Debt Collection, 68203-68213 [2010-28020]
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Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 214 / Friday, November 5, 2010 / Rules and Regulations
Therefore, under the Federal Food,
Drug, and Cosmetic Act and under
authority delegated to the Commissioner
of Food and Drugs, 21 CFR part 892 is
amended as follows:
■
PART 892—RADIOLOGY DEVICES
1. The authority citation for 21 CFR
part 892 continues to read as follows:
■
Authority: 21 U.S.C. 351, 360, 360c, 360e,
360j, 371.
2. Section 892.1715 is added to
subpart B to read as follows:
■
§ 892.1715
system.
Full-field digital mammography
(a) Identification. A full-field digital
mammography system is a device
intended to produce planar digital x-ray
images of the entire breast. This generic
type of device may include digital
mammography acquisition software,
full-field digital image receptor,
acquisition workstation, automatic
exposure control, image processing and
reconstruction programs, patient and
equipment supports, component parts,
and accessories.
(b) Classification. Class II (special
controls). The special control for the
device is FDA’s guidance document
entitled ‘‘Class II Special Controls
Guidance Document: Full-Field Digital
Mammography System.’’ See § 892.1(e)
for the availability of this guidance
document.
Dated: November 2, 2010.
Leslie Kux,
Acting Assistant Commissioner for Policy.
[FR Doc. 2010–28007 Filed 11–4–10; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4160–01–P
PENSION BENEFIT GUARANTY
CORPORATION
29 CFR Parts 4003 and 4903
Debt Collection
Pension Benefit Guaranty
Corporation.
ACTION: Final rule.
AGENCY:
This final rule amends the
Pension Benefit Guaranty Corporation’s
(PBGC) regulation on debt collection to
conform to the Debt Collection
Improvement Act of 1996, the Federal
Claims Collection Standards and other
legal requirements applicable to the
collection of non-tax debts owed to
PBGC. PBGC is adding salary offset and
administrative wage garnishment to the
collection methods allowed under the
current regulation and making other
changes to strengthen PBGC’s debt
collection program.
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SUMMARY:
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Effective December 6, 2010 (See
Applicability in SUPPLEMENTARY
INFORMATION.)
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Margaret E. Drake, Attorney, Office of
the General Counsel, Pension Benefit
Guaranty Corporation, 1200 K Street,
NW., Washington, DC 20005–4026; 202–
326–4400 (extension 3228). (For TTY/
TDD users, call the Federal relay service
toll-free at 1–800–877–8339 and ask to
be connected to 202–326–4400
(extension 3228)).
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: This final
rule revises and replaces BGC’s debt
collection regulations found at 29 CFR
Part 4903 to conform to the Debt
Collection Improvement Act of 1996
(DCIA), Public Law 104–134, 110 Stat.
1321, 1358 (April 26, 1996), the revised
Federal Claims Collection Standards, 31
CFR Chapter IX (Parts 900 through 904),
and other laws applicable to the
collection of non-tax debt owed to the
Government.
DATES:
Background
In 1994, PBGC adopted a regulation
on debt collection to provide procedures
to implement administrative offset, as
authorized by the Federal Claims
Collection Act of 1966, as amended by
the Debt Collection Act of 1982 (31
U.S.C. 3701, et seq.), and in accordance
with regulations issued by the
Department of Justice and the General
Accountability Office. In 1995, PBGC
adopted a regulation on debt collection
to provide procedures to implement tax
refund offset, as required for
participation in the Federal tax refund
offset program authorized by 31 U.S.C.
3720A and in accordance with
regulations issued by the Treasury
Department. Together, these regulations
comprise PBGC’s current debt collection
regulation (29 CFR part 4903) providing
procedures for debt collection through
administrative offset and tax refund
offset. Administrative offset allows
PBGC to request that debts owed to
PBGC by a debtor (e.g., in connection
with government contractual
obligations) be offset by amounts
another Federal agency may owe to the
debtor. Likewise, other Federal agencies
may request the collection of debts
owed to them be offset by amounts
PBGC may owe the debtor. Tax refund
offset allows PBGC to request that debts
owed to PBGC by a debtor be offset by
amounts the Government may owe to
the debtor. The Debt Collection
Improvement Act of 1996 (DCIA)
fundamentally changed the manner in
which the Federal government is
required to manage the collection of its
delinquent debts. Under DCIA, Congress
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directed that the management of
delinquent obligations is to be
centralized at the Treasury Department
in order to increase the efficiency of the
Government’s collection efforts.
Pursuant to 31 U.S.C. 3716, to utilize
the administrative offset tools under
DCIA, Federal agencies had to ‘‘adopt,
without change, regulations on
collecting by administrative offset
promulgated by the Department of
Justice, the Government Accountability
Office, or the Department of the
Treasury,’’ or promulgate their own
regulations consistent with the
regulations issued by the Department of
Justice, the General Accountability
Office, or the Department of the
Treasury. On November 20, 2000, the
Department of Justice and the
Department of the Treasury revised the
FCCS. 65 FR 70390 (Nov. 20, 2000).
On July 22, 2010 (at 75 FR 42662),
PBGC published a proposed rule to
revise its regulation on debt collection
to conform the Debt Collection
Improvement Act of 1996, the Federal
Claims Collections Standards, other
legal requirements applicable to non-tax
debts owed to PBGC, and to add salary
offset and administrative wage
garnishment to the collection methods
allowed under the current regulation
and make other changes to strengthen
PBGC’s debt collection program. PBGC
received no public comments on the
proposed rule and the final regulation is
unchanged from the proposed
regulation.
Overview of Final Rule
This final regulation revises the
procedures for the collection of non-tax
debts owed to PBGC through
administrative offset and tax refund
offset. It adopts the FCCS and
supplements it by prescribing
procedures consistent with the FCCS, as
necessary and appropriate for PBGC
operations. The final regulation also
provides for the collection of debts via
salary offset and the use of
administrative wage garnishment.
Salary offset is the collection of debt
owed by a Federal employee by
withholding up to 15 percent of the
employee’s disposable pay. The
procedures for salary offset are governed
by 5 U.S.C. 5514, and Office of
Personnel Management (OPM)
regulations (5 CFR part 550, subpart k).
OPM regulations provide for salary
offset through the Treasury Offset
Program.1 Administrative wage
1 PBGC has an internal directive which provides
procedures to recover debts owed to PBGC from the
current pay account of an employee, and to process
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garnishment is the collection of a debt
owed by a former Federal employee by
ordering a non-Federal employer to
withhold funds from a debtor’s wages.
The procedures for administrative wage
garnishment are governed by 31 U.S.C.
3720D and 31 CFR 285.11.
As with PBGC’s current debt
collection regulation, the final
regulation applies to collection of debts
to PBGC by employers (e.g., unpaid
premium, penalty and interest under
part 4007, information penalties under
part 4071, and employer liability under
part 4062) and to the recovery of benefit
overpayments to participants in cases
where PBGC does not recoup the
overpayment under part 4022 (e.g.,
where a participant is not entitled to
future annuity benefits as of the plan’s
termination date). The final regulation
also applies to debts owed to the United
States by current and former PBGC
employees.
The final regulation does not apply to
the collection of tax debts, which is
governed by the Internal Revenue Code
of 1986 (26 U.S.C. 1 et seq.) and
regulations, policies, and procedures
issued by the Internal Revenue Service.
Under the final regulation, benefits
paid by PBGC generally are not offset,
in accordance with the anti-alienation
provisions under 29 U.S.C. 1056(d) and
26 U.S.C. 401(a)(13). However, benefits
paid by PBGC could be offset under
certain limited exceptions from those
provisions (e.g., in certain fiduciary
breach situations).
Nothing in the final regulation
precludes the use of collection
procedures not contained in the
regulation. For example, PBGC may
collect unused travel advances through
setoff of an employee’s pay under 5
U.S.C. 5705. Moreover, certain PBGC
efforts to obtain payment of debts
arising out of activities under ERISA are
authorized by and subject to
requirements prescribed under other
Federal statutes. PBGC’s activities will
be consistent with such requirements, as
well as with any other applicable
requirements (see e.g., parts 4000, 4003,
4007, and 4062). PBGC may use
multiple collection methods at the same
time to collect a debt, as permitted by
law. Nothing in the final regulation
requires PBGC to duplicate notices or
administrative proceedings required by
contract, this part, or other laws or
regulations.
PBGC maintains a system of records
to collect debts owed to PBGC by
various individuals, PBGC–13, Debt
requests received from another Federal agency from
the current pay account of a PBGC employee to
recover debts owed to the agency.
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Collection. See 75 FR 37842 (June 30,
2010).
Subpart A—4903.1 to 4903.4
Subpart A of the final regulation
addresses the general provisions
applicable to the collection of non-tax
debts owed to PBGC. Section 4903.5
includes procedures for the collection of
debts owed to PBGC, other than those
subject to recoupment.
Under § 4903.2, PBGC is not required
to duplicate notices or administrative
proceedings provided by contract, this
final regulation, or other laws or
regulations. PBGC is not required to
provide a debtor with two hearings on
the same issue simply because PBGC
used two different collection tools, each
of which requires that the debtor be
provided with a hearing. For example,
if PBGC has provided a debtor with
notice of unpaid premium under part
4007, it need not provide additional
notice to the debtor before using this
regulation to collect the debt owed to
PBGC.
Section 4903.4 states that PBGC’s
rules under part 4000 regarding
permissible methods of filing with
PBGC, determining dates of filing and
computation of time apply for purposes
of this regulation.
Subpart B—4903.5 to 4903.20
Subpart B of the final regulation
describes the procedures to be followed
by PBGC when collecting debts owed to
it. Among other things, subpart B
outlines the due process procedures
PBGC is required to follow when using
offset (administrative, tax refund, and
salary) to collect a debt owed to it, when
garnishing a debtor’s non-Federal
wages, or before reporting a debt owed
to it to a credit bureau. Specifically,
PBGC is required to provide debtors
with notice of the amount and type of
the debt, the intended collection action
to be taken, how a debtor may pay the
debt or make alternate payment
arrangements, how a debtor could
review documents related to the debt,
and the consequences to the debtor if
the debt is not repaid. Subpart B also
describes how a debtor may request a
hearing to contest the noticed debt.
Subpart B also explains the
circumstances under which PBGC could
waive interest, penalties, and
administrative costs. Such waivers are
permitted only to the extent permitted
by law. For example, part 4007 of this
chapter does not permit waivers of
interest charges on late premium
payments. PBGC may provide
additional guidance on how interest,
penalties, and administrative costs are
assessed on particular types of debts.
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Subpart B updates PBGC procedures
to reflect changes required by DCIA. For
example, DCIA centralized the use of
offset by requiring agencies to refer
debts delinquent for more than 180 days
to the Financial Management Service
(FMS) of the Treasury Department for
offset. See 31 U.S.C. 3716(c)(6). FMS is
required to offset payments to persons
who owe delinquent debts to the
Government. The final regulation
revises PBGC’s regulations to comply
with DCIA requirements for all types of
offsets. This final regulation also
incorporates procedures for several
collection remedies authorized by DCIA,
such as administrative wage
garnishment.
Subpart C—4903.21 to 4903.22
Subpart C of the final regulation
describes the procedures to be followed
when a Federal agency, other than
PBGC, wishes to use the offset process
to collect a debt from a non-tax payment
issued by PBGC as a payment agency.
Subpart C governs the process for offsets
that occur on a case-by-case basis to
collect debts from payments made by
PBGC to its employees, its vendors, and
others whom PBGC is required or
authorized to pay. While centralized
offset through the Treasury Offset
Program is the Government’s primary
offset collection tool, this final
regulation provides the procedures to be
used when centralized offset is not
otherwise available or appropriate. An
agency’s use of the non-centralized
administrative offset process does not
provide grounds to invalidate any offset
on the basis that centralized offset was
not used.
Compliance With Rulemaking
Guidelines
Executive Order 12866
PBGC has determined that this rule is
not a ‘‘significant regulatory action’’
under Executive Order 12866.
Regulatory Flexibility Act
PBGC certifies under section 605(b) of
the Regulatory Flexibility Act (5 U.S.C.
601 et seq.) that the amendments in this
final regulation will not have a
significant economic impact on a
substantial number of small entities.
The final rule is limited to procedures
required by the Debt Collection
Improvement Act of 1996, the Federal
Claims Collection Standards and other
laws applicable to the collection of nontax debts owed to the United States.
Thus, a small entity can avoid the
application of this rule by paying such
debts when due. Further, insofar as the
provisions of this rule do apply, their
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primary effect would be to provide
procedural protections to persons whose
debts are otherwise subject to collection
by administrative offset, tax refund
offset, salary offset or administrative
wage garnishment. Accordingly, as
provided in section 605 of the
Regulatory Flexibility Act, sections 603
and 604 do not apply.
List of Subjects
29 CFR Part 4003
Administrative practice and
procedure, Organization and functions
(Government agencies, Pension
insurance, Pensions.
29 CFR Part 4903
Claims.
For the reasons given above, PBGC is
amending 29 CFR parts 4003 and 4903
as follows:
■
PART 4003—RULES FOR
ADMINISTRATIVE REVIEW OF
AGENCY DECISIONS
1. The authority citation for part 4003
continues to read as follows:
■
Authority: 29 U.S.C. 1302(b)(3).
2. Amend § 4003.32 by removing
‘‘§ 4903.33 of this chapter, by a date 60
days (or more) thereafter’’ and replacing
it with ‘‘part 4903 of this chapter, by the
date’’.
■
3. Amend § 4003.52 by removing
‘‘§ 4903.33 of this chapter, by a date 60
days (or more) thereafter’’ and replacing
it with ‘‘part 4903 of this chapter, by the
date’’.
■
4. Part 4903 is revised to read as
follows:
■
PART 4903—DEBT COLLECTION
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Subpart A—General Provisions
Sec.
4903.1 What definitions apply to this part?
4903.2 What do these regulations cover?
4903.3 Do these regulations adopt the
Federal Claims Collection Standards
(FCCS)?
4903.4 What rules apply for purposes of
filing with PBGC, determining dates of
filings, and computation of time?
Subpart B—Procedures to Collect Debts
Owed to PBGC
4903.5 What notice will PBGC send to a
debtor when collecting a debt owed to
PBGC?
4903.6 How will PBGC add interest, penalty
charges, and administrative costs to a
debt owed to PBGC?
4903.7 When will PBGC allow a debtor to
pay a debt owed to PBGC in installments
instead of a lump sum?
4903.8 When will PBGC compromise a debt
owed to PBGC?
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4903.9 When will PBGC suspend or
terminate debt collection on a debt owed
to PBGC?
4903.10 When will PBGC transfer a debt
owed to PBGC to the Treasury
Department’s Financial Management
Service for collection?
4903.11 How will PBGC use administrative
offset (offset of non-tax Federal
payments) to collect a debt owed to
PBGC?
4903.12 How will PBGC use tax refund
offset to collect a debt owed to PBGC?
4903.13 How will PBGC offset a Federal
employee’s salary to collect a debt owed
to PBGC?
4903.14 How will PBGC use administrative
wage garnishment to collect a debt owed
to PBGC from a debtor’s wages?
4903.15 How will PBGC report debts owed
to credit bureaus to PBGC?
4903.16 How will PBGC refer debts owed to
private collection agencies to PBGC?
4903.17 When will PBGC refer debts owed
to the Department of Justice to PBGC?
