Freedom of Information Act Policies and Procedures, 65586-65592 [2016-22863]
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65586
Federal Register / Vol. 81, No. 185 / Friday, September 23, 2016 / Proposed Rules
Issued in Fort Worth, Texas, on September
14, 2016.
Walter Tweedy,
Acting Manager, Operations Support Group,
ATO Central Service Center.
[FR Doc. 2016–22889 Filed 9–22–16; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4910–13–P
OFFICE OF THE UNITED STATES
TRADE REPRESENTATIVE
15 CFR Part 2004
[Docket Number USTR–2016–0015]
RIN 0350–AA08
Office of the United States
Trade Representative.
ACTION: Proposed rule with request for
comments.
AGENCY:
As part of a comprehensive
review of agency practices related to the
disclosure of records and information,
the Office of the United States Trade
Representative (USTR) is updating its
implementing rule under the Freedom
of Information Act (FOIA). The
proposed rule, which is modeled after a
template provided by the U.S.
Department of Justice, describes how to
make a FOIA request to USTR and how
the FOIA Office, which includes the
USTR officials who are authorized to
work on FOIA requests, processes
requests for records. We are in the
process of renaming and reorganizing
part 2004 to include all of the rules
governing disclosure of USTR records
and information, and with this proposed
rule, we are moving the FOIA rule into
a new subpart B to part 2004.
DATES: We must receive your written
comments on or before November 22,
2016.
SUMMARY:
You should submit written
comments through the Federal
eRulemaking Portal: https://
www.regulations.gov. The docket
number for this rulemaking is USTR–
2016–0015. USTR invites comments on
all aspects of the proposed rule, and
will revise the language as appropriate
after taking all timely submitted
comments into consideration. Copies of
all comments will be available for
public viewing at www.regulations.gov
upon completion of processing. You can
view a submission by entering the
docket number USTR–2016–0015 in the
search field at https://
www.regulations.gov. We will post
comments without change and will
include any personal information you
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ADDRESSES:
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FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Janice Kaye, Monique Ricker or Melissa
Keppel, Office of General Counsel,
United States Trade Representative,
Anacostia Naval Annex, Building 410/
Door 123, 250 Murray Lane SW.,
Washington, DC 20509, jkaye@
ustr.eop.gov; mricker@ustr.eop.gov;
mkeppel@ustr.eop.gov, or the USTR
FOIA Public Liaison at FOIA@
ustr.eop.gov or 202–395–3419.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
I. Background
Freedom of Information Act Policies
and Procedures
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address, email address, and telephone
number.
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USTR has undertaken a
comprehensive review of agency
practices related to the collection, use,
protection and disclosure of USTR
records and information. As a result of
that review, USTR is updating it FOIA
implementing rule. The FOIA, 5 U.S.C.
552, provides a right of access to certain
records and information Federal
agencies maintain and control. The
FOIA requires each Federal agency to
publish regulations describing how to
submit a FOIA request and how the
FOIA Office will process these requests.
USTR’s current FOIA rule, codified at
15 CFR part 2004, was last revised in in
2008. See 73 FR 35063, June 20, 2008.
Due to the passage of time and
amendments to the FOIA, we are
completely rewriting and updating the
rule. USTR’s proposed rule is modeled
after a template provided by the U.S.
Department of Justice, and incorporates
the practical experience of the FOIA
staff. This rulemaking would move the
FOIA rule to a new subpart B to part
2004, which we have proposed
renaming and reorganizing to include
all of the rules governing disclosure of
USTR records and information.
II. Section-by-Section Analysis
Section 2004.1—Purpose and scope:
This section describes the purpose of
the regulation, which is to implement
the FOIA, and explains general policies
and procedures for requesters seeking
access to records and information, and
for processing requests by the USTR
FOIA Office.
Section 2004.2—Proactive
disclosures: This section describes
USTR information the public can access
without filing a FOIA request.
Section 2004.3—How to make a FOIA
request: This section explains what an
individual must do to submit a valid
FOIA request to USTR and where a
request should be sent. It also describes
the information a requester must
provide so USTR can identify the
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records sought and process their
request.
