Salary Offset, 10419-10426 [E7-4005]
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Federal Register / Vol. 72, No. 45 / Thursday, March 8, 2007 / Rules and Regulations
Treasury determines such a sale is in
the best interests of the United States.
Since the discharge of a debt precludes
any further collection action, including
the sale of a delinquent debt, the
Secretary may not discharge a debt until
the requirements of 31 U.S.C. 3711(i)
have been meet.
(c) Upon discharge of an
indebtedness, the Secretary must report
the discharge to the IRS in accordance
with the requirements of 26 U.S.C.
6050P and 26 CFR 1.6050P–1. The
Secretary may request that Treasury or
Treasury-designated debt collection
centers file such a discharge report to
the IRS on the Department’s behalf.
(d) When discharging a debt, the
Secretary must request that litigation
counsel release any liens of record
securing the debt.
Subpart E—Referrals to the
Department of Justice
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§ 30.33
Prompt referral.
(a)(1) The Secretary promptly shall
refer to Justice for litigation debts on
which aggressive collection activity has
been taken in accordance with subpart
B of this part, and that cannot be
compromised, or on which collection
activity cannot be suspended or
terminated, in accordance with subpart
D of this part.
(2) The Secretary may refer to Justice
for litigation those debts arising out of
activities of, or referred or transferred
for collection services to, the
Department.
(b)(1) Debts for which the principal
amount is over $1,000,000, or such
other amount as the Attorney General
may direct, exclusive of interest,
penalties, and administrative costs shall
be referred to the Civil Division or other
division responsible for litigating such
debts at the Department of Justice,
Washington DC.
(2) Debts for which the principal
amount is $1,000,000 or less, or such
other amount as the Attorney General
may direct, exclusive of interest,
penalties, and administrative costs shall
be referred to the Nationwide Central
Intake Facility at Justice as required by
the CCLR instructions.
(c)(1) Consistent with aggressive
agency collection activity and the
standards contained in this part and 31
CFR parts 900 through 904, debts shall
be referred to Justice as early as
possible, and, in any event, well within
the period for initiating timely lawsuits
against the debtors.
(2) The Secretary shall make every
effort to refer delinquent debts to Justice
for litigation within one year of the date
such debts last became delinquent. In
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the case of guaranteed or insured loans,
the Secretary will make every effort to
refer these delinquent debts to Justice
for litigation within one year from the
date the loan was presented to the
Department for payment or reinsurance.
(d) Justice has exclusive jurisdiction
over debts referred to it pursuant to this
subpart. Upon referral of a debt to
Justice, the Secretary shall:
(1) Immediately terminate the use of
any administrative collection activities
to collect the debt;
(2) Advise Justice of the collection
activities utilized to date, and their
result; and
(3) Refrain from having any contact
with the debtor and direct all debtor
inquiries concerning the debt to Justice.
(e) After referral of a debt under this
subpart, the Secretary shall immediately
notify the Department of Justice of any
payments credited by the Department to
the debtor’s account. Pursuant to 31
CFR 904.1(b), after referral of the debt
under this subpart, Justice shall notify
the Secretary of any payment received
from the debtor.
§ 30.34 Claims Collection Litigation
Report.
(a)(1) Unless excepted by Justice, the
Secretary will complete the CCLR,
accompanied by a signed Certificate of
Indebtedness, to refer all
administratively uncollectible claims to
the Department of Justice for litigation.
(2) The Secretary shall complete all of
the sections of the CCLR appropriate to
each debt as required by the CCLR
instructions, and furnish such other
information as may be required in
specific cases.
(b) The Secretary shall indicate
clearly on the CCLR the actions that the
Department wishes Justice to take with
respect to the referred debt. The
Secretary may indicate specifically any
of a number of litigation activities
which Justice may pursue, including
enforced collection, judgement lien
only, renew judgement lien only, renew
judgement lien and enforced collection,
program enforcement, foreclosure only,
and foreclosure and deficiency
judgment.
(c) The Secretary also shall use the
CCLR to refer a debt to Justice for the
purpose of obtaining approval of a
proposal to compromise the debt, or to
suspend or terminate administrative
collection activity of the debt.
§ 30.35
Preservation of evidence.
The Secretary will maintain and
preserve all files and records that may
be needed by Justice to prove the
Department’s claim in court. When
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10419
referring debts to Justice for litigation,
certified copies of the documents that
form the basis for the claim should be
provided along with the CCLR. Upon its
request, the original documents will be
provided to Justice.
§ 30.36
Minimum amount of referrals.
(a) Except as in paragraph (b) of this
section, claims of less than $2,500
exclusive of interest, penalties, and
administrative costs, or such other
amount as the Attorney General may
prescribe, shall not be referred for
litigation.
(b) The Secretary shall not refer
claims of less than the minimum
amount unless:
(1) Litigation to collect such smaller
amount is important to ensure
compliance with the policies and
programs of the Department;
(2) The claim is being referred solely
for the purpose of securing a judgment
against the debtor, which will be filed
as a lien against the debtor’s property
pursuant to 28 U.S.C. 3201 and returned
to the Department for enforcement; or
(3) The debtor has the clear ability to
pay the claim and the Government
effectively can enforce payment, with
due regard for the exemptions available
to the debtor under State and Federal
law and the judicial remedies available
to the Government.
(c) The Secretary should consult with
the Financial Litigation Staff of the
Executive Office for United States
Attorneys in Justice prior to referring
claims valued at less than the minimum
amount.
Dated: November 27, 2006.
Michael O. Leavitt,
Secretary.
Editorial Note: This document was
received at the Office of the Federal Register
on March 2, 2007.
[FR Doc. E7–4002 Filed 3–7–07; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4150–26–P
DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH AND
HUMAN SERVICES
Office of the Secretary
45 CFR Part 33
RIN 0991–AB19
Salary Offset
Department of Health and
Human Services.
ACTION: Final rule.
AGENCY:
SUMMARY: The Department of Health and
Human Services (HHS) adds specific
rules concerning involuntary salary
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employees to the United States through
involuntary salary offset, including
changes made by the DCIA. Briefly,
such changes provide for centralized
computer matching through the
Department of Treasury, an exclusion
from the prior notice and hearing
requirements for certain pay
adjustments, and a priority for Federal
tax levies. This regulation is
inapplicable to U.S. Public Health
Service Commissioned Corps officers
and retirees, as, pursuant to 37 U.S.C.
1001, the U.S. Public Health Service
Commissioned Corps follows
regulations relating to active duty and
retired pay and allowances, including
the collection of indebtedness, set forth
in the Department of Defense Financial
Management Regulation, DOD 7000.14–
R.
Background
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offset by adding a new part 33 to title
45 CFR. The rule implements 5 U.S.C.
5514, as amended by the salary offset
provisions of the Debt Collection
Improvement Act of 1996 (DCIA), as
implemented by the Office of Personnel
Management at 5 CFR part 550, subpart
K. Involuntary salary offset was
previously included in the Department’s
more general claims collection
regulations at 45 CFR part 30.
DATES: Effective Date: March 8, 2007.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Jeffrey S. Davis, Associate General
Counsel, General Law Division, Office
of the General Counsel, Department of
Health and Human Services, Room 4760
Cohen Building, 330 Independence
Avenue, SW., Washington, DC 20201.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Authority: 5 U.S.C. 5514
This rule was published as a proposed
rule on July 13, 2004 (69 FR 42022) and
provided for a 60-day comment period
ending on September 13, 2004. We
received no comments concerning the
proposed rule and are finalizing the rule
as proposed with only minor clarifying
changes to § 33.10. In § 33.10(b), we
clarify that the employee can agree in
writing to a greater deduction, as
outlined in § 33.8. In § 33.10(c)(2), we
inserted the word ‘‘deemed’’ in front of
‘‘financially unable to pay.’’
Current HHS regulations at 45 CFR
part 30 provide standards and
procedures for the collection and
disposition of debts owed the United
States, including collection by
administrative offset. Standards and
procedures for collection of debts from
the current pay of federal employees by
involuntary salary offset had been
included in the administrative offset
provisions of part 30. Those regulations,
which this final rule replaces, are based
on the Debt Collection Act of 1982
(DCA), Public Law No. 97–365, and
were implemented on a governmentwide basis by the Federal Claims
Collection Standards (FCCS), set forth at
4 CFR part 101, issued by the
Department of Justice and General
Accounting Office on March 9, 1984 (49
FR 8889 (1984)), and the salary offset
regulations set forth at 5 CFR part 550,
subpart K, issued by the Office of
Personnel Management on July 3, 1984
(49 FR 27472). The current HHS rules
are in the process of being amended to
comply with the Debt Collection
Improvement Act of 1996 (DCIA), Public
Law No. 104–134, as implemented by
the Department of Treasury and the
Department of Justice at 31 CFR 900–
904. Since there are specific rules that
apply to salary offset that go beyond
those applicable to administrative offset
generally, and because salary offset has
a separate statutory basis, the
Department takes this opportunity to
segregate the salary offset provisions
and provide separate guidance to
specifically address the standards and
procedures applicable to salary offset.
Basic Provisions
This rule prescribes the Department’s
standards and procedures for the
collection of debts owed by Federal
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Reporting and Recordkeeping
Requirements
For purposes of the Paperwork
Reduction Act, 44 U.S.C. chapter 35,
this rule will impose no new reporting
or recordkeeping requirements on any
member of the public.
Economic Impact
We have examined the impact of this
rule as required by Executive Order (EO)
12866 (September 1993, Regulatory
Planning and Review), as amended by
EO 13258 (February 2002, Amending
EO 12866 on Regulatory Planning and
Review), the Regulatory Flexibility Act
(RFA) (September 19, 1980; Pub. L. No.
96–354); the Unfunded Mandated
Reform Act of 1995 (UMRA, Pub. L. No.
104–4); and EO 13132 (August 1999,
Federalism). EO 12866, as amended by
EO 13258, directs agencies to assess all
costs and benefits of available regulatory
alternatives and, if regulation is
necessary, to select regulatory
approaches that maximize the benefits
(including potential economic,
environmental, public health and safety
effects, distributive impacts, and
equity). A regulatory impact analysis
must be prepared for major rules with
economically significant effects ($100
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million or more in 1 year). We have
determined that the rule is consistent
with the principals set forth in the EO,
and we find that the rule would not
have an effect on the economy that
exceeds $100 million in any one year.
In addition, this rule is not a major rule
as defined at 5 U.S.C. 804(2). In
accordance with the provisions of the
EO, the rule has been reviewed by the
Office of Management and Budget.
Under the RFA, 5 U.S.C. 605(b), if a
rule has a significant impact on a
substantial number of small entities, an
agency must analyze regulatory options
that would minimize any significant
impact of the rule on small entities and
determined it will not have any effect.
