, 64189-64193 [X09-61207]
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Federal Register / Vol. 74, No. 233 / Monday, December 7, 2009 / The Regulatory Plan
DEPARTMENT OF DEFENSE (DOD)
Statement of Regulatory Priorities
Background
The Department of Defense (DoD) is
the largest Federal Department
consisting of three Military Departments
(Army, Navy, and Air Force), ten
Unified Combatant Commands, fourteen
Defense Agencies, and ten DoD Field
Activities. It has 1,417,747 military
personnel and 731,592 civilians
assigned as of June 30, 2009, and over
200 large and medium installations in
the continental United States, U. S.
territories, and foreign countries. The
overall size, composition, and
dispersion of DoD, coupled with an
innovative regulatory program, presents
a challenge to the management of the
Defense regulatory efforts under
Executive Order 12866 ‘‘Regulatory
Planning and Review’’ of September 30,
1993.
Because of its diversified nature, DoD
is affected by the regulations issued by
regulatory agencies such as the
Departments of Energy, Health and
Human Services, Housing and Urban
Development, Labor, Transportation,
and the Environmental Protection
Agency. In order to develop the best
possible regulations that embody the
principles and objectives embedded in
Executive Order 12866, there must be
coordination of proposed regulations
among the regulatory agencies and the
affected DoD Components. Coordinating
the proposed regulations in advance
throughout an organization as large as
DoD is straightforward, yet a formidable
undertaking.
DoD is not a regulatory agency, but
occasionally it issues regulations that
have an effect on the public. These
regulations, while small in number
compared to the regulating agencies, can
be significant as defined in Executive
Order 12866. In addition, some of DoD’s
regulations may affect the regulatory
agencies. DoD, as an integral part of its
program, not only receives coordinating
actions from the regulating agencies, but
coordinates with the agencies that are
affected by its regulations as well.
of providing more services with fewer
resources. The Department of Defense,
as a matter of overall priority for its
regulatory program, fully incorporates
the provisions of the President’s
priorities and objectives under
Executive Order 12866.
Administration Priorities:
1. Rulemakings that Support the
Administration’s Regulation Agenda
to Streamline Regulations and
Reporting Requirements
The Department plans to:
• Revise the Defense Federal
Acquisition Regulation Supplement
(DFARS) to delete obsolete
restrictions on contracting with
foreign entities for the performance of
research and development in
connection with any weapon system
or other military equipment for DoD.
• Review of the DFARS requirements
for reporting the loss, theft, damage,
or destruction of Government
property.
• Review of the DFARS requirements
for reporting Government Furnished
Equipment and Government
Furnished Material in the DoD Item
Unique Identification (IUID) registry.
• Review of the DFARS requirements
for Unique Item Identifier marking of
Government-furnished Equipment.
• Simplify and clarify the DFARS
coverage of patents, data, and
copyrights, dramatically reducing the
amount of regulatory text and the
number of required clauses.
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• Revise the FAR to clarify the criteria
for sole source awards to servicedisabled veteran-owned small
businesses concerns.
3. Regulations with International
Effects or Interest
Of international effect or interest are
regulations to:
• Finalize the FAR rule implementing
the American Recovery and
Reinvestment Act of 2009 buy
American requirements for
construction material.
• Finalize the DFARS rule that
prohibits procurement of steel for
construction projects or activities for
which American steel producers,
fabricators, and manufacturers have
been denied the opportunity to
compete for such steel procurement.
• Implement in the DFARS the
determinations regarding
participation of South
Caucasus/Central and South Asian
states in acquisitions in support of
operations in Afghanistan.
• Finalize the DFARS rule that provides
authority to limit competition in the
acquisition of products or services,
other than small arms, acquired in
support of operations in Iraq or
Afghanistan.
• Finalize the DFARS rule that makes
the required changes to conform the
DFARS to the Federal Acquisition
Regulation (FAR) implementation of
the OFPP waivers of certain statutory
requirements when acquiring of COTS
items.
• Consider whether to revise the
DFARS regulations relating to
acquisition of spare or replacement
parts from the original foreign
manufacturer.
• Improve the contract closeout process.
2. Regulations of Particular Interest to
Small Business
The Department needs to function at
a reasonable cost, while ensuring that it
does not impose ineffective and
unnecessarily burdensome regulations
on the public. The rulemaking process
should be responsive, efficient, costeffective, and both fair and perceived as
fair. This is being done in DoD while
reacting to the contradictory pressures
• Consider revisions to the FAR to
address the findings of the Rothe case
that Federal contracting programs for
minority-owned and other small
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• Revise the FAR to implement changes
in the HUBZone Program, in
accordance with Small Business
Administration regulations.
• Clarify in the DFARS the criteria for
deciding whether a company is
located in Iraq or Afghanistan.
Of interest to Small Businesses are
regulations to:
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businesses that implement 10 U.S.C.
2323 are ‘‘facially unconstitutional.’’
• Simplify and clarify the DFARS
coverage of multiyear acquisitions.
Overall Priorities
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• Revise the FAR and DFARS to
implement the use of Electronic
Subcontracting Reporting System for
both summary and individual
subcontracting reporting.
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• Revise the DFARS to implement the
pending Defense Procurement Trade
Cooperation Treaties with the United
Kingdom and Australia, upon
ratification.
• Finalize the DFARS rule that
implements the determination that
authorizes acquisition of articles
containing para-aramid fibers and
yarns manufactured in a qualifying
country, in accordance with section
807 of the National Defense
Authorization Act for FY 1999.
• Revise the FAR and DFARS list of
least designated countries under the
Trade Agreements Act to add Taiwan,
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and the National Security Personnel
System.