4903.18 Will a debtor who owes a debt to
PBGC or another Federal agency, and
persons controlled by or controlling such
debtors, be ineligible for Federal loan
assistance, grants, cooperative
agreements, or other sources of Federal
funds?
4903.19 How does a debtor request a
special review based on a change in
circumstances such as a catastrophic
illness, divorce, death, or disability?
4903.20 Will PBGC issue a refund if money
is erroneously collected on a debt?
Subpart C—Procedures for Offset of PBGC
Payments to Collect Debts Owed to Other
Federal Agencies
4903.21 How do other Federal agencies use
the offset process to collect debts from
payments issued by PBGC?
4903.22 What does PBGC do upon receipt
of a request to offset the salary of a PBGC
employee to collect a debt owed by the
employee to another Federal agency?
Authority: 5 U.S.C. 5514; 29 U.S.C.
1302(b); 31 U.S.C. 3701–3719, 3720A; 5 CFR
part 550, subpart K; 31 CFR part 285; 31 CFR
parts 900–904.
Subpart A—General Provisions
§ 4903.1
part?
What definitions apply to this
The following terms are defined in
§ 4001.2 of this chapter: Code, PBGC,
and Person. In addition, for purposes of
this part:
Administrative offset or offset means
withholding funds payable by the
United States (including funds payable
by the United States on behalf of a state
government) to, or held by the United
States for, a person to satisfy a debt
owed by the person. The term
‘‘administrative offset’’ can include, but
is not limited to, the offset of Federal
salary, vendor, retirement, and Social
Security benefit payments. The terms
‘‘centralized administrative offset’’ and
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‘‘centralized offset’’ refer to the process
by which the Treasury Department’s
Financial Management Service offsets
Federal payments through the Treasury
Offset Program.
Administrative wage garnishment
means the process by which a Federal
agency orders a non-Federal employer
to withhold amounts from a debtor’s
wages to satisfy a debt, as authorized by
31 U.S.C. 3720D, 31 CFR 285.11, and
this part.
Agency or Federal agency means an
executive department or agency; a
military department; the United States
Postal Service; the Postal Regulatory
Commission; any nonappropriated fund
instrumentality described in 5 U.S.C.
2105(c); the United States Senate; the
United States House of Representatives;
any court, court administrative office, or
instrumentality in the judicial or
legislative branches of the Government;
or a Government corporation.
Creditor agency means any Federal
agency that is owed a debt.
Debt means any amount of money,
funds or property that has been
determined by an appropriate official of
the Federal Government to be owed to
the United States government, including
government-owned corporations, by a
person. As used in this part, the term
‘‘debt’’ can include a debt owed to
PBGC, but does not include debts
arising under the Internal Revenue Code
of 1986 (26 U.S.C. 1 et seq.).
Debtor means a person who owes a
debt to the United States.
Delinquent debt means a debt that has
not been paid by the date specified in
the agency’s initial written demand for
payment or applicable agreement or
instrument (including a postdelinquency payment agreement) unless
other satisfactory payment arrangements
have been made.
Disposable pay has the same meaning
as that term is defined in 5 CFR
550.1103.
Employee or Federal employee means
a current employee of PBGC or other
Federal agency, including a current
member of the uniformed services,
including the Army, Navy, Air Force,
Marine Corps, Coast Guard,
Commissioned Corps of the National
Oceanic and Atmospheric
Administration, Commissioned Corps of
the Public Health Service, the National
Guard, and the reserve forces of the
uniformed services.
FCCS means the Federal Claims
Collection Standards, 31 CFR parts 900–
904.
Financial Management Service (FMS)
means the Treasury Department bureau
that is responsible for the centralized
collection of delinquent debts through
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the offset of Federal payments and other
means.
Payment agency or Federal payment
agency means any Federal agency that
transmits payment requests in the form
of certified payment vouchers, or other
similar forms, to a disbursing official for
disbursement. The payment agency may
be the agency that employs the debtor.
In some cases, PBGC may be both the
creditor agency and payment agency.
Salary offset means a type of
administrative offset to collect a debt
under Section 5514 of Title 5 of the
United States Code and 5 CFR part 550,
subpart K by deduction(s) at one or
more officially established pay intervals
from the current pay account of an
employee with or without his or her
consent.
Tax debt means a debt arising under
the Code.
Tax refund offset means the reduction
by the IRS of a tax overpayment payable
to a taxpayer by the amount of past-due,
legally enforceable debt owed by that
taxpayer to a Federal agency pursuant to
Treasury regulations.
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§ 4903.2
What do these regulations cover?
(a) Scope. This part provides
procedures for the collection of debts
owed to PBGC, other than those subject
to recoupment (29 CFR 4022, subpart E).
This part also provides procedures for
collection of other debts owed to the
United States when a request for offset
of a payment, for which PBGC is the
payment agency, is received by PBGC
from another agency (for example, when
a PBGC employee owes a student loan
debt to the United States Department of
Education).
(b) Applicability.
(1) This part applies to PBGC when
collecting a debt owed to PBGC; to
persons who owe debts to PBGC; to
persons controlled by or controlling
persons who owe debts to a Federal
agency, and to Federal agencies
requesting offset of a payment issued by
PBGC as a payment agency (including
salary payments to PBGC employees).
(2) This part does not apply to debts
owed to PBGC being collected through
recoupment under subpart E of part
4022 of this chapter. Benefits paid by
PBGC generally will not be offset,
subject to limited exceptions (e.g., in
certain fiduciary breach situations).
(3) This part does not apply to tax
debts, to any debt based in whole or in
part on conduct in violation of the
antitrust laws, nor to any debt for which
there is an indication of fraud or
misrepresentation, as described in
§ 900.3 of the FCCS, unless the debt is
returned by the Department of Justice to
PBGC for handling.
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(4) Nothing in this part precludes the
use of other statutory or regulatory
authority to collect or dispose of any
debt. See, for example, 5 U.S.C. 5705,
Advancements and Deductions, which
authorizes PBGC to recover travel
advances by offset of up to 100 percent
of a Federal employee’s accrued pay.
See, also, 5 U.S.C. 4108, governing the
collection of training expenses.
(5) To the extent that provisions of
laws, other regulations, and PBGC
enforcement policies differ from the
provisions of this part, those provisions
of law, other regulations, and PBGC
enforcement policies apply to the
remission or mitigation of fines,
penalties, and forfeitures, and to debts
arising under ERISA, rather than the
provisions of this part.
(c) Additional policies and
procedures. PBGC may, but is not
required to, promulgate additional
policies and procedures consistent with
this part, the FCCS, and other applicable
law, policies, and procedures.
(1) PBGC does not intend this
regulation to prohibit PBGC from
demanding the return of specific
property or the payment of its value.
(2) The failure of PBGC to comply
with any provision in this regulation
will not serve as a defense to the
existence of the debt.
(d) Duplication not required. Nothing
in this part requires PBGC to duplicate
notices or administrative proceedings
required by contract, this part, or other
laws or regulations.
(e) Use of multiple collection
remedies allowed. PBGC and other
Federal agencies may simultaneously
use multiple collection remedies to
collect a debt, except as prohibited by
law. This part is intended to promote
aggressive debt collection, using for
each debt all available and appropriate
collection remedies. To provide PBGC
with flexibility in determining which
remedies will be most efficient in
collecting the particular debt, these
remedies are not listed in any
prescribed order.
§ 4903.3 Do these regulations adopt the
Federal Claims Collection Standards
(FCCS)?
This part adopts and incorporates all
provisions of FCCS. This part also
supplements the FCCS by prescribing
procedures consistent with FCCS, as
necessary and appropriate for PBGC
operations.
§ 4903.4 What rules apply for purposes of
filing with PBGC, determining dates of
filings, and computation of time?
(a) How and where to file. PBGC
applies the rules in subpart A of part
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4000 of this chapter to determine
permissible methods of filing with
PBGC under this part. See § 4000.4 of
this chapter for information on where to
file.
(b) Date of filing. PBGC applies the
rules in subpart C of part 4000 of this
chapter to determine the date that a
submission under this part was filed
with PBGC.
(c) Computation of time. PBGC
applies the rules of subpart D of part
4000 of this chapter to compute any
time period under this part.
Subpart B—Procedures To Collect
Debts Owed to PBGC
§ 4903.5 What notice will PBGC send to a
debtor when collecting a debt owed to
PBGC?
(a) Notice requirements. PBGC will
collect debts owed to PBGC. PBGC will
promptly send at least one written
notice to a debtor informing the debtor
of the consequences of failing to pay or
otherwise resolve a debt owed to PBGC.
The notice(s) will be sent to the debtor
at the most current address of the debtor
in PBGC’s records. Generally, before
starting the collection actions described
in §§ 4903.6 and 4903.10 through
4903.18 of this part, PBGC will send no
more than two written notices to the
debtor. The notice will explain why the
debt is owed to PBGC, the amount of the
debt, how a debtor may pay the debt or
make alternate repayment arrangements,
how a debtor may review non-privileged
documents related to the debt, how a
debtor may dispute the debt, the
collection remedies available to PBGC if
the debtor refuses or otherwise fails to
pay the debt, and other consequences to
the debtor if the debt is not paid. Except
as otherwise provided in paragraph (b)
of this section, the written notice(s) will
explain to the debtor:
(1) The nature and amount of the
debt, and the facts giving rise to the
debt;
(2) How interest, penalties, and
administrative costs are added to the
debt, the date by which payment must
be made to avoid such charges, and that
such assessments must be made unless
excused in accordance with 31 CFR
901.9 (see § 4903.6 of this part);
(3) The date by which payment
should be made to avoid the enforced
collection actions described in
paragraph (a)(6) of this section;
(4) PBGC’s willingness to discuss
alternative payment arrangements and
how the debtor may enter into a written
agreement to repay the debt under terms
acceptable to PBGC (see § 4903.7 of this
part);
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(5) The name, address, and telephone
number of a contact person or office
within PBGC;
(6) PBGC’s intention to enforce
collection by taking one or more of the
following actions if the debtor fails to
pay or otherwise resolve the debt:
(i) Offset. Offset the debtor’s receipt of
Federal payments, including income tax
refunds, salary, certain benefit payments
(such as Social Security), Federal
retirement (i.e., CSRS or FERS), vendor,
travel reimbursements and advances,
and other Federal payments (see
§§ 4903.11 through 4903.13 of this part);
(ii) Private collection agency. Refer
the debt to a private collection agency
(see § 4903.16 of this part);
(iii) Credit bureau reporting. Report
the debt to a credit bureau (see
§ 4903.15 of this part);
(iv) Administrative wage garnishment.
Garnish the debtor’s wages through
administrative wage garnishment (see
§ 4903.14 of this part);
(v) Litigation. Whether PBGC will
initiate litigation under 29 U.S.C. 1302
to collect the debt or refer the debt to
the Department of Justice to initiate
litigation to collect the debt (see
§ 4903.17 of this part);
(vi) Treasury Department’s Financial
Management Service. Refer the debt to
the Financial Management Service for
collection (see § 4903.10 of this part);
(7) That debts over 180 days
delinquent must be referred to the
Financial Management Service for the
collection actions described in
paragraph (a)(6) of this section (see
§ 4903.10 of this part);
(8) How the debtor may inspect and
copy non-privileged records related to
the debt;
(9) How the debtor may request a
review of PBGC’s determination that the
debtor owes a debt to PBGC and present
evidence that the debt is not delinquent
or legally enforceable (see §§ 4903.11(c)
and 4903.12(c) of this part);
(10) How a debtor who is an
individual may request a hearing if
PBGC intends to garnish the debtor’s
private sector (i.e., non-Federal) wages
(see § 4903.14(a) of this part), including:
(i) The method and time period for
requesting a hearing;
(ii) That a request for a hearing, timely
filed on or before the 15th business day
following the date of the mailing of the
notice, will stay the commencement of
administrative wage garnishment, but
not other collection procedures; and
(iii) The name and address of the
office to which the request for a hearing
should be sent.
(11) How a debtor who is an
individual and a Federal employee
subject to Federal salary offset may
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request a hearing (see § 4903.13(e) of
this part), including:
(i) The method and time period for
requesting a hearing;
(ii) That a request for a hearing, timely
filed on or before the 15th day following
receipt of the notice, will stay the
commencement of salary offset, but not
other collection procedures;
(iii) The name and address of the
office to which the request for a hearing
should be sent;
(iv) That PBGC will refer the debt to
the debtor’s employing agency or to the
Financial Management Service to
implement salary offset, unless the
employee files a timely request for a
hearing;
(v) That a final decision on the
hearing, if requested, will be issued at
the earliest practicable date, but not
later than 60 days after the filing of the
request for a hearing, unless the
employee requests and the hearing
official grants a delay in the
proceedings;
(vi) That any knowingly false or
frivolous statements, representations, or
evidence may subject the Federal
employee to penalties under the False
Claims Act (31 U.S.C. 3729–3731) or
other applicable statutory authority, and
criminal penalties under 18 U.S.C. 286,
287, 1001, and 1002, or other applicable
statutory authority;
(vii) That unless prohibited by
contract or statute, amounts paid on or
deducted for the debt which are later
waived or found not owed to the United
States will be promptly refunded to the
employee; and
(viii) That proceedings with respect to
such debt are governed by 5 U.S.C. 5514
and 31 U.S.C. 3716.
(12) How the debtor may request a
waiver of the debt, if applicable. See, for
example, § 4903.6 and § 4903.13(f) of
this part.
(13) How the debtor’s spouse may
claim his or her share of a joint income
tax refund by filing Form 8379 with the
Internal Revenue Service (see https://
www.irs.gov);
(14) How the debtor may exercise
other rights and remedies, if any,
available to the debtor under statutory
or regulatory authority under which the
debt arose.
(15) That certain debtors and, if
applicable, persons controlled by or
controlling such debtors, may be
ineligible for Federal Government loans,
guaranties and insurance, grants,
cooperative agreements or other Federal
funds (see 28 U.S.C. 3201(e); 31 U.S.C.
3720B, 31 CFR 285.13, and § 4903.18(a)
of this part); and
(16) That the debtor should advise
PBGC of a bankruptcy proceeding of the
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debtor or another person liable for the
debt being collected.
(b) Exceptions to notice requirements.
PBGC may omit from a notice to a
debtor one or more of the provisions
contained in paragraphs (a)(6) through
(a)(16) of this section if PBGC, in
consultation with its legal counsel,
determines that any provision is not
legally required given the collection
remedies to be applied to a particular
debt.
(c) Respond to debtors; comply with
FCCS. PBGC should respond promptly
to communications from debtors and
comply with other FCCS provisions
applicable to the administrative
collection of debts. See 31 CFR part 901.
§ 4903.6 How will PBGC add interest,
penalty charges, and administrative costs
to a debt owed to PBGC?
(a) Assessment and notice. PBGC will
assess interest, penalties and
administrative costs on PBGC debts in
accordance with the provisions of 31
U.S.C. 3717, 31 CFR 901.9 and other
applicable requirements. Administrative
costs, including the costs of processing
and handling a delinquent debt, will be
determined by PBGC. PBGC will explain
in the notice to the debtor how interest,
penalties, costs, and other charges are
assessed, unless the requirements are
included in a contract or other legally
binding agreement.
(b) Waiver of interest, penalties, and
administrative costs. Unless otherwise
required by law, regulation, or contract,
PBGC will not charge interest if the
amount due on the debt is paid within
30 days of the date from which the
interest accrues. See 31 U.S.C. 3717(d).
