Baltimore, Maryland 21202-4026
                                          Resident Officer
   Washington Resident Office, 1099 14th Street, NW, Suite 
                           5530, Washington, DC 20570-0001
                               Regional Director, Region 6
      William S. Moorehead Federal Building, 1000 Liberty 
    Avenue, Room 1501, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania 15222-4173
                               Regional Director, Region 7
       Patrick V. McNamara Federal Building, 477 Michigan 
            Avenue--Room 300, Detroit, Michigan 48226-2569
                                          Resident Officer
      Grand Rapids Resident Office, The Furniture Company 
    Building, 82 Ionia Northwest--Room 330, Grand Rapids, 
                                       Michigan 49503-3022
                               Regional Director, Region 8
    Anthony J. Celebrezze Federal Building, 1240 East 9th 
              Street, Room 1695 Cleveland, Ohio 44199-2086
                               Regional Director, Region 9
   John Weld Peck Federal Building, 550 Main Street, Room 
                         3003, Cincinnati, Ohio 45202-3271
                              Regional Director, Region 10
     Marietta Tower, Suite 2400, 101 Marietta Street NW., 
                               Atlanta, Georgia 30323-3301
                                          Resident Officer
    The Burger--Phillips Centre, 1900 Third Avenue North, 
                 Suite 311, Birmingham, Alabama 35203-3502
                              Regional Director, Region 11
     Republic Square, Suite 200, 4035 University Parkway, 
                  Winston Salem, North Carolina 27106-3325
                              Regional Director, Region 12
      First of America Plaza--Suite 530, 201 East Kennedy 
                      Boulevard, Tampa, Florida 33602-5824
                                          Resident Officer
      Miami Resident Office, Claude Pepper Federal Office 
       Building-13th Floor, 51 Southwest 1st Avenue, Room 
                           1320, Miami, Florida 33130-1608
                                          Resident Officer
     Jacksonville Resident Office, Federal Building, Room 
       214, 400 West Bay Street, Box 35091, Jacksonville, 
                                        Florida 32202-4412
                              Regional Director, Region 13
      Bank of America Building--Suite 800, 200 West Adams 
                      Street, Chicago, Illinois 60606-5208
                              Regional Director, Region 14
     1222 Spruce Street, Room 8302, Saint Louis, Missouri 
                                                63103-2829
                              Regional Director, Region 15
    1515 Poydras Street--Room 610, New Orleans, Louisiana 
                                                70112-3723
                              Regional Director, Region 16
      Fritz G. Lanham Federal Office Building, 819 Taylor 
           Street, Room 8A24, Fort Worth, Texas 76102-6178
                                          Resident Officer
    Houston Resident Office, Suite 550, Lyric Center, 440 
               Louisiana Street, Houston, Texas 77002-2649
                                          Resident Officer
            San Antonio Resident Office, U.S. Post Office/
    Courthouse Building--Room 565, 615 E. Houston Street, 
                             San Antonio, Texas 78205-2040
                                          Resident Officer
    El Paso Resident Office, PO Box 23159, El Paso, Texas 
                                                79923-3159
                              Regional Director, Region 17
     8600 Farley Street, Suite 100, Overland Park, Kansas 
                                                66212-4677
                                          Resident Officer
   Tulsa Resident ffice, Grantson Building--Suite 990, 111 
             West Fifth Street, Tulsa, Oklahoma 74103-4214
                              Regional Director, Region 18
        Federal Building, 110 South 4th Street--Room 316, 
                         Minneapolis, Minnesota 55401-2291
                                          Resident Officer
   Des Moines Resident Office, Federal Building--Room 909, 
            210 Walnut Street, Des Moines, Iowa 50309-2116
                              Regional Director, Region 19
    Henry Jackson Federal Building--Room 2948, 915 Second 
                    Avenue, Seattle, Washington 98174-1078
                                          Resident Officer
   Anchorage Resident Office, Federal Office Building, 222 
     West 7th Avenue, Room 510, Box 21, Anchorage, Alaska 
                                                99513-3546
                                         Officer in Charge
       Subregion 36, Koin Center--Room 401, 222 Southwest 
              Columbia Street, Portland, Oregon 97201-6604
                              Regional Director, Region 20
   901 Market Street--Suite 400, San Francisco, California 
                                                94103-1735
                                         Officer in Charge
   Subregion 37, Prince Kuhio Federal Building--Room 7318, 
      300 Ala Moana Boulevard, Honolulu, Hawaii 96850-4980
                              Regional Director, Region 21
       888 South Figueroa Street--9th Floor, Los Angeles, 
                                     California 90017-5449
                                          Resident Officer
          San Diego Resident Office, Pacific Professional 
     Center--Suite 302, 555 West Beech Street, San Diego, 
                                     California 92101-2939
                              Regional Director, Region 22
       20 Washington Place--5th Floor, Newark, New Jersey 
                                                07102-2570
                              Regional Director, Region 24
        La Torre de Plaza--Suite 1002, 525 F.D. Roosevelt 
                  Avenue, San Juan, Puerto Rico 00918-1002
                              Regional Director, Region 25
    Minton Capehart Federal Building--Room 238, 575 North 
     Pennsylvania Street, Indianapolis, Indiana 46204-1577
                                Region Director, Region 26
         Mid-Memphis Tower--Suite 800, 1407 Union Avenue, 
                             Memphis, Tennessee 38104-3627
                                          Resident Officer
   Little Rock Resident Office, TCBY Building--Suite 375, 
     425 West Capitol Avenue, Little Rock, Arkansas 72201-
                                                      3489
                                          Resident Officer
     Nashville Resident Office, 8101 Broadway, 3rd Floor, 
                           Nashville, Tennessee 37203-3816
                              Regional Director, Region 27
        Dominion Plaza, North Tower, 600 17th Street, 7th 
                        Floor, Denver, Colorado 80202-5433
                              Regional Director, Region 28
   Security Building, Suite 440, 234 North Central Avenue, 
                               Phoenix, Arizona 85004-2212
                                          Resident Officer
    Albuquerque Resident Office, Western Bank Plaza--Room 
        1820, 505 Marquette Avenue, NW., Albuquerque, New 
                                         Mexico 87102-2181
                                          Resident Officer
            Las Vegas Resident Office, Alan Bible Federal 
     Building--Suite 400, 600 Las Vegas Boulevard, South, 
                              Las Vegas, Nevada 89101-6637
                              Regional Director, Region 29
     One Metro Tech Center, Jay Street and Myrtle Avenue--
                 10th Floor, Brooklyn, New York 11201-4201
                              Regional Director, Region 30
        Henry S. Reuss Federal Plaza--Suite 700, 310 West 
         Wisconsin Avenue, Milwaukee, Wisconsin 53203-2211
                              Regional Director, Region 31
        Federal Building/USPO--Room 12100, 11000 Wilshire 
             Boulevard, Los Angeles, California 90024-3682
                              Regional Director, Region 32
      Breuner Building, 2nd Floor, 1301 Clay Street, Room 
                      300N, Oakland, California 94612-5211
                              Regional Director, Region 33
        Hamilton Square Building--Suite 200, 300 Hamilton 
                    Boulevard, Peoria, Illinois 61602-1104
                              Regional Director, Region 34
      1 Commercial Plaza--21st Floor, Church and Trumbull 
                  Street, Hartford, Connecticut 06103-3599

   NLRB-2

   System name: 

       Applicant Files for Attorney and Field Examiner Positions.
     Security classification: 
       None.
  System location:
       Office of Executive Assistant, Division of Operations Management; 
   Office of the Executive Secretary, NLRB, 1099 14th Street, NW, 
   Washington, DC 20570-0001.
       Washington and Field Offices are authorized to maintain the 
   records or copies of the records in connection with processing of 
   applications for employment in the Agency. See the attached appendix 
   for addresses of the Washington and Field Offices.
     Categories of individuals covered by the system: 
       Applicants for Attorney or Field Examiner positions in offices 
   under the general supervision of the General Counsel; applicants for 
   Attorney positions on Board Member's staffs, in the Office of the 
   Solicitor, and in the Office of Representation Appeals.
     Categories of records in the system: 
       Records may include copies of employment applications; 
   educational transcripts, resumes, employment interview reports, and 
   other information related to employment.
     Authority for maintenance of the system: 
       5 U.S.C. 3301 et seq.; 29 U.S.C. 153(d), 154, 159, and 160.
   Purpose(s): 
       These records document the skills and background of applicants 
   for attorney and field examiner positions within the NLRB.
     Routine uses of records maintained in the system, including 
   categories of users and the purposes of such uses: 
       The records or information contained therein may be disclosed to:
       1. Individuals who need the information in connection with the 
   processing of an appeal, grievance, or complaint.
       2. A Member of Congress or to a Congressional staff member in 
   response to an inquiry of the congressional office made at the 
   written request of the constituent about whom the records are 
   maintained.
       3. Officials of labor organizations recognized under 5 U.S.C. 
   Chapter 71, when disclosure is not prohibited by law; and the data is 
   normally maintained by the Agency in the regular course of business 
   and is reasonably available and necessary for full and proper 
   discussion, understanding and negotiation of subjects within the 
   scope of collective bargaining. The foregoing shall have the 
   identical meaning as 5 U.S.C. 7114(b)(4) as interpreted by the FLRA 
   and the courts.
       4. An arbitrator to resolve disputes under a negotiated grievance 
   arbitration procedure.
       5. Other agencies, offices, establishments, and authorities, 
   whether Federal, state, or local, authorized or charged with 
   responsibility to investigate, litigate, prosecute, enforce, or 
   implement a statute, rule, regulation, or order, where the record or 
   information, by itself or in connection with other records or 
   information, indicates a violation or potential violation of law, 
   whether criminal, civil, administrative, or regulatory in nature, and 
   whether arising by general statute or particular program statute, or 
   by regulation, rule, or order issued pursuant thereto.
       6. The Department of Justice for use in litigation when either: 
   (a) The NLRB or any component thereof, (b) any employee of the NLRB 
   in his or her official capacity, (c) any employee of the Agency in 
   his or her individual capacity, where the Department of Justice has 
   agreed to represent the employee, or (d) the United States Government 
   where the NLRB determines that litigation is likely to affect the 
   NLRB or any of its components, is a party to litigation or has 
   interest in such litigation, and the use of such records by the 
   Department of Justice is deemed by the NLRB to be relevant and 
   necessary to the litigation, provided that in each case the Agency 
   determines that disclosure of the records to the Department of 
   Justice is a use of the information contained in the records that is 
   compatible with the purpose for which the records were collected.
       7. A court, magistrate, administrative tribunal, or other 
   adjudicatory body in the course of presenting evidence or argument, 
   including disclosure to opposing counsel or witnesses in the course 
   of civil discovery, litigation, or settlement negotiations, or in 
   connection with criminal law proceedings, when: (a) The NLRB or any 
   component thereof, or (b) any employee of the NLRB in his or her 
   official capacity; or (c) any employee of the NLRB in his or her 
   individual capacity, where the NLRB has agreed to represent the 
   employee, or (d) the United States Government is a party to 
   litigation or has an interest in such litigation, and determines that 
   such disclosure is relevant and necessary to the litigation and that 
   the use of such records is therefore deemed by the NLRB to be for a 
   purpose that is compatible with the purpose for which the records 
   were collected.
   Disclosure to consumer reporting agencies:
       None.
     Policies and practices for storing, retrieving, accessing, 
   retaining, and disposing of records in the system: 
     Storage: 
       Maintained on paper including forms, letters, and memoranda.
     Retrievability: 
       Alphabetically by name.
     Safeguards: 
       Maintained in file cabinets. During duty hours cabinets are under 
   surveillance of personnel charged with custody of the records and 
   after duty hours are behind locked doors. Access to the cabinets is 
   limited to personnel having a need for access to perform their 
   official functions.
     Retention and disposal:
       Employment applications not resulting in appointment are 
   destroyed when 2 years old.
     System manager(s) and address: 
       1. To those applicants for positions under supervision of the 
   General Counsel--Executive Assistant, Division of Operations 
   Management, NLRB, 1099 14th Street, NW, Washington, DC 20570.
       2. To those applicants for positions under the supervision of a 
   Board Member, the Director of the Office of Representation Appeals, 
   and the Solicitor--Executive Secretary, NLRB, 1099 14th Street, NW., 
   Washington, DC 20570-0001.
       See the attached appendix for titles and addresses of officials 
   at other locations responsible for this system at their location.
     Notification procedure: 
       An individual may inquire as to whether this system contains a 
   record pertaining to him or her by directing a request to the 
   appropriate System Manager in accordance with the procedures set 
   forth in 29 CFR 102.117(f).
     Record access procedures:
       An individual seeking to gain access to records in this system 
   pertaining to him or her should contact the appropriate System 
   Manager in accordance with the procedures set forth in 29 CFR 102.117 
   (g) and (h).
     Contesting record procedures: 
       An individual may request amendment of a record pertaining to him 
   or her maintained in this system by directing a request to the 
   appropriate System Manager in accordance with the procedures set 
   forth in 29 CFR 102.117(i).
     Record source categories: 
       Applicants, educational institutions, interviewers, evaluators, 
   personnel specialists, references, previous employers.

                                Appendix

       Names and Addresses of NLRB Offices referenced in Notice of 
   Records System shown above.

         NLRB HEADQUARTERS OFFICES, 1099 14th Street, NW, 
                                 Washington, DC 20570-0001
                                                OFFICES OF THE BOARD

                                      Members of the Board
    Executive Secretary, Office of the Executive Secretary
                Director, Office of Representation Appeals
                         Director, Division of Information
                                                 Solicitor
            Inspector General, Office of Inspector General
    Chief Administrative Law Judge, 1099 14th Street, NW, 
                 Room 5400 East, Washington, DC 20570-0001
   Associate Chief Administrative Law Judge, San Francisco 
     Judges, 901 Market Street, Suite 300, San Francisco, 
                                     California 94103-1779
       Associate Chief Administrative Law Judge, New York 
   Judges, 120 West 45th Street, 11th Floor, New York, New 
                                           York 10036-5503
        Associate Chief Administrative Law Judge, Atlanta 
      Judges, Peachtree Summit Building, 401 W. Peachtree 
       Street, NW, Suite 1708, Atlanta, Georgia 30308-3510
                                      OFFICES OF THE GENERAL COUNSEL

                                           General Counsel
        Associate General Counsel, Division of Operations 
                                                Management
             Associate General Counsel, Division of Advice
       Associate General Counsel, Division of Enforcement 
                                                Litigation
                      Director, Division of Administration
                    Director, Equal Employment Opportunity
                                                  NLRB FIELD OFFICES

        Regional Director, Region 1, Thomas P. O'Neal Jr. 
   Federal Office Building, 10 Causeway Street, 6th Floor, 
                          Boston, Massachusetts 02222-1072
     Regional Director, Region 2, Jacob K. Javits Federal 
     Building, 26 Federal Plaza, Room 3614, New York, New 
                                           York 10278-0104
   Regional Director, Region 3, Thaddeus J. Dulski Federal 
   Building, 111 West Huron Street, Room 901, Buffalo, New 
                                           York 14202-2387
         Resident Officer, Albany Resident Office, Leo W. 
     O'Brien Federal Building, Clinton Avenue at N. Pearl 
             Street, Room 342, Albany, New York 12207-2350
   Regional Director, Region 4, One Independence Mall, 615 
   Chestnut Street, 7th Floor, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania 
                                                19106-4404
        Regional Director, Region 5, The Appraisers Store 
    Building, 103 South Gay Street, 8th Floor, Baltimore, 
                                       Maryland 21202-4026
     Resident Officer, Franklin Court Building, 1099 14th 
         Street, NW, Suite 5530, Washington, DC 20570-0001
        Regional Director, Region 6, William S. Moorehead 
        Federal Building, 1000 Liberty Avenue, Room 1501, 
                       Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania 15222-4173
         Regional Director, Region 7, Patrick V. McNamara 
         Federal Building, 477 Michigan Avenue, Room 300, 
                              Detroit, Michigan 48226-2569
      Resident Officer, Grand Rapids Resident Office, The 
     Furniture Company Building, 82 Ionia Northwest, Room 
                    330, Grand Rapids, Michigan 49503-3022
       Regional Director, Region 8, Anthony J. Celebrezze 
       Federal Building, 1240 East 9th Street, Room 1695, 
                                Cleveland, Ohio 44199-2086
      Regional Director, Region 9, John Weld Peck Federal 
   Building, 550 Main Street, Room 3003, Cincinnati, Ohio 
                                                45202-3271
          Regional Director, Region 10, Harris Tower, 233 
       Peachtree Street, NE, Suite 1000, Atlanta, Georgia 
                                                30303-1504
   Resident Officer, The Burger-Phillips Centre, 1900 3rd 
   Avenue North, Suite 311, Birmingham, Alabama 35203-3511
     Regional Director, Region 11, Republic Square, Suite 
       200, 4035 University Parkway, Winston-Salem, North 
                                       Carolina 27106-3325
   Regional Director, Region 12, South Trust Plaza, Suite 
    530, 201 East Kennedy Boulevard, Tampa, Florida 33602-
                                                      5824
   Resident Officer, Jacksonville Resident Office, Federal 
      Building, 400 West Bay Street, Room 214, Box 35091, 
                          Jacksonville, Florida 32202-4412
         Resident Officer, Miami Resident Office, Federal 
     Building, 51 Southwest 1st Avenue, Room 1320, Miami, 
                                        Florida 33130-1608
     Regional Director, Region 13, 200 West Adams Street, 
                   Suite 800, Chicago, Illinois 60606-5208
   Regional Director, Region 14, 1222 Spruce Street, Room 
                   8.302, Saint Louis, Missouri 63103-2829
   Regional Director, Region 15, 1515 Poydras Street, Room 
                    610, New Orleans, Louisiana 70112-3723
   Regional Director, Region 16, Federal Office Building, 
   819 Taylor Street, Room 8A24, Forth Worth, Texas 76102-
                                                      6178
           Resident Officer, Houston Resident Office, 440 
    Louisiana Street, Suite 550, Houston, Texas 77002-2649
    Resident Officer, San Antonio Resident Office, 615 E. 
   Houston Street, Room 565, San Antonio, Texas 78205-2040
   Regional Director, Region 17, 8600 Farley Street, Suite 
                     100, Overland Park, Kansas 66212-4677
       Resident Officer, Tulsa Resident Office, 224 South 
      Boulder Avenue, Room 318, Tulsa, Oklahoma 74103-3027
         Regional Director, Region 18, 234 Federal Courts 
   Building, 110 South 4th Street, Room 234, Minneapolis, 
                                      Minnesota 55401-2291
        Resident Officer, Des Moines Resident Office, 210 
      Walnut Street, Room 439, Des Moines, Iowa 50309-2116
   Regional Director, Region 19, Henry M. Jackson Federal 
         Building, 915 Second Avenue, Room 2948, Seattle, 
                                     Washington 98174-1078
    Resident Officer, Anchorage Resident Office, 222 West 
          7th Avenue, Box 21, Anchorage, Alaska 99513-3546
         Officer in Charge, Subregion 36, 222 SW Columbia 
             Street, Room 401, Portland, Oregon 97201-6604
   Regional Director, Region 20, 901 Market Street, Suite 
                 400, San Francisco, California 94103-1735
    Officer in Charge, Subregion 37, Prince Kuhio Federal 
           Building, 300 Ala Moana Boulevard, Room 7-245, 
                               Honolulu, Hawaii 96850-4980
         Regional Director, Region 21, 888 South Figueroa 
     Street, 9th Floor, Los Angeles, California 90017-5449
     Resident Officer, San Diego Resident Office, Pacific 
   Professional Center, 555 West Beech Street, Suite 302, 
                          San Diego, California 92101-2939
   Regional Director, Region 22, 20 Washington Place, 5th 
                      Floor, Newark, New Jersey 07102-2570
     Regional Director, Region 24, La Torre de Plaza, 525 
      F.D. Roosevelt Avenue, Suite 1002, San Juan, Puerto 
                                           Rico 00918-1002
    Regional Director, Region 25, Minton-Capehard Federal 
       Building, 575 North Pennsylvania Street, Room 238, 
                          Indianapolis, Indiana 46204-1577
          Regional Director, Region 26, Mid-Memphis Tower 
         Building, 1407 Union Avenue, Suite 800, Memphis, 
                                      Tennessee 38104-3627
      Resident Officer, Little Rock Resident Office, TCBY 
   Tower, 425 West Capitol Avenue, Suite 375, Little Rock, 
                                       Arkansas 72201-3489
        Resident Officer, Nashville Resident Officer, 810 
      Broadway, 3rd Floor, Nashville, Tennessee 37203-3816
      Regional Director, Region 27, Dominion Plaza, North 
      Tower, 600 17th Street, 7th Floor, Denver, Colorado 
                                                80202-5433
     Regional Director, Region 28, Security Building, 234 
        North Central Avenue, Suite 440, Phoenix, Arizona 
                                                85004-2212
   Resident Officer, Albuquerque Resident Office, Western 
         Bank Plaza, 505 Marquette Avenue, NW, Room 1820, 
                        Albuquerque, New Mexico 87102-2181
   Resident Officer, Las Vegas Resident Office, Alan Bible 
   Federal Building, 600 Las Vegas Boulevard South, Suite 
                         400, Las Vegas, Nevada 89101-6637
      Resident Officer, El Paso Resident Office, P.O. Box 
                          23159, El Paso, Texas 79923-3159
     Regional Director, Region 29, One Metro Tech Center, 
   Jay Street and Myrtle Avenue, 10th Floor, Brooklyn, New 
                                           York 11201-4201
     Regional Director, Region 30, Henry S. Reuss Federal 
   Plaza, 310 West Wisconsin Avenue, Suite 700, Milwaukee, 
                                      Wisconsin 54203-2211
           Regional Director, Region 31, 11150 W. Olympic 
      Boulevard, Suite 700, Los Angeles, California 90064-
                                                      1824
      Regional Director, Region 32, Breuner Building, 2nd 
   Floor, 1301 Clay Street, Room 300N, Oakland, California 
                                                94612-5211
   Regional Director, Region 33, Hamilton Square Building, 
      300 Hamilton Boulevard, Suite 200, Peoria, Illinois 
                                                61602-1246
   Regional Director, Region 34, One Commercial Plaza, 280 
       Trumbull Street, 21st Floor, Hartford, Connecticut 
                                                06103-3599

   NLRB-3

   System name: 

       Biographical Data File--Presidential Appointees.
     Security classification: 
       None.
     System location: 
       Division of Information, NLRB, 1099 14th Street, NW, Washington, 
   DC 20570-0001.
     Categories of individuals covered by the system: 
       Present and former Presidential appointees to NLRB positions.
     Categories of records in the system: 
       Records may include biographical sketches; news releases, news 
   articles or speeches and other newsmaking activities; photographs, 
   and related materials.
     Authority for maintenance of the system: 
       29 U.S.C. 153(a) and (d), 54(a); 44 U.S.C. 3101.
   Purpose(s):
       These records document pertinent aspects of the personal and 
   professional history of NLRB's most senior officials.
     Routine uses of records maintained in the system, including 
   categories of users and the purposes of such uses: 
       The records, or information contained therein may be disclosed 
   to:
       1. Individuals who need the information in connection with the 
   processing of an appeal, grievance, or complaint.
       2. The public, upon demonstrated interest.
       3. A Member of Congress or to a congressional staff member in 
   response to an inquiry of the congressional office made at the 
   written request of the constituent about whom the records are 
   maintained.
       4. The Department of Justice for use in litigation when either 
   (a) the NLRB or any component thereof, (b) any employee of the NLRB 
   in his or her official capacity, (c) any employee of the NLRB in his 
   or her individual capacity where the Department of Justice has agreed 
   to represent the employee; or (d) the United States Government where 
   the NLRB determines that litigation is likely to affect the NLRB or 
   any of its components, is a party to litigation or has interest in 
   such litigation, and the use of such records by the Department of 
   Justice is deemed by the NLRB to be relevant and necessary to the 
   litigation, provided that in each case the Agency determines that 
   disclosure of the records to the Department of Justice is a use of 
   the information contained in the records that is compatible with the 
   purpose for which the records were collected.
       5. A court, a magistrate, administrative tribunal, or other 
   adjudicatory body in the course of presenting evidence or argument, 
   including disclosure to opposing counsel or witnesses in the course 
   of civil discovery, litigation, or settlement negotiations, or in 
   connection with criminal law proceedings, when: (a) The NLRB or any 
   component thereof; or (b) any employee of the NLRB in his or her 
   official capacity; or (c) any employee of the NLRB in his or her 
   individual capacity where the NLRB has agreed to represent the 
   employee; or (d) the United States Government, is a party to 
   litigation or has interest in such litigation, and determines that 
   such disclosure is relevant and necessary to the litigation and that 
   the use of such records is therefore deemed by the NLRB to be for a 
   purpose that is compatible with the purpose for which the records 
   were collected.
   Disclosure to consumer reporting agencies:
       None.
     Policies and practices for storing, retrieving, accessing, 
   retaining, and disposing of records in the system:  
     Storage: 
       Maintained on original sources or related papers in file folders.
     Retrievability:
       Alphabetically by name.
     Safeguards: 
       Maintained in file cabinets within the Division of Information. 
   During duty hours, cabinets are under the surveillance of office 
   personnel charged with custody of the records, and after duty hours 
   are behind locked doors.
     Retention and disposal: 
       Permanently retained.
     System manager(s) and address: 
       Director, Division of Information, NLRB, 1099 14th Street, NW, 
   Washington, DC 20570-0001.
     Notification procedure: 
       An individual may inquire as to whether this system contains a 
   record pertaining to him or her by directing a request to the System 
   Manager in accordance with the procedures set forth in 29 CFR 
   102.117(f).
     Record access procedures: 
       An individual seeking to gain access to records in this system 
   pertaining to him or her should contact the System Manager in 
   accordance with the procedures set forth in 29 CFR 102.117(g) and 
   (h).
     Contesting record procedures: 
       An individual may request amendment of a record pertaining to 
   such individual maintained in this system by directing a request to 
   the System Manager in accordance with the procedures set forth in 29 
   CFR 102.117(i).
     Record source categories: 
       Information in this system is submitted by the individual, 
   written by Agency staff and approved by the individual, and obtained 
   from general news sources.