Peru, Costa Rica, and Oman (FAR
only).
• Revise the FAR list of articles that are
domestically non-available.
• Finalize the FAR rule that prohibits
Federal contractors from restricted
business operations in Sudan and
imports from Burma.
• Finalize the FAR rule that prohibits
Government contracts with any
foreign incorporated entity that is
treated as an inverted domestic
corporation under section 835(b) of
the Homeland Security Act of 2002 or
any subsidiary of such entity.
4. Suggestions From the Public for
Reform—Status of DoD Items
Rulemaking Actions in Response to
Public Nominations
The Army Corps of Engineers has not
undertaken any rulemaking actions in
response to the public nominations
submitted to the Office of Management
and Budget in 2001, 2002, or 2004.
Those nominations were discussed in:
• Making Sense of Regulation: 2001
Report to Congress on the Costs and
Benefits of Regulations and Unfunded
Mandates on State, Local, and Tribal
Entities.
• Stimulating Smarter Regulation: 2002
Report to Congress on the Costs and
Benefits of Regulations and Unfunded
Mandates on State, Local, and Tribal
Entities.
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• Progress in Regulatory Reform: 2004
Report to Congress on the Costs and
Benefits of Federal Regulations and
Unfunded Mandates on State, Local,
and Tribal Entities.
Specific DoD Priorities:
For this Regulatory Plan, there are six
specific DoD priorities, all of which
reflect the established regulatory
principles. In those areas where
rulemaking or participation in the
regulatory process is required, DoD has
studied and developed policy and
regulations that incorporate the
provisions of the President’s priorities
and objectives under the Executive
Order.
DoD has focused its regulatory
resources on the most serious
environmental, health, and safety risks.
Perhaps most significant is that each of
the priorities described below
promulgates regulations to offset the
resource impacts of Federal decisions
on the public or to improve the quality
of public life, such as those regulations
concerning acquisition, security,
homeowners, education, health affairs,
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1. Defense Procurement and
Acquisition Policy
The Department of Defense
continuously reviews the DFARS and
continues to lead Government efforts to:
• Finalize the FAR rules that implement
the regulations relating to the
American Recovery and Reinvestment
Act of 2009 — Reporting
Requirements, Publicizing Contract
Actions, Whistleblower Protection,
and GAO/IG Access to Contractor
Employees.
• Revise the DFARS to implement the
Weapons System Acquisition Reform
Act of 2009 — including acquisition
strategies to ensure competition
throughout life-cycle of major defense
acquisition programs and address
organizational conflicts of interest in
major defense acquisition programs.
• Revise DFARS to ensure continuation
of contractor services in support of
mission essential functions during an
emergency, such as an influenza
pandemic.
• Revise the FAR to implement the
Executive Orders relating to project
labor agreements, allowability of labor
relations costs, non-displacement of
qualified workers, and notification of
employee rights under Federal labor
laws.
• Revise the FAR to address service
contractor employee personal
conflicts of interest and organizational
conflicts of interest and limit
contractor access to information.
• Revise the FAR to establish a Federal
database for Federal agency contract
and grant officers and suspension and
debarment officials, to track
information relating to awardees of
Federal contracts and grants.
• Revise the FAR to require contractors
to verify, through the use of the EVerify System, that certain of their
employees are eligible to work in the
United States.
• Enhance competition by:
— Limiting the length of contracts
awarded non-competitively under
‘‘unusual and compelling urgency’’
circumstances to the minimum
contract period necessary to meet
requirements, not to exceed one year,
unless approved by the head of the
contracting activity.
— Requiring publication of notices on
FedBizOpps of all sole source task or
delivery orders in excess of the
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simplified acquisition thresholds that
are placed against multiple award
contracts or multiple award blanket
purchase agreements.
— Requiring post-award debriefings
be provided, as requested, to
disappointed offerors on task and
delivery orders in excess of $5 million
(including options).
— Requiring public disclosure of
justification and approval documents
for noncompetitive contracts.
• Provide enhanced competition for
task and delivery order contracts and
additional market research before
awarding a task or delivery order in
excess of the simplified acquisition
threshold.
2. Logistics and Materiel Readiness,
Department of Defense
The Department of Defense published
or plans to publish rules on contractors
supporting the military in contingency
operations:
• Interim Final Rule: Private Security
Contractors (PSCs) Operating in
Contingency Operations. In order to
meet the mandate of Section 862 of
the 2008 National Defense
Authorization Act, this rule
establishes policy, assigns
responsibilities and provides
procedures for the regulation of the
selection, accountability, training,
equipping, and conduct of personnel
performing private security functions
under a covered contract during
contingency operations. It also assigns
responsibilities and establishes
procedures for incident reporting, use
of and accountability for equipment,
rules for the use of force, and a
process for administrative action or
the removal, as appropriate, of PSCs
and PSC personnel. DoD published an
interim final rule on July 17, 2009 (74
FR 34690-34694) with an effective
date of July 17, 2009. The comment
period ended August 31, 2009.
• Proposed Rule: Program Management
of Operational Contract Support for
Contingency Operations. This rule
will incorporate the latest changes
and lessons learned into policy and
procedures for program management
for the preparation and execution of
contracted support and the integration
of DoD contractor personnel into
military contingency operations
outside the United States. DoD
anticipates publishing the proposed
rule in the first or second quarter of
FY 2010.
