Statement of Policy Regarding Treasurers' Best Efforts To Obtain, Maintain, and Submit Information as Required by the Federal Election Campaign Act, 31438-31440 [E7-10997]
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Federal Register / Vol. 72, No. 109 / Thursday, June 7, 2007 / Rules and Regulations
Title—7 Agriculture
PART 432—CONTRACT FINANCING
PART 24—[Removed and reserved]
I
8. Revise the authority citation for part
432 to read as follows:
1. Remove and reserve part 24,
consisting of §§ 24.1 through 24.21.
I
Authority: 40 U.S.C. 121, 41 U.S.C. 421.
I
PART 400—GENERAL
ADMINISTRATIVE REGULATIONS
§ 432.616
2. Revise the authority citation for part
400 to read as follows:
I
Authority: 40 U.S.C. 121, 41 U.S.C. 421.
3. Amend § 400.169 by revising the
last sentence of paragraph (c) and
paragraph (d) to read as follows:
I
§ 400.169
9. Revise § 432.616 to read as follows:
Compromise Actions.
Compromise of a debt within the
proceedings under appeal to the
Civilian Board of Contract Appeals is
the responsibility of the contracting
officer.
PART 433—PROTESTS, DISPUTES
AND APPEALS
Disputes.
*
*
*
*
*
(c) * * * Such determinations will
not be appealable to the Civilian Board
of Contract Appeals.
(d) Appealable final administrative
determinations of the Corporation under
paragraph (a) or (b) of this section may
be appealed to the Civilian Board of
Contract Appeals in accordance with 48
CFR part 6102.
Title 36—Parks, Forests, and Public
Property
PART 223—SALE AND DISPOSAL OF
NATIONAL FOREST SYSTEM TIMBER
4. The authority citation for part 223
continues to read as follows:
I
10. Revise the authority citation for
part 433 to read as follows:
I
Authority: 40 U.S.C. 121, 41 U.S.C. 421.
11. Revise § 433.203–70 to read as
follows:
I
§ 433.203–70
Appeals.
Civilian Board of Contract
The organization, jurisdiction, and
functions of the Civilian Board of
Contract Appeals, together with its
Rules of Procedure, are set out in 48
CFR part 6101.
Done in Washington, DC, this 25th day of
May 2007.
Mike Johanns,
Secretary of Agriculture.
[FR Doc. 07–2702 Filed 6–6–07; 8:45 am]
Authority: 90 Stat. 2958, 16 U.S.C. 472a; 98
Stat. 2213, 16 U.S.C. 618, 104 Stat. 714–726,
16 U.S.C. 620–620j; unless otherwise noted.
BILLING CODE 3410–01–M
5. Amend § 223.138 by removing
paragraph (b)(8) and revising paragraphs
(b)(7)(i)(C) and (D) and by removing
paragraph (b)(7)(i)(E) to read as follows:
FEDERAL ELECTION COMMISSION
§ 223.138
Statement of Policy Regarding
Treasurers’ Best Efforts To Obtain,
Maintain, and Submit Information as
Required by the Federal Election
Campaign Act
I
Procedures for Debarment.
*
*
*
*
*
(b) * * *
(7) * * *
(i) * * *
(C) State the period of debarment,
including effective dates (see § 223.139);
and
(D) Specify any limitations on the
terms of the debarment.
*
*
*
*
*
Title 48—Federal Acquisition
Regulations System, chapter 4,
Department of Agriculture.
rwilkins on PROD1PC63 with RULES
PART 409—CONTRACTOR
QUALIFICATIONS
6. Revise the authority citation for part
409 to read as follows:
I
Authority: 40 U.S.C. 121, 41 U.S.C. 421.
I
7. Remove § 409.470.
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11 CFR Part 104
[Notice 2007–13]
Federal Election Commission.
Statement of Policy.
AGENCY:
ACTION:
SUMMARY: The Federal Election
Commission (the ‘‘Commission’’) is
issuing a Policy Statement to clarify its
enforcement policy with respect to the
circumstances under which it intends to
consider a political committee and its
treasurer to be in compliance with the
recordkeeping and reporting
requirements of the Federal Election
Campaign Act, as amended (‘‘FECA’’).