Section 2004.4—Confidential
commercial information: This section
explains when and how a person or
entity that submits information to USTR
must identify confidential commercial
information. It also describes how USTR
staff will handle such information.
Section 2004.5—The USTR staff that
processes FOIA requests: The USTR
FOIA Office handles all FOIA requests.
The section explains when the FOIA
staff will consult with or refer a request
to another Federal agency.
Section 2004.6—When we will
respond to your request: This section
describes the period of time within
which USTR will respond to requests,
i.e., ordinarily within twenty working
days after the date the request is
perfected. It provides for an extension if
there are unusual circumstances and
explains the requirements for expedited
processing. The section also describes
our multitrack processing system.
Section 2004.7—What our response
will include: This section explains that
we will respond to your request in
writing either with the requested
records or a detailed explanation of the
reasons why all of the requested records
were not disclosed. We also will
provide information about the right of
appeal and the mediation services
offered by the Office of Government
Information Services of the National
Archives and Records Administration.
Section 2004.8—What you can do if
you are dissatisfied with our response:
This section describes when and how a
requester may appeal a determination
on a FOIA request and how and within
what period of time USTR will make a
determination on an appeal.
Section 2004.9—Fees: This section
describes the different categories of
requesters and the types and amounts of
fees we may assess to process and
respond to a FOIA request.
III. Regulatory Flexibility Act
USTR has considered the impact of
the proposed rule and determined that
if adopted as a final rule it is not likely
to have a significant economic impact
on a substantial number of small
business entities because it is applicable
only to USTR’s internal operations and
legal obligations. See 5 U.S.C. 601 et
seq.
IV. Paperwork Reduction Act
The proposed rule does not contain
any information collection requirement
that requires the approval of the Office
of Management and Budget under the
Paperwork Reduction Act (44 U.S.C.
3501 et seq.).
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List of Subjects in 15 CFR Part 2004
Administrative practice and
procedure, Courts, Disclosure,
Exemptions, Freedom of information,
Government employees, Privacy,
Records, Subpoenas, Testimony.
For the reasons stated in the
preamble, the Office of the United States
Trade Representative is proposing to
amend chapter XX of title 15 of the
Code of Federal Regulations as follows:
PART 2004—DISCLOSURE OF
RECORDS AND INFORMATION
1. Add the subpart B authority citation
to read as follows:
■
Authority: 5 U.S.C. 552; 19 U.S.C.
2171(e)(3); Uniform Freedom of Information
Act Fee Schedule and Guidelines, 52 FR
10012, Mar. 27, 1987.
Subpart B—Freedom of Information
Act Policies and Procedures
2. Add §§ 2004.1 through 2004.9 to
subpart B to read as follows:
■
Sec.
2004.1 Purpose and scope.
2004.2 Proactive disclosures.
2004.3 How do I make a request for records
under the FOIA?
2004.4 How will we handle confidential
commercial information?
2004.5 Who is responsible for responding to
your FOIA request?
2004.6 When will we respond to your FOIA
request?
2004.7 What will our response to your
FOIA request include?
2004.8 What can I do if I am dissatisfied
with USTR’s response to my FOIA
request?
2004.9 Fees.
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§ 2004.1
Purpose and scope.
(a) This subpart contains the rules we
follow when processing requests for
records under the FOIA, a Federal law
that provides a right of access to certain
records and information Federal
agencies maintain and control. You
should read this subpart in conjunction
with the text of the FOIA and the
Uniform Freedom of Information Act
Fee Schedule and Guidelines published
by the Office of Management and
Budget (OMB Guidelines). Additionally,
our FOIA Reference Guide, which is
available on our Web site at https://
www.ustr.gov, contains information
about the specific procedures for
making FOIA requests and descriptions
of the types of records we maintain.
(b) To maximize the amount of
information we can provide to you, we
may process requests you make for
records about yourself under both this
subpart and subpart C to part 2004, our
rules implementing the Privacy Act.