3. Installations and Environment,
Department of Defense
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The Department of Defense has
published a rule to assist eligible
military and civilian Federal employee
homeowners:
• Interim Final Rule: This rule
continues to authorize the
Homeowners Assistance Program
(HAP) under section 3374 of title 42,
United States Code, to assist eligible
military and civilian Federal
employee homeowners when the real
estate market is adversely affected by
closure or reduction-in-scope of
operations. In accordance with DoD
Directive 5101.1, DoD Executive
Agent,‘‘ designates the Secretary of
the Army as the DoD Executive Agent
for administering, managing, and
executing the HAP. Additionally, this
rule will allow the Department of
Defense to temporarily expand the
existing HAP in compliance with
section 1001 of the American
Recovery and Reinvestment Act of
2009. This temporary expansion
covers certain persons affected by
BRAC 2005, certain persons on
permanent change of station orders,
and certain wounded persons and
surviving spouses. This rule updates
policy, delegates authority, and
assigns responsibilities for managing
Expanded HAP. This is an
economically significant rule. The
interim final rule was published
September 30, 2009 (74 FR 50109),
with an effective date of September
30, 2009. The comment period ended
October 30, 2009. DoD anticipates
publishing a final rule in the third
quarter of FY 2010.
4. Personnel and Readiness,
Department of Defense
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The Department of Defense published
or plans to publish a rule implementing
the Post-9/11 Veterans Educational
Assistance Act of 2008, title V, P.L. 110252 (the ‘‘Post-9/11 GI Bill’’):
• Interim Final Rule: This rule
establishes policy, assigns
responsibilities, and prescribes
procedures for carrying out the Post9/11 GI Bill. It establishes policy for
the use of supplemental educational
assistance ‘‘kickers,’’ for members
with critical skills or specialties, or
for members serving additional
service; for authorizing the
transferability of education benefits;
and for the DoD Education Benefits
Fund Board of Actuaries. DoD
published an interim final rule on
June 25, 2009 (74 FR 30212-30220)
with an effective date of June 25,
2009. The comment period ended July
27, 2009.
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5. Health Affairs, Department of
Defense
The Department of Defense is able to
meet its dual mission of wartime
readiness and peacetime health care by
operating an extensive network of
medical treatment facilities. This
network includes DoD’s own military
treatment facilities supplemented by
civilian health care providers, facilities,
and services under contract to DoD
through the TRICARE program.
TRICARE is a major health care program
designed to improve the management
and integration of DoD’s health care
delivery system. The program’s goal is
to increase access to health care
services, improve health care quality,
and control health care costs.
The TRICARE Management Activity
has published or plans to publish the
following rules:
• Final rule on CHAMPUS/TRICARE:
Inclusion of TRICARE Retail
Pharmacy Program in Federal
Procurement of Pharmaceuticals. This
rule implements changes directed by
the enactment of National Defense
Authorization Act for Fiscal Year
2008 (NDAA-08), Pub. L. 110-181, to
the extent necessary to ensure
pharmaceuticals, paid for by the DoD
that are provided by pharmacies
under the TRICARE Retail Pharmacy
Program (TRRx) to eligible
beneficiaries, are subject to the
pricing standards under section 8126
of title 38 United States Code. This is
an economically significant rule. The
proposed rule was published July 25,
2008 (73 FR 43394). The comment
period ended September 23, 2008.
The final rule published March 17,
2009 (74 FR 11279-11293) with an
effective date of May 26, 2009.
• Final rule on TRICARE: Outpatient
Prospective Payment System (OPPS).
The rule implements a prospective
payment system for hospital
outpatient services similar to that
furnished to Medicare beneficiaries,
as set forth in section 1833(t) of the
Social Security Act. The rule also
recognizes applicable statutory
requirements and changes arising
from Medicare’s continuing
experience with its system, including
certain related provisions of the
Medicare Prescription Drug,
Improvement, and Modernization Act
of 2003. While TRICARE intends to
remain as true as possible to
Medicare’s basic OPPS methodology
(i.e., adoption and updating of the
Medicare data elements used in
calculating the prospective payment
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64191
amounts), there will be some
significant deviations required to
accommodate the uniqueness of the
TRICARE program. These deviations
have been designed to accommodate
existing TRICARE benefit structure
and claims processing procedures
implemented under the TRICARE
Next Generation Contracts (T-NEX)
while at the same time eliminating
any undue financial burden to
TRICARE Prime, Extra and Standard
beneficiary populations. The
proposed rule was published April 1,
2008 (73 FR 17271). The comment
period ended June 2, 2008. The final
rule published December 10, 2008 (73
FR 74945-74966) with an effective
date of February 9, 2009. DoD
published a notice on February 6,
2009 (74 FR 6228) delaying the
effective date of the final rule to May
1, 2009 and re-opening the final rule
for comment. The comment period
ended March 9, 2009. DoD then
published a notice May 8, 2009 (74 FR
21547) responding to the comments
received. The effective date of the
final rule remained May 1, 2009.
• Final rule on TRICARE: Relationship
Between the TRICARE Program and
Employer-Sponsored Group Health
Coverage. This rule implements
section 1097c of title 10, United States
Code. This law prohibits employers
from offering incentives to TRICAREeligible employees to not enroll, or to
terminate enrollment, in an employeroffered Group Health Plan (GHP) that
is or would be primary to TRICARE.
Cafeteria plans that comport with
section 125 of the Internal Revenue
Code will be permissible so long as
the plan treats all employees the same
and does not illegally take TRICARE
eligibility into account. The proposed
rule was published March 28, 2008
(73 FR 16612). The comment period
ended May 27, 2008. DoD anticipates
publishing a final rule in the first
quarter of FY 2010.