To the extent permitted by law, PBGC
may waive interest, penalties, and
administrative costs, or any portion
thereof, in appropriate circumstances
consistent with the FCCS.
(c) Accrual during suspension of debt
collection. In most cases, interest,
penalties and administrative costs will
continue to accrue during any period
when collection has been suspended for
any reason (for example, when the
debtor has requested a hearing). PBGC
may suspend accrual of any or all of
these charges in appropriate
circumstances consistent with the
FCCS.
§ 4903.7 When will PBGC allow a debtor to
pay a debt owed to PBGC in installments
instead of a lump sum?
If a debtor is financially unable to pay
the debt in a lump sum, PBGC may
accept payment of a debt in regular
installments, in accordance with the
provisions of 31 CFR 901.8.
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§ 4903.8 When will PBGC compromise a
debt owed to PBGC?
If PBGC cannot collect the full
amount of a debt owed to PBGC, PBGC
may compromise the debt in accordance
with the provisions of 31 CFR part 902.
§ 4903.9 When will PBGC suspend or
terminate debt collection on a debt owed to
PBGC?
If, after pursuing all appropriate
means of collection, PBGC determines
that a debt owed to PBGC is
uncollectible, PBGC may suspend or
terminate debt collection activity in
accordance with the provisions of 31
CFR part 903. Termination of debt
collection activity by PBGC does not
discharge the indebtedness.
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§ 4903.10 When will PBGC transfer a debt
owed to PBGC to the Treasury
Department’s Financial Management
Service for collection?
(a) PBGC will transfer a debt owed to
PBGC that is more than 180 days
delinquent to the Financial Management
Service for debt collection services, a
process known as ‘‘cross-servicing.’’ See
31 U.S.C. 3711(g) and 31 CFR 285.12.
PBGC may transfer debts owed to PBGC
that are delinquent 180 days or less to
the Financial Management Service in
accordance with the procedures
described in 31 CFR 285.12. The
Financial Management Service takes
appropriate action to collect or
compromise the transferred PBGC debt,
or to suspend or terminate collection
action thereon, in accordance with the
statutory and regulatory requirements
and authorities applicable to the debt
owed to PBGC and the collection action
to be taken. See 31 CFR 285.12(b) and
285.12(c)(2). Appropriate action can
include, but is not limited to, contact
with the debtor, referral of the debt
owed to PBGC to the Treasury Offset
Program, private collection agencies, or
the Department of Justice; reporting of
the debt to credit bureaus, and/or
administrative wage garnishment.
(b) At least 60 days prior to
transferring a debt owed to PBGC to the
Financial Management Service, PBGC
will send notice to the debtor as
required by § 4903.5 of this part. PBGC
will certify to the Financial
Management Service that the debt is
valid, delinquent, legally enforceable,
and that there are no legal bars to
collection. In addition, PBGC will
certify its compliance with all
applicable due process and other
requirements as described in this part
and other Federal laws. See 31 CFR
285.12(i) regarding the certification
requirement.
(c) As part of its debt collection
process, the Financial Management
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Service uses the Treasury Offset
Program to collect debts owed to PBGC
by administrative and tax refund offset.
See 31 CFR 285.12(g). Under the
Treasury Offset Program, before a
Federal payment is disbursed, the
Financial Management Service
compares the name and taxpayer
identification number (TIN) of the payee
with the names and TINs of debtors that
have been submitted by Federal
agencies and states to the Treasury
Offset Program database. If there is a
match, the Financial Management
Service (or, in some cases, another
Federal disbursing agency) offsets all or
a portion of the Federal payment,
disburses any remaining payment to the
payee, and pays the offset amount to the
creditor agency. Federal payments
eligible for offset include, but are not
limited to, income tax refunds, salary,
travel advances and reimbursements,
retirement and vendor payments, and
Social Security and other benefit
payments.
§ 4903.11 How will PBGC use
administrative offset (offset of non-tax
Federal payments) to collect a debt owed to
PBGC?
(a) Centralized administrative offset
through the Treasury Offset Program.
(1) In most cases, the Financial
Management Service uses the Treasury
Offset Program to collect debts owed to
PBGC by the offset of Federal payments.
See § 4903.10(c) of this part. If not
already transferred to the Financial
Management Service under § 4903.10 of
this part, PBGC will refer debt over 180
days delinquent to the Treasury Offset
Program for collection by centralized
administrative offset. See 31 U.S.C.
3716(c)(6); 31 CFR part 285, subpart A;
and 31 CFR 901.3(b). PBGC may refer to
the Treasury Offset Program for offset
any debt owed to PBGC that has been
delinquent for 180 days or less.
(2) At least 60 days prior to referring
a debt owed to PBGC to the Treasury
Offset Program, in accordance with
paragraph (a)(1) of this section, PBGC
will send notice to the debtor in
accordance with the requirements of
§ 4903.5 of this part. PBGC will certify
to the Financial Management Service,
that the debt is valid, delinquent, and
legally enforceable, and that there are no
legal bars to collection by offset. In
addition, PBGC will certify its
compliance with the requirements in
this part.
(b) Non-centralized administrative
offset for debts owed to PBGC.
(1) When centralized administrative
offset through the Treasury Offset
Program is not available or appropriate,
PBGC may collect past-due, legally
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enforceable debts owed to PBGC
through non-centralized administrative
offset. See 31 CFR 901.3(c). In these
cases, PBGC may offset a payment
internally or make an offset request
directly to a Federal payment agency.
(2) At least 30 days prior to offsetting
a payment internally or requesting a
Federal payment agency to offset a
payment, PBGC will send notice to the
debtor in accordance with the
requirements of § 4903.5 of this part.
When referring a debt owed to PBGC for
offset under this paragraph (b), PBGC
will certify that the debt is valid,
delinquent, and legally enforceable, and
that there are no legal bars to collection
by offset. In addition, PBGC will certify
its compliance with these regulations
concerning administrative offset. See
31 CFR 901.3(c)(2)(ii).
(c) Administrative review. The notice
described in § 4903.5 of this part will
explain to the debtor how to request an
administrative review of PBGC’s
determination that the debtor owes a
debt to PBGC and how to present
evidence that the debt is not delinquent
or legally enforceable. In addition to
challenging the existence and amount of
the debt owed to PBGC, the debtor may
seek a review of the terms of repayment.
In most cases, PBGC will provide
administrative review based upon the
written record, including
documentation provided by the debtor.
PBGC may provide the debtor with a
reasonable opportunity for an oral
hearing when the debtor requests
reconsideration of the debt owed to
PBGC, and PBGC determines that the
question of the indebtedness cannot be
resolved by review of the documentary
evidence. Unless otherwise required by
law, an oral hearing under this section
is not required to be a formal
evidentiary hearing. PBGC will carefully
document all significant matters
discussed at the hearing. PBGC may
suspend collection through
administrative offset and/or other
collection actions pending the
resolution of a debtor’s dispute.
(d) Procedures for expedited offset.
Under the circumstances described in
31 CFR 901.3(b)(4)(iii), PBGC may offset
against a payment to be made to the
debtor prior to sending a notice to the
debtor, as described in § 4903.5 of this
part, or completing the procedures
described in paragraph (b)(2) and (c) of
this section. PBGC will give the debtor
notice and an opportunity for review as
soon as practicable and promptly refund
any money ultimately found not to have
been owed to the Government.
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§ 4903.12 How will PBGC use tax refund
offset to collect a debt owed to PBGC?
(a) Tax refund offset. In most cases,
the Financial Management Service uses
the Treasury Offset Program to collect
debts owed to PBGC by the offset of tax
refunds and other Federal payments.
See § 4903.10(c) of this part. If not
already transferred to the Financial
Management Service under § 4903.10 of
this part, PBGC will refer to the
Treasury Offset Program any past-due,
legally enforceable debt for collection by
tax refund offset. See 26 U.S.C. 6402(d),
31 U.S.C. 3720A and 31 CFR 285.2.
(b) Notice. At least 60 days prior to
referring a debt owed to the Treasury
Offset Program, PBGC will send notice
to the debtor in accordance with the
requirements of § 4903.5 of this part.
PBGC will certify to the Financial
Management Service’s Treasury Offset
Program that the debt is past due and
legally enforceable in the amount
submitted, and that the PBGC has made
reasonable efforts to obtain payment of
the debt as described in 31 CFR
285.2(d). In addition, PBGC will certify
its compliance with all applicable due
process and other requirements
described in this part and other Federal
laws. See 31 U.S.C. 3720A(b) and
31 CFR 285.2.
(c) Administrative review. The notice
described in § 4903.5 of this part will
provide the debtor with at least 60 days
prior to the initiation of tax refund offset
to request an administrative review as
described in § 4903.11(c) of this part.
PBGC may suspend collection through
tax refund offset and/or other collection
actions pending the resolution of the
debtor’s dispute.
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§ 4903.13 How will PBGC offset a Federal
employee’s salary to collect a debt owed to
PBGC?
(a) Federal salary offset.
(1) Salary offset is used to collect
debts owed to the United States or
PBGC by Federal employees. If a Federal
employee owes PBGC a debt, PBGC may
offset the employee’s Federal salary to
collect the debt in the manner described
in this section. For information on how
a Federal agency other than PBGC may
collect debt from the salary of a PBGC
employee, see §§ 4903.21 and 4903.22,
subpart C, of this part.
(2) Nothing in this part requires PBGC
to collect a debt in accordance with the
provisions of this section if Federal law
allows other means to collect. See, for
example, 5 U.S.C. 5705 (travel advances
not used for allowable travel expenses
are recoverable from the employee or
his estate by setoff against accrued pay
and other means) and 5 U.S.C. 4108
(recovery of training expenses).
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(3) PBGC may use the administrative
wage garnishment procedure described
in § 4903.14 of this part to collect from
an individual’s non-Federal wages a
debt owed to PBGC.
(b) Centralized salary offset through
the Treasury Offset Program. As
described in § 4903.10(a) of this part,
PBGC will refer debts owed to PBGC to
the Financial Management Service for
collection by administrative offset,
including salary offset, through the
Treasury Offset Program. When
possible, PBGC will attempt salary offset
through the Treasury Offset Program
before applying the procedures in
paragraph (c) of this section. See 5 CFR
550.1108 and 550.1109.
(c) Non-centralized salary offset for
debts owed to PBGC. When centralized
salary offset through the Treasury Offset
Program is not available or appropriate,
PBGC may collect delinquent debts
owed to PBGC through non-centralized
salary offset. See 5 CFR 550.1109. In
these cases, PBGC may offset a payment
internally or make a request directly to
a Federal payment agency to offset a
salary payment to collect a delinquent
debt owed to PBGC by a Federal
employee. Thirty (30) days prior to
offsetting internally or requesting a
Federal agency to offset a salary
payment, PBGC will send notice to the
debtor in accordance with the
requirements of § 4903.5 of this part.
When referring a debt owed to PBGC for
offset, PBGC will certify to the payment
agency that the debt is valid, delinquent
and legally enforceable in the amount
stated, and there are no legal bars to
collection by salary offset. In addition,
PBGC will certify that all due process
and other prerequisites to salary offset
have been met. See 5 U.S.C. 5514, 31
U.S.C. 3716(a), and this section for a
description of the due process and other
prerequisites for salary offset.
(d) When prior notice not required.
PBGC is not required to provide prior
notice to an employee when the
following adjustments are made by
PBGC to a PBGC employee’s pay:
(1) Any adjustment to pay arising out
of any employee’s election of coverage
or a change in coverage under a Federal
benefits program requiring periodic
deductions from pay if the amount to be
recovered was accumulated over 4 pay
periods or less;
(2) A routine intra-agency adjustment
of pay that is made to correct an
overpayment of pay attributable to
clerical or administrative errors or
delays in processing pay documents, if
the overpayment occurred within the 4
pay periods preceding the adjustment,
and, at the time of such adjustment, or
as soon thereafter as practicable, the
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68209
individual is provided written notice of
the nature and the amount of the
adjustment and the point of contact for
contesting such adjustment; or
(3) Any adjustment to collect a debt
amounting to $50 or less, if, at the time
of such adjustment, or as soon thereafter
as practicable, the individual is
provided written notice of the nature
and the amount of the adjustment and
a point of contact for contesting such
adjustment.
(e) Administrative review—
(1) Request for administrative review. A
Federal employee who has received a
notice that his or her debt will be
collected by means of salary offset may
request administrative review
concerning the existence or amount of
the debt owed to PBGC. The Federal
employee also may request
administrative review concerning the
amount proposed to be deducted from
the employee’s pay each pay period.
The employee must send any request for
administrative review in writing to the
office designated in the notice described
in § 4903.5. See § 4903.5(a)(11). The
request must be received by the
designated office on or before the 15th
day following the employee’s receipt of
the notice. The employee must sign the
request and specify whether an oral
hearing is requested. If an oral hearing
is requested, the employee must explain
why the matter cannot be resolved by
review of the documentary evidence
alone. All travel expenses incurred by
the Federal employee in connection
with an in-person hearing will be borne
by the employee. See 31 CFR
901.3(a)(7).
(2) Failure to submit timely request for
administrative review. If the employee
fails to submit a request for
administrative review within the time
period described in paragraph (e)(1) of
this section, salary offset may be
initiated. However, PBGC may accept a
late request for administrative review if
the employee can show that the late
request was the result of circumstances
beyond the employee’s control or
because of a failure to receive actual
notice of the filing deadline.
(3) Reviewing official. PBGC must
obtain the services of a reviewing
official who is not under the
supervision or control of the Director of
the PBGC. PBGC may enter into
interagency support agreements with
other agencies to provide reviewing
officials.
(4) Notice of administrative review.
After the employee requests
administrative review, the designated
reviewing official will inform the
employee of the form of the review to
be provided. For oral hearings, the
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notice will set forth the date, time and
location of the hearing. For
determinations based on review of
written records, the notice will notify
the employee of the date by which he
or she should submit written arguments
to the designated reviewing official. The
reviewing official will give the
employee reasonable time to submit
documentation in support of the
employee’s position. The reviewing
official will schedule a new hearing date
if requested by both parties. The
reviewing official will give both parties
reasonable notice of the time and place
of a rescheduled hearing.
(5) Oral hearing. The reviewing
official will conduct an oral hearing if
the official determines that the matter
cannot be resolved by review of
documentary evidence alone. The
hearing need not take the form of an
evidentiary hearing, but may be
conducted in a manner determined by
the reviewing official, including but not
limited to:
(i) Informal conferences (in person or
electronically) with the reviewing
official, in which the employee and
agency representative will be given a
reasonable opportunity to present
evidence, witnesses and argument;
(ii) Informal meetings with an
interview of the employee by the
reviewing official; or
(iii) Formal written submissions, with
an opportunity for oral presentation.
(6) Determination based on review of
written record. If the reviewing official
determines that an oral hearing is not
necessary, the official will make the
determination based upon a review of
the available written record, including
any documentation submitted by the
employee in support of his or her
position. See 31 CFR 901.3(a)(7).
(7) Failure to appear or submit
documentary evidence. In the absence of
good cause shown (for example,
excused illness), if the employee fails to
appear at an oral hearing or fails to
submit documentary evidence as
required for administrative review, the
employee will have waived the right to
administrative review, and salary offset
may be initiated. Further, the employee
will have been deemed to admit the
existence and amount of the debt owed
to PBGC as described in the notice of
intent to offset. If PBGC’s representative
fails to appear at an oral hearing, the
reviewing official will proceed with the
hearing as scheduled, and make his or
her determination based upon the oral
testimony presented and the
documentary evidence submitted by
both parties.
