Records Management, 12432-12440 [2016-05150]
Download as PDF
12432
Federal Register / Vol. 81, No. 46 / Wednesday, March 9, 2016 / Proposed Rules
NATIONAL ARCHIVES AND RECORDS
ADMINISTRATION
36 CFR Parts 1223, 1224, 1227, 1229,
1232, 1233, and 1239
[FDMS No. NARA–16–0001; NARA–2016–
014]
RIN 3095–AB74
Records Management
National Archives and Records
Administration (NARA).
ACTION: Proposed rules.
AGENCY:
NARA proposes to revise its
records management regulations to
reflect changes in technology, practice,
and organizational structure. This is
phase I of the revisions and includes
changes to provisions in regulations on
managing vital records, records
disposition programs, general records
schedules, emergency authorization to
destroy records, transfer of records to
records storage facilities, transfer, use,
and disposition of records in a NARA
Federal Records Center, and program
assistance and inspections.
DATES: Submit comments on or before
May 9, 2016.
ADDRESSES: You may submit comments,
identified by RIN 3095–AB74, by any of
the following methods:
• Federal eRulemaking Portal: https://
www.regulations.gov. Follow the
instructions for submitting comments.
• Email: Regulation_comments@
nara.gov. Include RIN 3095–AB74 in the
subject line of the message.
• Fax: 301–837–0319. Include RIN
3095–AB74 in the subject line of the fax
cover sheet.
• Mail (for paper, disk, or CD–ROM
submissions. Include RIN 3095–AB74
on the submission): Regulations
Comment Desk (Strategy & Performance
Division (SP)); Suite 4100; National
Archives and Records Administration;
8601 Adelphi Road; College Park, MD
20740–6001.
• Hand delivery or courier: Deliver
comments to front desk at the address
above.
Instructions: All submissions must
include NARA’s name and the
regulatory information number for this
rulemaking (RIN 3095–AB74). We may
publish any comments we receive
without changes, including any
personal information you include.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Laura McCarthy, by email at regulation_
comments@nara.gov, or by telephone at
301–837–3023. You may also find more
information about records management
at NARA on NARA’s Web site at
https://www.archives.gov/records-mgmt/
Lhorne on DSK5TPTVN1PROD with PROPOSALS
SUMMARY:
VerDate Sep<11>2014
14:09 Mar 08, 2016
Jkt 238001
The
proposed revisions to the Federal
records management regulations
contained in 36 CFR Chapter XII,
Subchapter B, affect Federal agencies’
records management programs in the
areas of managing essential (formerly
referred to as ‘‘vital’’) records, records
disposition programs, the General
Records Schedules, emergency
authorizations to destroy records,
storage of records in records storage
facilities, and NARA assistance and
inspection programs. We are making
administrative changes, such as
updating office names and
organizational codes, updating URLs,
and adding new links to NARA’s
records management Web pages. We are
removing repetitive definitions sections
from each part to a centralized
definitions part (to come in part 1220)
applying to all parts (streamlining under
the Paperwork Reduction Act) and
removing repetitive authorities sections
from each part because authorities are
noted under the table of contents
(streamlining under the Paperwork
Reduction Act). We are making other
minor editorial changes for consistency
among parts and revising some language
to comply with Plain Language
requirements.
We are replacing references to the
Standard Form 115 (SF 115), Request for
Disposition Authority, with ‘‘records
schedule’’ because we now use the
Electronic Records Archives (ERA) for
scheduling records and no longer accept
SF 115s, except when special
circumstances merit its use. We have
made revision to incorporate use of the
ERA throughout the records
management regulations, including
revising references to the SF 115.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Discussion of Proposed Rule Revisions
Proposed Part 1223, Managing Vital
Records
This part sets out the necessary
actions that each agency must take to
ensure proper and adequate
documentation of continuing agency
operations in the event of activation of
an agency continuity plan. We have also
changed the term ‘‘vital’’ records to
‘‘essential’’ records to mirror the term
FEMA used in Federal Continuity
Directive 1 (FCD–1, 2012). Certain
Federal agencies were using the term
‘‘vital records’’ in another context with
a different meaning, so we decided to
change to ‘‘essential records’’ both to be
parallel with FCD–1 and to reduce
confusion among agencies.
PO 00000
Frm 00010
Fmt 4702
Sfmt 4702
Proposed Part 1224, Records Disposition
Programs
This part specifies the elements of a
records disposition program and the
integration of records management into
an agency’s business processes. Details
for the program functions, such as
scheduling, retention, and disposition of
records are found in parts 1225, 1226,
1227, 1235, and 1236. We added records
disposition provisions to part 1224 for
circumstances where multiple agencies
collaborate on a project or initiative.
Proposed Part 1227, General Records
Schedules
This part explains General Records
Schedules (GRS) and when the GRS
must be used by agencies. We added the
section for application of the GRS to
records that have been transferred into
the National Archives of the United
States and subject to the provisions in
36 CFR 1235.34.
Proposed Part 1229, Emergency
Authorization To Destroy Records
This part outlines the steps agencies
must take when they discover records
are a continuing menace to human
health or life, or to property, or when
destruction of records is necessary
during a state of war or threatened war
outside of the continental United States.
We have added the requirement in
§ 1229.12(b) that if records are destroyed
during a state of war or threatened war
that agencies must provide NARA with
a list of the destroyed records that can
and will be reconstructed, the records
used to reconstruct the destroyed
records, and assurance that these
records will be retained until after
reconstruction.
Proposed Part 1232, Transfer of Records
to Records Storage Facilities
This part provides procedures of the
transfer of records to a NARA, agencyoperated, or commercial records storage
facility. There are no substantive
changes from the existing part.
Proposed Part 1233, Transfer, Use and
Disposition of Records in NARA
Records Center
This part provide procedures that
apply to the use of NARA’s Federal
Records Center Program. There are no
substantive changes from the existing
part.
Proposed Part 1239, Program Assistance
and Inspections
The material in proposed part 1239
relating to program assistance NARA
provides to agencies is drawn from the
existing part 1239 with no substantive
changes. We have proposed changes to
E:\FR\FM\09MRP1.SGM
09MRP1
Federal Register / Vol. 81, No. 46 / Wednesday, March 9, 2016 / Proposed Rules
material relating to inspections of
records management programs has been
changed to add two circumstances or
conditions when NARA may inspect an
agency: NARA may inspect to assess an
agency’s compliance with records
management statutes and regulations,
and may also inspect an agency’s
implementation of records management
policies, guidance, and principles.
Timeframes for both NARA and agency
actions have been changed to business
days and NARA clarifies that agencies
must report on their follow-up
obligations no less frequently than semiannually.
Regulatory Analysis
Review Under Executive Orders 12866
and 13563
Executive Order 12866, Regulatory
Planning and Review, 58 FR 51735
(September 30, 1993), and Executive
Order 13563, Improving Regulation and
Regulation Review, 76 FR 23821
(January 18, 2011), direct agencies to
assess all costs and benefits of available
regulatory alternatives and, if regulation
is necessary, to select regulatory
approaches that maximize net benefits
(including potential economic,
environmental, public health and safety
effects, distributive impacts, and
equity). This proposed rule is not
‘‘significant’’ under section 3(f) of
Executive Order 12866 because it
applies only to Federal agencies, and is
updating the regulations, not
establishing new programs. Although
the proposed revisions change and add
new requirements for agencies, the
requirements are necessary to keep the
existing regulations up-to-date and to
ensure agencies are preserving records
for the United States as well as possible.
The Office of Management and Budget
(OMB) has reviewed this regulation.
Lhorne on DSK5TPTVN1PROD with PROPOSALS
Review Under the Regulatory Flexibility
Act (5 U.S.C. 601, et seq.)
This review requires an agency to
prepare an initial regulatory flexibility
analysis and publish it when the agency
publishes the proposed rule. This
requirement does not apply if the
agency certifies that the rule will not, if
promulgated, have a significant
economic impact on a substantial
number of small entities (5 U.S.C. 603).
NARA certifies, after review and
analysis, that this proposed rule will not
have a significant adverse economic
impact on small entities.
VerDate Sep<11>2014
14:09 Mar 08, 2016
Jkt 238001
Review Under the Paperwork Reduction
Act of 1995 (44 U.S.C. 3501et seq.)
This proposed rule does not contain
any information collection requirements
subject to the Paperwork Reduction Act.
Review Under Executive Order 13132,
Federalism, 64 FR 43255 (August 4,
1999)
Review under Executive Order 13132
requires that agencies review
regulations for Federalism effects on the
institutional interest of states and local
governments, and, if the effects are
sufficiently substantial, prepare a
Federal assessment to assist senior
policy makers. This proposed rule will
not have any direct effects on State and
local governments within the meaning
of the Executive Order. Therefore, no
Federalism assessment is required.
List of Subjects in 36 CFR Parts 1223,
1224, 1227, 1229, 1232, 1233, and 1239
Archives, Records, Records
management.
For the reasons stated in the
preamble, NARA proposes to amend 36
CFR parts 1223, 1224, 1227, 1229, 1232,
1233, and 1239, as follows:
PART 1223—MANAGING ESSENTIAL
RECORDS
1. The authority citation for part 1223
is revised to read as follows:
■
Authority: 44 U.S.C. 3101; E.O. 12656, 53
FR 47491; 3 CFR, 1988 Comp., p. 585; E.O.
13231, 66 FR 53063, 3 CFR, 2001 Comp., p.
805.
2. Revise the part heading to read as
set forth above.
■ 3. Revise § 1223.1 to read as follows:
■
§ 1223.1
part?
What authorities apply to this
(a) The authorities for this part, listed
above, require the head of each agency
to create and preserve records that
contain adequate and proper
documentation of the organization and
to perform national security emergency
preparedness functions.
(b) The regulations in this part also
conform to guidance in National
Security Presidential Directive (NSPD–
51), Homeland Security Presidential
Directive (HSPD–20), Federal
Continuity Directive (FCD) 1, Federal
Executive Branch National Continuity
Program and Requirements, and FCD 2,
Federal Executive Branch Mission
Essential Function and Primary Mission
Essential Function Identification and
Submission Process.
■ 4. Amend § 1223.2 by:
■ a. Removing paragraph (a) and the
introductory text of paragraph (b) and
PO 00000
Frm 00011
Fmt 4702
Sfmt 4702
12433
adding introductory text to the section
in their place.
■ b. Revising the definitions of ‘‘cycle’’
and ‘‘emergency operating records.’’
■ c. Adding definitions for ‘‘essential
records’’ and ‘‘essential records
program’’ in alphabetical order.
■ d. Revising the definitions of ‘‘legal
and financial rights records,’’ and ‘‘offsite storage.’’
■ e. Removing definitions of ‘‘vital
records’’ and ‘‘vital records program.’’
The revisions and additions read as
follows:
§ 1223.2
part?
What definitions apply to this
In addition to the definitions in part
1220 that apply to all of subchapter B
including this part, the following
definitions apply only to part 1223:
Cycle means the recurring removal of
obsolete copies of essential records and
replacing them with current copies of
essential records. This may occur daily,
weekly, quarterly, annually or at other
designated intervals.
*
*
*
*
*
Emergency operating records means a
category of records essential to the
continued functioning or the
reconstitution of an organization during
and after a continuity activation.
Examples of these records are
emergency plans and directives, orders
of succession, delegations of authority,
staffing assignments, and related policy
or procedure records.
Essential records means information
systems and applications, electronic and
hardcopy documents, references, and
records needed to support essential
functions during a continuity event. The
two basic categories of essential records
are emergency operating records and
legal and financial rights records.
Essential records program means the
policies, plans, and procedures the
agency develops and implements—and
the resources needed—to identify, use,
and protect essential records. This is a
program element of an agency’s
emergency management function.
Legal and financial rights records are
that category of essential records needed
to protect the legal and financial rights
of the Government and of the
individuals directly affected by its
activities. Examples include accounts
receivable records, social security
records, payroll records, retirement
records, and insurance records. NARA
formerly defined these records as
‘‘rights-and-interests’’ records.
*
*
*
*
*
Off-site storage means a facility other
than an agency’s normal place of
business, including a facility
maintained by a third party, where an
E:\FR\FM\09MRP1.SGM
09MRP1
12434
Federal Register / Vol. 81, No. 46 / Wednesday, March 9, 2016 / Proposed Rules
agency keeps records until eligible for
final disposition. Agencies may keep
essential records at off-site storage to
ensure that they are not damaged or
destroyed should an emergency occur in
an agency’s normal place of business.
§§ 1223.3 and 1233.4
■
■
[Removed]
5. Remove §§ 1223.3 and 1223.4.
6. Revise § 1223.10 to read as follows:
§ 1223.10
1223?