   NLRB-4

   System name: 

       Claim Records.
     Security classification: 
       None.
     System location: 
       Director, Division of Administration, NLRB, 1099 14th Street, NW, 
   Washington, DC 20570-0001.
     Categories of individuals covered by the system: 
       Individuals filing claims under the Federal Tort Claims Act of 
   1946; the Military Personnel and Civilian Employees' Claims Act of 
   1964; claims filed under 41 CFR 101-39.4, Interagency Fleet 
   Management Systems, Accidents and Claims; and claims under contracts 
   with rental car companies.
     Categories of records in the system: 
       Records may include reports of accidents or other events causing 
   damage or loss; data bearing upon the scope of employment of motor 
   vehicle operators; statements of witnesses; claims for damage or 
   loss; investigations of claims, including doctors' reports, if any; 
   police reports; rental agreements; repair estimates; records on 
   disposition of claims; and information related to the above.
     Authority for maintenance of the system: 
       28 U.S.C. 2671 et seq.; 29 U.S.C. 153(d), 154(a) and (b); 31 
   U.S.C. 3701 et seq.
   Purpose(s): 
       These records document the initiation, investigation, and 
   disposition of claims filed with the NLRB.
     Routine uses of records maintained in the system, including 
   categories of users and the purposes of such uses: 
       The records, or information contained therein may be disclosed 
   to:
       1. The Department of Justice for use in litigation when either: 
   (a) The NLRB or any component thereof; (b) any employee of the NLRB 
   in his or her official capacity; (c) any employee of the NLRB in his 
   or her individual capacity where the Department of Justice has agreed 
   to represent the employee; or (d) the United States Government where 
   the NLRB determines that litigation is likely to affect the NLRB or 
   any of its components, is a party to litigation or has an interest in 
   such litigation, and the use of such records by the Department of 
   Justice is deemed by the NLRB to be relevant and necessary to the 
   litigation, provided that in each case the Agency determines that 
   disclosure of the records to the Department of Justice is a use of 
   the information contained in the records that is compatible with the 
   purpose for which the records were collected.
       2. A court, a magistrate, administrative tribunal, or other 
   adjudicatory body in the course of presenting evidence or argument, 
   including disclosure to opposing counsel or witness in the course of 
   civil discovery, litigation, or settlement negotiations, or in 
   connection with criminal law proceedings, when: (a) The NLRB or any 
   component thereof; or (b) any employee of the NLRB in his or her 
   official capacity; (c) any employee of the NLRB in his or her 
   individual capacity, where the NLRB has agreed to represent the 
   employee; or (d) the United States Government, is a party to 
   litigation or has an interest in such litigation, and determines that 
   disclosure is relevant and necessary to the litigation and that the 
   use of such records is therefore deemed by the NLRB to be for a 
   purpose that is compatible with the purpose for which the records 
   were collected.
       3. Investigators utilized by the Agency to obtain information 
   relevant to a claim against the Agency.
       4. Other agencies, offices, establishments, and authorities, 
   whether Federal, State, or local, authorized or charged with the 
   responsibility to investigate, litigate, prosecute, enforce, or 
   implement a statute, rule, regulation, or order, where the record or 
   information, by itself or in connection with other records or 
   information, indicates a violation or potential violation of law, 
   whether criminal, civil, administrative, or regulatory in nature, and 
   whether arising by general statute, or particular program statute, or 
   by regulation, rule, or order issued pursuant thereto.
       5. A Member of Congress or to a Congressional staff member in 
   response to an inquiry of the Congressional office made at the 
   written request of the constituent about whom the record is 
   maintained.
       6. Individuals who need the information in connection with the 
   processing of an appeal, grievance, or compliant.
       7. Officials of labor organizations recognized under 5 U.S.C. 
   Chapter 71, when disclosure is not prohibited by law; and the data is 
   normally maintained by the Agency in the regular course of business 
   and is reasonably available and necessary for full and proper 
   discussion, understanding and negotiation of subjects within the 
   scope of collective bargaining. The forgoing shall have the identical 
   meaning as 5 U.S.C. 7114(b)(4) as interpreted by the FLRA and the 
   courts.
       8. An arbitrator to resolve disputes under a negotiated grievance 
   arbitration procedure.
   Disclosure to consumer reporting agencies:
       None.
     Policies and practices for storing, retrieving, accessing, 
   retaining, and disposing of records in the system:  
     Storage: 
       Maintained on forms, documents, and other papers.
     Retrievability: 
       Alphabetically by name.
     Safeguards: 
       Maintained in a file cabinet within the office of the Director, 
   Division of Administration. During duty hours files are under the 
   surveillance of personnel charged with the custody of the records, 
   and after duty hours are behind locked doors. Access is limited to 
   personnel who have a need for access to perform their official 
   functions.
     Retention and disposal: 
       Claims reports involving pecuniary liability are destroyed 10 
   years after the close of the fiscal year in which final action was 
   taken. All other claims reports are destroyed 3 years after the close 
   of the fiscal year in which final action was taken.
     System manager(s) and address: 
       Director, Division of Administration, NLRB, 1099 14th Street, NW, 
   Washington, DC 20570-0001.
     Notification procedures:
       An individual may inquire as to whether this system contains a 
   record pertaining to him or her by directing a request to the System 
   Manager in accordance with the procedures set forth in 29 CFR 
   102.117(f).
     Record access procedures: 
       An individual seeking to gain access to records in this system 
   pertaining to him or her should contact the System Manager in 
   accordance with the procedures set forth in 29 CFR 102.117 (g) and 
   (h).
     Contesting record procedures: 
       An individual may request amendment of a record pertaining to 
   such individual maintained in this system by directing a request to 
   the System Manager in accordance with the procedures set forth in 29 
   CFR 102.117(i).
     Record source categories: 
       Claimants, investigators, and witnesses.

   NLRB-5

   System name: 

       Employment and Performance Records, Attorneys and Field 
   Examiners.
     Security classification: 
       None.
     System location: 
       Office of Executive Assistant, Division of Operations Management; 
   Board Members' Offices; Office of Representation Appeals; Office of 
   the Solicitor, NLRB, 1099 14th Street, NW, Washington, DC 20570-0001.
       Washington and Field Offices are authorized to maintain the 
   records or copies of the records for current and former NLRB 
   employees of that office. See attached appendix for addresses of the 
   Washington and Field Offices.
     Categories of individuals covered by the system: 
       Current and former Attorneys and Field Examiners in offices under 
   the general supervision of the General Counsel; current and former 
   Attorneys employed on Board Members' Staffs, in the Office of the 
   Solicitor, and in the Office of Representation Appeals.
     Categories of records in the system: 
       Records may include copies of employment applications, copies of 
   personnel records, educational transcripts, resumes, employment 
   interview reports, evaluation reports, career development appraisals, 
   recommendations concerning promotion, copies of the official 
   personnel file, correspondence, memoranda, and other relevant 
   information.
     Authority for maintenance of the system: 
       5 U.S.C. 4301 et seq.; 29 U.S.C. 153(D), 154, 159, 160.
   Purpose(s):
       These records document employee actions and performance 
   appraisals.
     Routine uses of records maintained in the system, including 
   categories of users and the purposes of such uses: 
       The records, or information contained therein may be disclosed 
   to:
       1. Individuals who have a need for the information in connection 
   with the processing of an appeal, grievance, or complaint.
       2. A Member of Congress or to a Congressional staff member in 
   response to an inquiry of the Congressional office made at the 
   written request of the constituent about whom the record is 
   maintained.
       3. Officials of labor organizations recognized under 5 U.S.C. 
   Chapter 71, when disclosure is not prohibited by law; and the data is 
   normally maintained by the Agency in the regular course of business 
   and is reasonably available and necessary for full and proper 
   discussion, understanding and negotiation of subjects within the 
   scope of collective bargaining. The foregoing shall have the 
   identical meaning as 5 U.S.C. 7114(b)(4) as interpreted by the FLRA 
   and the courts.
       4. An arbitrator to resolve disputes under a negotiated grievance 
   arbitration procedure.
       5. Other agencies, offices, establishments, and authorities, 
   whether Federal, State, or local, authorized or charged with the 
   responsibility to investigate, litigate, prosecute, enforce, or 
   implement a statute, rule, regulation, or order, where the record or 
   information, by itself or in connection with other records or 
   information, indicates a violation or potential violation of law, 
   whether criminal, civil, administrative, or regulatory in nature, and 
   whether arising by general statute, or particular program statute, or 
   by regulation, rule or order issued pursuant thereto.
       6. The Department of Justice for use in litigation when either: 
   (a) The NLRB or any component thereof; (b) any employee of the NLRB 
   in his or her official capacity; (c) any employee of the NLRB in his 
   or her individual capacity where the Department of Justice has agreed 
   to represent the employee; or (d) the United States Government, where 
   the NLRB determines that litigation is likely to affect the NLRB or 
   any of its components, is a party to litigation or has an interest in 
   such litigation, and the use of such records by the Department of 
   Justice is deemed by the NLRB to be relevant and necessary to the 
   litigation, provided that in each case the Agency determines that 
   disclosure of the records to the Department of Justice is a use of 
   the information contained in the records that is compatible with the 
   purpose for which the records were collected.
       7. A court, magistrate, administrative tribunal, or other 
   adjudicatory body in the course of presenting evidence or argument, 
   including disclosure to opposing counsel or witness in the course of 
   civil discovery, litigation, or settlement negotiations, or in 
   connection with criminal law proceedings, when: (a) The NLRB or any 
   component thereof; or (b) any employee of the NLRB in his or her 
   official capacity; (c) any employee of the NLRB in his or her 
   individual capacity, where the NLRB has agreed to represent the 
   employee; or (d) the United States Government, is a party to 
   litigation or has interest in such litigation, and determines that 
   such disclosure is relevant and necessary to the litigation and that 
   the use of such records is therefore deemed by the NLRB to be for a 
   purpose that is compatible with the purpose for which the records 
   were collected.
   Disclosure to consumer reporting agencies:
       None.
     Policies and practices for storing, retrieving, accessing, 
   retaining, and disposing of records in the system:  
     Storage: 
       Maintained on paper including forms, letters, and memoranda, and 
   on electronic automated media.
     Retrievability: 
       Alphabetically by name.
     Safeguards: 
       Maintained in file cabinets. During duty hours cabinets are under 
   the surveillance of personnel charged with custody of the records and 
   after duty hours are behind locked doors. Access is limited to 
   personnel having a need for access to perform their official 
   functions. Computer records can be accessed only through use of 
   confidential procedures and passwords. Disks are limited to those 
   with access codes and are stored in a locked room during and after 
   duty hours.
     Retention and disposal: 
       Retained and disposed of in accordance with applicable General 
   Records Schedules issued by the National Archives and Records 
   Administration, and the Office of Personnel Management.
     System manager(s) and address: 
       1. Attorneys and Field Examiners under supervision of the General 
   Counsel--Executive Assistant, Division of Operations Management, 
   NLRB, 1099 14th Street, NW., Washington, DC 20570-0001.
       2. Attorneys under supervision of a Board Member--Chief Counsel 
   to that Board Member, NLRB, 1099 14th Street, NW, Washington, DC 
   20570-0001.
       3. Attorneys under supervision of the Director, Office of 
   Representation Appeals--Director, Office of Representation Appeals, 
   NLRB, 1099 14th Street, NW., Washington, DC 20570-0001.
       4. Attorneys under supervision of the Solicitor--Solicitor, NLRB, 
   1099 14th Street, NW., Washington, DC 20570-0001.
       See the attached appendix for titles and addresses of officials 
   responsible for this system at their location.
     Notification procedures:
       An individual may inquire as to whether this system contains a 
   record pertaining to him or her by directing a request to the 
   appropriate System Manager in accordance with the procedures set 
   forth in 29 CFR 102.117(f).
     Record access procedures: 
       An individual seeking to gain access to records in this system 
   pertaining to him or her should contact the appropriate System 
   Manager in accordance with the procedures set forth in 29 CFR 
   102.117(g) and (h).
     Contesting record procedures: 
       An individual may request amendment of a record pertaining to 
   such individual maintained in this system by directing a request to 
   the appropriate System Manager in accordance with the procedures set 
   forth in 29 CFR 102.117(i).
     Record source categories: 
       The individual, the Personnel Branch, educational institutions, 
   interviewers, evaluators, references, previous employers and 
   supervisors.

   NLRB-6

   System name: 

       Employment and Performance Records, Nonprofessionals and Nonlegal 
   Professionals.
     Security classification: 
       None.
     System location: 
       Records are authorized to be maintained for current and former 
   NLRB employees in all Agency offices. See the attached appendix for 
   the addresses of these offices.
     Categories of individuals covered by the system: 
       Current and former nonprofessional employees and nonlegal 
   professional employees of the Agency.
     Categories of records in the system: 
       Records may include copies of employment applications, copies of 
   personnel records, educational transcripts, resumes, employment 
   interview reports, evaluation reports, career development appraisals, 
   recommendations concerning promotion, copies of the official 
   personnel file, correspondence, memoranda, and other relevant 
   information.
     Authority for maintenance of the system: 
       5 U.S.C. 4301 et seq.; 29 U.S.C. 153(d), 154, 159, and 160.
   Purpose(s): 
       These records document employee actions and performance 
   appraisals.
     Routine uses of records maintained in the system, including 
   categories of users and the purposes of such uses: 
       The records, or information therefrom, are disclosed to:
       1. Individuals who have a need for the information in connection 
   with the processing of an appeal, grievance, or complaint.
       2. A Member of Congress or to a Congressional staff member in 
   response to an inquiry of the Congressional office made at the 
   written request of the constituent about whom the record is 
   maintained.
       3. Officials of labor organizations recognized under 5 U.S.C. 
   Chapter 71, when disclosure is not prohibited by law; and the data is 
   normally maintained by the Agency in the regular course of business 
   and is reasonably available and necessary for full and proper 
   discussion, understanding and negotiation of subjects within the 
   scope of collective bargaining. The foregoing shall have the 
   identical meaning as 5 U.S.C. 7114(b)(4) as interpreted by the FLRA 
   and the courts.
       4. An arbitrator to resolve disputes under a negotiated grievance 
   arbitration procedure.
       5. Other agencies, offices, establishments, and authorities, 
   whether Federal, State, or local, authorized or charged with the 
   responsibility to investigate, litigate, prosecute, enforce, or 
   implement a statute, rule, regulation, or order, where the record or 
   information, by itself or in connection with other records or 
   information, indicates a violation or potential violation of law, 
   whether criminal, civil, administrative, or regulatory in nature, and 
   whether arising by general statute or particular program statute, or 
   by regulation, rule, or order issued pursuant thereto.
       6. The Department of Justice for use in litigation when either: 
   (a) The NLRB or any component thereof; (b) any employee of the NLRB 
   in his or her official capacity; (c) any employee of the NLRB in his 
   or her individual capacity where the Department of Justice has agreed 
   to represent the employee; or (d) the United States Government where 
   the NLRB determines that litigation is likely to affect the NLRB or 
   any of its components, is a party to litigation or has an interest in 
   such litigation, and the use of such records by the Department of 
   Justice is deemed by the NLRB to be relevant and necessary to the 
   litigation, provided that in each case the Agency determines that 
   disclosure of the records to the Department of Justice is a use of 
   the information contained in the records that is compatible with the 
   purpose for which the records were collected.
       7. A court, magistrate, administrative tribunal, or other 
   adjudicatory body in the course of presenting evidence or argument, 
   including disclosure to opposing counsel or witnesses in the course 
   of civil discovery, litigation, or settlement negotiations, or in 
   connection with criminal law proceedings, when: (a) the NLRB or any 
   component thereof; or (b) any employee of the NLRB in his or her 
   official capacity; or (c) any employee of the NLRB in his or her 
   individual capacity, where the NLRB has agreed to represent the 
   employee; or (d) the United States Government, is a party to 
   litigation or has interest in such litigation, and determines that 
   such disclosure is relevant and necessary to the litigation and that 
   the use of such records is therefore deemed by the Agency to be for a 
   purpose that is compatible with the purpose for which the records 
   were collected.
   Disclosure to consumer reporting agencies:
       None.
     Policies and practices for storing, retrieving, accessing, 
   retaining and disposing of records in the system:  
     Storage: 
       Maintained on paper including forms, letters, memoranda, and on 
   electronic automated media.
     Retrievability: 
       Alphabetically by name.
     Safeguards: 
       Maintained in file cabinets. During duty hours cabinets are under 
   the surveillance of personnel charged with the custody of the 
   records, and after duty hours are behind locked doors. Access is 
   limited to personnel having a need for access to perform their 
   official functions. Computer records can be accessed only through use 
   of confidential procedures and passwords. Disks are limited to those 
   with access codes and are stored in a locked room during and after 
   duty hours.
     Retention and disposal: 
       Retained and disposed of in accordance with applicable General 
   Records Schedules issued by the National Archives and Records 
   Administration and the Office of Personnel Management.
     System manager(s) and address: 
       See the attached appendix for the titles and addresses of 
   officials responsible for this system at their locations.
     Notification procedure:
       An individual may inquire as to whether this system contains a 
   record pertaining to him or her by directing a request to the 
   appropriate System Manager in accordance with the procedures set 
   forth in 29 CFR 102.117(f).
     Record access procedures: 
       An individual seeking to gain access to records in this system 
   pertaining to him or her should contact the appropriate System 
   Manager in accordance with the procedures set forth in 29 CFR 
   102.117(g) and (h).
     Contesting record procedures: 
       An individual may request amendment of a record pertaining to 
   such individual maintained in this system by directing a request to 
   the appropriate System Manager in accordance with the procedures set 
   forth in 29 CFR 102.117(i).
     Record source categories: 
       The individual, the Personnel Branch, professional employees, 
   educational institutions, interviewers, evaluators, references, 
   previous employers and supervisors.

    NLRB-7

   System name: Grievances, Appeals, Complaints, and Related 
      Litigation Records.