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(c) We administer the FOIA with a
presumption of openness. This means
that as a matter of policy, we make
discretionary disclosures of records or
information exempt from disclosure
under the FOIA whenever disclosure
would not foreseeably harm an interest
protected by a FOIA exemption. This
policy does not create any right
enforceable in court and you should not
construe anything in this subpart as an
entitlement to any service or to the
disclosure of any record you are not
entitled to under the FOIA.
§ 2004.2
Proactive disclosures.
You can access records that the FOIA
requires us to make available for public
inspection and copying through our
Web site: https://www.ustr.gov. You also
can find press releases, links to Federal
Register notices and comments, fact
sheets, speeches and remarks, reports,
information about current initiatives,
and historical information about U.S.
trade issues. If you need assistance to
locate a particular record, you can
contact the Office of Public and Media
Affairs at MEDIA@ustr.eop.gov or the
FOIA Office at FOIA@ustr.eop.gov.
§ 2004.3 How do I make a request for
records under the FOIA?
(a) General information—(1) Where do
I send my written request? To make a
request for records, you should write
directly to the FOIA Office. Heightened
security delays mail delivery. To avoid
mail delivery delays, we strongly
suggest that you email your request to
FOIA@ustr.eop.gov. Our mailing address
is: FOIA Office, Office of the United
States Trade Representative, Anacostia
Naval Annex, Building 410/Door 123,
250 Murray Lane SW., Washington, DC
20509. To ensure that the FOIA Office
receives your request without delay, you
should include the notation ‘‘FOIA
Request’’ in the subject line of your
email or on the front of your envelope
and also at the beginning of your
request.
(2) Security concerns. To protect our
computer systems, we will not open
attachments to emailed requests—you
must include your request within the
body of the email. We will not process
email attachments.
(3) Verifying your identity. (i) If you
are making a request for records about
yourself or about another individual,
you may receive greater access by
submitting a notarized signature—yours
if the records are about you, or the other
individual’s if the records are about
them. You can fulfill this requirement
by having the signature on your request
letter witnessed by a notary.
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(ii) Alternatively, you can provide an
unsworn declaration under 28 U.S.C.
1746, a law that permits statements to
be made under penalty of perjury. You
can fulfill this requirement by including
the following statement just before the
signature on your request letter:
I declare under penalty of perjury that the
foregoing is true and correct. Executed on
[date].
(iii) If the other individual is
deceased, you should submit proof of
death such as a copy of a death
certificate or an obituary. As an exercise
of administrative discretion, we may
require that you provide additional
information if necessary in order to
verify that a particular individual has
consented to disclosure.
(b) How do I describe the records I
want? (1) You must describe the records
you seek in sufficient detail to enable
USTR personnel to locate them with a
reasonable amount of effort. To satisfy
this requirement, you should be as
detailed as possible when describing the
records you seek. To the extent possible,
you should include specific information
that may help us identify the requested
records, such as the date, title or name,
author, recipient, subject matter of the
record, case number, file designation, or
reference number. For example, we
cannot process a request for all records
related to a particular trade negotiation
or agreement or a request for all
communications between USTR and a
particular third party. Your request
must include a date limitation,
particular topics, and if asking for
correspondence, the subject matter and
the relevant parties with contact
information such as their email
addresses.
(2) If a request does not provide
sufficient specific descriptive
information for the FOIA Office
reasonably to ascertain exactly which
records you are requesting and to locate
them, our response may be delayed or
we may not be able to respond. Please
note that in response to a FOIA request,
we are not required to create records,
conduct research for you, analyze data,
answer written questions, or parse your
narrative to try and determine the
specific records you are seeking. You
can contact the FOIA Office before you
submit your request for assistance in
describing the records you are seeking.
If we determine that your request does
not reasonably describe the records
sought, we will explain why we cannot
process your request and ask for
additional information. For example, we
might ask you to narrow your request if
you ask for all documents in a certain
date range but do not include a specific
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subject matter, topic or personnel. We
can help you reformulate or modify
your request.
(3) We generally withhold
predecisional, deliberative documents
and classified trade negotiating and
policy documents under 5 U.S.C.