What is the purpose of part
Part 1223 specifies policies and
procedures an agency needs to identify,
protect, and manage essential records as
part of any agency’s continuity of
operation plan designed to meet
emergency management responsibilities.
■ 7. Amend § 1223.12 by:
■ a. Revising the section heading.
■ b. Amending the introductory text to
remove ‘‘A vital’’ and add in its place
the words ‘‘An essential.’’
■ c. Amend paragraph (a) by removing
‘‘It provides’’ and adding in its place
‘‘To provide’’ and removing the word
‘‘to’’ before the word ‘‘resume.’’
■ d. Amend paragraph (b) by removing
‘‘It enables’’ and adding in its place ‘‘To
enable’’ and removing the word
‘‘persons’’ and adding in its place the
word ‘‘people.’’
The revision reads as follows:
§ 1223.12 What are the objectives of an
essential records program?
*
*
*
*
*
8. Revise §§ 1223.14, 1223.16, and
1223.18 to read as follows:
■
Lhorne on DSK5TPTVN1PROD with PROPOSALS
§ 1223.14 What elements must agencies
include in essential records programs?
(a) To achieve compliance with this
section, an agency must include in its
essential records program all of the
following elements:
(1) Specified agency staff
responsibilities;
(2) Methods to appropriately inform
all staff about essential records;
(3) Processes to ensure current and
complete designation of essential
records;
(4) Adequate protections for the
essential records;
(5) Procedures to ensure access to and
immediate use of the essential records
when needed;
(6) Annual review and testing of the
program, and training for applicable
staff; and
(b) Additional Continuity of
Operations guidance for essential
records provided in the Federal
Continuity Directive (FCD–1) is
published by the Federal Emergency
Management Agency (FEMA) and
available on FEMA’s Web site at https://
www.fema.gov/guidance-directives.
VerDate Sep<11>2014
14:09 Mar 08, 2016
Jkt 238001
§ 1223.16 How do agencies identify
essential records?
Agencies identify essential records in
the context of the emergency
management function. Essential records
are those the agency needs to perform
its most critical functions and those the
agency needs to protect the legal and
financial rights of the Government and
the people affected by its actions.
Essential records also include
emergency plans and related records
that specify how an agency will respond
to an emergency. The informational
content of records series and electronic
records systems determines which
records are essential. Only the most
recent and complete sources of the
information are essential records.
§ 1223.18 Must agencies maintain
essential records in a particular form or
format?
(a) Essential records can be original
records or copies of records. Consult
NARA records management guidance on
essential records at https://
www.archives.gov/records-mgmt/vitalrecords/ for further
information.
(b) Agencies may maintain essential
records on a variety of media, including
paper, photographic film, microform,
and electronic forms. In selecting the
media (such as magnetic tape or optical
disk), agencies must ensure that the
hardware, software, and documentation
it needs to access records will be
available following an emergency or
disaster. The agency may store essential
records it maintains electronically in
shared data and computing services via
the Internet or a Virtual Private
Network.
■ 9. Amend § 1223.20 by revising the
section heading and the first sentence,
to read as follows:
§ 1223.20 What are the requirements for
accessing essential records during an
emergency?
Agencies must establish procedures
for retrieving and accessing essential
records. * * *
■ 10. Revise §§ 1223.22 and 1223.24 to
read as follows:
§ 1223.22 How must agencies protect
essential records?
Agencies must take appropriate
measures to ensure they protect and
provide access to essential records or
copies of essential records in case of an
emergency.
(a) Duplication. Agencies may choose
to duplicate essential records as the
primary protection method. Duplication
can be to the same medium as the
original record or to a different medium.
When agencies choose duplication as a
PO 00000
Frm 00012
Fmt 4702
Sfmt 4702
protection method, they normally use
the copy of the original essential record
as the version stored off-site. The agency
may store the original records off-site if
their protection is necessary, or if the
agency does not need to keep the
original records at its normal place of
business.
(b) Dispersal. Once agencies duplicate
the records, they must disperse the
copies to sites a sufficient distance away
to avoid them being subject to the same
emergency. Agencies may use other
office locations, off-site locations, or
storage facilities maintained by a third
party as dispersal sites.
(c) Storage considerations. Copies of
emergency operating records must be
readily available for use within 12 hours
following the activation of agency
continuity plans. Agencies may not
need copies of legal and financial rights
records as quickly. When deciding
where to store essential record copies,
agencies must treat records that have the
properties of both categories, that is,
both emergency operating and legal and
financial rights records, as emergency
operating records.
(1) Agencies may store copies of legal
and financial rights essential records at
an off-site agency location or, in
accordance with § 1233.12, at a NARA
records storage facility.
(2) In accordance with § 1233.12,
when using a NARA records storage
facility for storing legal and financial
essential records that are duplicate
copies of original records, the agency
must specify on the SF 135, Records
Transmittal and Receipt, or equivalent
that they are essential records (duplicate
copies) and the medium on which they
are maintained. The agency must also
periodically cycle them by removing
obsolete items and replacing them with
the most recent versions in accordance
with NARA’s General Records Schedule
(GRS) covering essential records.
§ 1223.24 When can agencies destroy
essential records?
NARA-approved records schedules
(see part 1225, Scheduling Records, of
this subchapter) govern disposition of
essential records that are original
records. Agencies must not destroy
original records that are not scheduled.
Agencies may destroy duplicate copies
it created and maintained for essential
records purposes when they are
superseded or obsolete, in accordance
with NARA’s GRS.
■ 11. Revise part 1224 to read as
follows:
PART 1224—RECORDS DISPOSITION
PROGRAMS
Sec.
E:\FR\FM\09MRP1.SGM
09MRP1
Federal Register / Vol. 81, No. 46 / Wednesday, March 9, 2016 / Proposed Rules
§ 1224.10 What must agencies do to
implement an effective records
disposition program?
Authority: 44 U.S.C. 2111, 2902, 2904,
3102, and 3301.
§ 1224.10 What must agencies do to
implement an effective records disposition
program?
Agencies should integrate records
management into business processes. As
part of this effort, agencies should
analyze records management
requirements, integrate them into
operating plans, and implement, review,
and revise records management policies
and procedures across the agency on a
regular basis. To properly carry out the
provisions of part 1220 of this
subchapter, agencies must:
(a) Schedule all records in accordance
with part 1225 of this subchapter,
implement records schedules in
accordance with part 1226 of this
subchapter, and transfer permanent
records to NARA in accordance with
part 1235 of this subchapter;
(b) Transfer all permanent electronic
records to NARA in electronic form to
the greatest extent possible;
(c) Promptly disseminate and
implement NARA-approved agency
records schedules, additions, and
changes to the General Records
Schedules (GRS) in accordance with
parts 1226 and 1227 of this subchapter;
(d) Regularly review agency-generated
records schedules, and, if necessary,
update them in accordance with part
1225 of this subchapter;
(e) Incorporate records retention and
disposition needs into the design,
development, and implementation of
new or revised recordkeeping systems.
See part 1236 of this subchapter for
electronic records management
requirements;
(f) Provide training and guidance to
all employees on agency records
disposition requirements and
procedures and other significant aspects
of the records disposition program.
When NARA approves a new or revised
records schedule, provide specific
guidance to employees responsible for
applying the schedule; and
(g) When two or more Federal
agencies collaborate on a common
project or initiative, the participants
must establish and agree to
recordkeeping responsibilities and
manage all records. This also applies to
multi-agency endeavors that include
private organizations, state, local,
Tribal, or foreign governments.
When NARA issues a new or revised GRS, and
PART 1227—GENERAL RECORDS
SCHEDULES
Sec.
1227.10 What are General Records
Schedules (GRS)?
1227.12 When must agencies apply the
GRS?
1227.13 May NARA apply the GRS to
records transferred to the National
Archives?
1227.14 How do I obtain copies of the GRS?
Authority: 44 U.S.C. 2107(2), 2909, and
3303a.
§ 1227.10 What are General Records
Schedules (GRS)?
The Archivist of the United States
issues General Records Schedules (GRS)
for records common to several or all
agencies. The GRS authorizes, after
specified periods of time, agencies to
destroy temporary records or to transfer
permanent records to NARA.
§ 1227.12
GRS?
When must agencies apply the
(a) Agencies should apply the
disposition instructions in the following
table.
No action is required.
(4) Your agency does not have an existing records
schedule for these records,
Lhorne on DSK5TPTVN1PROD with PROPOSALS
12. Revise part 1227 to read as
follows:
■
Then
(1) Your agency does not create or maintain any of the
records addressed by that GRS,
(2) The GRS disposition authority states that it must be
followed without exception,
(3) Your agency has an existing records schedule for
these records AND the GRS permits use of existing
agency-specific schedules,
12435
(b) Except as provided in the table in
paragraph (a) of this section, agencies
must disseminate and implement any
new or revised GRS within 6 months
after NARA has issued a new GRS
transmittal.
§ 1227.13 May NARA apply the GRS to
records transferred to the National
Archives?
NARA may, at its discretion, apply
the provisions of the GRS to records in
VerDate Sep<11>2014
14:09 Mar 08, 2016
Jkt 238001
Your agency must follow the disposition instructions of the GRS, whether or not your
agency has existing records schedules.
(i) Your agency may follow the disposition instructions in either the GRS or the existing agency records schedule. If your agency chooses to follow its own schedule,
then it must notify NARA within 120 calendar days of the issuance of the new or
revised GRS. Notifications should be sent to GRS_Team@nara.gov or National Archives and Records Administration; Office of the Chief Records Officer (AC); Attention: GRS Team, Room 2100; 8601 Adelphi Road; College Park, Maryland
20740–6001.
(ii) After reviewing your agency’s notification, NARA may determine that your agency-specific schedule is no longer appropriate because of the passage of time,
change in value of the records, or for other reasons. NARA will notify your agency’s records officer of the notification’s status within 90 calendar days.
(iii) Agencies may also submit a new schedule to NARA with a justification for deviating from the GRS.
Your agency must follow the disposition instructions of the GRS. If your agency’s
needs require a different retention period, then your agency must submit a records
schedule to NARA in accordance with part 1225 of this subchapter, with a justification for the deviation.
its legal custody, subject to the
provisions of part 1235 of this
subchapter.
§ 1227.14
GRS?
How do I obtain copies of the
The GRS and instructions for its use
are available online at https://
www.archives.gov/records-mgmt/grs/.
They are also available by contacting
GRS_Team@nara.gov or writing to
NARA at National Archives and Records
PO 00000
Frm 00013
Fmt 4702
Sfmt 4702
Administration, Office of the Chief
Records Officer (AC), Attention: GRS
Team, Room 2100, 8601 Adelphi Road,
College Park, MD 20740–6001.
■ 13. Revise part 1229 to read as
follows:
PART 1229—EMERGENCY
AUTHORIZATION TO DESTROY
RECORDS
Sec.
1229.1
E:\FR\FM\09MRP1.SGM
What is the scope of this part?
09MRP1
12436
Federal Register / Vol. 81, No. 46 / Wednesday, March 9, 2016 / Proposed Rules
1229.10 What steps must agencies take
when records are a continuing menace to
health, life, or property?
1229.12 What are the requirements during a
state of war or threatened war?
Authority: 44 U.S.C. 3310 and 3311.
§ 1229.1
What is the scope of this part?
This part describes certain conditions
under which agencies may destroy
records without regard to the provisions
of part 1226 of this subchapter.
§ 1229.10 What steps must agencies take
when records are a continuing menace to
health, life, or property?
When an agency identifies records
that pose a continuing menace to human
health or life, or to property, the records
officer or other designee must
immediately notify NARA in writing by
mail at National Archives and Records
Administration, Office of the Chief
Records Officer (AC), 8601 Adelphi
Road, College Park, MD 20740–6001, or
by email at RM.Communications@
nara.gov. The notification must describe
the records, their location and quantity,
the nature of the menace and, if
appropriate, the steps taken to
reconstruct the records using other
records and sources of information.
(a) If NARA concurs that the records
must be destroyed, NARA notifies the
agency to immediately destroy them by
an appropriate and safe disposal
method.
(b) If NARA does not concur that the
records must be destroyed, NARA
advises the agency of alternative
remedial action to address the menace.
§ 1229.12 What are the requirements
during a state of war or threatened war?
(a) Destruction of records outside the
territorial limits of the continental
United States is authorized whenever,
during a state of war between the United
States and any other nation or when
hostile action appears imminent, the
head of the agency that has custody of
the records determines that their
retention would be prejudicial to the
interests of the United States, or that
they occupy space urgently needed for
military purposes and are without
sufficient administrative, fiscal, legal,
historical, or other value to warrant
their continued preservation. When it is
not feasible for the head of the agency
to make this determination, the agency’s
most senior official at the location of the
records may do so.