     Security classification: 
       None.
     System location: 
       Records are authorized to be maintained for current and former 
   NLRB employees in all Agency offices. See the attached appendix for 
   the addresses of these offices.
     Categories of individuals covered by the system: 
       Current and former employees of the Agency.
     Categories of records in the system: 
       Records may include formal or informal grievances, appeals, and 
   complaints, together with information and documents related thereto; 
   letters or notices to the individual; records of hearings when 
   conducted; material placed in the file to support or contradict the 
   decision or determination on such grievance, appeal, or compliant; 
   affidavits or statements; testimonies of witnesses; investigative 
   reports; related correspondence and recommendations; and records on 
   court proceedings, arbitration, or subsequent litigation.
     Authority for maintenance of the system: 
       5. U.S.C. 7101 et seq.; 5 U.S.C. 7501 et seq.; 5 U.S.C. 7701 et 
   seq.; 29 U.S.C. 153(d), 154.
   Purpose(s): 
       These records document the employee grievance process within the 
   NLRB, and also contain material gathered and used in representing the 
   Agency in other appeals, complaints, and litigation.
     Routine uses of records maintained in the system, including 
   categories of users and the purposes of such uses: 
       The records, or information therefrom, are disclosed to:
       1. Agency officials and employees who have a need for the records 
   or information in the performance of their duties.
       2. Individuals who have a need for the information in connection 
   with the processing of a grievance, appeal, or complaint. Wherever 
   feasible, such information shall be furnished in depersonalized form, 
   i.e., without personal identifiers.
       3. An arbitrator for use in arbitrating a grievance or complaint.
       4. The Department of Justice for use in litigation when either 
   (a) the Agency or any component thereof, (b) any employee of the 
   Agency in his or her official capacity, (c) any employee of the 
   Agency in his or her individual capacity where the Department of 
   Justice has agreed to represent the employee, or (d) the United 
   States where the Agency determines that litigation is likely to 
   affect the Agency or any of its components, is a party to litigation 
   or has an interest in such litigation, and the use of such records by 
   the Department of Justice is deemed by the Agency to be relevant and 
   necessary to the litigation, provided that in each case the Agency 
   determines that disclosure of the records to the Department of 
   Justice is a use of the information contained in the records that is 
   compatible with the purpose for which the records were collected.
       5. A court or other adjudicative body before which the Agency is 
   authorized to appear, when either (a) the Agency or any component 
   thereof, (b) any employee of the Agency in his or her official 
   capacity, (c) any employee of the Agency in his or her individual 
   capacity, where the Agency has agreed to represent the employee, or 
   (d) the United States where the Agency determines that litigation is 
   likely to affect the Agency or any of its components, is a party to 
   litigation or has an interest in such litigation, and the Agency 
   determines that disclosure of the records to a court or other 
   adjudicative body is compatible with the purpose for which the 
   records were collected.
       6. Officials of labor organizations recognized under Pub. L. 95-
   454, when relevant and necessary to their duties of exclusive 
   representation of NLRB employees under the Act. Wherever feasible and 
   consistent with responsibilities under the Act, such information 
   shall be furnished in depersonalized form, i.e., without personal 
   identifiers.
       7. A congressional office from the record of an individual in 
   response to an inquiry from the congressional office made at the 
   request of the subject individual.
       8. The appropriate Federal (including offices of Inspector 
   General), State, or local government agency responsible for 
   investigating, prosecuting, enforcing, or implementing a statute, 
   rule, regulation, or order, where the Agency becomes aware of an 
   indication of a violation or potential violation of civil or criminal 
   law or regulation.
       9. Individuals making general requests for statistical 
   information (without personal identification of individuals).
   Disclosure to consumer reporting agencies: 
       None.
     Policies and practices for storing, retrieving, accessing, 
   retaining, and disposing of records in the system: 
     Storage: 
       Maintained on forms, documents, letters, memoranda, and other 
   similar papers.
     Retrievability: 
       Alphabetically by name of individual or party filing a grievance, 
   claim, or complaint.
     Safeguards: 
       Access to and use of the records are limited to those persons 
   whose official duties require such access until the records are 
   required to be made public in support of an Agency action or 
   position. These records are maintained in file cabinets which during 
   duty hours are under the surveillance of personnel charged with 
   custody of the records and after duty hours are behind locked doors.
     Retention and disposal: 
       Placed in inactive file when case is closed. Destroyed 3 years 
   after the end of the fiscal year in which the case is closed.
     System manager(s) and address: 
       1. To those employees under supervision of the General Counsel--
   Deputy General Counsel, NLRB, 1717 Pennsylvania Avenue, NW, 
   Washington, DC 20570.
       2. To those employees under supervision of the Board--Deputy 
   Executive Secretary, NLRB, 1717 Pennsylvania Avenue, NW, Washington, 
   DC 20570.
       See the attached appendix for titles and addresses of officials 
   responsible for this system at their locations.
     Notification procedure: 
       An individual may inquire as to whether this system contains a 
   record pertaining to him or her by directing a request to the 
   appropriate System Manager in accordance with the procedures set 
   forth in 29 CFR 102.117(e).
     Record access procedures: 
       An individual seeking to gain access to records in this system 
   pertaining to him or her should contact the appropriate System 
   Manager in accordance with the procedures set forth in 29 CFR 
   102.117(f).
     Contesting record procedures: 
       An individual may request amendment of a record pertaining to 
   such individual maintained in this system by directing a request to 
   the appropriate System Manager in accordance with the procedures set 
   forth in 29 CFR 102.117(h).
     Record source categories: 
       Information in this system is obtained from the individual to 
   whom the record pertains; Agency officials; affidavits, statements, 
   and record testimony of individuals; and other documents and 
   memoranda relating to the grievance, appeal, or complaint.

    NLRB-8

   System name: Health Maintenance Program Records.

     Security classification: 
       None.
     System location: 
       Personnel Branch, NLRB, 1717 Pennsylvania Avenue, NW, Washington, 
   DC 20570.
     Categories of individuals covered by the system: 
       Current NLRB employees participating in Agency-sponsored health 
   maintenance programs, such as diabetes tests, glaucoma tests, vision 
   tests, blood donor program, and similar programs.
     Categories of records in the system: 
       Records may involve recorded information on individual's names 
   and dates of participation in health maintenance programs, and the 
   name of the screening program in which participated. Also, for blood 
   donor program, contains social security number, sex, donor 
   identification number, home address and telephone, date of last 
   donation, medications being taken, blood type, whether accepted or 
   deferred as donor, and information relevant to the above.
     Authority for maintenance of the system: 
       5 U.S.C. 7901; 29 U.S.C. 153(a) and (d), 154.
   Purpose(s): 
       These records document employee participation in the NLRB health 
   maintenance programs such as screening and blood donor programs.
     Routine uses of records maintained in the system, including 
   categories of users and the purposes of such uses: 
       These records, or information therefrom, are disclosed to:
       1. Agency officials and employees working with the program who 
   have a need for the records or information:
       a. The administration of voluntary health maintenance programs.
       b. As a data source for production of summary descriptive 
   statistics and analytical studies in support of the function for 
   which the records are collected and maintained (without personal 
   identification of individuals).
       2. Individuals making general requests for statistical 
   information (without personal identification of individuals).
       3. The American Red Cross insofar as the records or information 
   pertain to the blood donor program.
       4. The U.S. Department of Health and Human Services in the 
   administration of public health service programs.
       5. A congressional office in response to an inquiry from the 
   congressional office made at the request of the subject individual.
       6. The Department of Justice for use in litigation when either 
   (a) the Agency or any component thereof, (b) any employee of the 
   Agency in his or her official capacity, (c) any employee of the 
   Agency in his or her individual capacity where the Department of 
   Justice has agreed to represent the employee, or (d) the United 
   States where the Agency determines that litigation is likely to 
   affect the Agency or any of its components, is a party to litigation 
   or has an interest in such litigation, and the use of such records by 
   the Department of Justice is deemed by the Agency to be relevant and 
   necessary to the litigation, provided that in each case the Agency 
   determines that disclosure of the records to the Department of 
   Justice is a use of the information contained in the records that is 
   compatible with the purpose for which the records were collected.
       7. A court or other adjudicative body before which the Agency is 
   authorized to appear, when either (a) the Agency or any component 
   thereof, (b) any employee of the Agency in his or her official 
   capacity, (c) any employee of the Agency in his or her individual 
   capacity, where the Agency has agreed to represent the employee, or 
   (d) the United States where the Agency determines that litigation is 
   likely to affect the Agency or any of its components, is a party to 
   litigation or has an interest in such litigation, and the Agency 
   determines that disclosure of the records to a court or other 
   adjudicative body is compatible with the purpose for which the 
   records were collected.
   Disclosure to consumer reporting agencies: 
       None.
     Policies and practices for storing, retrieving, accessing, 
   retaining, and disposing of records in the system: 
     Storage: 
       Maintained on logs, forms, and other papers.
     Retrievability: 
       By program name and within each program alphabetically by name.
     Safeguards: 
       Maintained in file safe within the office of the Personnel 
   Branch. File safe remains locked except during access to records. 
   During duty hours, file safe is under the surveillance of personnel 
   charged with the custody of the records, and after duty hours is 
   behind locked doors. Combination is known only to designated members 
   of the Personnel Branch. Access is limited to personnel who have a 
   need for access to perform their official functions.
     Retention and disposal: 
       Retained for 6 years after last entry.
     System manager(s) and address: 
       Chief, Special Programs and Services Unit, Personnel Branch, Room 
   533, NLRB, 1717 Pennsylvania Avenue, NW, Washington, DC 20570.
     Notification procedure: 
       An individual may inquire as to whether this system contains a 
   record pertaining to him or her by directing a request to the System 
   Manager in accordance with the procedures set forth in 29 CFR 
   102.177(e).
     Record access procedures: 
       An individual seeking to gain access to records in this system 
   pertaining to him or her should contact the System Manager in 
   accordance with the procedures set forth in 29 CFR 102.117(f).
     Contesting record procedures: 
       An individual may request amendment of a record pertaining to 
   such individual maintained in this system by directing a request to 
   the System Manager in accordance with the procedures set forth in 29 
   CFR 102.117(h).
     Record source categories: 
       Information submitted by individual; officials of the servicing 
   health units; and American Red Cross.

    NLRB-9

   System name: Occupational Injury and Illness Records.

     Security classification: 
       None.
     System location: 
       Personnel Branch, NLRB, 1717 Pennsylvania Avenue, NW, Washington, 
   DC 20570. Each Washington and Field Office is authorized to maintain 
   copies of records in this system. See the attached appendix for 
   addresses of the Washington and Field Offices.
     Categories of individuals covered by the system: 
       Current and former NLRB employees who have reported a work-
   related injury or illness.
     Categories of records in the system: 
       Records may include information pertaining to the complete 
   history of the employee's occupational injury or illness, including 
   any doctors' or investigative reports submitted, and the disposition 
   of claims for compensation filed under the Federal Employees 
   Compensation Act and information relative thereto.
     Authority for maintenance of the system: 
       5 U.S.C. 7901; 5 U.S.C. 8101 et seq.; 29 U.S.C. 153(a) and (d), 
   154.
   Purpose(s): 
       These records document the processing of claims filed by NLRB 
   employees for compensation based on an occupational injury or 
   illness.
     Routine uses of records maintained in the system, including 
   categories of users and the purposes of such uses: 
       These records, or information therefrom, are disclosed to:
       1. Agency officials and employees who have a need for the records 
   or information:
       a. In processing reports of occupational injury or illness and 
   claims for compensation under the Federal Employees Compensation Act.
       b. As a data source for management information for production of 
   summary descriptive statistics and analytical studies in support of 
   the function for which the records are collected and maintained, or 
   for related personnel management functions or manpower studies.
       2. Individuals making general requests for statistical 
   information (without personal identification of individuals).
       3. The Department of Justice for use in litigation when either 
   (a) the Agency or any component thereof, (b) any employee of the 
   Agency in his or her official capacity, (c) any employee of the 
   Agency in his or her individual capacity where the Department of 
   Justice has agreed to represent the employee, or (d) the United 
   States where the Agency determines that litigation is likely to 
   affect the Agency or any of its components, is a party to litigation 
   or has an interest in such litigation, and the use of such records by 
   the Department of Justice is deemed by the Agency to be relevant and 
   necessary to the litigation, provided that in each case the Agency 
   determines that disclosure of the records to the Department of 
   Justice is a use of the information contained in the records that is 
   compatible with the purpose for which the records were collected.
       4. A court or other adjudicative body before which the Agency is 
   authorized to appear, when either (a) the Agency or any component 
   thereof, (b) any employee of the Agency in his or her official 
   capacity, (c) any employee of the Agency in his or her individual 
   capacity, where the Agency has agreed to represent the employee, or 
   (d) the United States where the Agency determines that litigation is 
   likely to affect the Agency or any of its components, is a party to 
   litigation or has an interest in such litigation, and the Agency 
   determines that disclosure of the records to a court or other 
   adjudicative body is compatible with the purpose for which the 
   records were collected.
       5. The U.S. Department of Health and Human Services in the 
   administration of public health service programs.
       6. Investigator utilized by the Agency to obtain information 
   relevant to a claim arising under the Federal Employees Compensation 
   Act.
       7. The appropriate agency, whether Federal, State, or local, 
   where there is an indication of a violation or potential violation of 
   law, whether civil, criminal, or regulatory in nature, charged with 
   the responsibility of investigating or prosecuting such violation or 
   enforcing or implementing the statute, rule, regulation, or order 
   issued pursuant thereto, or to any agency in connection with its 
   oversight review responsibility.
       8. A congressional office in response to an inquiry from the 
   congressional office made at the request of the subject individual.
       9. Officials of labor organizations recognized under Pub. L. 95-
   454, when relevant and necessary to their duties of exclusive 
   representation of NLRB employees under the Act. Wherever feasible and 
   consistent with responsibilities under the Act, such information 
   shall be furnished in depersonalized form, i.e., without personal 
   identifiers.
       10. Individuals who need the information in connection with the 
   processing of an appeal, grievance or complaint. Whenever feasible 
   such information shall be furnished in depersonalized form, i.e., 
   without personal identifiers.
   Disclosure to consumer reporting agencies: 
       None.
     Policies and practices for storing, retrieving, accessing, 
   retaining, and disposing of records in the system: 
     Storage: 
       Maintained on forms and related correspondence.
     Retrievability: 
       Alphabetically by name.
     Safeguards: 
       Maintained in locked filing cabinet within the Personnel Branch. 
   Filing cabinet remains locked except during access. During duty hours 
   filing cabinet is under surveillance of personnel charged with the 
   custody of the records, and after duty hours is behind locked doors. 
   Access is limited to personnel who have a need for access to perform 
   their official functions.
     Retention and disposal: 
       Retain and dispose of in accordance with the General Records 
   Schedules issued by the National Archives and Records Administration.
     System manager(s) and address: 
       Chief, Special Programs and Services Unit, Personnel Branch, Room 
   533, NLRB, 1717 Pennsylvania Avenue, NW, Washington, DC 20570.
     Notification procedure: 
       An individual may inquire as to whether this system contains a 
   record pertaining to him or her by directing a request to the System 
   Manager in accordance with the procedures set forth in 29 CFR 
   102.117(e).
     Record access procedures: 
       An individual seeking to gain access to records in this system 
   pertaining to him or her should contact the System Manager in 
   accordance with the procedures set forth in 29 CFR 102.117(f).
     Contesting record procedures: 
       An individual may request amendment of a record pertaining to 
   such individual maintained in this system by directing a request to 
   the System Manager in accordance with the procedures set forth in 29 
   CFR 102.117(h).
     Record source categories: 
       Forms completed by the employee; witnesses; investigators; 
   employee's supervisor; claims examiners of the U.S. Department of 
   Labor; and doctors' statements, if any.

   NLRB-10

   System name: 

       Payroll/Personnel Records.
     Security classification: 
       None.
     System location: 
       Personnel Branch, National Labor Relations Board, 1099 14th 
   Street, NW, Washington, DC 20570-0001. Each Washington and field 
   office maintains a copy of time and attendance records for current 
   employees in its office, and is authorized to maintain such records 
   on former employees of that office. See the attached appendix for 
   addresses of these offices.
       Inactive records are stored at the appropriate Federal records 
   center in accordance with provisions of applicable General Records 
   Schedules issued by National Archives and Records Administration.
     Categories of individuals covered by the system: 
       Current and former NLRB employees.
     Categories of records in the system: 
       Records may include employee's name, previous name if any, home 
   address, date of birth, social security number, sex, race, time and 
   attendance records, and employment histories, including prolonged 
   leave without pay and monetary contributions to a retirement fund or 
   thrift-savings plan made during employment and information relevant 
   thereto. In addition, these records may also include:
       A. Employment Payroll Records: These are magnetic tape and 
   microfiche records containing information on current and former pay 
   and leave status for individuals serviced by the automated payroll/
   personnel system.
       B. Employee Pay Records: These are magnetic tape, microfiche, and 
   individual paper folders containing information on savings bond 
   deductions, savings account allotments, charitable contributions, 
   child support and alimony, and Federal and state tax exemption 
   certificates. The individual paper folders contain source documents, 
   correspondence, and other papers in support of an active employee's 
   pay and other allowances requested by the employee.
       C. History of Earnings and Time and Attendance Records: These are 
   paper copies and microfiche records containing information on 
   earnings, time and attendance, leave, and other pay-related 
   activities.
       D. Copies of Retirement Records: These are copies of Individual 
   Retirement Records, Civil Service Retirement (SF-2806) or the Federal 
   Employees Retirement System (SF-3100) from the former payroll 
   systems. These records will be used to update employees' records in 
   cases of retroactive adjustments.
       E. Former Employee Pay Records: These records are the employee 
   pay records (A and C, above) for employees who have been separated, 
   transferred, or retired. In addition to information contained in the 
   Employee Pay Records, they include information related to retirement, 
   separation or transfer, time and attendance, and leave. These records 
   are destroyed after separation in accordance with the NARA General 
   Records Schedule.
       F. Unemployment Records: These records are the Unemployment 
   Compensation Records for separated employees who seek unemployment 
   benefits. They are maintained in a separate file.
       G. Returned Check Records: These records are a manual log for 
   recording and controlling checks issued to employees that were 
   returned to the Agency because they were undelivered, erroneous, or 
   canceled prior to conversion to cash.
       H. Indebtedness Records: These records include source documents, 
   correspondence, and other papers containing information regarding the 
   Government's claims of debt against individuals covered by the 
   system. These records are supplemented by hard copy or electronic 
   records necessary to establish the identity and address of the 
   individuals, including in certain cases, the taxpayer's mailing 
   address provided by the Internal Revenue Service.
     Authority for maintenance of the system: 
       The Agency head is responsible for establishing and maintaining 
   an adequate payroll system, covering pay, leave, time and attendance, 
   and allowances, in accordance with 5 U.S.C. 8301, 29 U.S.C. 153(a) 
   and (d), 154; the Debt Collection Act of 1982 and 49 FR 27470 (salary 
   offset provisions published 7/3/84) and 5 U.S.C. 8501-8508, 
   Unemployment Compensation for Federal employees, the Debt Collection 
   Improvement Act of 1996, and the Personal Responsibility and Work 
   Opportunity Reconciliation Act (PRWORA) of 1996 Pub. L. 104-193, 
   316(f) codified at 42 U.S.C. 653.
   Purpose(s):
       These records document the payroll process as it relates to 
   current and former NLRB employees, and are used to support various 
   fiscal and personnel functions.
     Routine uses of records maintained in the system, including 
   categories of users and the purposes of such uses: 
       The records or information contained therein may be disclosed to:
       1. Individuals who need the information in connection with the 
   processing of an appeal, grievance, or complaint.
       2. The U.S. Department of Agriculture, National Finance Center.
       3. The Office of Personnel Management concerning pay and benefits 
   for administering the Civil Service/Federal Employees Retirement 
   Systems, and other information necessary for the office to carry out 
   its Government-wide personnel management functions.
       4. State and local authorities for the purpose of verifying tax 
   collections, unemployment compensation claims, and administering 
   public assistance programs.
       5. The U.S. Department of Health and Human Services for the 
   administration of the social security program.
       6. The U.S. General Accounting Office for audit purposes.
       7. Other agencies, offices, establishments, and authorities, 
   whether Federal, State, or local, authorized or charged with the 
   responsibility to investigate, litigate, prosecute, enforce, or 
   implement a statute, rule, regulation, or order, where the record or 
   information, by itself or in connection with other records or 
   information, indicates a violation or potential violation of law, 
   whether criminal, civil, administrative or regulatory in nature, and 
   whether arising by general statute or particular program statute, or 
   by regulation, rule, or order issued pursuant thereto.
       8. A Member of Congress or to a Congressional staff member in 
   response to an inquiry of the congressional office made at the 
   written request of the constituent about whom the records are 
   maintained.
       9. An arbitrator to resolve disputes under a negotiated grievance 
   arbitration procedure.
       10. Officials of labor organizations recognized under 5 U.S.C. 
   chapter 71, when disclosure is not prohibited by law; and the data is 
   normally maintained by the Agency in the regular course of business 
   and is reasonably available and necessary for full and proper 
   discussion, understanding and negotiation of subjects within the 
   scope of collective bargaining. The forgoing shall have the identical 
   meaning as 5 U.S.C. 7114(b)(4) as interpreted by the FLRA and the 
   courts.
       11. The Department of Justice for use in litigation when either: 
   (a) The NLRB or any component thereof: (b) an employee of the NLRB in 
   his or her official capacity; (c) any employee of the NLRB in his or 
   her individual capacity, where the Department of Justice has agreed 
   to represent the employee; or (d) the United States Government where 
   the NLRB determines that litigation is likely to affect the NLRB or 
   any of its components, is a party to litigation or has an interest in 
   such litigation, and the use of such records by the Department of 
   Justice is deemed by the NLRB to be relevant and necessary to the 
   litigation, provided that in each case the Agency determines that 
   disclosure of the records to the Department of Justice is a use of 
   the information contained in the records that is compatible with the 
   purpose for which the records were collected.
       12. A court, magistrate, administrative tribunal, or other 
   adjudicatory body in the course of presenting evidence or argument, 
   including disclosure to opposing counsel or witnesses in the course 
   of civil discovery, litigation, or settlement negotiations, or in 
   connection with criminal law proceedings, when: (a) The NLRB or any 
   component thereof; or (b) any employee of the NLRB in his or her 
   official capacity; or (c) any employee of the NLRB in his or her 
   individual capacity where the NLRB has agreed to represent the 
   employee; or (d) the United States Government is a party to 
   litigation or has interest in such litigation, and determines that 
   such disclosure is relevant and necessary to the litigation and that 
   the use of such records is therefore deemed by the NLRB to be for a 
   purpose that is compatible with the purpose for which the records 
   were collected.
       13. The U.S. Treasury Department for payroll purposes.
       14. Names, social security numbers, home addresses, dates of 
   birth, dates of hire, quarterly earnings, employer identifying 
   information, and State of hire of employees may be disclosed to the 
   Office of Child Support Enforcement, Administration for Children and 
   Families, Department of Health and Human Services for the purpose of 
   locating individuals to establish paternity, establishing and 
   modifying orders of child support, identifying sources of income, and 
   for other child support enforcement actions required by the Personal 
   Responsibility and Work Opportunity Reconciliation Act of 1996, 
   (Welfare Reform law, Pub. L. 104-193).
   Disclosure to consumer reporting agencies:
       None.
     Policies for storing, retrieving, accessing, retaining, and 
   disposing of records in the system:  
     Storage: 
       Records are maintained in file folders, on employment history 
   cards, on microfiche, on computer disks and diskettes, on magnetic 
   computer tapes, and on computer printouts.
     Retrievability: 
       Records are retrievable alphabetically by individual name and/or 
   personal identifier (social security number).
     Safeguards: 
       Maintained in file cabinets within the Payroll/Personnel Systems 
   Unit. During duty hours, file cabinets are under surveillance of 
   personnel charged with custody of the records, and after duty hours, 
   records are behind locked doors. Computer records can be accessed 
   only through use of confidential procedures and passwords. Access is 
   limited to personnel who have a need for access to perform their 
   official functions.
     Retention and disposal: 
       Files are disposed of according to applicable provisions of the 
   General Records Schedules issued by the National Archives and Records 
   Administration, and with General Accounting Office approval. 
   Microfilm, magnetic strip ledgers, and microfiche are maintained for 
   56 years after the date of last entry, GRS 2.1.
     System manager(s) and address: 
       Director of Personnel, NLRB, 1099 14th St., NW., Washington, DC 
   20570-1000. (See the attached appendix for the titles and addresses 
   of officials of other locations responsible for this system at their 
   locations.)
     Notification procedure: 
       An individual may inquire as to whether this system contains a 
   record pertaining to her or him by directing a request to the system 
   manager in accordance with the procedures set forth in 29 CFR 
   102.117(f).
     Record access procedures:
       An individual seeking to gain access to records in this system 
   pertaining to her or him should contact the appropriate manager in 
   accordance with the procedures set forth in 29 CFR 102.117 (g) and 
   (h).
     Contesting record procedure:
       An individual may request amendment of a record pertaining to 
   such individual maintained in this system by directing a request to 
   the appropriate system manager in accordance with procedures set 
   forth in 29 CFR 102.117(i).
     Record source categories: 
       Personnel Branch, timekeepers, supervisors, and National Finance 
   Center.
     Systems exempted from certain provisions of the act: 
       None.

