Best Efforts in Administrative Fines Challenges, 14662-14668 [E7-5730]
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Federal Register / Vol. 72, No. 60 / Thursday, March 29, 2007 / Rules and Regulations
extensively to the stabilization of
producer prices, which prior to 1980
experienced wide fluctuations from
year-to-year. National Agricultural
Statistics Service records show that the
average price paid for both classes of
spearmint oil ranged from $4.00 per
pound to $11.10 per pound during the
period between 1968 and 1980. Prices
have been consistently more stable since
the marketing order’s inception in 1980,
with an average price for the period
from 1980 to 2005 of $12.72 per pound
for Scotch spearmint oil and $9.84 per
pound for Native spearmint oil.
During the period of 1998 through
2005, however, large production and
carry-in inventories have contributed to
prices below the 26-year average,
despite the Committee’s efforts to
balance available supplies with
demand. Prices have ranged from $8.00
to $11.00 per pound for Scotch
spearmint oil and between $9.10 and
$10.00 per pound for Native spearmint
oil. The 2005 Native price exceeded the
26-year average by $0.16. Producers
stated, however, that fuel cost increases
more than offset the price increase.
According to the Committee, the
recommended salable quantities and
allotment percentages are expected to
achieve the goals of market and price
stability.
As previously stated, annual salable
quantities and allotment percentages
have been issued for both classes of
spearmint oil since the order’s
inception. Accordingly, this action will
not impose any additional reporting or
recordkeeping requirements on either
small or large spearmint oil producers
or handlers. As with all Federal
marketing order programs, reports and
forms are periodically reviewed to
reduce information requirements and
duplication by industry and public
sector agencies.
The AMS is committed to complying
with the E-Government Act, to promote
the use of the Internet and other
information technologies to provide
increased opportunities for citizen
access to Government information and
services, and for other purposes.
As noted in the initial regulatory
flexibility analysis, USDA has not
identified any relevant Federal rules
that duplicate, overlap, or conflict with
this final rule.
In addition, the Committee’s meeting
was widely publicized throughout the
spearmint oil industry and all interested
persons were invited to attend the
meeting and participate in Committee
deliberations on all issues. Like all
Committee meetings, the October 4,
2006, meeting was a public meeting and
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all entities, both large and small, were
able to express views on this issue.
A proposed rule concerning this
action was published in the Federal
Register on January 22, 2007 (71 FR
2639). Copies of the rule were provided
to Committee staff, which in turn made
it available to spearmint oil producers,
handlers, and other interested person.
Finally, the rule was made available
through the Internet by the Office of the
Federal Register and USDA. A 30-day
comment period ending February 21,
2007, was provided to allow interested
persons to respond to the proposal. No
comments were received.
A small business guide on complying
with fruit, vegetable, and specialty crop
marketing agreements and orders may
be viewed at: https://www.ams.usda.gov/
fv/moab.html. Any questions about the
compliance guide should be sent to Jay
Guerber at the previously mentioned
address in the FOR FURTHER INFORMATION
CONTACT section.
After consideration of all relevant
matter presented, including the
information and recommendation
submitted by the Committee and other
available information, it is hereby found
that this rule, as hereinafter set forth,
will tend to effectuate the declared
policy of the Act.
List of Subjects in 7 CFR Part 985
Marketing agreements, Oils and fats,
Reporting and recordkeeping
requirements, Spearmint oil.
For the reasons set forth in the
preamble, 7 CFR part 985 is amended as
follows:
I
PART 985—MARKETING ORDER
REGULATING THE HANDLING OF
SPEARMINT OIL PRODUCED IN THE
FAR WEST
1. The authority citation for 7 CFR
part 985 continues to read as follows:
I
Authority: 7 U.S.C. 601–674.
2. A new § 985.226 is added to read
as follows:
I
Note: This section will not appear in the
Code of Federal Regulations.
§ 985.226 Salable quantities and allotment
percentages—2007–2008 marketing year.
The salable quantity and allotment
percentage for each class of spearmint
oil during the marketing year beginning
on June 1, 2007, shall be as follows:
(a) Class 1 (Scotch) oil—a salable
quantity of 886,667 pounds and an
allotment percentage of 45 percent.
(b) Class 3 (Native) oil—a salable
quantity of 1,062,336 pounds and an
allotment percentage of 48 percent.
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Dated: March 23, 2007.
Lloyd C. Day,
Administrator, Agricultural Marketing
Service.
[FR Doc. E7–5811 Filed 3–28–07; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 3410–02–P
FEDERAL ELECTION COMMISSION
11 CFR Part 111
[Notice 2007–7]
Best Efforts in Administrative Fines
Challenges
AGENCY:
Federal Election Commission.
Final Rules and Transmittal of
Rules to Congress.
ACTION:
SUMMARY: The Federal Election
Commission is revising its regulations to
amend four aspects of its Administrative
Fines Program (‘‘AFP’’), a streamlined
process through which the Commission
assesses civil money penalties for late
filers and non-filers under the Federal
Election Campaign Act of 1971, as
amended (‘‘FECA’’). First, the
Commission is revising its rules
regarding the permissible grounds for
challenging a proposed civil money
penalty by clarifying the scope of the
defense based on factual errors. Second,
the Commission is incorporating a
defense for political committees that
demonstrate that they used their best
efforts to file reports timely. Third, the
Commission is revising its rules
regarding its final determinations to
clarify when the Commission finds that
no violation has occurred. Lastly, the
rules are being amended to explain that
the Commission’s statement of reasons
for its final decision in an AFP matter
usually consists of the reasons set forth
by the Commission’s reviewing officer
as adopted by the Commission. The
supplementary information that follows
provides further information.
EFFECTIVE DATE:
April 30, 2007.
Mr.
J. Duane Pugh Jr., Acting Assistant
General Counsel, or Ms. Margaret G.
Perl, Attorney, 999 E Street, NW.,
Washington, DC 20463, (202) 694–1650
or (800) 424–9530.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Through
the AFP, the Commission may assess a
civil money penalty for a violation of
the reporting requirements of 2 U.S.C.
434(a) (such as not filing or filing late)
without using the traditional
enforcement procedures reserved for
more serious violations under 2 U.S.C.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
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437g. See 2 U.S.C. 437g(a)(4)(C).1
Congress intended the Commission to
process these straightforward violations
through a ‘‘simplified procedure’’ that
would ease the enforcement burden on
the Commission. See H.R. Rep. No. 106–
295, at 11–12 (1999). The rules
governing the AFP create a streamlined
procedure that balances the
respondent’s rights to notice and
opportunity to be heard with the need
to operate the AFP in an expeditious
manner without undue administrative
burden. See Explanation and
Justification for Final Rule on
Administrative Fines, 65 FR 31787,
31788 (May 19, 2000) (‘‘Admin Fines
E&J’’).2
When the Commission finds reason to
believe (‘‘RTB’’) that a political
committee and its treasurer
(‘‘respondents’’) violated the reporting
requirements, the respondents may
challenge the finding and the proposed
civil money penalty only for certain
specified reasons. See revised 11 CFR
111.35. The Commission’s reviewing
officer considers the challenge and
forwards a recommendation to the
Commission. See 11 CFR 111.36(e).
After considering the challenge, the
reviewing officer’s recommendation,
and any subsequent comments from the
respondent regarding the
recommendation, the Commission
makes a final determination. See revised
11 CFR 111.37. The Commission
assesses civil money penalties based on
published penalty schedules set forth in
11 CFR 111.43. Respondents may
challenge the Commission’s final
determination in U.S. District Court. See
2 U.S.C. 437g(a)(4)(C)(iii); 11 CFR
111.38.
In Lovely v. FEC, 307 F. Supp. 2d 294
(D. Mass. 2004), a political committee
challenged a civil money penalty
assessed by the Commission through the
AFP. The political committee argued
that it had used its best efforts to file the
report in question and that this
constituted a valid and complete
defense under FECA’s ‘‘best efforts’’
provision in 2 U.S.C. 432(i). See Lovely,
307 F. Supp. 2d at 299. Section 432(i)
provides that ‘‘[w]hen the treasurer of a
political committee shows that best
efforts have been used to obtain,
maintain, and submit the information
required by this Act for the political
1 The AFP applies to violations of the reporting
requirements by political committees and their
treasurers. See 11 CFR 111.30.
2 The AFP is set to expire on December 31, 2008.
See Pub. L. No. 109–115, sec. 721, 119 Stat. 2396,
2493–94 (2005); Final Rule on Extension of
Administrative Fines Program, 70 FR 75717 (Dec.
21, 2005) (extending the sunset date in 11 CFR
111.30 to Dec. 31, 2008).
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committee, any report or any records of
such committee shall be considered in
compliance with [FECA].’’ 2 U.S.C.
432(i).3 The Lovely court concluded that
the plain language of FECA requires the
Commission to consider the ‘‘best
efforts’’ defense in the AFP, and that the
record in the Lovely case did not
establish whether the Commission had
considered that defense. See Lovely, 307
F. Supp. 2d at 300–01. The court
remanded the case to the Commission
for further proceedings. See id. at 301.
On remand, the Commission
determined that the political committee
had failed to show it used best efforts to
file timely and confirmed the earlier
imposition of the civil money penalty.
See Statement of Reasons in
Administrative Fines Case 549 (Oct. 4,
2005), available at https://www.fec.gov/
law/law_rulemakings.shtml under the
heading ‘‘Best Efforts in Administrative
Fines Challenges.’’