552(b)(1) and (5).
(c) Form or format of responsive
records. You can specify the preferred
form or format (including electronic
formats) for the records you seek. We
will try to accommodate your request if
the record is readily reproducible in that
form or format.
(d) Contact information. You must
provide contact information, such as
your phone number, email address, and
mailing address, so we will be able to
communicate with you about your
request and provide released records. If
we cannot contact you, or you do not
respond within thirty calendar days to
our requests for clarification, we will
close your request.
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§ 2004.4 How will we handle confidential
commercial information?
(a) Definitions. For purposes of this
section:
(1) Confidential commercial
information means commercial or
financial information that we obtain
from a submitter that may be protected
from disclosure under exemption 4 of
the FOIA, 5 U.S.C. 552(b)(4).
(2) Submitter means any person or
entity, including a corporation or a State
or foreign government, but not
including another Federal Government
entity, which provides information,
either directly or indirectly to the
Federal Government.
(b) How does a submitter designate
confidential commercial information?
At the time of submission, the submitter
of confidential commercial information
must use good faith efforts to designate
by appropriate markings any portion of
its submission that it considers to be
protected from disclosure under
exemption 4 of the FOIA, 5 U.S.C.
552(b)(4). These designations expire ten
years after the date of the submission
unless the submitter requests and
provides justification for a longer
designation period.
(c) When will we notify a submitter?
(1) We promptly will notify the
submitter of confidential commercial
information in writing whenever we
receive a FOIA request or appeal for
records containing such information if
we determine that we may have to
disclose the records, provided:
(i) The requested information has
been designated in good faith by the
submitter as information considered
protected from disclosure under
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exemption 4 of the FOIA, 5 U.S.C.
552(b)(4); or
(ii) We have reason to believe that the
requested information may be protected
from disclosure exemption 4 of the
FOIA, 5 U.S.C. 552(b)(4), but have not
yet determined whether the information
is protected from disclosure under that
exemption or any other applicable FOIA
exemption.
(2) Our notice either will describe the
commercial information requested or
include a copy of the requested records
or portions of records containing the
information. In cases involving a
voluminous number of submitters, we
may post or publish a notice in a place
or manner reasonably likely to inform
the submitters of the proposed
disclosure without publicly disclosing
the records, instead of sending
individual notifications.
(3) We promptly will notify the
submitter whenever a requester files a
lawsuit seeking to compel the disclosure
of the submitter’s confidential
commercial information.
(d) Exceptions to submitter notice
requirements. The notice requirements
of this section do not apply if:
(1) We determine that the information
is exempt under the FOIA, and therefore
will not be disclosed;
(2) The information has been lawfully
published or has officially been made
available to the public;
(3) Disclosure of the information is
required by a statute other than the
FOIA or by a regulation issued in
accordance with the requirements of
Executive Order 12600 of June 23, 1987,
Predisclosure notification procedures
for confidential commercial
information; or
(4) The designation made by the
submitter under paragraph (b) of this
section appears obviously frivolous. In
such case, we will give the submitter
written notice of any final decision to
disclose the information and a
reasonable time period within which to
object to disclosure under paragraph (e)
of this section.
(e) How can a submitter object to
disclosure? (1) If a submitter has any
objections to disclosure, it should
provide to us within the period listed in
the notice a detailed written statement
that specifies all grounds for
withholding the particular information
under any FOIA exemption. In order to
rely on exemption 4 as a basis for
nondisclosure, the submitter must
explain why the information constitutes
a trade secret or commercial or financial
information that is confidential.
(2) A submitter who does not respond
within the time period specified in the
notice will be considered to have no
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objection to disclosure of the
information. We will not consider any
information we receive after the date of
any disclosure decision. Any
information provided by the submitter
under this section may itself be subject
to disclosure under the FOIA.
(f) Analysis of objections. We will
consider the submitter’s objections and
specific grounds for nondisclosure in
deciding whether to disclose the
requested information.