This rule only affects Federal
employees. The agency has considered
the effect that this rule would have on
small entities. I hereby certify, under 5
U.S.C 605(b), that the rule will not have
a significant economic impact on a
substantial number of small entities,
including small businesses, small
organizations and small local
governments. Therefore, a regulatory
flexibility analysis is not required by 5
U.S.C. 603. Section 202 of the UMRA
also requires that agencies assess
anticipated costs and benefits before
issuing any rule that may result in
expenditure in any one year by State,
local, or tribunal governments, in the
aggregate, or by the private sector, of
$100 million. As noted above, we find
that the rule would not have an effect
of this magnitude on the economy.
Therefore, no further analysis is
required under the UMRA. EO 13132
establishes certain requirements that an
agency must meet when it promulgates
a final rule that imposes substantial
direct requirement costs on State and
local governments, preempts State law,
or otherwise has federalism
implications. We have reviewed the rule
under the threshold criteria of EO 13132
and have determined that this proposed
rule would not have substantial direct
impact on States, or on the distribution
of power and responsibilities among the
various levels of government. As there
are no federalism implications, a
federalism impact statement is not
required.
Alternatives Considered
Title 5 CFR part 550, subpart K,
provides the standards to be used by
Federal agencies to prepare regulations
implementing 5 U.S.C. 5514. There is
little room for us to consider
alternatives, but where the Department
has discretion (i.e., in § 33.1, specifying
that the regulations cover Governmentwide collections and in § 33.6,
specifying that if the petition for hearing
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is untimely, the Secretary may grant the
request if the employee can establish
that the delay was the result of
circumstances beyond the employee’s
control, or that the employee failed to
receive actual notice of the filing
deadline), we drafted the rule to
maximize the Department’s debt
collection ability and make the process
fair as possible to debtors.
These regulations were submitted to
the Office of Personnel Management for
review prior to publication of this final
rule, as required by 5 CFR part 550,
subpart K.
List of Subjects in 45 CFR Part 33
Administrative practice and
procedure, Claims, Debts, Claims, Debt
collection, Hearings, Wages, Salary
offset, and Government employees.
For the reasons set forth in the
preamble, HHS adds 45 CFR part 33 as
follows:
I
PART 33—SALARY OFFSET
Sec.
33.1
33.2
33.3
33.4
33.5
§ 33.2
Purpose, authority, and scope.
Definitions.
General rule.
Notice requirements before offset.
Review of department records relating
to the debt.
33.6 Hearings.
33.7 Obtaining the services of a hearing
official.
33.8 Voluntary repayment agreement in lieu
of salary offset.
33.9 Special review.
33.10 Procedures for salary offset.
33.11 Salary offset when the Department is
the creditor agency but not the paying
agency.
33.12 Salary offset when the Department is
the paying agency but not the creditor
agency.
33.13 Interest, penalties, and administrative
costs.
33.14 Non-waiver of rights.
33.15 Refunds.
33.16 Additional administrative collection.
Authority: 5 U.S.C. 5514; 5 CFR Part 550,
Subpart K.
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§ 33.1
employee consents to collection through
deduction(s) from the employee’s pay
account, or to debts arising under the
Internal Revenue Code or the tariff laws
of the United States, or where another
statute explicitly provides for, or
prohibits, collection of a debt by salary
offset (e.g., travel advances in 5 U.S.C.
5705 and employee training expenses in
5 U.S.C. 4108).
(3) This part does not preclude an
employee from requesting waiver of an
erroneous payment under 5 U.S.C. 5584,
10 U.S.C. 2774, or 32 U.S.C. 716, or in
any way questioning the amount or
validity of a debt, in the manner
prescribed by the Secretary. Similarly,
this part does not preclude an employee
from requesting waiver of the collection
of a debt under any other applicable
statutory authority.
(4) Nothing in this part precludes the
compromise of the debt, or the
suspension or termination of collection
actions, in accordance with part 30 of
this title.
Purpose, authority, and scope.
(a) Purpose. This part prescribes the
Department’s standards and procedures
for the collection of debts owed by
Federal employees to the United States
through involuntary salary offset.
(b) Authority. 5 U.S.C. 5514; 5 CFR
Part 550, subpart K.
(c) Scope. (1) This part applies to
internal and Government-wide
collections of debts owed by Federal
employees by administrative offset from
the current pay account of the debtor
without his or her consent.
(2) The procedures contained in this
part do not apply to any case where an
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Definitions.
In this part—
Administrative offset means
withholding funds payable by the
United States to, or held by the United
States for, a person to satisfy a debt
owed by the payee.
Agency means an executive
department or agency; a military
department; the United States Postal
Service; the Postal Rate Commission;
the United States Senate; the United
States House of Representatives; and
court, court administrative office, or
instrumentality in the judicial or
legislative branches of the Government;
or a Government Corporation.
Creditor agency means the agency to
which the debt is owed, including a
debt collection center when acting on
behalf of a creditor agency in matters
pertaining to the collection of a debt.
Day means calendar day. For
purposes of computation, the last day of
the period will be included unless it is
a Saturday, Sunday, or a Federal
holiday, in which case the next business
day will be considered the last day of
the period.
Debt means an amount determined by
an appropriate official to be owed to the
United States from sources which
include loans insured or guaranteed by
the United States and all other amounts
due the United States from fees, leases,
rents, royalties, services, sales of real or
personal property, overpayments,
penalties, damages, interest, fines and
forfeitures (except those arising under
the Uniform Code of Military Justice),
and all other similar sources.
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Debt collection center means the
Department of the Treasury or other
Government agency or division
designated by the Secretary of the
Treasury with authority to collect debts
on behalf of creditor agencies in
accordance with 31 U.S.C. 3711(g).
Debtor means a Federal employee
who owes a debt to the United States.
Delinquent debt means a debt which
the debtor does not pay or otherwise
resolve by the date specified in the
initial demand for payment, or in an
applicable written repayment agreement
or other instrument, including a postdelinquency repayment agreement.
Department means the Department of
Health and Human Services, its Staff
Divisions, Operating Divisions, and
Regional Offices.
Disposable pay means that part of the
debtor’s current basic, special,
incentive, retired, and retainer pay, or
other authorized pay, remaining after
deduction of amounts required by law
to be withheld. For purposes of
calculating disposable pay, legally
required deductions that must be
applied first include: Tax levies
pursuant to the Internal Revenue Code
(title 26, United States Code); properly
withheld taxes, FICA, Medicare; health
and life insurance premiums; and
retirement contributions. Amounts
deducted under garnishment orders,
including child support garnishment
orders, are not legally required
deductions for calculating disposable
pay.
Employee means any individual
currently employed by an agency, as
defined in this section, including
seasonal and temporary employees and
current members of the Armed Forces or
a Reserve of the Armed Forces
(Reserves).
Evidence of service means
information retained by the Department
indicating the nature of the document to
which it pertains, the date of mailing
the document, and the address and
name of the debtor to whom it is being
sent. A copy of the dated and signed
written notice of intent to offset
provided to the debtor pursuant to this
part may be considered evidence of
service for purposes of this part.
Evidence of service may be retained
electronically so long as the manner of
retention is sufficient for evidentiary
purposes.
Hearing means a review of the
documentary evidence to confirm the
existence or amount of a debt or the
terms of a repayment schedule. If the
Secretary determines that the issues in
dispute cannot be resolved by such a
review, such as when the validity of the
claim turns on the issue of credibility or
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veracity, the Secretary may provide an
oral hearing.
Hearing official means a Departmental
Appeals Board administrative law judge
or appropriate alternate as outlined in
§ 33.7(a)(2).
Paying agency means the agency
employing the individual and
authorizing the payment of his or her
current pay.
Salary offset means an administrative
offset to collect a debt under 5 U.S.C.
5514 owed by a federal employee
through deductions at one or more
officially established pay intervals from
the current pay account of the employee
without his or her consent.
Secretary means the Secretary of
Health and Human Services, or the
Secretary’s designee within any Staff
Division, Operating Division or Regional
Office.
Waiver means the cancellation,
remission, forgiveness, or non-recovery
of a debt owed by an employee to this
Department or another agency as
required or permitted by 5 U.S.C. 5584,
8346(b), 10 U.S.C. 2774, 32 U.S.C. 716,
or any other law.
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§ 33.3
General rule.
(a) Whenever a delinquent debt is
owed to the Department by an
employee, the Secretary may, subject to
paragraphs (b) through (d) of this
section, involuntarily offset the amount
of the debt from the employee’s
disposable pay.
(b) Unless provided by another statute
pertaining to a particular type of debt
(e.g., 42 U.S.C. 292r, Health
professionals education, 42 U.S.C. 297b,
Nurse education), the Department may
not initiate salary offset to collect a debt
more than 10 years after the
Government’s right to collect the debt
first accrued, unless facts material to the
Government’s right to collect the debt
were not known and could not
reasonably have been known by the
official or officials of the Government
who were charged with the
responsibility to discover and collect
such debts.
(c) Except as provided in paragraph
(d) of this section, prior to initiating
collection through salary offset under
this part, the Secretary must first
provide the employee with the
following:
(1) Written notice of intent to offset as
described in § 33.4; and
(2) An opportunity to petition for a
hearing, and, if a hearing is provided, to
receive a written decision from the
hearing official within 60 days on the
following issues:
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(i) The determination of the
Department concerning the existence or
amount of the debt; and
(ii) The repayment schedule, unless it
was established by written agreement
between the employee and Department.
(d) The provisions of paragraph (c) of
this section do not apply to:
(1) Any adjustment to pay arising out
of an employee’s election of coverage or
a change in coverage under a federal
benefits program requiring periodic
deduction from pay, if the amount to be
recovered was accumulated over four
pay periods or less;
(2) A routine intra-agency adjustment
of pay that is made to correct an
overpayment of pay attributable to
clerical or administrative errors or
delays in processing pay documents, if
the overpayment occurred within the
four pay periods preceding the
adjustment and, at the time of such
adjustment, or as soon thereafter as
practical, the individual is provided
written notice of the nature and the
amount of the adjustment and point of
contact for contesting such adjustment;
or
(3) Any adjustment to collect a debt
amounting to $50 or less, if, at the time
of such adjustment, or as soon thereafter
as practical, the individual is provided
written notice of the nature and the
amount of the adjustment and a point of
contact for contesting such adjustment.
§ 33.4
Notice requirements before offset.