Although the Lovely decision did not
directly challenge the AFP rules, and
did not affect the validity of 11 CFR
111.35 or the Commission’s
consideration of any other AFP matters,
the Commission opted to open a
rulemaking by publishing a Notice of
Proposed Rulemaking on December 8,
2006, to seek public comment on
proposed revisions to the AFP based on
the court’s concerns. See Notice of
Proposed Rulemaking for Best Efforts in
Administrative Fines Challenges, 71 FR
71093 (Dec. 8, 2006) (‘‘NPRM’’). The
Commission received two comments,
which are available at https://
www.fec.gov/law/
law_rulemakings.shtml under the
heading ‘‘Best Efforts in Administrative
Fines Challenges.’’4 One comment made
several recommendations as to how the
Commission could further clarify the
‘‘best efforts’’ defense by incorporating
the business management concept of
‘‘best practices’’ regarding corporate
operation, financial controls, risk
prevention and risk assessment, while
3 The Commission had long interpreted the ‘‘best
efforts’’ safe harbor to be limited to political
committees’ obligation to report certain substantive
information that may be beyond the control of the
committees to obtain. See 11 CFR 104.7 (defining
‘‘best efforts’’ for purposes of obtaining and
submitting contributor information). The
Commission is currently considering in a separate
proceeding whether to revise its application of this
provision in enforcement matters outside the scope
of the AFP. See Proposed Statement of Policy
Regarding Treasurer’s Best Efforts to Obtain,
Maintain, and Submit Information as Required by
the Federal Election Campaign Act, 71 FR 71084
(Dec. 8, 2006). The Commission anticipates issuing
a final policy statement this year.
4 The Internal Revenue Service did not comment
on the NPRM.
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the other comment was not relevant to
this rulemaking.
After consideration of the relevant
comment, the Commission has decided
to revise its rules governing the AFP in
four ways, as described below: (1)
Clarifying the scope of the ‘‘factual
errors’’ defense; (2) incorporating a
‘‘best efforts’’ defense for challenges to
RTB findings; (3) clarifying when the
Commission may find that no violation
has occurred in an AFP matter; and (4)
explaining the procedure for issuing
Commission statements of reasons for
AFP final determinations. These
changes address the concerns raised by
the Lovely court and provide greater
clarity regarding permissible grounds
for challenging an RTB finding. The
revisions are substantially similar to
those proposed in the NPRM.
Under the Administrative Procedure
Act, 5 U.S.C. 553(d), and the
Congressional Review of Agency
Rulemaking Act, 5 U.S.C. 801(a)(1),
agencies must submit final rules to the
Speaker of the House of Representatives
and the President of the Senate and
publish them in the Federal Register at
least 30 calendar days before they take
effect. The final rules that follow were
transmitted to Congress on March 23,
2007.
Explanation And Justification
I. Revised 11 CFR 111.35—Respondent
Challenges to Reason To Believe
Finding or Proposed Civil Money
Penalty
Revised section 111.35 sets forth the
requirements for AFP respondents’
challenges to RTB findings and
proposed civil money penalties. Revised
section 111.35(a) is clarified so that it
applies only to respondents that seek to
challenge an RTB finding or proposed
civil money penalty.5 The Commission
is reorganizing and clarifying section
111.35 so that respondents may easily
identify the basis for challenges in the
AFP. See revised 11 CFR 111.35(b).
A. Revised 11 CFR 111.35(b)(1)—
Changes to the ‘‘Factual Errors’’ Defense
The NPRM sought comment on
proposed clarifications to the ‘‘factual
errors’’ defense and asked whether the
regulation should include examples of
the types of factual errors that would
suffice as grounds for challenging an
RTB finding. See NPRM, 71 FR at 71094.
The comment did not address this issue.
The Commission has decided to revise
5 The revisions to section 111.35(a) did not alter
the basic timing requirement that a respondent
must file a challenge with the Commission within
forty (40) days of when the Commission issues its
reason to believe finding. See revised 111.35(a);
Admin Fines E&J, 65 FR at 31789.
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the rule regarding the ‘‘factual errors’’
defense as proposed in the NPRM,
except for stylistic changes. The revised
rule states that the facts alleged to be in
error must be facts upon which the
Commission relied in its RTB finding.
See revised 11 CFR 111.35(b)(1). Thus,
a respondent may not challenge an RTB
finding based on factual errors that are
irrelevant to the Commission’s actual
RTB finding, such as errors in the RTB
finding regarding individual names or
titles of committee staff.
The revised rule provides two
examples of the type of factual errors
that would properly support a
challenge: the respondent was not
required to file the report in question,
and the respondent did in fact timely
file as described in 11 CFR 100.19. See
revised 11 CFR 111.35(b)(1). For
example, a political committee that is
not subject to electronic filing
requirements could challenge an RTB
finding and proposed civil money
penalty under section 111.35(b)(1) by
showing that the paper copy was filed
on time and the Commission relied on
the factual error that the committee was
required instead to file electronically.
See 11 CFR 104.18(a). As referenced in
the rule’s second example, Commission
rules currently state that certain reports
are ‘‘timely filed’’ if they are deposited
as registered or certified mail with the
U.S. Post Office, as Priority Mail or
Express Mail through the U.S. Post
Office, or with an overnight delivery
service to be delivered the next business
day with a postmark no later than 11:59
p.m. EST on the filing date. See 11 CFR
100.19(b). Thus, a respondent who is
not required to file electronically could
challenge an RTB finding based on
evidence that it deposited the report in
the proper manner pursuant to section
100.19(b) on the filing date, even if the
Commission did not receive the report
because of a delivery failure by the U.S.
Post Office or other delivery service.
The Commission emphasizes that the
revisions to section 111.35(b)(1) do not
create any new ‘‘factual errors’’
defenses, but simply recognize the types
of errors that the Commission has
accepted previously as a defense in the
AFP.
B. Revised 11 CFR 111.35(b)(3)—‘‘Best
Efforts’’ Defense
The NPRM also sought comment on
whether to replace the ‘‘extraordinary
circumstances’’ defense in the prior rule
with a ‘‘best efforts’’ defense for
challenging an RTB finding based upon
2 U.S.C. 432(i). See NPRM, 71 FR at
71094–95 and former 11 CFR
111.35(b)(1)(iii). The comment generally
supported the idea of a ‘‘best efforts’’
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defense. The Commission has decided
to adopt the Lovely court’s
interpretation of 2 U.S.C. 432(i) and to
incorporate a ‘‘best efforts’’ defense into
the AFP. It appears in revised 11 CFR
111.35(b)(3) and is the same as the
proposed rule, except for the changes
noted below. The ‘‘best efforts’’ defense
in the revised rule completely replaces
the prior ‘‘extraordinary circumstances’’
defense because the two defenses are
largely coextensive. The Commission
reiterates its policy determination, as
stated in the initial rulemaking for the
AFP, that respondents’ defenses in the
AFP should be limited because the
complete and timely disclosure of the
political committee’s financial activity
is a ‘‘cornerstone of campaign finance
law.’’ See Admin Fines E&J, 65 FR at
31789.
The Lovely court recognized that the
Commission could ‘‘refine by regulation
what best efforts means in the context
of submitting a report.’’ Lovely, 307 F.
Supp. 2d at 300. In exercising its
authority to interpret how to incorporate
a ‘‘best efforts’’ defense into the AFP
rules, the Commission is mindful of the
statutory terms chosen by Congress. As
also explained by the Commission in its
statement of reasons in the Lovely case
after remand, section 432(i) creates a
safe harbor for treasurers who
demonstrate that best efforts have been
used to submit reports required by
FECA. ‘‘Best’’ is an adjective of the
superlative degree. Therefore, best
efforts requires more than ‘‘some’’ or
‘‘good’’ efforts. Section 432(i)’s use of
the phrase ‘‘best efforts,’’ instead of a
‘‘good faith’’ standard, means that an
AFP respondent cannot rely upon the
state of mind of the committee’s
treasurer or staff to claim this defense.6
Instead, the Commission’s revised rule
at 11 CFR 111.35(b)(3), which sets forth
the ‘‘best efforts’’ defense, focuses on
actions taken by the respondent
committee or treasurer to comply with
reporting deadlines.
The ‘‘best efforts’’ defense is
described in the revised rule as a twopart test. The AFP respondent must
demonstrate that: (1) The respondent
was prevented from filing in a timely
manner by ‘‘reasonably unforeseen
circumstances that were beyond the
control’’ of the respondent; and (2) the
respondent filed the report in question
no later than 24 hours after the end of
the reasonably unforeseen
circumstances preventing the timely
filing. See revised 11 CFR 111.35(b)(3).
The Commission believes this test is
straightforward and should be easy for
6 See Statement of Reasons in Administrative
Fines Case 549 (Oct. 4, 2005).
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respondents to understand and
document in their written responses.
The final rule differs slightly from the
proposed rule, which would have stated
that the respondent must be prevented
from filing in a timely manner by
‘‘unforeseen’’ circumstances. The
Commission is making this change to
emphasize that the ‘‘best efforts’’
defense is an objective test, which uses
a reasonable person standard and does
not depend upon the committee’s
treasurer or staff’s subjective ability to
foresee a particular circumstance. The
examples included in the rule in 11 CFR
111.35(c) and (d), described below,
illustrate how this defense operates as
an objective test.
Under the first part of the defense, the
respondent bears the burden of showing
that the reasonably unforeseen
circumstances in fact prevented the
timely and proper filing of the required
report. The NPRM requested public
comment regarding whether the
Commission should apply a ‘‘but for’’ or
‘‘contributing factor’’ test for
determining whether a respondent was
prevented from timely filing under the
rule. See NPRM, 71 FR at 71095. The
comment did not address this issue. The
Commission has decided that this rule
requires a strict causal relationship
between the circumstances described in
the challenge (such as a natural disaster)
and the respondent’s inability to file the
report timely. It is not sufficient for
reasonably unforeseen circumstances to
make it merely more difficult than usual
for the respondent to file on time. The
circumstance must cause the respondent
to be unable to file in a timely and
proper manner, despite the respondent
attempting to use all available methods
of filing. ‘‘Best efforts’’ is a high
standard set by FECA, and the
Commission reminds respondents that
there are multiple ways for a committee
to file required reports properly and
timely. See, e.g., 11 CFR 100.19(b)
(political committees not required to file
electronically may file on paper by hand
delivery, first class, registered, certified,
Priority or Express U.S. Mail, or
overnight delivery service); 11 CFR
104.18 (mandatory electronic filings
accepted through the Commission’s
filing system via internet, modem, or by
submission of diskette or CD). If the
respondent is prevented from using one
method of filing by a problem (such as
a technical problem with the
Commission’s modems), the respondent
cannot claim the ‘‘best efforts’’ defense
if it did not attempt to use other
available methods to file timely (such as
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submission on a diskette or CD).7
Therefore, to satisfy the ‘‘best efforts’’
defense, a respondent must demonstrate
that it attempted to use all available
methods to file, but that timely filing by
each method was prevented by the
reasonably unforeseen circumstances
beyond the control of the respondent.