(b) Within six months after the
destruction of any records under this
authorization, the agency official who
directed the destruction must submit a
written statement by mail to NARA at
National Archives and Records
Administration, Office of the Chief
Records Officer (AC), 8601 Adelphi
Road, College Park, MD 20740–6001, or
by email at RM.Communications@
nara.gov. The statement must include
the following:
(1) An explanation of the reasons for
the destruction;
(2) A description of the records
destroyed;
(3) How, when, and where the records
were destroyed;
(4) A list of destroyed records that can
and will be reconstructed using other
records and sources of information; and
(5) A list of the records used to
reconstruct the destroyed records listed
in paragraph (b)(4) of this section and
assurance that the agency will retain
these until it has reconstructed the
records.
■ 14. Revise part 1232 to read as
follows:
PART 1232—TRANSFER OF RECORDS
TO RECORDS STORAGE FACILITIES
Sec.
1232.10 Where may a Federal agency store
records?
1232.12 Under what conditions may
agencies store Federal records in records
storage facilities?
Type of record
Lhorne on DSK5TPTVN1PROD with PROPOSALS
(c) Temporary records (excluding Civilian Personnel Records).
(d) Essential records ...........................................
(e) Civilian Personnel Records ...........................
§ 1232.14 What requirements must an
agency meet before it transfers records to
a records storage facility?
An agency must comply with part
1234 of this subchapter and the
following requirements before it
14:09 Mar 08, 2016
Authority: 44 U.S.C. 2907 and 3103.
§ 1232.10 Where may a Federal agency
store records?
Federal agencies may store records in
the following types of records storage
facilities, so long as the facilities meet
the facility standards in part 1234 of this
subchapter. Records transferred to a
records storage facility remain in the
legal custody of the agency.
(a) NARA Federal Records Centers.
NARA owns or operates records centers
to store, process, and service records for
Federal agencies (under authority of 44
U.S.C. 2907). These NARA records
centers include a National Personnel
Records Center that contains designated
records of the Department of Defense,
the Office of Personnel Management,
and other records on former Federal
civilian and military employees. For a
list of NARA Federal Records Centers,
consult NARA’s Web site at https://
www.archives.gov/locations/.
(b) Records centers operated by or on
behalf of one or more Federal agencies
other than NARA.
(c) Commercial records storage
facilities operated by private entities.
§ 1232.12 Under what conditions may
agencies store Federal records in records
storage facilities?
The following chart shows what
records agencies can store in a records
storage facility and the conditions that
apply:
Conditions
(a) Permanent records ........................................
(b) Unscheduled records ....................................
VerDate Sep<11>2014
1232.14 What requirements must an agency
meet before it transfers records to a
records storage facility?
1232.16 What must an agency document
before transferring records to a records
storage facility?
1232.18 What procedures must an agency
follow to transfer records to an agency
records center or commercial records
storage facility?
Jkt 238001
Any storage facility that meets the provisions of part 1234 of this subchapter.
(1) Any storage facility that meets the provisions of part 1234 of this subchapter.
(2) Also requires prior notification to NARA (see § 1232.14(b)).
Any storage facility that meets the provisions of part 1234 of this subchapter.
Any storage facility that meets the provisions of parts 1223 and 1234 of this subchapter.
Textual must be transferred to the National Personnel Records Center (NPRC), St. Louis, MO
(see part 1233 of this subchapter).
transfers records to a records storage
facility:
(a) Non-paper-based media (e.g., film,
audio tape, electronic media, etc.),
especially those that are unscheduled or
scheduled for long-term or permanent
retention, require more stringent
PO 00000
Frm 00014
Fmt 4702
Sfmt 4702
environmental controls (see parts 1236
and 1237 of this subchapter).
(b) Notify NARA in writing prior to
transferring unscheduled records to a
records storage facility, by mail at
National Archives and Records
Administration; Office of the Chief
E:\FR\FM\09MRP1.SGM
09MRP1
Federal Register / Vol. 81, No. 46 / Wednesday, March 9, 2016 / Proposed Rules
Records Officer (AC); 8601 Adelphi
Road; College Park, MD 20740–6001, or
by email at RM.Communications@
nara.gov. The notification must identify
the records storage facility and include
a copy of the information required by
§ 1232.16(a).
(c) For all records being transferred,
create documentation sufficient to
identify and locate files. (See § 1232.16.)
(d) Adhere to NARA-approved
retention periods and create and
maintain records documenting final
disposition actions (destruction or
transfer to NARA).
Lhorne on DSK5TPTVN1PROD with PROPOSALS
§ 1232.16 What must an agency document
before transferring records to a records
storage facility?
(a) For each individual records series
spanning one or more consecutive years,
the agency must document the:
(1) Creating office;
(2) Series title;
(3) Description (provide for all
transfers, and in the case of permanent
or unscheduled records, the description
must include a folder title list of the box
contents or equivalent detailed records
description). For more information on
folder title lists, consult NARA’s Web
site at https://www.archives.gov/recordsmgmt/accessioning/finding-aid.html;
(4) Date span (provide both the
inclusive start and end dates of the
records; these indicate the dates on
which the records started and stopped
being created or accumulated);
(5) Physical form and medium of
records (e.g., paper, motion picture film,
sound recordings, photographs, digital
images);
(6) Volume (assuming a standard-size
records box equals approximately one
cubic foot, provide the total number of
boxes included in the transfer);
(7) Citation to NARA-approved
records schedule or agency records
disposition manual (unscheduled
records must cite the date the agency
notified NARA or, if available, the date
the agency submitted the records
schedule to NARA);
(8) Restrictions on access, if
applicable;
(9) Disposition (‘‘permanent,’’
‘‘temporary,’’ or ‘‘unscheduled; records
schedule pending’’);
(10) Date of disposition action
(transfer to NARA or destruction);
(11) Physical location, including
name and address of facility; and
(12) Control number or identifier used
to track the records.
(b) In the case of permanent and
unscheduled records, provide copies of
the documentation to NARA and advise
NARA in writing of the new location
whenever the records are moved to a
VerDate Sep<11>2014
14:09 Mar 08, 2016
Jkt 238001
new storage facility. For permanent
records, mail the documentation to
National Archives and Records
Administration; Office of the Chief
Records Officer (AC); 8601 Adelphi
Road; College Park, MD 20740–6001, or
send via email to RM.Communications@
nara.gov, no later than 30 days after the
agency transfers records to the agency
records center or commercial records
storage facility.
§ 1232.18 What procedures must an
agency follow to transfer records to an
agency records center or commercial
records storage facility?
Federal agencies must use the
following procedures to transfer records
to an agency records center or
commercial records storage facility:
(a) Incorporate into agreements with
the storage facility the standards in part
1234 of this subchapter and allow for
inspections by the agency and NARA to
ensure compliance. An agency must
promptly remove records from a facility
if the facility does not correct
deficiencies within six months of the
inspection report identifying them;
(b) For temporary records, make
available to NARA on request the
documentation specified in § 1232.16;
(c) Retain temporary records until the
expiration of their NARA-approved
retention period and no longer, except
as provided for in § 1226.18 of this
subchapter;
(d) Transfer permanent records that
have met their retention period to
NARA in accordance with part 1235 of
this subchapter;
(e) Ensure that the facility stores and
maintains records that are restricted
because they are security classified or
exempt from disclosure by statute
(including the Privacy Act of 1974, 5
U.S.C. 552a, as amended) or regulation
in accordance with applicable laws,
Executive Orders, or regulations;
(f) Ensure that the agency destroys
temporary records, including restricted
records (security classified or exempted
from disclosure by statute (including the
Privacy Act of 1974) or regulation, in
accordance with the requirements
specified in § 1226.24 of this
subchapter;
(g) Ensure that emergency operating
records, as defined in part 1223 of this
subchapter, that are transferred to an
agency records center or commercial
records storage facility are available in
accordance with § 1223.24 of this
subchapter; and
(h) Provide records access to
appropriate NARA staff wherever the
records are located in order to:
(1) Conduct an inspection in
accordance with part 1239 of this
subchapter; or
PO 00000
Frm 00015
Fmt 4702
Sfmt 4702
12437
(2) Process a request for records
disposition authority.
■ 15. Revise part 1233 to read as
follows:
PART 1233—TRANSFER, USE, AND
DISPOSITION OF RECORDS IN A
NARA FEDERAL RECORDS CENTER
Sec.
1233.10 How does an agency transfer
records to a NARA Federal Records
Center (FRC)?
1233.12 How does an agency transfer
essential records to a NARA Federal
Records Center (FRC)?
1233.14 What personnel records must an
agency transfer to the National Personnel
Records Center (NPRC)?
1233.16 How does an agency transfer
records to the National Personnel
Records Center (NPRC)?
1233.18 What reference procedures do
NARA Federal Records Centers (FRCs)
use?
1233.20 How do NARA Federal Records
Centers (FRCs) manage records disposal
clearances?
Authority: 44 U.S.C. 2907 and 3103.
§ 1233.10 How does an agency transfer
records to a NARA Federal Records Center
(FRC)?
(a) Agencies must meet the
requirements for records storage
described in other parts of this
subchapter. NARA ensures that its
records centers meet the facilities
standards in 36 CFR part 1234, so using
a NARA FRC meets the agency’s
obligations in § 1232.12 of this
subchapter.
(b) Agencies must use the designated
NARA FRC(s) named in their agreement
with NARA’s Federal Records Centers
Program (AF).
(c) Before transferring records to a
NARA FRC, an agency must prepare and
submit a Standard Form (SF) 135,
Records Transmittal and Receipt, or an
electronic equivalent. Doing so meets
the records description requirements in
§ 1232.14(c) of this subchapter, except
the requirement for a folder title list.
Agencies must provide NARA with
folder title lists for all permanent and
unscheduled records transfers and for
records that the agency schedules for
sampling or selection after transfer.
(d) Agencies must submit a separate
SF 135 or electronic equivalent for each
individual records series having the
same disposition authority and
disposition date.
(e) For further guidance on
transferring records to a NARA FRC,
consult the NARA Federal Records
Centers Program (FRCP) Web site at
https://www.archives.gov/frc/
toolkit.html#transfer. You may also
request current NARA publications and
E:\FR\FM\09MRP1.SGM
09MRP1
12438
Federal Register / Vol. 81, No. 46 / Wednesday, March 9, 2016 / Proposed Rules
bulletins by writing to NARA at
National Archives and Records
Administration; Federal Records Center
Program (AF); 8601 Adelphi Road;
College Park, MD 20740–6001, or by
calling (301) 837–2950. Agencies may
also contact individual NARA FRCs (see
https://www.archives.gov/frc/
locations.html for contact information).
§ 1233.12 How does an agency transfer
essential records to a NARA Federal
Records Center (FRC)?
Essential records transfers are
governed by the general requirements
and procedures in this part and part
1223 of this subchapter. For assistance
in selecting a NARA facility that best
meets the needs of your agency, write to
NARA at National Archives and Records
Administration; Federal Records
Centers Program (AF); 8601 Adelphi
Road; College Park, MD 20740–6001, or
by calling (301) 837–2950.
§ 1233.14 What personnel records must an
agency transfer to the National Personnel
Records Center (NPRC)?
(a) The GRS specifies which Federal
civilian personnel, medical, and pay
records agencies must centrally store at
the National Personnel Records Center
(NPRC) headquartered in St. Louis, MO.
(b) Agencies should transfer the
following types of civilian and military
medical treatment records to the NPRC:
(1) Inpatient (hospitalization) records
created for all categories of patients
(active duty military personnel, retirees,
and dependents) receiving inpatient
treatment and extended ambulatory
procedures; and
(2) Outpatient medical treatment
records for military retirees,
dependents, and other civilians treated
at military health care facilities
(excludes active duty military personnel
at time of military discharge or
retirement).
Lhorne on DSK5TPTVN1PROD with PROPOSALS
§ 1233.16 How does an agency transfer
records to the National Personnel Records
Center (NPRC)?
Agencies must use the following
procedures to transfer records to the
NPRC:
(a) Civilian personnel files. (1)
Forward the official personnel folder
(OPF) and the employee medical folder
(EMF) to the NPRC at the same time;
(2) Transfer EMFs and OPFs in
separate folders;
(3) Retire individual folders on the
basis of the person’s date of separation,
within 90 to 120 days after the
employee separates from Federal
service;
(4) For additional guidance, write to
the Office of Personnel Management
(OPM); 1900 E Street NW., Washington,
VerDate Sep<11>2014
14:09 Mar 08, 2016
Jkt 238001
DC 20415, or call (202) 606–1800. The
OPM publication, ‘‘The Guide to
Personnel Recordkeeping,’’ which
includes procedures for transferring
OPFs and EMFs, is available online at
https://www.opm.gov/feddata/
recguide2008.pdf.