(a) At least 30 days before the
initiation of salary offset under this part,
the Secretary shall mail, by first class
mail, to the employee’s last known
address, a written notice informing the
debtor of the following:
(1) The Secretary has reviewed the
records relating to the debt and has
determined that a debt is owed, the
amount of the debt, and the facts giving
rise to the debt;
(2) The Secretary’s intention to collect
the debt by means of deduction from the
employee’s current disposable pay
account until the debt and all
accumulated interest, penalties, and
administrative costs are paid in full;
(3) The amount, stated either as a
fixed dollar amount or as a percentage
of pay not to exceed 15 percent of
disposable pay, the frequency, the
commencement date, and the duration
of the intended deductions;
(4) An explanation of the
Department’s policies concerning the
assessment of interest, penalties, and
administrative costs, stating that such
assessments must be made unless
waived in accordance with 31 CFR
901.9 and § 30.18 of this title;
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(5) The employee’s right to inspect
and copy all records of the Department
pertaining to the debt or, if the
employee or the employee’s
representative cannot personally inspect
the records, to request and receive
copies of such records;
(6) If not previously provided, the
opportunity to establish a schedule for
the voluntary repayment of the debt
through offset, or to enter into an
agreement to establish a schedule for
repayment of the debt in lieu of offset,
provided the agreement is in writing,
signed by both the employee and the
Department, and documented in the
Department’s files;
(7) The right to a hearing conducted
by an impartial hearing official with
respect to the existence and amount of
the debt, or the repayment schedule, so
long as a petition is filed by the
employee as prescribed in § 33.6;
(8) Time limitations and other
procedures or conditions for inspecting
Department records pertaining to the
debt, establishing an alternative
repayment agreement, and requesting a
hearing;
(9) The name, address, and telephone
number of the person or office within
the Department who may be contacted
concerning the procedures for
inspecting Department records,
establishing an alternative repayment
agreement, and requesting a hearing;
(10) The name and address of the
office within the Department to which
the petition for a hearing should be sent,
which generally will be the Operating
Division or Staff Division responsible
for collecting the debt;
(11) A timely and properly filed
petition for a hearing will stay the
commencement of the collection
proceeding;
(12) The Department will initiate
action to effect salary offset not less than
30 days from the date of mailing the
notice of intent, unless the employee
properly files a timely petition for a
hearing,
(13) A final decision on a hearing, if
one is requested, will be issued at the
earliest practical date, but not later than
60 days after the filing of the petition
requesting the hearing unless the
employee requests and the hearing
official grants a delay in the proceeding;
(14) Knowingly false or frivolous
statements, representations or evidence
may subject the employee to:
(i) Disciplinary procedures
appropriate under chapter 75 of title 5,
United States Code; part 752 of title 5,
Code of Federal Regulations; or any
other applicable statutes or regulations;
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(ii) Penalties under the False Claims
Act, 31 U.S.C. 3729–3731, or under any
other applicable statutory authority; and
(iii) Criminal penalties under 18
U.S.C. 286, 287, 1001, and 1002, or
under any other applicable statutory
authority;
(15) Any other rights and remedies
available to the employee under statutes
or regulations governing the program for
which the collection is being made;
(16) Unless there are applicable
contractual or statutory provisions to
the contrary, amounts paid on or
deducted for the debt, which are later
waived or found not owed to the United
States, will be promptly refunded to the
employee; and
(17) Proceedings with respect to such
debt are governed by 5 U.S.C. 5514.
(b) The Secretary will retain evidence
of service indicating the date of mailing
of the notice.
§ 33.5 Review of department records
relating to the debt.
(a) To inspect or copy Department
records relating to the debt, the
employee must send a written request to
the Department official or office
designated in the notice of intent to
offset stating his or her intention. The
written request must be received by the
Department within 15 days from the
employee’s receipt of the notice.
(b) In response to a timely request as
described in paragraph (a) of this
section, the designated Department
official shall notify the employee of the
location and time when the employee
may inspect and copy such records. If
the employee or employee’s
representative is unable to personally
inspect such records as the result of
geographical or other constraints, the
Department shall arrange to send copies
of such records to the employee.
pwalker on PROD1PC71 with RULES
§ 33.6
Hearings.
(a) Petitions for hearing. (1) To request
a hearing concerning the existence or
amount of the debt or the offset
schedule established by the Department,
the employee must send a written
petition to the office designated in the
notice of intent to offset, see
§ 33.4(a)(10), within 15 days of receipt
of the notice.
(2) The petition must:
(i) Be signed by the employee;
(ii) Fully identify and explain with
reasonable specificity all the facts,
evidence, and witnesses, if any, that the
employee believes support his or her
position; and
(iii) Specify whether an oral or paper
hearing is requested. If an oral hearing
is requested, the request should explain
why the matter cannot be resolved by
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Jkt 211001
review of the documentary evidence
alone.
(3) The timely filing of a petition for
hearing shall stay any further collection
proceedings.
(b) Failure to timely request. (1) If the
petition for hearing is filed after the 15day period provided for in paragraph
(a)(1) of this section, the Secretary may
grant the request if the employee can
establish that the delay was the result of
circumstances beyond the employee’s
control, or that the employee failed to
receive actual notice of the filing
deadline.
(2) An employee waives the right to
a hearing, and will have his or her
disposable pay offset in accordance with
the offset schedule established by the
Department, if the employee:
(i) Fails to file a timely request for a
hearing, unless such failure is excused;
or
(ii) Fails to appear at an oral hearing,
of which the employee was notified,
unless the hearing official determines
that the failure to appear was due to
circumstances beyond the employee’s
control.
(c) Form of hearings. (1) General.
After the employee requests a hearing,
the hearing official shall notify the
employee of the form of the hearing to
be provided. If the hearing will be oral,
the notice shall set forth the date, time,
and location of the hearing. If the
hearing will be a review of the written
record, the employee shall be notified
that he or she should submit evidence
and arguments in writing to the hearing
official by a specified date, after which
the record shall be closed. The date
specified shall give the employee
reasonable time to submit
documentation.
(2) Oral hearing. An employee who
requests an oral hearing shall be
provided an oral hearing if the hearing
official determines that the matter
cannot be resolved by review of
documentary evidence alone because an
issue of credibility or veracity is
involved. Where an oral hearing is
appropriate, the hearing is not an
adversarial adjudication and need not
take the form of an evidentiary hearing,
i.e., the rules of evidence need not
apply. Oral hearings may take the form
of, but are not limited to:
(i) Informal conferences with the
hearing official in which the employee
and agency representative will be given
full opportunity to present evidence,
witnesses, and arguments;
(ii) Informal meetings in which the
hearing official interviews the
employee; or
(iii) Formal written submissions with
an opportunity for oral presentations.
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10423
(3) Paper hearing. If the hearing
official determines that an oral hearing
is not necessary, the hearing official will
make the determination based upon a
review of the available written record.
(4) Record. The hearing official shall
maintain a summary record of any
hearing conducted under this part.
Witnesses who testify in oral hearings
will do so under oath or affirmation.
(d) Written decision. (1) Date of
decision. The hearing officer shall issue
a written opinion stating his or her
decision, based upon documentary
evidence and information developed at
the hearing, as soon as practicable after
the hearing, but not later than sixty (60)
days after the date on which the hearing
petition was received by the creditor
agency, unless the employee requested
a delay in the proceedings, in which
case the 60-day decision period shall be
extended by the number of days by
which the hearing was postponed. The
recipient of an employee’s request for a
hearing must forward the request
expeditiously to the Departmental
Appeals Board so as to not jeopardize
the Boards’s ability to issue a decision
within this 60-day period.
(2) Content of decision. The written
decision shall include:
(i) A statement of the facts presented
to support the origin, nature, and
amount of the debt;
(ii) The hearing official’s findings,
analysis, and conclusions, including a
determination whether the employee’s
petition for hearing was baseless and
resulted from an intent to delay creditor
agency collection activity; and
(iii) The terms of any repayment
schedule, if applicable.
(e) Failure to appear. In the absence
of good cause shown, an employee who
fails to appear at a hearing shall be
deemed, for the purpose of this part, to
admit the existence and amount of the
debt as described in the notice of intent.
If the representative of the creditor
agency fails to appear, the hearing
official shall proceed with the hearing
as scheduled and make a determination
based upon oral testimony presented
and the documentary evidence
submitted by both parties. With the
agreement of both parties, the hearing
official shall schedule a new hearing
date, and both parties shall be given
reasonable notice of the time and place
of the new hearing.
§ 33.7 Obtaining the services of a hearing
official.
(a)(1) When the Department is the
creditor agency, the office designated in
§ 33.4(a)(10) shall schedule a hearing, if
one is requested by an employee, before
a hearing official.
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(2) When the Department cannot
provide a prompt and appropriate
hearing before an administrative law
judge or a hearing official furnished
pursuant to another lawful arrangement,
the office designated in § 33.4(a)(10)
may:
(i) When the debtor is not an
employee of the Department, contact an
agent of the employee’s paying agency
designated in 5 CFR part 581, Appendix
A, to arrange for a hearing official; or
(ii) When the debtor is an employee
of the Department, contact an agent of
any agency designated in 5 CFR part
581, Appendix A, to arrange for a
hearing official.
(b)(1) When another agency is the
creditor agency, it is the responsibility
of that agency to arrange for a hearing
if one is requested. The Department will
provide a hearing official upon the
request of a creditor agency when the
debtor is employed by the Department
and the creditor agency cannot provide
a prompt and appropriate hearing before
a hearing official furnished pursuant to
another lawful arrangement.
(2) Services rendered to a creditor
agency under paragraph (b)(1) of this
section will be provided on a fully
reimbursable basis pursuant to the
Economy Act of 1932, as amended, 31
U.S.C. 1535.
(c) The determination of a hearing
official designated under this section is
considered to be an official certification
regarding the existence and amount of
the debt for purposes of executing salary
offset under 5 U.S.C. 5514 and this part.
A creditor agency may make a
certification to the Secretary of the
Treasury under 5 CFR 550.1108 or a
paying agency under 5 CFR 550.1109
regarding the existence and amount of
the debt based on the certification of a
hearing official. If a hearing official
determines that a debt may not be
collected via salary offset, but the
creditor agency finds that the debt is
still valid, the creditor agency may still
seek collection of the debt through other
means, such as offset of other Federal
payments or litigation.
pwalker on PROD1PC71 with RULES
§ 33.8 Voluntary repayment agreement in
lieu of salary offset.
(a)(1) In response to the notice of
intent to offset, the employee may
propose to establish an alternative
schedule for the voluntary repayment of
the debt by submitting a written request
to the Department official designated in
the notice of intent to offset. An
employee who wishes to repay the debt
without salary offset shall also submit a
proposed written repayment agreement.
The proposal shall admit the existence
of the debt, and the agreement must be
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in such form that it is legally
enforceable. The agreement must:
(i) Be in writing;
(ii) Be signed by both the employee
and the Department;
(iii) Specify all the terms of the
arrangement for payment; and
(iv) Contain a provision accelerating
the debt in the event of default by the
employee, but such an increase may not
result in a deduction that exceeds 15
percent of the employee’s disposable
pay unless the employee has agreed in
writing to deduction of a greater
amount.
(2) Any proposal under paragraph
(a)(1) of this section must be received by
the Department within 30 days of the
date of the notice of intent to offset.