Section 432(i) of FECA provides that
when the treasurer of a political
committee demonstrates that best efforts
were used to obtain, maintain, and
submit the information required by
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FECA, any report or records of such
committee shall be considered in
compliance with FECA or the statutes
governing the public financing of
Presidential candidates. In the past, the
Commission has interpreted this section
to apply only to a treasurer’s efforts to
obtain required information from
contributors to a political committee,
and not to maintaining information or to
submitting reports. However, the district
court in Lovely v. FEC, 307 F. Supp. 2d
294 (D. Mass. 2004), held that the
Commission should consider whether a
treasurer used best efforts under FECA
with regard to efforts made to submit a
report in a timely manner. This Policy
Statement makes clear that the
Commission intends to apply FECA’s
best efforts provision to treasurers’ and
committees’ efforts to obtain, maintain,
and submit information and records to
the Commission consistent with the
holding of the Federal court in Lovely.
Further information is provided in the
supplementary information that follows.
DATES: Effective Date: June 7, 2007.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Mr.
Ron B. Katwan, 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:
I. Background
A. Statutory and Regulatory Provisions
FECA states the ‘‘best efforts defense’’
in 2 U.S.C. 432(i) as follows:
When 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 this Act or chapter 95 or chapter 96 of
title 26.
The Commission implemented this
provision in 11 CFR 104.7(a) with
regulatory language virtually identical
to the statutory provision:
When the treasurer of a political committee
shows that best efforts have been used to
obtain, maintain and submit the information
required by the Act for the political
committee, any report of such committee
shall be considered in compliance with the
Act.
Paragraph (b) of 11 CFR 104.7
specifies the actions that treasurers of a
political committee must take to
demonstrate that they have exercised
best efforts to obtain and report the
‘‘identification’’ of each person whose
contribution(s) to the political
committee and its affiliated political
committees aggregate in excess of $200
in a calendar year (or in an election
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Federal Register / Vol. 72, No. 109 / Thursday, June 7, 2007 / Rules and Regulations
cycle in the case of an authorized
committee).1 ‘‘Identification’’ includes
the person’s full name, mailing address,
occupation, and name of employer. See
11 CFR 100.12.
Both the language of FECA and the
Commission’s regulation at 11 CFR
104.7(a) apply the best efforts defense
broadly to efforts by treasurers to
‘‘obtain, maintain and submit’’ the
information required to be disclosed by
FECA. In past enforcement actions,
however, the Commission has
interpreted this statutory and regulatory
language to apply only to efforts to
‘‘obtain’’ contributor information.2 This
interpretation draws from an example
contained in the provision’s legislative
history. See H.R. Rep. No. 96–422, at 14
(1979) (‘‘One illustration of the
application of this [best efforts] test is
the current requirement for a committee
to report the occupation and principal
place of business of individual
contributors who give in excess of
$100’’).
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B. The Lovely Decision
In Lovely, a political committee
challenged an administrative fine the
1 The U.S. Court of Appeals for the District of
Columbia Circuit referred to 11 CFR 104.7(b) as a
‘‘Commission regulation interpreting what political
committees must do under [FECA] to demonstrate
that they have exercised their ‘best efforts’ to
encourage donors to disclose certain personally
identifying information.’’ Republican Nat’l Comm.
v. FEC, 76 F.3d 400, 403 (D.C. Cir. 1996).
2 In 1980, the Commission explained that ‘‘[i]n
determining whether or not a committee has
exercised ‘best efforts,’ the Commission’s primary
focus will be on the system established by the
committee for obtaining disclosure information.’’
Amendments to Federal Election Campaign Act of
1971; Regulations Transmitted to Congress, 45 FR
15080, 15086 (Mar. 7, 1980) (emphasis added). In
1993, the Commission referred to ‘‘the requirement
of [FECA] that treasurers of political committees
exercise best efforts to obtain, maintain and report
the complete identification of each contributor
whose contributions aggregate more than $200 per
calendar year.’’ Final Rule on Recordkeeping and
Reporting by Political Committees: Best Efforts, 58
FR 57725, 57725 (Oct. 27, 1993). And in 1997, the
Commission stated that ‘‘[t]reasurers of political
committees must be able to show they have
exercised their best efforts to obtain, maintain and
report [contributor identification information].’’
Final Rule on Recordkeeping and Reporting by
Political Committees: Best Efforts, 62 FR 23335,
23335 (Apr. 30, 1997). In 2003, the Commission
asserted in the Lovely litigation: ‘‘the Commission
has long interpreted the best efforts provision as
creating a limited safe harbor regarding committees’
obligations to report substantive information that
may be beyond their ability to obtain.’’ FEC
Supplemental Brief at 1, Lovely (Civil Action No.