(b) Military medical records. Military
health care facilities should contact
their facility records managers for
guidance on transferring medical
records to NPRC. For additional
guidance, consult the ‘‘Transactions
with the National Personnel Records
Center (NPRC), St. Louis, MO’’ section
of the NARA FRCP Web site at https://
www.archives.gov/frc/
toolkit.html#transactions.
(c) Other guidance. For further
guidance, consult the NPRC Web site at
https://www.archives.gov/facilities/mo/
st_louis.html.
§ 1233.18 What reference procedures do
NARA Federal Records Centers (FRCs)
use?
(a) Agency records transferred to a
NARA FRC remain in the legal custody
of the originating agency. NARA acts as
the agency’s agent to maintain the
records. NARA discloses the record only
to the originating agency that retains
legal custody, or under rules established
by that agency that are consistent with
existing laws.
(b) For general reference requests,
agencies should use the Federal Records
Centers Program (FRCP) electronic
system or the Optional Form (OF) 11,
Reference Request—Federal Records
Centers, or its electronic equivalent. The
agency and NARA jointly designate this
form.
(c) For civilian personnel records
requests, agencies must use the
following forms:
(1) Standard Form 127, Request for
Official Personnel Folder (Separated
Employee), to request transmission of
separated employee personnel folders
stored at the National Personnel Records
Center (NPRC). Additional instructions
on requesting OPFs are available online
at https://www.archives.gov/st-louis/
civilian-personnel/federalagencies.html.
(2) Standard Form 184, Request for
Employee Medical Folder (Separated
Employee), to request medical folders
stored at the NPRC. Additional
instructions on requesting EMFs are
available online at https://
www.archives.gov/st-louis/civilianpersonnel/federal-agencies.html.
(3) Optional Form 11, Reference
Request—Federal Records Center, to
request medical records transferred to
other NARA FRCs prior to September 1,
1984. The request must include the
PO 00000
Frm 00016
Fmt 4702
Sfmt 4702
name and address of the agency’s
designated medical records manager.
The form and additional instructions are
available online at https://
www.archives.gov/frc/forms/of-11.pdf.
(4) National Archives Form 14136,
Request Pertaining to Civilian
Conservation Corps (CCC) Personnel
Records, to request records relating to
the CCC. The form, as well as additional
instructions, is available online at
https://www.archives.gov/st-louis/
archival-programs/civilian-personnelarchival/ccc-holdings-access.html.
(5) National Archives Form 14137,
Request Pertaining to Works Progress
Administration (WPA) Personnel
Records, to request records relating to
the WPA. The form, as well as
additional instructions, is available
online at https://www.archives.gov/stlouis/archival-programs/civilianpersonnel-archival/wpa-holdingsaccess.html.
(d) For military personnel records
requests, agencies and other requesters
must use the following methods:
(1) Federal agencies must use
Standard Form (SF) 180, Request
Pertaining to Military Records, to obtain
information from military service
records in the NPRC (Military Personnel
Records). The form is available online at
https://www.archives.gov/veterans/
military-service-records/standard-form180.html#sf, or by writing to the
National Personnel Records Center
(Military Personnel Records); 1 Archives
Drive; St. Louis, MO 63138. OMB
Control Number 3095–0029 covers SF
180.
(2) Authorized agencies requesting the
loan of a military personnel record may
order records using eMilrecs (electronic
equivalent of the SF 180). Access to
eMilrecs and additional information is
available online at https://
www.archives.gov/st-louis/militarypersonnel/agencies/ompf-fedagency.html.
(3) A military veteran or the next of
kin of a deceased veteran may order
military personnel records by
submitting an SF 180 or an online
records request. We may be permitted,
under certain circumstances, to provide
surviving next of kin greater access to a
deceased veteran’s records than a
member of the general public.
Additional information is available
online at https://www.archives.gov/
veterans/military-service-records/.
(4) Members of the public and nongovernmental organizations may also
request military personnel records by
submitting an SF 180. To request
information from another person’s
military personnel records, you must
have the release authorization in
E:\FR\FM\09MRP1.SGM
09MRP1
Federal Register / Vol. 81, No. 46 / Wednesday, March 9, 2016 / Proposed Rules
Section III of the SF 180 signed by the
member or legal guardian. If you cannot
obtain the appropriate signature, we can
only provide limited information.
(5) For guidance on requesting
original medical treatment records,
military hospitals and clinics should
consult the ‘‘Medical Treatment
Records’’ Web page at https://
www.archives.gov/st-louis/militarypersonnel/other-medical-records.html.
(e) For further guidance on requesting
records from a NARA FRC, consult the
NARA Federal Records Centers Program
Web site at https://www.archives.gov/frc/
toolkit.html#retrieval. You may also
request current NARA publications and
bulletins by contacting the FRCP, or
individual NARA Federal Records
Centers (see https://www.archives.gov/
frc/locations.html for contact
information).
Lhorne on DSK5TPTVN1PROD with PROPOSALS
§ 1233.20 How do NARA Federal Records
Centers (FRCs) manage records disposal
clearances?
(a) The National Personnel Records
Center destroys records covered by
General Records Schedules (GRS) in
accordance with those schedules
without further agency clearance.
(b) For records not covered under a
GRS, NARA FRCs destroy eligible
Federal records only with the written
concurrence of the agency having legal
custody of the records.
(c) NARA FRCs maintain
documentation on the final disposition
of records, as required in § 1232.14(d) of
this subchapter.
(d) When NARA approves an
extension of retention period beyond
the time authorized in the records
schedule for records stored in NARA
FRCs, NARA notifies the affected
Federal Records Centers to suspend
disposal of the records (see § 1226.18 of
this subchapter for more specific
guidance on when agencies may
temporarily extend retention periods).
(e) For further guidance on records
disposition, consult the NARA FRCP
Web site at https://www.archives.gov/frc/
toolkit.html#disposition. You may also
request current NARA publications and
bulletins by contacting the FRCP or
individual NARA Federal Records
Centers (see https://www.archives.gov/
frc/locations.html for contact
information).
■ 16. Revise part 1239 to read as
follows:
PART 1239—PROGRAM ASSISTANCE
AND INSPECTIONS
Sec.
Subpart A—General
1239.1 What is the scope of this part?
VerDate Sep<11>2014
14:09 Mar 08, 2016
Jkt 238001
1239.3
What definitions apply to this part?
Subpart B—Program Assistance
1239.10 What program assistance does
NARA provide?
1239.12 Who may agencies contact to
request program assistance?
Subpart C—Inspections
1239.20 When does NARA inspect an
agency?
1239.22 How does NARA notify the agency
of the inspection?
1239.24 How does NARA conduct an
inspection?
1239.26 What are an agency’s follow-up
obligations after it receives an inspection
report?
Authority: 44 U.S.C. 2904 and 2906.
Subpart A—General
§ 1239.1
an agency to address a serious records
management issue in the agency.
(b) For information on NARA
handbooks and guidance, consult
NARA’s Web site at https://
www.archives.gov/records-mgmt/.
(c) For information on NARA training,
consult NARA’s Web site at https://
www.archives.gov/records-mgmt/
training/.
§ 1239.12 Who may agencies contact to
request program assistance?
Agencies may write to NARA at
National Archives and Records
Administration; Office of the Chief
Records Officer (AC); 8601 Adelphi
Road; College Park, MD 20740–6001 for
information or assistance related to any
area covered by this subchapter.
What is the scope of this part?
NARA’s statutory authorities include
assisting agencies to carry out their
records management responsibilities
and, when necessary, inspecting agency
programs and reporting to Congress on
those inspections. Part 1239 identifies
the types of records management
guidance and program assistance NARA
provides to agencies under its 44 U.S.C.
chapter 29 mandate; the conditions
under which NARA invokes its
inspection authority, also under chapter
29; and the requirements for agencies to
cooperate fully in such inspections.
§ 1239.3
part?
12439
What definitions apply to this
In addition to the definitions in part
1220 that apply to all of Subchapter B
including this part, the following
definition applies only to part 1239:
Inspection means NARA’s formal
review and report on an agency’s
recordkeeping processes, under 44
U.S.C. 2904(c) and 2906(a). NARA’s
formal review and report focus on those
practices that put records meeting one
or more of the following criteria at risk:
(1) Have a direct and high impact on
legal rights or government
accountability;
(2) Are the subject of high profile
litigation, Congressional attention, or
widespread media coverage;
(3) Have high research potential; or
(4) Are permanent records with a
large volume, regardless of format.
Subpart C—Inspections
§ 1239.20
agency?
When does NARA inspect an
(a) NARA may inspect when it
identifies risks through:
(1) An agency failing to address
specific records management problems;
(2) Internal or external records
management assessments;
(3) Reports in the media;
(4) Congressional inquiries;
(5) Allegations of unauthorized
destruction;
(6) Reports issued by the GAO or an
agency’s Inspector General;
(7) Observations by NARA staff
members; or
(8) An agency head, who then can
request that NARA conduct an
inspection.
(b) NARA may also inspect to assess
an agency’s compliance with records
management statutes and regulations.
(c) NARA may also inspect an
agency’s implementation of records
management policies, guidance, and
principles to validate the following:
(1) Reports of unique or innovative
methods;
(2) Low risk scores on assessments; or
(3) NARA staff members’ observation
of sound practices.
(d) NARA reports to Congress and the
Office of Management and Budget on
inspections in accordance with 44
U.S.C. 2904.
Subpart B—Program Assistance
§ 1239.22 How does NARA notify the
agency of the inspection?
§ 1239.10 What program assistance does
NARA provide?
(a) Once NARA identifies the need for
an agency inspection, the Archivist of
the United States sends a letter to the
head of the agency. If the agency is a
component of a cabinet department, the
Archivist also sends a copy to the head
of the cabinet department. NARA also
sends a copy to the agency’s records
officer. The letter includes:
(a) NARA publishes handbooks,
conducts workshops and other training
sessions, and furnishes information and
guidance to agencies on creating,
maintaining, using, and disposing of
records. NARA may also conduct an
assistance project in cooperation with
PO 00000
Frm 00017
Fmt 4702
Sfmt 4702
E:\FR\FM\09MRP1.SGM
09MRP1
12440
Federal Register / Vol. 81, No. 46 / Wednesday, March 9, 2016 / Proposed Rules
(1) Notice that NARA intends to
conduct an inspection;
(2) Which records management
processes or procedures NARA is
evaluating, and any specific issues;
(3) A beginning date for the
inspection that is no more than 30
business days after the date of the letter;
and
(4) A request for an agency point of
contact to assist NARA as it conducts
the inspection.
(b) If the agency does not respond to
NARA’s notification letter, NARA
reports the matter to the agency’s
Congressional oversight committee and
to the Office of Management and
Budget, under its 44 U.S.C. 2904(c)(8)
statutory authority.
§ 1239.24 How does NARA conduct an
inspection?
(a) The NARA inspection team leader
coordinates with the agency point of
contact to arrange an initial meeting
with the agency. The initial meeting
addresses the scope of the inspection,
including its parameters, any surveys or
other inspection instruments, involved
offices, and timing of site visits.
(b) NARA prepares a draft inspection
report and transmits it to the agency no
later than 45 business days after the last
site visit or meeting. The report
includes:
(1) An executive summary;
(2) Background and purpose of
inspection;
(3) Inspection methodology, including
offices visited;
(4) Findings;
(5) Necessary corrective actions and
other recommendations; and
(6) Any necessary appendices.
(c) The agency must submit its
comments on the draft report no later
than 45 business days after receipt.
(d) NARA incorporates any necessary
corrections or revisions in the final
report and issues the report to the head
of the agency within 45 business days.
Lhorne on DSK5TPTVN1PROD with PROPOSALS
§ 1239.26 What are an agency’s follow-up
obligations after it receives an inspection
report?
(a) The agency must submit to NARA
a plan of corrective action that specifies
how the agency will address each
inspection report recommendation,
including a timeline for completion, and
proposed progress reporting dates.
(b) The agency must submit the plan
of corrective action to NARA within 60
business days of the date of the final
report.
(c) NARA may take up to 60 business
days to review and comment on the
plan.
(d) Once both NARA and the agency
agree that the plan of corrective action
VerDate Sep<11>2014
14:09 Mar 08, 2016
Jkt 238001
is final, the agency must submit
progress reports to NARA.