(b) In response to a timely request as
described in paragraph (a) of this
section, the designated Department
official shall notify the employee
whether the proposed repayment
schedule is acceptable. It is within the
Secretary’s discretion to accept a
proposed alternative repayment
schedule, and to set the necessary terms
of a voluntary repayment agreement.
(c) No voluntary repayment agreement
will be binding on the Secretary unless
it is in writing and signed by both the
Secretary and the employee.
§ 33.9
Special review.
(a) A Department employee subject to
salary offset or a voluntary repayment
agreement may, at any time, request a
special review by the Secretary of the
amount of the salary offset or voluntary
repayment installments, based on
materially changed circumstances, such
as, but not limited to, catastrophic
illness, divorce, death, or disability.
(b)(1) In determining whether an
offset would prevent the employee from
meeting essential subsistence expenses,
e.g., food, housing, clothing,
transportation, and medical care, the
employee shall submit a detailed
statement and supporting documents for
the employee, his or her spouse, and
dependents indicating:
(i) Income from all sources;
(ii) Assets and liabilities;
(iii) Number of dependents;
(iv) Food, housing, clothing,
transportation, and medical expenses;
and
(v) Exceptional and unusual expenses,
if any.
(2) When requesting a special review
under this section, the employee shall
file an alternative proposed offset or
payment schedule and a statement, with
supporting documents as described in
paragraph (b)(1) of this section, stating
why the current salary offset or
payments result in an extreme financial
hardship to the employee.
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(c)(1) The Secretary shall evaluate the
statement and supporting documents,
and determine whether the original
offset or repayment schedule imposes
extreme financial hardship on the
employee.
(2) Within 30 calendar days of the
receipt of the request and supporting
documents, the Secretary shall notify
the employee in writing of such
determination, including, if appropriate,
a revised offset or repayment schedule.
(d) If the special review results in a
revised offset or repayment schedule,
the Secretary shall provide a new
certification to the paying agency.
§ 33.10
Procedures for salary offset.
(a) Method and source of deductions.
Unless the employee and the Secretary
have agreed to an alternative repayment
arrangement under § 33.8, a debt shall
be collected in lump sum or by
installment deductions at officially
established pay intervals from an
employee’s current pay account.
(b) Limitation on amount of
deduction. Ordinarily, the size of
installment deductions must bear a
reasonable relationship to the size of the
debt and the employee’s ability to pay.
However, the amount deducted for any
pay period must not exceed 15 percent
of the disposable pay from which the
deduction is made, unless the employee
has agreed in writing to the deduction
of a greater amount, as outlined in
§ 33.8.
(c) Duration of deductions. (1) Lump
sum. If the amount of the debt is equal
to or less than 15 percent of the
employee’s disposable pay for an
officially established pay interval, the
debt generally will be collected in one
lump-sum deduction.
(2) If the employee is deemed
financially unable to pay in one lumpsum or the amount of the debt exceeds
15 percent of the employee’s disposable
pay for an officially established pay
interval, the debt shall be collected in
installments. Except as provided in
paragraphs (e) and (f) of this section,
installment deductions must be made
over a period not greater than the
anticipated period of active duty or
employment.
(d) When deductions may begin. (1)
Deductions will begin on the date stated
in the notice of intent, unless an
alternative repayment agreement under
§ 33.8 has been accepted or the
employee has filed a timely request for
a hearing.
(2) If the employee files a timely
petition for hearing as provided in
§ 33.6, deductions will begin after the
hearing official has provided the
employee with a hearing and a final
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written decision has been rendered in
favor of the Department.
(e) Liquidation from final check. If an
employee retires, resigns, or the period
of employment ends before collection of
the debt is completed, the remainder of
the debt will be offset under 31 U.S.C.
3716 from subsequent payments of any
nature (e.g., final salary payment or
lump-sum leave) due the employee from
the paying agency as of the date of
separation.
(f) Recovery from other payments due
a separated employee. If the debt cannot
be satisfied by offset from any final
payment due the employee on the date
of separation, the Secretary will
liquidate the debt, where appropriate,
by administrative offset under 31 U.S.C.
3716 from later payments of any kind
due the former employee (e.g., lump
sum leave payment).
pwalker on PROD1PC71 with RULES
§ 33.11 Salary offset when the Department
is the creditor agency but not the paying
agency.
(a) Centralized administrative offset.
(1) Under 31 U.S.C. 3716, the
Department shall notify the Secretary of
the Treasury of all past-due, legally
enforceable debts which are 180 days
delinquent for purposes of collection by
centralized administrative offset. This
includes debts which the Department
seeks to recover from the pay account of
an employee of another agency via
salary offset. The Secretary of the
Treasury and other Federal disbursing
officials will match payments, including
Federal salary payments, against these
debts. Where a match occurs, and all the
requirements for offset have been met,
the payments will be offset to collect the
debt.
(2) Prior to offset of the pay account
of an employee, the Department must
comply with the requirements of 5
U.S.C. 5514; 5 CFR part 550, subpart K,
and this part. Specific procedures for
notifying the Secretary of the Treasury
of a debt for purposes of collection by
administrative offset, including salary
offset, are contained in 31 CFR parts 285
and 901 and part 30 of this title.
(b) Non-centralized administrative
offset. When salary offset through
centralized administrative offset under
paragraph (a) of this section is not
possible, the Department may attempt to
collect a debt through non-centralized
administrative offset in accordance with
part 30 of this title.
(1) Format of the request. Upon
completion of the procedures
established in this part and pursuant to
5 U.S.C. 5514, the Department shall:
(i) Certify in writing to the paying
agency that the employee owes the debt,
the amount and basis of the debt, the
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Jkt 211001
date on which payment(s) is due, the
date the Government’s right to collect
the debt first accrued, and that the
Departmental regulations implementing
5 U.S.C. 5514 have been approved by
the Office of Personnel Management.
(ii) If the collection is to be made in
installments, advise the paying agency
of the number of installments to be
collected, the amount or percentage of
disposable pay to be collected in each
installment, and the commencement
date of the installments, if a date other
than the next officially established pay
period is required.
(iii) Unless the employee has
consented in writing to the salary
deductions or signed a statement
acknowledging receipt of the required
procedures and this written consent or
statement is forwarded to the paying
agency, advise the paying agency of the
action(s) taken under 5 U.S.C. 5514 and
this part, and give the date(s) the
action(s) was taken.
(2) Requesting recovery from current
paying agency. (i) Except as otherwise
provided in this paragraph, the
Department shall submit a certified debt
claim containing the information
specified in paragraph (a) of this
section, and an installment agreement,
or other instruction on the payment
schedule, if applicable, to the
employee’s paying agency.
(ii) If the employee is in the process
of separating from the Federal
Government, the Department shall
submit the certified debt claim to the
employee’s paying agency for collection
as provided in § 33.10(e). The paying
agency must certify the total amount of
its collection on the debt and send a
copy of the certification to the employee
and another copy to the Department. If
the paying agency’s collection does not
fully satisfy the debt, and the paying
agency is aware that the employee is
entitled to payments from the Civil
Service Retirement and Disability Fund,
or other similar payments that may be
due the employee from other Federal
Government sources, the paying agency
will provide written notification of the
outstanding debt to the agency
responsible for making such payments
to the employee, stating the employee
owes a debt, the amount of the debt, and
that the provisions of this section have
been fully complied with. The
Department must submit a properly
certified claim to the agency responsible
for making such payments before the
collection can be made.
(iii) If the employee is already
separated and all payments due from
the employee’s former paying agency
have been paid, the Department may
request, unless otherwise prohibited,
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10425
that money due and payable to the
employee from the Civil Service
Retirement and Disability Fund (5 CFR
831.1801 or 5 CFR 845.401) or other
similar funds, be administratively offset
to collect the debt. See 31 U.S.C. 3716
and 31 CFR 901.3.
(iv) If the employee transfers to
another paying agency, the Department
must submit a properly certified debt
claim to the new paying agency before
collection can be resumed; however, the
Department need not repeat the due
process procedures described in 5
U.S.C. 5514 and this part. The
Department shall review the debt to
ensure that collection is resumed by the
new paying agency.
§ 33.12 Salary offset when the Department
is the paying agency but not the creditor
agency.
(a) Format of the request. (1) When
the Department is the paying agency
and another agency is the creditor
agency, the creditor agency must certify,
in writing, to the Department that the
employee owes the debt, the amount
and basis of the debt, the date on which
payment(s) is due, the date the
Government’s right to collect the debt
first accrued, and that the creditor
agency’s regulations implementing 5
U.S.C. 5514 have been approved by the
Office of Personnel Management.
(2) If the collection is to be made in
installments, the creditor agency must
also advise the Department of the
number of installments to be collected,
the amount or percentage of disposable
pay to be collected in each installment,
and the commencement date of the
installments, if a date other than the
next officially established pay period is
required.
(3) Unless the employee has
consented in writing to the salary
deductions or signed a statement
acknowledging receipt of the required
procedures and the written consent or
statement is forwarded to the
Department, the creditor agency must
advise the Department of the action(s)
taken under 5 U.S.C. § 5514, and give
the date(s) the action(s) was taken.
(b) Requests for recovery. (1)
Complete claim. When the Department
receives a properly certified debt claim
from a creditor agency, deductions
should be scheduled to begin
prospectively at the next officially
established pay interval. The employee
must receive written notice as described
in § 33.10 that the Department has
received a certified debt claim from the
creditor agency, including the amount,
and written notice of the date
deductions from salary will commence
and the amount of such deductions.
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08MRR1
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Federal Register / Vol. 72, No. 45 / Thursday, March 8, 2007 / Rules and Regulations
(2) Incomplete claim. When the
Department receives an incomplete debt
claim from a creditor agency, the
Secretary shall return the debt claim
with a notice that procedures under 5
U.S.C. 5514 and 5 CFR part 550, subpart
K, must be provided and a properly
certified debt claim received before
action will be taken to collect from the
employee’s current pay account.
(c) Review. The Secretary is not
required or authorized to review the
merits of the determination with respect
to the amount or validity of the debt
certified by the creditor agency.
(d) Employees separating. If an
employee begins separation action
before the Department collects the total
debt due the creditor agency, the
following actions will be taken:
(1) To the extent possible, the balance
owed the creditor agency will be
liquidated from a final salary check, or
other final payments of any nature due
the employee from the Department;
(2) The Secretary will certify the total
amount of the Department’s collection
on the debt and send a copy of the
certification to the employee and
another copy to the creditor agency; and
(3) If the Department’s collection does
not fully satisfy the debt, and the
Secretary is aware that the employee is
entitled to payments from the Civil
Service Retirement and Disability Fund,
or other similar payments that may be
due the employee from other Federal
Government sources, the Secretary will
provide written notification of the
outstanding debt to the agency
responsible for making such payments
to the employee. The written
notification shall state that the
employee owes a debt, the amount of
the debt, and that the provisions of this
section have been fully complied with.