(g) Notice of intent to disclose. We
will notify the submitter whenever we
decide to disclose information over the
submitter’s objection. Our written notice
will include:
(1) A statement of the reasons why we
did not sustain each of the submitter’s
disclosure objections;
(2) A description of the information to
be disclosed or copies of the records as
we intend to release them; and
(3) A specified disclosure date, which
will be a reasonable time after the
notice.
(h) When will we notify a requester?
We will notify the requester whenever
we provide the submitter with notice
and an opportunity to object to
disclosure; whenever we notify the
submitter of our intent to disclose the
requested information; and whenever
the submitter files a lawsuit to prevent
the disclosure of the information.
§ 2004.5 Who is responsible for
responding to your FOIA request?
(a) In general. The FOIA Office is
authorized to grant or to deny any
requests for records that USTR
maintains and controls. In determining
which records are responsive to a
request, we ordinarily will include only
records in our possession and control as
of the date that we begin our search. We
will notify you if we use any other date.
(b) Consultation, referral and
coordination. If we believe that another
Federal agency is better able to
determine whether a record we locate in
response to your request is exempt from
disclosure under the FOIA and, if so,
whether it should be released as a
matter of discretion, then we will
proceed in one of the following ways:
(1) Consultation. When records
originated with USTR but contain
within them information of significance
to another Federal agency or office, we
typically consult with that other entity
prior to making a release determination.
(2) Referral. If we believe that a
different Federal agency is best able to
determine whether to disclose the
record, we typically refer responsibility
for responding to the request regarding
that record to that agency. Ordinarily,
the agency that originated the record is
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presumed to be the best agency to make
the disclosure determination. Whenever
we refer any part of the responsibility
for responding to a request to another
agency, we will notify you of the
referral, including the name of the
agency and that agency’s FOIA contact
information.
(3) Coordination. The standard
referral procedure is not appropriate
where disclosure of the identity of the
Federal agency to which the referral
would be made could harm an interest
protected by an applicable exemption,
such as the exemptions that protect
personal privacy or national security
interests. For example, if a non-law
enforcement agency responding to a
request for records on a living third
party locates within its files records
originating with a law enforcement
agency, and if the existence of that law
enforcement interest in the third party
was not publicly known, then to
disclose that law enforcement interest
could cause an unwarranted invasion of
the personal privacy of the third party.
Similarly, if an agency locates within its
files material originating with an
Intelligence Community agency, and the
involvement of that agency in the matter
is classified and not publicly
acknowledged, then to disclose or give
attribution to the involvement of that
Intelligence Community agency could
cause national security harms. In such
instances, in order to avoid harm to an
interest protected by an applicable
exemption, we will coordinate with the
originating agency to seek its views on
disclosure of the record. We then will
notify you of the release determination
for the record that is the subject of the
coordination.
(c) Classified information. On receipt
of any request involving classified
information, we will determine whether
the information is currently and
properly classified. Whenever a request
involves a record containing
information that has been classified or
may be appropriate for classification by
another Federal agency, we will refer
responsibility for responding to the
request regarding that information to the
agency that classified the information,
or that should consider the information
for classification. Whenever an agency’s
record contains information that has
been derivatively classified (for
example, when it contains information
classified by another agency), we will
refer responsibility for responding to
that portion of the request to the agency
that classified the underlying
information.
(d) Timing of responses to
consultations and referrals. We will
handle all consultations and referrals
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we receive according to the date that the
first agency received the perfected FOIA
request.
(e) Agreements regarding
consultations and referrals. We may
establish agreements with other
agencies to eliminate the need for
consultations or referrals with respect to
particular types of records.
§ 2004.6 When will we respond to your
FOIA request?
(a) In general. We ordinarily will
respond to a request within twenty days
based on the order in which we receive
the request. We may toll the twenty-day
period if we need additional
information from you in order to
process the request or need to clarify fee
assessment issues.
(b) Multitrack processing. We use a
multitrack processing system that
distinguishes between simple and more
complex requests based on the
estimated amount of work or time we
need to process the request. Among the
factors we consider are the number of
records requested, the number of pages
involved in processing the request, and
the need for consultations or referrals.