02–12496–PBS). Furthermore, ‘‘when Congress
originally enacted the ‘best efforts’ provision, it
could not have been more clear that it was creating
a limited defense regarding the inability to obtain
specific information that was supposed to be
disclosed, not the failure to file reports on time.’’
Id. at 12–13. The Lovely court summarized the
Commission’s argument: ‘‘The FEC in its briefing
claims that it limits the reach of the best efforts
statute to best efforts to ‘obtain’ contributor
information.’’ Lovely, 307 F. Supp. 2d at 300.
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Commission had assessed for failing to
file timely a report. The committee
argued that it had made best efforts to
file the report and that this constituted
a complete defense to the fine. The
court concluded that the plain language
of the Act requires the Commission to
entertain a best efforts defense in the
Administrative Fine Program (‘‘AFP’’),
and that it was unclear from the record
if the Commission had done so.
In so holding, the court drew on the
legislative history of the best efforts
provision, and specifically noted the
1979 amendments to FECA that made
the best efforts defense ‘‘applicable to
the entirety of FECA, rather than merely
to one subsection.’’ Lovely, 307 F. Supp.
2d at 299. The court quoted the
provision’s legislative history:
The best efforts test is specifically made
applicable to recordkeeping and reporting
requirements in both Title 2 and Title 26. The
test of whether a committee has complied
with the statutory requirements is whether its
treasurer has exercised his or her best efforts
to obtain, maintain, and submit the
information required by the Act. If the
treasurer has exercised his or her best efforts,
the committee is in compliance. Accordingly,
the application of the best efforts test is
central to the enforcement of the
recordkeeping and reporting provisions of the
Act. It is the opinion of the Committee that
the Commission has not adequately
incorporated the best efforts test into its
administration procedures, such as the
systematic review of reports.
Id. (emphasis added) (quoting H.R. Rep.
No. 96–422, at 14 (1979), reprinted in
1979 U.S.C.C.A.N. 2860, 2873).
After remand of the Lovely case, the
Commission acknowledged in its
Statement of Reasons that ‘‘[t]he Court
held that FECA’s ‘best efforts’ provision
. . . requires the Commission to
consider whether a committee’s
treasurer exercised best efforts to submit
timely disclosure reports.’’ Statement of
Reasons in Administrative Fines Case
#549 at 1 (Oct. 4, 2005), available at
https://www.fec.gov/law/
law_rulemakings.shtml under the
heading ‘‘Best Efforts in Administrative
Fine Challenges.’’ (‘‘Lovely Statement of
Reasons’’). Upon further review, the
Commission determined that the
committee’s treasurer had not made best
efforts in filing the report in question
and assessed a civil money penalty. Id.
at 5.
C. Proposed Policy Statement
The Commission sought public
comment on a Proposed Statement of
Policy that would clarify the
Commission’s current enforcement
practice to consider whether the
treasurer and committee made best
efforts to obtain, maintain or submit the
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31439
required information under 11 CFR
104.7(a). 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
received two comments, which are
available at https://www.fec.gov/law/
policy.shtml under the heading ‘‘Best
Efforts.’’ 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. The
comment also suggested that the Policy
Statement provide guidance to political
committees and treasurers regarding
what conduct would qualify under the
best efforts defense, and not rely solely
on examples of conduct that would not
qualify under the defense. The other
comment was not relevant to this Policy
Statement.
II. Policy Regarding the Best Efforts
Defense
Although the court decision in Lovely
only concerned permissible defenses
within the AFP, the Commission has
decided to adopt the court’s
interpretation of the best efforts defense
with regard to other enforcement
matters. While the Commission’s
enforcement practices formerly reflected
the view that the best efforts defense
was limited to obtaining certain
contributor identification information
(see note 2 above) the Commission
recognizes that this narrow application
of the defense in previous enforcement
matters derives from a single example of
the defense’s application in its 1979
legislative history.3 In light of these
considerations, the Commission hereby
notifies the public and the regulated
community through this Policy
Statement that henceforth it intends to
apply the best efforts defense of 2 U.S.C.
432(i), as promulgated at 11 CFR 104.7,
not only to efforts made to obtain
contributor information as currently set
forth in section 104.7(b),4 but also to
3 A respondent’s assertion in an enforcement
matter that best efforts were made to maintain and/
or submit required information was formerly
considered by the Commission to be a mitigating
factor, but not an outright defense to an alleged
violation of the recordkeeping and reporting
requirements.