• Final rule on TRICARE: Authorization
of Forensic Examinations. This rule
implements section 701 of the John
Warner National Defense
Authorization Act for FY 2007, Public
Law 109-364. Section 701 amends
Title 10 of the United States Code
(U.S.C.), Chapter 55, Section 1079(a)
by authorizing coverage for forensic
examinations following a sexual
assault or domestic violence for
eligible beneficiaries. This authorizes
forensic examinations provided in
civilian health care facilities (e.g.,
civilian rape crisis facilities)
following sexual assault or domestic
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violence, which is consistent with the
services that are authorized in
Military Medical Treatment Facilities
for all beneficiaries who are victims of
sexual assault or domestic violence.
The proposed rule was published July
7, 2008 (73 FR 38348-38350). The
comment period ended September 5,
2008. The final rule published July
17, 2009 (74 FR 34649-34696) with an
effective date of August 17, 2009.
6. National Security Personnel System,
Department of Defense
On November 1, 2005 (70 FR 6611566164), the Department of Defense and
the Office of Personnel Management
(OPM) issued final regulations to
establish the National Security
Personnel System (NSPS), a human
resources management system, within
DoD, as authorized by the National
Defense Authorization Act (Pub. L. 108136, November 24, 2003). These
regulations govern basic pay, staffing,
classification, performance
management, labor relations, adverse
actions, and employee appeals. These
regulations are designed to ensure that
the DoD’s human resources management
and labor relations systems align with
its critical mission requirements and
protect the civil service rights of its
employees.
Subsequent legislation in the National
Defense Authorization Act (Pub. L. 110181, January 28, 2008) required revision
of the NSPS regulation. DoD and OPM
published a proposed rule on May 22,
2008 (73 FR 29882-29927). The period
for public comment ended on June 23,
2008. The final rule published
September 26, 2008 (73 FR 5634456420) with an effective date of October
7, 2008. A correction to the final rule
effective date published on October 7,
2008 (73 FR 58435). The effective date
was corrected to November 25, 2009.
DoD and OPM published a proposed
rule on December 3, 2008 (73 FR 7360673716) to add a Staffing and
Employment subpart to the final rule
that was published on September 26,
2008. The period for public comment
ended on January 2, 2009. The final rule
published January 16, 2009 (74 FR 27572770) with an effective date of March
17, 2009.
On July 16, 2009, a task group under
the Defense Business Board (DBB) made
recommendations to significantly alter
the National Security Personnel System
(NSPS). The final report of the DBB will
be to the Department of Defense and the
Office of Personnel Management (OPM).
The recommendations may be adopted
or rejected. If adopted, some of the
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recommendations may be implemented
under the current regulation. However,
it is likely that the regulation will
require substantial revision
DoD and OPM anticipate publishing a
proposed rule in late winter 2010 and a
final rule in the fall of 2010, to be
effective 60 days after final action.
DOD—Office of the Secretary (OS)
FINAL RULE STAGE
36. ∑ HOMEOWNERS ASSISTANCE
PROGRAM (HAP)
Priority:
Economically Significant. Major under
5 USC 801.
Legal Authority:
42 USC 3374
Legal Deadline:
None
Abstract:
This rule continues to authorize the
Homeowners Assistance Program (HAP)
under section 3374 of title 42, United
States Code, to assist eligible military
and civilian Federal employee
homeowners when the real estate
market is adversely affected by closure
or reduction-in-scope of operations. In
accordance with DoD Directive 5101.1,
DoD Executive Agent,‘‘ designates the
Secretary of the Army as the DoD
Executive Agent for administering,
managing, and executing the HAP.
Additionally, this rule will allow the
Department of Defense to temporarily
expand the existing Homeowners
Assistance Program (HAP) in
compliance with The American
Recovery and Reinvestment Act of 2009
(ARRA). This temporary expansion
covers certain persons affected by
BRAC 2005, certain persons on
permanent change of station (PCS)
orders, and certain wounded persons
and surviving spouses. This rule
updates policy, delegates authority, and
assigns responsibilities for managing
Expanded HAP.
Statement of Need:
This rule continues to authorize the
Homeowners Assistance Program (HAP)
under section 3374 of title 42, United
States Code, to assist eligible military
and civilian Federal employee
Frm 00052
Fmt 1260
Summary of Legal Basis:
42 U.S.C. 3374
Alternatives:
Required by 42 U.S.C. 3374. No
alternatives considered.
CFR Citation:
32 CFR 239
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homeowners when the real estate
market is adversely affected by closure
or reduction-in-scope of operations. It
updates policy, delegates authority, and
assigns responsibilities for managing
HAP. In accordance with DoD Directive
5101.1, ‘‘DoD Executive Agent,’’
designates the Secretary of the Army
as the DoD Executive Agent for
administering, managing, and executing
the HAP.
Additionally, this rule will allow the
Department of Defense to temporarily
expand the existing HAP in compliance
with section 1001 of the American
Recovery and Reinvestment Act of 2009
(ARRA). This rule updates policy,
delegates authority, and assigns
responsibilities for managing Expanded
HAP.
Sfmt 1260
Anticipated Cost and Benefits:
There is no cost to the public.
Administrative costs to the Department
of Defense for implementation of the
authorities under this rule are eight
percent of the $555 million
appropriated to fund the Expanded
HAP. Workload will be accomplished
with additional staffing and will be
integrated into normal business.
Risks:
The rule will allow the Department of
Defense to expand HAP to assist
military families and DoD civilians who
recently sold their homes at a loss. This
temporary expansion covers certain
persons affected by BRAC 2005, certain
persons on permanent change of station
orders, and certain wounded persons
and surviving spouses.