(8) Burden of proof. PBGC will have
the initial burden to prove the existence
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and amount of the debt owed to PBGC.
Thereafter, if the employee disputes the
existence or amount of the debt, the
employee must prove by a
preponderance of the evidence that no
such debt exists or that the amount of
the debt is incorrect. In addition, the
employee may present evidence that the
proposed terms of the repayment
schedule are unlawful, would cause a
financial hardship to the employee, or
that collection of the debt may not be
pursued due to operation of law.
(9) Record. The reviewing official will
maintain a summary record of any
hearing provided by this part. Witnesses
will testify under oath or affirmation in
oral hearings. See 31 CFR 901.3(a)(7).
(10) Date of decision. The reviewing
official will issue a written opinion
stating the official’s decision, based
upon documentary evidence and
information developed during the
administrative review, as soon as
practicable after the review, but not later
than 60 days after the date on which the
request for review was received by
PBGC. If the employee (or the parties
jointly) requests a delay in the
proceedings, the deadline for the
decision may be postponed by the
number of days by which the review
was postponed. When a decision is not
timely rendered, PBGC will waive
interest and penalties applied to the
debt owed to PBGC for the period
beginning with the date the decision is
due and ending on the date the decision
is issued.
(11) Content of decision. The written
decision will include:
(i) A statement of the facts presented
to support the origin, nature, and
amount of the debt owed to PBGC;
(ii) The reviewing official’s findings,
analysis, and conclusions; and
(iii) The terms of any repayment
schedules, if applicable.
(12) Final agency action. The
reviewing official’s decision will be
final.
(f) Waiver not precluded. Nothing in
this part precludes an employee from
requesting waiver of an overpayment
under 5 U.S.C. 5584 or 8346(b), 32
U.S.C. 716, or other statutory authority.
PBGC may grant such waivers when it
would be against equity and good
conscience or not in the United States’
best interest to collect such debts, in
accordance with those authorities, 5
CFR 550.1102(b)(2).
(g) Salary offset process—
(1) Determination of disposable pay.
PBGC will implement salary offset when
requested to do so by PBGC, as
described in paragraph (c) of this
section, or another agency, as described
in § 4903.21 of this part. If the debtor is
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not employed by PBGC, the agency
employing the debtor will determine the
amount of the employee’s disposable
pay and will implement salary offset
upon request.
(2) When salary offset begins.
Deductions will begin within three
official pay periods following receipt of
the creditor agency’s request for offset or
after a decision has been issued
following a request for a hearing.
(3) Amount of salary offset. The
amount to be offset from each salary
payment will be up to 15 percent of a
debtor’s disposable pay, subject to the
requirements of 15 U.S.C. 1673, as
follows:
(i) If the amount of the debt is equal
to or less than 15 percent of the
disposable pay, such debt generally will
be collected in a lump sum payment;
(ii) Installment deductions will be
made over a period of no greater than
the anticipated period of employment.
An installment deduction will not
exceed 15 percent of the disposable pay
from which the deduction is made
unless the employee has agreed in
writing to the deduction of a greater
amount, or the creditor agency has
determined that smaller deductions are
appropriate based on the employee’s
ability to pay.
(4) Final salary payment. After the
employee has separated either
voluntarily or involuntarily from the
payment agency, the payment agency
may make a lump sum deduction
exceeding 15 percent of disposable pay
from any final salary or other payments
pursuant to 31 U.S.C. 3716 in order to
satisfy a debt owed to PBGC.
(h) Payment agency’s responsibilities.
(1) As required by 5 CFR 550.1109, if
the employee separates from the
payment agency from which PBGC has
requested salary offset, the payment
agency must certify the total amount of
its collection and notify PBGC and the
employee of the amounts collected. If
the payment agency knows that the
employee is entitled to payments from
the Civil Service Retirement Fund and
Disability Fund, the Federal Employee
Retirement System, or other similar
payments, it must provide written
notification to the agency responsible
for making such payments that the
debtor owes a debt to PBGC, the amount
of the debt, and that PBGC has complied
with the provisions of this section.
PBGC must submit a properly certified
claim to the agency responsible for
making such payments before the
collection can be made.
(2) If the employee is already
separated from employment and all
payments due from his or her former
payment agency have been made, PBGC
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may request that money due and
payable to the employee from the Civil
Service Retirement Fund and Disability
Fund, the Federal Employee Retirement
System, or other similar funds, be
administratively offset to collect the
debt. Generally, PBGC will collect such
monies through the Treasury Offset
Program as described in § 4903.10(c) of
this part.
(3) When an employee transfers to
another agency, PBGC should resume
collection with the employee’s new
payment agency in order to continue
salary offset.
mstockstill on DSKH9S0YB1PROD with RULES
§ 4903.14 How will PBGC use
administrative wage garnishment to collect
a debt owed to PBGC from a debtor’s
wages?
(a) PBGC is authorized to collect debts
owed to PBGC from an individual
debtor’s wages by means of
administrative wage garnishment in
accordance with the requirements of 31
U.S.C. 3720D and 31 CFR 285.11. This
part adopts and incorporates all of the
provisions of 31 CFR 285.11 concerning
administrative wage garnishment,
including the hearing procedures
described in 31 CFR 285.11(f). PBGC
may use administrative wage
garnishment to collect a delinquent debt
unless the debtor is making timely
payments under an agreement to pay the
debt in installments (see § 4903.7 of this
part). Thirty (30) days prior to initiating
an administrative wage garnishment,
PBGC will send notice to the debtor in
accordance with the requirements of
§ 4903.5 of this part, including the
requirements of § 4903.5(a)(10) of this
part. For debts referred to the Financial
Management Service under § 4903.10 of
this part, PBGC may authorize the
Financial Management Service to send a
notice informing the debtor that
administrative wage garnishment will
be initiated and how the debtor may
request a hearing as described in
§ 4903.5(a)(10) of this part. If a debtor
makes a timely request for a hearing,
administrative wage garnishment will
not begin until a hearing is held and a
decision is sent to the debtor. PBGC will
determine whether the matter requires
an oral hearing or if a determination
based upon review of the written record
is sufficient. PBGC will provide the
debtor with a reasonable opportunity for
an oral hearing when it determines that
the issues in dispute cannot be resolved
by a review of the documentary
evidence. See 31 CFR 285.11(f)(1)–(4).
Even if a debtor’s hearing request is not
timely, PBGC may suspend collection
by administrative wage garnishment in
accordance with the provisions of 31
CFR 285.11(f)(5). All travel expenses
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16:35 Nov 04, 2010
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incurred by the debtor in connection
with an in-person hearing will be borne
by the debtor.
(b) This section does not apply to
Federal salary offset, the process by
which PBGC collects debts owed to
PBGC from the salaries of Federal
employees (see § 4903.13 of this part).
§ 4903.15 How will PBGC report debts
owed to PBGC to credit bureaus?
PBGC will report delinquent debts
owed to PBGC to credit bureaus in
accordance with the provisions of 31
U.S.C. 3711(e), 31 CFR 901.4, and the
Office of Management and Budget
Circular A–129, ‘‘Policies for Federal
Credit Programs and Non-tax
Receivables.’’ At least 60 days prior to
reporting a delinquent debt to a
consumer reporting agency, PBGC will
send notice to the debtor in accordance
with the requirements of § 4903.5 of this
part. PBGC may authorize the Financial
Management Service to report to credit
bureaus those delinquent debts owed to
the PBGC that have been transferred to
the Financial Management Service
under § 4903.10 of this part.
§ 4903.16 How will PBGC refer debts owed
to PBGC to private collection agencies?
PBGC will transfer delinquent debts
owed to PBGC to the Financial
Management Service to obtain debt
collection services provided by private
collection agencies. See § 4903.10 of this
part.
68211
§ 4903.18 Will a debtor who owes a debt to
PBGC or another Federal agency, and
persons controlled by or controlling such
debtors, be ineligible for Federal loan
assistance, grants, cooperative
agreements, or other sources of Federal
funds?
(a) Delinquent debtors are ineligible
for and barred from obtaining Federal
loans or loan insurance or guaranties.
As required by 31 U.S.C. 3720B and 31
CFR 901.6, PBGC will not extend
financial assistance in the form of a
loan, loan guarantee, or loan insurance
to any person delinquent on a debt
owed to a Federal agency. PBGC may
issue standards under which it may
determine that persons controlled by or
controlling such delinquent debtors are
similarly ineligible in accordance with
31 CFR 285.13(c)(2). This prohibition
does not apply to disaster loans. PBGC
may extend credit after the delinquency
has been resolved. See 31 CFR 285.13.
(b) This section does not apply to
loans provided to multi-employer
pension plans pursuant to 29 U.S.C.
1431, 29 CFR 4261.1 and 4281.47.
(c) A debtor who has a judgment lien
against the debtor’s property for a debt
to the United States is not eligible to
receive grants, loans or funds directly or
indirectly from the United States until
the judgment is paid in full or otherwise
satisfied. This prohibition does not
apply to funds to which the debtor is
entitled as beneficiary. PBGC may
promulgate regulations to allow for
waivers of this ineligibility. See 28
U.S.C. 3201(e).
§ 4903.17 When will PBGC refer debts
owed to PBGC to the Department of
Justice?
§ 4903.19 How does a debtor request a
special review based on a change in
circumstances such as catastrophic illness,
divorce, death, or disability?
PBGC may initiate litigation pursuant
to 29 U.S.C. 1302 with delinquent debts
on which aggressive collection activity
has been taken in accordance with this
part and that should not be
compromised, and on which collection
activity should not be suspended or
terminated. Alternatively, PBGC may
refer debts owed to PBGC having a
principal balance over $100,000, or such
higher amount as authorized by the
Attorney General, to the Department of
Justice for approval of any compromise
of a debt or suspension or termination
of collection activity. See §§ 4903.8 and
4903.9 of this part; 31 CFR 902.1, 903.1,
and part 904. PBGC may authorize the
Financial Management Service to refer
to the Department of Justice for
litigation those delinquent debts that
have been transferred to the Financial
Management Service under § 4903.10 of
this part.
(a) Material change in circumstances.
A debtor who owes a debt to PBGC may,
at any time, request a special review by
PBGC of the amount of any offset,
administrative wage garnishment, or
voluntary payment, based on materially
changed circumstances beyond the
control of the debtor such as, but not
limited to, catastrophic illness, divorce,
death, or disability.
(b) Inability to pay. For purposes of
this section, in determining whether an
involuntary or voluntary payment
would prevent the debtor from meeting
essential subsistence expenses (e.g.,
costs incurred for food, housing,
clothing, transportation, and medical
care), the debtor must submit a detailed
statement and supporting documents for
the debtor, his or her spouse, and
dependents, indicating:
(1) Income from all sources;
(2) Assets;
(3) Liabilities;
(4) Number of dependents;
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(5) Expenses for food, housing,
clothing, and transportation;
(6) Medical expenses;
(7) Exceptional expenses, if any; and
(8) Any additional materials and
information that PBGC may request
relating to ability or inability to pay the
amount(s) currently required.
(c) Alternative payment arrangement.
If the debtor requests a special review
under this section, the debtor must
submit an alternative proposed payment
schedule and a statement to PBGC, with
supporting documents, showing why
the current offset, garnishment or
repayment schedule imposes an extreme
financial hardship on the debtor. PBGC
will evaluate the statement and
documentation and determine whether
the current offset, garnishment, or
repayment schedule imposes extreme
financial hardship on the debtor. PBGC
will notify the debtor in writing of such
determination, including, if appropriate,
a revised offset, garnishment, or
payment schedule. If the special review
results in a revised offset, garnishment,
or repayment schedule, PBGC will
notify the appropriate Federal agency or
other persons about the new terms.
§ 4903.20 Will PBGC issue a refund if
money is erroneously collected on a debt?
PBGC will promptly refund to a
debtor any amount collected on a debt
owed to PBGC when the debt is waived
or otherwise found not to be owed to the
United States, or as otherwise required
by law.
Subpart C—Procedures for Offset of
PBGC Payments To Collect Debts
Owed to Other Federal Agencies
mstockstill on DSKH9S0YB1PROD with RULES
§ 4903.21 How do other Federal agencies
use the offset process to collect debts from
payments issued by PBGC?
(a) Offset of PBGC payments to collect
debts owed to other Federal agencies.
(1) In most cases, Federal agencies
submit debts to the Treasury Offset
Program to collect delinquent debts
from payments issued by PBGC and
other Federal agencies, a process known
as ‘‘centralized offset.’’ When centralized
offset is not available or appropriate,
any Federal agency may ask PBGC
(when acting as a ‘‘payment agency’’) to
collect a debt owed to such agency by
offsetting funds payable to a debtor by
PBGC, including salary payments issued
to PBGC employees. This section and
§ 4903.21 of this subpart C apply when
a Federal agency asks PBGC to offset a
payment issued by PBGC to a person
who owes a debt to the United States.
(2) This subpart C does not apply to
debts owed to PBGC. See §§ 4903.11
through 4903.13 of this part for offset
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16:35 Nov 04, 2010
Jkt 223001
procedures applicable to debts owed to
PBGC.
(3) This subpart C does not apply to
the collection of non-PBGC debts
through tax refund offset. See 31 CFR
285.2 for tax refund offset procedures.
(4) Benefits paid by PBGC generally
will not be offset, subject to limited
exceptions (e.g., in certain fiduciary
breach situations).
(b) Administrative offset (including
salary offset); certification. PBGC will
initiate a requested offset only upon
receipt of written certification from the
creditor agency that the debtor owes the
past-due, legally enforceable debt in the
amount stated, and that the creditor
agency has fully complied with all
applicable due process and other
requirements contained in 31 U.S.C.
3716, 5 U.S.C. 5514, and the creditor
agency’s regulations, as applicable.
Offsets will continue until the debt is
paid in full or otherwise resolved to the
satisfaction of the creditor agency.
(c) Where a creditor agency makes
requests for offset. Requests for offset
under this section must be sent to
PBGC, ATTN: Chief Financial Officer,
1200 K Street, NW., Washington, DC
20005.
(d) Incomplete certification. PBGC
will return an incomplete debt
certification to the creditor agency with
notice that the creditor agency must
comply with paragraph (b) of this
section before action will be taken to
collect a debt from a payment issued by
PBGC.
(e) Review. PBGC is not authorized to
review the merits of the creditor
agency’s determination with respect to
the amount or validity of the debt
certified by the creditor agency.
(f) When PBGC will not comply with
offset request. PBGC will comply with
the offset request of another agency
unless PBGC determines, in
consultation with that agency, that the
offset would not be in the best interests
of the United States, or would otherwise
be contrary to law.
(g) Multiple debts. When two or more
creditor agencies are seeking offsets
from payments made to the same
person, or when two or more debts are
owed to a single creditor agency, PBGC
may determine the order in which the
debts will be collected or whether one
or more debts should be collected by
offset simultaneously.
(h) Priority of debts owed to PBGC.
For purposes of this section, debts owed
to PBGC generally take precedence over
debts owed to other agencies. PBGC may
determine whether to pay debts owed to
other agencies before paying a debt
owed to PBGC. PBGC will determine the
order in which the debts will be
PO 00000
Frm 00044
Fmt 4700
Sfmt 4700
collected based on the best interests of
the United States.
§ 4903.22 What does PBGC do upon
receipt of a request to offset the salary of
a PBGC employee to collect a debt owed by
the employee to another Federal agency?