The direct causal link between the
reasonably unforeseen circumstances
and the ability of the respondent to file
the report also underlies the second part
of the test for the ‘‘best efforts’’ defense.
A respondent must show that the report
was properly filed no later than 24
hours after the resolution of the
circumstances preventing the timely
filing. When the situation (such as a
problem with Commission computers)
is resolved, the Act’s high standard of
‘‘best efforts’’ requires that the
respondent file the report within a
reasonably short period of time. The
NPRM requested public comment
regarding whether the 24-hour period in
the proposed rule was appropriate for
the ‘‘best efforts’’ defense. See NPRM, 71
FR at 71095. The comment did not
address this issue. The Commission has
determined that a 24-hour period best
serves the interest in disclosure of the
information as soon as practicable after
the circumstances preventing the timely
disclosure are resolved.
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C. Examples of Circumstances Under
the ‘‘Best Efforts’’ Defense
To provide further guidance to
respondents regarding the scope of the
‘‘best efforts’’ defense, the revised rule
includes examples of circumstances that
will be considered ‘‘reasonably
unforeseen and beyond the control of
the respondent,’’ and examples of
circumstances that will not be
considered ‘‘reasonably unforeseen and
beyond the control of the respondent.’’
See revised 11 CFR 111.35(c) and (d).
The comment argued that the rule
should not be limited to examples of
defenses that would be unacceptable
under the new ‘‘best efforts’’ defense,
but should also include examples of
defenses that would meet the new
defense to provide guidance to
7 The Commission’s guidance and instructions to
political committees required to file electronically
makes clear that if a report is successfully uploaded
and accepted by the Commission, a confirmation
receipt (including a validation number) is
immediately sent to the committee via e-mail, fax
or both. If a committee does not receive such a
receipt, the committee should not assume the filing
was received and should contact the Commission’s
technical support personnel. See, e.g., ‘‘Frequently
Asked Questions About Electronic Filing,’’
available at https://www.fec.gov/support/
faq_filing.shtml (last visited Mar. 16, 2007);
‘‘Common Electronic Filing Mistakes,’’ available at
https://www.fec.gov/elecfil/mistakes.shtml (last
visited Mar. 16, 2007).
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Revised section 111.35(c) provides
three examples of circumstances that
the Commission will consider
‘‘reasonably unforeseen and beyond the
control’’ of the respondent under a ‘‘best
efforts’’ defense. The first example is
that a failure of Commission computers
or Commission-provided software,
despite the respondent seeking
technical assistance, caused the
respondent’s untimely electronic filing.
See revised 11 CFR 111.35(c)(1). This
example is similar to the example in the
prior rules, in which a failure of
Commission computers satisfied the
‘‘extraordinary circumstances’’ defense.
See former 11 CFR 111.35(b)(4)(iv);
Admin Fines E&J, 65 FR at 31790 (‘‘Any
failure of the Commission’s system that
prevents committees from filing their
reports when due would be recognized
as an extraordinary circumstance
beyond the respondents’ control.’’).8
The revised rule differs from the
proposed rule by including the
respondent’s seeking technical
assistance as part of the example.
Consistent with the prior defense based
on Commission computer failures, the
revised example clarifies that political
committees must use all Commission
resources available to aid with
electronic filing, such as technical
support manuals and personnel, before
a respondent will be considered
‘‘prevented’’ from timely filing by
Commission computer or software
failures. Thus, any failure of
Commission computers, servers, filing
system or Commission-provided
software of sufficient severity that it
results in a respondent being unable to
file, despite the respondent seeking
assistance from the Commission’s
technical support personnel, is a
reasonably unforeseen circumstance
beyond the respondent’s control.
The second example in revised
section 111.35(c)(2) is a ‘‘widespread
disruption of information transmissions
over the Internet not caused by any
failure of the Commission’s or
respondent’s computer systems or
Internet service provider.’’ This example
covers circumstances in which
technological problems at a third-party
hub or information transfer location,
rather than the Commission’s or
respondent’s computer systems, caused
widespread communication failures on
the Internet that left the respondent
unable to send, or the Commission
unable to receive, an electronically filed
report. This failure to transmit
information must occur irrespective of
any failures of the Commission’s or
respondent’s computer systems or
Internet service providers. If a
respondent demonstrates such a
widespread disruption of information
transmissions occurred, the Commission
will consider it ‘‘reasonably unforeseen
circumstances that were beyond the
control’’ of the respondent. As with all
the examples in revised section
111.35(c)(2), the respondent bears the
burden of showing that these reasonably
unforeseen circumstances in fact
prevented the respondent from filing
timely, despite attempts to file by any
available alternative methods permitted
under Commission regulations.9 This
example has been refined from the
proposed rule to clarify the types of
transmission failures contemplated.
The final example in the rule states
that a ‘‘[s]evere weather or other
disaster-related incident’’ is a
reasonably unforeseen circumstance
beyond the control of the respondent.
See revised 11 CFR 111.35(c)(3). Under
the prior rule, the Commission deemed
certain weather conditions (lasting more
than 48 hours) met the ‘‘extraordinary
circumstances’’ test, explaining that
‘‘natural disasters where a committee’s
office is located in the disaster area and
the committee cannot timely file a
report because of lack of electricity or
flooding or destruction of committee
records’’ would satisfy the defense. See
previous 11 CFR 111.35(b)(1)(iii);
Admin Fines E&J, 65 FR at 31790. The
revised rule permits such severe
weather-related events occurring at the
respondent’s or Commission’s location
8 In order to satisfy the prior ‘‘extraordinary
circumstances’’ defense, the failure of Commission
computers had to last at least 48 hours. See former
11 CFR 111.35(b)(1)(iii). The new ‘‘best efforts’’
defense does not contain any minimum time period
for the ‘‘reasonably unforeseen circumstances that
were beyond the control’’ of the respondent. See
revised 11 CFR 111.35(b)(3).
9 The Commission’s electronic filing manuals
detail step-by-step instructions for the various
methods of acceptable electronic filing via the
Internet, modem, or by saving the report to a
diskette or CD. See, e.g., ‘‘FECFile User Manual for
Candidate Committees,’’ available at https://
www.fec.gov/elecfil/authorized_manual/
manual.shtml (last visited Mar. 16, 2007).
committees and treasurers. The revised
rule provides such illustrations. The
examples of defenses in the revised rule
are the same as proposed in the NPRM,
except as noted otherwise below. Both
sets of examples in revised section
111.35(c) and (d) are non-exhaustive
lists and should not be read to override
the general requirements of the defense
in revised section 111.35(b)(3) as
discussed above.
1. Revised 11 CFR 111.35(c)—
Reasonably Unforeseen Circumstances
Beyond Respondents’ Control
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to form the basis for a ‘‘best efforts’’
defense. The Commission is not
defining with specificity the level of
severity for weather or other disasterrelated incidents in revised section
111.35(c)(3) because a respondent’s
challenge must show that the weather or
disaster-related incident in fact
prevented the respondent from filing
timely. Given that the effects upon the
respondent of each weather or disasterrelated incident will vary, the
Commission will evaluate the particular
facts contained in individual challenges,
instead of mandating such details in a
rule of general application.
2. Revised 11 CFR 111.35(d)—
Circumstances That Are Not Reasonably
Unforeseen or Beyond Respondents’
Control
Revised section 111.35(d) includes a
non-exhaustive list of circumstances
that are not considered ‘‘reasonably
unforeseen and beyond the control’’ of
the respondent, and will not support a
‘‘best efforts’’ finding. See revised 11
CFR 111.35(d)(1) through (6). All but
two of these examples are drawn from
the list of events that did not constitute
‘‘extraordinary circumstances’’ under
the Commission’s prior rule:
Negligence; delays caused by committee
vendors or contractors; illness,
inexperience or unavailability
(including death) of the treasurer or
other staff; and committee computer,
software or Internet service provider
failures. Compare revised 11 CFR
111.35(d)(1) through (4) with former 11
CFR 111.35(b)(4). One example
concerns Internet service provider
failures. See revised 11 CFR
111.35(d)(4). The proposed rule
described this example as failures of
committee computers or software. The
final rule also includes Internet service
provider failures. Because many Internet
service providers are available, a failure
limited to one provider is not a defense
for late filing or not filing. The revised
rule adds two examples to this list based
upon the Commission’s experience with
respondent challenges in the AFP: A
failure to know filing dates and a failure
to use Commission software properly.
See revised 11 CFR 111.35(d)(5) and (6).
Under the revised rule, a respondent’s
challenge will not succeed if its ‘‘best
efforts’’ defense is based on any of these
circumstances as the cause of the failure
to file timely. The Commission notes
that the examples in revised section
111.35(d) are not exhaustive, but are
illustrative of the types of situations that
are not reasonably unforeseen and
beyond the respondent’s control. The
Commission strongly encourages all
political committees to name assistant
treasurers and have additional staff
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available so that their ability to file
reports on time will not be
compromised due to the unavailability
or inexperience of the treasurer or other
staff. See Final Rules on Administrative
Fines, 68 FR 12572, 12573 (Mar. 17,
2003) (adding staff ‘‘inexperience’’ and
‘‘unavailability’’ as examples of
circumstances that will not be
considered ‘‘extraordinary’’ under
former 11 CFR 111.35(b)(4)(iii)).