Timetable:
Action
Date
Interim Final Rule
Interim Final Rule
Effective
Interim Final Rule
Comment Period
End
Interim Final Rule
Comment Period
Extended
Interim Final Rule
Comment Period
End
Final Action
FR Cite
09/30/09 74 FR 50109
09/30/09
10/30/09
11/16/09 74 FR 58846
01/15/10
04/00/10
Regulatory Flexibility Analysis
Required:
No
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Small Entities Affected:
Agency Contact:
No
Deanna Buchner
Department of Defense
Office of the Secretary
3000 Defense Pentagon
Washington, DC 20301–3000
Phone: 703 602–4353
Government Levels Affected:
Federal
RIN: 0790–AI58
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BILLING CODE 5001–06–S
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[Federal Register Volume 74, Number 233 (Monday, December 7, 2009)]
[Unknown Section]
[Pages 64189-64193]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Printing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: X09-61207]
[[Page 64189]]
DEPARTMENT OF DEFENSE (DOD)
Statement of Regulatory Priorities
Background
The Department of Defense (DoD) is the largest Federal Department
consisting of three Military Departments (Army, Navy, and Air Force),
ten Unified Combatant Commands, fourteen Defense Agencies, and ten DoD
Field Activities. It has 1,417,747 military personnel and 731,592
civilians assigned as of June 30, 2009, and over 200 large and medium
installations in the continental United States, U. S. territories, and
foreign countries. The overall size, composition, and dispersion of
DoD, coupled with an innovative regulatory program, presents a
challenge to the management of the Defense regulatory efforts under
Executive Order 12866 ``Regulatory Planning and Review'' of September
30, 1993.
Because of its diversified nature, DoD is affected by the regulations
issued by regulatory agencies such as the Departments of Energy, Health
and Human Services, Housing and Urban Development, Labor,
Transportation, and the Environmental Protection Agency. In order to
develop the best possible regulations that embody the principles and
objectives embedded in Executive Order 12866, there must be
coordination of proposed regulations among the regulatory agencies and
the affected DoD Components. Coordinating the proposed regulations in
advance throughout an organization as large as DoD is straightforward,
yet a formidable undertaking.
DoD is not a regulatory agency, but occasionally it issues regulations
that have an effect on the public. These regulations, while small in
number compared to the regulating agencies, can be significant as
defined in Executive Order 12866. In addition, some of DoD's
regulations may affect the regulatory agencies. DoD, as an integral
part of its program, not only receives coordinating actions from the
regulating agencies, but coordinates with the agencies that are
affected by its regulations as well.
Overall Priorities
The Department needs to function at a reasonable cost, while ensuring
that it does not impose ineffective and unnecessarily burdensome
regulations on the public. The rulemaking process should be responsive,
efficient, cost-effective, and both fair and perceived as fair. This is
being done in DoD while reacting to the contradictory pressures of
providing more services with fewer resources. The Department of
Defense, as a matter of overall priority for its regulatory program,
fully incorporates the provisions of the President's priorities and
objectives under Executive Order 12866.
Administration Priorities:
1. Rulemakings that Support the Administration's Regulation Agenda to
Streamline Regulations and Reporting Requirements
The Department plans to:
Revise the Defense Federal Acquisition Regulation Supplement
(DFARS) to delete obsolete restrictions on contracting with
foreign entities for the performance of research and
development in connection with any weapon system or other
military equipment for DoD.
Review of the DFARS requirements for reporting the loss,
theft, damage, or destruction of Government property.
Review of the DFARS requirements for reporting Government
Furnished Equipment and Government Furnished Material in
the DoD Item Unique Identification (IUID) registry.
Review of the DFARS requirements for Unique Item Identifier
marking of Government-furnished Equipment.
Simplify and clarify the DFARS coverage of patents, data, and
copyrights, dramatically reducing the amount of regulatory
text and the number of required clauses.
Simplify and clarify the DFARS coverage of multiyear
acquisitions.
Finalize the DFARS rule that makes the required changes to
conform the DFARS to the Federal Acquisition Regulation
(FAR) implementation of the OFPP waivers of certain
statutory requirements when acquiring of COTS items.
Improve the contract closeout process.
2. Regulations of Particular Interest to Small Business
Of interest to Small Businesses are regulations to:
Revise the FAR and DFARS to implement the use of Electronic
Subcontracting Reporting System for both summary and
individual subcontracting reporting.
Consider revisions to the FAR to address the findings of the
Rothe case that Federal contracting programs for minority-
owned and other small businesses that implement 10 U.S.C.
2323 are ``facially unconstitutional.''
Revise the FAR to implement changes in the HUBZone Program, in
accordance with Small Business Administration regulations.
Revise the FAR to clarify the criteria for sole source awards
to service-disabled veteran-owned small businesses
concerns.
3. Regulations with International Effects or Interest
Of international effect or interest are regulations to:
Finalize the FAR rule implementing the American Recovery and
Reinvestment Act of 2009 buy American requirements for
construction material.
Finalize the DFARS rule that prohibits procurement of steel
for construction projects or activities for which American
steel producers, fabricators, and manufacturers have been
denied the opportunity to compete for such steel
procurement.
Implement in the DFARS the determinations regarding
participation of South Caucasus/Central and South Asian
states in acquisitions in support of operations in
Afghanistan.
Finalize the DFARS rule that provides authority to limit
competition in the acquisition of products or services,
other than small arms, acquired in support of operations in
Iraq or Afghanistan.
Clarify in the DFARS the criteria for deciding whether a
company is located in Iraq or Afghanistan.
Consider whether to revise the DFARS regulations relating to
acquisition of spare or replacement parts from the original
foreign manufacturer.
Revise the DFARS to implement the pending Defense Procurement
Trade Cooperation Treaties with the United Kingdom and
Australia, upon ratification.
Finalize the DFARS rule that implements the determination that
authorizes acquisition of articles containing para-aramid
fibers and yarns manufactured in a qualifying country, in
accordance with section 807 of the National Defense
Authorization Act for FY 1999.