The Department shall furnish a copy of
this written notification to the creditor
agency so that it can file a properly
certified debt claim with the agency
responsible for making such payments.
(e) Employees who transfer to another
paying agency. If, after the creditor
agency has submitted a debt claim to the
Department, the employee transfers
from the Department to a different
paying agency before the debt is
collected in full, the Secretary shall:
(1) Certify the total amount of the
collection made on the debt; and
(2) Furnish a copy of the certification
to the employee and another copy to the
creditor agency along with notice of the
employee’s transfer.
§ 33.13 Interest, penalties, and
administrative costs.
Debts owed to the Department shall
be assessed interest, penalties and
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18:23 Mar 07, 2007
Jkt 211001
administrative costs in accordance with
45 CFR 30.18.
§ 33.14
Non-waiver of rights.
An employee’s involuntary payment
of all or any portion of a debt collected
under this part shall not be construed as
a waiver of any rights which the
employee may have under 5 U.S.C. 5514
or any other provision of law or
contract, unless there are statutory or
contractual provisions to the contrary.
§ 33.15
Refunds.
(a) The Secretary shall promptly
refund any amounts paid or deducted
under this part when:
(1) A debt is waived or otherwise
found not owing to the United States; or
(2) The employee’s paying agency is
directed by administrative or judicial
order to refund amount deducted from
the employee’s current pay.
(b) Unless required or permitted by
law or contract, refunds shall not bear
interest.
§ 33.16 Additional administrative
collection action.
Nothing contained in this part is
intended to preclude the use of any
other appropriate administrative
remedy.
Dated: November 27, 2006.
Michael O. Leavitt,
Secretary.
[FR Doc. E7–4005 Filed 3–7–07; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4150–26–P
DEPARTMENT OF COMMERCE
National Oceanic and Atmospheric
Administration
50 CFR Part 648
[Docket No. 060606150–6240–02; I.D.
030107A]
Magnuson-Stevens Fishery
Conservation and Management Act
Provisions; Fisheries of the
Northeastern United States; Northeast
Multispecies Fishery; Modification of
the Gear Restrictions and Georges
Bank Yellowtail Flounder Trip Limits
for the U.S./Canada Management Area
National Marine Fisheries
Service (NMFS), National Oceanic and
Atmospheric Administration (NOAA),
Commerce.
ACTION: Temporary rule; gear
restriction, trip limit.
AGENCY:
SUMMARY: NMFS announces that the
Administrator, Northeast (NE) Region,
NMFS (Regional Administrator), is
eliminating the haddock separator trawl
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Fmt 4700
Sfmt 4700
requirement, which was temporarily
implemented on June 19, 2006, for all
limited access NE multispecies vessels
fishing with trawl gear on a NE
multispecies day-at-sea (DAS), and is
reducing from 10,000 lb (4,536 kg) to
5,000 lb (2,268 kg) the trip limit for
Georges Bank (GB) yellowtail flounder
for all NE multispecies vessels fishing
without a haddock separator trawl on a
NE multispecies DAS in the Eastern
U.S./Canada Area. This temporary
reduction in the GB yellowtail flounder
trip limit is effective through April 30,
2007. A projection based on available
catch and discard information indicates
that removal of the haddock separator
trawl requirement and establishment of
a 5,000–lb (2,268 kg) trip limit for GB
yellowtail flounder in the Eastern U.S./
Canada Area will help vessels achieve
the total allowable catch (TAC) limits
established for the shared U.S./Canada
stocks of cod, haddock, and yellowtail
flounder while preventing the GB
yellowtail flounder TAC from being
exceeded before the end of the 2006
fishing year on April 30, 2007. This
action is therefore intended to provide
increased opportunities to harvest the
healthy Eastern GB haddock TAC and
maximize the harvest of the GB
yellowtail flounder. This action is
authorized by the regulations
implementing Framework 42 to the NE
Multispecies Fishery Management Plan
(FMP) under the authority of the
Magnuson-Stevens Fishery
Conservation and Management Act
(Magnuson-Stevens Act).
DATES: Effective March 5, 2007, through
April 30, 2007.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Mark Grant, Fishery Management
Specialist, (978) 281–9145, fax (978)
281–9135.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: The U.S.
portion of the U.S./Canada Area TACs
for GB cod, GB haddock, and GB
yellowtail flounder for the 2006 fishing
year (May 1, 2006–April 30, 2007) were
specified at 374 mt, 7,480 mt, and 2,070
mt, respectively, on April 28, 2006 (71
FR 25095). Pursuant to
§ 648.85(a)(3)(iv)(E), once the available
TAC for GB cod, GB haddock, or GB
yellowtail flounder is projected to be
caught, the Regional Administrator is
required to close the Eastern U.S./
Canada Area to all NE multispecies DAS
vessels for the remainder of the fishing
year. The FMP requires trawl vessels
issued a valid limited access NE
multispecies permit and fishing under a
NE multispecies DAS in the Eastern
U.S./Canada Area to fish with either a
haddock separator trawl or a flounder
net. Prohibitions governing the gear
E:\FR\FM\08MRR1.SGM
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Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 72, Number 45 (Thursday, March 8, 2007)]
[Rules and Regulations]
[Pages 10419-10426]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Printing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: E7-4005]
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH AND HUMAN SERVICES
Office of the Secretary
45 CFR Part 33
RIN 0991-AB19
Salary Offset
AGENCY: Department of Health and Human Services.
ACTION: Final rule.
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SUMMARY: The Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) adds
specific rules concerning involuntary salary
[[Page 10420]]
offset by adding a new part 33 to title 45 CFR. The rule implements 5
U.S.C. 5514, as amended by the salary offset provisions of the Debt
Collection Improvement Act of 1996 (DCIA), as implemented by the Office
of Personnel Management at 5 CFR part 550, subpart K. Involuntary
salary offset was previously included in the Department's more general
claims collection regulations at 45 CFR part 30.
DATES: Effective Date: March 8, 2007.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Jeffrey S. Davis, Associate General
Counsel, General Law Division, Office of the General Counsel,
Department of Health and Human Services, Room 4760 Cohen Building, 330
Independence Avenue, SW., Washington, DC 20201.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Background
Current HHS regulations at 45 CFR part 30 provide standards and
procedures for the collection and disposition of debts owed the United
States, including collection by administrative offset. Standards and
procedures for collection of debts from the current pay of federal
employees by involuntary salary offset had been included in the
administrative offset provisions of part 30. Those regulations, which
this final rule replaces, are based on the Debt Collection Act of 1982
(DCA), Public Law No. 97-365, and were implemented on a government-wide
basis by the Federal Claims Collection Standards (FCCS), set forth at 4
CFR part 101, issued by the Department of Justice and General
Accounting Office on March 9, 1984 (49 FR 8889 (1984)), and the salary
offset regulations set forth at 5 CFR part 550, subpart K, issued by
the Office of Personnel Management on July 3, 1984 (49 FR 27472). The
current HHS rules are in the process of being amended to comply with
the Debt Collection Improvement Act of 1996 (DCIA), Public Law No. 104-
134, as implemented by the Department of Treasury and the Department of
Justice at 31 CFR 900-904. Since there are specific rules that apply to
salary offset that go beyond those applicable to administrative offset
generally, and because salary offset has a separate statutory basis,
the Department takes this opportunity to segregate the salary offset
provisions and provide separate guidance to specifically address the
standards and procedures applicable to salary offset.
Basic Provisions
This rule prescribes the Department's standards and procedures for
the collection of debts owed by Federal employees to the United States
through involuntary salary offset, including changes made by the DCIA.
Briefly, such changes provide for centralized computer matching through
the Department of Treasury, an exclusion from the prior notice and
hearing requirements for certain pay adjustments, and a priority for
Federal tax levies. This regulation is inapplicable to U.S. Public
Health Service Commissioned Corps officers and retirees, as, pursuant
to 37 U.S.C. 1001, the U.S. Public Health Service Commissioned Corps
follows regulations relating to active duty and retired pay and
allowances, including the collection of indebtedness, set forth in the
Department of Defense Financial Management Regulation, DOD 7000.14-R.
Authority: 5 U.S.C. 5514
This rule was published as a proposed rule on July 13, 2004 (69 FR
42022) and provided for a 60-day comment period ending on September 13,
2004. We received no comments concerning the proposed rule and are
finalizing the rule as proposed with only minor clarifying changes to
Sec. 33.10. In Sec. 33.10(b), we clarify that the employee can agree
in writing to a greater deduction, as outlined in Sec. 33.8. In Sec.
33.10(c)(2), we inserted the word ``deemed'' in front of ``financially
unable to pay.''
Reporting and Recordkeeping Requirements
For purposes of the Paperwork Reduction Act, 44 U.S.C. chapter 35,
this rule will impose no new reporting or recordkeeping requirements on
any member of the public.
Economic Impact
We have examined the impact of this rule as required by Executive
Order (EO) 12866 (September 1993, Regulatory Planning and Review), as
amended by EO 13258 (February 2002, Amending EO 12866 on Regulatory
Planning and Review), the Regulatory Flexibility Act (RFA) (September
19, 1980; Pub. L. No. 96-354); the Unfunded Mandated Reform Act of 1995
(UMRA, Pub. L. No. 104-4); and EO 13132 (August 1999, Federalism). EO
12866, as amended by EO 13258, directs agencies to assess all costs and
benefits of available regulatory alternatives and, if regulation is
necessary, to select regulatory approaches that maximize the benefits
(including potential economic, environmental, public health and safety
effects, distributive impacts, and equity). A regulatory impact
analysis must be prepared for major rules with economically significant
effects ($100 million or more in 1 year). We have determined that the
rule is consistent with the principals set forth in the EO, and we find
that the rule would not have an effect on the economy that exceeds $100
million in any one year. In addition, this rule is not a major rule as
defined at 5 U.S.C. 804(2). In accordance with the provisions of the
EO, the rule has been reviewed by the Office of Management and Budget.
Under the RFA, 5 U.S.C. 605(b), if a rule has a significant impact
on a substantial number of small entities, an agency must analyze
regulatory options that would minimize any significant impact of the
rule on small entities and determined it will not have any effect. This
rule only affects Federal employees. The agency has considered the
effect that this rule would have on small entities. I hereby certify,
under 5 U.S.C 605(b), that the rule will not have a significant
economic impact on a substantial number of small entities, including
small businesses, small organizations and small local governments.