(e) The agency submits the reports on
a mutually agreed-upon schedule, but
no less frequently than semi-annually,
until it completes all actions.
Dated: March 2, 2016.
David S. Ferriero,
Archivist of the United States.
[FR Doc. 2016–05150 Filed 3–8–16; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 7515–01–P
ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION
AGENCY
40 CFR Part 52
[EPA–R01–OAR–2015–0351; FRL–9943–38–
Region 1]
Air Plan Approval; Massachusetts;
Decommissioning of Stage II Vapor
Recovery Systems
Environmental Protection
Agency.
ACTION: Proposed rule.
AGENCY:
The Environmental Protection
Agency (EPA) is proposing to approve a
State Implementation Plan (SIP)
revision submitted by the
Commonwealth of Massachusetts
Department of Environmental
Protection. This revision includes
regulatory amendments that allow
gasoline dispensing facilities (GDFs) to
decommission their Stage II vapor
recovery systems as of January 2, 2015,
and a demonstration that such removal
is consistent with the Clean Air Act and
EPA guidance. This revision also
includes regulatory amendments that
strengthen Massachusetts’ requirements
for Stage I vapor recovery systems at
GDFs. The intended effect of this action
is to propose approval of Massachusetts’
revised vapor recovery regulations. This
action is being taken under the Clean
Air Act.
DATES: Written comments must be
received on or before April 8, 2016.
ADDRESSES: Submit your comments,
identified by Docket ID No. EPA–R01–
OAR–2015–0351 at https://
www.regulations.gov, or via email to
arnold.anne@epa.gov. For comments
submitted at Regulations.gov, follow the
online instructions for submitting
comments. Once submitted, comments
cannot be edited or removed from
Regulations.gov. For either manner of
submission, the EPA may publish any
comment received to its public docket.
Do not submit electronically any
information you consider to be
Confidential Business Information (CBI)
or other information whose disclosure is
SUMMARY:
PO 00000
Frm 00018
Fmt 4702
Sfmt 4702
restricted by statute. Multimedia
submissions (audio, video, etc.) must be
accompanied by a written comment.
The written comment is considered the
official comment and should include
discussion of all points you wish to
make. The EPA will generally not
consider comments or comment
contents located outside of the primary
submission (i.e. on the web, cloud, or
other file sharing system). For
additional submission methods, please
contact the person identified in the ‘‘For
Further Information Contact’’ section.
For the full EPA public comment policy,
information about CBI or multimedia
submissions, and general guidance on
making effective comments, please visit
https://www2.epa.gov/dockets/
commenting-epa-dockets.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Ariel Garcia, Air Quality Planning Unit,
U.S. Environmental Protection Agency,
EPA New England Regional Office, 5
Post Office Square, Suite 100 (mail
code: OEP05–2), Boston, MA 02109–
3912, telephone number: (617) 918–
1660, fax number: (617) 918–0660,
email: garcia.ariel@epa.gov.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Throughout this document whenever
‘‘we,’’ ‘‘us,’’ or ‘‘our’’ is used, we mean
EPA.
Organization of this document. The
following outline is provided to aid in
locating information in this preamble.
I. Background and Purpose
II. Summary of Massachusetts’ SIP Revision
III. EPA’s Evaluation of Massachusetts’ SIP
Revision
IV. Proposed Action
V. Incorporation by Reference
VI. Statutory and Executive Order Reviews
I. Background and Purpose
On May 5, 2015, the Massachusetts
Department of Environmental Protection
submitted a revision to its State
Implementation Plan (SIP). The SIP
revision consists of Massachusetts’
revised regulations 310 Code of
Massachusetts Regulations (CMR) 7.00,
Air Pollution Control: Definitions and
310 CMR 7.24, Organic Material Storage
and Distribution. Specifically, in
addition to the new and revised
definitions in 310 CMR 7.00, the SIP
revision consists of Massachusetts’
revised regulation sections:
• 310 CMR 7.24(3), Distribution of
Motor Vehicle Fuel;
• 310 CMR 7.24(4), Motor Vehicle
Fuel Tank Trucks; and
• 310 CMR 7.24(6), Dispensing of
Motor Vehicle Fuel.
These sections of Massachusetts’ 310
CMR 7.24 have been revised to allow
the decommissioning of Stage II vapor
E:\FR\FM\09MRP1.SGM
09MRP1
Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 81, Number 46 (Wednesday, March 9, 2016)]
[Proposed Rules]
[Pages 12432-12440]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2016-05150]
[[Page 12432]]
=======================================================================
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
NATIONAL ARCHIVES AND RECORDS ADMINISTRATION
36 CFR Parts 1223, 1224, 1227, 1229, 1232, 1233, and 1239
[FDMS No. NARA-16-0001; NARA-2016-014]
RIN 3095-AB74
Records Management
AGENCY: National Archives and Records Administration (NARA).
ACTION: Proposed rules.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SUMMARY: NARA proposes to revise its records management regulations to
reflect changes in technology, practice, and organizational structure.
This is phase I of the revisions and includes changes to provisions in
regulations on managing vital records, records disposition programs,
general records schedules, emergency authorization to destroy records,
transfer of records to records storage facilities, transfer, use, and
disposition of records in a NARA Federal Records Center, and program
assistance and inspections.
DATES: Submit comments on or before May 9, 2016.
ADDRESSES: You may submit comments, identified by RIN 3095-AB74, by any
of the following methods:
Federal eRulemaking Portal: https://www.regulations.gov.
Follow the instructions for submitting comments.
Email: Regulation_comments@nara.gov. Include RIN 3095-AB74
in the subject line of the message.
Fax: 301-837-0319. Include RIN 3095-AB74 in the subject
line of the fax cover sheet.
Mail (for paper, disk, or CD-ROM submissions. Include RIN
3095-AB74 on the submission): Regulations Comment Desk (Strategy &
Performance Division (SP)); Suite 4100; National Archives and Records
Administration; 8601 Adelphi Road; College Park, MD 20740-6001.
Hand delivery or courier: Deliver comments to front desk
at the address above.
Instructions: All submissions must include NARA's name and the
regulatory information number for this rulemaking (RIN 3095-AB74). We
may publish any comments we receive without changes, including any
personal information you include.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Laura McCarthy, by email at
regulation_comments@nara.gov, or by telephone at 301-837-3023. You may
also find more information about records management at NARA on NARA's
Web site at https://www.archives.gov/records-mgmt/
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: The proposed revisions to the Federal
records management regulations contained in 36 CFR Chapter XII,
Subchapter B, affect Federal agencies' records management programs in
the areas of managing essential (formerly referred to as ``vital'')
records, records disposition programs, the General Records Schedules,
emergency authorizations to destroy records, storage of records in
records storage facilities, and NARA assistance and inspection
programs. We are making administrative changes, such as updating office
names and organizational codes, updating URLs, and adding new links to
NARA's records management Web pages. We are removing repetitive
definitions sections from each part to a centralized definitions part
(to come in part 1220) applying to all parts (streamlining under the
Paperwork Reduction Act) and removing repetitive authorities sections
from each part because authorities are noted under the table of
contents (streamlining under the Paperwork Reduction Act). We are
making other minor editorial changes for consistency among parts and
revising some language to comply with Plain Language requirements.
We are replacing references to the Standard Form 115 (SF 115),
Request for Disposition Authority, with ``records schedule'' because we
now use the Electronic Records Archives (ERA) for scheduling records
and no longer accept SF 115s, except when special circumstances merit
its use. We have made revision to incorporate use of the ERA throughout
the records management regulations, including revising references to
the SF 115.
Discussion of Proposed Rule Revisions
Proposed Part 1223, Managing Vital Records
This part sets out the necessary actions that each agency must take
to ensure proper and adequate documentation of continuing agency
operations in the event of activation of an agency continuity plan. We
have also changed the term ``vital'' records to ``essential'' records
to mirror the term FEMA used in Federal Continuity Directive 1 (FCD-1,
2012). Certain Federal agencies were using the term ``vital records''
in another context with a different meaning, so we decided to change to
``essential records'' both to be parallel with FCD-1 and to reduce
confusion among agencies.
Proposed Part 1224, Records Disposition Programs
This part specifies the elements of a records disposition program
and the integration of records management into an agency's business
processes. Details for the program functions, such as scheduling,
retention, and disposition of records are found in parts 1225, 1226,
1227, 1235, and 1236. We added records disposition provisions to part
1224 for circumstances where multiple agencies collaborate on a project
or initiative.
Proposed Part 1227, General Records Schedules
This part explains General Records Schedules (GRS) and when the GRS
must be used by agencies. We added the section for application of the
GRS to records that have been transferred into the National Archives of
the United States and subject to the provisions in 36 CFR 1235.34.
Proposed Part 1229, Emergency Authorization To Destroy Records
This part outlines the steps agencies must take when they discover
records are a continuing menace to human health or life, or to
property, or when destruction of records is necessary during a state of
war or threatened war outside of the continental United States. We have
added the requirement in Sec. 1229.12(b) that if records are destroyed
during a state of war or threatened war that agencies must provide NARA
with a list of the destroyed records that can and will be
reconstructed, the records used to reconstruct the destroyed records,
and assurance that these records will be retained until after
reconstruction.
Proposed Part 1232, Transfer of Records to Records Storage Facilities
This part provides procedures of the transfer of records to a NARA,
agency-operated, or commercial records storage facility. There are no
substantive changes from the existing part.
Proposed Part 1233, Transfer, Use and Disposition of Records in NARA
Records Center
This part provide procedures that apply to the use of NARA's
Federal Records Center Program. There are no substantive changes from
the existing part.
Proposed Part 1239, Program Assistance and Inspections
The material in proposed part 1239 relating to program assistance
NARA provides to agencies is drawn from the existing part 1239 with no
substantive changes. We have proposed changes to
[[Page 12433]]
material relating to inspections of records management programs has
been changed to add two circumstances or conditions when NARA may
inspect an agency: NARA may inspect to assess an agency's compliance
with records management statutes and regulations, and may also inspect
an agency's implementation of records management policies, guidance,
and principles. Timeframes for both NARA and agency actions have been
changed to business days and NARA clarifies that agencies must report
on their follow-up obligations no less frequently than semi-annually.
Regulatory Analysis
Review Under Executive Orders 12866 and 13563
Executive Order 12866, Regulatory Planning and Review, 58 FR 51735
(September 30, 1993), and Executive Order 13563, Improving Regulation
and Regulation Review, 76 FR 23821 (January 18, 2011), direct agencies
to assess all costs and benefits of available regulatory alternatives
and, if regulation is necessary, to select regulatory approaches that
maximize net benefits (including potential economic, environmental,
public health and safety effects, distributive impacts, and equity).
This proposed rule is not ``significant'' under section 3(f) of
Executive Order 12866 because it applies only to Federal agencies, and
is updating the regulations, not establishing new programs. Although
the proposed revisions change and add new requirements for agencies,
the requirements are necessary to keep the existing regulations up-to-
date and to ensure agencies are preserving records for the United
States as well as possible. The Office of Management and Budget (OMB)
has reviewed this regulation.
Review Under the Regulatory Flexibility Act (5 U.S.C. 601, et seq.)
This review requires an agency to prepare an initial regulatory
flexibility analysis and publish it when the agency publishes the
proposed rule. This requirement does not apply if the agency certifies
that the rule will not, if promulgated, have a significant economic
impact on a substantial number of small entities (5 U.S.C. 603). NARA
certifies, after review and analysis, that this proposed rule will not
have a significant adverse economic impact on small entities.
Review Under the Paperwork Reduction Act of 1995 (44 U.S.C. 3501et
seq.)
This proposed rule does not contain any information collection
requirements subject to the Paperwork Reduction Act.
Review Under Executive Order 13132, Federalism, 64 FR 43255 (August 4,
1999)
Review under Executive Order 13132 requires that agencies review
regulations for Federalism effects on the institutional interest of
states and local governments, and, if the effects are sufficiently
substantial, prepare a Federal assessment to assist senior policy
makers. This proposed rule will not have any direct effects on State
and local governments within the meaning of the Executive Order.
Therefore, no Federalism assessment is required.
List of Subjects in 36 CFR Parts 1223, 1224, 1227, 1229, 1232,
1233, and 1239
Archives, Records, Records management.
For the reasons stated in the preamble, NARA proposes to amend 36
CFR parts 1223, 1224, 1227, 1229, 1232, 1233, and 1239, as follows:
PART 1223--MANAGING ESSENTIAL RECORDS
0
1. The authority citation for part 1223 is revised to read as follows:
Authority: 44 U.S.C. 3101; E.O. 12656, 53 FR 47491; 3 CFR, 1988
Comp., p. 585; E.O. 13231, 66 FR 53063, 3 CFR, 2001 Comp., p. 805.