Revise the FAR and DFARS list of least designated countries
under the Trade Agreements Act to add Taiwan,
[[Page 64190]]
Peru, Costa Rica, and Oman (FAR only).
Revise the FAR list of articles that are domestically non-
available.
Finalize the FAR rule that prohibits Federal contractors from
restricted business operations in Sudan and imports from
Burma.
Finalize the FAR rule that prohibits Government contracts with
any foreign incorporated entity that is treated as an
inverted domestic corporation under section 835(b) of the
Homeland Security Act of 2002 or any subsidiary of such
entity.
4. Suggestions From the Public for Reform--Status of DoD Items
Rulemaking Actions in Response to Public Nominations
The Army Corps of Engineers has not undertaken any rulemaking actions
in response to the public nominations submitted to the Office of
Management and Budget in 2001, 2002, or 2004. Those nominations were
discussed in:
Making Sense of Regulation: 2001 Report to Congress on the
Costs and Benefits of Regulations and Unfunded Mandates on
State, Local, and Tribal Entities.
Stimulating Smarter Regulation: 2002 Report to Congress on the
Costs and Benefits of Regulations and Unfunded Mandates on
State, Local, and Tribal Entities.
Progress in Regulatory Reform: 2004 Report to Congress on the
Costs and Benefits of Federal Regulations and Unfunded
Mandates on State, Local, and Tribal Entities.
Specific DoD Priorities:
For this Regulatory Plan, there are six specific DoD priorities, all of
which reflect the established regulatory principles. In those areas
where rulemaking or participation in the regulatory process is
required, DoD has studied and developed policy and regulations that
incorporate the provisions of the President's priorities and objectives
under the Executive Order.
DoD has focused its regulatory resources on the most serious
environmental, health, and safety risks. Perhaps most significant is
that each of the priorities described below promulgates regulations to
offset the resource impacts of Federal decisions on the public or to
improve the quality of public life, such as those regulations
concerning acquisition, security, homeowners, education, health
affairs, and the National Security Personnel System.
1. Defense Procurement and Acquisition Policy
The Department of Defense continuously reviews the DFARS and continues
to lead Government efforts to:
Finalize the FAR rules that implement the regulations relating
to the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act of 2009 --
Reporting Requirements, Publicizing Contract Actions,
Whistleblower Protection, and GAO/IG Access to Contractor
Employees.
Revise the DFARS to implement the Weapons System Acquisition
Reform Act of 2009 -- including acquisition strategies to
ensure competition throughout life-cycle of major defense
acquisition programs and address organizational conflicts
of interest in major defense acquisition programs.
Revise DFARS to ensure continuation of contractor services in
support of mission essential functions during an emergency,
such as an influenza pandemic.
Revise the FAR to implement the Executive Orders relating to
project labor agreements, allowability of labor relations
costs, non-displacement of qualified workers, and
notification of employee rights under Federal labor laws.
Revise the FAR to address service contractor employee personal
conflicts of interest and organizational conflicts of
interest and limit contractor access to information.
Revise the FAR to establish a Federal database for Federal
agency contract and grant officers and suspension and
debarment officials, to track information relating to
awardees of Federal contracts and grants.
Revise the FAR to require contractors to verify, through the
use of the E-Verify System, that certain of their employees
are eligible to work in the United States.
Enhance competition by:
-- Limiting the length of contracts awarded non-competitively under
``unusual and compelling urgency'' circumstances to the
minimum contract period necessary to meet requirements, not
to exceed one year, unless approved by the head of the
contracting activity.
-- Requiring publication of notices on FedBizOpps of all sole source
task or delivery orders in excess of the simplified
acquisition thresholds that are placed against multiple
award contracts or multiple award blanket purchase
agreements.
-- Requiring post-award debriefings be provided, as requested, to
disappointed offerors on task and delivery orders in excess
of $5 million (including options).
-- Requiring public disclosure of justification and approval documents
for noncompetitive contracts.
Provide enhanced competition for task and delivery order
contracts and additional market research before awarding a
task or delivery order in excess of the simplified
acquisition threshold.
2. Logistics and Materiel Readiness, Department of Defense
The Department of Defense published or plans to publish rules on
contractors supporting the military in contingency operations:
Interim Final Rule: Private Security Contractors (PSCs)
Operating in Contingency Operations. In order to meet the
mandate of Section 862 of the 2008 National Defense
Authorization Act, this rule establishes policy, assigns
responsibilities and provides procedures for the regulation
of the selection, accountability, training, equipping, and
conduct of personnel performing private security functions
under a covered contract during contingency operations. It
also assigns responsibilities and establishes procedures
for incident reporting, use of and accountability for
equipment, rules for the use of force, and a process for
administrative action or the removal, as appropriate, of
PSCs and PSC personnel. DoD published an interim final rule
on July 17, 2009 (74 FR 34690-34694) with an effective date
of July 17, 2009. The comment period ended August 31, 2009.
Proposed Rule: Program Management of Operational Contract
Support for Contingency Operations. This rule will
incorporate the latest changes and lessons learned into
policy and procedures for program management for the
preparation and execution of contracted support and the
integration of DoD contractor personnel into military
contingency operations outside the United States. DoD
anticipates publishing the proposed rule in the first or
second quarter of FY 2010.
3. Installations and Environment, Department of Defense
[[Page 64191]]
The Department of Defense has published a rule to assist eligible
military and civilian Federal employee homeowners:
Interim Final Rule: This rule continues to authorize the
Homeowners Assistance Program (HAP) under section 3374 of
title 42, United States Code, to assist eligible military
and civilian Federal employee homeowners when the real
estate market is adversely affected by closure or
reduction-in-scope of operations. In accordance with DoD
Directive 5101.1, DoD Executive Agent,`` designates the
Secretary of the Army as the DoD Executive Agent for
administering, managing, and executing the HAP.