                            Appendix

       Names and Addresses of NLRB Offices referenced in Notice of 
   Records System shown below.

NLRB Headquarters Offices: 1099 14th Street, NW, Washington, DC 20570-0001

Offices of the Board

                                      Members of the Board
    Executive Secretary, Office of the Executive Secretary
                Director, Office of Representation Appeals
                         Director, Division of Information
                                                 Solicitor
            Inspector General, Office of Inspector General

    Chief Administrative Law Judge, 1099 14th Street, NW, 
                 Room 5400 East, Washington, DC 20570-0001
   Associate Chief Administrative Law Judge, San Francisco 
     Judges, 901 Market Street, Suite 300, San Francisco, 
                                     California 94103-1779
       Associate Chief Administrative Law Judge, New York 
   Judges, 120 West 45th Street, 11th Floor, New York, New 
                                           York 10036-5503
        Associate Chief Administrative Law Judge, Atlanta 
      Judges, Peachtree Summit Building, 401 W. Peachtree 
       Street, NW, Suite 1708, Atlanta, Georgia 30308-3510

Offices of the General Counsel

                                           General Counsel
        Associate General Counsel, Division of Operations 
                                                Management
             Associate General Counsel, Division of Advice
       Associate General Counsel, Division of Enforcement 
                                                Litigation
                      Director, Division of Administration
                    Director, Equal Employment Opportunity

NLRB Field Offices

       Regional Director, Region 1, Thomas P. O'Neal, Jr. 
   Federal Office Building, 10 Causeway Street, 6th Floor, 
                          Boston, Massachusetts 02222-1072
     Regional Director, Region 2, Jacob K. Javits Federal 
     Building, 26 Federal Plaza, Room 3614, New York, New 
                                           York 10278-0104
   Regional Director, Region 3, Thaddeus J. Dulski Federal 
   Building, 111 West Huron Street, Room 901, Buffalo, New 
                                           York 14202-2387
         Resident Officer, Albany Resident Office, Leo W. 
     O'Brien Federal Building, Clinton Avenue at N. Pearl 
             Street, Room 342, Albany, New York 12207-2350
   Regional Director, Region 4, One Independence Mall, 615 
   Chestnut Street, 7th Floor, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania 
                                                19106-4404
        Regional Director, Region 5, The Appraisers Store 
    Building, 103 South Gay Street, 8th Floor, Baltimore, 
                                       Maryland 21202-4026
     Resident Officer, Franklin Court Building, 1099 14th 
         Street, NW, Suite 5530, Washington, DC 20570-0001
        Regional Director, Region 6, William S. Moorehead 
        Federal Building, 1000 Liberty Avenue, Room 1501, 
                       Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania 15222-4173
         Regional Director, Region 7, Patrick V. McNamara 
         Federal Building, 477 Michigan Avenue, Room 300, 
                              Detroit, Michigan 48226-2569
      Resident Officer, Grand Rapids Resident Office, The 
     Furniture Company Building, 82 Ionia Northwest, Room 
                    330, Grand Rapids, Michigan 49503-3022
       Regional Director, Region 8, Anthony J. Celebrezze 
       Federal Building, 1240 East 9th Street, Room 1695, 
                                Cleveland, Ohio 44199-2086
    Regional Director, Region 9, Federal Office Building, 
   550 Main Street, Room 3003, Cincinnati, Ohio 45202-3271
          Regional Director, Region 10, Harris Tower, 233 
       Peachtree Street, NE, Suite 1000, Atlanta, Georgia 
                                                30303-1504
   Resident Officer, The Burger-Phillips Center, 1900 3rd 
     Avenue North, Third Floor, Birmingham, Alabama 35203-
                                                      3502
     Regional Director, Region 11, Republic Square, Suite 
       200, 4035 University Parkway, Winston-Salem, North 
                                       Carolina 27106-3325
    Regional Director, Region 12, Enterprise Plaza, Suite 
    530, 201 East Kennedy Boulevard, Tampa, Florida 33602-
                                                      5824
   Resident Officer, Jacksonville Resident Office, Federal 
      Building, 400 West Bay Street, Room 214, Box 35091, 
                          Jacksonville, Florida 32202-4412
         Resident Officer, Miami Resident Office, Federal 
     Building, 51 Southwest 1st Avenue, Room 1320, Miami, 
                                        Florida 33130-1608
     Regional Director, Region 13, 200 West Adams Street, 
                   Suite 800, Chicago, Illinois 60606-5208
   Regional Director, Region 14, 1222 Spruce Street, Room 
                   8.202, Saint Louis, Missouri 63103-2829
   Regional Director, Region 15, 1515 Poydras Street, Room 
                    610, New Orleans, Louisiana 70112-3723
   Regional Director, Region 16, Federal Office Building, 
    819 Taylor Street, Room 8A24, Fort Worth, Texas 76102-
                                                      6178
           Resident Officer, Houston Resident Office, 440 
    Louisiana Street, Suite 550, Houston, Texas 77002-2649
    Resident Officer, San Antonio Resident Office, 615 E. 
   Houston Street, Room 565, San Antonio, Texas 78205-2040
        Resident Officer, El Paso Resident Office, PO Box 
                          23159, El Paso, Texas 79923-3159
   Regional Director, Region 17, 8600 Farley Street, Suite 
                     100, Overland Park, Kansas 66212-4677
       Resident Officer, Tulsa Resident Office, 224 South 
      Boulder Avenue, Room 316, Tulsa, Oklahoma 74103-4214
      Regional Director, Region 18, Federal Building, 110 
       South 4th Street, Room 234, Minneapolis, Minnesota 
                                                55401-2291
    Resident Officer, Des Moines Resident Office, Federal 
   Building, 210 Walnut Street, Room 439, Des Moines, Iowa 
                                                50309-2116
   Regional Director, Region 19, Henry M. Jackson Federal 
         Building, 915 Second Avenue, Room 2948, Seattle, 
                                     Washington 98174-1078
     Resident Officer, Anchorage Resident Office, Federal 
            Office Building, 222 West 7th Avenue, Box 21, 
                              Anchorage, Alaska 99513-3546
         Officer in Charge, Subregion 36, 222 SW Columbia 
             Street, Room 401, Portland, Oregon 97201-6604
   Regional Director, Region 20, 901 Market Street, Suite 
                 400, San Francisco, California 94103-1735
    Officer in Charge, Subregion 37, Prince Kuhio Federal 
   Building, 300 Ala Moana Boulevard, Room 7318, Honolulu, 
                                         Hawaii 96850-4980
         Regional Director, Region 21, 888 South Figueroa 
     Street, 9th Floor, Los Angeles, California 90017-5449
     Resident Officer, San Diego Resident Office, Pacific 
   Professional Center, 555 West Beech Street, Suite 302, 
                          San Diego, California 92101-2939
   Regional Director, Region 22, 20 Washington Place, 5th 
                      Floor, Newark, New Jersey 07102-2570
     Regional Director, Region 24, La Torre de Plaza, 525 
      F.D. Roosevelt Avenue, Suite 1002, San Juan, Puerto 
                                           Rico 00918-1002
    Regional Director, Region 25, Minton-Capehart Federal 
       Building, 575 North Pennsylvania Street, Room 238, 
                          Indianapolis, Indiana 46204-1577
   Region Director, Region 26, Mid-Memphis Tower Building, 
   1407 Union Avenue, Suite 800, Memphis, Tennessee 38104-
                                                      3627
      Resident Officer, Little Rock Resident Office, TCBY 
   Tower, 425 West Capitol Avenue, Suite 375, Little Rock, 
                                       Arkansas 72201-3489
         Resident Officer, Nashville Resident Office, 810 
      Broadway, 3rd Floor, Nashville, Tennessee 37203-3816
      Regional Director, Region 27, Dominion Plaza, North 
      Tower, 600 17th Street, 7th Floor, Denver, Colorado 
                                                80202-5433
     Regional Director, Region 28, Security Building, 234 
   North Central Avenue, Suite 440 Phoenix, Arizona 85004-
                                                      2212
   Resident Officer, Albuquerque Resident Office, Western 
         Bank Plaza, 505 Marquette Avenue, NW, Room 1820, 
                        Albuquerque, New Mexico 87102-2181
   Resident Officer, Las Vegas Resident Office, Alan Bible 
   Federal Building, 600 Las Vegas Boulevard South, Suite 
                         400, Las Vegas, Nevada 89101-6637
   Regional Director, Region 29, One MetroTech Center, Jay 
      Street and Myrtle Avenue, 10th Floor, Brooklyn, New 
                                           York 11201-4201
     Regional Director, Region 30, Henry S. Reuss Federal 
   Plaza, Suite 700, 310 West Wisconsin Avenue, Milwaukee, 
                                      Wisconsin 53203-2211
           Regional Director, Region 31, 11150 W. Olympic 
      Boulevard, Suite 700, Los Angeles, California 90064-
                                                      1824
      Regional Director, Region 32, Breuner Building, 2nd 
   Floor, 1301 Clay Street, Room 300N, Oakland, California 
                                                94612-5211
   Regional Director, Region 33, Hamilton Square Building, 
      Suite 200, 300 Hamilton Boulevard, Peoria, Illinois 
                                                61602-1246
   Regional Director, Region 34, 1 Commercial Plaza, 21st 
             Floor, Church and Trumbull Street, Hartford, 
                                    Connecticut 06103-3599

    NLRB-12

   System name: Prefiling Communications.

     Security classification: 
       None.
     System location: 
       Records are authorized to be maintained in all Field Offices of 
   the Agency, at the address listed in the attached appendix, and 
   Office of the General Counsel, NLRB, 1717 Pennsylvania Avenue, NW, 
   Washington, DC 20570.
     Categories of individuals covered by the system: 
       Persons who have sought assistance regarding possible institution 
   of an unfair labor practice, representation, or other civil action or 
   proceeding before the National Labor Relations Board.
     Categories of records in the system: 
       Records may include file memoranda detailing the substance of 
   oral communications; letters of inquiry and responses thereto; 
   information relating to an individual's employment history, job 
   performance, earnings, home address, telephone number, union 
   activity; or other information relevant to a potential action or 
   proceeding before the National Labor Relations Board.
     Authority for maintenance of the system: 
       29 U.S.C. 158-169.
   Purpose(s): 
       These records document the processing of preliminary inquiries 
   regarding potential unfair labor practices, representation, or other 
   civil action or proceeding before the NLRB, or representation case 
   issues.
     Routine uses of records maintained in the system, including 
   categories of users and the purposes of such uses: 
       These records, or information therefrom, are disclosed to:
       1. Agency officials and employees who have a need for the records 
   or information in the processing of cases before the Agency.
       2. The appropriate agency, whether Federal, State, or local, 
   charged with the responsibility of investigating or prosecuting a 
   violation or charged with enforcing or implementing a statute, rule, 
   regulation, or order issued pursuant thereto, where there is an 
   indication of a violation or potential violation of law, whether 
   civil, criminal, or regulatory in nature.
       3. A congressional office in response to an inquiry from the 
   congressional office made a request of the subject individual.
       4. The Department of Justice for use in litigation when either 
   (a) the Agency or any component thereof, (b) any employee or Agency 
   in his or her official capacity, (c) any employee of the Agency in 
   his or her individual capacity where the Department of Justice has 
   agreed to represent the employee, or (d) the United States where the 
   Agency determines that litigation is likely to affect the Agency or 
   any of its components, is a party to litigation or has an interest in 
   such litigation, and the use of such records by the Department of 
   Justice is deemed by the Agency to be relevant and necessary to the 
   litigation, provided that in each case the Agency determines that 
   disclosure of the records to the Department of Justice is a use of 
   the information contained in the records that is compatible with the 
   purpose for which the records were collected.
       5. A court or other adjudicative body before which the Agency is 
   authorized to appear, when either (a) the Agency or any component 
   thereof, (b) any employee of the Agency in his or her official 
   capacity, (c) any employee of the Agency in his or her individual 
   capacity, where the Agency has agreed to represent the employee, or 
   (d) the United States where the Agency determines that litigation is 
   likely to affect the Agency or any of its components, is a party to 
   litigation or has an interest in such litigation, and the Agency 
   determines that disclosure of the records to a court or other 
   adjudicative body is compatible with the purpose for which the 
   records were collected.
   Disclosure to consumer reporting agencies: 
       None.
     Policies and practices for storing, retrieving, accessing, 
   retaining, and disposing of records in the system: 
     Storage: 
       Maintained on paper in file folders.
     Retrievability: 
       Alphabetically by name.
     Safeguards: 
       Maintained in file cabinets in the nonpublic area of the office 
   under the immediate control of the System Manager. During duty hours 
   cabinets are under surveillance of personnel charged with custody of 
   the records and after duty hours are behind locked doors.
     Retention and disposal: 
       In the event a civil action or proceeding is instituted prior to 
   the record being destroyed, the record is placed in the case file 
   which is not indexed by the name of the individual. In the event no 
   action or proceeding is instituted, the records are destroyed when 1 
   year old.
     System manager(s) and address: 
       General Counsel, NLRB, 1717 Pennsylvania Avenue NW, Washington, 
   DC 20570. See the attached appendix for titles and addresses of 
   officials responsible for this system at their locations.
     Notification procedure: 
       An individual may inquire as to whether this system contains a 
   record pertaining to him or her by directing a request to the 
   appropriate System Manager in accordance with the procedures set 
   forth in 29 CFR 102.117(e).
     Record access procedures: 
       An individual seeking to gain access to records in this system 
   pertaining to him or her should contact the appropriate System 
   Manager in accordance with the procedures set forth in 29 CFR 
   102.117(f).
     Contesting record procedures: 
       An individual may request amendment of a record pertaining to 
   such individual maintained in this system by directing a request to 
   the appropriate System Manager in accordance with the procedures set 
   forth in 29 CFR 102.117(h).
     Record source categories: 
       Individual who seeks assistance.

    NLRB-13

   System name: Time and Attendance Records, NLRB.

     Security classification: 
       None.
     System location: 
       Current records are maintained in:
       Financial Management Branch, NLRB, 1717 Pennsylvania Avenue NW, 
   Washington, DC 20570. Each Washington and Field Office maintains a 
   copy of time and attendance records for current employees in that 
   office, and is authorized to retain such records on former employees 
   of that office. See the attached appendix for addresses of these 
   offices.
       Inactive records are stored at the appropriate Federal records 
   center in accordance with provisions of applicable General Records 
   Schedules issued by the General Service Administration.
     Categories of individuals covered by the system: 
       Current and former employees of the Agency.
     Categories of records in the system: 
       Records may include name; home address; organizational unit 
   number, payroll identification number; entrance-on-duty date; time 
   worked, including regular hours, overtime, compensatory time, and 
   premium pay status; leave earned and used; absences without leave; 
   and doctors' certificates, when required.
     Authority for maintenance of the system: 
       5 U.S.C. 6101 et seq.; 5 U.S.C. 6301 et seq.; 29 U.S.C. 153 (a) 
   and (d), 154.
   Purpose(s): 
       These records document various pay and pesonnel functions, 
   including the hours of work performed by employees.
     Routine uses of records maintained in the system, including 
   categories of users and the purposes of such uses: 
       These records, or information therefrom, are disclosed to:
       1. Agency officials and employees who have a need for the records 
   or information:
       a. In the compilation of biweekly payrolls.
       b. To maintain leave accounts.
       c. As a data source for management information for production of 
   summary descriptive statistics and analytical studies in support of 
   the function for which the records are collected and maintained, or 
   for related personnel management functions or manpower studies.
       2. Individuals making general requests for statistical 
   information (without personal identification of individuals).
       3. Another Federal Government agency in connection with the 
   transfer of an NLRB employee to that agency.
       4. The Office of Personnel Management for administering the Civil 
   Service Retirement System.
       5. The U.S. General Accounting Office for audit purposes.
       6. Another Government agency or private organization in 
   connection with an agreement under the Intergovernmental Personnel 
   Act.
       7. The U.S. Treasury Department for payroll purposes.
       8. The appropriate agency, whether Federal, State, or local, 
   where there is an indication of a violation or potential violation of 
   law, whether civil, criminal, or regulatory in nature, charged with 
   the responsibility of investigating or prosecuting such violation or 
   enforcing or implementing the statute, rule, regulations, or order 
   issued pursuant thereto, or to any agency in connection with its 
   oversight review responsibility.
       9. A congressional office in response to an inquiry from the 
   congressional office made at the request of the subject individual.
       10. Individuals who have a need for the information in connection 
   with the processing of an appeal, grievance, or complaint. Wherever 
   feasible, such information shall be furnished in depersonalized form, 
   i.e., without personal identifiers.
       11. Officials of labor organizations recognized under Public Law 
   95-454, when relevant and necessary to their duties of exclusive 
   representation of NLRB employees under the Act. Wherever feasible and 
   consistent with responsibilities under the Act, such information 
   shall be furnished in depersonalized form, i.e., without personal 
   identifiers.
       12. The Department of Justice for use in litigation when either 
   (a) the Agency or any component thereof, (b) any employee of the 
   Agency in his or her official capacity, (c) any employee of the 
   Agency in his or her individual capacity where the Department of 
   Justice has agreed to represent the employee or (d) the United States 
   where the Agency determines that litigation is likely to affect the 
   Agency or any of its components, is a party to litigation or has an 
   interest in such litigation, and the use of such records by the 
   Department of Justice is deemed by the Agency to be relevant and 
   necessary to the litigation, provided that in each case the Agency 
   determines that disclosure of the records to the Department of 
   Justice is a use of the information contained in the records that is 
   compatible with the purpose for which the records were collected.
       13. A court or other adjudicative body before which the Agency is 
   authorized to appear, when either (a) the Agency or any component 
   thereof, (b) any employee of the Agency in his or her official 
   capacity, (c) any employee of the Agency in his or her individual 
   capacity, where the Agency has agreed to represent the employee, or 
   (d) the United States where the Agency determines that litigation is 
   likely to affect the Agency or any of its components, is a party to 
   litigation or has an interest in such litigation, and the Agency 
   determines that disclosure of the records to a court or other 
   adjudicative body is compatible with the purpose for which the 
   records were collected.
   Disclosure to consumer reporting agencies: 
       None.
     Policies and practices for storing, retrieving, accessing, 
   retaining, and disposing of records in the system: 
     Storage: 
       Maintained on Form TDF 10-11.H-1, H-2, and H-3 and related forms 
   and papers, and on microfilm/microfiche.
     Retrievability: 
       Chronologically by year, and within each year by organizational 
   unit, and within each unit by social security number or by employee 
   name.
     Safeguards: 
       Original source documents or copies thereof are maintained in 
   file cabinets. Microfilm/microfiche is maintained in locked fireproof 
   metal cabinets. During duty hours, cabinets are under surveillance of 
   personnel charged with custody of the records, and after duty hours 
   are behind locked doors. Access is limited to personnel having a need 
   for access to perform their official functions.
     Retention and disposal: 
       Destroyed after GAO audit or when 3 years old, whichever is 
   sooner.
     System manager(s) and address: 
       Finance Officer, NLRB, 1717 Pennsylvania Avenue NW, Washington, 
   DC 20570. See the attached appendix for the titles and addresses of 
   officials at other locations responsible for this system at their 
   locations.
     Notification procedure: 
       An individual may inquire as to whether this system contains a 
   record pertaining to him or her by directing a request to the 
   appropriate System Manager in accordance with the procedures set 
   forth in 29 CFR 102.117(e).
     Record access procedures: 
       An individual seeking to gain access to records in this system 
   pertaining to him or her should contact the appropriate Manager in 
   accordance with the procedures set forth in 29 CFR 102.117(f).
     Contesting record procedures: 
       An individual may request amendment of a record pertaining to 
   such individual maintained in this system by directing a request to 
   the appropriate System Manager in accordance with the procedures set 
   forth in 29 CFR 102.117(h).
     Record source categories: 
       Individual to whom the record pertains, timekeeper or supervisor, 
   doctors' statements.

    NLRB-14

   System name: Equal Employment Opportunity Program Management 
      System.