Therefore, a regulatory flexibility analysis is not required by 5
U.S.C. 603. Section 202 of the UMRA also requires that agencies assess
anticipated costs and benefits before issuing any rule that may result
in expenditure in any one year by State, local, or tribunal
governments, in the aggregate, or by the private sector, of $100
million. As noted above, we find that the rule would not have an effect
of this magnitude on the economy. Therefore, no further analysis is
required under the UMRA. EO 13132 establishes certain requirements that
an agency must meet when it promulgates a final rule that imposes
substantial direct requirement costs on State and local governments,
preempts State law, or otherwise has federalism implications. We have
reviewed the rule under the threshold criteria of EO 13132 and have
determined that this proposed rule would not have substantial direct
impact on States, or on the distribution of power and responsibilities
among the various levels of government. As there are no federalism
implications, a federalism impact statement is not required.
Alternatives Considered
Title 5 CFR part 550, subpart K, provides the standards to be used
by Federal agencies to prepare regulations implementing 5 U.S.C. 5514.
There is little room for us to consider alternatives, but where the
Department has discretion (i.e., in Sec. 33.1, specifying that the
regulations cover Government-wide collections and in Sec. 33.6,
specifying that if the petition for hearing
[[Page 10421]]
is untimely, the Secretary may grant the request if the employee can
establish that the delay was the result of circumstances beyond the
employee's control, or that the employee failed to receive actual
notice of the filing deadline), we drafted the rule to maximize the
Department's debt collection ability and make the process fair as
possible to debtors.
These regulations were submitted to the Office of Personnel
Management for review prior to publication of this final rule, as
required by 5 CFR part 550, subpart K.
List of Subjects in 45 CFR Part 33
Administrative practice and procedure, Claims, Debts, Claims, Debt
collection, Hearings, Wages, Salary offset, and Government employees.
0
For the reasons set forth in the preamble, HHS adds 45 CFR part 33 as
follows:
PART 33--SALARY OFFSET
Sec.
33.1 Purpose, authority, and scope.
33.2 Definitions.
33.3 General rule.
33.4 Notice requirements before offset.
33.5 Review of department records relating to the debt.
33.6 Hearings.
33.7 Obtaining the services of a hearing official.
33.8 Voluntary repayment agreement in lieu of salary offset.
33.9 Special review.
33.10 Procedures for salary offset.
33.11 Salary offset when the Department is the creditor agency but
not the paying agency.
33.12 Salary offset when the Department is the paying agency but not
the creditor agency.
33.13 Interest, penalties, and administrative costs.
33.14 Non-waiver of rights.
33.15 Refunds.
33.16 Additional administrative collection.
Authority: 5 U.S.C. 5514; 5 CFR Part 550, Subpart K.
Sec. 33.1 Purpose, authority, and scope.
(a) Purpose. This part prescribes the Department's standards and
procedures for the collection of debts owed by Federal employees to the
United States through involuntary salary offset.
(b) Authority. 5 U.S.C. 5514; 5 CFR Part 550, subpart K.
(c) Scope. (1) This part applies to internal and Government-wide
collections of debts owed by Federal employees by administrative offset
from the current pay account of the debtor without his or her consent.
(2) The procedures contained in this part do not apply to any case
where an employee consents to collection through deduction(s) from the
employee's pay account, or to debts arising under the Internal Revenue
Code or the tariff laws of the United States, or where another statute
explicitly provides for, or prohibits, collection of a debt by salary
offset (e.g., travel advances in 5 U.S.C. 5705 and employee training
expenses in 5 U.S.C. 4108).
(3) This part does not preclude an employee from requesting waiver
of an erroneous payment under 5 U.S.C. 5584, 10 U.S.C. 2774, or 32
U.S.C. 716, or in any way questioning the amount or validity of a debt,
in the manner prescribed by the Secretary. Similarly, this part does
not preclude an employee from requesting waiver of the collection of a
debt under any other applicable statutory authority.
(4) Nothing in this part precludes the compromise of the debt, or
the suspension or termination of collection actions, in accordance with
part 30 of this title.
Sec. 33.2 Definitions.
In this part--
Administrative offset means withholding funds payable by the United
States to, or held by the United States for, a person to satisfy a debt
owed by the payee.
Agency means an executive department or agency; a military
department; the United States Postal Service; the Postal Rate
Commission; the United States Senate; the United States House of
Representatives; and court, court administrative office, or
instrumentality in the judicial or legislative branches of the
Government; or a Government Corporation.
Creditor agency means the agency to which the debt is owed,
including a debt collection center when acting on behalf of a creditor
agency in matters pertaining to the collection of a debt.
Day means calendar day. For purposes of computation, the last day
of the period will be included unless it is a Saturday, Sunday, or a
Federal holiday, in which case the next business day will be considered
the last day of the period.
Debt means an amount determined by an appropriate official to be
owed to the United States from sources which include loans insured or
guaranteed by the United States and all other amounts due the United
States from fees, leases, rents, royalties, services, sales of real or
personal property, overpayments, penalties, damages, interest, fines
and forfeitures (except those arising under the Uniform Code of
Military Justice), and all other similar sources.
Debt collection center means the Department of the Treasury or
other Government agency or division designated by the Secretary of the
Treasury with authority to collect debts on behalf of creditor agencies
in accordance with 31 U.S.C. 3711(g).
Debtor means a Federal employee who owes a debt to the United
States.
Delinquent debt means a debt which the debtor does not pay or
otherwise resolve by the date specified in the initial demand for
payment, or in an applicable written repayment agreement or other
instrument, including a post-delinquency repayment agreement.
Department means the Department of Health and Human Services, its
Staff Divisions, Operating Divisions, and Regional Offices.
Disposable pay means that part of the debtor's current basic,
special, incentive, retired, and retainer pay, or other authorized pay,
remaining after deduction of amounts required by law to be withheld.
For purposes of calculating disposable pay, legally required deductions
that must be applied first include: Tax levies pursuant to the Internal
Revenue Code (title 26, United States Code); properly withheld taxes,
FICA, Medicare; health and life insurance premiums; and retirement
contributions. Amounts deducted under garnishment orders, including
child support garnishment orders, are not legally required deductions
for calculating disposable pay.
Employee means any individual currently employed by an agency, as
defined in this section, including seasonal and temporary employees and
current members of the Armed Forces or a Reserve of the Armed Forces
(Reserves).
Evidence of service means information retained by the Department
indicating the nature of the document to which it pertains, the date of
mailing the document, and the address and name of the debtor to whom it
is being sent. A copy of the dated and signed written notice of intent
to offset provided to the debtor pursuant to this part may be
considered evidence of service for purposes of this part. Evidence of
service may be retained electronically so long as the manner of
retention is sufficient for evidentiary purposes.
Hearing means a review of the documentary evidence to confirm the
existence or amount of a debt or the terms of a repayment schedule. If
the Secretary determines that the issues in dispute cannot be resolved
by such a review, such as when the validity of the claim turns on the
issue of credibility or
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veracity, the Secretary may provide an oral hearing.
Hearing official means a Departmental Appeals Board administrative
law judge or appropriate alternate as outlined in Sec. 33.7(a)(2).
Paying agency means the agency employing the individual and
authorizing the payment of his or her current pay.
Salary offset means an administrative offset to collect a debt
under 5 U.S.C. 5514 owed by a federal employee through deductions at
one or more officially established pay intervals from the current pay
account of the employee without his or her consent.
Secretary means the Secretary of Health and Human Services, or the
Secretary's designee within any Staff Division, Operating Division or
Regional Office.
Waiver means the cancellation, remission, forgiveness, or non-
recovery of a debt owed by an employee to this Department or another
agency as required or permitted by 5 U.S.C. 5584, 8346(b), 10 U.S.C.
2774, 32 U.S.C. 716, or any other law.
Sec. 33.3 General rule.
(a) Whenever a delinquent debt is owed to the Department by an
employee, the Secretary may, subject to paragraphs (b) through (d) of
this section, involuntarily offset the amount of the debt from the
employee's disposable pay.
(b) Unless provided by another statute pertaining to a particular
type of debt (e.g., 42 U.S.C. 292r, Health professionals education, 42
U.S.C. 297b, Nurse education), the Department may not initiate salary
offset to collect a debt more than 10 years after the Government's
right to collect the debt first accrued, unless facts material to the
Government's right to collect the debt were not known and could not
reasonably have been known by the official or officials of the
Government who were charged with the responsibility to discover and
collect such debts.
(c) Except as provided in paragraph (d) of this section, prior to
initiating collection through salary offset under this part, the
Secretary must first provide the employee with the following:
(1) Written notice of intent to offset as described in Sec. 33.4;
and
(2) An opportunity to petition for a hearing, and, if a hearing is
provided, to receive a written decision from the hearing official
within 60 days on the following issues:
(i) The determination of the Department concerning the existence or
amount of the debt; and
(ii) The repayment schedule, unless it was established by written
agreement between the employee and Department.
(d) The provisions of paragraph (c) of this section do not apply
to:
(1) Any adjustment to pay arising out of an employee's election of
coverage or a change in coverage under a federal benefits program
requiring periodic deduction from pay, if the amount to be recovered
was accumulated over four pay periods or less;
(2) A routine intra-agency adjustment of pay that is made to
correct an overpayment of pay attributable to clerical or
administrative errors or delays in processing pay documents, if the
overpayment occurred within the four pay periods preceding the
adjustment and, at the time of such adjustment, or as soon thereafter
as practical, the individual is provided written notice of the nature
and the amount of the adjustment and point of contact for contesting
such adjustment; or
(3) Any adjustment to collect a debt amounting to $50 or less, if,
at the time of such adjustment, or as soon thereafter as practical, the
individual is provided written notice of the nature and the amount of
the adjustment and a point of contact for contesting such adjustment.
Sec. 33.4 Notice requirements before offset.