Additionally, this rule will allow the Department of
Defense to temporarily expand the existing HAP in
compliance with section 1001 of the American Recovery and
Reinvestment Act of 2009. This temporary expansion covers
certain persons affected by BRAC 2005, certain persons on
permanent change of station orders, and certain wounded
persons and surviving spouses. This rule updates policy,
delegates authority, and assigns responsibilities for
managing Expanded HAP. This is an economically significant
rule. The interim final rule was published September 30,
2009 (74 FR 50109), with an effective date of September 30,
2009. The comment period ended October 30, 2009. DoD
anticipates publishing a final rule in the third quarter of
FY 2010.
4. Personnel and Readiness, Department of Defense
The Department of Defense published or plans to publish a rule
implementing the Post-9/11 Veterans Educational Assistance Act of 2008,
title V, P.L. 110-252 (the ``Post-9/11 GI Bill''):
Interim Final Rule: This rule establishes policy, assigns
responsibilities, and prescribes procedures for carrying
out the Post-9/11 GI Bill. It establishes policy for the
use of supplemental educational assistance ``kickers,'' for
members with critical skills or specialties, or for members
serving additional service; for authorizing the
transferability of education benefits; and for the DoD
Education Benefits Fund Board of Actuaries. DoD published
an interim final rule on June 25, 2009 (74 FR 30212-30220)
with an effective date of June 25, 2009. The comment period
ended July 27, 2009.
5. Health Affairs, Department of Defense
The Department of Defense is able to meet its dual mission of wartime
readiness and peacetime health care by operating an extensive network
of medical treatment facilities. This network includes DoD's own
military treatment facilities supplemented by civilian health care
providers, facilities, and services under contract to DoD through the
TRICARE program. TRICARE is a major health care program designed to
improve the management and integration of DoD's health care delivery
system. The program's goal is to increase access to health care
services, improve health care quality, and control health care costs.
The TRICARE Management Activity has published or plans to publish the
following rules:
Final rule on CHAMPUS/TRICARE: Inclusion of TRICARE Retail
Pharmacy Program in Federal Procurement of Pharmaceuticals.
This rule implements changes directed by the enactment of
National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2008
(NDAA-08), Pub. L. 110-181, to the extent necessary to
ensure pharmaceuticals, paid for by the DoD that are
provided by pharmacies under the TRICARE Retail Pharmacy
Program (TRRx) to eligible beneficiaries, are subject to
the pricing standards under section 8126 of title 38 United
States Code. This is an economically significant rule. The
proposed rule was published July 25, 2008 (73 FR 43394).
The comment period ended September 23, 2008. The final rule
published March 17, 2009 (74 FR 11279-11293) with an
effective date of May 26, 2009.
Final rule on TRICARE: Outpatient Prospective Payment System
(OPPS). The rule implements a prospective payment system
for hospital outpatient services similar to that furnished
to Medicare beneficiaries, as set forth in section 1833(t)
of the Social Security Act. The rule also recognizes
applicable statutory requirements and changes arising from
Medicare's continuing experience with its system, including
certain related provisions of the Medicare Prescription
Drug, Improvement, and Modernization Act of 2003. While
TRICARE intends to remain as true as possible to Medicare's
basic OPPS methodology (i.e., adoption and updating of the
Medicare data elements used in calculating the prospective
payment amounts), there will be some significant deviations
required to accommodate the uniqueness of the TRICARE
program. These deviations have been designed to accommodate
existing TRICARE benefit structure and claims processing
procedures implemented under the TRICARE Next Generation
Contracts (T-NEX) while at the same time eliminating any
undue financial burden to TRICARE Prime, Extra and Standard
beneficiary populations. The proposed rule was published
April 1, 2008 (73 FR 17271). The comment period ended June
2, 2008. The final rule published December 10, 2008 (73 FR
74945-74966) with an effective date of February 9, 2009.
DoD published a notice on February 6, 2009 (74 FR 6228)
delaying the effective date of the final rule to May 1,
2009 and re-opening the final rule for comment. The comment
period ended March 9, 2009. DoD then published a notice May
8, 2009 (74 FR 21547) responding to the comments received.
The effective date of the final rule remained May 1, 2009.
Final rule on TRICARE: Relationship Between the TRICARE
Program and Employer-Sponsored Group Health Coverage. This
rule implements section 1097c of title 10, United States
Code. This law prohibits employers from offering incentives
to TRICARE-eligible employees to not enroll, or to
terminate enrollment, in an employer-offered Group Health
Plan (GHP) that is or would be primary to TRICARE.
Cafeteria plans that comport with section 125 of the
Internal Revenue Code will be permissible so long as the
plan treats all employees the same and does not illegally
take TRICARE eligibility into account. The proposed rule
was published March 28, 2008 (73 FR 16612). The comment
period ended May 27, 2008. DoD anticipates publishing a
final rule in the first quarter of FY 2010.
Final rule on TRICARE: Authorization of Forensic Examinations.
This rule implements section 701 of the John Warner
National Defense Authorization Act for FY 2007, Public Law
109-364. Section 701 amends Title 10 of the United States
Code (U.S.C.), Chapter 55, Section 1079(a) by authorizing
coverage for forensic examinations following a sexual
assault or domestic violence for eligible beneficiaries.