4 As stated above, the standards for determining
whether the best efforts defense is applicable in the
context of obtaining specific contributor
information are set forth at current 11 CFR 104.7(b).
This Policy Statement does not affect or modify
those standards.
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efforts made to obtain other information,
to maintain all information required by
the statute, and to submit required
information on disclosure reports.
This Policy Statement does not affect
the Commission’s AFP, but applies only
to matters in the Commission’s
traditional enforcement and audit
programs, and in the Alternative
Dispute Resolution program (‘‘ADR’’).
The Commission recently completed a
rulemaking adding a best efforts defense
to the enumerated defenses available in
the AFP. See Final Rules for Best Efforts
in Administrative Fines Challenges, 72
FR 14662 (Mar. 29, 2007). In that
rulemaking, the Commission
incorporated the statutory best efforts
standard, while taking into account the
unique streamlined nature of the AFP.
See id. at 14666.
The Commission considers best
efforts to be ‘‘a standard that has
diligence as its essence.’’ E. Allan
Farnsworth, On Trying to Keep One’s
Promises: The Duty of Best Efforts in
Contract Law, 46 U. Pitt. L. Rev. 1, 8
(1984). As the Commission explained in
its Lovely Statement of Reasons at 2:
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Section 432(i) creates a safe harbor for
treasurers who ‘‘show[] that best efforts’’
have been made to report the information
required to be reported by the Act. ‘‘Best’’ is
an adjective of the superlative degree. ‘‘Best
efforts’’ must therefore require more than
‘‘some’’ or ‘‘good’’ efforts. Congress’s choice
of a ‘‘best efforts’’ standard, rather than a
‘‘good faith’’ standard, suggests that a
treasurer cannot rely upon his or her
earnestness or state of mind to gain the
shelter of Section 432(i)’s safe harbor. Rather,
a treasurer has the burden of showing that
the actions taken—the efforts he or she made
to comply with applicable reporting
deadlines—meet the statute’s demanding
benchmark.
With respect to 11 CFR 104.7(a), the
Commission intends to consider a
committee’s affirmative steps to keep
adequate records and make accurate
reports, as well as the reasons for its
failure to obtain, maintain, or submit
information properly. The Commission
generally intends to consider the
following: (1) The actions taken, or
systems implemented, by the committee
to ensure that required information is
obtained, maintained, and submitted;
(2) the cause of the failure to obtain,
maintain, or submit the information or
reports at issue; and (3) the specific
efforts of the committee to obtain,
maintain, and submit the information or
reports at issue. This general policy
does not modify other guidance and
policy standards issued by the
Commission addressing specific
circumstances, such as the Internal
Controls for Political Committees, and
Policy Statement Regarding Safe Harbor
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for Misreporting Due to Embezzlement,
72 FR 16695 (Apr. 5, 2007), both
available at https://www.fec.gov/law/
policy.shtml.
The Commission will generally
conclude that a committee has shown
best efforts if the committee establishes
the following:
• At the time of its failure, the
committee took relevant precautions
such as double checking recordkeeping
entries, regular reconciliation of
committee records with bank
statements, and regular backup of all
electronic files;
• The committee had trained staff
responsible for obtaining, maintaining,
and submitting campaign finance
information in the requirements of the
Act as well as the committee’s
procedures, recordkeeping systems, and
filing systems;
• The failure was a result of
reasonably unforeseen circumstances
beyond the control of the committee,
such as a failure of Commission
computers or Commission-provided
software; severe weather or other
disaster-related incidents; a widespread
disruption of information transmission
over the Internet not caused by any
failure of the committee’s computer
systems or Internet service provider; or
delivery failures caused by mail/courier
services such as U.S. Postal Service or
Federal Express; and
• Upon discovering the failure, the
committee promptly took all reasonable
additional steps to expeditiously file
any unfiled reports and correct any
inaccurate reports.
In contrast, the Commission will
generally conclude that a committee has
not met the best efforts standard if the
committee’s failure to obtain, maintain,
or submit information or reports is due
to any of the following:
• Unavailability, inexperience,
illness, negligence or error of committee
staff, agents, counsel or connected
organization(s);
• The failure of a committee’s
computer system;
• Delays caused by committee
vendors or contractors;
• A committee’s failure to know or
understand the recordkeeping and filing
requirements of the Act, or the Act’s
filing dates; or
• A committee’s failure to use
Commission-or vendor-provided
software properly.