(a) At least 30 days before the initiation of salary offset under
this part, the Secretary shall mail, by first class mail, to the
employee's last known address, a written notice informing the debtor of
the following:
(1) The Secretary has reviewed the records relating to the debt and
has determined that a debt is owed, the amount of the debt, and the
facts giving rise to the debt;
(2) The Secretary's intention to collect the debt by means of
deduction from the employee's current disposable pay account until the
debt and all accumulated interest, penalties, and administrative costs
are paid in full;
(3) The amount, stated either as a fixed dollar amount or as a
percentage of pay not to exceed 15 percent of disposable pay, the
frequency, the commencement date, and the duration of the intended
deductions;
(4) An explanation of the Department's policies concerning the
assessment of interest, penalties, and administrative costs, stating
that such assessments must be made unless waived in accordance with 31
CFR 901.9 and Sec. 30.18 of this title;
(5) The employee's right to inspect and copy all records of the
Department pertaining to the debt or, if the employee or the employee's
representative cannot personally inspect the records, to request and
receive copies of such records;
(6) If not previously provided, the opportunity to establish a
schedule for the voluntary repayment of the debt through offset, or to
enter into an agreement to establish a schedule for repayment of the
debt in lieu of offset, provided the agreement is in writing, signed by
both the employee and the Department, and documented in the
Department's files;
(7) The right to a hearing conducted by an impartial hearing
official with respect to the existence and amount of the debt, or the
repayment schedule, so long as a petition is filed by the employee as
prescribed in Sec. 33.6;
(8) Time limitations and other procedures or conditions for
inspecting Department records pertaining to the debt, establishing an
alternative repayment agreement, and requesting a hearing;
(9) The name, address, and telephone number of the person or office
within the Department who may be contacted concerning the procedures
for inspecting Department records, establishing an alternative
repayment agreement, and requesting a hearing;
(10) The name and address of the office within the Department to
which the petition for a hearing should be sent, which generally will
be the Operating Division or Staff Division responsible for collecting
the debt;
(11) A timely and properly filed petition for a hearing will stay
the commencement of the collection proceeding;
(12) The Department will initiate action to effect salary offset
not less than 30 days from the date of mailing the notice of intent,
unless the employee properly files a timely petition for a hearing,
(13) A final decision on a hearing, if one is requested, will be
issued at the earliest practical date, but not later than 60 days after
the filing of the petition requesting the hearing unless the employee
requests and the hearing official grants a delay in the proceeding;
(14) Knowingly false or frivolous statements, representations or
evidence may subject the employee to:
(i) Disciplinary procedures appropriate under chapter 75 of title
5, United States Code; part 752 of title 5, Code of Federal
Regulations; or any other applicable statutes or regulations;
[[Page 10423]]
(ii) Penalties under the False Claims Act, 31 U.S.C. 3729-3731, or
under any other applicable statutory authority; and
(iii) Criminal penalties under 18 U.S.C. 286, 287, 1001, and 1002,
or under any other applicable statutory authority;
(15) Any other rights and remedies available to the employee under
statutes or regulations governing the program for which the collection
is being made;
(16) Unless there are applicable contractual or statutory
provisions to the contrary, amounts paid on or deducted for the debt,
which are later waived or found not owed to the United States, will be
promptly refunded to the employee; and
(17) Proceedings with respect to such debt are governed by 5 U.S.C.
5514.
(b) The Secretary will retain evidence of service indicating the
date of mailing of the notice.
Sec. 33.5 Review of department records relating to the debt.
(a) To inspect or copy Department records relating to the debt, the
employee must send a written request to the Department official or
office designated in the notice of intent to offset stating his or her
intention. The written request must be received by the Department
within 15 days from the employee's receipt of the notice.
(b) In response to a timely request as described in paragraph (a)
of this section, the designated Department official shall notify the
employee of the location and time when the employee may inspect and
copy such records. If the employee or employee's representative is
unable to personally inspect such records as the result of geographical
or other constraints, the Department shall arrange to send copies of
such records to the employee.
Sec. 33.6 Hearings.
(a) Petitions for hearing. (1) To request a hearing concerning the
existence or amount of the debt or the offset schedule established by
the Department, the employee must send a written petition to the office
designated in the notice of intent to offset, see Sec. 33.4(a)(10),
within 15 days of receipt of the notice.
(2) The petition must:
(i) Be signed by the employee;
(ii) Fully identify and explain with reasonable specificity all the
facts, evidence, and witnesses, if any, that the employee believes
support his or her position; and
(iii) Specify whether an oral or paper hearing is requested. If an
oral hearing is requested, the request should explain why the matter
cannot be resolved by review of the documentary evidence alone.
(3) The timely filing of a petition for hearing shall stay any
further collection proceedings.
(b) Failure to timely request. (1) If the petition for hearing is
filed after the 15-day period provided for in paragraph (a)(1) of this
section, the Secretary may grant the request if the employee can
establish that the delay was the result of circumstances beyond the
employee's control, or that the employee failed to receive actual
notice of the filing deadline.
(2) An employee waives the right to a hearing, and will have his or
her disposable pay offset in accordance with the offset schedule
established by the Department, if the employee:
(i) Fails to file a timely request for a hearing, unless such
failure is excused; or
(ii) Fails to appear at an oral hearing, of which the employee was
notified, unless the hearing official determines that the failure to
appear was due to circumstances beyond the employee's control.
(c) Form of hearings. (1) General. After the employee requests a
hearing, the hearing official shall notify the employee of the form of
the hearing to be provided. If the hearing will be oral, the notice
shall set forth the date, time, and location of the hearing. If the
hearing will be a review of the written record, the employee shall be
notified that he or she should submit evidence and arguments in writing
to the hearing official by a specified date, after which the record
shall be closed. The date specified shall give the employee reasonable
time to submit documentation.
(2) Oral hearing. An employee who requests an oral hearing shall be
provided an oral hearing if the hearing official determines that the
matter cannot be resolved by review of documentary evidence alone
because an issue of credibility or veracity is involved. Where an oral
hearing is appropriate, the hearing is not an adversarial adjudication
and need not take the form of an evidentiary hearing, i.e., the rules
of evidence need not apply. Oral hearings may take the form of, but are
not limited to:
(i) Informal conferences with the hearing official in which the
employee and agency representative will be given full opportunity to
present evidence, witnesses, and arguments;
(ii) Informal meetings in which the hearing official interviews the
employee; or
(iii) Formal written submissions with an opportunity for oral
presentations.
(3) Paper hearing. If the hearing official determines that an oral
hearing is not necessary, the hearing official will make the
determination based upon a review of the available written record.
(4) Record. The hearing official shall maintain a summary record of
any hearing conducted under this part. Witnesses who testify in oral
hearings will do so under oath or affirmation.
(d) Written decision. (1) Date of decision. The hearing officer
shall issue a written opinion stating his or her decision, based upon
documentary evidence and information developed at the hearing, as soon
as practicable after the hearing, but not later than sixty (60) days
after the date on which the hearing petition was received by the
creditor agency, unless the employee requested a delay in the
proceedings, in which case the 60-day decision period shall be extended
by the number of days by which the hearing was postponed. The recipient
of an employee's request for a hearing must forward the request
expeditiously to the Departmental Appeals Board so as to not jeopardize
the Boards's ability to issue a decision within this 60-day period.
(2) Content of decision. The written decision shall include:
(i) A statement of the facts presented to support the origin,
nature, and amount of the debt;
(ii) The hearing official's findings, analysis, and conclusions,
including a determination whether the employee's petition for hearing
was baseless and resulted from an intent to delay creditor agency
collection activity; and
(iii) The terms of any repayment schedule, if applicable.
(e) Failure to appear. In the absence of good cause shown, an
employee who fails to appear at a hearing shall be deemed, for the
purpose of this part, to admit the existence and amount of the debt as
described in the notice of intent. If the representative of the
creditor agency fails to appear, the hearing official shall proceed
with the hearing as scheduled and make a determination based upon oral
testimony presented and the documentary evidence submitted by both
parties. With the agreement of both parties, the hearing official shall
schedule a new hearing date, and both parties shall be given reasonable
notice of the time and place of the new hearing.
Sec. 33.7 Obtaining the services of a hearing official.
(a)(1) When the Department is the creditor agency, the office
designated in Sec. 33.4(a)(10) shall schedule a hearing, if one is
requested by an employee, before a hearing official.
[[Page 10424]]
(2) When the Department cannot provide a prompt and appropriate
hearing before an administrative law judge or a hearing official
furnished pursuant to another lawful arrangement, the office designated
in Sec. 33.4(a)(10) may:
(i) When the debtor is not an employee of the Department, contact
an agent of the employee's paying agency designated in 5 CFR part 581,
Appendix A, to arrange for a hearing official; or
(ii) When the debtor is an employee of the Department, contact an
agent of any agency designated in 5 CFR part 581, Appendix A, to
arrange for a hearing official.
(b)(1) When another agency is the creditor agency, it is the
responsibility of that agency to arrange for a hearing if one is
requested. The Department will provide a hearing official upon the
request of a creditor agency when the debtor is employed by the
Department and the creditor agency cannot provide a prompt and
appropriate hearing before a hearing official furnished pursuant to
another lawful arrangement.
(2) Services rendered to a creditor agency under paragraph (b)(1)
of this section will be provided on a fully reimbursable basis pursuant
to the Economy Act of 1932, as amended, 31 U.S.C. 1535.
(c) The determination of a hearing official designated under this
section is considered to be an official certification regarding the
existence and amount of the debt for purposes of executing salary
offset under 5 U.S.C. 5514 and this part. A creditor agency may make a
certification to the Secretary of the Treasury under 5 CFR 550.1108 or
a paying agency under 5 CFR 550.1109 regarding the existence and amount
of the debt based on the certification of a hearing official. If a
hearing official determines that a debt may not be collected via salary
offset, but the creditor agency finds that the debt is still valid, the
creditor agency may still seek collection of the debt through other
means, such as offset of other Federal payments or litigation.
Sec. 33.8 Voluntary repayment agreement in lieu of salary offset.
(a)(1) In response to the notice of intent to offset, the employee
may propose to establish an alternative schedule for the voluntary
repayment of the debt by submitting a written request to the Department
official designated in the notice of intent to offset. An employee who
wishes to repay the debt without salary offset shall also submit a
proposed written repayment agreement. The proposal shall admit the
existence of the debt, and the agreement must be in such form that it
is legally enforceable. The agreement must:
(i) Be in writing;
(ii) Be signed by both the employee and the Department;
(iii) Specify all the terms of the arrangement for payment; and
(iv) Contain a provision accelerating the debt in the event of
default by the employee, but such an increase may not result in a
deduction that exceeds 15 percent of the employee's disposable pay
unless the employee has agreed in writing to deduction of a greater
amount.
(2) Any proposal under paragraph (a)(1) of this section must be
received by the Department within 30 days of the date of the notice of
intent to offset.
(b) In response to a timely request as described in paragraph (a)
of this section, the designated Department official shall notify the
employee whether the proposed repayment schedule is acceptable. It is
within the Secretary's discretion to accept a proposed alternative
repayment schedule, and to set the necessary terms of a voluntary
repayment agreement.
(c) No voluntary repayment agreement will be binding on the
Secretary unless it is in writing and signed by both the Secretary and
the employee.
Sec. 33.9 Special review.
(a) A Department employee subject to salary offset or a voluntary
repayment agreement may, at any time, request a special review by the
Secretary of the amount of the salary offset or voluntary repayment
installments, based on materially changed circumstances, such as, but
not limited to, catastrophic illness, divorce, death, or disability.
(b)(1) In determining whether an offset would prevent the employee
from meeting essential subsistence expenses, e.g., food, housing,
clothing, transportation, and medical care, the employee shall submit a
detailed statement and supporting documents for the employee, his or
her spouse, and dependents indicating:
(i) Income from all sources;
(ii) Assets and liabilities;
(iii) Number of dependents;
(iv) Food, housing, clothing, transportation, and medical expenses;
and
(v) Exceptional and unusual expenses, if any.