(a) Notice to a PBGC employee. When
PBGC receives proper certification of a
debt owed by one of its employees,
PBGC will send a written notice to the
employee indicating that a certified debt
claim has been received from the
creditor agency, the amount of the debt
claimed to be owed by the creditor
agency, the date deductions from salary
will begin, and the amount of such
deductions. PBGC will begin deductions
from the employee’s pay at the next
officially established pay interval.
(b) Amount of deductions from a
PBGC employee’s salary. The amount
deducted under § 4903.21(b) of this part
will be the lesser of the amount of the
debt certified by the creditor agency or
an amount up to 15 percent of the
debtor’s disposable pay so long as that
amount does not exceed limitations
imposed by 15 U.S.C. 1673. Deductions
will continue until PBGC knows that the
debt is paid in full or until otherwise
instructed by the creditor agency.
Alternatively, the amount offset may be
an amount agreed upon, in writing, by
the debtor and the creditor agency. See
§ 4903.13(g) (salary offset process).
(c) When the debtor is no longer
employed by PBGC—(1) Offset of final
and subsequent payments. If a PBGC
employee retires or resigns or if his or
her employment ends before collection
of the debt is complete, PBGC will
continue to offset, under 31 U.S.C. 3716,
up to 100 percent of an employee’s
subsequent payments until the debt is
paid or otherwise resolved. Such
payments include a debtor’s final salary
payment, lump-sum leave payment, and
other payments payable to the debtor by
PBGC. See 31 U.S.C. 3716 and 5 CFR
550.1104(l) and 550.1104(m).
(2) Notice to the creditor agency. If the
employee is separated from PBGC before
the debt is paid in full, PBGC will
certify to the creditor agency the total
amount of its collection. If PBGC knows
that the employee is entitled to
payments from the Civil Service
Retirement and Disability Fund, Federal
Employee Retirement System, or other
similar payments, PBGC will provide
written notice to the agency making
such payments that the debtor owes a
debt (including the amount) and that the
provisions of 5 CFR 550.1109 have been
fully complied with. The creditor
agency is responsible for submitting a
certified claim to the agency responsible
for making such payments before
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Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 214 / Friday, November 5, 2010 / Rules and Regulations
collection may begin. Generally,
creditor agencies will collect such
monies through the Treasury Offset
Program as described in § 4903.10(c) of
this part.
(3) Notice to the debtor. PBGC will
provide to the debtor a copy of any
notices sent to the creditor agency under
paragraph (c)(2) of this section.
(d) When the debtor transfers to
another Federal agency—(1) Notice to
the creditor agency. If the debtor
transfers to another Federal agency
before the debt is paid in full, PBGC will
notify the creditor agency and will
certify the total amount of its collection
on the debt. PBGC will provide a copy
of the certification to the creditor
agency. The creditor agency is
responsible for submitting a certified
claim to the debtor’s new employing
agency before collection may begin.
(2) Notice to the debtor. PBGC will
provide to the debtor a copy of any
notices and certifications sent to the
creditor agency under paragraph (d)(1)
of this section.
(e) Request for hearing official. PBGC
will provide a hearing official upon the
creditor agency’s request with respect to
a PBGC employee. See 5 CFR
550.1107(a).
Issued in Washington, DC, this 1st day of
November 2010.
Joshua Gotbaum,
Director, Pension Benefit Guaranty
Corporation.
[FR Doc. 2010–28020 Filed 11–4–10; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 7709–01–P
DEPARTMENT OF DEFENSE
Department of the Navy
32 CFR Part 706
Certifications and Exemptions Under
the International Regulations for
Preventing Collisions at Sea, 1972
AGENCY:
Department of the Navy, DoD.
ACTION:
Final rule.
The Department of the Navy
(DoN) is amending its certifications and
exemptions under the International
Regulations for Preventing Collisions at
Sea, 1972 (72 COLREGS), to reflect that
the Deputy Assistant Judge Advocate
General (DAJAG) (Admiralty and
Maritime Law) has determined that USS
OSCAR AUSTIN (DDG 79) is a vessel of
the Navy which, due to its special
construction and purpose, cannot fully
comply with certain provisions of the
72 COLREGS without interfering with
its special function as a naval ship. The
intended effect of this rule is to warn
mariners in waters where 72 COLREGS
apply.
DATES: This rule is effective November
5, 2010 and is applicable beginning
October 13, 2010.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Lieutenant Commander Ted Cook,
JAGC, U.S. Navy, Admiralty Attorney,
(Admiralty and Maritime Law), Office of
the Judge Advocate General, Department
of the Navy, 1322 Patterson Ave., SE.,
Suite 3000, Washington Navy Yard, DC
20374–5066, telephone number: 202–
685–5040.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: Pursuant
to the authority granted in 33 U.S.C.
1605, the DoN amends 32 Code of
Federal Regulations (CFR) Part 706.
This amendment provides notice that
the DAJAG (Admiralty and Maritime
Law), under authority delegated by the
Secretary of the Navy, has certified that
USS OSCAR AUSTIN (DDG 79) is a
vessel of the Navy which, due to its
special construction and purpose,
cannot fully comply with the following
specific provisions of 72 COLREGS
without interfering with its special
function as a naval ship: Annex I,
paragraph 3(c), pertaining to the
placement of task lights not less than
two meters from the fore and aft
centerline of the ship in the athwartship
direction. The DAJAG (Admiralty and
SUMMARY:
Maritime Law) has also certified that the
lights involved are located in closest
possible compliance with the applicable
72 COLREGS requirements.
Moreover, it has been determined, in
accordance with 32 CFR Parts 296 and
701, that publication of this amendment
for public comment prior to adoption is
impracticable, unnecessary, and
contrary to public interest since it is
based on technical findings that the
placement of lights on this vessel in a
manner differently from that prescribed
herein will adversely affect the vessel’s
ability to perform its military functions.
List of Subjects in 32 CFR Part 706
Marine safety, Navigation (water), and
Vessels.
For the reasons set forth in the
preamble, amend part 706 of title 32 of
the CFR as follows:
■
PART 706—CERTIFICATIONS AND
EXEMPTIONS UNDER THE
INTERNATIONAL REGULATIONS FOR
PREVENTING COLLISIONS AT SEA,
1972
1. The authority citation for part 706
continues to read as follows:
■
Authority: 33 U.S.C. 1605.
2. Section 706.2 is amended in Table
Four, Paragraph 15 by adding the
following entry for USS OSCAR
AUSTIN (DDG 79) in alphanumerical
order by DDG number:
■
§ 706.2 Certifications of the Secretary of
the Navy under Executive Order 11964 and
33 U.S.C. 1605.
*
*
*
Table Four
*
*
*
15. * * *
*
*
*
*
*
*
USS OSCAR AUSTIN ............................................................................................................
mstockstill on DSKH9S0YB1PROD with RULES
Number
*
*
DDG 79 .....................
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*
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*
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*
Frm 00045
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*
Sfmt 4700
E:\FR\FM\05NOR1.SGM
*
05NOR1
*
Horizontal distance
from the fore and aft
centerline of the vessel
in the athwartship
direction
Vessel
*
*
*
1.89 meters.
*
Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 75, Number 214 (Friday, November 5, 2010)]
[Rules and Regulations]
[Pages 68203-68213]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Printing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2010-28020]
=======================================================================
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
PENSION BENEFIT GUARANTY CORPORATION
29 CFR Parts 4003 and 4903
Debt Collection
AGENCY: Pension Benefit Guaranty Corporation.
ACTION: Final rule.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SUMMARY: This final rule amends the Pension Benefit Guaranty
Corporation's (PBGC) regulation on debt collection to conform to the
Debt Collection Improvement Act of 1996, the Federal Claims Collection
Standards and other legal requirements applicable to the collection of
non-tax debts owed to PBGC. PBGC is adding salary offset and
administrative wage garnishment to the collection methods allowed under
the current regulation and making other changes to strengthen PBGC's
debt collection program.
DATES: Effective December 6, 2010 (See Applicability in SUPPLEMENTARY
INFORMATION.)
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Margaret E. Drake, Attorney, Office of
the General Counsel, Pension Benefit Guaranty Corporation, 1200 K
Street, NW., Washington, DC 20005-4026; 202-326-4400 (extension 3228).
(For TTY/TDD users, call the Federal relay service toll-free at 1-800-
877-8339 and ask to be connected to 202-326-4400 (extension 3228)).
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: This final rule revises and replaces BGC's
debt collection regulations found at 29 CFR Part 4903 to conform to the
Debt Collection Improvement Act of 1996 (DCIA), Public Law 104-134, 110
Stat. 1321, 1358 (April 26, 1996), the revised Federal Claims
Collection Standards, 31 CFR Chapter IX (Parts 900 through 904), and
other laws applicable to the collection of non-tax debt owed to the
Government.
Background
In 1994, PBGC adopted a regulation on debt collection to provide
procedures to implement administrative offset, as authorized by the
Federal Claims Collection Act of 1966, as amended by the Debt
Collection Act of 1982 (31 U.S.C. 3701, et seq.), and in accordance
with regulations issued by the Department of Justice and the General
Accountability Office. In 1995, PBGC adopted a regulation on debt
collection to provide procedures to implement tax refund offset, as
required for participation in the Federal tax refund offset program
authorized by 31 U.S.C. 3720A and in accordance with regulations issued
by the Treasury Department. Together, these regulations comprise PBGC's
current debt collection regulation (29 CFR part 4903) providing
procedures for debt collection through administrative offset and tax
refund offset. Administrative offset allows PBGC to request that debts
owed to PBGC by a debtor (e.g., in connection with government
contractual obligations) be offset by amounts another Federal agency
may owe to the debtor. Likewise, other Federal agencies may request the
collection of debts owed to them be offset by amounts PBGC may owe the
debtor. Tax refund offset allows PBGC to request that debts owed to
PBGC by a debtor be offset by amounts the Government may owe to the
debtor. The Debt Collection Improvement Act of 1996 (DCIA)
fundamentally changed the manner in which the Federal government is
required to manage the collection of its delinquent debts. Under DCIA,
Congress directed that the management of delinquent obligations is to
be centralized at the Treasury Department in order to increase the
efficiency of the Government's collection efforts.
Pursuant to 31 U.S.C. 3716, to utilize the administrative offset
tools under DCIA, Federal agencies had to ``adopt, without change,
regulations on collecting by administrative offset promulgated by the
Department of Justice, the Government Accountability Office, or the
Department of the Treasury,'' or promulgate their own regulations
consistent with the regulations issued by the Department of Justice,
the General Accountability Office, or the Department of the Treasury.
On November 20, 2000, the Department of Justice and the Department of
the Treasury revised the FCCS. 65 FR 70390 (Nov. 20, 2000).
On July 22, 2010 (at 75 FR 42662), PBGC published a proposed rule
to revise its regulation on debt collection to conform the Debt
Collection Improvement Act of 1996, the Federal Claims Collections
Standards, other legal requirements applicable to non-tax debts owed to
PBGC, and to add salary offset and administrative wage garnishment to
the collection methods allowed under the current regulation and make
other changes to strengthen PBGC's debt collection program. PBGC
received no public comments on the proposed rule and the final
regulation is unchanged from the proposed regulation.
Overview of Final Rule
This final regulation revises the procedures for the collection of
non-tax debts owed to PBGC through administrative offset and tax refund
offset. It adopts the FCCS and supplements it by prescribing procedures
consistent with the FCCS, as necessary and appropriate for PBGC
operations. The final regulation also provides for the collection of
debts via salary offset and the use of administrative wage garnishment.
Salary offset is the collection of debt owed by a Federal employee by
withholding up to 15 percent of the employee's disposable pay. The
procedures for salary offset are governed by 5 U.S.C. 5514, and Office
of Personnel Management (OPM) regulations (5 CFR part 550, subpart k).
OPM regulations provide for salary offset through the Treasury Offset
Program.\1\ Administrative wage
[[Page 68204]]
garnishment is the collection of a debt owed by a former Federal
employee by ordering a non-Federal employer to withhold funds from a
debtor's wages. The procedures for administrative wage garnishment are
governed by 31 U.S.C. 3720D and 31 CFR 285.11.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\1\ PBGC has an internal directive which provides procedures to
recover debts owed to PBGC from the current pay account of an
employee, and to process requests received from another Federal
agency from the current pay account of a PBGC employee to recover
debts owed to the agency.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
As with PBGC's current debt collection regulation, the final
regulation applies to collection of debts to PBGC by employers (e.g.,
unpaid premium, penalty and interest under part 4007, information
penalties under part 4071, and employer liability under part 4062) and
to the recovery of benefit overpayments to participants in cases where
PBGC does not recoup the overpayment under part 4022 (e.g., where a
participant is not entitled to future annuity benefits as of the plan's
termination date). The final regulation also applies to debts owed to
the United States by current and former PBGC employees.
The final regulation does not apply to the collection of tax debts,
which is governed by the Internal Revenue Code of 1986 (26 U.S.C. 1 et
seq.) and regulations, policies, and procedures issued by the Internal
Revenue Service.
Under the final regulation, benefits paid by PBGC generally are not
offset, in accordance with the anti-alienation provisions under 29
U.S.C. 1056(d) and 26 U.S.C. 401(a)(13). However, benefits paid by PBGC
could be offset under certain limited exceptions from those provisions
(e.g., in certain fiduciary breach situations).
Nothing in the final regulation precludes the use of collection
procedures not contained in the regulation. For example, PBGC may
collect unused travel advances through setoff of an employee's pay
under 5 U.S.C. 5705. Moreover, certain PBGC efforts to obtain payment
of debts arising out of activities under ERISA are authorized by and
subject to requirements prescribed under other Federal statutes. PBGC's
activities will be consistent with such requirements, as well as with
any other applicable requirements (see e.g., parts 4000, 4003, 4007,
and 4062). PBGC may use multiple collection methods at the same time to
collect a debt, as permitted by law. Nothing in the final regulation
requires PBGC to duplicate notices or administrative proceedings
required by contract, this part, or other laws or regulations.
PBGC maintains a system of records to collect debts owed to PBGC by
various individuals, PBGC-13, Debt Collection. See 75 FR 37842 (June
30, 2010).
Subpart A--4903.1 to 4903.4
Subpart A of the final regulation addresses the general provisions
applicable to the collection of non-tax debts owed to PBGC. Section
4903.5 includes procedures for the collection of debts owed to PBGC,
other than those subject to recoupment.
Under Sec. 4903.2, PBGC is not required to duplicate notices or
administrative proceedings provided by contract, this final regulation,
or other laws or regulations. PBGC is not required to provide a debtor
with two hearings on the same issue simply because PBGC used two
different collection tools, each of which requires that the debtor be
provided with a hearing. For example, if PBGC has provided a debtor
with notice of unpaid premium under part 4007, it need not provide
additional notice to the debtor before using this regulation to collect
the debt owed to PBGC.
Section 4903.4 states that PBGC's rules under part 4000 regarding
permissible methods of filing with PBGC, determining dates of filing
and computation of time apply for purposes of this regulation.
Subpart B--4903.5 to 4903.20
Subpart B of the final regulation describes the procedures to be
followed by PBGC when collecting debts owed to it. Among other things,
subpart B outlines the due process procedures PBGC is required to
follow when using offset (administrative, tax refund, and salary) to
collect a debt owed to it, when garnishing a debtor's non-Federal
wages, or before reporting a debt owed to it to a credit bureau.