     Security classification: 
       None.
     System location: 
       Management and Information Systems Branch, NLRB, 1717 
   Pennsylvania Avenue, NW, Washington, DC 20570. Office of Equal 
   Employment Opportunity, NLRB, 1717 Pennsylvania, Avenue, NW, 
   Washington, DC 20570.
     Categories of individuals covered by the system: 
       Current and former NLRB employees.
     Categories of records in the system: 
       Records may include information such as employee name, social 
   security number, Minority Group Designator (MGD) Code, employment 
   status, sex, date of birth, payroll block and unit number, pay plan, 
   grade and step, entrance-on-duty date, and date of last promotion, 
   date of last quality step increase, organizational unit, employment 
   class, and date of separation.
     Authority for maintenance of the system: 
       29 CFR part 1613; 29 U.S.C. 153(a) and (d), 154.
   Purpose(s): 
       These records document the implementation of the NLRB Equal 
   Employment Opportunity Program.
     Routine uses of records maintained in the system, including 
   categories of users and the purposes of such uses: 
       These records, or information therefrom are disclosed to:
       1. Agency officials and employees who have a need for the record 
   or information:
       a. In monitoring and evaluating the status and progress of 
   minority/female employment.
       b. As a data source for management information for production of 
   summary descriptive statistics and analytical studies in support of 
   the Agency's EEO Program (without personal identification of 
   individuals).
       c. In connection with the investigation, processing, adjudication 
   and/or settlement of an EEO complaint or civil action.
       2. Individuals making general requests for statistical 
   information (without personal identification of individuals).
       3. A congressional office in response to an inquiry from the 
   congressional office made at the request of the subject individual.
       4. The appropriate agency, whether Federal, State, or local, 
   where there is an indication of a violation or potential violation of 
   law, whether civil, criminal, or regulatory in nature, charged with 
   the responsibility of investigating or prosecuting such violation or 
   enforcing or implementing the statute, rule, regulation, or order 
   issued pursuant thereto, or to any agency in connection with its 
   oversight review responsibility.
       5. Officials of labor organizations recognized under Public Law 
   95-454, when relevant and necessary to their duties of exclusive 
   representation of NLRB employees under the Act. Wherever feasible and 
   consistent with responsibilities under the Act, such information 
   shall be furnished in depersonalized form, i.e., without personal 
   identifiers.
       6. Individuals who have a need for the information in connection 
   with the processing of an appeal, grievance, or complaint. Wherever 
   feasible, such information shall be furnished in depersonalized form, 
   i.e., without personal identifiers.
       7. The Department of Justice for use in litigation when either 
   (a) the Agency or any component thereof, (b) any employee of the 
   Agency in his or her official capacity, (c) any employee of the 
   Agency in his or her individual capactiy where the Department of 
   Justice has agreed to represent the employee, or (d) the United 
   States where the Agency determines that litigation is likely to 
   affect the Agency or any of its components, is a party to litigation 
   or has an interest in such litigation, and the use of such records by 
   the Department of Justice is deemed by the Agency to be relevant and 
   necessary to the litigation, provided that in each case the Agency 
   determines that disclosure of the records to the Department of 
   Justice is a use of the information contained in the records that is 
   compatible with the purpose for which the records were collected.
       8. A court or other adjudicative body before which the Agency is 
   authorized to appear, when either (a) the Agency or any component 
   thereof, (b) any employee of the Agency in his or her official 
   capacity, (c) any employee of the Agency in his or her individual 
   capacity, where the Agency has agreed to represent the employee, or 
   (d) the United States where the Agency determines that litigation is 
   likely to affect the Agency or any of its components, is a party to 
   litigation or has an interest in such litigation, and the Agency 
   determines that disclosure of the records to a court or other 
   adjudicative body is compatible with the purpose for which the 
   records were collected.
   Disclosure to consumer reporting agencies: 
       None.
     Policies and practices for storing, retrieving, accessing, 
   retaining, and disposing of records in the system: 
     Storage: 
       Maintained on computer disk file and magnetic tape backup.
     Retrievability: 
       By social security account number, alphabetically by name, or by 
   employee's organizational unit or post of duty.
     Safeguards: 
       All doors to the computer room have combination locks and during 
   duty hours the computer and magnetic tape backup are under 
   surveillance of Agency personnel charged with custody of the records. 
   After duty hours the computer disk file and magnetic tape backup are 
   stored in a fireproof safe behind locked doors. Access is limited to 
   authorized personnel only. All format programs are password protected 
   and use of the machines for information printouts is restricted to 
   designated personnel.
       Information printouts are maintained in file cabinets. During 
   duty hours cabinets are under surveillance of office personnel 
   charged with custody of the printouts and after duty hours are behind 
   locked doors. Access to cabinets is limited to personnel having a 
   need for access to perform their official functions.
     Retention and disposal: 
       The information in these records is updated as changes in the 
   data elements occur. The files and information printouts are disposed 
   of according to applicable provisions of the General Records 
   Schedules issued by the National Archives and Records Administration.
     System manager(s) and address: 
       Director, Equal Employment Opportunity, NLRB, 1717 Pennsylvania 
   Avenue, NW, Washington, DC 20570.
     Notification procedure: 
       An individual may inquire as to whether this system contains a 
   record pertaining to him or her by directing a request to the System 
   Manager in accordance with the procedures set forth in 29 CFR 
   102.117(e).
     Record access procedures: 
       An individual seeking to gain access to records in this system 
   pertaining to him or her should contact the System Manager in 
   accordance with the procedures set forth in 29 CFR 102.117(f).
     Contesting record procedures: 
       Any individual may request amendment of a record pertaining to 
   such individual maintained in this system by directing a request to 
   the System Manager in accordance with the procedures set forth in 29 
   CFR 102.117(h).
     Record source categories: 
       Information in this system is obtained from the individual to 
   whom the record pertains, Agency officials, and from personnel 
   records.

    NLRB-15

   System name: Employee Counseling Services Program Records.

     Security classification: 
       None.
     System location: 
       Personnel Branch, NLRB, 1717 Pennsylvania Avenue, NW, Washington, 
   DC 20570.
     Categories of individuals covered by the system: 
       Current and former NLRB employees who have been counseled or 
   otherwise treated for alcohol or drug abuse or for personal or 
   emotional health problems.
     Categories of records in the system: 
       Records in this system include documentation of visits to 
   employee counselors, psychologists, and physicians (Federal, State, 
   local government, or private) and the assessment, diagnosis, 
   recommended treatment, results of treatment, and other notes or 
   records of discussions held with the employee, as well as family 
   members of the employee, which may be made by the counselor. 
   Additionally, records in this system may include documentation of 
   treatment by a private therapist or a therapist at a Federal, State, 
   local government, or private institution.
     Authority for maintenance of the system: 
       5 U.S.C. 7901; 21 U.S.C. 1101 et seq.; 29 U.S.C. 153 (a) and (d), 
   154.
   Purpose(s): 
       These records are used to document the nature of the individual's 
   problem and progress and to record an individual's participation in 
   and the results of community or private sector treatment or 
   rehabilitation programs.
     Routine uses of records maintained in the system, including 
   categories of users and the purposes of such uses: 
       These records and information in these records may be disclosed 
   to:
       1. The Department of Justice for use in litigation when either 
   (a) the Agency or any component thereof, or (b) any employee of the 
   Agency in his or her official capacity, or (c) any employee of the 
   Agency in his or her individual capacity where the Department of 
   Justice has agreed to represent the employee, or (d) the United 
   States where the Agency determines that litigation is likely to 
   affect the Agency or any of its components, is a party to litigation 
   or has an interest in such litigation, and the use of such records by 
   the Department of Justice is deemed by the Agency to be relevant and 
   necessary to the litigation, provided that in each case the Agency 
   determines that disclosure of the records to the Department of 
   Justice is a use of the information contained in the records that is 
   compatible with the purpose for which the records were collected.
       2. A court or other adjudicative body before which the Agency is 
   authorized to appear, when either (a) the Agency or any component 
   thereof, (b) any employee of the Agency in his or her official 
   capacity, (c) any employee of the Agency in his or her individual 
   capacity, where the Agency has agreed to represent the employee, or 
   (d) the United States where the Agency determines that litigation is 
   likely to affect the Agency or any of its components, is a party to 
   litigation or has an interest in such litigation, and the Agency 
   determines that disclosure of the records to a court or other 
   adjudicative body is compatible with the purpose for which the 
   records were collected.
       3. Qualified personnel for the purpose of conducting scientific 
   research, management audits, financial audits, or program evaluation, 
   but such personnel may not identify, directly or indirectly, any 
   individual patient identities in any manner (when such records are 
   provided to qualified researchers employed or contracted by the 
   Agency, all patient identifying information shall be removed).
       Note: Disclosure of these records beyond officials of the Agency 
   having a bona fide need for them or to the person to whom they 
   pertain, is rarely made as disclosures of information pertaining to 
   an individual with a history of alcohol or drug abuse must be limited 
   in compliance with the restriction of the Confidentiality of Alcohol 
   and Drug Abuse Patient Records regulations, 42 CFR part 2. Records 
   pertaining to the physical and mental fitness of employees are, as a 
   matter of Agency policy, afforded the same degree of confidentiality 
   and are generally not disclosed.
   Disclosure to consumer reporting agencies: 
       None.
     Policies and practices for storing, retrieving, accessing, 
   retaining, and disposing of records in the system: 
     Storage: 
       These records are maintained in file folders.
     Retrievability: 
       These records are retrieved by the name of the individual on whom 
   they are maintained.
     Safeguards: 
       These records are maintained in locked file cabinets labeled 
   confidential with access strictly limited to employees directly 
   involved in the Agency's Employee Assistance Program.
     Retention and disposal: 
       Files are destroyed 3 years after termination of counseling. The 
   records are destroyed by shredding.
     System manager(s) and address: 
       Chief, Special Programs and Services Unit, Personnel Branch, Room 
   533, NLRB, 1717 Pennsylvania Avenue, NW, Washington, DC 20570.
     Notification procedure: 
       An individual may inquire as to whether this system contains a 
   record pertaining to him or her by directing a request to the System 
   Manager in accordance with the procedures set forth in 29 CFR 
   102.117(e).
     Record access procedures: 
       An individual seeking to gain access to records in this system 
   pertaining to him or her should contact the System Manager in 
   accordance with the procedures set forth in 29 CFR 102.117(f).
     Contesting record procedures: 
       An individual may request amendment of a record pertaining to 
   such individual maintained in this system by directing a request to 
   the System Manager in accordance with the procedures set forth in 29 
   CFR 102.117(h).
     Record source categories: 
       Information in this system of records comes from the individual 
   to whom it applies, the supervisor of the individual if the 
   individual was referred by the supervisor, the Employee Assistance 
   Program Coordinator, or staff member whom records the counseling 
   session, and therapists or institutions providing treatment.

    NLRB-16

   System name:  Investigative Services Case Files.

     Security classification: 
       None.
     System location: 
       Office of contractors of the Agency.
     Categories of individuals covered by the system: 
       Individuals sought by the Agency for purpose of effecting 
   compliance with the National Labor Relations Act and Board Orders and 
   court decrees issued thereunder.
     Categories of records in the system: 
       Records consist of investigative reports on efforts to trace 
   individuals, entities, and assets, and include copies of interview 
   reports, public documents, and certain confidential data gathered.
     Authority for maintenance of the system: 
       5 U.S.C. 552a(m)(1) and 29 U.S.C. 153(d) and 160.
   Purpose(s): 
       These records are used to effect compliance with the National 
   Labor Relations Act and Board Orders and court decrees issued 
   thereunder.
     Routine uses of records maintained in the system, including 
   categories of users and the purposes of such uses: 
       These records and information in these records may be used in 
   disclosing information to:
       1. A congressional office in response to an inquiry from 
   congressional office made at the request of the subject individual.
       2. A court or other adjudicative body before which the Agency is 
   authorized to appear, when either (a) the Agency, or any component 
   thereof, (b) any employee of the Agency his or her official capacity, 
   (c) any employee of the Agency in his or her individual capacity, 
   where the Agency has agreed to represent the employee, or (d) the 
   United States, where the Agency determines that litigation is likely 
   to affect the Agency or any of its components, is a party to 
   litigation or has interest in such litigation, and the Agency 
   determines that disclosure of the records to a court or other 
   adjudicative body is compatible with the purpose for which the 
   records were collected.
       3. The Department of Justice for use in litigation when either 
   (a) the Agency, or any component thereof, (b) any employee of the 
   Agency is his or her official capacity, (c) any employee of the 
   Agency in his or her individual capacity, where the Department of 
   Justice has agreed to represent the employee, or (d) the United 
   States, where the Agency determines that litigation is likely to 
   affect the Agency or any of its components, is a party to litigation 
   or has an interest in such litigation, and the use of such records by 
   the Department of Justice is deemed by the Agency to be relevant and 
   necessary to the litigation, provided that in each case the Agency 
   determines that disclosure of the records to the Department of 
   Justice is a use of the information contained in the records that is 
   compatible with the purpose for which the records were collected.
       4. The appropriate agency, whether Federal, State, or local, 
   where there is an indication of a violation or potential violation of 
   law, whether civil, criminal, or regulatory in nature, charged with 
   the responsibility of investigating or prosecuting such violation or 
   enforcing or implementing the statute, rule, regulation, or order 
   issued pursuant thereto or to any agency in connection with its 
   oversight review responsibility.
   Disclosure to consumer reporting agencies: 
       None.
     Policies and practices for storing, retrieving, accessing, 
   retaining, and disposing of records in the system: 
     Storage: 
       Paper records are kept in file holders in locked filing cabinets 
   in offices of contractors of the Agency. Automated information 
   storage and retrieval systems may also be used by individual 
   contractors.
     Retrievability: 
       Records are maintained alphabetically by name, or may be 
   retrieved by other personal identifier.
     Safeguards: 
       Access to and use of the records is limited to authorized persons 
   on a need-to-know basis.
     Retention and disposal: 
       The records are retained by the contractor for no more than 3 
   years after the case is closed, and are destroyed upon notification 
   from the Agency.
     System manager(s) and address: 
       Assistant General Counsel, Contempt Litigation Branch, Division 
   of Enforcement Litigation, National Labor Relations Board, Room 923, 
   1717 Pennsylvania Avenue, NW, Washington, DC 20570.
     Notification procedure: 
       An individual may inquire as to whether this system contains a 
   record pertaining to him or her by directing a request to the System 
   Manager in accordance with the procedures set forth in 29 CFR 
   102.117(e).
     Record access procedures: 
       An individual seeking to gain access to records in this system 
   pertaining to him or her should contact the System Manager in 
   accordance with the procedures set forth in 29 CFR 102.11(f).
     Contesting record procedures: 
       An individual may request amendment of a record pertaining to 
   such individual maintained in this system by directing a request to 
   the System Manager in accordance with the procedures set forth in 29 
   CFR 102.117(h).
     Record source categories: 
       Public records, state, and local law enforcement authorities, 
   third party informants, and Agency personnel.

    NLRB-17

   System name:  Personnel Security Files.

     Security classification: 
       None.
     System location: 
       Division of Administration, Security Staff, National Labor 
   Relations Board, 1717 Pennsylvania Avenue NW, Washington, DC 20570.
     Categories of individuals covered by the system: 
       Current and former NLRB employees and applicants for employment 
   with the NLRB.
     Categories of records in the system: 
       This system contains active and inactive personnel security files 
   on current employees, former employees, and applicants including 
   Federal agency name checks, police checks, and other relevant 
   inquiries. Also, investigative summaries reflecting the reasoning 
   behind suitability recommendations, security data cards, NLRB 
   identification cards, and employee photographs are included.

       Note: Copies of investigative information regarding an individual 
   that were created by the Office of Personnel Management, the FBI, the 
   Department of the Army, or other agencies that provide NLRB with 
   information on a restricted basis under their authorities remain the 
   property of those agencies and requests regarding such material must 
   be directed to them.
     Authority for maintenance of the system: 
       E.O. 10450; 5 U.S.C. 3301; Federal Personnel Manual, Chapter 732; 
   and NLRB Administrative Policies and Procedures Manual, Title 6, 
   Sections 2620-42.
   Purpose(s): 
       These records are used by the NLRB Security Staff for 
   administrative reference in determining suitability for initial and 
   continuing employment.
     Routine uses of records maintained in the system, including 
   categories of users and the purposes of such uses: 
       The records or information therefrom are disclosed to:
       1. NLRB officials to make a determination that the employment of 
   an applicant or retention of employment of a current employee within 
   the NLRB is clearly consistent with the interest of national 
   security.
       2. The appropriate agency, whether Federal, state, or local, 
   where there is an indication of a violation or potential violation of 
   law, whether civil, criminal, or regulatory in nature, charged with 
   the responsibility of investigating or prosecuting such violation or 
   enforcing or implementing the statute, rule, regulation, or order 
   issued pursuant thereto, or to any agency in connection with its 
   oversight review responsibility.
       3. A Federal, state, or local agency maintaining civil, criminal, 
   or other relevant enforcement information if necessary to obtain 
   information relevant to an NLRB decision concerning the hiring or 
   retention of an employee, or the issuance of a security clearance.
       4. A Federal agency in response to its request in connection with 
   the hiring or retention of an employee or the issuance of a security 
   clearance, to the extent that the information is relevant and 
   necessary to the requesting agency's decisions on that matter.
       5. A congressional office in response to an inquiry from the 
   congressional office made at the request of the subject individual.
       6. A court or other adjudicative body before which the Agency is 
   authorized to appear, when either (a) the Agency or any component 
   thereof, (b) any employee of the Agency in his or her official 
   capacity, (c) any employee of the Agency in his or her individual 
   capacity, where the Agency has agreed to represent the employee, or 
   (d) the United States where the Agency determines that litigation is 
   likely to affect the Agency or any of its components, is a party to 
   litigation or has an interest in such litigation, and the Agency 
   determines that disclosure of the records to a court or other 
   adjudicative body is compatible with the purpose for which the 
   records were collected.
       7. The Department of Justice for use in litigation when either 
   (a) the Agency or any component thereof, (b) any employee of the 
   Agency in his or her official capacity, (c) any employee of the 
   Agency in his or her individual capacity where the Department of 
   Justice has agreed to represent the employee, or (d) the United 
   States where the Agency determines that litigation is likely to 
   affect the Agency or any of its components, is a party to litigation 
   or has an interest in such litigation, and the use of such records by 
   the Department of Justice is deemed by the Agency to be relevant and 
   necessary to the litigation, provided that in each case the Agency 
   determines that disclosure of the records to the Department of 
   Justice is a use of the information contained in the records that is 
   compatible with the purpose for which the records were collected.
   Disclosure to consumer reporting agencies: 
       None.
     Policies and practices for storing, retrieving, accessing, 
   retaining, and disposing of records in the system: 
     Storage: 
       Records on current employees and applicants are maintained in 
   file folders and on index cards.
     Retrievability: 
       Records are indexed alphabetically by name.
     Safeguards: 
       Records are maintained in combination safes in the personnel 
   security officer's custody and access is limited to the personnel 
   security officer and his duly authorized representatives.
     Retention and disposal: 
       The files are disposed of according to applicable provisions of 
   the General Records Schedules issued by the National Archives and 
   Records Administration.
     System manager(s) and address: 
       Security Officer, National Labor Relations Board, 1717 
   Pennsylvania Avenue NW, Washington, DC 20570.
     Notification procedure: 
       An individual may inquire whether this system contains a record 
   pertaining to him or her by directing a request to the System Manager 
   in accordance with the procedures set forth in 29 CFR 102.117(f).
     Record access procedures: 
       An individual seeking to gain access to records in this system 
   pertaining to him or her should contact the System Manager in 
   accordance with the procedures set forth in 29 CFR 102.117(g). 
   Current NLRB employees employed in bargaining units covered by a 
   collective-bargaining agreement should refer to the applicable 
   provisions of that agreement.
     Contesting record procedures: 
       An individual may request amendment of a record pertaining to 
   such individual maintained in this system by directing a request to 
   the System Manager in accordance with the procedures set forth in 29 
   CFR 102.117(i).
     Record source categories: 
       Office of Personnel Management and other Federal agencies, law 
   enforcement agencies, Security Officer, and individual involved.
     Systems exempted from certain provisions of the act: 
       This system may contain investigatory material compiled for the 
   purpose of determining suitability, eligibility, or qualifications 
   regarding Federal civilian employment. The Privacy Act, at 5 U.S.C. 
   552a(k)(5), permits an agency to exempt such material from certain 
   provisions of the act. Materials may be exempted to the extent that 
   release of the material to the individual whom the information is 
   about would:
       1. Reveal the identity of a source who furnished information to 
   the Government under an express promise (granted on or after 
   September 27, 1975) that the identity of the source would be held in 
   confidence or
       2. Reveal the identity of a source who, prior to September 27, 
   1975, furnished information to the Government under an implied 
   promise that the identity of the source would be held in confidence.
       The National Labor Relations Board has claimed these exemptions 
   from the requirements of 5 U.S.C. 552a(c)(3) and (d). These 
   requirements relate to providing an accounting of disclosures to the 
   individual whom the records are about and access to and amendment of 
   records.

   NLRB 18

   System name: 