The Commission’s implementation of
the ‘‘best efforts’’ defense set forth in
this revised rule serves as a proxy for
the factual investigation of a
respondent’s internal practices
regarding filing of reports that would
ordinarily be necessary to determine
whether such practices were sufficient
to constitute best efforts. The comment
argued that the Commission should
conduct a full examination of the
business models and management
procedures of each committee to
determine whether the committee
implemented proper back-up systems
and other measures reflecting
management ‘‘best practices’’ in the
relevant industry to reduce the risk of a
late filing. However, such an
investigation would be resourceintensive for the Commission,
burdensome for the respondent, and
inappropriate in the AFP, which is a
streamlined procedure created by
Congress to alleviate the Commission’s
enforcement burden for routine and
minor filing violations. Absent
reasonably unforeseen circumstances
that were beyond the control of the
respondent, the Commission sees no
reason why political committees cannot
file reports on time.10 Thus, the
Commission’s implementation of the
‘‘best efforts’’ defense appropriately
incorporates a statutory ‘‘best efforts’’
standard, while taking into account the
unique streamlined nature of the AFP.
D. Revised 11 CFR 111.35(e)—Factual
Basis for Challenge
The Commission is adding paragraph
(e) to 11 CFR 111.35 to require that the
respondent’s written response must
detail the factual basis supporting its
challenge. Furthermore, respondents
must provide supporting documentation
for their challenges. The comment did
not address this provision, which is
identical to the proposed rule.
The three defenses specified in
sections 111.35(b)(1) through (3) (factual
10 See Admin Fines E&J, 65 FR at 31790 (stating
that political committees should be aware of their
reporting duties and noting that the Commission
makes efforts to send reminders of deadlines and
political committees have ample time from the end
of the reporting period to the filing deadline to
prepare and file reports).
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error, miscalculation of civil money
penalty, and best efforts) are the only
permissible grounds for challenging the
Commission’s RTB finding or proposed
civil money penalty, and a respondent’s
written response must be based on one
of these grounds to be considered by the
reviewing officer and the Commission.
Respondents bear the burden of
showing that a permissible defense is
satisfied.11
II. Revised 11 CFR 111.37—
Commission Review of Respondent’s
Challenge and Reviewing Officer’s
Recommendation
A. Revised 11 CFR 111.37(b)—
Commission Finding That No Violation
Has Occurred
Revised section 111.37 sets forth
procedures regarding the Commission’s
final determination for AFP matters
upon receipt of the respondent’s
challenge and the reviewing officer’s
recommendation. See revised 11 CFR
111.37(a) through (d). The NPRM sought
comment on proposed revisions to
section 111.37(b) regarding Commission
determinations that no violation has
occurred where the RTB finding is
based on a factual error, and where the
respondent demonstrated it used best
efforts to file timely. See NPRM, 71 FR
at 71095. The comment did not address
these rules. The Commission is revising
section 111.37(b) to clarify that the
existence of factual errors or a finding
of best efforts are complete defenses.
Thus, if one of these defenses is
satisfied, the Commission will conclude
that no violation of FECA has occurred.
Please note that the defense based on an
incorrect basis for calculating the civil
money penalty (section 111.35(b)(2)) is
a defense only as to the amount of the
civil money penalty and does not serve
as a basis for a finding of no violation
under the AFP.
B. Revised 11 CFR 111.37(d)—
Commission Statement of Reasons in
AFP Final Determinations
The NPRM sought comment on
proposed revisions to section 111.37(d)
to make clear that the reasons for the
reviewing officer’s recommendation
regarding the challenge, unless modified
or rejected by the Commission, will
serve as the Commission’s statement of
reasons regarding the final
determination in the AFP matter.12 See
NPRM, 71 FR at 71095. This proposed
11 The Commission considers affidavits more
persuasive evidence than unsworn statements
submitted in support of the respondent’s challenge.
12 These revisions do not affect any statements of
reasons the Commissioners may issue in
enforcement matters under review.
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revision addresses the Lovely court’s
concerns that it was unclear what
constituted the statement of reasons for
the Commission’s final determination in
that matter. The comment did not
address this issue.
The Commission is revising section
111.37(d) to indicate that, unless
otherwise indicated by the Commission,
the statement of reasons for the
Commission’s final determination in an
AFP matter consists of the reasons
provided by the reviewing officer for the
recommendation, if approved by the
Commission. See Lovely, 307 F. Supp.
2d at 301 (stating that the Commission’s
‘‘adoption of a reviewing officer’s
recommendation may suffice in some
circumstances’’). Statements setting
forth additional or different reasons may
also be issued. The revised rule also
recognizes that the Commission may
modify or reject the reviewing officer’s
recommendation in whole or in part.
See 11 CFR 111.37(d). In such cases, the
Commission will indicate the grounds
for its action and it or individual
Commissioners may issue one or more
statements of reasons.
Former section 111.37(d) provided
that the Commission could determine
that a violation of 2 U.S.C. 434(a) had
occurred, but waive the civil money
penalty because the respondent
demonstrated the existence of
‘‘extraordinary circumstances’’ under
former section 111.35(b)(1)(iii). See
former 11 CFR 111.37(d). As discussed
above, the Commission is removing the
‘‘extraordinary circumstances’’ defense
and replacing it with a ‘‘best efforts’’
defense in revised section 111.35(b)(3).
Under 2 U.S.C. 432(i), if the
Commission determines that the
treasurer used best efforts in compliance
with this rule, there is no violation of
FECA and the Commission will so
notify the respondent pursuant to
revised section 111.37(b). See revised 11
CFR 111.37(b). Therefore, the
Commission need not retain the former
section 111.37(d).
Certification of No Effect Pursuant to 5
U.S.C. 605(b) (Regulatory Flexibility
Act)
The Commission certifies that the
attached final rules will not have a
significant economic impact on a
substantial number of small entities.
The basis for this certification is that
any individuals and not-for-profit
entities affected by these rules are not
‘‘small entities’’ under 5 U.S.C. 601(6).
The definition of ‘‘small entity’’ does
not include individuals, and classifies a
not-for-profit enterprise as a ‘‘small
organization’’ if it is independently
owned and operated and not dominant
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14:22 Mar 28, 2007
Jkt 211001
in its field. 5 U.S.C. 601(4). The rules
apply to all types of political
committees and their treasurers. State
political party committees are not
independently owned and operated
because they are not financed and
controlled by a small identifiable group
of individuals, and they are affiliated
with the larger national political party
organizations. In addition, the State
political party committees representing
the Democratic and Republican parties
have a major controlling influence
within the political arena of their State
and are thus dominant in their field.
District and local party committees are
generally considered affiliated with the
State committees and need not be
considered separately. To the extent that
any State party committees representing
minor political parties or any other
political committees might be
considered ‘‘small organizations,’’ the
number that would be affected by this
rule is not substantial.
Furthermore, any separate segregated
funds affected by these rules are not-forprofit political committees that do not
meet the definition of ‘‘small
organization’’ because they are financed
by a combination of individual
contributions and financial support for
certain expenses from corporations,
labor organizations, membership
organizations, or trade associations, and
therefore are not independently owned
and operated. Most of the other political
committees affected by these rules are
not-for-profit committees that do not
meet the definition of ‘‘small
organization.’’ Most political
committees are not independently
owned and operated because they are
not financed by a small identifiable
group of individuals. Most political
committees rely on contributions from a
large number of individuals to fund the
committees’ operations and activities.
The final rules also do not impose any
additional restrictions or increase the
costs of compliance for respondents
within the AFP. Instead, the final rules
provide additional defenses available to
political committees and their
treasurers, thereby potentially
increasing the number of situations in
which the Commission assesses no civil
money penalty. Moreover, these rules
apply only in the AFP, where penalties
are proportionate to the amount of a
political committee’s financial activity.
Any political committee meeting the
definition of ‘‘small entity’’ would be
subject to lower fines than larger
committees with more financial activity.
Therefore, the final rules will not have
a significant economic impact on a
substantial number of small entities.
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14667
List of Subjects in 11 CFR Part 111
Administrative practice and
procedures, Elections, Law enforcement.
For the reasons set out in the
preamble, the Federal Election
Commission is amending subchapter A
of chapter I of Title 11 of the Code of
Federal Regulations as follows:
I
PART 111—COMPLIANCE
PROCEDURE (2 U.S.C. 437g, 437d(a))
1. The authority citation for part 111
is revised to read as follows:
I
Authority: 2 U.S.C. 432(i), 437g, 437d(a),
438(a)(8); 28 U.S.C. 2461 nt.
2. Section 111.35 is revised to read as
follows:
I
§ 111.35 If the respondent decides to
challenge the alleged violation or proposed
civil money penalty, what should the
respondent do?
(a) To challenge a reason to believe
finding or proposed civil money
penalty, the respondent must submit a
written response to the Commission
within forty (40) days of the
Commission’s reason to believe finding.
(b) The respondent’s written response
must assert at least one of the following
grounds for challenging the reason to
believe finding or proposed civil money
penalty:
(1) The Commission’s reason to
believe finding is based on a factual
error including, but not limited to, the
committee was not required to file the
report, or the committee timely filed the
report in accordance with 11 CFR
100.19;
(2) The Commission improperly
calculated the civil money penalty; or
(3) The respondent used best efforts to
file in a timely manner in that:
(i) The respondent was prevented
from filing in a timely manner by
reasonably unforeseen circumstances
that were beyond the control of the
respondent; and
(ii) The respondent filed no later than
24 hours after the end of these
circumstances.
(c) Circumstances that will be
considered reasonably unforeseen and
beyond the control of respondent
include, but are not limited to:
(1) A failure of Commission
computers or Commission-provided
software despite the respondent seeking
technical assistance from Commission
personnel and resources;
(2) A widespread disruption of
information transmissions over the
Internet not caused by any failure of the
Commission’s or respondent’s computer
systems or Internet service provider;
and
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(3) Severe weather or other disasterrelated incident.
(d) Circumstances that will not be
considered reasonably unforeseen and
beyond the control of respondent
include, but are not limited to:
(1) Negligence;
(2) Delays caused by committee
vendors or contractors;
(3) Illness, inexperience, or
unavailability of the treasurer or other
staff;
(4) Committee computer, software or
Internet service provider failures;
(5) A committee’s failure to know
filing dates; and
(6) A committee’s failure to use filing
software properly.
(e) Respondent’s written response
must detail the factual basis supporting
its challenge and include supporting
documentation.
3. In section 111.37, paragraphs (b)
and (d) are revised to read as follows:
I
§ 111.37 What will the Commission do
once it receives the respondent’s written
response and the reviewing officer’s
recommendation?