Specifically, PBGC is required to provide debtors with notice of the
amount and type of the debt, the intended collection action to be
taken, how a debtor may pay the debt or make alternate payment
arrangements, how a debtor could review documents related to the debt,
and the consequences to the debtor if the debt is not repaid. Subpart B
also describes how a debtor may request a hearing to contest the
noticed debt.
Subpart B also explains the circumstances under which PBGC could
waive interest, penalties, and administrative costs. Such waivers are
permitted only to the extent permitted by law. For example, part 4007
of this chapter does not permit waivers of interest charges on late
premium payments. PBGC may provide additional guidance on how interest,
penalties, and administrative costs are assessed on particular types of
debts.
Subpart B updates PBGC procedures to reflect changes required by
DCIA. For example, DCIA centralized the use of offset by requiring
agencies to refer debts delinquent for more than 180 days to the
Financial Management Service (FMS) of the Treasury Department for
offset. See 31 U.S.C. 3716(c)(6). FMS is required to offset payments to
persons who owe delinquent debts to the Government. The final
regulation revises PBGC's regulations to comply with DCIA requirements
for all types of offsets. This final regulation also incorporates
procedures for several collection remedies authorized by DCIA, such as
administrative wage garnishment.
Subpart C--4903.21 to 4903.22
Subpart C of the final regulation describes the procedures to be
followed when a Federal agency, other than PBGC, wishes to use the
offset process to collect a debt from a non-tax payment issued by PBGC
as a payment agency. Subpart C governs the process for offsets that
occur on a case-by-case basis to collect debts from payments made by
PBGC to its employees, its vendors, and others whom PBGC is required or
authorized to pay. While centralized offset through the Treasury Offset
Program is the Government's primary offset collection tool, this final
regulation provides the procedures to be used when centralized offset
is not otherwise available or appropriate. An agency's use of the non-
centralized administrative offset process does not provide grounds to
invalidate any offset on the basis that centralized offset was not
used.
Compliance With Rulemaking Guidelines
Executive Order 12866
PBGC has determined that this rule is not a ``significant
regulatory action'' under Executive Order 12866.
Regulatory Flexibility Act
PBGC certifies under section 605(b) of the Regulatory Flexibility
Act (5 U.S.C. 601 et seq.) that the amendments in this final regulation
will not have a significant economic impact on a substantial number of
small entities. The final rule is limited to procedures required by the
Debt Collection Improvement Act of 1996, the Federal Claims Collection
Standards and other laws applicable to the collection of non-tax debts
owed to the United States. Thus, a small entity can avoid the
application of this rule by paying such debts when due. Further,
insofar as the provisions of this rule do apply, their
[[Page 68205]]
primary effect would be to provide procedural protections to persons
whose debts are otherwise subject to collection by administrative
offset, tax refund offset, salary offset or administrative wage
garnishment. Accordingly, as provided in section 605 of the Regulatory
Flexibility Act, sections 603 and 604 do not apply.
List of Subjects
29 CFR Part 4003
Administrative practice and procedure, Organization and functions
(Government agencies, Pension insurance, Pensions.
29 CFR Part 4903
Claims.
0
For the reasons given above, PBGC is amending 29 CFR parts 4003 and
4903 as follows:
PART 4003--RULES FOR ADMINISTRATIVE REVIEW OF AGENCY DECISIONS
0
1. The authority citation for part 4003 continues to read as follows:
Authority: 29 U.S.C. 1302(b)(3).
0
2. Amend Sec. 4003.32 by removing ``Sec. 4903.33 of this chapter, by
a date 60 days (or more) thereafter'' and replacing it with ``part 4903
of this chapter, by the date''.
0
3. Amend Sec. 4003.52 by removing ``Sec. 4903.33 of this chapter, by
a date 60 days (or more) thereafter'' and replacing it with ``part 4903
of this chapter, by the date''.
0
4. Part 4903 is revised to read as follows:
PART 4903--DEBT COLLECTION
Subpart A--General Provisions
Sec.
4903.1 What definitions apply to this part?
4903.2 What do these regulations cover?
4903.3 Do these regulations adopt the Federal Claims Collection
Standards (FCCS)?
4903.4 What rules apply for purposes of filing with PBGC,
determining dates of filings, and computation of time?
Subpart B--Procedures to Collect Debts Owed to PBGC
4903.5 What notice will PBGC send to a debtor when collecting a debt
owed to PBGC?
4903.6 How will PBGC add interest, penalty charges, and
administrative costs to a debt owed to PBGC?
4903.7 When will PBGC allow a debtor to pay a debt owed to PBGC in
installments instead of a lump sum?
4903.8 When will PBGC compromise a debt owed to PBGC?
4903.9 When will PBGC suspend or terminate debt collection on a debt
owed to PBGC?
4903.10 When will PBGC transfer a debt owed to PBGC to the Treasury
Department's Financial Management Service for collection?
4903.11 How will PBGC use administrative offset (offset of non-tax
Federal payments) to collect a debt owed to PBGC?
4903.12 How will PBGC use tax refund offset to collect a debt owed
to PBGC?
4903.13 How will PBGC offset a Federal employee's salary to collect
a debt owed to PBGC?
4903.14 How will PBGC use administrative wage garnishment to collect
a debt owed to PBGC from a debtor's wages?
4903.15 How will PBGC report debts owed to credit bureaus to PBGC?
4903.16 How will PBGC refer debts owed to private collection
agencies to PBGC?
4903.17 When will PBGC refer debts owed to the Department of Justice
to PBGC?
4903.18 Will a debtor who owes a debt to PBGC or another Federal
agency, and persons controlled by or controlling such debtors, be
ineligible for Federal loan assistance, grants, cooperative
agreements, or other sources of Federal funds?
4903.19 How does a debtor request a special review based on a change
in circumstances such as a catastrophic illness, divorce, death, or
disability?
4903.20 Will PBGC issue a refund if money is erroneously collected
on a debt?
Subpart C--Procedures for Offset of PBGC Payments to Collect Debts Owed
to Other Federal Agencies
4903.21 How do other Federal agencies use the offset process to
collect debts from payments issued by PBGC?
4903.22 What does PBGC do upon receipt of a request to offset the
salary of a PBGC employee to collect a debt owed by the employee to
another Federal agency?
Authority: 5 U.S.C. 5514; 29 U.S.C. 1302(b); 31 U.S.C. 3701-
3719, 3720A; 5 CFR part 550, subpart K; 31 CFR part 285; 31 CFR
parts 900-904.
Subpart A--General Provisions
Sec. 4903.1 What definitions apply to this part?
The following terms are defined in Sec. 4001.2 of this chapter:
Code, PBGC, and Person. In addition, for purposes of this part:
Administrative offset or offset means withholding funds payable by
the United States (including funds payable by the United States on
behalf of a state government) to, or held by the United States for, a
person to satisfy a debt owed by the person. The term ``administrative
offset'' can include, but is not limited to, the offset of Federal
salary, vendor, retirement, and Social Security benefit payments. The
terms ``centralized administrative offset'' and ``centralized offset''
refer to the process by which the Treasury Department's Financial
Management Service offsets Federal payments through the Treasury Offset
Program.
Administrative wage garnishment means the process by which a
Federal agency orders a non-Federal employer to withhold amounts from a
debtor's wages to satisfy a debt, as authorized by 31 U.S.C. 3720D, 31
CFR 285.11, and this part.
Agency or Federal agency means an executive department or agency; a
military department; the United States Postal Service; the Postal
Regulatory Commission; any nonappropriated fund instrumentality
described in 5 U.S.C. 2105(c); the United States Senate; the United
States House of Representatives; any court, court administrative
office, or instrumentality in the judicial or legislative branches of
the Government; or a Government corporation.
Creditor agency means any Federal agency that is owed a debt.
Debt means any amount of money, funds or property that has been
determined by an appropriate official of the Federal Government to be
owed to the United States government, including government-owned
corporations, by a person. As used in this part, the term ``debt'' can
include a debt owed to PBGC, but does not include debts arising under
the Internal Revenue Code of 1986 (26 U.S.C. 1 et seq.).
Debtor means a person who owes a debt to the United States.
Delinquent debt means a debt that has not been paid by the date
specified in the agency's initial written demand for payment or
applicable agreement or instrument (including a post-delinquency
payment agreement) unless other satisfactory payment arrangements have
been made.
Disposable pay has the same meaning as that term is defined in 5
CFR 550.1103.
Employee or Federal employee means a current employee of PBGC or
other Federal agency, including a current member of the uniformed
services, including the Army, Navy, Air Force, Marine Corps, Coast
Guard, Commissioned Corps of the National Oceanic and Atmospheric
Administration, Commissioned Corps of the Public Health Service, the
National Guard, and the reserve forces of the uniformed services.
FCCS means the Federal Claims Collection Standards, 31 CFR parts
900-904.
Financial Management Service (FMS) means the Treasury Department
bureau that is responsible for the centralized collection of delinquent
debts through
[[Page 68206]]
the offset of Federal payments and other means.
Payment agency or Federal payment agency means any Federal agency
that transmits payment requests in the form of certified payment
vouchers, or other similar forms, to a disbursing official for
disbursement. The payment agency may be the agency that employs the
debtor. In some cases, PBGC may be both the creditor agency and payment
agency.
Salary offset means a type of administrative offset to collect a
debt under Section 5514 of Title 5 of the United States Code and 5 CFR
part 550, subpart K by deduction(s) at one or more officially
established pay intervals from the current pay account of an employee
with or without his or her consent.
Tax debt means a debt arising under the Code.
Tax refund offset means the reduction by the IRS of a tax
overpayment payable to a taxpayer by the amount of past-due, legally
enforceable debt owed by that taxpayer to a Federal agency pursuant to
Treasury regulations.
Sec. 4903.2 What do these regulations cover?
(a) Scope. This part provides procedures for the collection of
debts owed to PBGC, other than those subject to recoupment (29 CFR
4022, subpart E). This part also provides procedures for collection of
other debts owed to the United States when a request for offset of a
payment, for which PBGC is the payment agency, is received by PBGC from
another agency (for example, when a PBGC employee owes a student loan
debt to the United States Department of Education).
(b) Applicability.
(1) This part applies to PBGC when collecting a debt owed to PBGC;
to persons who owe debts to PBGC; to persons controlled by or
controlling persons who owe debts to a Federal agency, and to Federal
agencies requesting offset of a payment issued by PBGC as a payment
agency (including salary payments to PBGC employees).
(2) This part does not apply to debts owed to PBGC being collected
through recoupment under subpart E of part 4022 of this chapter.
Benefits paid by PBGC generally will not be offset, subject to limited
exceptions (e.g., in certain fiduciary breach situations).
(3) This part does not apply to tax debts, to any debt based in
whole or in part on conduct in violation of the antitrust laws, nor to
any debt for which there is an indication of fraud or
misrepresentation, as described in Sec. 900.3 of the FCCS, unless the
debt is returned by the Department of Justice to PBGC for handling.
(4) Nothing in this part precludes the use of other statutory or
regulatory authority to collect or dispose of any debt. See, for
example, 5 U.S.C. 5705, Advancements and Deductions, which authorizes
PBGC to recover travel advances by offset of up to 100 percent of a
Federal employee's accrued pay. See, also, 5 U.S.C. 4108, governing the
collection of training expenses.
(5) To the extent that provisions of laws, other regulations, and
PBGC enforcement policies differ from the provisions of this part,
those provisions of law, other regulations, and PBGC enforcement
policies apply to the remission or mitigation of fines, penalties, and
forfeitures, and to debts arising under ERISA, rather than the
provisions of this part.
(c) Additional policies and procedures. PBGC may, but is not
required to, promulgate additional policies and procedures consistent
with this part, the FCCS, and other applicable law, policies, and
procedures.
(1) PBGC does not intend this regulation to prohibit PBGC from
demanding the return of specific property or the payment of its value.
(2) The failure of PBGC to comply with any provision in this
regulation will not serve as a defense to the existence of the debt.
(d) Duplication not required. Nothing in this part requires PBGC to
duplicate notices or administrative proceedings required by contract,
this part, or other laws or regulations.
(e) Use of multiple collection remedies allowed. PBGC and other
Federal agencies may simultaneously use multiple collection remedies to
collect a debt, except as prohibited by law. This part is intended to
promote aggressive debt collection, using for each debt all available
and appropriate collection remedies. To provide PBGC with flexibility
in determining which remedies will be most efficient in collecting the
particular debt, these remedies are not listed in any prescribed order.
Sec. 4903.3 Do these regulations adopt the Federal Claims Collection
Standards (FCCS)?
This part adopts and incorporates all provisions of FCCS. This part
also supplements the FCCS by prescribing procedures consistent with
FCCS, as necessary and appropriate for PBGC operations.
Sec. 4903.4 What rules apply for purposes of filing with PBGC,
determining dates of filings, and computation of time?
(a) How and where to file. PBGC applies the rules in subpart A of
part 4000 of this chapter to determine permissible methods of filing
with PBGC under this part. See Sec. 4000.4 of this chapter for
information on where to file.
(b) Date of filing. PBGC applies the rules in subpart C of part
4000 of this chapter to determine the date that a submission under this
part was filed with PBGC.
(c) Computation of time. PBGC applies the rules of subpart D of
part 4000 of this chapter to compute any time period under this part.
Subpart B--Procedures To Collect Debts Owed to PBGC
Sec. 4903.5 What notice will PBGC send to a debtor when collecting a
debt owed to PBGC?
(a) Notice requirements. PBGC will collect debts owed to PBGC. PBGC
will promptly send at least one written notice to a debtor informing
the debtor of the consequences of failing to pay or otherwise resolve a
debt owed to PBGC. The notice(s) will be sent to the debtor at the most
current address of the debtor in PBGC's records. Generally, before
starting the collection actions described in Sec. Sec. 4903.6 and
4903.10 through 4903.18 of this part, PBGC will send no more than two
written notices to the debtor. The notice will explain why the debt is
owed to PBGC, the amount of the debt, how a debtor may pay the debt or
make alternate repayment arrangements, how a debtor may review non-
privileged documents related to the debt, how a debtor may dispute the
debt, the collection remedies available to PBGC if the debtor refuses
or otherwise fails to pay the debt, and other consequences to the
debtor if the debt is not paid. Except as otherwise provided in
paragraph (b) of this section, the written notice(s) will explain to
the debtor:
(1) The nature and amount of the debt, and the facts giving rise to
the debt;
(2) How interest, penalties, and administrative costs are added to
the debt, the date by which payment must be made to avoid such charges,
and that such assessments must be made unless excused in accordance
with 31 CFR 901.9 (see Sec. 4903.6 of this part);
(3) The date by which payment should be made to avoid the enforced
collection actions described in paragraph (a)(6) of this section;
(4) PBGC's willingness to discuss alternative payment arrangements
and how the debtor may enter into a written agreement to repay the debt
under terms acceptable to PBGC (see Sec. 4903.7 of this part);
[[Page 68207]]
(5) The name, address, and telephone number of a contact person or
office within PBGC;
(6) PBGC's intention to enforce collection by taking one or more of
the following actions if the debtor fails to pay or otherwise resolve
the debt:
(i) Offset. Offset the debtor's receipt of Federal payments,
including income tax refunds, salary, certain benefit payments (such as
Social Security), Federal retirement (i.e., CSRS or FERS), vendor,
travel reimbursements and advances, and other Federal payments (see
Sec. Sec. 4903.11 through 4903.13 of this part);
(ii) Private collection agency. Refer the debt to a private
collection agency (see Sec. 4903.16 of this part);
(iii) Credit bureau reporting. Report the debt to a credit bureau
(see Sec. 4903.15 of this part);
(iv) Administrative wage garnishment. Garnish the debtor's wages
through administrative wage garnishment (see Sec. 4903.14 of this
part);
(v) Litigation. Whether PBGC will initiate litigation under 29
U.S.C. 1302 to collect the debt or refer the debt to the Department of
Justice to initiate litigation to collect the debt (see Sec. 4903.17
of this part);
(vi) Treasury Department's Financial Management Service. Refer the
debt to the Financial Management Service for collection (see Sec.