0
2. Revise the part heading to read as set forth above.
0
3. Revise Sec. 1223.1 to read as follows:
Sec. 1223.1 What authorities apply to this part?
(a) The authorities for this part, listed above, require the head
of each agency to create and preserve records that contain adequate and
proper documentation of the organization and to perform national
security emergency preparedness functions.
(b) The regulations in this part also conform to guidance in
National Security Presidential Directive (NSPD-51), Homeland Security
Presidential Directive (HSPD-20), Federal Continuity Directive (FCD) 1,
Federal Executive Branch National Continuity Program and Requirements,
and FCD 2, Federal Executive Branch Mission Essential Function and
Primary Mission Essential Function Identification and Submission
Process.
0
4. Amend Sec. 1223.2 by:
0
a. Removing paragraph (a) and the introductory text of paragraph (b)
and adding introductory text to the section in their place.
0
b. Revising the definitions of ``cycle'' and ``emergency operating
records.''
0
c. Adding definitions for ``essential records'' and ``essential records
program'' in alphabetical order.
0
d. Revising the definitions of ``legal and financial rights records,''
and ``off-site storage.''
0
e. Removing definitions of ``vital records'' and ``vital records
program.''
The revisions and additions read as follows:
Sec. 1223.2 What definitions apply to this part?
In addition to the definitions in part 1220 that apply to all of
subchapter B including this part, the following definitions apply only
to part 1223:
Cycle means the recurring removal of obsolete copies of essential
records and replacing them with current copies of essential records.
This may occur daily, weekly, quarterly, annually or at other
designated intervals.
* * * * *
Emergency operating records means a category of records essential
to the continued functioning or the reconstitution of an organization
during and after a continuity activation. Examples of these records are
emergency plans and directives, orders of succession, delegations of
authority, staffing assignments, and related policy or procedure
records.
Essential records means information systems and applications,
electronic and hardcopy documents, references, and records needed to
support essential functions during a continuity event. The two basic
categories of essential records are emergency operating records and
legal and financial rights records.
Essential records program means the policies, plans, and procedures
the agency develops and implements--and the resources needed--to
identify, use, and protect essential records. This is a program element
of an agency's emergency management function.
Legal and financial rights records are that category of essential
records needed to protect the legal and financial rights of the
Government and of the individuals directly affected by its activities.
Examples include accounts receivable records, social security records,
payroll records, retirement records, and insurance records. NARA
formerly defined these records as ``rights-and-interests'' records.
* * * * *
Off-site storage means a facility other than an agency's normal
place of business, including a facility maintained by a third party,
where an
[[Page 12434]]
agency keeps records until eligible for final disposition. Agencies may
keep essential records at off-site storage to ensure that they are not
damaged or destroyed should an emergency occur in an agency's normal
place of business.
Sec. Sec. 1223.3 and 1233.4 [Removed]
0
5. Remove Sec. Sec. 1223.3 and 1223.4.
0
6. Revise Sec. 1223.10 to read as follows:
Sec. 1223.10 What is the purpose of part 1223?
Part 1223 specifies policies and procedures an agency needs to
identify, protect, and manage essential records as part of any agency's
continuity of operation plan designed to meet emergency management
responsibilities.
0
7. Amend Sec. 1223.12 by:
0
a. Revising the section heading.
0
b. Amending the introductory text to remove ``A vital'' and add in its
place the words ``An essential.''
0
c. Amend paragraph (a) by removing ``It provides'' and adding in its
place ``To provide'' and removing the word ``to'' before the word
``resume.''
0
d. Amend paragraph (b) by removing ``It enables'' and adding in its
place ``To enable'' and removing the word ``persons'' and adding in its
place the word ``people.''
The revision reads as follows:
Sec. 1223.12 What are the objectives of an essential records program?
* * * * *
0
8. Revise Sec. Sec. 1223.14, 1223.16, and 1223.18 to read as follows:
Sec. 1223.14 What elements must agencies include in essential records
programs?
(a) To achieve compliance with this section, an agency must include
in its essential records program all of the following elements:
(1) Specified agency staff responsibilities;
(2) Methods to appropriately inform all staff about essential
records;
(3) Processes to ensure current and complete designation of
essential records;
(4) Adequate protections for the essential records;
(5) Procedures to ensure access to and immediate use of the
essential records when needed;
(6) Annual review and testing of the program, and training for
applicable staff; and
(b) Additional Continuity of Operations guidance for essential
records provided in the Federal Continuity Directive (FCD-1) is
published by the Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA) and
available on FEMA's Web site at https://www.fema.gov/guidance-directives.
Sec. 1223.16 How do agencies identify essential records?
Agencies identify essential records in the context of the emergency
management function. Essential records are those the agency needs to
perform its most critical functions and those the agency needs to
protect the legal and financial rights of the Government and the people
affected by its actions. Essential records also include emergency plans
and related records that specify how an agency will respond to an
emergency. The informational content of records series and electronic
records systems determines which records are essential. Only the most
recent and complete sources of the information are essential records.
Sec. 1223.18 Must agencies maintain essential records in a particular
form or format?
(a) Essential records can be original records or copies of records.
Consult NARA records management guidance on essential records at https://www.archives.gov/records-mgmt/vital-records/ for further
information.
(b) Agencies may maintain essential records on a variety of media,
including paper, photographic film, microform, and electronic forms. In
selecting the media (such as magnetic tape or optical disk), agencies
must ensure that the hardware, software, and documentation it needs to
access records will be available following an emergency or disaster.
The agency may store essential records it maintains electronically in
shared data and computing services via the Internet or a Virtual
Private Network.
0
9. Amend Sec. 1223.20 by revising the section heading and the first
sentence, to read as follows:
Sec. 1223.20 What are the requirements for accessing essential
records during an emergency?
Agencies must establish procedures for retrieving and accessing
essential records. * * *
0
10. Revise Sec. Sec. 1223.22 and 1223.24 to read as follows:
Sec. 1223.22 How must agencies protect essential records?
Agencies must take appropriate measures to ensure they protect and
provide access to essential records or copies of essential records in
case of an emergency.
(a) Duplication. Agencies may choose to duplicate essential records
as the primary protection method. Duplication can be to the same medium
as the original record or to a different medium. When agencies choose
duplication as a protection method, they normally use the copy of the
original essential record as the version stored off-site. The agency
may store the original records off-site if their protection is
necessary, or if the agency does not need to keep the original records
at its normal place of business.
(b) Dispersal. Once agencies duplicate the records, they must
disperse the copies to sites a sufficient distance away to avoid them
being subject to the same emergency. Agencies may use other office
locations, off-site locations, or storage facilities maintained by a
third party as dispersal sites.
(c) Storage considerations. Copies of emergency operating records
must be readily available for use within 12 hours following the
activation of agency continuity plans. Agencies may not need copies of
legal and financial rights records as quickly. When deciding where to
store essential record copies, agencies must treat records that have
the properties of both categories, that is, both emergency operating
and legal and financial rights records, as emergency operating records.
(1) Agencies may store copies of legal and financial rights
essential records at an off-site agency location or, in accordance with
Sec. 1233.12, at a NARA records storage facility.
(2) In accordance with Sec. 1233.12, when using a NARA records
storage facility for storing legal and financial essential records that
are duplicate copies of original records, the agency must specify on
the SF 135, Records Transmittal and Receipt, or equivalent that they
are essential records (duplicate copies) and the medium on which they
are maintained. The agency must also periodically cycle them by
removing obsolete items and replacing them with the most recent
versions in accordance with NARA's General Records Schedule (GRS)
covering essential records.
Sec. 1223.24 When can agencies destroy essential records?
NARA-approved records schedules (see part 1225, Scheduling Records,
of this subchapter) govern disposition of essential records that are
original records. Agencies must not destroy original records that are
not scheduled. Agencies may destroy duplicate copies it created and
maintained for essential records purposes when they are superseded or
obsolete, in accordance with NARA's GRS.
0
11. Revise part 1224 to read as follows:
PART 1224--RECORDS DISPOSITION PROGRAMS
Sec.
[[Page 12435]]
Sec. 1224.10 What must agencies do to implement an effective
records disposition program?
Authority: 44 U.S.C. 2111, 2902, 2904, 3102, and 3301.
Sec. 1224.10 What must agencies do to implement an effective records
disposition program?
Agencies should integrate records management into business
processes. As part of this effort, agencies should analyze records
management requirements, integrate them into operating plans, and
implement, review, and revise records management policies and
procedures across the agency on a regular basis. To properly carry out
the provisions of part 1220 of this subchapter, agencies must:
(a) Schedule all records in accordance with part 1225 of this
subchapter, implement records schedules in accordance with part 1226 of
this subchapter, and transfer permanent records to NARA in accordance
with part 1235 of this subchapter;
(b) Transfer all permanent electronic records to NARA in electronic
form to the greatest extent possible;
(c) Promptly disseminate and implement NARA-approved agency records
schedules, additions, and changes to the General Records Schedules
(GRS) in accordance with parts 1226 and 1227 of this subchapter;
(d) Regularly review agency-generated records schedules, and, if
necessary, update them in accordance with part 1225 of this subchapter;
(e) Incorporate records retention and disposition needs into the
design, development, and implementation of new or revised recordkeeping
systems. See part 1236 of this subchapter for electronic records
management requirements;
(f) Provide training and guidance to all employees on agency
records disposition requirements and procedures and other significant
aspects of the records disposition program. When NARA approves a new or
revised records schedule, provide specific guidance to employees
responsible for applying the schedule; and
(g) When two or more Federal agencies collaborate on a common
project or initiative, the participants must establish and agree to
recordkeeping responsibilities and manage all records. This also
applies to multi-agency endeavors that include private organizations,
state, local, Tribal, or foreign governments.
0
12. Revise part 1227 to read as follows:
PART 1227--GENERAL RECORDS SCHEDULES
Sec.
1227.10 What are General Records Schedules (GRS)?
1227.12 When must agencies apply the GRS?
1227.13 May NARA apply the GRS to records transferred to the
National Archives?
1227.14 How do I obtain copies of the GRS?
Authority: 44 U.S.C. 2107(2), 2909, and 3303a.
Sec. 1227.10 What are General Records Schedules (GRS)?
The Archivist of the United States issues General Records Schedules
(GRS) for records common to several or all agencies. The GRS
authorizes, after specified periods of time, agencies to destroy
temporary records or to transfer permanent records to NARA.
Sec. 1227.12 When must agencies apply the GRS?
(a) Agencies should apply the disposition instructions in the
following table.
------------------------------------------------------------------------
When NARA issues a new or revised
GRS, and Then
------------------------------------------------------------------------
(1) Your agency does not create or No action is required.
maintain any of the records
addressed by that GRS,
(2) The GRS disposition authority Your agency must follow the
states that it must be followed disposition instructions of the
without exception, GRS, whether or not your agency has
existing records schedules.
(3) Your agency has an existing (i) Your agency may follow the
records schedule for these disposition instructions in either
records AND the GRS permits use the GRS or the existing agency
of existing agency-specific records schedule. If your agency
schedules, chooses to follow its own schedule,
then it must notify NARA within 120
calendar days of the issuance of
the new or revised GRS.
Notifications should be sent to
GRS_Team@nara.gov or National
Archives and Records
Administration; Office of the Chief
Records Officer (AC); Attention:
GRS Team, Room 2100; 8601 Adelphi
Road; College Park, Maryland 20740-
6001.
(ii) After reviewing your agency's
notification, NARA may determine
that your agency-specific schedule
is no longer appropriate because of
the passage of time, change in
value of the records, or for other
reasons. NARA will notify your
agency's records officer of the
notification's status within 90
calendar days.
(iii) Agencies may also submit a new
schedule to NARA with a
justification for deviating from
the GRS.
(4) Your agency does not have an Your agency must follow the
existing records schedule for disposition instructions of the
these records, GRS. If your agency's needs require
a different retention period, then
your agency must submit a records
schedule to NARA in accordance with
part 1225 of this subchapter, with
a justification for the deviation.
------------------------------------------------------------------------
(b) Except as provided in the table in paragraph (a) of this
section, agencies must disseminate and implement any new or revised GRS
within 6 months after NARA has issued a new GRS transmittal.
Sec. 1227.13 May NARA apply the GRS to records transferred to the
National Archives?
NARA may, at its discretion, apply the provisions of the GRS to
records in its legal custody, subject to the provisions of part 1235 of
this subchapter.
Sec. 1227.14 How do I obtain copies of the GRS?