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*
*
*
*
*
(b) If the Commission, after reviewing
the reason to believe finding, the
respondent’s written response, and the
reviewing officer’s written
recommendation, determines by an
affirmative vote of at least four (4) of its
members, that no violation has occurred
(either because the Commission had
based its reason to believe finding on a
factual error or because the respondent
used best efforts to file in a timely
manner) or otherwise terminates its
proceedings, the Commission shall
authorize the reviewing officer to notify
the respondent by letter of its final
determination.
*
*
*
*
*
(d) When the Commission makes a
final determination under this section,
the statement of reasons for the
Commission action will, unless
otherwise indicated by the Commission,
consist of the reasons provided by the
reviewing officer for the
recommendation, if approved by the
Commission, although statements
setting forth additional or different
reasons may also be issued. If the
reviewing officer’s recommendation is
modified or not approved, the
Commission will indicate the grounds
for its action and one or more
statements of reasons may be issued.
Dated: March 22, 2007.
Robert D. Lenhard,
Chairman, Federal Election Commission.
[FR Doc. E7–5730 Filed 3–28–07; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 6715–01–P
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Jkt 211001
DEPARTMENT OF TRANSPORTATION
Procedural Matters
Federal Aviation Administration
In general, under the Administrative
Procedure Act (APA), 5 U.S.C. 553,
agencies must publish regulations for
public comment and give the public at
least 30 days notice before adopting
regulations. There is an exception to
these requirements if the agency for
good cause finds that notice and public
comment are impracticable,
unnecessary, or contrary to the public
interest. In this case, the FAA finds that
notice and comment requirements are
unnecessary due to the administrative
nature of the change. It is in the public
interest for the Rules of Practice to
provide the correct address for the civil
penalty adjudication Web site as soon as
possible.
14 CFR Part 13
[Docket No. FAA–2006–26477]
FAA Civil Penalty Adjudication Web
Site
Federal Aviation
Administration (FAA), DOT.
ACTION: Final rule; technical
amendment.
AGENCY:
SUMMARY: The FAA has a Web site that
provides access to many documents
relating to the agency’s administrative
adjudication of civil penalty cases.
Currently, the address provided in the
regulations for the civil penalty
adjudication Web site is incorrect. In
this rulemaking, we are amending the
regulations to substitute the correct Web
site address.
DATES: This rule is effective on March
29, 2007.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Sheila Skojec, Office of the Chief
Counsel, Adjudication Branch, 800
Independence Avenue, SW.,
Washington, DC, 20591; telephone 202/
385–8228.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Background
The FAA assesses civil penalties for
violations of certain provisions of the
Federal aviation statute and the Federal
hazardous materials transportation
statute. The rules of practice in 14 CFR
13.16 and 14 CFR part 13, subpart G (14
CFR 13.201–13.235) govern these
proceedings involving the adjudication
of civil penalties.
The agency has a Web site containing
documents relating to the agency’s
adjudication of civil penalties. These
documents include decisions and orders
issued by the Administrator, indexes of
decisions, contact information for the
Hearing Docket and the administrative
law judges, the rules of practice, and
other information.
We recently discovered that the
address for the Web site set forth in 14
CFR 13.210 is incorrect. As a result, we
are amending the rules to correct this
problem.
This Rulemaking
FAA Civil Penalty Adjudication Web
Site. We are amending section 13.210 to
correct the Web site address for the FAA
civil penalty adjudication Web site. The
correct address is: https://www.faa.gov/
about/office_org/headquarters_offices/
agc/pol_adjudication/AGC400/
Civil_Penalty.
PO 00000
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Fmt 4700
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List of Subjects in 14 CFR Part 13
Administrative practice and
procedure, Air transportation, Aviation
safety, Hazardous materials
transportation, Investigations, Law
enforcement, Penalties.
The Amendments
Accordingly, the Federal Aviation
Administration amends part 13 of the
Federal Aviation Regulations as follows:
I
PART 13—INVESTIGATIVE AND
ENFORCEMENT PROCEDURES
1. The authority section for part 13
continues to read as follows:
I
Authority: 18 U.S.C. 6002; 28 U.S.C. 2461
(note); 49 U.S.C. 106(g), 5121–5128, 40113–
40114, 44103–44106, 44702–44703, 44709–
44710, 44713, 46101–46111, 46301, 46302
(for a violation of 49 U.S.C. 46504), 46304–
46316, 46318, 46501–46502, 46504–46507,
47106, 47107, 47111, 47122, 47306, 47531–
47532; 49 CFR 1.47.
2. Amend § 13.210 by revising
paragraphs (e)(2) to read as follows:
I
§ 13.210
Filing of documents.
*
*
*
*
*
(e) * * *
(1) * * *
(2) Decisions and orders issued by the
Administrator in civil penalty cases,
indexes of decisions, contact
information for the FAA Hearing Docket
and the administrative law judges, the
rules of practice, and other information
are available on the FAA civil penalty
adjudication Web site at: https://
www.faa.gov/about/office_org/
headquarters_offices/agc/
pol_adjudication/AGC400/
Civil_Penalty.
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Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 72, Number 60 (Thursday, March 29, 2007)]
[Rules and Regulations]
[Pages 14662-14668]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Printing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: E7-5730]
=======================================================================
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
FEDERAL ELECTION COMMISSION
11 CFR Part 111
[Notice 2007-7]
Best Efforts in Administrative Fines Challenges
AGENCY: Federal Election Commission.
ACTION: Final Rules and Transmittal of Rules to Congress.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SUMMARY: The Federal Election Commission is revising its regulations to
amend four aspects of its Administrative Fines Program (``AFP''), a
streamlined process through which the Commission assesses civil money
penalties for late filers and non-filers under the Federal Election
Campaign Act of 1971, as amended (``FECA''). First, the Commission is
revising its rules regarding the permissible grounds for challenging a
proposed civil money penalty by clarifying the scope of the defense
based on factual errors. Second, the Commission is incorporating a
defense for political committees that demonstrate that they used their
best efforts to file reports timely. Third, the Commission is revising
its rules regarding its final determinations to clarify when the
Commission finds that no violation has occurred. Lastly, the rules are
being amended to explain that the Commission's statement of reasons for
its final decision in an AFP matter usually consists of the reasons set
forth by the Commission's reviewing officer as adopted by the
Commission. The supplementary information that follows provides further
information.
EFFECTIVE DATE: April 30, 2007.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Mr. J. Duane Pugh Jr., Acting
Assistant General Counsel, or Ms. Margaret G. Perl, Attorney, 999 E
Street, NW., Washington, DC 20463, (202) 694-1650 or (800) 424-9530.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: Through the AFP, the Commission may assess a
civil money penalty for a violation of the reporting requirements of 2
U.S.C. 434(a) (such as not filing or filing late) without using the
traditional enforcement procedures reserved for more serious violations
under 2 U.S.C.
[[Page 14663]]
437g. See 2 U.S.C. 437g(a)(4)(C).\1\ Congress intended the Commission
to process these straightforward violations through a ``simplified
procedure'' that would ease the enforcement burden on the Commission.
See H.R. Rep. No. 106-295, at 11-12 (1999). The rules governing the AFP
create a streamlined procedure that balances the respondent's rights to
notice and opportunity to be heard with the need to operate the AFP in
an expeditious manner without undue administrative burden. See
Explanation and Justification for Final Rule on Administrative Fines,
65 FR 31787, 31788 (May 19, 2000) (``Admin Fines E&J'').\2\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\1\ The AFP applies to violations of the reporting requirements
by political committees and their treasurers. See 11 CFR 111.30.
\2\ The AFP is set to expire on December 31, 2008. See Pub. L.
No. 109-115, sec. 721, 119 Stat. 2396, 2493-94 (2005); Final Rule on
Extension of Administrative Fines Program, 70 FR 75717 (Dec. 21,
2005) (extending the sunset date in 11 CFR 111.30 to Dec. 31, 2008).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
When the Commission finds reason to believe (``RTB'') that a
political committee and its treasurer (``respondents'') violated the
reporting requirements, the respondents may challenge the finding and
the proposed civil money penalty only for certain specified reasons.
See revised 11 CFR 111.35. The Commission's reviewing officer considers
the challenge and forwards a recommendation to the Commission. See 11
CFR 111.36(e). After considering the challenge, the reviewing officer's
recommendation, and any subsequent comments from the respondent
regarding the recommendation, the Commission makes a final
determination. See revised 11 CFR 111.37. The Commission assesses civil
money penalties based on published penalty schedules set forth in 11
CFR 111.43. Respondents may challenge the Commission's final
determination in U.S. District Court. See 2 U.S.C. 437g(a)(4)(C)(iii);
11 CFR 111.38.
In Lovely v. FEC, 307 F. Supp. 2d 294 (D. Mass. 2004), a political
committee challenged a civil money penalty assessed by the Commission
through the AFP. The political committee argued that it had used its
best efforts to file the report in question and that this constituted a
valid and complete defense under FECA's ``best efforts'' provision in 2
U.S.C. 432(i). See Lovely, 307 F. Supp. 2d at 299. Section 432(i)
provides that ``[w]hen the treasurer of a political committee shows
that best efforts have been used to obtain, maintain, and submit the
information required by this Act for the political committee, any
report or any records of such committee shall be considered in
compliance with [FECA].'' 2 U.S.C. 432(i).\3\ The Lovely court
concluded that the plain language of FECA requires the Commission to
consider the ``best efforts'' defense in the AFP, and that the record
in the Lovely case did not establish whether the Commission had
considered that defense. See Lovely, 307 F. Supp. 2d at 300-01. The
court remanded the case to the Commission for further proceedings. See
id. at 301. On remand, the Commission determined that the political
committee had failed to show it used best efforts to file timely and
confirmed the earlier imposition of the civil money penalty. See
Statement of Reasons in Administrative Fines Case 549 (Oct. 4, 2005),
available at https://www.fec.gov/law/law_rulemakings.shtml under the
heading ``Best Efforts in Administrative Fines Challenges.''