       Office of Inspector General Investigative Files.
     System location: 
       Office of Inspector General, National Labor Relations Board, 1099 
   14th Street, NW., Suite 9820, Washington, DC 20570, (202) 273-1960.
     Categories of individuals covered by the system: 
       Subject individuals include, but are not limited to, current and 
   former employees; contractors, subcontractors, their agents, or 
   employees; and others whose actions affect the NLRB, its programs, 
   and operations.
     Categories of the Records in the System:
       All correspondence relevant to the investigation; all internal 
   staff memoranda; copies of all subpoenas issued during the 
   investigation; affidavits, statements from witnesses, and transcripts 
   of testimony taken in the investigation and accompanying exhibits; 
   documents and records or copies obtained during the investigation; 
   working papers of the staff; other documents and records relating to 
   the investigations, and records relating to ``Hotline'' complaints.
     Authority for maintenance of the system: 
       Pub. L. 95-452, as amended, 5 U.S.C. app. at 1184 (1988); 5 
   U.S.C. 552a.
   Purpose(s): 
       These records are used by the Inspector General's Office in the 
   investigation of programs and operations of the National Labor 
   Relations Board pursuant to the Inspector General Act Amendments of 
   1988, 5 U.S.C. app. at 1184 (1988).
     Routine uses of records maintained in the system, including 
   categories of users and the purposes of such uses: 
       Other agencies, offices, establishments, and authorities, whether 
   Federal, State, or local, (including State or local bar associations 
   and other professional, regulatory, or disciplinary bodies) 
   authorized or charged with the responsibility to investigate, 
   litigate, prosecute, enforce, or implement a statute, rule, 
   regulation, or order, where the record or information, by itself or 
   in connection with other records or information, indicates a 
   violation or potential violation of law, whether criminal, civil, 
   administrative, or regulatory in nature, and whether arising by 
   general statute or particular program statute, or by regulation, 
   rule, or order pursuant thereto.
       Any source from which information is requested in the course of 
   an investigation, to the extent necessary to identify the individual, 
   inform the source of the nature and purpose of the investigation, and 
   to identify the type of information requested.
       Independent auditors or other private firms with which the Office 
   of Inspector General has contracted to carry out an independent audit 
   or noncriminal investigation, or to analyze, collate, aggregate, or 
   otherwise refine data collected in the system of records. These 
   contractors will be required to maintain Privacy Act safeguards with 
   respect to such records.
       A court, magistrate, or administrative tribunal in the course of 
   presenting evidence, including disclosures to opposing counsel or 
   witnesses in the course of civil discovery, litigation, or settlement 
   negotiations, or in connection with criminal law proceedings, when 
   the NLRB determines it is relevant and necessary to the litigation.
       A court or other adjudicative body before which the NLRB is 
   authorized to appear, when either (a) the NLRB, or any component 
   thereof, (b) any employee of the NLRB in his or her official 
   capacity, (c) any employee of the NLRB in his or her individual 
   capacity, where the NLRB has agreed to represent the employee, or (d) 
   the United States, where the NLRB determines that litigation is 
   likely to affect the NLRB or any of it components, is a party to 
   litigation or has interest in such litigation, and the NLRB 
   determines that disclosure of the records to a court or other 
   adjudicative body is relevant, necessary, and compatible with the 
   purpose for which the records were collected.
       The Department of Justice for use in litigation when either (a) 
   the NLRB, or any component thereof, (b) any employee of the NLRB in 
   his or her official capacity, (c) any employee of the NLRB in his or 
   her individual capacity, where the Department of Justice has agreed 
   to represent the employee, or (d) the United States, where the NLRB 
   determines that litigation is likely to affect the Agency or any of 
   its components, is a party to litigation or has an interest in such 
   litigation, and the use of such records by the Department of Justice 
   is deemed by the NLRB to be relevant and necessary to the litigation, 
   provided that in each case the NLRB determines that disclosure of the 
   records to the Department of Justice is a use of the information 
   contained in the records that is compatible with the purpose for 
   which the records were collected.
       These records may be disclosed, as a routine use, to the Agency's 
   legal representative, to include the Department of Justice and other 
   outside counsel, where the Agency is a party in litigation or has an 
   interest in litigation when either (a) NLRB, or any component 
   thereof; (b) Any employee of NLRB in his or her official capacity; 
   (c) Any employee of NLRB in her or her individual capacity, where the 
   Department of Justice has agreed or is considering a request to 
   represent the employee; or (d) The United States, where NLRB 
   determines that litigation is likely to affect NLRB or any of its 
   components, is a party to litigation or has an interest in such 
   litigation, and NLRB determines that the use of such records by the 
   Department of Justice is relevant and necessary to litigation; 
   provided however, that in each case, NLRB determines that disclosures 
   of the records to the Department of Justice is a use of the 
   information contained in the records that is compatible with the 
   purpose for which the records were collected.
       These records may routinely be disclosed to other Federal 
   agencies, in response to their requests in connection with the 
   conduct of background checks. Disclosure will be made only to the 
   extent that the information is relevant and necessary to the 
   requesting agencies' function.
       These records may be disclosed, as a routine use, to the Office 
   of Government Ethics for any purpose consistent with that office's 
   mission, including the compilation of statistical data.
       These records may be disclosed, as a routine use, to debt 
   collection contractors for the purpose of collecting delinquent debts 
   as authorized by the Debt Collection Act of 1982, 31 U.S.C. 3718.
       These records may be disclosed, as a routine use, to agency 
   personnel responsible for bringing Program Fraud Civil Remedies Act 
   litigation, to the persons constituting the tribunal hearing such 
   litigation or any appeals therefrom, and to counsel for the defendant 
   party in any such litigation.
       A member of Congress or to a congressional staff member in 
   response to an inquiry of the congressional office made at the 
   written request of an individual about whom the record is maintained. 
   In such cases, the member has no greater right to access to the 
   record than does the individual.
       These records may be disclosed, as a routine use, for a 
   legitimate public interest to the news media and public to provide 
   information on events in the criminal process following an 
   indictment, the filing of formal charges by another means, or a 
   conviction; or when necessary for protection from imminent threat to 
   life or property.
       These records may be disclosed, as a routine use, to members of 
   the President's Council on Integrity and Efficiency/Executive Council 
   on Integrity and Efficiency, for the preparation of reports to the 
   President and Congress on the activities of the Inspectors General.
       These records may be disclosed, as a routine use, to members of 
   the President's Council on Integrity and Efficiency/Executive Council 
   on Integrity and Efficiency, the Department of Justice, the Federal 
   Bureau of Investigation, or the U.S. Marshals Service, as necessary, 
   for the purpose of conducting qualitative assessment reviews of the 
   investigative operations of NLRB OIG to ensure that adequate internal 
   safeguards and management procedures are maintained.
       These records may be disclosed, as a routine use, to the Office 
   of Management and Budget in order to obtain that office's advice 
   regarding the NLRB's obligations under the Privacy Act.
       The Department of Justice for the purpose of obtaining its advice 
   in the event that the NLRB concludes it is desirable or necessary in 
   determining whether particular records are required to be disclosed 
   under the Freedom of Information Act.
     Policies and practices for storing, retrieving, accessing, 
   retaining, and disposing of records in the system:  
     Storage: 
       The Office of Inspector General Investigative Files consists of 
   paper records maintained in files, records on computer disks and 
   diskettes, and records on computer tapes.
     Retrievability: 
       The records are retrievable by case number and individual name.
     Safeguards: 
       These records are only available to those persons whose official 
   duties require such access. The records are kept in a limited access 
   area during on duty hours. During off-duty hours they are kept inside 
   locked offices, in locked file cabinets, or in safes. Computer 
   records can be accessed only through use of confidential procedures 
   and passwords.
     Retention and disposal: 
       As prescribed in NLRB Records Schedule, Job Number N1-025-01-1, 
   OIG Investigative Files are generally destroyed 10 years after a case 
   is closed. Cases that are unusually significant for documenting major 
   violations of criminal law or ethical standards are offered to the 
   National Archives for permanent retention.
     System manager(s) and address: 
       Office of the Inspector General, National Labor Relations Board, 
   1099 14th Street, NW., Suite 9820, Washington, DC 20570, (202) 273-
   1960.
     Notification procedure: 
       The OIG Investigative Files are exempt pursuant to 5 U.S.C. 552a 
   (j)(2) and (k)(2); however, consideration will be given to requests 
   addressed to the system manager. The request should include the 
   individual's name and date of birth.
     Record access procedure:
       See ``Notification Procedures'' above. Requestors should specify 
   the record contents being sought. Under section 7(b) of the Inspector 
   General Act of 1978 (Pub. L. 95-452), the identity of an employee or 
   other personal source who makes a complaint or provides information 
   to the Office of the Inspector General (OIG) via the OIG ``Hotline'' 
   is exempt from disclosure unless the Inspector General determines 
   such disclosure is unavoidable during the course of an investigation.
     Contesting record procedures: 
       Contact the system manager at the above address, and identify the 
   record, specify the information to be contested, and the corrective 
   action sought with supporting justification.
     Record source categories: 
       The Office of Inspector General collects information from a wide 
   variety of sources, including information from the NLRB and other 
   Federal, state, and local agencies, witnesses, complainants and other 
   nongovernmental sources.
     System exempted from certain provisions of the act: 
       Pursuant to 5 U.S.C. 552a(j)(2), this system of records, to the 
   extent it consists of investigatory material compiled for criminal 
   law enforcement purposes, is exempted from all provisions of the 
   Privacy Act of 1974, 5 U.S.C. 552a, except subsections (b), (c) (1) 
   and (2), (e)(4) (A) through (F), (e) (6), (7), (9), (10), and (11), 
   and (i).
       Pursuant to 5 U.S.C. 552a(k)(2), this system of records, to the 
   extent it consists of investigatory material compiled for law 
   enforcement purposes other than material within the scope of the 
   exemption at 5 U.S.C. 552a(j)(2), is exempted from the following 
   provisions of the Privacy Act of 1974, 5 U.S.C. 552a (c)(3), (d), 
   (e)(1), (e)(4) (G), (H), and (I), and (f).
       These exemptions are contained in 29 CFR part 102.

   NLRB-19

   System name: Telephone Call Detail Records.

     Security classification: 
       None.
     System location: 
       Records are authorized to be maintained for current and former 
   NLRB employees in all Agency offices. See the attached appendix for 
   the addresses of these offices.
     Categories of individuals covered by the system: 
       All current and former employees (permanent, temporary, part or 
   full time) and all contractors, subcontractors, and consultants who 
   make long-distance calls and individuals who receive telephone calls 
   placed from or charged to Agency telephones.
     Categories of records in the system: 
       Records relating to use of NLRB telephones to place long-distance 
   calls; records relating to long-distance telephone calls charged to 
   the Agency; records indicating assignment of telephone numbers and 
   authorized calling card numbers to employees, and records relating to 
   the location of telephones in the Agency.
     Authority for maintenance of the system: 
       29 U.S.C. 153, 154, 155; 31 U.S.C. 1348(b); 44 U.S.C. 3101; 41 
   CFR 201-21.601; 5 U.S.C. 552a, and FIRMR Bulletin C-13, dated January 
   31, 1991.
   Purpose(s):
       These documents are used to support the certification that 
   telephone calls listed on call detail records were required for 
   official business.
     Routine uses of records maintained in the system, including 
   categories of users and the purposes of such uses: 
       These records and information in these records may be disclosed 
   to:
       1. A Member of Congress or to a Congressional staff member in 
   response to an inquiry of the Congressional office made at the 
   written request of the constituent about whom the record is 
   maintained.
       (2) The General Services Administration and the National Archives 
   and Records Administration in records management inspections 
   conducted under the authority of 44 U.S.C. 2904 and 2906.
       3. A court, a magistrate, administrative tribunal, or other 
   adjudicatory body in the course of presenting evidence or argument, 
   including disclosure to opposing counsel or witnesses in the course 
   of civil discovery, litigation, or settlement negotiations, or in 
   connection with criminal law proceedings, when: (a) The NLRB or any 
   component thereof; or (b) any employee of the NLRB in his or her 
   official capacity; or (c) any employee of the NLRB in his or her 
   individual capacity where the NLRB has agreed to represent the 
   employee; or (d) the United States Government, is a party to 
   litigation or has interest in such litigation, and determines that 
   such disclosure is relevant and necessary to the litigation and that 
   the use of such records is therefore deemed by the NLRB to be for a 
   purpose that is compatible with the purpose for which the records 
   were collected.
       (4) Other agencies, offices, establishments, and authorities, 
   whether Federal, state, or local, authorized or charged with the 
   responsibility to investigate, litigate, prosecute, enforce, or 
   implement a statute, rule, regulation, or order, where the record or 
   information, by itself or in connection with other records or 
   information, indicates a violation or potential violation of law, 
   whether criminal, civil, administrative, or regulatory in nature, and 
   whether arising by general statute or particular program statute, or 
   by regulation, rule, or order issued pursuant thereto.
       (5) The Department of Justice for use in litigation when either 
   (a) the NLRB, or any component thereof, (b) any employee of the NLRB 
   in his or her official capacity, (c) any employee of the NLRB in his 
   or her individual capacity, where the Department of Justice has 
   agreed to represent the employee, or (d) the United States, where the 
   NLRB determines that litigation is likely to affect the Agency or any 
   of its components, is a party to litigation or has an interest in 
   such litigation, and the use of such records by the Department of 
   Justice is deemed by the NLRB to be relevant and necessary to the 
   litigation, provided that in each case the NLRB determines that 
   disclosure of the records to the Department of Justice is a use of 
   the information contained in the records that is compatible with the 
   purpose for which the records were collected.
       (6) Officials of labor organizations recognized under Public Law 
   95-454, when relevant and necessary to their duties of exclusive 
   representation of NLRB employees under the Act. Whenever feasible and 
   consistent with responsibilities under the Act, such information 
   shall be furnished in depersonalized form, i.e., without personal 
   identifiers.
       (7) NLRB current and former employees and other individuals 
   currently or formerly provided telephone services by the NLRB to 
   determine their individual responsibility for telephone calls.
       8. A Federal authority, in response to its request, that this 
   system of records contains information relevant to the hiring or 
   retention of an employee, the issuance or retention of a security 
   clearance, the letting of a contract, or the issuance or retention of 
   a license, grant, or other benefit. The other agency or licensing 
   organization, however, may then make a request supported by the 
   written consent of the individual for the entire record if it so 
   chooses. No disclosure will be made unless the information has been 
   determined to be sufficiently reliable to support a referral to 
   another office within the NLRB or to another Federal agency for 
   criminal, civil, administrative, personnel, or regulatory action.
       (9) A telecommunications company providing telecommunications 
   support to permit servicing the account.
   Disclosure to consumer reporting agencies:
       Disclosures may be made from this system, pursuant to 5 U.S.C. 
   552(a)b)(12), to consumer reporting agencies as defined in the Fair 
   Credit Reporting Act, 15 U.S.C. 1681a(f) or the Federal Claims 
   Collection Act of 1966, 31 U.S.C. 3701(a)(3), in accordance with 
   3711(f) of Title 31.
     Policies and practices for storing, retrieving, accessing, 
   retaining, and disposing of records in the system: 
     Storage: 
       The telephone call detail records consist of paper records 
   maintained in files and records on computer disks and diskettes, and/
   or on computer tapes.
     Retrievability: 
       The records are retrievable by name, authorized calling card 
   number, and telephone number.
     Safeguards: 
       These records are only available to those persons whose official 
   duties require such access. Paper records are maintained in file 
   cabinets. During duty hours cabinets containing the records are under 
   the surveillance of personnel charged with custody of the records. 
   During off-duty hours they are kept inside locked offices, in locked 
   file cabinets. Computer records can be accessed only through use of 
   confidential procedures and passwords.
     Retention and disposal: 
       Telephone call detail records are retained and disposed of in 
   accordance with the National Archives and Records Administration 
   (NARA), General Records Schedule 12.
     System manager(s) and address: 
       Assistant Branch Chief, Facilities and Safety, Room 6100, NLRB, 
   1099 14th Street, NW, Washington, DC 20570-0001. See the attached 
   appendix for the titles and addresses of officials at other locations 
   responsible for this system at their locations.
     Notification procedures:
       An individual may inquire whether this system contains a record 
   pertaining to him or her by directing a request to the appropriate 
   System Manager in accordance with the procedures set forth in 29 CFR 
   102.117(f).
     Record access procedures:
       An individual seeking to gain access to records in this system 
   pertaining to him or her should contact the appropriate System 
   Manager in accordance with the procedures set forth in 29 CFR 
   102.117(g).
     Contesting records procedures:
       An individual may request amendment of a record pertaining to 
   such individual maintained in this system by directing a request to 
   the appropriate System Manager in accordance with the procedures set 
   forth in 29 CFR 102.117(i).
     Record source categories: 
       Telephone assignment records; telephone call detail listings; 
   results of administrative inquiries relating to assignment of 
   responsibility for placement of specific long-distance calls.

                                 Appendix

       Names and addresses of NLRB offices referenced in Notice of 
   Telephone Call Detail Records Systems shown above.

       NLRB Headquarters Offices:
       1099 14th Street, NW, Washington, DC 20570-0001
       Offices of the Board
       Members of the Board
       Executive Secretary, Office of the Executive Secretary
       Director, Office of Representative and Appeals
       Director, Office of Information
       Solicitor
       Chief Administrative Law Judge, 1550 Wilson Boulevard, 6th Floor, 
   Arlington, VA 22209-2426
       Deputy Chief Administrative Law Judge, San Francisco Judges, 901 
   Market Street, suite 300, San Francisco, CA 94103-1779
       Associate Chief Administrative Law Judge, New York Judges, 120 
   West 45th Street, 11th Floor, New York, NY 10036-5503
       Associate Chief Administrative Law Judge, Atlanta Judges, 
   Peachtree Summit Building, 401 W. Peachtree St., NW--suite 1708, 
   Atlanta, GA 30308-5510
       Offices of the General Counsel
       General Counsel
       Associate General Counsel, Division of Operations Management
       Associate General Counsel, Division of Advice
       Associate General Counsel, Division of Enforcement Litigation
       Director, Division of Administration
       Director, Equal Employment Opportunity
       Chief, Procurement and Facilities Branch
       Chief, Administrative Service Branch
       Chief, Management Information System Branch
       Chief, Library and Records Management Branch
       Chief, Finance Branch
       Chief, Budget Branch
       Director, Personnel Branch
       Inspector General, Office of Inspector General
       NLRB Field Offices
       Regional Director, Region 1, Thomas P. O'Neal, Jr., Federal 
   Office Building, 10 Causeway Street, 6th Floor, Boston, MA 02222-1072
       Regional Director, Region 2, Jacob K. Javits Federal Building, 26 
   Federal Plaza, room 3614, New York, NY 10278-0104
       Regional Director, Region 3, Federal Building--room 901, 111 W. 
   Huron Street, Buffalo, NY 14202-2387
       Resident Officer, Albany Resident Office, Clinton Avenue at Pearl 
   Street--room 342, Albany, NY 12207-2350
       Regional Director, Region 4, Philadelphia Life Building--7th 
   Floor, 615 Chestnut Street, One Independence Mall, Philadelphia, PA 
   19106-4404
       Regional Director, Region 5, Candler Building, 4th Floor, 109 
   Market Place, Baltimore, MD 21202-4026
       Resident Officer, Washington Resident Office, Gelman Building, 
   suite 100, 2120 L Street, NW, Washington, DC 20037-1560
       Regional Director, Region 6, William S. Moorehead, Federal Office 
   Building, room 1501, 1000 Liberty Avenue, Pittsburgh, PA 15222-4173
       Regional Director, Region 7, Patrick V. McNamara, Federal Office 
   Building, 477 Michigan Avenue, room 300, Detroit, MI 48226-2569
       Resident Officer, Grant Rapids Resident Office, 82 Ionia, 
   Northwest--3rd Floor, Grand Rapids, MI 49503-3022
       Regional Director, Region 8, Anthony J. Celebrezze, Federal 
   Office Building--room 1695, 1240 East 9th Street, Cleveland, OH 
   44199-2086
       Regional Director, Region 9, John Weld Peck, Federal Office 
   Building, 550 Main Street, room 30003, Cincinnati, OH 45202-3271
       Regional Director, Region 10, Marietta Tower--Suite 2400, 101 
   Marietta Street, Northwest, Atlanta, GA 30323-3301
       Resident Officer, Birmingham Resident Office, Massey Building, 
   suite 407, 2025 3rd Avenue, North, Birmingham, AL 35203-3323
       Regional Director, Region 11, U.S. Courthouse/Federal Building, 
   251 Main Street, room 447, Winston Salem, NC 27101-3986
       Regional Director, Region 12, Enterprise Plaza, suite 530, 201 E. 
   Kennedy Boulevard, Tampa, FL 33602-5824
       Resident Officer, Miami Resident Office, Claude Pepper Federal 
   Building--13th Floor, 51 Southwest 1st Avenue, Miami, FL 33130-1608
       Resident Officer, Jacksonville Resident Office, Federal Building, 
   room 278, 400 West Bay Street, Jacksonville, FL 33130-4412
       Regional Director, Region 13, Bank of America Building--suite 
   800, 200 West Adams Street, Chicago, IL 60606-5208
       Regional Director, Region 14, 611 N. 10th Street--suite 400, St. 
   Louis, MO 63101-1932
       Regional Director, Region 15, 1515 Poydras Street--room 610, New 
   Orleans, LA 70112-3723
       Regional Director, Region 16, Fritz G. Lanham, Federal Office 
   Building, 819 Taylor Street, room 8A24, Fort Worth, TX 76102-6178
       Resident Officer, Houston Resident Office, Lyric Centre, 440 
   Louisana Street, Houston, TX 77002-2649
       Resident Officer, San Antonio Resident Office, US Post Office/
   Courthouse Building--room 565, 615 East Houston Street, San Antonio, 
   TX 78205-2040
       Regional Director, Region 17, 5799 Broadmoor--room 500, Kansas 
   City, KS 66302-2408
       Resident Officer, Tulsa Resident Office, Grantson Building--suite 
   990, 111 West Fifth Street, Tulsa, OK 74103-4262
       Regional Director, Region 18, Federal Building--room 316, 110 
   South 4th Street, Minneapolis, MN 55401-2291
       Resident Officer, Des Moines Resident Office, Federal Building--
   room 909, 210 Walnut Street, Des Moines, IA 50309-2116
       Regional Director, Region 19, Henry Jackson Federal Building--
   room 2948, 915 Second Avenue, Seattle, WA 48174-1078
       Resident Officer, Anchorage Resident Office, Federal Office 
   Building, 222 West 7th Avenue, room 510, Box 21, Anchorage, AK 99513-
   3546
       Officer in Charge, Subregion 36, Koin Center--room 401, 222 
   Southwest Columbia Street, Portland, OR 97201-5878
       Regional Director, Region 20, 901 Market Street--suite 400, San 
   Francisco, CA 94103-1735
       Officer in Charge, Subregion 37, Prince Kuhio Federal Building--
   room 7318, 300 Ala Moana Boulevard, Honolulu, HI 96850-4980
       Regional Director, Region 21, 615 South Flower Street--11th 
   Floor, Los Angeles, CA 90017-2803
       Resident Officer, San Diego Resident Office, Pacific Professional 
   Center--suite 302, 555 West Beech Street, San Diego, CA 92101-2939
       Regional Director, Region 22, Peter D. Rodino Jr., Federal office 
   Building--room 1600, 970 Broad Street, Newark, NJ 07102-2570
       Regional Director, Region 24, Frederico Degetau, Federal 
   Building/Courthouse--room 591, 150 Carlos E. Chardon Avenue, Hato 
   Rey, PR 00918-1720
       Regional Director, Region 25, Minton Capehart Federal Building--
   room 238, 575 North Pennsylvania Street, Indianapolis, IN 46204-1577
       Regional Director, Region 26, Mid-Memphis Tower--suite 800, 1407 
   Union Avenue, Memphis, TN 38104-3627
       Resident Officer, Little Rock Resident Office, TCBY Building--
   suite 375, 425 West Capitol Avenue, Little Rock, AR 72201-3489
       Nashville Resident Office, Estes Kefauver Federal Building, U.S. 
   Courthouse, room 716, 801 Broadway, Nashville, TN 37203-3816
       Regional Director, Region 27, Dominion Plaza, 3d Floor, 600 17th 
   Street, Denver, CO 80202-5433
       Regional Director, Region 28, Security Building, suite 440, 234 
   North Central Avenue, Phoenix, AZ 85004-2212
       Resident Officer, Albuquerque Resident Office, Western Bank 
   Plaza--room 1820, 505 Marquette Avenue, NW, Albuquerque, NM 87102-
   2181
       Resident Officer, El Paso Resident Office, Federal Building, 
   suite C-403, 700 East San Antonio Avenue, El Paso, TX 79901-7020
       Resident Officer, Las Vegas Resident Office, Alan Bible Federal 
   Building--suite 400, 600 W. Las Vegas Boulevard, South, Las Vegas, NV 
   89101-6637
       Regional Director, Region 29, 75 Clinton Street--8th Floor, 
   Brooklyn, NY 11201-4201
       Regional Director, Region 30, Henry S. Reuss Federal Plaza--suite 
   700, 310 West Wisconsin Avenue, Milwaukee, WI 53203-2211
       Regional Director, Region 31, Federal Building/USPO--room 12100, 
   11000 Wilshire Boulevard, Los Angeles, CA 90024-3682
       Regional Director, Region 32, Breuner Building, 2d Floor, 2201 
   Broadway, PO Box 12983, Oakland, CA 94612-3017
       Regional Director, Region 33, Hamilton Square Building--suite 
   200, 300 Hamilton Boulevard, Peoria, IL 61602-1104
       Regional Director, Region 34, 1 Commercial Plaza--21st Floor, 
   Church and Trumbull Streets, Hartford, CT 06103-3599

   NLRB-20

   System name: Agency Disciplinary Case Files.