The GRS and instructions for its use are available online at https://www.archives.gov/records-mgmt/grs/. They are also available by
contacting GRS_Team@nara.gov or writing to NARA at National Archives
and Records Administration, Office of the Chief Records Officer (AC),
Attention: GRS Team, Room 2100, 8601 Adelphi Road, College Park, MD
20740-6001.
0
13. Revise part 1229 to read as follows:
PART 1229--EMERGENCY AUTHORIZATION TO DESTROY RECORDS
Sec.
1229.1 What is the scope of this part?
[[Page 12436]]
1229.10 What steps must agencies take when records are a continuing
menace to health, life, or property?
1229.12 What are the requirements during a state of war or
threatened war?
Authority: 44 U.S.C. 3310 and 3311.
Sec. 1229.1 What is the scope of this part?
This part describes certain conditions under which agencies may
destroy records without regard to the provisions of part 1226 of this
subchapter.
Sec. 1229.10 What steps must agencies take when records are a
continuing menace to health, life, or property?
When an agency identifies records that pose a continuing menace to
human health or life, or to property, the records officer or other
designee must immediately notify NARA in writing by mail at National
Archives and Records Administration, Office of the Chief Records
Officer (AC), 8601 Adelphi Road, College Park, MD 20740-6001, or by
email at RM.Communications@nara.gov. The notification must describe the
records, their location and quantity, the nature of the menace and, if
appropriate, the steps taken to reconstruct the records using other
records and sources of information.
(a) If NARA concurs that the records must be destroyed, NARA
notifies the agency to immediately destroy them by an appropriate and
safe disposal method.
(b) If NARA does not concur that the records must be destroyed,
NARA advises the agency of alternative remedial action to address the
menace.
Sec. 1229.12 What are the requirements during a state of war or
threatened war?
(a) Destruction of records outside the territorial limits of the
continental United States is authorized whenever, during a state of war
between the United States and any other nation or when hostile action
appears imminent, the head of the agency that has custody of the
records determines that their retention would be prejudicial to the
interests of the United States, or that they occupy space urgently
needed for military purposes and are without sufficient administrative,
fiscal, legal, historical, or other value to warrant their continued
preservation. When it is not feasible for the head of the agency to
make this determination, the agency's most senior official at the
location of the records may do so.
(b) Within six months after the destruction of any records under
this authorization, the agency official who directed the destruction
must submit a written statement by mail to NARA at National Archives
and Records Administration, Office of the Chief Records Officer (AC),
8601 Adelphi Road, College Park, MD 20740-6001, or by email at
RM.Communications@nara.gov. The statement must include the following:
(1) An explanation of the reasons for the destruction;
(2) A description of the records destroyed;
(3) How, when, and where the records were destroyed;
(4) A list of destroyed records that can and will be reconstructed
using other records and sources of information; and
(5) A list of the records used to reconstruct the destroyed records
listed in paragraph (b)(4) of this section and assurance that the
agency will retain these until it has reconstructed the records.
0
14. Revise part 1232 to read as follows:
PART 1232--TRANSFER OF RECORDS TO RECORDS STORAGE FACILITIES
Sec.
1232.10 Where may a Federal agency store records?
1232.12 Under what conditions may agencies store Federal records in
records storage facilities?
1232.14 What requirements must an agency meet before it transfers
records to a records storage facility?
1232.16 What must an agency document before transferring records to
a records storage facility?
1232.18 What procedures must an agency follow to transfer records to
an agency records center or commercial records storage facility?
Authority: 44 U.S.C. 2907 and 3103.
Sec. 1232.10 Where may a Federal agency store records?
Federal agencies may store records in the following types of
records storage facilities, so long as the facilities meet the facility
standards in part 1234 of this subchapter. Records transferred to a
records storage facility remain in the legal custody of the agency.
(a) NARA Federal Records Centers. NARA owns or operates records
centers to store, process, and service records for Federal agencies
(under authority of 44 U.S.C. 2907). These NARA records centers include
a National Personnel Records Center that contains designated records of
the Department of Defense, the Office of Personnel Management, and
other records on former Federal civilian and military employees. For a
list of NARA Federal Records Centers, consult NARA's Web site at https://www.archives.gov/locations/.
(b) Records centers operated by or on behalf of one or more Federal
agencies other than NARA.
(c) Commercial records storage facilities operated by private
entities.
Sec. 1232.12 Under what conditions may agencies store Federal records
in records storage facilities?
The following chart shows what records agencies can store in a
records storage facility and the conditions that apply:
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Type of record Conditions
------------------------------------------------------------------------
(a) Permanent records........ Any storage facility that meets the
provisions of part 1234 of this
subchapter.
(b) Unscheduled records...... (1) Any storage facility that meets the
provisions of part 1234 of this
subchapter.
(2) Also requires prior notification to
NARA (see Sec. 1232.14(b)).
(c) Temporary records Any storage facility that meets the
(excluding Civilian provisions of part 1234 of this
Personnel Records). subchapter.
(d) Essential records........ Any storage facility that meets the
provisions of parts 1223 and 1234 of
this subchapter.
(e) Civilian Personnel Textual must be transferred to the
Records. National Personnel Records Center
(NPRC), St. Louis, MO (see part 1233 of
this subchapter).
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Sec. 1232.14 What requirements must an agency meet before it
transfers records to a records storage facility?
An agency must comply with part 1234 of this subchapter and the
following requirements before it transfers records to a records storage
facility:
(a) Non-paper-based media (e.g., film, audio tape, electronic
media, etc.), especially those that are unscheduled or scheduled for
long-term or permanent retention, require more stringent environmental
controls (see parts 1236 and 1237 of this subchapter).
(b) Notify NARA in writing prior to transferring unscheduled
records to a records storage facility, by mail at National Archives and
Records Administration; Office of the Chief
[[Page 12437]]
Records Officer (AC); 8601 Adelphi Road; College Park, MD 20740-6001,
or by email at RM.Communications@nara.gov. The notification must
identify the records storage facility and include a copy of the
information required by Sec. 1232.16(a).
(c) For all records being transferred, create documentation
sufficient to identify and locate files. (See Sec. 1232.16.)
(d) Adhere to NARA-approved retention periods and create and
maintain records documenting final disposition actions (destruction or
transfer to NARA).
Sec. 1232.16 What must an agency document before transferring records
to a records storage facility?
(a) For each individual records series spanning one or more
consecutive years, the agency must document the:
(1) Creating office;
(2) Series title;
(3) Description (provide for all transfers, and in the case of
permanent or unscheduled records, the description must include a folder
title list of the box contents or equivalent detailed records
description). For more information on folder title lists, consult
NARA's Web site at https://www.archives.gov/records-mgmt/accessioning/finding-aid.html;
(4) Date span (provide both the inclusive start and end dates of
the records; these indicate the dates on which the records started and
stopped being created or accumulated);
(5) Physical form and medium of records (e.g., paper, motion
picture film, sound recordings, photographs, digital images);
(6) Volume (assuming a standard-size records box equals
approximately one cubic foot, provide the total number of boxes
included in the transfer);
(7) Citation to NARA-approved records schedule or agency records
disposition manual (unscheduled records must cite the date the agency
notified NARA or, if available, the date the agency submitted the
records schedule to NARA);
(8) Restrictions on access, if applicable;
(9) Disposition (``permanent,'' ``temporary,'' or ``unscheduled;
records schedule pending'');
(10) Date of disposition action (transfer to NARA or destruction);
(11) Physical location, including name and address of facility; and
(12) Control number or identifier used to track the records.
(b) In the case of permanent and unscheduled records, provide
copies of the documentation to NARA and advise NARA in writing of the
new location whenever the records are moved to a new storage facility.
For permanent records, mail the documentation to National Archives and
Records Administration; Office of the Chief Records Officer (AC); 8601
Adelphi Road; College Park, MD 20740-6001, or send via email to
RM.Communications@nara.gov, no later than 30 days after the agency
transfers records to the agency records center or commercial records
storage facility.
Sec. 1232.18 What procedures must an agency follow to transfer
records to an agency records center or commercial records storage
facility?
Federal agencies must use the following procedures to transfer
records to an agency records center or commercial records storage
facility:
(a) Incorporate into agreements with the storage facility the
standards in part 1234 of this subchapter and allow for inspections by
the agency and NARA to ensure compliance. An agency must promptly
remove records from a facility if the facility does not correct
deficiencies within six months of the inspection report identifying
them;
(b) For temporary records, make available to NARA on request the
documentation specified in Sec. 1232.16;
(c) Retain temporary records until the expiration of their NARA-
approved retention period and no longer, except as provided for in
Sec. 1226.18 of this subchapter;
(d) Transfer permanent records that have met their retention period
to NARA in accordance with part 1235 of this subchapter;
(e) Ensure that the facility stores and maintains records that are
restricted because they are security classified or exempt from
disclosure by statute (including the Privacy Act of 1974, 5 U.S.C.
552a, as amended) or regulation in accordance with applicable laws,
Executive Orders, or regulations;
(f) Ensure that the agency destroys temporary records, including
restricted records (security classified or exempted from disclosure by
statute (including the Privacy Act of 1974) or regulation, in
accordance with the requirements specified in Sec. 1226.24 of this
subchapter;
(g) Ensure that emergency operating records, as defined in part
1223 of this subchapter, that are transferred to an agency records
center or commercial records storage facility are available in
accordance with Sec. 1223.24 of this subchapter; and
(h) Provide records access to appropriate NARA staff wherever the
records are located in order to:
(1) Conduct an inspection in accordance with part 1239 of this
subchapter; or
(2) Process a request for records disposition authority.
0
15. Revise part 1233 to read as follows:
PART 1233--TRANSFER, USE, AND DISPOSITION OF RECORDS IN A NARA
FEDERAL RECORDS CENTER
Sec.
1233.10 How does an agency transfer records to a NARA Federal
Records Center (FRC)?
1233.12 How does an agency transfer essential records to a NARA
Federal Records Center (FRC)?
1233.14 What personnel records must an agency transfer to the
National Personnel Records Center (NPRC)?
1233.16 How does an agency transfer records to the National
Personnel Records Center (NPRC)?
1233.18 What reference procedures do NARA Federal Records Centers
(FRCs) use?
1233.20 How do NARA Federal Records Centers (FRCs) manage records
disposal clearances?
Authority: 44 U.S.C. 2907 and 3103.
Sec. 1233.10 How does an agency transfer records to a NARA Federal
Records Center (FRC)?
(a) Agencies must meet the requirements for records storage
described in other parts of this subchapter. NARA ensures that its
records centers meet the facilities standards in 36 CFR part 1234, so
using a NARA FRC meets the agency's obligations in Sec. 1232.12 of
this subchapter.
(b) Agencies must use the designated NARA FRC(s) named in their
agreement with NARA's Federal Records Centers Program (AF).
(c) Before transferring records to a NARA FRC, an agency must
prepare and submit a Standard Form (SF) 135, Records Transmittal and
Receipt, or an electronic equivalent. Doing so meets the records
description requirements in Sec. 1232.14(c) of this subchapter, except
the requirement for a folder title list. Agencies must provide NARA
with folder title lists for all permanent and unscheduled records
transfers and for records that the agency schedules for sampling or
selection after transfer.
(d) Agencies must submit a separate SF 135 or electronic equivalent
for each individual records series having the same disposition
authority and disposition date.
(e) For further guidance on transferring records to a NARA FRC,
consult the NARA Federal Records Centers Program (FRCP) Web site at
https://www.archives.gov/frc/toolkit.html#transfer. You may also request
current NARA publications and
[[Page 12438]]
bulletins by writing to NARA at National Archives and Records
Administration; Federal Records Center Program (AF); 8601 Adelphi Road;
College Park, MD 20740-6001, or by calling (301) 837-2950. Agencies may
also contact individual NARA FRCs (see https://www.archives.gov/frc/locations.html for contact information).
Sec. 1233.12 How does an agency transfer essential records to a NARA
Federal Records Center (FRC)?
Essential records transfers are governed by the general
requirements and procedures in this part and part 1223 of this
subchapter. For assistance in selecting a NARA facility that best meets
the needs of your agency, write to NARA at National Archives and
Records Administration; Federal Records Centers Program (AF); 8601
Adelphi Road; College Park, MD 20740-6001, or by calling (301) 837-
2950.
Sec. 1233.14 What personnel records must an agency transfer to the
National Personnel Records Center (NPRC)?
(a) The GRS specifies which Federal civilian personnel, medical,
and pay records agencies must centrally store at the National Personnel
Records Center (NPRC) headquartered in St. Louis, MO.