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\3\ The Commission had long interpreted the ``best efforts''
safe harbor to be limited to political committees' obligation to
report certain substantive information that may be beyond the
control of the committees to obtain. See 11 CFR 104.7 (defining
``best efforts'' for purposes of obtaining and submitting
contributor information). The Commission is currently considering in
a separate proceeding whether to revise its application of this
provision in enforcement matters outside the scope of the AFP. See
Proposed Statement of Policy Regarding Treasurer's Best Efforts to
Obtain, Maintain, and Submit Information as Required by the Federal
Election Campaign Act, 71 FR 71084 (Dec. 8, 2006). The Commission
anticipates issuing a final policy statement this year.
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Although the Lovely decision did not directly challenge the AFP
rules, and did not affect the validity of 11 CFR 111.35 or the
Commission's consideration of any other AFP matters, the Commission
opted to open a rulemaking by publishing a Notice of Proposed
Rulemaking on December 8, 2006, to seek public comment on proposed
revisions to the AFP based on the court's concerns. See Notice of
Proposed Rulemaking for Best Efforts in Administrative Fines
Challenges, 71 FR 71093 (Dec. 8, 2006) (``NPRM''). The Commission
received two comments, which are available at https://www.fec.gov/law/
law_rulemakings.shtml under the heading ``Best Efforts in
Administrative Fines Challenges.''\4\ One comment made several
recommendations as to how the Commission could further clarify the
``best efforts'' defense by incorporating the business management
concept of ``best practices'' regarding corporate operation, financial
controls, risk prevention and risk assessment, while the other comment
was not relevant to this rulemaking.
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\4\ The Internal Revenue Service did not comment on the NPRM.
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After consideration of the relevant comment, the Commission has
decided to revise its rules governing the AFP in four ways, as
described below: (1) Clarifying the scope of the ``factual errors''
defense; (2) incorporating a ``best efforts'' defense for challenges to
RTB findings; (3) clarifying when the Commission may find that no
violation has occurred in an AFP matter; and (4) explaining the
procedure for issuing Commission statements of reasons for AFP final
determinations. These changes address the concerns raised by the Lovely
court and provide greater clarity regarding permissible grounds for
challenging an RTB finding. The revisions are substantially similar to
those proposed in the NPRM.
Under the Administrative Procedure Act, 5 U.S.C. 553(d), and the
Congressional Review of Agency Rulemaking Act, 5 U.S.C. 801(a)(1),
agencies must submit final rules to the Speaker of the House of
Representatives and the President of the Senate and publish them in the
Federal Register at least 30 calendar days before they take effect. The
final rules that follow were transmitted to Congress on March 23, 2007.
Explanation And Justification
I. Revised 11 CFR 111.35--Respondent Challenges to Reason To Believe
Finding or Proposed Civil Money Penalty
Revised section 111.35 sets forth the requirements for AFP
respondents' challenges to RTB findings and proposed civil money
penalties. Revised section 111.35(a) is clarified so that it applies
only to respondents that seek to challenge an RTB finding or proposed
civil money penalty.\5\ The Commission is reorganizing and clarifying
section 111.35 so that respondents may easily identify the basis for
challenges in the AFP. See revised 11 CFR 111.35(b).
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\5\ The revisions to section 111.35(a) did not alter the basic
timing requirement that a respondent must file a challenge with the
Commission within forty (40) days of when the Commission issues its
reason to believe finding. See revised 111.35(a); Admin Fines E&J,
65 FR at 31789.
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A. Revised 11 CFR 111.35(b)(1)--Changes to the ``Factual Errors''
Defense
The NPRM sought comment on proposed clarifications to the ``factual
errors'' defense and asked whether the regulation should include
examples of the types of factual errors that would suffice as grounds
for challenging an RTB finding. See NPRM, 71 FR at 71094. The comment
did not address this issue. The Commission has decided to revise
[[Page 14664]]
the rule regarding the ``factual errors'' defense as proposed in the
NPRM, except for stylistic changes. The revised rule states that the
facts alleged to be in error must be facts upon which the Commission
relied in its RTB finding. See revised 11 CFR 111.35(b)(1). Thus, a
respondent may not challenge an RTB finding based on factual errors
that are irrelevant to the Commission's actual RTB finding, such as
errors in the RTB finding regarding individual names or titles of
committee staff.
The revised rule provides two examples of the type of factual
errors that would properly support a challenge: the respondent was not
required to file the report in question, and the respondent did in fact
timely file as described in 11 CFR 100.19. See revised 11 CFR
111.35(b)(1). For example, a political committee that is not subject to
electronic filing requirements could challenge an RTB finding and
proposed civil money penalty under section 111.35(b)(1) by showing that
the paper copy was filed on time and the Commission relied on the
factual error that the committee was required instead to file
electronically. See 11 CFR 104.18(a). As referenced in the rule's
second example, Commission rules currently state that certain reports
are ``timely filed'' if they are deposited as registered or certified
mail with the U.S. Post Office, as Priority Mail or Express Mail
through the U.S. Post Office, or with an overnight delivery service to
be delivered the next business day with a postmark no later than 11:59
p.m. EST on the filing date. See 11 CFR 100.19(b). Thus, a respondent
who is not required to file electronically could challenge an RTB
finding based on evidence that it deposited the report in the proper
manner pursuant to section 100.19(b) on the filing date, even if the
Commission did not receive the report because of a delivery failure by
the U.S. Post Office or other delivery service. The Commission
emphasizes that the revisions to section 111.35(b)(1) do not create any
new ``factual errors'' defenses, but simply recognize the types of
errors that the Commission has accepted previously as a defense in the
AFP.
B. Revised 11 CFR 111.35(b)(3)--``Best Efforts'' Defense
The NPRM also sought comment on whether to replace the
``extraordinary circumstances'' defense in the prior rule with a ``best
efforts'' defense for challenging an RTB finding based upon 2 U.S.C.
432(i). See NPRM, 71 FR at 71094-95 and former 11 CFR
111.35(b)(1)(iii). The comment generally supported the idea of a ``best
efforts'' defense. The Commission has decided to adopt the Lovely
court's interpretation of 2 U.S.C. 432(i) and to incorporate a ``best
efforts'' defense into the AFP. It appears in revised 11 CFR
111.35(b)(3) and is the same as the proposed rule, except for the
changes noted below. The ``best efforts'' defense in the revised rule
completely replaces the prior ``extraordinary circumstances'' defense
because the two defenses are largely coextensive. The Commission
reiterates its policy determination, as stated in the initial
rulemaking for the AFP, that respondents' defenses in the AFP should be
limited because the complete and timely disclosure of the political
committee's financial activity is a ``cornerstone of campaign finance
law.'' See Admin Fines E&J, 65 FR at 31789.
The Lovely court recognized that the Commission could ``refine by
regulation what best efforts means in the context of submitting a
report.'' Lovely, 307 F. Supp. 2d at 300. In exercising its authority
to interpret how to incorporate a ``best efforts'' defense into the AFP
rules, the Commission is mindful of the statutory terms chosen by
Congress. As also explained by the Commission in its statement of
reasons in the Lovely case after remand, section 432(i) creates a safe
harbor for treasurers who demonstrate that best efforts have been used
to submit reports required by FECA. ``Best'' is an adjective of the
superlative degree. Therefore, best efforts requires more than ``some''
or ``good'' efforts. Section 432(i)'s use of the phrase ``best
efforts,'' instead of a ``good faith'' standard, means that an AFP
respondent cannot rely upon the state of mind of the committee's
treasurer or staff to claim this defense.\6\ Instead, the Commission's
revised rule at 11 CFR 111.35(b)(3), which sets forth the ``best
efforts'' defense, focuses on actions taken by the respondent committee
or treasurer to comply with reporting deadlines.
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\6\ See Statement of Reasons in Administrative Fines Case 549
(Oct. 4, 2005).
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The ``best efforts'' defense is described in the revised rule as a
two-part test. The AFP respondent must demonstrate that: (1) The
respondent was prevented from filing in a timely manner by ``reasonably
unforeseen circumstances that were beyond the control'' of the
respondent; and (2) the respondent filed the report in question no
later than 24 hours after the end of the reasonably unforeseen
circumstances preventing the timely filing. See revised 11 CFR
111.35(b)(3). The Commission believes this test is straightforward and
should be easy for respondents to understand and document in their
written responses. The final rule differs slightly from the proposed
rule, which would have stated that the respondent must be prevented
from filing in a timely manner by ``unforeseen'' circumstances. The
Commission is making this change to emphasize that the ``best efforts''
defense is an objective test, which uses a reasonable person standard
and does not depend upon the committee's treasurer or staff's
subjective ability to foresee a particular circumstance. The examples
included in the rule in 11 CFR 111.35(c) and (d), described below,
illustrate how this defense operates as an objective test.
Under the first part of the defense, the respondent bears the
burden of showing that the reasonably unforeseen circumstances in fact
prevented the timely and proper filing of the required report. The NPRM
requested public comment regarding whether the Commission should apply
a ``but for'' or ``contributing factor'' test for determining whether a
respondent was prevented from timely filing under the rule. See NPRM,
71 FR at 71095. The comment did not address this issue. The Commission
has decided that this rule requires a strict causal relationship
between the circumstances described in the challenge (such as a natural
disaster) and the respondent's inability to file the report timely. It
is not sufficient for reasonably unforeseen circumstances to make it
merely more difficult than usual for the respondent to file on time.
The circumstance must cause the respondent to be unable to file in a
timely and proper manner, despite the respondent attempting to use all
available methods of filing. ``Best efforts'' is a high standard set by
FECA, and the Commission reminds respondents that there are multiple
ways for a committee to file required reports properly and timely. See,
e.g., 11 CFR 100.19(b) (political committees not required to file
electronically may file on paper by hand delivery, first class,
registered, certified, Priority or Express U.S. Mail, or overnight
delivery service); 11 CFR 104.18 (mandatory electronic filings accepted
through the Commission's filing system via internet, modem, or by
submission of diskette or CD). If the respondent is prevented from
using one method of filing by a problem (such as a technical problem
with the Commission's modems), the respondent cannot claim the ``best
efforts'' defense if it did not attempt to use other available methods
to file timely (such as
[[Page 14665]]
submission on a diskette or CD).\7\ Therefore, to satisfy the ``best
efforts'' defense, a respondent must demonstrate that it attempted to
use all available methods to file, but that timely filing by each
method was prevented by the reasonably unforeseen circumstances beyond
the control of the respondent.