     Security classification: 
       None.
     System location: 
       Office of the Executive Secretary; Office of the Solicitor; Board 
   Members' Offices; Office of the General Counsel; Division of 
   Operations Management, NLRB, 1099 14th Street, NW, Washington, DC 
   20570-0001.
     Categories of individuals covered by the system: 
       Attorneys and other individuals, other than current NLRB 
   employees, who appear and practice before the NLRB.
     Categories of records in the system: 
       All correspondence, internal staff memoranda, affidavits, 
   statements, transcripts, exhibits, or other documents or records 
   compiled by the NLRB in the course of conducting disciplinary 
   investigations and proceedings involving allegations of misconduct in 
   violation of the NLRB's rules by attorneys and other individuals, 
   other than current NLRB employees, who appear and practice before the 
   NLRB.
     Authority for maintenance of the system: 
       5 U.S.C. 552a; 29 U.S.C. 156; and 29 CFR 102.44, 102.66(d), 
   102.119, and 102.120.
   Purpose(s): 
       Purpose of records is to document NLRB investigations and 
   proceedings involving allegations of misconduct in violation of the 
   NLRB's rules by attorneys and other individuals, other than current 
   NLRB employees, who appear and practice before the NLRB.
     Routine uses of records maintained in the system, including 
   categories of users and the purposes of such uses: 
       The records and information contained therein may be disclosed 
   to:
       1. Any person who, during the course of a disciplinary 
   investigation or proceeding, is a source or assists in such 
   investigation or proceeding, to the extent necessary to obtain 
   relevant information or assistance.
       2. A bar association or similar Federal, State, or local 
   licensing authority, where the record or information, by itself or in 
   connection with other records or information, indicates a violation 
   or potential violation of the standards of professional conduct 
   established or adopted by the licensing authority.
       3. Other agencies, offices, establishments, and authorities, 
   whether Federal, state, or local, authorized or charged with the 
   responsibility to investigate, litigate, prosecute, enforce, or 
   implement a statute, rule, regulation, or order, where the record or 
   information, by itself or in connection with other records or 
   information, indicates a violation or potential violation of law, 
   whether criminal, civil, administrative, or regulatory in nature, and 
   whether arising by general statute or particular program statute, or 
   by regulation, rule, or order pursuant thereto.
       4. A Federal, state, or local governmental authority maintaining 
   civil, criminal, or other relevant enforcement information, if 
   necessary to obtain information relevant to an NLRB decision 
   concerning the hiring or retention of an employee, the issuance of a 
   security clearance, or the letting of a contract.
       5. A Federal, State, or local government authority, in response 
   to its request, that this system of records contains information 
   relevant to the hiring or retention of an employee, the issuance or 
   retention of a security clearance, the letting of a contract, or the 
   issuance or retention of a license, grant, or other benefit. The 
   other agency or licensing organization may then make a request 
   supported by the written consent of the individual for the entire 
   record if it so chooses. No disclosure will be made unless the 
   information has been determined to be sufficiently reliable to 
   support a referral to another office within the NLRB or to another 
   Federal agency for criminal, civil, administrative, personnel, or 
   regulatory action.
       6. A court, magistrate, administrative tribunal, or other 
   adjudicatory body in the course of presenting evidence or argument, 
   including disclosure to opposing counsel or witnesses in the course 
   of civil discovery, litigation, or settlement negotiations, or in 
   connection with criminal law proceedings, when: (a) The NLRB or any 
   component thereof, or (b) any employee of the NLRB in his or her 
   official capacity; or (c) any employee of the NLRB in his individual 
   capacity where the NLRB has agreed to represent the employee; or (d) 
   the United States Government, is a party to litigation or has 
   interest in such litigation, and determines that such disclosure is 
   relevant and necessary to the litigation and that the use of such 
   records is therefore deemed by the NLRB to be for a purpose that is 
   compatible with the purpose for which the records were collected.
       7. The Department of Justice for use in litigation when either 
   (a) the NLRB or any component thereof, (b) any employee of the NLRB 
   in his or her official capacity, (c) any employee of the NLRB in his 
   or her official capacity, where the Department of Justice has agreed 
   to represent the employee, or (d) the United States where the NLRB 
   determines that litigation is likely to affect the NLRB or any of its 
   components, is a party to litigation or has an interest in such 
   litigation, and the use of such records by the Department of Justice 
   is deemed by the NLRB to be relevant and necessary to the litigation, 
   provided that in each case the Agency determines that disclosure of 
   the records to the Department of Justice is a use of the information 
   contained in the records that is compatible with the purpose for 
   which the records were collected.
       8. Any person with whom the NLRB contracts to reproduce, by 
   typing, photocopy or other means, any record within the system for 
   use by the NLRB.
       9. A Member of Congress or a Congressional staff member in 
   response to an inquiry of the Congressional office made at the 
   written request of the constituent about whom the records are 
   maintained.

   Disclosures to consumer reporting agencies:
       None.
     Policies and practices for storing, retrieving, accessing, 
   retaining, and disposing of records in the system: 
     Storage: 
       Records are maintained in file folders, on computer disks and 
   diskettes, and on computer tapes.
     Retrievability: 
       Records are retrievable by case number and/or individual name.
     Safeguards: 
       Access to and use of records is limited to those persons whose 
   official duties require such access. Records are kept in limited 
   access areas during duty hours and in locked offices and file 
   cabinets during off-duty hours. Computer records can be accessed only 
   through use of confidential procedures and passwords.
     Retention and disposal: 
       Files are disposed of according to applicable provisions of the 
   General Records Schedules issued by the National Archives and Records 
   Administration.
     System manager(s) and address: 
       Executive Secretary, NLRB, 1099 14th Street, NW, Washington, DC 
   20570, for files maintained by the Executive Secretary's Office, 
   Solicitor's Office, and Board Members' Offices.
       Associate General Counsel, Division of Operations Management, 
   NLRB, 1099 14th Street, NW, Washington, DC 20570, for files 
   maintained by the General Counsel's Office and the Division of 
   Operations Management.
     Notification procedure: 
       The Agency Disciplinary Case Files system of records is exempt 
   from certain provisions of the Privacy Act pursuant to 5 U.S.C. 
   552a(k)(2); however, consideration will be given to individual 
   requests for notification whether the system contains a record 
   pertaining to the requesting individual, for access to records 
   pertaining to such individual, or for amendment of a record 
   pertaining to such individual. Requests should be made in writing 
   addressed to the system manager(s) and should contain the 
   individual's full name, occupation, address, and date of birth.
     Record access procedure:
       See ``Notification Procedure'' above.
     Contesting record procedures: 
       See ``Notification Procedure'' above.
     Record source categories: 
       Categories of record sources include the subject individual, 
   records from the underlying administrative proceeding where the 
   alleged misconduct occurred, other participants in the underlying 
   administrative proceeding, and various other sources.
     Systems exempted from certain provisions of the Privacy Act:
       Pursuant to 5 U.S.C. 552a(k)(2), the NLRB has exempted the system 
   from the following provisions of the Privacy Act of 1974: 5 U.S.C. 
   552a (c)(3), (d), (e)(1), (e)(4) (G), (H), and (I), and (f). This 
   exemption is codified in 29 CFR part 102.

                          Appendix

       Names and Addresses of NLRB Offices referenced in Notice of 
   Records System shown above.

NLRB HEADQUARTERS OFFICES

       1099 14th Street, NW, Washington, DC 20570-0001

OFFICES OF THE BOARD

                                      Members of the Board
    Executive Secretary, Office of the Executive Secretary
                Director, Office of Representation Appeals
                         Director, Division of Information
                                                 Solicitor
            Inspector General, Office of Inspector General
    Chief Administrative Law Judge, 1099 14th Street, NW, Room 5400 
                                     East, Washington, DC 20570-0001
    Associate Chief Administrative Law Judge, San Francisco Judges, 
      901 Market Street, Suite 300, San Francisco, California 94103-
                                                                1779
     Associate Chief Administrative Law Judge, New York Judges, 120 
         West 45th Street, 11th Floor, New York, New York 10036-5503
          Associate Chief Administrative Law Judge, Atlanta Judges, 
      Peachtree Summit Building, 401 W. Peachtree Street, NW, Suite 
                                   1708, Atlanta, Georgia 30308-3510

OFFICES OF THE GENERAL COUNSEL

                                           General Counsel
        Associate General Counsel, Division of Operations 
                                                Management
             Associate General Counsel, Division of Advice
       Associate General Counsel, Division of Enforcement 
                                                Litigation
                      Director, Division of Administration
                    Director, Equal Employment Opportunity

NLRB FIELD OFFICES

        Regional Director, Region 1, Thomas P. O'Neal, Jr., Federal 
            Office Building, 10 Causeway Street, 6th Floor, Boston, 
                                            Massachusetts 02222-1072
   Regional Director, Region 2, Jacob K. Javits Federal Building, 26 
             Federal Plaza, Room 3614, New York, New York 10278-0104
   Regional Director, Region 3, Thaddeus J. Dulski Federal Building, 
       111 West Huron Street, Room 901, Buffalo, New York 14202-2387
   Resident Officer, Albany Resident Office, Leo W. O'Brien Federal 
     Building, Clinton Avenue at N. Pearl Street, Room 342, Albany, 
                                                 New York 12207-2350
   Regional Director, Region 4, One Independence Mall, 615 Chestnut 
            Street, 7th Floor, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania 19106-4404
    Regional Director, Region 5, The Appraisers Store Building, 103 
         South Gay Street, 8th Floor, Baltimore, Maryland 21202-4026
   Resident Officer, Franklin Court Building, 1099 14th Street, NW, 
                               Suite 5530, Washington, DC 20570-0001
          Regional Director, Region 6, William S. Moorehead Federal 
              Building, 1000 Liberty Avenue, Room 1501, Pittsburgh, 
                                             Pennsylvania 15222-4173
           Regional Director, Region 7, Patrick V. McNamara Federal 
   Building, 477 Michigan Avenue, Room 300, Detroit, Michigan 48226-
                                                                2569
      Resident Officer, Grand Rapids Resident Office, The Furniture 
      Company Building, 82 Ionia Northwest, Room 330, Grand Rapids, 
                                                 Michigan 49503-3022
         Regional Director, Region 8, Anthony J. Celebrezze Federal 
   Building, 1240 East 9th Street, Room 1695, Cleveland, Ohio 44199-
                                                                2086
   Regional Director, Region 9, John Weld Peck Federal Building, 550 
                 Main Street, Room 3003, Cincinnati, Ohio 45202-3271
   Regional Director, Region 10, Harris Tower, 233 Peachtree Street, 
                         NE, Suite 1000, Atlanta, Georgia 30303-1504
      Resident Officer, The Burger-Phillips Centre, 1900 3rd Avenue 
                    North, Suite 311, Birmingham, Alabama 35203-3511
     Regional Director, Region 11, Republic Square, Suite 200, 4035 
        University Parkway, Winston-Salem, North Carolina 27106-3325
    Regional Director, Region 12, South Trust Plaza, Suite 530, 201 
                   East Kennedy Boulevard, Tampa, Florida 33602-5824
   Resident Officer, Jacksonville Resident Office, Federal Building, 
    400 West Bay Street, Room 214, Box 35091, Jacksonville, Florida 
                                                          32202-4412
      Resident Officer, Miami Resident Office, Federal Building, 51 
          Southwest 1st Avenue, Room 1320, Miami, Florida 33130-1608
    Regional Director, Region 13, 200 West Adams Street, Suite 800, 
                                        Chicago, Illinois 60606-5208
      Regional Director, Region 14, 1222 Spruce Street, Room 8.302, 
                                    Saint Louis, Missouri 63103-2829
   Regional Director, Region 15, 1515 Poydras Street, Room 610, New 
                                       Orleans, Louisiana 70112-3723
   Regional Director, Region 16, Federal Office Building, 819 Taylor 
                     Street, Room 8A24, Fort Worth, Texas 76102-6178
   Resident Officer, Houston Resident Office, Mickey Leland Federal 
      Building, 1919 Smith Street--Suite 1545, Houston, Texas 77002-
                                                                2649
      Resident Officer, San Antonio Resident Office, 615 E. Houston 
                     Street, Room 565, San Antonio, Texas 78205-2040
       Regional Director, Region 17, 8600 Farley Street, Suite 100, 
                                    Overland Park, Kansas 66212-4677
         Resident Officer, Tulsa Resident Office, 224 South Boulder 
                        Avenue, Room 318, Tulsa, Oklahoma 74103-3027
       Regional Director, Region 18, Towle Building, Suite 790, 330 
              Second Avenue South, Minneapolis, Minnesota 55401-2221
   Resident Officer, Des Moines Resident Office, 210 Walnut Street, 
                               Room 439, Des Moines, Iowa 50309-2116
   Regional Director, Region 19, Henry M. Jackson Federal Building, 
        915 Second Avenue, Room 2948, Seattle, Washington 98174-1078
   Resident Officer, Anchorage Resident Office, 222 West 7th Avenue, 
                                Box 21, Anchorage, Alaska 99513-3546
    Officer in Charge, Subregion 36, 601 SW 2nd Avenue, Suite 1910, 
                                         Portland, Oregon 97204-3170
    Regional Director, Region 20, 901 Market Street, Suite 400, San 
                                    Francisco, California 94103-1735
    Officer in Charge, Subregion 37, Prince Kuhio Federal Building, 
    300 Ala Moana Boulevard, Room 7-245, Honolulu, Hawaii 96850-4980
       Regional Director, Region 21, 888 South Figueroa Street, 9th 
                           Floor, Los Angeles, California 90017-5449
   Resident Officer, San Diego Resident Office, Pacific Professional 
    Center, 555 West Beech Street, Suite 302, San Diego, California 
                                                          92101-2939
      Regional Director, Region 22, 20 Washington Place, 5th Floor, 
                                       Newark, New Jersey 07102-2570
          Regional Director, Region 24, La Torre de Plaza, 525 F.D. 
      Roosevelt Avenue, Suite 1002, San Juan, Puerto Rico 00918-1002
    Regional Director, Region 25, Minton-Capehart Federal Building, 
     575 North Pennsylvania Street, Room 238, Indianapolis, Indiana 
                                                          46204-1577
     Regional Director, Region 26, Mid-Memphis Tower Building, 1407 
              Union Avenue, Suite 800, Memphis, Tennessee 38104-3627
     Resident Officer, Little Rock Resident Office, TCBY Tower, 425 
    West Capitol Avenue, Suite 375, Little Rock, Arkansas 72201-3489
     Resident Officer, Nashville Resident Office, 810 Broadway, 3rd 
                              Floor, Nashville, Tennessee 37203-3816
     Regional Director, Region 27, Dominion Plaza, North Tower, 600 
                 17th Street, 7th Floor, Denver, Colorado 80202-5433
         Regional Director, Region 28, Security Building, 234 North 
              Central Avenue, Suite 440, Phoenix, Arizona 85004-2212
        Resident Officer, Albuquerque Resident Office, Western Bank 
       Plaza, 505 Marquette Avenue, NW, Room 1820, Albuquerque, New 
                                                   Mexico 87102-2181
    Resident Officer, Las Vegas Resident Office, Alan Bible Federal 
     Building, 600 Las Vegas Boulevard South, Suite 400, Las Vegas, 
                                                   Nevada 89101-6637
   Resident Officer, El Paso Resident Office, PO Box 23159, El Paso, 
                                                    Texas 79923-3159
    Regional Director, Region 29, One Metro Tech Center, Jay Street 
        and Myrtle Avenue, 10th Floor, Brooklyn, New York 11201-4201
    Regional Director, Region 30, Henry S. Reuss Federal Plaza, 310 
   West Wisconsin Avenue, Suite 700, Milwaukee, Wisconsin 53203-2211
    Regional Director, Region 31, 11150 W. Olympic Boulevard, Suite 
                             700, Los Angeles, California 90064-1824
    Regional Director, Region 32, Breuner Building, 2nd Floor, 1301 
              Clay Street, Room 300N, Oakland, California 94612-5211
        Regional Director, Region 33, Hamilton Square Building, 300 
          Hamilton Boulevard, Suite 200, Peoria, Illinois 61602-1246
   Regional Director, Region 34, One Commercial Plaza, 280 Trumbull 
                Street, 21st Floor, Hartford, Connecticut 06103-3503

   NATIONAL LABOR RELATIONS BOARD

Title 29-Labor

Chapter I-National Labor Relations Board

PART 102-RULES AND REGULATIONS, SERIES 8

Subpart K-Records and Information

Sec

102.117 Board materials and formal documents available for public 
    inspection and copying; requests for described records; time limit 
    for response; appeal from denial of request; fees for document 
    search and duplication; files and records not subject to inspection.

   Sec. 102.117   Board materials and formal documents available for 
   public inspection and copying; requests for described records; time 
   limit for response; appeal from denial of request; fees for document 
   search and duplication; files and records not subject to inspection.