(b) Agencies should transfer the following types of civilian and
military medical treatment records to the NPRC:
(1) Inpatient (hospitalization) records created for all categories
of patients (active duty military personnel, retirees, and dependents)
receiving inpatient treatment and extended ambulatory procedures; and
(2) Outpatient medical treatment records for military retirees,
dependents, and other civilians treated at military health care
facilities (excludes active duty military personnel at time of military
discharge or retirement).
Sec. 1233.16 How does an agency transfer records to the National
Personnel Records Center (NPRC)?
Agencies must use the following procedures to transfer records to
the NPRC:
(a) Civilian personnel files. (1) Forward the official personnel
folder (OPF) and the employee medical folder (EMF) to the NPRC at the
same time;
(2) Transfer EMFs and OPFs in separate folders;
(3) Retire individual folders on the basis of the person's date of
separation, within 90 to 120 days after the employee separates from
Federal service;
(4) For additional guidance, write to the Office of Personnel
Management (OPM); 1900 E Street NW., Washington, DC 20415, or call
(202) 606-1800. The OPM publication, ``The Guide to Personnel
Recordkeeping,'' which includes procedures for transferring OPFs and
EMFs, is available online at https://www.opm.gov/feddata/recguide2008.pdf.
(b) Military medical records. Military health care facilities
should contact their facility records managers for guidance on
transferring medical records to NPRC. For additional guidance, consult
the ``Transactions with the National Personnel Records Center (NPRC),
St. Louis, MO'' section of the NARA FRCP Web site at https://www.archives.gov/frc/toolkit.html#transactions.
(c) Other guidance. For further guidance, consult the NPRC Web site
at https://www.archives.gov/facilities/mo/st_louis.html.
Sec. 1233.18 What reference procedures do NARA Federal Records
Centers (FRCs) use?
(a) Agency records transferred to a NARA FRC remain in the legal
custody of the originating agency. NARA acts as the agency's agent to
maintain the records. NARA discloses the record only to the originating
agency that retains legal custody, or under rules established by that
agency that are consistent with existing laws.
(b) For general reference requests, agencies should use the Federal
Records Centers Program (FRCP) electronic system or the Optional Form
(OF) 11, Reference Request--Federal Records Centers, or its electronic
equivalent. The agency and NARA jointly designate this form.
(c) For civilian personnel records requests, agencies must use the
following forms:
(1) Standard Form 127, Request for Official Personnel Folder
(Separated Employee), to request transmission of separated employee
personnel folders stored at the National Personnel Records Center
(NPRC). Additional instructions on requesting OPFs are available online
at https://www.archives.gov/st-louis/civilian-personnel/federal-agencies.html.
(2) Standard Form 184, Request for Employee Medical Folder
(Separated Employee), to request medical folders stored at the NPRC.
Additional instructions on requesting EMFs are available online at
https://www.archives.gov/st-louis/civilian-personnel/federal-agencies.html.
(3) Optional Form 11, Reference Request--Federal Records Center, to
request medical records transferred to other NARA FRCs prior to
September 1, 1984. The request must include the name and address of the
agency's designated medical records manager. The form and additional
instructions are available online at https://www.archives.gov/frc/forms/of-11.pdf.
(4) National Archives Form 14136, Request Pertaining to Civilian
Conservation Corps (CCC) Personnel Records, to request records relating
to the CCC. The form, as well as additional instructions, is available
online at https://www.archives.gov/st-louis/archival-programs/civilian-personnel-archival/ccc-holdings-access.html.
(5) National Archives Form 14137, Request Pertaining to Works
Progress Administration (WPA) Personnel Records, to request records
relating to the WPA. The form, as well as additional instructions, is
available online at https://www.archives.gov/st-louis/archival-programs/civilian-personnel-archival/wpa-holdings-access.html.
(d) For military personnel records requests, agencies and other
requesters must use the following methods:
(1) Federal agencies must use Standard Form (SF) 180, Request
Pertaining to Military Records, to obtain information from military
service records in the NPRC (Military Personnel Records). The form is
available online at https://www.archives.gov/veterans/military-service-records/standard-form-180.html#sf, or by writing to the National
Personnel Records Center (Military Personnel Records); 1 Archives
Drive; St. Louis, MO 63138. OMB Control Number 3095-0029 covers SF 180.
(2) Authorized agencies requesting the loan of a military personnel
record may order records using eMilrecs (electronic equivalent of the
SF 180). Access to eMilrecs and additional information is available
online at https://www.archives.gov/st-louis/military-personnel/agencies/ompf-fed-agency.html.
(3) A military veteran or the next of kin of a deceased veteran may
order military personnel records by submitting an SF 180 or an online
records request. We may be permitted, under certain circumstances, to
provide surviving next of kin greater access to a deceased veteran's
records than a member of the general public. Additional information is
available online at https://www.archives.gov/veterans/military-service-records/.
(4) Members of the public and non-governmental organizations may
also request military personnel records by submitting an SF 180. To
request information from another person's military personnel records,
you must have the release authorization in
[[Page 12439]]
Section III of the SF 180 signed by the member or legal guardian. If
you cannot obtain the appropriate signature, we can only provide
limited information.
(5) For guidance on requesting original medical treatment records,
military hospitals and clinics should consult the ``Medical Treatment
Records'' Web page at https://www.archives.gov/st-louis/military-personnel/other-medical-records.html.
(e) For further guidance on requesting records from a NARA FRC,
consult the NARA Federal Records Centers Program Web site at https://www.archives.gov/frc/toolkit.html#retrieval. You may also request
current NARA publications and bulletins by contacting the FRCP, or
individual NARA Federal Records Centers (see https://www.archives.gov/frc/locations.html for contact information).
Sec. 1233.20 How do NARA Federal Records Centers (FRCs) manage
records disposal clearances?
(a) The National Personnel Records Center destroys records covered
by General Records Schedules (GRS) in accordance with those schedules
without further agency clearance.
(b) For records not covered under a GRS, NARA FRCs destroy eligible
Federal records only with the written concurrence of the agency having
legal custody of the records.
(c) NARA FRCs maintain documentation on the final disposition of
records, as required in Sec. 1232.14(d) of this subchapter.
(d) When NARA approves an extension of retention period beyond the
time authorized in the records schedule for records stored in NARA
FRCs, NARA notifies the affected Federal Records Centers to suspend
disposal of the records (see Sec. 1226.18 of this subchapter for more
specific guidance on when agencies may temporarily extend retention
periods).
(e) For further guidance on records disposition, consult the NARA
FRCP Web site at https://www.archives.gov/frc/toolkit.html#disposition.
You may also request current NARA publications and bulletins by
contacting the FRCP or individual NARA Federal Records Centers (see
https://www.archives.gov/frc/locations.html for contact information).
0
16. Revise part 1239 to read as follows:
PART 1239--PROGRAM ASSISTANCE AND INSPECTIONS
Sec.
Subpart A--General
1239.1 What is the scope of this part?
1239.3 What definitions apply to this part?
Subpart B--Program Assistance
1239.10 What program assistance does NARA provide?
1239.12 Who may agencies contact to request program assistance?
Subpart C--Inspections
1239.20 When does NARA inspect an agency?
1239.22 How does NARA notify the agency of the inspection?
1239.24 How does NARA conduct an inspection?
1239.26 What are an agency's follow-up obligations after it receives
an inspection report?
Authority: 44 U.S.C. 2904 and 2906.
Subpart A--General
Sec. 1239.1 What is the scope of this part?
NARA's statutory authorities include assisting agencies to carry
out their records management responsibilities and, when necessary,
inspecting agency programs and reporting to Congress on those
inspections. Part 1239 identifies the types of records management
guidance and program assistance NARA provides to agencies under its 44
U.S.C. chapter 29 mandate; the conditions under which NARA invokes its
inspection authority, also under chapter 29; and the requirements for
agencies to cooperate fully in such inspections.
Sec. 1239.3 What definitions apply to this part?
In addition to the definitions in part 1220 that apply to all of
Subchapter B including this part, the following definition applies only
to part 1239:
Inspection means NARA's formal review and report on an agency's
recordkeeping processes, under 44 U.S.C. 2904(c) and 2906(a). NARA's
formal review and report focus on those practices that put records
meeting one or more of the following criteria at risk:
(1) Have a direct and high impact on legal rights or government
accountability;
(2) Are the subject of high profile litigation, Congressional
attention, or widespread media coverage;
(3) Have high research potential; or
(4) Are permanent records with a large volume, regardless of
format.
Subpart B--Program Assistance
Sec. 1239.10 What program assistance does NARA provide?
(a) NARA publishes handbooks, conducts workshops and other training
sessions, and furnishes information and guidance to agencies on
creating, maintaining, using, and disposing of records. NARA may also
conduct an assistance project in cooperation with an agency to address
a serious records management issue in the agency.
(b) For information on NARA handbooks and guidance, consult NARA's
Web site at https://www.archives.gov/records-mgmt/.
(c) For information on NARA training, consult NARA's Web site at
https://www.archives.gov/records-mgmt/training/.
Sec. 1239.12 Who may agencies contact to request program assistance?
Agencies may write to NARA at National Archives and Records
Administration; Office of the Chief Records Officer (AC); 8601 Adelphi
Road; College Park, MD 20740-6001 for information or assistance related
to any area covered by this subchapter.
Subpart C--Inspections
Sec. 1239.20 When does NARA inspect an agency?
(a) NARA may inspect when it identifies risks through:
(1) An agency failing to address specific records management
problems;
(2) Internal or external records management assessments;
(3) Reports in the media;
(4) Congressional inquiries;
(5) Allegations of unauthorized destruction;
(6) Reports issued by the GAO or an agency's Inspector General;
(7) Observations by NARA staff members; or
(8) An agency head, who then can request that NARA conduct an
inspection.
(b) NARA may also inspect to assess an agency's compliance with
records management statutes and regulations.
(c) NARA may also inspect an agency's implementation of records
management policies, guidance, and principles to validate the
following:
(1) Reports of unique or innovative methods;
(2) Low risk scores on assessments; or
(3) NARA staff members' observation of sound practices.
(d) NARA reports to Congress and the Office of Management and
Budget on inspections in accordance with 44 U.S.C. 2904.
Sec. 1239.22 How does NARA notify the agency of the inspection?
(a) Once NARA identifies the need for an agency inspection, the
Archivist of the United States sends a letter to the head of the
agency. If the agency is a component of a cabinet department, the
Archivist also sends a copy to the head of the cabinet department. NARA
also sends a copy to the agency's records officer. The letter includes:
[[Page 12440]]
(1) Notice that NARA intends to conduct an inspection;
(2) Which records management processes or procedures NARA is
evaluating, and any specific issues;
(3) A beginning date for the inspection that is no more than 30
business days after the date of the letter; and
(4) A request for an agency point of contact to assist NARA as it
conducts the inspection.
(b) If the agency does not respond to NARA's notification letter,
NARA reports the matter to the agency's Congressional oversight
committee and to the Office of Management and Budget, under its 44
U.S.C. 2904(c)(8) statutory authority.
Sec. 1239.24 How does NARA conduct an inspection?
(a) The NARA inspection team leader coordinates with the agency
point of contact to arrange an initial meeting with the agency. The
initial meeting addresses the scope of the inspection, including its
parameters, any surveys or other inspection instruments, involved
offices, and timing of site visits.
(b) NARA prepares a draft inspection report and transmits it to the
agency no later than 45 business days after the last site visit or
meeting. The report includes:
(1) An executive summary;
(2) Background and purpose of inspection;
(3) Inspection methodology, including offices visited;
(4) Findings;
(5) Necessary corrective actions and other recommendations; and
(6) Any necessary appendices.
(c) The agency must submit its comments on the draft report no
later than 45 business days after receipt.
(d) NARA incorporates any necessary corrections or revisions in the
final report and issues the report to the head of the agency within 45
business days.
Sec. 1239.26 What are an agency's follow-up obligations after it
receives an inspection report?
(a) The agency must submit to NARA a plan of corrective action that
specifies how the agency will address each inspection report
recommendation, including a timeline for completion, and proposed
progress reporting dates.
(b) The agency must submit the plan of corrective action to NARA
within 60 business days of the date of the final report.
(c) NARA may take up to 60 business days to review and comment on
the plan.
(d) Once both NARA and the agency agree that the plan of corrective
action is final, the agency must submit progress reports to NARA.
(e) The agency submits the reports on a mutually agreed-upon
schedule, but no less frequently than semi-annually, until it completes
all actions.
Dated: March 2, 2016.
David S. Ferriero,
Archivist of the United States.
[FR Doc. 2016-05150 Filed 3-8-16; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 7515-01-P