(2) When requesting a special review under this section, the
employee shall file an alternative proposed offset or payment schedule
and a statement, with supporting documents as described in paragraph
(b)(1) of this section, stating why the current salary offset or
payments result in an extreme financial hardship to the employee.
(c)(1) The Secretary shall evaluate the statement and supporting
documents, and determine whether the original offset or repayment
schedule imposes extreme financial hardship on the employee.
(2) Within 30 calendar days of the receipt of the request and
supporting documents, the Secretary shall notify the employee in
writing of such determination, including, if appropriate, a revised
offset or repayment schedule.
(d) If the special review results in a revised offset or repayment
schedule, the Secretary shall provide a new certification to the paying
agency.
Sec. 33.10 Procedures for salary offset.
(a) Method and source of deductions. Unless the employee and the
Secretary have agreed to an alternative repayment arrangement under
Sec. 33.8, a debt shall be collected in lump sum or by installment
deductions at officially established pay intervals from an employee's
current pay account.
(b) Limitation on amount of deduction. Ordinarily, the size of
installment deductions must bear a reasonable relationship to the size
of the debt and the employee's ability to pay. However, the amount
deducted for any pay period must not exceed 15 percent of the
disposable pay from which the deduction is made, unless the employee
has agreed in writing to the deduction of a greater amount, as outlined
in Sec. 33.8.
(c) Duration of deductions. (1) Lump sum. If the amount of the debt
is equal to or less than 15 percent of the employee's disposable pay
for an officially established pay interval, the debt generally will be
collected in one lump-sum deduction.
(2) If the employee is deemed financially unable to pay in one
lump-sum or the amount of the debt exceeds 15 percent of the employee's
disposable pay for an officially established pay interval, the debt
shall be collected in installments. Except as provided in paragraphs
(e) and (f) of this section, installment deductions must be made over a
period not greater than the anticipated period of active duty or
employment.
(d) When deductions may begin. (1) Deductions will begin on the
date stated in the notice of intent, unless an alternative repayment
agreement under Sec. 33.8 has been accepted or the employee has filed
a timely request for a hearing.
(2) If the employee files a timely petition for hearing as provided
in Sec. 33.6, deductions will begin after the hearing official has
provided the employee with a hearing and a final
[[Page 10425]]
written decision has been rendered in favor of the Department.
(e) Liquidation from final check. If an employee retires, resigns,
or the period of employment ends before collection of the debt is
completed, the remainder of the debt will be offset under 31 U.S.C.
3716 from subsequent payments of any nature (e.g., final salary payment
or lump-sum leave) due the employee from the paying agency as of the
date of separation.
(f) Recovery from other payments due a separated employee. If the
debt cannot be satisfied by offset from any final payment due the
employee on the date of separation, the Secretary will liquidate the
debt, where appropriate, by administrative offset under 31 U.S.C. 3716
from later payments of any kind due the former employee (e.g., lump sum
leave payment).
Sec. 33.11 Salary offset when the Department is the creditor agency
but not the paying agency.
(a) Centralized administrative offset. (1) Under 31 U.S.C. 3716,
the Department shall notify the Secretary of the Treasury of all past-
due, legally enforceable debts which are 180 days delinquent for
purposes of collection by centralized administrative offset. This
includes debts which the Department seeks to recover from the pay
account of an employee of another agency via salary offset. The
Secretary of the Treasury and other Federal disbursing officials will
match payments, including Federal salary payments, against these debts.
Where a match occurs, and all the requirements for offset have been
met, the payments will be offset to collect the debt.
(2) Prior to offset of the pay account of an employee, the
Department must comply with the requirements of 5 U.S.C. 5514; 5 CFR
part 550, subpart K, and this part. Specific procedures for notifying
the Secretary of the Treasury of a debt for purposes of collection by
administrative offset, including salary offset, are contained in 31 CFR
parts 285 and 901 and part 30 of this title.
(b) Non-centralized administrative offset. When salary offset
through centralized administrative offset under paragraph (a) of this
section is not possible, the Department may attempt to collect a debt
through non-centralized administrative offset in accordance with part
30 of this title.
(1) Format of the request. Upon completion of the procedures
established in this part and pursuant to 5 U.S.C. 5514, the Department
shall:
(i) Certify in writing to the paying agency that the employee owes
the debt, the amount and basis of the debt, the date on which
payment(s) is due, the date the Government's right to collect the debt
first accrued, and that the Departmental regulations implementing 5
U.S.C. 5514 have been approved by the Office of Personnel Management.
(ii) If the collection is to be made in installments, advise the
paying agency of the number of installments to be collected, the amount
or percentage of disposable pay to be collected in each installment,
and the commencement date of the installments, if a date other than the
next officially established pay period is required.
(iii) Unless the employee has consented in writing to the salary
deductions or signed a statement acknowledging receipt of the required
procedures and this written consent or statement is forwarded to the
paying agency, advise the paying agency of the action(s) taken under 5
U.S.C. 5514 and this part, and give the date(s) the action(s) was
taken.
(2) Requesting recovery from current paying agency. (i) Except as
otherwise provided in this paragraph, the Department shall submit a
certified debt claim containing the information specified in paragraph
(a) of this section, and an installment agreement, or other instruction
on the payment schedule, if applicable, to the employee's paying
agency.
(ii) If the employee is in the process of separating from the
Federal Government, the Department shall submit the certified debt
claim to the employee's paying agency for collection as provided in
Sec. 33.10(e). The paying agency must certify the total amount of its
collection on the debt and send a copy of the certification to the
employee and another copy to the Department. If the paying agency's
collection does not fully satisfy the debt, and the paying agency is
aware that the employee is entitled to payments from the Civil Service
Retirement and Disability Fund, or other similar payments that may be
due the employee from other Federal Government sources, the paying
agency will provide written notification of the outstanding debt to the
agency responsible for making such payments to the employee, stating
the employee owes a debt, the amount of the debt, and that the
provisions of this section have been fully complied with. The
Department must submit a properly certified claim to the agency
responsible for making such payments before the collection can be made.
(iii) If the employee is already separated and all payments due
from the employee's former paying agency have been paid, the Department
may request, unless otherwise prohibited, that money due and payable to
the employee from the Civil Service Retirement and Disability Fund (5
CFR 831.1801 or 5 CFR 845.401) or other similar funds, be
administratively offset to collect the debt. See 31 U.S.C. 3716 and 31
CFR 901.3.
(iv) If the employee transfers to another paying agency, the
Department must submit a properly certified debt claim to the new
paying agency before collection can be resumed; however, the Department
need not repeat the due process procedures described in 5 U.S.C. 5514
and this part. The Department shall review the debt to ensure that
collection is resumed by the new paying agency.
Sec. 33.12 Salary offset when the Department is the paying agency but
not the creditor agency.
(a) Format of the request. (1) When the Department is the paying
agency and another agency is the creditor agency, the creditor agency
must certify, in writing, to the Department that the employee owes the
debt, the amount and basis of the debt, the date on which payment(s) is
due, the date the Government's right to collect the debt first accrued,
and that the creditor agency's regulations implementing 5 U.S.C. 5514
have been approved by the Office of Personnel Management.
(2) If the collection is to be made in installments, the creditor
agency must also advise the Department of the number of installments to
be collected, the amount or percentage of disposable pay to be
collected in each installment, and the commencement date of the
installments, if a date other than the next officially established pay
period is required.
(3) Unless the employee has consented in writing to the salary
deductions or signed a statement acknowledging receipt of the required
procedures and the written consent or statement is forwarded to the
Department, the creditor agency must advise the Department of the
action(s) taken under 5 U.S.C. Sec. 5514, and give the date(s) the
action(s) was taken.
(b) Requests for recovery. (1) Complete claim. When the Department
receives a properly certified debt claim from a creditor agency,
deductions should be scheduled to begin prospectively at the next
officially established pay interval. The employee must receive written
notice as described in Sec. 33.10 that the Department has received a
certified debt claim from the creditor agency, including the amount,
and written notice of the date deductions from salary will commence and
the amount of such deductions.
[[Page 10426]]
(2) Incomplete claim. When the Department receives an incomplete
debt claim from a creditor agency, the Secretary shall return the debt
claim with a notice that procedures under 5 U.S.C. 5514 and 5 CFR part
550, subpart K, must be provided and a properly certified debt claim
received before action will be taken to collect from the employee's
current pay account.
(c) Review. The Secretary is not required or authorized to review
the merits of the determination with respect to the amount or validity
of the debt certified by the creditor agency.
(d) Employees separating. If an employee begins separation action
before the Department collects the total debt due the creditor agency,
the following actions will be taken:
(1) To the extent possible, the balance owed the creditor agency
will be liquidated from a final salary check, or other final payments
of any nature due the employee from the Department;
(2) The Secretary will certify the total amount of the Department's
collection on the debt and send a copy of the certification to the
employee and another copy to the creditor agency; and
(3) If the Department's collection does not fully satisfy the debt,
and the Secretary is aware that the employee is entitled to payments
from the Civil Service Retirement and Disability Fund, or other similar
payments that may be due the employee from other Federal Government
sources, the Secretary will provide written notification of the
outstanding debt to the agency responsible for making such payments to
the employee. The written notification shall state that the employee
owes a debt, the amount of the debt, and that the provisions of this
section have been fully complied with. The Department shall furnish a
copy of this written notification to the creditor agency so that it can
file a properly certified debt claim with the agency responsible for
making such payments.
(e) Employees who transfer to another paying agency. If, after the
creditor agency has submitted a debt claim to the Department, the
employee transfers from the Department to a different paying agency
before the debt is collected in full, the Secretary shall:
(1) Certify the total amount of the collection made on the debt;
and
(2) Furnish a copy of the certification to the employee and another
copy to the creditor agency along with notice of the employee's
transfer.
Sec. 33.13 Interest, penalties, and administrative costs.
Debts owed to the Department shall be assessed interest, penalties
and administrative costs in accordance with 45 CFR 30.18.
Sec. 33.14 Non-waiver of rights.
An employee's involuntary payment of all or any portion of a debt
collected under this part shall not be construed as a waiver of any
rights which the employee may have under 5 U.S.C. 5514 or any other
provision of law or contract, unless there are statutory or contractual
provisions to the contrary.
Sec. 33.15 Refunds.
(a) The Secretary shall promptly refund any amounts paid or
deducted under this part when:
(1) A debt is waived or otherwise found not owing to the United
States; or
(2) The employee's paying agency is directed by administrative or
judicial order to refund amount deducted from the employee's current
pay.
(b) Unless required or permitted by law or contract, refunds shall
not bear interest.
Sec. 33.16 Additional administrative collection action.
Nothing contained in this part is intended to preclude the use of
any other appropriate administrative remedy.
Dated: November 27, 2006.
Michael O. Leavitt,
Secretary.
[FR Doc. E7-4005 Filed 3-7-07; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4150-26-P