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\7\ The Commission's guidance and instructions to political
committees required to file electronically makes clear that if a
report is successfully uploaded and accepted by the Commission, a
confirmation receipt (including a validation number) is immediately
sent to the committee via e-mail, fax or both. If a committee does
not receive such a receipt, the committee should not assume the
filing was received and should contact the Commission's technical
support personnel. See, e.g., ``Frequently Asked Questions About
Electronic Filing,'' available at https://www.fec.gov/support/faq_
filing.shtml (last visited Mar. 16, 2007); ``Common Electronic
Filing Mistakes,'' available at https://www.fec.gov/elecfil/
mistakes.shtml (last visited Mar. 16, 2007).
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The direct causal link between the reasonably unforeseen
circumstances and the ability of the respondent to file the report also
underlies the second part of the test for the ``best efforts'' defense.
A respondent must show that the report was properly filed no later than
24 hours after the resolution of the circumstances preventing the
timely filing. When the situation (such as a problem with Commission
computers) is resolved, the Act's high standard of ``best efforts''
requires that the respondent file the report within a reasonably short
period of time. The NPRM requested public comment regarding whether the
24-hour period in the proposed rule was appropriate for the ``best
efforts'' defense. See NPRM, 71 FR at 71095. The comment did not
address this issue. The Commission has determined that a 24-hour period
best serves the interest in disclosure of the information as soon as
practicable after the circumstances preventing the timely disclosure
are resolved.
C. Examples of Circumstances Under the ``Best Efforts'' Defense
To provide further guidance to respondents regarding the scope of
the ``best efforts'' defense, the revised rule includes examples of
circumstances that will be considered ``reasonably unforeseen and
beyond the control of the respondent,'' and examples of circumstances
that will not be considered ``reasonably unforeseen and beyond the
control of the respondent.'' See revised 11 CFR 111.35(c) and (d). The
comment argued that the rule should not be limited to examples of
defenses that would be unacceptable under the new ``best efforts''
defense, but should also include examples of defenses that would meet
the new defense to provide guidance to committees and treasurers. The
revised rule provides such illustrations. The examples of defenses in
the revised rule are the same as proposed in the NPRM, except as noted
otherwise below. Both sets of examples in revised section 111.35(c) and
(d) are non-exhaustive lists and should not be read to override the
general requirements of the defense in revised section 111.35(b)(3) as
discussed above.
1. Revised 11 CFR 111.35(c)--Reasonably Unforeseen Circumstances Beyond
Respondents' Control
Revised section 111.35(c) provides three examples of circumstances
that the Commission will consider ``reasonably unforeseen and beyond
the control'' of the respondent under a ``best efforts'' defense. The
first example is that a failure of Commission computers or Commission-
provided software, despite the respondent seeking technical assistance,
caused the respondent's untimely electronic filing. See revised 11 CFR
111.35(c)(1). This example is similar to the example in the prior
rules, in which a failure of Commission computers satisfied the
``extraordinary circumstances'' defense. See former 11 CFR
111.35(b)(4)(iv); Admin Fines E&J, 65 FR at 31790 (``Any failure of the
Commission's system that prevents committees from filing their reports
when due would be recognized as an extraordinary circumstance beyond
the respondents' control.'').\8\ The revised rule differs from the
proposed rule by including the respondent's seeking technical
assistance as part of the example. Consistent with the prior defense
based on Commission computer failures, the revised example clarifies
that political committees must use all Commission resources available
to aid with electronic filing, such as technical support manuals and
personnel, before a respondent will be considered ``prevented'' from
timely filing by Commission computer or software failures. Thus, any
failure of Commission computers, servers, filing system or Commission-
provided software of sufficient severity that it results in a
respondent being unable to file, despite the respondent seeking
assistance from the Commission's technical support personnel, is a
reasonably unforeseen circumstance beyond the respondent's control.
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\8\ In order to satisfy the prior ``extraordinary
circumstances'' defense, the failure of Commission computers had to
last at least 48 hours. See former 11 CFR 111.35(b)(1)(iii). The new
``best efforts'' defense does not contain any minimum time period
for the ``reasonably unforeseen circumstances that were beyond the
control'' of the respondent. See revised 11 CFR 111.35(b)(3).
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The second example in revised section 111.35(c)(2) is a
``widespread disruption of information transmissions over the Internet
not caused by any failure of the Commission's or respondent's computer
systems or Internet service provider.'' This example covers
circumstances in which technological problems at a third-party hub or
information transfer location, rather than the Commission's or
respondent's computer systems, caused widespread communication failures
on the Internet that left the respondent unable to send, or the
Commission unable to receive, an electronically filed report. This
failure to transmit information must occur irrespective of any failures
of the Commission's or respondent's computer systems or Internet
service providers. If a respondent demonstrates such a widespread
disruption of information transmissions occurred, the Commission will
consider it ``reasonably unforeseen circumstances that were beyond the
control'' of the respondent. As with all the examples in revised
section 111.35(c)(2), the respondent bears the burden of showing that
these reasonably unforeseen circumstances in fact prevented the
respondent from filing timely, despite attempts to file by any
available alternative methods permitted under Commission
regulations.\9\ This example has been refined from the proposed rule to
clarify the types of transmission failures contemplated.
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\9\ The Commission's electronic filing manuals detail step-by-
step instructions for the various methods of acceptable electronic
filing via the Internet, modem, or by saving the report to a
diskette or CD. See, e.g., ``FECFile User Manual for Candidate
Committees,'' available at https://www.fec.gov/elecfil/authorized_
manual/manual.shtml (last visited Mar. 16, 2007).
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The final example in the rule states that a ``[s]evere weather or
other disaster-related incident'' is a reasonably unforeseen
circumstance beyond the control of the respondent. See revised 11 CFR
111.35(c)(3). Under the prior rule, the Commission deemed certain
weather conditions (lasting more than 48 hours) met the ``extraordinary
circumstances'' test, explaining that ``natural disasters where a
committee's office is located in the disaster area and the committee
cannot timely file a report because of lack of electricity or flooding
or destruction of committee records'' would satisfy the defense. See
previous 11 CFR 111.35(b)(1)(iii); Admin Fines E&J, 65 FR at 31790. The
revised rule permits such severe weather-related events occurring at
the respondent's or Commission's location
[[Page 14666]]
to form the basis for a ``best efforts'' defense. The Commission is not
defining with specificity the level of severity for weather or other
disaster-related incidents in revised section 111.35(c)(3) because a
respondent's challenge must show that the weather or disaster-related
incident in fact prevented the respondent from filing timely. Given
that the effects upon the respondent of each weather or disaster-
related incident will vary, the Commission will evaluate the particular
facts contained in individual challenges, instead of mandating such
details in a rule of general application.
2. Revised 11 CFR 111.35(d)--Circumstances That Are Not Reasonably
Unforeseen or Beyond Respondents' Control
Revised section 111.35(d) includes a non-exhaustive list of
circumstances that are not considered ``reasonably unforeseen and
beyond the control'' of the respondent, and will not support a ``best
efforts'' finding. See revised 11 CFR 111.35(d)(1) through (6). All but
two of these examples are drawn from the list of events that did not
constitute ``extraordinary circumstances'' under the Commission's prior
rule: Negligence; delays caused by committee vendors or contractors;
illness, inexperience or unavailability (including death) of the
treasurer or other staff; and committee computer, software or Internet
service provider failures. Compare revised 11 CFR 111.35(d)(1) through
(4) with former 11 CFR 111.35(b)(4). One example concerns Internet
service provider failures. See revised 11 CFR 111.35(d)(4). The
proposed rule described this example as failures of committee computers
or software. The final rule also includes Internet service provider
failures. Because many Internet service providers are available, a
failure limited to one provider is not a defense for late filing or not
filing. The revised rule adds two examples to this list based upon the
Commission's experience with respondent challenges in the AFP: A
failure to know filing dates and a failure to use Commission software
properly. See revised 11 CFR 111.35(d)(5) and (6).
Under the revised rule, a respondent's challenge will not succeed
if its ``best efforts'' defense is based on any of these circumstances
as the cause of the failure to file timely. The Commission notes that
the examples in revised section 111.35(d) are not exhaustive, but are
illustrative of the types of situations that are not reasonably
unforeseen and beyond the respondent's control. The Commission strongly
encourages all political committees to name assistant treasurers and
have additional staff available so that their ability to file reports
on time will not be compromised due to the unavailability or
inexperience of the treasurer or other staff. See Final Rules on
Administrative Fines, 68 FR 12572, 12573 (Mar. 17, 2003) (adding staff
``inexperience'' and ``unavailability'' as examples of circumstances
that will not be considered ``extraordinary'' under former 11 CFR
111.35(b)(4)(iii)).
The Commission's implementation of the ``best efforts'' defense set
forth in this revised rule serves as a proxy for the factual
investigation of a respondent's internal practices regarding filing of
reports that would ordinarily be necessary to determine whether such
practices were sufficient to constitute best efforts. The comment
argued that the Commission should conduct a full examination of the
business models and management procedures of each committee to
determine whether the committee implemented proper back-up systems and
other measures reflecting management ``best practices'' in the relevant
industry to reduce the risk of a late filing. However, such an
investigation would be resource-intensive for the Commission,
burdensome for the respondent, and inappropriate in the AFP, which is a
streamlined procedure created by Congress to alleviate the Commission's
enforcement burden for routine and minor filing violations. Absent
reasonably unforeseen circumstances that were beyond the control of the
respondent, the Commission sees no reason why political committees
cannot file reports on time.\10\ Thus, the Commission's implementation
of the ``best efforts'' defense appropriately incorporates a statutory
``best efforts'' standard, while taking into account the unique
streamlined nature of the AFP.