4903.10 of this part);
(7) That debts over 180 days delinquent must be referred to the
Financial Management Service for the collection actions described in
paragraph (a)(6) of this section (see Sec. 4903.10 of this part);
(8) How the debtor may inspect and copy non-privileged records
related to the debt;
(9) How the debtor may request a review of PBGC's determination
that the debtor owes a debt to PBGC and present evidence that the debt
is not delinquent or legally enforceable (see Sec. Sec. 4903.11(c) and
4903.12(c) of this part);
(10) How a debtor who is an individual may request a hearing if
PBGC intends to garnish the debtor's private sector (i.e., non-Federal)
wages (see Sec. 4903.14(a) of this part), including:
(i) The method and time period for requesting a hearing;
(ii) That a request for a hearing, timely filed on or before the
15th business day following the date of the mailing of the notice, will
stay the commencement of administrative wage garnishment, but not other
collection procedures; and
(iii) The name and address of the office to which the request for a
hearing should be sent.
(11) How a debtor who is an individual and a Federal employee
subject to Federal salary offset may request a hearing (see Sec.
4903.13(e) of this part), including:
(i) The method and time period for requesting a hearing;
(ii) That a request for a hearing, timely filed on or before the
15th day following receipt of the notice, will stay the commencement of
salary offset, but not other collection procedures;
(iii) The name and address of the office to which the request for a
hearing should be sent;
(iv) That PBGC will refer the debt to the debtor's employing agency
or to the Financial Management Service to implement salary offset,
unless the employee files a timely request for a hearing;
(v) That a final decision on the hearing, if requested, will be
issued at the earliest practicable date, but not later than 60 days
after the filing of the request for a hearing, unless the employee
requests and the hearing official grants a delay in the proceedings;
(vi) That any knowingly false or frivolous statements,
representations, or evidence may subject the Federal employee to
penalties under the False Claims Act (31 U.S.C. 3729-3731) or other
applicable statutory authority, and criminal penalties under 18 U.S.C.
286, 287, 1001, and 1002, or other applicable statutory authority;
(vii) That unless prohibited by contract or statute, amounts paid
on or deducted for the debt which are later waived or found not owed to
the United States will be promptly refunded to the employee; and
(viii) That proceedings with respect to such debt are governed by 5
U.S.C. 5514 and 31 U.S.C. 3716.
(12) How the debtor may request a waiver of the debt, if
applicable. See, for example, Sec. 4903.6 and Sec. 4903.13(f) of this
part.
(13) How the debtor's spouse may claim his or her share of a joint
income tax refund by filing Form 8379 with the Internal Revenue Service
(see https://www.irs.gov);
(14) How the debtor may exercise other rights and remedies, if any,
available to the debtor under statutory or regulatory authority under
which the debt arose.
(15) That certain debtors and, if applicable, persons controlled by
or controlling such debtors, may be ineligible for Federal Government
loans, guaranties and insurance, grants, cooperative agreements or
other Federal funds (see 28 U.S.C. 3201(e); 31 U.S.C. 3720B, 31 CFR
285.13, and Sec. 4903.18(a) of this part); and
(16) That the debtor should advise PBGC of a bankruptcy proceeding
of the debtor or another person liable for the debt being collected.
(b) Exceptions to notice requirements. PBGC may omit from a notice
to a debtor one or more of the provisions contained in paragraphs
(a)(6) through (a)(16) of this section if PBGC, in consultation with
its legal counsel, determines that any provision is not legally
required given the collection remedies to be applied to a particular
debt.
(c) Respond to debtors; comply with FCCS. PBGC should respond
promptly to communications from debtors and comply with other FCCS
provisions applicable to the administrative collection of debts. See 31
CFR part 901.
Sec. 4903.6 How will PBGC add interest, penalty charges, and
administrative costs to a debt owed to PBGC?
(a) Assessment and notice. PBGC will assess interest, penalties and
administrative costs on PBGC debts in accordance with the provisions of
31 U.S.C. 3717, 31 CFR 901.9 and other applicable requirements.
Administrative costs, including the costs of processing and handling a
delinquent debt, will be determined by PBGC. PBGC will explain in the
notice to the debtor how interest, penalties, costs, and other charges
are assessed, unless the requirements are included in a contract or
other legally binding agreement.
(b) Waiver of interest, penalties, and administrative costs. Unless
otherwise required by law, regulation, or contract, PBGC will not
charge interest if the amount due on the debt is paid within 30 days of
the date from which the interest accrues. See 31 U.S.C. 3717(d). To the
extent permitted by law, PBGC may waive interest, penalties, and
administrative costs, or any portion thereof, in appropriate
circumstances consistent with the FCCS.
(c) Accrual during suspension of debt collection. In most cases,
interest, penalties and administrative costs will continue to accrue
during any period when collection has been suspended for any reason
(for example, when the debtor has requested a hearing). PBGC may
suspend accrual of any or all of these charges in appropriate
circumstances consistent with the FCCS.
Sec. 4903.7 When will PBGC allow a debtor to pay a debt owed to PBGC
in installments instead of a lump sum?
If a debtor is financially unable to pay the debt in a lump sum,
PBGC may accept payment of a debt in regular installments, in
accordance with the provisions of 31 CFR 901.8.
[[Page 68208]]
Sec. 4903.8 When will PBGC compromise a debt owed to PBGC?
If PBGC cannot collect the full amount of a debt owed to PBGC, PBGC
may compromise the debt in accordance with the provisions of 31 CFR
part 902.
Sec. 4903.9 When will PBGC suspend or terminate debt collection on a
debt owed to PBGC?
If, after pursuing all appropriate means of collection, PBGC
determines that a debt owed to PBGC is uncollectible, PBGC may suspend
or terminate debt collection activity in accordance with the provisions
of 31 CFR part 903. Termination of debt collection activity by PBGC
does not discharge the indebtedness.
Sec. 4903.10 When will PBGC transfer a debt owed to PBGC to the
Treasury Department's Financial Management Service for collection?
(a) PBGC will transfer a debt owed to PBGC that is more than 180
days delinquent to the Financial Management Service for debt collection
services, a process known as ``cross-servicing.'' See 31 U.S.C. 3711(g)
and 31 CFR 285.12. PBGC may transfer debts owed to PBGC that are
delinquent 180 days or less to the Financial Management Service in
accordance with the procedures described in 31 CFR 285.12. The
Financial Management Service takes appropriate action to collect or
compromise the transferred PBGC debt, or to suspend or terminate
collection action thereon, in accordance with the statutory and
regulatory requirements and authorities applicable to the debt owed to
PBGC and the collection action to be taken. See 31 CFR 285.12(b) and
285.12(c)(2). Appropriate action can include, but is not limited to,
contact with the debtor, referral of the debt owed to PBGC to the
Treasury Offset Program, private collection agencies, or the Department
of Justice; reporting of the debt to credit bureaus, and/or
administrative wage garnishment.
(b) At least 60 days prior to transferring a debt owed to PBGC to
the Financial Management Service, PBGC will send notice to the debtor
as required by Sec. 4903.5 of this part. PBGC will certify to the
Financial Management Service that the debt is valid, delinquent,
legally enforceable, and that there are no legal bars to collection. In
addition, PBGC will certify its compliance with all applicable due
process and other requirements as described in this part and other
Federal laws. See 31 CFR 285.12(i) regarding the certification
requirement.
(c) As part of its debt collection process, the Financial
Management Service uses the Treasury Offset Program to collect debts
owed to PBGC by administrative and tax refund offset. See 31 CFR
285.12(g). Under the Treasury Offset Program, before a Federal payment
is disbursed, the Financial Management Service compares the name and
taxpayer identification number (TIN) of the payee with the names and
TINs of debtors that have been submitted by Federal agencies and states
to the Treasury Offset Program database. If there is a match, the
Financial Management Service (or, in some cases, another Federal
disbursing agency) offsets all or a portion of the Federal payment,
disburses any remaining payment to the payee, and pays the offset
amount to the creditor agency. Federal payments eligible for offset
include, but are not limited to, income tax refunds, salary, travel
advances and reimbursements, retirement and vendor payments, and Social
Security and other benefit payments.
Sec. 4903.11 How will PBGC use administrative offset (offset of non-
tax Federal payments) to collect a debt owed to PBGC?
(a) Centralized administrative offset through the Treasury Offset
Program.
(1) In most cases, the Financial Management Service uses the
Treasury Offset Program to collect debts owed to PBGC by the offset of
Federal payments. See Sec. 4903.10(c) of this part. If not already
transferred to the Financial Management Service under Sec. 4903.10 of
this part, PBGC will refer debt over 180 days delinquent to the
Treasury Offset Program for collection by centralized administrative
offset. See 31 U.S.C. 3716(c)(6); 31 CFR part 285, subpart A; and 31
CFR 901.3(b). PBGC may refer to the Treasury Offset Program for offset
any debt owed to PBGC that has been delinquent for 180 days or less.
(2) At least 60 days prior to referring a debt owed to PBGC to the
Treasury Offset Program, in accordance with paragraph (a)(1) of this
section, PBGC will send notice to the debtor in accordance with the
requirements of Sec. 4903.5 of this part. PBGC will certify to the
Financial Management Service, that the debt is valid, delinquent, and
legally enforceable, and that there are no legal bars to collection by
offset. In addition, PBGC will certify its compliance with the
requirements in this part.
(b) Non-centralized administrative offset for debts owed to PBGC.
(1) When centralized administrative offset through the Treasury
Offset Program is not available or appropriate, PBGC may collect past-
due, legally enforceable debts owed to PBGC through non-centralized
administrative offset. See 31 CFR 901.3(c). In these cases, PBGC may
offset a payment internally or make an offset request directly to a
Federal payment agency.
(2) At least 30 days prior to offsetting a payment internally or
requesting a Federal payment agency to offset a payment, PBGC will send
notice to the debtor in accordance with the requirements of Sec.
4903.5 of this part. When referring a debt owed to PBGC for offset
under this paragraph (b), PBGC will certify that the debt is valid,
delinquent, and legally enforceable, and that there are no legal bars
to collection by offset. In addition, PBGC will certify its compliance
with these regulations concerning administrative offset. See 31 CFR
901.3(c)(2)(ii).
(c) Administrative review. The notice described in Sec. 4903.5 of
this part will explain to the debtor how to request an administrative
review of PBGC's determination that the debtor owes a debt to PBGC and
how to present evidence that the debt is not delinquent or legally
enforceable. In addition to challenging the existence and amount of the
debt owed to PBGC, the debtor may seek a review of the terms of
repayment. In most cases, PBGC will provide administrative review based
upon the written record, including documentation provided by the
debtor. PBGC may provide the debtor with a reasonable opportunity for
an oral hearing when the debtor requests reconsideration of the debt
owed to PBGC, and PBGC determines that the question of the indebtedness
cannot be resolved by review of the documentary evidence. Unless
otherwise required by law, an oral hearing under this section is not
required to be a formal evidentiary hearing. PBGC will carefully
document all significant matters discussed at the hearing. PBGC may
suspend collection through administrative offset and/or other
collection actions pending the resolution of a debtor's dispute.
(d) Procedures for expedited offset. Under the circumstances
described in 31 CFR 901.3(b)(4)(iii), PBGC may offset against a payment
to be made to the debtor prior to sending a notice to the debtor, as
described in Sec. 4903.5 of this part, or completing the procedures
described in paragraph (b)(2) and (c) of this section. PBGC will give
the debtor notice and an opportunity for review as soon as practicable
and promptly refund any money ultimately found not to have been owed to
the Government.
[[Page 68209]]
Sec. 4903.12 How will PBGC use tax refund offset to collect a debt
owed to PBGC?
(a) Tax refund offset. In most cases, the Financial Management
Service uses the Treasury Offset Program to collect debts owed to PBGC
by the offset of tax refunds and other Federal payments. See Sec.
4903.10(c) of this part. If not already transferred to the Financial
Management Service under Sec. 4903.10 of this part, PBGC will refer to
the Treasury Offset Program any past-due, legally enforceable debt for
collection by tax refund offset. See 26 U.S.C. 6402(d), 31 U.S.C. 3720A
and 31 CFR 285.2.
(b) Notice. At least 60 days prior to referring a debt owed to the
Treasury Offset Program, PBGC will send notice to the debtor in
accordance with the requirements of Sec. 4903.5 of this part. PBGC
will certify to the Financial Management Service's Treasury Offset
Program that the debt is past due and legally enforceable in the amount
submitted, and that the PBGC has made reasonable efforts to obtain
payment of the debt as described in 31 CFR 285.2(d). In addition, PBGC
will certify its compliance with all applicable due process and other
requirements described in this part and other Federal laws. See 31
U.S.C. 3720A(b) and 31 CFR 285.2.
(c) Administrative review. The notice described in Sec. 4903.5 of
this part will provide the debtor with at least 60 days prior to the
initiation of tax refund offset to request an administrative review as
described in Sec. 4903.11(c) of this part. PBGC may suspend collection
through tax refund offset and/or other collection actions pending the
resolution of the debtor's dispute.
Sec. 4903.13 How will PBGC offset a Federal employee's salary to
collect a debt owed to PBGC?
(a) Federal salary offset.
(1) Salary offset is used to collect debts owed to the United
States or PBGC by Federal employees. If a Federal employee owes PBGC a
debt, PBGC may offset the employee's Federal salary to collect the debt
in the manner described in this section. For information on how a
Federal agency other than PBGC may collect debt from the salary of a
PBGC employee, see Sec. Sec. 4903.21 and 4903.22, subpart C, of this
part.
(2) Nothing in this part requires PBGC to collect a debt in
accordance with the provisions of this section if Federal law allows
other means to collect. See, for example, 5 U.S.C. 5705 (travel
advances not used for allowable travel expenses are recoverable from
the employee or his estate by setoff against accrued pay and other
means) and 5 U.S.C. 4108 (recovery of training expenses).
(3) PBGC may use the administrative wage garnishment procedure
described in Sec. 4903.14 of this part to collect from an individual's
non-Federal wages a debt owed to PBGC.
(b) Centralized salary offset through the Treasury Offset Program.
As described in Sec. 4903.10(a) of this part, PBGC will refer debts
owed to PBGC to the Financial Management Service for collection by
administrative offset, including salary offset, through the Treasury
Offset Program. When possible, PBGC will attempt salary offset through
the Treasury Offset Program before applying the procedures in paragraph
(c) of this section. See 5 CFR 550.1108 and 550.1109.