This authorizes forensic examinations provided in civilian
health care facilities (e.g., civilian rape crisis
facilities) following sexual assault or domestic
[[Page 64192]]
violence, which is consistent with the services that are
authorized in Military Medical Treatment Facilities for all
beneficiaries who are victims of sexual assault or domestic
violence. The proposed rule was published July 7, 2008 (73
FR 38348-38350). The comment period ended September 5,
2008. The final rule published July 17, 2009 (74 FR 34649-
34696) with an effective date of August 17, 2009.
6. National Security Personnel System, Department of Defense
On November 1, 2005 (70 FR 66115-66164), the Department of Defense and
the Office of Personnel Management (OPM) issued final regulations to
establish the National Security Personnel System (NSPS), a human
resources management system, within DoD, as authorized by the National
Defense Authorization Act (Pub. L. 108-136, November 24, 2003). These
regulations govern basic pay, staffing, classification, performance
management, labor relations, adverse actions, and employee appeals.
These regulations are designed to ensure that the DoD's human resources
management and labor relations systems align with its critical mission
requirements and protect the civil service rights of its employees.
Subsequent legislation in the National Defense Authorization Act (Pub.
L. 110-181, January 28, 2008) required revision of the NSPS regulation.
DoD and OPM published a proposed rule on May 22, 2008 (73 FR 29882-
29927). The period for public comment ended on June 23, 2008. The final
rule published September 26, 2008 (73 FR 56344-56420) with an effective
date of October 7, 2008. A correction to the final rule effective date
published on October 7, 2008 (73 FR 58435). The effective date was
corrected to November 25, 2009.
DoD and OPM published a proposed rule on December 3, 2008 (73 FR 73606-
73716) to add a Staffing and Employment subpart to the final rule that
was published on September 26, 2008. The period for public comment
ended on January 2, 2009. The final rule published January 16, 2009 (74
FR 2757-2770) with an effective date of March 17, 2009.
On July 16, 2009, a task group under the Defense Business Board (DBB)
made recommendations to significantly alter the National Security
Personnel System (NSPS). The final report of the DBB will be to the
Department of Defense and the Office of Personnel Management (OPM). The
recommendations may be adopted or rejected. If adopted, some of the
recommendations may be implemented under the current regulation.
However, it is likely that the regulation will require substantial
revision
DoD and OPM anticipate publishing a proposed rule in late winter 2010
and a final rule in the fall of 2010, to be effective 60 days after
final action.
_______________________________________________________________________
DOD--Office of the Secretary (OS)
-----------
FINAL RULE STAGE
-----------
36. HOMEOWNERS ASSISTANCE PROGRAM (HAP)
Priority:
Economically Significant. Major under 5 USC 801.
Legal Authority:
42 USC 3374
CFR Citation:
32 CFR 239
Legal Deadline:
None
Abstract:
This rule continues to authorize the Homeowners Assistance Program
(HAP) under section 3374 of title 42, United States Code, to assist
eligible military and civilian Federal employee homeowners when the
real estate market is adversely affected by closure or reduction-in-
scope of operations. In accordance with DoD Directive 5101.1, DoD
Executive Agent,`` designates the Secretary of the Army as the DoD
Executive Agent for administering, managing, and executing the HAP.
Additionally, this rule will allow the Department of Defense to
temporarily expand the existing Homeowners Assistance Program (HAP) in
compliance with The American Recovery and Reinvestment Act of 2009
(ARRA). This temporary expansion covers certain persons affected by
BRAC 2005, certain persons on permanent change of station (PCS) orders,
and certain wounded persons and surviving spouses. This rule updates
policy, delegates authority, and assigns responsibilities for managing
Expanded HAP.
Statement of Need:
This rule continues to authorize the Homeowners Assistance Program
(HAP) under section 3374 of title 42, United States Code, to assist
eligible military and civilian Federal employee homeowners when the
real estate market is adversely affected by closure or reduction-in-
scope of operations. It updates policy, delegates authority, and
assigns responsibilities for managing HAP. In accordance with DoD
Directive 5101.1, ``DoD Executive Agent,'' designates the Secretary of
the Army as the DoD Executive Agent for administering, managing, and
executing the HAP.
Additionally, this rule will allow the Department of Defense to
temporarily expand the existing HAP in compliance with section 1001 of
the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act of 2009 (ARRA). This rule
updates policy, delegates authority, and assigns responsibilities for
managing Expanded HAP.
Summary of Legal Basis:
42 U.S.C. 3374
Alternatives:
Required by 42 U.S.C. 3374. No alternatives considered.
Anticipated Cost and Benefits:
There is no cost to the public. Administrative costs to the Department
of Defense for implementation of the authorities under this rule are
eight percent of the $555 million appropriated to fund the Expanded
HAP. Workload will be accomplished with additional staffing and will be
integrated into normal business.
Risks:
The rule will allow the Department of Defense to expand HAP to assist
military families and DoD civilians who recently sold their homes at a
loss. This temporary expansion covers certain persons affected by BRAC
2005, certain persons on permanent change of station orders, and
certain wounded persons and surviving spouses.
Timetable:
_______________________________________________________________________
Action Date FR Cite
_______________________________________________________________________
Interim Final Rule 09/30/09 74 FR 50109
Interim Final Rule
Effective 09/30/09
Interim Final Rule
Comment Period End 10/30/09
Interim Final Rule
Comment Period
Extended 11/16/09 74 FR 58846
Interim Final Rule
Comment Period End 01/15/10
Final Action 04/00/10
Regulatory Flexibility Analysis Required:
No
[[Page 64193]]
Small Entities Affected:
No
Government Levels Affected:
Federal
Agency Contact:
Deanna Buchner
Department of Defense
Office of the Secretary
3000 Defense Pentagon
Washington, DC 20301-3000
Phone: 703 602-4353
RIN: 0790-AI58
BILLING CODE 5001-06-S