  (a)(1) The following materials are available to the public for 
inspection and copying during normal business hours: (i) All final 
opinions and orders made in the adjudication of cases; (ii) 
administrative staff manuals and instructions that affect any member of 
the public (excepting those establishing internal operating rules, 
guidelines, and procedures for the investigation, trial, and settlement 
of cases); (iii) a record of the final votes of each member of the Board 
in every agency proceeding; and (iv) a current index of final opinions 
and orders made in the adjudication of cases. Paragraphs (a)(1)(i) 
through (iv) of this section are available for inspection and copying 
during normal business hours at the Board's offices in Washington, DC. 
Paragraphs (a)(1)(ii) and (iv) of this section are also available for 
inspection and copying during normal business hours at each regional, 
subregional, and resident office of the Board. Final opinions and orders 
made by regional directors in the adjudication of representation cases 
pursuant to the delegation of authority from the Board under section 
3(b) of the Act are available to the public for inspection and copying 
in the original office where issued.
  (2) Copies of forms prescribed by the Board for the filing of charges 
under section 10 or petitions under section 9 may be obtained without 
charge from any regional, subregional, or resident office of the Board.
  (b)(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 during normal business hours, at the appropriate 
regional office of the Board or at the Board's office in Washington, DC, 
as the case may be.
  (2) The executive secretary shall certify copies of the formal 
documents upon request made a reasonable time in advance of need and 
payment of lawfully prescribed costs.
  (c)(1) Requests for the inspection and copying of records other than 
those specified in paragraphs (a) and (b) of this section must be in 
writing and must reasonably describe the record in a manner to permit 
its identification and location. The envelope and the letter should be 
clearly marked to indicate that it contains a request for records under 
the Freedom of Information Act (FOIA). The request must contain a 
specific statement assuming financial liability in accordance with 
paragraph (d)(2) of this section for the direct costs of responding to 
the request. If the request is for records in a Regional or subregional 
office of the Agency, it should be made to that Regional or subregional 
office; if for records 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 if for 
records in the offices of the Board in Washington, DC, to the Executive 
Secretary of the Board, Washington, DC. Requests made to other than the 
appropriate office will be forwarded to that office by the receiving 
office, but in that event the applicable time limit for response set 
forth in paragraph (c)(2)(i) of this section shall be calculated from 
the date of receipt by the appropriate office.
  (2)(i) Within 10 working days after receipt of a request by the 
appropriate office of the Agency a determination shall be made whether 
to comply with such request, and the person making the request shall be 
notified in writing of that determination. If the determination is to 
comply with the request, the records shall be promptly available to the 
person making the request upon payment of any charges due in accordance 
with the provisions of paragraph (d)(2) of this section. If the 
determination is to deny the request, the notification shall set forth 
the reasons therefor and the name and title or position of each person 
responsible for the denial, and shall notify the person making the 
request of the right to appeal the adverse determination under the 
provisions of paragraph (c)(2)(ii) of this section.
  (ii) An appeal from an adverse determination made pursuant to 
paragraph (c)(2)(i) of this section must be filed within 20 working days 
of the receipt by the person of the notification of the adverse 
determination where the request is denied in its entirety; or, in the 
case of a partial denial, within 20 working days of the receipt of any 
records being made available pursuant to the request. If the adverse 
determination was made in a Regional Office, a subregional office, or by 
the Freedom of Information Officer, Office of the General Counsel, the 
appeal shall be filed with the General Counsel in Washington, DC. If the 
adverse determination was made by the Executive Secretary of the Board, 
the appeal shall be filed with the Chairman of the Board in Washington, 
DC. Within 20 working days after the receipt of an appeal the Chairman 
of the Board or the General Counsel, as the case may be, shall make a 
determination with respect to such appeal and shall notify the person in 
writing. If the determination is to comply with the request, the record 
shall be made promptly available to the person making the request upon 
receipt of payment of any charges due in accordance with the provisions 
of paragraph (d)(2) of this section. If on appeal the denial of the 
request for records is upheld in whole or in part, the person making the 
request shall be notified of the reasons for the determination, the name 
and title or position of each person responsible for the denial, and the 
provisions for judicial review of that determination under the 
provisions of 5 U.S.C. 552(4)(B). 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 Board or the General Counsel may, 
without regard to the time limit for filing of an appeal, sua sponte 
initiate consideration of an adverse determination 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.
  (iii) In unusual circumstances as specified in this subparagraph, the 
time limits prescribed in either paragraph (c)(2)(i) or (ii) of this 
section may be extended by written notice to the person requesting the 
record setting forth the reasons for such extension and the date on 
which a determination is expected to be dispatched. No such notice or 
notices shall specify a date or dates that would result in an extension 
or extensions totaling more than 10 working days with respect to a 
particular request. As used in this subparagraph, 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;
  (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.
  (d)(1) For the purposes of this section, the following definitions 
apply:
  (i) Direct costs means those expenditures which are actually incurred 
in searching for and duplicating and, in the case of commercial use 
requesters, reviewing documents to respond to a FOIA request.
  (ii) Search includes all time spent looking for material that is 
responsive to a request, including page-by-page and line-by-line 
identification of material within documents. Searches may be done 
manually or by computer using existing programing.
  (iii) 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, videotape, audiotape, 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.
  (iv) Review refers to the process of examining documents located in 
response to a request that is for commercial use to determine whether a 
document or any portion of any document located is permitted to be 
withheld. It includes processing any documents for disclosure, e.g., 
doing all that is necessary to excise them and otherwise prepare them 
for release.
  (v) 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.
  (vi) 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, which operates a program or programs of scholarly research.
  (vii) 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. 
In the case of ``freelance'' journalists, they may be regarded as 
working for a news organization if they can demonstrate a reasonable 
expectation of publication through that organization, even though not 
actually employed by it.
  (viii) Working days, as used in this paragraph, means calendar days 
excepting Saturdays, Sundays, and legal holidays.
  (2) Persons requesting records from this Agency shall be subject to a 
charge of fees for the full allowable direct costs of document search, 
review, and duplicating, as appropriate, in accordance with the 
following schedules, procedures, and conditions:
  (i) Schedule of charges:
  (A) For each one-quarter hour or portion thereof of clerical time, 
$2.50.
  (B) For each one-quarter hour or portion thereof of professional time, 
$6.60.
  (C) For each sheet of duplication (not to exceed 8\1/2\ by 14 inches) 
of requested records, $0.10.
  (D) All other direct costs of preparing a response to a request shall 
be charged to the requester in the same amount as incurred by the 
Agency. Such costs shall include, but not be limited to: Certifying that 
records are true copies, and sending records to requesters or receiving 
records from the Federal records storage centers by special methods such 
as express mail.
  (ii) Fees incurred in responding to information requests are to be 
charged in accordance with the following categories of requesters:
  (A) Commercial use requesters will be assessed charges to recover the 
full direct costs of searching for, reviewing for release, and 
duplicating the records sought. Requesters must reasonably describe the 
records sought. Commercial use requesters are not entitled to 2 hours of 
free search time nor 100 free pages of reproduction of documents.
  (B) Educational institution requesters will be assessed charges 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 under the auspices of a qualifying 
institution and that the records are not sought for commercial use, but 
are sought in furtherance of scholarly research. Requesters must 
reasonably describe the records sought.
  (C) Requesters who are representatives of the news media will be 
assessed charges 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 paragraph (d)(1)(vii) of this 
section, and the request must not be made for 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 commercial use. Requesters must reasonably 
describe the records sought.
  (D) All other requesters, not elsewhere described, will be assessed 
charges to 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 2 hours of search time 
shall be furnished without charge. Requesters must reasonably describe 
the records sought.
  (E) Absent a reasonably based factual showing that a requester should 
be placed in a particular user category, fees will be imposed as 
provided for in the commercial use requester category.
  (iii)(A) In no event shall fees be imposed on any requester when the 
total charges are less than $11, which is the Agency cost of collecting 
and processing the fee itself.
  (B) If the Agency has reason to believe that a requester or several 
requesters whose interests are aligned are breaking up a request into 
several smaller requests for the purpose of evading the imposition of 
fees that otherwise would be charged, the Agency may, after 
notification, aggregate the requests and impose fees in accordance with 
the fee schedule in this section.
  (iv) Documents are to be furnished without charge or at reduced levels 
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.
  (v) If a requester fails to pay chargeable fees that were incurred as 
a result of the Agency's processing of the information request, 
beginning on the 31st day following the date on which the notification 
of charges was sent, the Agency may assess interest charges against the 
requester in the manner prescribed in section 3717 of title 31 U.S.C.
  (vi) Each request for records shall contain a specific statement 
assuming financial liability, in full or to a specified maximum amount, 
for charges, in accordance with paragraphs (d)(2) (i) and (ii) of this 
section, which may be incurred by the Agency in responding to the 
request. If the anticipated charges exceed the maximum limit stated by 
the person making the request or if the request contains no assumption 
of financial liability for charges, the person shall be notified and 
afforded an opportunity to assume financial liability. The request for 
records shall not be deemed received for purposes of the applicable time 
limit for response until a written assumption of financial liability is 
received. The Agency may require a requester to make an advance payment 
of anticipated fees under the following circumstances:
  (A) If the anticipated charges are likely to exceed $250, the Agency 
shall notify the requester of the likely cost and obtain satisfactory 
assurance of full payment when 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.
  (B) If a requester has previously failed to pay fees that have been 
charged in processing a request within 30 days of the date when the 
notification of fees was sent, the requester will be required to pay the 
entire amount of fees that are owed, plus interest as provided for in 
paragraph (d)(2)(v) of this section, before the Agency will process a 
further information request. In addition, the Agency may require advance 
payment of fees that the Agency estimates will be incurred in processing 
the further request before the Agency commences processing that request. 
When the Agency acts under paragraph (d)(2)(vi)(A) or (B) of this 
section, the administrative time limits for responding to a request or 
an appeal from initial denials will begin to run only after the Agency 
has received the fee payments required above.
  (vii) Charges may be imposed even though the search discloses no 
records responsive to the request, or none not exempt from disclosure.
  (e) Subject to the provisions of Sec. Sec. 102.31(c) and 102.66(c), 
all fines, documents, reports, memoranda, and records of the Agency 
falling within the exemptions specified in 5 U.S.C. 552(b) shall not be 
made available for inspection or copying, unless specifically permitted 
by the Board, its Chairman, or its General Counsel.
  (f) An individual will be informed whether a system of records 
maintained by this Agency contains a record pertaining to such 
individual. An inquiry should be made in writing or in person during 
normal business hours to the official of this Agency designated for that 
purpose and at the address set forth in a notice of a system of records 
published by this Agency, in a Notice of Systems of Governmentwide 
Personnel Records published by the Office of Personnel Management, or in 
a Notice of Governmentwide Systems of Records published by the 
Department of Labor. Copies of such notices, and assistance in preparing 
an inquiry, may be obtained from any Regional Office of the Board or at 
the Board offices at 1717 Pennsylvania Avenue, NW, Washington, DC 20570. 
The inquiry should contain sufficient information, as defined in the 
notice, to identify the record. Reasonable verification of the identity 
of the inquirer, as described in paragraph (j) of this section, will be 
required to assure that information is disclosed to the proper person. 
The Agency shall acknowledge the inquiry in writing within 10 days 
(excluding Saturdays, Sundays, and legal public holidays) and, wherever 
practicable, the acknowledgment shall supply the information requested. 
If, for good cause shown, the Agency cannot supply the information 
within 10 days, the inquirer shall within that time period be notified 
in writing of the reasons therefor and when it is anticipated the 
information will be supplied. An acknowledgment will not be provided 
when the information is supplied within the 10-day period. If the Agency 
refuses to inform an individual whether a system of records contains a 
record pertaining to an individual, the inquirer shall be notified in 
writing of that determination and the reasons therefor, and of the right 
to obtain review of that determination under the provisions of paragraph 
(k) of this section.
  (g) An individual will be permitted access to records pertaining to 
such individual contained in any system of records described in the 
notice of system of records published by this Agency, or access to the 
accounting of disclosures from such records. The request for access must 
be made in writing or in person during normal business hours to the 
person designated for that purpose and at the address set forth in the 
published notice of system of records. The request for access must be 
made in writing or in person during normal business hours to the person 
designated for that purpose and at the address set forth in the 
published notice of system of records. Copies of such notices, and 
assistance in preparing a request for access, may be obtained from any 
Regional Office of the Board or at the Board offices at 1717 
Pennsylvania Avenue NW, Washington, DC 20570. Reasonable verification of 
the identity of the requester, as described in paragraph (j) of this 
section, shall be required to assure that records are disclosed to the 
proper person. A request for access to records or the accounting of 
disclosures from such records shall be acknowledged in writing by the 
Agency within 10 days of receipt (excluding Saturdays, Sundays, and 
legal public holidays) and, wherever practicable, the acknowledgment 
shall inform the requester whether access will be granted and, if so, 
the time and location at which the records or accounting will be made 
available. If access to the record or accounting is to be granted, the 
record or accounting will normally be provided within 30 days (excluding 
Saturdays, Sundays, and legal public holidays) of the request, unless 
for good cause shown the Agency is unable to do so, in which case the 
individual will be informed in writing within that 30-day period of the 
reasons therefor and when it is anticipated that access will be granted. 
An acknowledgment of a request will not be provided if the record is 
made available within the 10-day period. If an individual's request for 
access to a record or an accounting of disclosure from such a record 
under the provisions of this paragraph is denied, the notice informing 
the individual of the denial shall set forth the reasons therefor and 
advise the individual of the right to obtain a review of that 
determination under the provisions of paragraph (k) of this section.
  (h) An individual granted access to records pertaining to such 
individual contained in a system of records may review all such records. 
For that purpose the individual may be accompanied by a person of the 
individual's choosing, or the record may be released to the individual's 
representative who has written consent of the individual, as described 
in paragraph (j) of this section. A first copy of any such record or 
information will ordinarily be provided without charge to the individual 
or representative in a form comprehensible to the individual. Fees for 
any other copies of requested records shall be assessed at the rate of 
10 cents for each sheet of duplication.
  (i) An individual may request amendment of a record pertaining to such 
individual in a system of records maintained by this Agency. A request 
for amendment of a record must be in writing and submitted during normal 
business hours to the person designated for that purpose and at the 
address set forth in the published notice for the system of records 
containing the record of which amendment is sought. Copies of such 
notices, and assistance in preparing a request for amendment, may be 
obtained from any Regional Office of the Board or at the Board offices 
at 1717 Pennsylvania Avenue NW, Washington, DC 20570. The requester must 
provide verification of identity as described in paragraph (j) of this 
section, and the request should set forth the specific amendment 
requested and the reason for the requested amendment. The Agency shall 
acknowledge in writing receipt of the request within 10 days of receipt 
(excluding Saturdays, Sundays, and legal public holidays) and, wherever 
practicable, the acknowledgment shall advise the individual of the 
determination of the request. If the review of the request for amendment 
cannot be completed and a determination made within 10 days, the review 
shall be completed as soon as possible, normally within 30 days 
(Saturdays, Sundays, and legal public holidays excluded) of receipt of 
the request unless unusual circumstances preclude completing the review 
within that time, in which event the requester will be notified in 
writing within that 30-day period of the reasons for the delay and when 
the determination of the request may be expected. If the determination 
is to amend the record, the requester shall be so notified in writing 
and the record shall be amended in accordance with that determination. 
If any disclosures accountable under the provisions of 5 U.S.C. 552a(c) 
have been made, all previous recipients of the record which was amended 
shall be advised of the amendment and its substance. If it is determined 
that the request should not be granted, the requester shall be notified 
in writing of that determination and of the reasons therefor, and 
advised of the right to obtain review of the adverse determination under 
the provisions of paragraph (k) of this section.
  (j) Verification of the identification of individuals required under 
paragraphs (f), (g), (h), and (i) of this section to assure that records 
are disclosed to the proper person shall be required by the Agency to an 
extent consistent with the nature, location, and sensitivity of the 
records being disclosed. Disclosure of a record to an individual in 
person will normally be made upon the presentation of acceptable 
identification. Disclosure of records by mail may be made on the basis 
of the identifying information set forth in the request. Depending on 
the nature, location, and sensitivity of the requested record, a signed 
notarized statement verifying identity may be required by the Agency. 
Proof of authorization as representative to have access to a record of 
an individual shall be in writing, and a signed notarized statement of 
such authorization may be required by the Agency if the record requested 
is of a sensitive nature.
  (k)(1) Review may be obtained with respect to:
  (i) A refusal, under paragraph (f) or (l) of this section, to inform 
an individual if a system of records contains a record concerning that 
individual,
  (ii) A refusal, under paragraph (g) or (l) of this section, to grant 
access to a record or an accounting of disclosure from such a record, or
  (iii) A refusal, under paragraph (i) of this section, to amend a 
record.

The request for review should be made to the Chairman of the Board if 
the system of records is maintained in the office of a Member of the 
Board, the office of the Executive Secretary, the office of the 
Solicitor, the Division of Information, or the Division of 
Administrative Law Judges. Consonant with the provisions of section 3(d) 
of the National Labor Relations Act, and the delegation of authority 
from the Board to the General Counsel, the request should be made to the 
General Counsel if the system of records is maintained by an office of 
the Agency other than those enumerated above. Either the Chairman of the 
Board or the General Counsel may designate in writing another officer of 
the Agency to review the refusal of the request. Such review shall be 
completed within 30 days (excluding Saturdays, Sundays, and legal public 
holidays) from the receipt of the request for review unless the Chairman 
of the Board or the General Counsel, as the case may be, for good cause 
shown, shall extend such 30-day period.
  (2) If, upon review of a refusal under paragraph (f) or (l), the 
reviewing officer determines that the individual should be informed of 
whether a system of records contains a record pertaining to that 
individual, such information shall be promptly provided. If the 
reviewing officer determines that the information was properly denied, 
the individual shall be so informed in writing with a brief statement of 
the reasons therefor.
  (3) If, upon review of a refusal under paragraph (g) or (l), the 
reviewing officer determines that access to a record or to an accounting 
of disclosures should be granted, the requester shall be so notified and 
the record or accounting shall be promptly made available to the 
requester. If the reviewing officer determines that the request for 
access was properly denied, the individual shall be so informed in 
writing with a brief statement of the reasons therefor, and of the right 
to judicial review of that determination under the provisions of 5 
U.S.C. 552a(g)(1)(B).
  (4) If, upon review of a refusal under paragraph (i), the reviewing 
official grants a request to amend, the requester shall be so notified, 
the record shall be amended in accordance with the determination, and, 
if any disclosures accountable under the provisions of 5 U.S.C. 552a(c) 
have been made, all previous recipients of the record which was amended 
shall be advised of the amendment and its substance. If the reviewing 
officer determines that the denial of a request for amendment should be 
sustained, the Agency shall advise the requester of the determination 
and the reasons therefor, and that the individual may file with the 
Agency a concise statement of the reason for disagreeing with the 
determination, and may seek judicial review of the Agency's denial of 
the request to amend the record. In the event a statement of 
disagreement is filed, that statement--
  (i) Will be made available to anyone to whom the record is 
subsequently disclosed together with, at the discretion of the Agency, a 
brief statement summarizing the Agency's reasons for declining to amend 
the record, and
  (ii) Will be supplied, together with any Agency statements, to any 
prior recipients of the disputed record to the extent that an accounting 
of disclosure was made.
  (l) To the extent that portions of system of records described in 
notices of Governmentwide systems of records published by the Office of 
Personnel Management are identified by those notices as being subject to 
the management of an officer of this Agency, or an officer of this 
Agency is designated as the official to contact for information, access, 
or contents of those records, individual requests for access to those 
records, requests for their amendment, and review of denials of requests 
for amendment shall be in accordance with the provisions of 5 CFR part 
297, subpart A, Sec. 297.101, et seq., as promulgated by the Office of 
Personnel Management. To the extent that portions of system of records 
described in notices of Governmentwide system of records published by 
the Department of Labor are identified by those notices as being subject 
to the management of an officer of this Agency, or an officer of this 
Agency is designated as the official to contact for information, access, 
or contents of those records, individual requests for access to those 
records, requests for their amendment, and review of denials of requests 
for amendment shall be in accordance with the provisions of this rule. 
Review of a refusal to inform an individual whether such a system of 
records contains a record pertaining to that individual and review of a 
refusal to grant an individual's request for access to a record in such 
a system may be obtained in accordance with the provisions of paragraph 
(k) of this section.
  (m) Pursuant to 5 U.S.C. 552a(j)(2), the system of records maintained 
by the Office of the Inspector General of the National Labor Relations 
Board that contains Investigative Files shall be exempted from the 
provisions of 5 U.S.C. 552a, except subsections (b), (c)(1) and (2), 
(e)(4)(A) through (F), (e)(6), (7), (9), (10), and (11), and (i), and 29 
CFR 102.117(c), (d), (f), (g), (h), (i), (j) and (k), insofar as the 
system contains investigatory material compiled for criminal law 
enforcement purposes.
  (n) Pursuant to 5 U.S.C. 552a(k)(2), the system of records maintained 
by the Office of the Inspector General of the National Labor Relations 
Board that contains the Investigative Files shall be exempted from 5 
U.S.C. 552a(c)(3), (d), (e)(1), (e)(4)(G), (H), and (I), and (f) and 29 
CFR 102.117 (c), (d), (f), (g), (h), (i), (j), and (k), insofar as the 
system contains investigatory material compiled for law enforcement 
purposes not within the scope of the exemption at 29 CFR 102.117(m).
  (o) Privacy Act exemptions contained in paragraphs (m) and (n) of this 
section are justified for the following reasons:
  (1) 5 U.S.C. 552a(c)(3) requires an agency to make the accounting of 
each disclosure of records available to the individual named in the 
record at his/her request. These accountings must state the date, 
nature, and purpose of each disclosure of a record and the name and 
address of the recipient. Accounting for each disclosure would alert the 
subjects of an investigation to the existence of the investigation and 
the fact that they are subjects of the investigation. The release of 
such information to the subjects of an investigation would provide them 
with significant information concerning the nature of the investigation 
and could seriously impede or compromise the investigation, endanger the 
physical safety of confidential sources, witnesses, law enforcement 
personnel, and their families and lead to the improper influencing of 
witnesses, the destruction of evidence, or the fabrication of testimony.
  (2) 5 U.S.C. 552a(c)(4) requires an agency to inform any person or 
other agency about any correction or notation of dispute made by the 
agency in accordance with subsection (d) of the Act. Since this system 
of records is being exempted from subsection (d) of the Act, concerning 
access to records, this section is inapplicable to the extent that this 
system of records will be exempted from subsection (d) of the Act.
  (3) 5 U.S.C. 552a(d) requires an agency to permit an individual to 
gain access to records pertaining to him/her, to request amendment to 
such records, to request a review of an agency decision not to amend 
such records, and to contest the information contained in such records. 
Granting access to records in this system of records could inform the 
subject of an investigation of an actual or potential criminal 
violation, of the existence of that investigation, of the nature and 
scope of the information and evidence obtained as to his/her activities, 
or of the identity of confidential sources, witnesses, and law 
enforcement personnel and could provide information to enable the 
subject to avoid detection or apprehension. Granting access to such 
information could seriously impede or compromise an investigation, 
endanger the physical safety of confidential sources, witnesses, law 
enforcement personnel, and their families, lead to the improper 
influencing of witnesses, the destruction of evidence, or the 
fabrication of testimony, and disclose investigative techniques and 
procedures. In addition, granting access to such information could 
disclose classified, security-sensitive, or confidential business 
information and could constitute an unwarranted invasion of the personal 
privacy of others.
  (4) 5 U.S.C. 552a(e)(1) requires each agency to maintain in its 
records only such information about an individual as is relevant and 
necessary to accomplish a purpose of the agency required by statute or 
by executive order of the President. The application of this provision 
could impair investigations and law enforcement because it is not always 
possible to detect the relevance or necessity of specific information in 
the early stages of an investigation. Relevance and necessity are often 
questions of judgment and timing, and it is only after the information 
is evaluated that the relevance and necessity of such information can be 
established. In addition, during the course of the investigation, the 
investigator may obtain information which is incidental to the main 
purpose of the investigative jurisdiction of another agency. Such 
information cannot readily be segregated. Furthermore, during the course 
of the investigation, the investigator may obtain information concerning 
the violation of laws other than those which are within the scope of 
his/her jurisdiction. In the interest of effective law enforcement, OIG 
investigators should retain this information, since it can aid in 
establishing patterns of criminal activity and can provide valuable 
leads for other law enforcement agencies.
  (5) 5 U.S.C. 552a(e)(2) requires an agency to collect information to 
the greatest extent practicable directly from the subject individual 
when the information may result in adverse determinations about an 
individual's rights, benefits, and privileges under Federal programs. 
The application of this provision could impair investigations and law 
enforcement by alerting the subject of an investigation, thereby 
enabling the subject to avoid detection or apprehension, to influence 
witnesses improperly, to destroy evidence, or to fabricate testimony. 
Moreover, in certain circumstances the subject of an investigation 
cannot be required to provide information to investigators and 
information must be collected from other sources. Furthermore, it is 
often necessary to collect information from sources other than the 
subject of the investigation to verify the accuracy of the evidence 
collected.
  (6) 5 U.S.C. 552a(e)(3) requires an agency to inform each person whom 
it asks to supply information, on a form that can be retained by the 
person, of the authority under which the information is sought and 
whether disclosure is mandatory or voluntary; of the principal purposes 
for which the information is intended to be used; of the routine uses 
which may be made of the information; and of the effects on the person, 
if any, of not providing all or any part of the requested information. 
The application of this provision could provide the subject of an 
investigation with substantial information about the nature of that 
investigation that could interfere with the investigation. Moreover, 
providing such a notice to the subject of an investigation could 
seriously impede or compromise an undercover investigation by revealing 
its existence and could endanger the physical safety of confidential 
sources, witnesses, and investigators by revealing their identities.
  (7) 5 U.S.C. 552a(e)(4) (G) and (H) require an agency to publish a 
Federal Register notice concerning its procedures for notifying an 
individual, at his/her request, if the system of records contains a 
record pertaining to him/her, how to gain access to such a record and 
how to contest its content. Since this system of records is being 
exempted from subsection (f) of the Act, concerning agency rules, and 
subsection (d) of the Act, concerning access to records, these 
requirements are inapplicable to the extent that this system of records 
will be exempt from subsections (f) and (d) of the Act. Although the 
system would be exempt from these requirements, OIG has published 
information concerning its notification, access, and contest procedures 
because, under certain circumstances, OIG could decide it is appropriate 
for an individual to have access to all or a portion of his/her records 
in this system of records.
  (8) 5 U.S.C. 552a(e)(4)(I) requires an agency to publish a Federal 
Register notice concerning the categories of sources of records in the 
system of records. Exemption from this provision is necessary to protect 
the confidentiality of the sources of information, to protect the 
privacy and physical safety of confidential sources and witnesses, and 
to avoid the disclosure of investigative techniques and procedures. 
Although the system will be exempt from this requirement, OIG has 
published such a notice in broad generic terms.
  (9) 5 U.S.C. 552a(e)(5) requires an agency to maintain its records 
with such accuracy, relevance, timeliness, and completeness as is 
reasonably necessary to assure fairness to the individual in making any 
determination about the individual. Since the Act defines ``maintain'' 
to include the collection of information, complying with this provision 
could prevent the collection of any data not shown to be accurate, 
relevant, timely, and complete at the moment it is collected. In 
collecting information for criminal law enforcement purposes, it is not 
possible to determine in advance what information is accurate, relevant, 
timely, and complete. Facts are first gathered and then placed into a 
logical order to prove or disprove objectively the criminal behavior of 
an individual. Material which seems unrelated, irrelevant, or incomplete 
when collected can take on added meaning or significance as the 
investigation progresses. The restrictions of this provision could 
interfere with the preparation of a complete investigative report, 
thereby impeding effective law enforcement.
  (10) 5 U.S.C. 552a(e)(8) requires an agency to make reasonable efforts 
to serve notice on an individual when any record on such individual is 
made available to any person under compulsory legal process when such 
process becomes a matter of public record. Complying with this provision 
could prematurely reveal an ongoing criminal investigation to the 
subject of the investigation.
  (11) 5 U.S.C. 552a(f)(1) requires an agency to promulgate rules which 
shall establish procedures whereby an individual can be notified in 
response to his/her request if any system of records named by the 
individual contains a record pertaining to him/her. The application of 
this provision could impede or compromise an investigation or 
prosecution if the subject of an investigation were able to use such 
rules to learn of the existence of an investigation before it could be 
completed. In addition, mere notice of the fact of an investigation 
could inform the subject and others that their activities are under or 
may become the subject of an investigation and could enable the subjects 
to avoid detection or apprehension, to influence witnesses improperly, 
to destroy evidence, or to fabricate testimony. Since this system would 
be exempt from subsection (d) of the Act, concerning access to records, 
the requirements of subsection (f)(2) through (5) of the Act, concerning 
agency rules for obtaining access to such records, are inapplicable to 
the extent that this system of records will be exempted from subsection 
(d) of the Act. Although this system would be exempt from the 
requirements of subsection (f) of the Act, OIG has promulgated rules 
which establish agency procedures because, under certain circumstances, 
it could be appropriate for an individual to have access to all or a 
portion of his/her records in this system of records.
  (12) 5 U.S.C. 552a(g) provides for civil remedies if an agency fails 
to comply with the requirements concerning access to records under 
subsections (d)(1) and (3) of the Act; maintenance of records under 
subsection (e)(5) of the Act; and any other provision of the Act, or any 
rule promulgated thereunder, in such a way as to have an adverse effect 
on an individual. Since this system of records would be exempt from 
subsections (c)(3) and (4), (d), (e)(1), (2), and (3) and (4)(G) through 
(I), (e)(5), and (8), and (f) of the Act, the provisions of subsection 
(g) of the Act would be inapplicable to the extent that this system of 
records will be exempted from those subsections of the Act.
  (p) Pursuant to 5 U.S.C. 552a(k)(2), the system of records maintained 
by the NLRB containing Agency Disciplinary Case Files (Nonemployees) 
shall be exempted from the provisions of 5 U.S.C. 552a (c)(3), (d), 
(e)(1), (e)(4) (G), (H), and (I), and (f) insofar as the system contains 
investigatory material compiled for law enforcement purposes other than 
material within the scope of 5 U.S.C. 552a(j)(2).
  (q) The Privacy Act exemption set forth in paragraph (p) of this 
section is claimed on the ground that the requirements of subsections 
(c)(3), (d), (e)(1), (e)(4) (G), (H), and (I), and (f) of the Privacy 
Act, if applied to Agency Disciplinary Case Files, would seriously 
impair the ability of the NLRB to conduct investigations of alleged or 
suspected violations of the NLRB's misconduct rules, as set forth in 
paragraphs (o) (1), (3), (4), (7), (8), and (11) of this section.

[40 FR 7290, Feb. 19, 1975, as amended at 53 FR 10872, Apr. 4, 1988; 58 
FR 42235, Aug. 9, 1993; 61 FR 65183, Dec 11,1996; 66 FR 50311, OCT. 3, 
2001]