Under this policy, the Commission
intends to consider the best efforts of a
committee under section 432(i) when
reviewing all violations of the
recordkeeping and reporting
requirements of FECA, whether arising
in its traditional enforcement docket
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(Matters Under Review), audits, or the
ADR Program. The best efforts standard
is an affirmative defense and the burden
rests with the political committee and
its treasurer to present evidence
sufficient to demonstrate that best
efforts were made. The Commission
does not intend to consider the best
efforts defense in any enforcement or
ADR matter, or in an audit unless a
respondent or audited committee asserts
the facts that form the basis of that
defense.
Effective as of this date, the
Commission intends to apply the best
efforts standard to all matters currently
before the Commission in which a
respondent has already asserted such a
defense, and any matters in the future
involving treasurers’ and political
committees’ obligation to obtain,
maintain, and submit information or
reports. When treasurers make a
sufficient showing of best efforts, the
treasurers or committees shall be
considered in compliance with FECA.
The above provides general guidance
concerning the applicability of the
Commission’s best efforts defense and
announces the general course of action
that the Commission intends to follow.
This Policy Statement sets forth the
Commission’s intentions concerning the
exercise of its discretion in its
enforcement and audit programs.
However, the Commission retains that
discretion and will exercise it as
appropriate with respect to the facts and
circumstances of each matter or audit it
considers. Consequently, this Policy
Statement does not bind the
Commission or any member of the
general public. As such, it does not
constitute an agency regulation
requiring notice of proposed
rulemaking, opportunities for public
participation, prior publication, and
delay in effective date under 5 U.S.C.
553 of the Administrative Procedure Act
(‘‘APA’’). The provisions of the
Regulatory Flexibility Act, which apply
when notice and comment are required
by the APA or another statute, are not
applicable.
Dated: June 1, 2007.
Robert D. Lenhard,
Chairman, Federal Election Commission.
FR Doc. E7–10997 Filed 6–6–07; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 6715–01–P
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Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 72, Number 109 (Thursday, June 7, 2007)]
[Rules and Regulations]
[Pages 31438-31440]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Printing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: E7-10997]
=======================================================================
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FEDERAL ELECTION COMMISSION
11 CFR Part 104
[Notice 2007-13]
Statement of Policy Regarding Treasurers' Best Efforts To Obtain,
Maintain, and Submit Information as Required by the Federal Election
Campaign Act
AGENCY: Federal Election Commission.
ACTION: Statement of Policy.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SUMMARY: The Federal Election Commission (the ``Commission'') is
issuing a Policy Statement to clarify its enforcement policy with
respect to the circumstances under which it intends to consider a
political committee and its treasurer to be in compliance with the
recordkeeping and reporting requirements of the Federal Election
Campaign Act, as amended (``FECA''). Section 432(i) of FECA provides
that when the treasurer of a political committee demonstrates that best
efforts were used to obtain, maintain, and submit the information
required by FECA, any report or records of such committee shall be
considered in compliance with FECA or the statutes governing the public
financing of Presidential candidates. In the past, the Commission has
interpreted this section to apply only to a treasurer's efforts to
obtain required information from contributors to a political committee,
and not to maintaining information or to submitting reports. However,
the district court in Lovely v. FEC, 307 F. Supp. 2d 294 (D. Mass.
2004), held that the Commission should consider whether a treasurer
used best efforts under FECA with regard to efforts made to submit a
report in a timely manner. This Policy Statement makes clear that the
Commission intends to apply FECA's best efforts provision to
treasurers' and committees' efforts to obtain, maintain, and submit
information and records to the Commission consistent with the holding
of the Federal court in Lovely. Further information is provided in the
supplementary information that follows.
DATES: Effective Date: June 7, 2007.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Mr. Ron B. Katwan, 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:
I. Background
A. Statutory and Regulatory Provisions
FECA states the ``best efforts defense'' in 2 U.S.C. 432(i) as
follows:
When 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 this Act or chapter 95 or chapter 96 of title 26.
The Commission implemented this provision in 11 CFR 104.7(a) with
regulatory language virtually identical to the statutory provision:
When the treasurer of a political committee shows that best
efforts have been used to obtain, maintain and submit the
information required by the Act for the political committee, any
report of such committee shall be considered in compliance with the
Act.