(c) Non-centralized salary offset for debts owed to PBGC. When
centralized salary offset through the Treasury Offset Program is not
available or appropriate, PBGC may collect delinquent debts owed to
PBGC through non-centralized salary offset. See 5 CFR 550.1109. In
these cases, PBGC may offset a payment internally or make a request
directly to a Federal payment agency to offset a salary payment to
collect a delinquent debt owed to PBGC by a Federal employee. Thirty
(30) days prior to offsetting internally or requesting a Federal agency
to offset a salary payment, PBGC will send notice to the debtor in
accordance with the requirements of Sec. 4903.5 of this part. When
referring a debt owed to PBGC for offset, PBGC will certify to the
payment agency that the debt is valid, delinquent and legally
enforceable in the amount stated, and there are no legal bars to
collection by salary offset. In addition, PBGC will certify that all
due process and other prerequisites to salary offset have been met. See
5 U.S.C. 5514, 31 U.S.C. 3716(a), and this section for a description of
the due process and other prerequisites for salary offset.
(d) When prior notice not required. PBGC is not required to provide
prior notice to an employee when the following adjustments are made by
PBGC to a PBGC employee's pay:
(1) Any adjustment to pay arising out of any employee's election of
coverage or a change in coverage under a Federal benefits program
requiring periodic deductions from pay if the amount to be recovered
was accumulated over 4 pay periods or less;
(2) A routine intra-agency adjustment of pay that is made to
correct an overpayment of pay attributable to clerical or
administrative errors or delays in processing pay documents, if the
overpayment occurred within the 4 pay periods preceding the adjustment,
and, at the time of such adjustment, or as soon thereafter as
practicable, the individual is provided written notice of the nature
and the amount of the adjustment and the point of contact for
contesting such adjustment; or
(3) Any adjustment to collect a debt amounting to $50 or less, if,
at the time of such adjustment, or as soon thereafter as practicable,
the individual is provided written notice of the nature and the amount
of the adjustment and a point of contact for contesting such
adjustment.
(e) Administrative review-- (1) Request for administrative review.
A Federal employee who has received a notice that his or her debt will
be collected by means of salary offset may request administrative
review concerning the existence or amount of the debt owed to PBGC. The
Federal employee also may request administrative review concerning the
amount proposed to be deducted from the employee's pay each pay period.
The employee must send any request for administrative review in writing
to the office designated in the notice described in Sec. 4903.5. See
Sec. 4903.5(a)(11). The request must be received by the designated
office on or before the 15th day following the employee's receipt of
the notice. The employee must sign the request and specify whether an
oral hearing is requested. If an oral hearing is requested, the
employee must explain why the matter cannot be resolved by review of
the documentary evidence alone. All travel expenses incurred by the
Federal employee in connection with an in-person hearing will be borne
by the employee. See 31 CFR 901.3(a)(7).
(2) Failure to submit timely request for administrative review. If
the employee fails to submit a request for administrative review within
the time period described in paragraph (e)(1) of this section, salary
offset may be initiated. However, PBGC may accept a late request for
administrative review if the employee can show that the late request
was the result of circumstances beyond the employee's control or
because of a failure to receive actual notice of the filing deadline.
(3) Reviewing official. PBGC must obtain the services of a
reviewing official who is not under the supervision or control of the
Director of the PBGC. PBGC may enter into interagency support
agreements with other agencies to provide reviewing officials.
(4) Notice of administrative review. After the employee requests
administrative review, the designated reviewing official will inform
the employee of the form of the review to be provided. For oral
hearings, the
[[Page 68210]]
notice will set forth the date, time and location of the hearing. For
determinations based on review of written records, the notice will
notify the employee of the date by which he or she should submit
written arguments to the designated reviewing official. The reviewing
official will give the employee reasonable time to submit documentation
in support of the employee's position. The reviewing official will
schedule a new hearing date if requested by both parties. The reviewing
official will give both parties reasonable notice of the time and place
of a rescheduled hearing.
(5) Oral hearing. The reviewing official will conduct an oral
hearing if the official determines that the matter cannot be resolved
by review of documentary evidence alone. The hearing need not take the
form of an evidentiary hearing, but may be conducted in a manner
determined by the reviewing official, including but not limited to:
(i) Informal conferences (in person or electronically) with the
reviewing official, in which the employee and agency representative
will be given a reasonable opportunity to present evidence, witnesses
and argument;
(ii) Informal meetings with an interview of the employee by the
reviewing official; or
(iii) Formal written submissions, with an opportunity for oral
presentation.
(6) Determination based on review of written record. If the
reviewing official determines that an oral hearing is not necessary,
the official will make the determination based upon a review of the
available written record, including any documentation submitted by the
employee in support of his or her position. See 31 CFR 901.3(a)(7).
(7) Failure to appear or submit documentary evidence. In the
absence of good cause shown (for example, excused illness), if the
employee fails to appear at an oral hearing or fails to submit
documentary evidence as required for administrative review, the
employee will have waived the right to administrative review, and
salary offset may be initiated. Further, the employee will have been
deemed to admit the existence and amount of the debt owed to PBGC as
described in the notice of intent to offset. If PBGC's representative
fails to appear at an oral hearing, the reviewing official will proceed
with the hearing as scheduled, and make his or her determination based
upon the oral testimony presented and the documentary evidence
submitted by both parties.
(8) Burden of proof. PBGC will have the initial burden to prove the
existence and amount of the debt owed to PBGC. Thereafter, if the
employee disputes the existence or amount of the debt, the employee
must prove by a preponderance of the evidence that no such debt exists
or that the amount of the debt is incorrect. In addition, the employee
may present evidence that the proposed terms of the repayment schedule
are unlawful, would cause a financial hardship to the employee, or that
collection of the debt may not be pursued due to operation of law.
(9) Record. The reviewing official will maintain a summary record
of any hearing provided by this part. Witnesses will testify under oath
or affirmation in oral hearings. See 31 CFR 901.3(a)(7).
(10) Date of decision. The reviewing official will issue a written
opinion stating the official's decision, based upon documentary
evidence and information developed during the administrative review, as
soon as practicable after the review, but not later than 60 days after
the date on which the request for review was received by PBGC. If the
employee (or the parties jointly) requests a delay in the proceedings,
the deadline for the decision may be postponed by the number of days by
which the review was postponed. When a decision is not timely rendered,
PBGC will waive interest and penalties applied to the debt owed to PBGC
for the period beginning with the date the decision is due and ending
on the date the decision is issued.
(11) Content of decision. The written decision will include:
(i) A statement of the facts presented to support the origin,
nature, and amount of the debt owed to PBGC;
(ii) The reviewing official's findings, analysis, and conclusions;
and
(iii) The terms of any repayment schedules, if applicable.
(12) Final agency action. The reviewing official's decision will be
final.
(f) Waiver not precluded. Nothing in this part precludes an
employee from requesting waiver of an overpayment under 5 U.S.C. 5584
or 8346(b), 32 U.S.C. 716, or other statutory authority. PBGC may grant
such waivers when it would be against equity and good conscience or not
in the United States' best interest to collect such debts, in
accordance with those authorities, 5 CFR 550.1102(b)(2).
(g) Salary offset process-- (1) Determination of disposable pay.
PBGC will implement salary offset when requested to do so by PBGC, as
described in paragraph (c) of this section, or another agency, as
described in Sec. 4903.21 of this part. If the debtor is not employed
by PBGC, the agency employing the debtor will determine the amount of
the employee's disposable pay and will implement salary offset upon
request.
(2) When salary offset begins. Deductions will begin within three
official pay periods following receipt of the creditor agency's request
for offset or after a decision has been issued following a request for
a hearing.
(3) Amount of salary offset. The amount to be offset from each
salary payment will be up to 15 percent of a debtor's disposable pay,
subject to the requirements of 15 U.S.C. 1673, as follows:
(i) If the amount of the debt is equal to or less than 15 percent
of the disposable pay, such debt generally will be collected in a lump
sum payment;
(ii) Installment deductions will be made over a period of no
greater than the anticipated period of employment. An installment
deduction will not exceed 15 percent of the disposable pay from which
the deduction is made unless the employee has agreed in writing to the
deduction of a greater amount, or the creditor agency has determined
that smaller deductions are appropriate based on the employee's ability
to pay.
(4) Final salary payment. After the employee has separated either
voluntarily or involuntarily from the payment agency, the payment
agency may make a lump sum deduction exceeding 15 percent of disposable
pay from any final salary or other payments pursuant to 31 U.S.C. 3716
in order to satisfy a debt owed to PBGC.
(h) Payment agency's responsibilities.
(1) As required by 5 CFR 550.1109, if the employee separates from
the payment agency from which PBGC has requested salary offset, the
payment agency must certify the total amount of its collection and
notify PBGC and the employee of the amounts collected. If the payment
agency knows that the employee is entitled to payments from the Civil
Service Retirement Fund and Disability Fund, the Federal Employee
Retirement System, or other similar payments, it must provide written
notification to the agency responsible for making such payments that
the debtor owes a debt to PBGC, the amount of the debt, and that PBGC
has complied with the provisions of this section. PBGC must submit a
properly certified claim to the agency responsible for making such
payments before the collection can be made.
(2) If the employee is already separated from employment and all
payments due from his or her former payment agency have been made, PBGC
[[Page 68211]]
may request that money due and payable to the employee from the Civil
Service Retirement Fund and Disability Fund, the Federal Employee
Retirement System, or other similar funds, be administratively offset
to collect the debt. Generally, PBGC will collect such monies through
the Treasury Offset Program as described in Sec. 4903.10(c) of this
part.
(3) When an employee transfers to another agency, PBGC should
resume collection with the employee's new payment agency in order to
continue salary offset.
Sec. 4903.14 How will PBGC use administrative wage garnishment to
collect a debt owed to PBGC from a debtor's wages?
(a) PBGC is authorized to collect debts owed to PBGC from an
individual debtor's wages by means of administrative wage garnishment
in accordance with the requirements of 31 U.S.C. 3720D and 31 CFR
285.11. This part adopts and incorporates all of the provisions of 31
CFR 285.11 concerning administrative wage garnishment, including the
hearing procedures described in 31 CFR 285.11(f). PBGC may use
administrative wage garnishment to collect a delinquent debt unless the
debtor is making timely payments under an agreement to pay the debt in
installments (see Sec. 4903.7 of this part). Thirty (30) days prior to
initiating an administrative wage garnishment, PBGC will send notice to
the debtor in accordance with the requirements of Sec. 4903.5 of this
part, including the requirements of Sec. 4903.5(a)(10) of this part.
For debts referred to the Financial Management Service under Sec.
4903.10 of this part, PBGC may authorize the Financial Management
Service to send a notice informing the debtor that administrative wage
garnishment will be initiated and how the debtor may request a hearing
as described in Sec. 4903.5(a)(10) of this part. If a debtor makes a
timely request for a hearing, administrative wage garnishment will not
begin until a hearing is held and a decision is sent to the debtor.
PBGC will determine whether the matter requires an oral hearing or if a
determination based upon review of the written record is sufficient.
PBGC will provide the debtor with a reasonable opportunity for an oral
hearing when it determines that the issues in dispute cannot be
resolved by a review of the documentary evidence. See 31 CFR
285.11(f)(1)-(4). Even if a debtor's hearing request is not timely,
PBGC may suspend collection by administrative wage garnishment in
accordance with the provisions of 31 CFR 285.11(f)(5). All travel
expenses incurred by the debtor in connection with an in-person hearing
will be borne by the debtor.
(b) This section does not apply to Federal salary offset, the
process by which PBGC collects debts owed to PBGC from the salaries of
Federal employees (see Sec. 4903.13 of this part).
Sec. 4903.15 How will PBGC report debts owed to PBGC to credit
bureaus?
PBGC will report delinquent debts owed to PBGC to credit bureaus in
accordance with the provisions of 31 U.S.C. 3711(e), 31 CFR 901.4, and
the Office of Management and Budget Circular A-129, ``Policies for
Federal Credit Programs and Non-tax Receivables.'' At least 60 days
prior to reporting a delinquent debt to a consumer reporting agency,
PBGC will send notice to the debtor in accordance with the requirements
of Sec. 4903.5 of this part. PBGC may authorize the Financial
Management Service to report to credit bureaus those delinquent debts
owed to the PBGC that have been transferred to the Financial Management
Service under Sec. 4903.10 of this part.
Sec. 4903.16 How will PBGC refer debts owed to PBGC to private
collection agencies?
PBGC will transfer delinquent debts owed to PBGC to the Financial
Management Service to obtain debt collection services provided by
private collection agencies. See Sec. 4903.10 of this part.
Sec. 4903.17 When will PBGC refer debts owed to PBGC to the
Department of Justice?
PBGC may initiate litigation pursuant to 29 U.S.C. 1302 with
delinquent debts on which aggressive collection activity has been taken
in accordance with this part and that should not be compromised, and on
which collection activity should not be suspended or terminated.
Alternatively, PBGC may refer debts owed to PBGC having a principal
balance over $100,000, or such higher amount as authorized by the
Attorney General, to the Department of Justice for approval of any
compromise of a debt or suspension or termination of collection
activity. See Sec. Sec. 4903.8 and 4903.9 of this part; 31 CFR 902.1,
903.1, and part 904. PBGC may authorize the Financial Management
Service to refer to the Department of Justice for litigation those
delinquent debts that have been transferred to the Financial Management
Service under Sec. 4903.10 of this part.
Sec. 4903.18 Will a debtor who owes a debt to PBGC or another Federal
agency, and persons controlled by or controlling such debtors, be
ineligible for Federal loan assistance, grants, cooperative agreements,
or other sources of Federal funds?
(a) Delinquent debtors are ineligible for and barred from obtaining
Federal loans or loan insurance or guaranties. As required by 31 U.S.C.
3720B and 31 CFR 901.6, PBGC will not extend financial assistance in
the form of a loan, loan guarantee, or loan insurance to any person
delinquent on a debt owed to a Federal agency. PBGC may issue standards
under which it may determine that persons controlled by or controlling
such delinquent debtors are similarly ineligible in accordance with 31
CFR 285.13(c)(2). This prohibition does not apply to disaster loans.
PBGC may extend credit after the delinquency has been resolved. See 31
CFR 285.13.
(b) This section does not apply to loans provided to multi-employer
pension plans pursuant to 29 U.S.C. 1431, 29 CFR 4261.1 and 4281.47.
(c) A debtor who has a judgment lien against the debtor's property
for a debt to the United States is not eligible to receive grants,
loans or funds directly or indirectly from the United States until the
judgment is paid in full or otherwise satisfied. This prohibition does
not apply to funds to which the debtor is entitled as beneficiary. PBGC
may promulgate regulations to allow for waivers of this ineligibility.
See 28 U.S.C. 3201(e).
Sec. 4903.19 How does a debtor request a special review based on a
change in circumstances such as catastrophic illness, divorce, death,
or disability?
(a) Material change in circumstances. A debtor who owes a debt to
PBGC may, at any time, request a special review by PBGC of the amount
of any offset, administrative wage garnishment, or voluntary payment,
based on materially changed circumstances beyond the control of the
debtor such as, but not limited to, catastrophic illness, divorce,
death, or disability.
(b) Inability to pay. For purposes of this section, in determining
whether an involuntary or voluntary payment would prevent the debtor
from meeting essential subsistence expenses (e.g., costs incurred for
food, housing, clothing, transportation, and medical care), the debtor
must submit a detailed statement and supporting documents for the
debtor, his or her spouse, and dependents, indicating:
(1) Income from all sources;
(2) Assets;
(3) Liabilities;
(4) Number of dependents;
[[Page 68212]]
(5) Expenses for food, housing, clothing, and transportation;
(6) Medical expenses;
(7) Exceptional expenses, if any; and
(8) Any additional materials and information that PBGC may request
relating to ability or inability to pay the amount(s) currently
required.
(c) Alternative payment arrangement. If the debtor