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\10\ See Admin Fines E&J, 65 FR at 31790 (stating that political
committees should be aware of their reporting duties and noting that
the Commission makes efforts to send reminders of deadlines and
political committees have ample time from the end of the reporting
period to the filing deadline to prepare and file reports).
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D. Revised 11 CFR 111.35(e)--Factual Basis for Challenge
The Commission is adding paragraph (e) to 11 CFR 111.35 to require
that the respondent's written response must detail the factual basis
supporting its challenge. Furthermore, respondents must provide
supporting documentation for their challenges. The comment did not
address this provision, which is identical to the proposed rule.
The three defenses specified in sections 111.35(b)(1) through (3)
(factual error, miscalculation of civil money penalty, and best
efforts) are the only permissible grounds for challenging the
Commission's RTB finding or proposed civil money penalty, and a
respondent's written response must be based on one of these grounds to
be considered by the reviewing officer and the Commission. Respondents
bear the burden of showing that a permissible defense is satisfied.\11\
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\11\ The Commission considers affidavits more persuasive
evidence than unsworn statements submitted in support of the
respondent's challenge.
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II. Revised 11 CFR 111.37--Commission Review of Respondent's Challenge
and Reviewing Officer's Recommendation
A. Revised 11 CFR 111.37(b)--Commission Finding That No Violation Has
Occurred
Revised section 111.37 sets forth procedures regarding the
Commission's final determination for AFP matters upon receipt of the
respondent's challenge and the reviewing officer's recommendation. See
revised 11 CFR 111.37(a) through (d). The NPRM sought comment on
proposed revisions to section 111.37(b) regarding Commission
determinations that no violation has occurred where the RTB finding is
based on a factual error, and where the respondent demonstrated it used
best efforts to file timely. See NPRM, 71 FR at 71095. The comment did
not address these rules. The Commission is revising section 111.37(b)
to clarify that the existence of factual errors or a finding of best
efforts are complete defenses. Thus, if one of these defenses is
satisfied, the Commission will conclude that no violation of FECA has
occurred. Please note that the defense based on an incorrect basis for
calculating the civil money penalty (section 111.35(b)(2)) is a defense
only as to the amount of the civil money penalty and does not serve as
a basis for a finding of no violation under the AFP.
B. Revised 11 CFR 111.37(d)--Commission Statement of Reasons in AFP
Final Determinations
The NPRM sought comment on proposed revisions to section 111.37(d)
to make clear that the reasons for the reviewing officer's
recommendation regarding the challenge, unless modified or rejected by
the Commission, will serve as the Commission's statement of reasons
regarding the final determination in the AFP matter.\12\ See NPRM, 71
FR at 71095. This proposed
[[Page 14667]]
revision addresses the Lovely court's concerns that it was unclear what
constituted the statement of reasons for the Commission's final
determination in that matter. The comment did not address this issue.
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\12\ These revisions do not affect any statements of reasons the
Commissioners may issue in enforcement matters under review.
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The Commission is revising section 111.37(d) to indicate that,
unless otherwise indicated by the Commission, the statement of reasons
for the Commission's final determination in an AFP matter consists of
the reasons provided by the reviewing officer for the recommendation,
if approved by the Commission. See Lovely, 307 F. Supp. 2d at 301
(stating that the Commission's ``adoption of a reviewing officer's
recommendation may suffice in some circumstances''). Statements setting
forth additional or different reasons may also be issued. The revised
rule also recognizes that the Commission may modify or reject the
reviewing officer's recommendation in whole or in part. See 11 CFR
111.37(d). In such cases, the Commission will indicate the grounds for
its action and it or individual Commissioners may issue one or more
statements of reasons.
Former section 111.37(d) provided that the Commission could
determine that a violation of 2 U.S.C. 434(a) had occurred, but waive
the civil money penalty because the respondent demonstrated the
existence of ``extraordinary circumstances'' under former section
111.35(b)(1)(iii). See former 11 CFR 111.37(d). As discussed above, the
Commission is removing the ``extraordinary circumstances'' defense and
replacing it with a ``best efforts'' defense in revised section
111.35(b)(3). Under 2 U.S.C. 432(i), if the Commission determines that
the treasurer used best efforts in compliance with this rule, there is
no violation of FECA and the Commission will so notify the respondent
pursuant to revised section 111.37(b). See revised 11 CFR 111.37(b).
Therefore, the Commission need not retain the former section 111.37(d).
Certification of No Effect Pursuant to 5 U.S.C. 605(b) (Regulatory
Flexibility Act)
The Commission certifies that the attached final rules will not
have a significant economic impact on a substantial number of small
entities. The basis for this certification is that any individuals and
not-for-profit entities affected by these rules are not ``small
entities'' under 5 U.S.C. 601(6). The definition of ``small entity''
does not include individuals, and classifies a not-for-profit
enterprise as a ``small organization'' if it is independently owned and
operated and not dominant in its field. 5 U.S.C. 601(4). The rules
apply to all types of political committees and their treasurers. State
political party committees are not independently owned and operated
because they are not financed and controlled by a small identifiable
group of individuals, and they are affiliated with the larger national
political party organizations. In addition, the State political party
committees representing the Democratic and Republican parties have a
major controlling influence within the political arena of their State
and are thus dominant in their field. District and local party
committees are generally considered affiliated with the State
committees and need not be considered separately. To the extent that
any State party committees representing minor political parties or any
other political committees might be considered ``small organizations,''
the number that would be affected by this rule is not substantial.
Furthermore, any separate segregated funds affected by these rules
are not-for-profit political committees that do not meet the definition
of ``small organization'' because they are financed by a combination of
individual contributions and financial support for certain expenses
from corporations, labor organizations, membership organizations, or
trade associations, and therefore are not independently owned and
operated. Most of the other political committees affected by these
rules are not-for-profit committees that do not meet the definition of
``small organization.'' Most political committees are not independently
owned and operated because they are not financed by a small
identifiable group of individuals. Most political committees rely on
contributions from a large number of individuals to fund the
committees' operations and activities.
The final rules also do not impose any additional restrictions or
increase the costs of compliance for respondents within the AFP.
Instead, the final rules provide additional defenses available to
political committees and their treasurers, thereby potentially
increasing the number of situations in which the Commission assesses no
civil money penalty. Moreover, these rules apply only in the AFP, where
penalties are proportionate to the amount of a political committee's
financial activity. Any political committee meeting the definition of
``small entity'' would be subject to lower fines than larger committees
with more financial activity. Therefore, the final rules will not have
a significant economic impact on a substantial number of small
entities.
List of Subjects in 11 CFR Part 111
Administrative practice and procedures, Elections, Law enforcement.
0
For the reasons set out in the preamble, the Federal Election
Commission is amending subchapter A of chapter I of Title 11 of the
Code of Federal Regulations as follows:
PART 111--COMPLIANCE PROCEDURE (2 U.S.C. 437g, 437d(a))
0
1. The authority citation for part 111 is revised to read as follows:
Authority: 2 U.S.C. 432(i), 437g, 437d(a), 438(a)(8); 28 U.S.C.
2461 nt.
0
2. Section 111.35 is revised to read as follows:
Sec. 111.35 If the respondent decides to challenge the alleged
violation or proposed civil money penalty, what should the respondent
do?
(a) To challenge a reason to believe finding or proposed civil
money penalty, the respondent must submit a written response to the
Commission within forty (40) days of the Commission's reason to believe
finding.
(b) The respondent's written response must assert at least one of
the following grounds for challenging the reason to believe finding or
proposed civil money penalty:
(1) The Commission's reason to believe finding is based on a
factual error including, but not limited to, the committee was not
required to file the report, or the committee timely filed the report
in accordance with 11 CFR 100.19;
(2) The Commission improperly calculated the civil money penalty;
or
(3) The respondent used best efforts to file in a timely manner in
that:
(i) The respondent was prevented from filing in a timely manner by
reasonably unforeseen circumstances that were beyond the control of the
respondent; and
(ii) The respondent filed no later than 24 hours after the end of
these circumstances.
(c) Circumstances that will be considered reasonably unforeseen and
beyond the control of respondent include, but are not limited to:
(1) A failure of Commission computers or Commission-provided
software despite the respondent seeking technical assistance from
Commission personnel and resources;
(2) A widespread disruption of information transmissions over the
Internet not caused by any failure of the Commission's or respondent's
computer systems or Internet service provider; and
[[Page 14668]]
(3) Severe weather or other disaster-related incident.
(d) Circumstances that will not be considered reasonably unforeseen
and beyond the control of respondent include, but are not limited to:
(1) Negligence;
(2) Delays caused by committee vendors or contractors;
(3) Illness, inexperience, or unavailability of the treasurer or
other staff;
(4) Committee computer, software or Internet service provider
failures;
(5) A committee's failure to know filing dates; and
(6) A committee's failure to use filing software properly.
(e) Respondent's written response must detail the factual basis
supporting its challenge and include supporting documentation.
0
3. In section 111.37, paragraphs (b) and (d) are revised to read as
follows:
Sec. 111.37 What will the Commission do once it receives the
respondent's written response and the reviewing officer's
recommendation?
* * * * *
(b) If the Commission, after reviewing the reason to believe
finding, the respondent's written response, and the reviewing officer's
written recommendation, determines by an affirmative vote of at least
four (4) of its members, that no violation has occurred (either because
the Commission had based its reason to believe finding on a factual
error or because the respondent used best efforts to file in a timely
manner) or otherwise terminates its proceedings, the Commission shall
authorize the reviewing officer to notify the respondent by letter of
its final determination.
* * * * *
(d) When the Commission makes a final determination under this
section, the statement of reasons for the Commission action will,
unless otherwise indicated by the Commission, consist of the reasons
provided by the reviewing officer for the recommendation, if approved
by the Commission, although statements setting forth additional or
different reasons may also be issued. If the reviewing officer's
recommendation is modified or not approved, the Commission will
indicate the grounds for its action and one or more statements of
reasons may be issued.
Dated: March 22, 2007.
Robert D. Lenhard,
Chairman, Federal Election Commission.
[FR Doc. E7-5730 Filed 3-28-07; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 6715-01-P