Paragraph (b) of 11 CFR 104.7 specifies the actions that treasurers
of a political committee must take to demonstrate that they have
exercised best efforts to obtain and report the ``identification'' of
each person whose contribution(s) to the political committee and its
affiliated political committees aggregate in excess of $200 in a
calendar year (or in an election
[[Page 31439]]
cycle in the case of an authorized committee).\1\ ``Identification''
includes the person's full name, mailing address, occupation, and name
of employer. See 11 CFR 100.12.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\1\ The U.S. Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia
Circuit referred to 11 CFR 104.7(b) as a ``Commission regulation
interpreting what political committees must do under [FECA] to
demonstrate that they have exercised their `best efforts' to
encourage donors to disclose certain personally identifying
information.'' Republican Nat'l Comm. v. FEC, 76 F.3d 400, 403 (D.C.
Cir. 1996).
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Both the language of FECA and the Commission's regulation at 11 CFR
104.7(a) apply the best efforts defense broadly to efforts by
treasurers to ``obtain, maintain and submit'' the information required
to be disclosed by FECA. In past enforcement actions, however, the
Commission has interpreted this statutory and regulatory language to
apply only to efforts to ``obtain'' contributor information.\2\ This
interpretation draws from an example contained in the provision's
legislative history. See H.R. Rep. No. 96-422, at 14 (1979) (``One
illustration of the application of this [best efforts] test is the
current requirement for a committee to report the occupation and
principal place of business of individual contributors who give in
excess of $100'').
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\2\ In 1980, the Commission explained that ``[i]n determining
whether or not a committee has exercised `best efforts,' the
Commission's primary focus will be on the system established by the
committee for obtaining disclosure information.'' Amendments to
Federal Election Campaign Act of 1971; Regulations Transmitted to
Congress, 45 FR 15080, 15086 (Mar. 7, 1980) (emphasis added). In
1993, the Commission referred to ``the requirement of [FECA] that
treasurers of political committees exercise best efforts to obtain,
maintain and report the complete identification of each contributor
whose contributions aggregate more than $200 per calendar year.''
Final Rule on Recordkeeping and Reporting by Political Committees:
Best Efforts, 58 FR 57725, 57725 (Oct. 27, 1993). And in 1997, the
Commission stated that ``[t]reasurers of political committees must
be able to show they have exercised their best efforts to obtain,
maintain and report [contributor identification information].''
Final Rule on Recordkeeping and Reporting by Political Committees:
Best Efforts, 62 FR 23335, 23335 (Apr. 30, 1997). In 2003, the
Commission asserted in the Lovely litigation: ``the Commission has
long interpreted the best efforts provision as creating a limited
safe harbor regarding committees' obligations to report substantive
information that may be beyond their ability to obtain.'' FEC
Supplemental Brief at 1, Lovely (Civil Action No. 02-12496-PBS).
Furthermore, ``when Congress originally enacted the `best efforts'
provision, it could not have been more clear that it was creating a
limited defense regarding the inability to obtain specific
information that was supposed to be disclosed, not the failure to
file reports on time.'' Id. at 12-13. The Lovely court summarized
the Commission's argument: ``The FEC in its briefing claims that it
limits the reach of the best efforts statute to best efforts to
`obtain' contributor information.'' Lovely, 307 F. Supp. 2d at 300.
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B. The Lovely Decision
In Lovely, a political committee challenged an administrative fine
the Commission had assessed for failing to file timely a report. The
committee argued that it had made best efforts to file the report and
that this constituted a complete defense to the fine. The court
concluded that the plain language of the Act requires the Commission to
entertain a best efforts defense in the Administrative Fine Program
(``AFP''), and that it was unclear from the record if the Commission
had done so.
In so holding, the court drew on the legislative history of the
best efforts provision, and specifically noted the 1979 amendments to
FECA that made the best efforts defense ``applicable to the entirety of
FECA, rather than merely to one subsection.'' Lovely, 307 F. Supp. 2d
at 299. The court quoted the provision's legislative history:
The best efforts test is specifically made applicable to
recordkeeping and reporting requirements in both Title 2 and Title
26. The test of whether a committee has complied with the statutory
requirements is whether its treasurer has exercised his or her best
efforts to obtain, maintain, and submit the information required by
the Act. If the treasurer has exercised his or her best efforts, the
committee is in compliance. Accordingly, the application of the best
efforts test is central to the enforcement of the recordkeeping and
reporting provisions of the Act. It is the opinion of the Committee
that the Commission has not adequately incorporated the best efforts
test into its administration procedures, such as the systematic
review of reports.
Id. (emphasis added) (quoting H.R. Rep. No. 96-422, at 14 (1979),
reprinted in 1979 U.S.C.C.A.N. 2860, 2873).
After remand of the Lovely case, the Commission acknowledged in its
Statement of Reasons that ``[t]he Court held that FECA's `best efforts'
provision . . . requires the Commission to consider whether a
committee's treasurer exercised best efforts to submit timely
disclosure reports.'' Statement of Reasons in Administrative Fines Case
#549 at 1 (Oct. 4, 2005), available at https://www.fec.gov/law/law_
rulemakings.shtml under the heading ``Best Efforts in Administrative
Fine Challenges.'' (``Lovely Statement of Reasons''). Upon further
review, the Commission determined that the committee's treasurer had
not made best efforts in filing the report in question and assessed a
civil money penalty. Id. at 5.
C. Proposed Policy Statement
The Commission sought public comment on a Proposed Statement of
Policy that would clarify the Commission's current enforcement practice
to consider whether the treasurer and committee made best efforts to
obtain, maintain or submit the required information under 11 CFR
104.7(a). 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 received two comments, which are available at https://
www.fec.gov/law/policy.shtml under the heading ``Best Efforts.'' 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. The comment
also suggested that the Policy Statement provide guidance to political
committees and treasurers regarding what conduct would qualify under
the best efforts defense, and not rely solely on examples of conduct
that would not qualify under the defense. The other comment was not
relevant to this Policy Statement.
II. Policy Regarding the Best Efforts Defense
Although the court decision in Lovely only concerned permissible
defenses within the AFP, the Commission has decided to adopt the
court's interpretation of the best efforts defense with regard to other
enforcement matters. While the Commission's enforcement practices
formerly reflected the view that the best efforts defense was limited
to obtaining certain contributor identification information (see note 2
above) the Commission recognizes that this narrow application of the
defense in previous enforcement matters derives from a single example
of the defense's application in its 1979 legislative history.\3\ In
light of these considerations, the Commission hereby notifies the
public and the regulated community through this Policy Statement that
henceforth it intends to apply the best efforts defense of 2 U.S.C.
432(i), as promulgated at 11 CFR 104.7, not only to efforts made to
obtain contributor information as currently set forth in section
104.7(b),\4\ but also to
[[Page 31440]]
efforts made to obtain other information, to maintain all information
required by the statute, and to submit required information on
disclosure reports.
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\3\ A respondent's assertion in an enforcement matter that best
efforts were made to maintain and/or submit required information was
formerly considered by the Commission to be a mitigating factor, but
not an outright defense to an alleged violation of the recordkeeping
and reporting requirements.
\4\ As stated above, the standards for determining whether the
best efforts defense is applicable in the context of obtaining
specific contributor information are set forth at current 11 CFR
104.7(b). This Policy Statement does not affect or modify those
standards.
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This Policy Statement does not affect the Commission's AFP, but
applies only to matters in the Commission's traditional enforcement and
audit programs, and in the Alternative Dispute Resolution program
(``ADR''). The Commission recently completed a rulemaking adding a best
efforts defense to the enumerated defenses available in the AFP. See
Final Rules for Best Efforts in Administrative Fines Challenges, 72 FR
14662 (Mar. 29, 2007). In that rulemaking, the Commission incorporated
the statutory best efforts standard, while taking into account the
unique streamlined nature of the AFP. See id. at 14666.
The Commission considers best efforts to be ``a standard that has
diligence as its essence.'' E. Allan Farnsworth, On Trying to Keep
One's Promises: The Duty of Best Efforts in Contract Law, 46 U. Pitt.
L. Rev. 1, 8 (1984). As the Commission explained in its Lovely
Statement of Reasons at 2:
Section 432(i) creates a safe harbor for treasurers who ``show[]
that best efforts'' have been made to report the information
required to be reported by the Act. ``Best'' is an adjective of the
superlative degree. ``Best efforts'' must therefore require more
than ``some'' or ``good'' efforts. Congress's choice of a ``best
efforts'' standard, rather than a ``good faith'' standard, suggests
that a treasurer cannot rely upon his or her earnestness or state of
mind to gain the shelter of Section 432(i)'s safe harbor. Rather, a
treasurer has the burden of showing that the actions taken--the
efforts he or she made to comply with applicable reporting
deadlines--meet the statute's demanding benchmark.
With respect to 11 CFR 104.7(a), the Commission intends to consider
a committee's affirmative steps to keep adequate records and make
accurate reports, as well as the reasons for its failure to obtain,
maintain, or submit information properly. The Commission generally
intends to consider the following: (1) The actions taken, or systems
implemented, by the committee to ensure that required information is
obtained, maintained, and submitted; (2) the cause of the failure to
obtain, maintain, or submit the information or reports at issue; and
(3) the specific efforts of the committee to obtain, maintain, and
submit the information or reports at issue. This general policy does
not modify other guidance and policy standards issued by the Commission
addressing specific circumstances, such as the Internal Controls for
Political Committees, and Policy Statement Regarding Safe Harbor for
Misreporting Due to Embezzlement, 72 FR 16695 (Apr. 5, 2007), both
available at https://www.fec.gov/law/policy.shtml.
The Commission will generally conclude that a committee has shown
best efforts if the committee establishes the following:
At the time of its failure, the committee took relevant
precautions such as double checking recordkeeping entries, regular
reconciliation of committee records with bank statements, and regular
backup of all electronic files;
The committee had trained staff responsible for obtaining,
maintaining, and submitting campaign finance information in the
requirements of the Act as well as the committee's procedures,
recordkeeping systems, and filing systems;
The failure was a result of reasonably unforeseen
circumstances beyond the control of the committee, such as a failure of
Commission computers or Commission-provided software; severe weather or
other disaster-related incidents; a widespread disruption of
information transmission over the Internet not caused by any failure of
the committee's computer systems or Internet service provider; or
delivery failures caused by mail/courier services such as U.S. Postal
Service or Federal Express; and
Upon discovering the failure, the committee promptly took
all reasonable additional steps to expeditiously file any unfiled
reports and correct any inaccurate reports.
In contrast, the Commission will generally conclude that a
committee has not met the best efforts standard if the committee's
failure to obtain, maintain, or submit information or reports is due to
any of the following:
Unavailability, inexperience, illness, negligence or error
of committee staff, agents, counsel or connected organization(s);
The failure of a committee's computer system;
Delays caused by committee vendors or contractors;
A committee's failure to know or understand the
recordkeeping and filing requirements of the Act, or the Act's filing
dates; or
A committee's failure to use Commission-or vendor-provided
software properly.
Under this policy, the Commission intends to consider the best
efforts of a committee under section 432(i) when reviewing all
violations of the recordkeeping and reporting requirements of FECA,
whether arising in its traditional enforcement docket (Matters Under
Review), audits, or the ADR Program. The best efforts standard is an
affirmative defense and the burden rests with the political committee
and its treasurer to present evidence sufficient to demonstrate that
best efforts were made. The Commission does not intend to consider the
best efforts defense in any enforcement or ADR matter, or in an audit
unless a respondent or audited committee asserts the facts that form
the basis of that defense.
Effective as of this date, the Commission intends to apply the best
efforts standard to all matters currently before the Commission in
which a respondent has already asserted such a defense, and any matters
in the future involving treasurers' and political committees'
obligation to obtain, maintain, and submit information or reports. When
treasurers make a sufficient showing of best efforts, the treasurers or
committees shall be considered in compliance with FECA.
The above provides general guidance concerning the applicability of
the Commission's best efforts defense and announces the general course
of action that the Commission intends to follow. This Policy Statement
sets forth the Commission's intentions concerning the exercise of its
discretion in its enforcement and audit programs. However, the
Commission retains that discretion and will exercise it as appropriate
with respect to the facts and circumstances of each matter or audit it
considers. Consequently, this Policy Statement does not bind the
Commission or any member of the general public. As such, it does not
constitute an agency regulation requiring notice of proposed
rulemaking, opportunities for public participation, prior publication,
and delay in effective date under 5 U.S.C. 553 of the Administrative
Procedure Act (``APA''). The provisions of the Regulatory Flexibility
Act, which apply when notice and comment are required by the APA or
another statute, are not applicable.
Dated: June 1, 2007.
Robert D. Lenhard,
Chairman, Federal Election Commission.
FR Doc. E7-10997 Filed 6-6-07; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 6715-01-P