We will tell you if we place your request
into other than the simple track, and if
appropriate, we will offer you an
opportunity to narrow or modify your
request so that it can be placed in a
different processing track.
(c) Unusual circumstances—(1) What
is an unusual circumstance? We will
notify you if we extend the twenty-day
period for processing your request. The
notice will include the unusual
circumstances, such as the need to
search for and collect the requested
records from separate offices or
facilities, a request that involves a
voluminous amount of separate and
distinct records, or the need for
consultation, and the date by which we
estimate we will complete processing
your request. If the extension exceeds
ten days, we will give you the
opportunity to modify your request or
arrange an alternative time period for
processing the original or modified
request.
(2) Aggregating requests. We may
aggregate requests if it reasonably
appears that multiple requests
submitted either by a single requester or
by a group of requesters acting in
concert, involve related matters and
constitute a single request that
otherwise would involve unusual
circumstances. For example, we may
aggregate multiple requests for similar
information filed within a short period
of time.
(d) Expedited processing—(1) How do
I request expedited processing? When
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you submit your request or appeal, you
can ask us to expedite processing. If you
seek expedited processing, you must
submit a statement, certified to be true
and correct, explaining in detail the
basis for your expedited processing
request.
(2) When will we grant expedited
processing? We will process requests
and appeals on an expedited basis if we
determine that:
(i) Failure to obtain the records on an
expedited basis could reasonably be
expected to pose an imminent threat to
the life or physical safety of an
individual;
(ii) With respect to a request made by
a person primarily engaged in
disseminating information, there is an
urgency to inform the public about the
specific government activity that is the
subject of the request or appeal that
extends beyond the public’s right to
know about government activity
generally;
(iii) An individual will suffer the loss
of substantial due process rights; or
(iv) the subject is of widespread and
exceptional media interest and the
information sought involves possible
questions about the government’s
integrity that affect public confidence.
(3) When will we respond to your
request for expedited processing? We
will notify you within ten calendar days
of the receipt of a request for expedited
processing of our decision whether to
grant or deny expedited processing. If
we grant your request, we will give your
request or appeal priority, place it in the
processing track for expedited requests,
and process it as soon as practicable. If
we deny your request, we will process
any appeal of that decision
expeditiously.
§ 2004.7 What will our response to your
FOIA request include?
(a) In general. We will notify you in
writing of our determination regarding
your request. To the extent practicable,
we will communicate with you
electronically.
(b) Acknowledgement of requests. We
will acknowledge your request in
writing, including a brief description of
the records you are seeking, and assign
an individualized tracking number. If
we think that we will be unable to make
a determination on your request within
twenty days, we will send an
acknowledgment within ten days and
we may ask you to limit the scope of
your request or arrange for a longer
period for processing.
(c) Granting requests. If we decide to
grant your request in full or in part, our
response will include the records we are
disclosing unless we have assessed fees
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under § 2004.9. If your request involves
a voluminous amount of material or
searches in multiple locations, we may
provide interim responses, releasing the
records on a rolling basis. If we assessed
fees, we will disclose the records
promptly upon payment.
(d) Adverse determinations of
requests—(1) What is an adverse
determination? Adverse determinations,
or denials of requests, include decisions
that: The requested record is exempt in
whole or in part; the request does not
reasonably describe the records sought;
the information requested is not a
record subject to the FOIA; the
requested record does not exist, cannot
be located, or has been destroyed; or the
requested record is not readily
reproducible in the form or format
sought by the requester. Adverse
determinations also include denials
involving fees or fee waiver matters or
denials of requests for expedited
processing.
(2) Our response. If we make an
adverse determination denying your
request in any respect, our response will
include:
(i) The name and title or position of
the person responsible for the
determination;
(ii) A brief statement of the reasons for
the denial, including any FOIA
exemption(s) we applied;
(iii) An estimate of the volume of any
records or information we withheld,
such as the number of pages or some
other reasonable form of estimation,
although such an estimate is not
required if the volume is otherwise
indicated by deletions marked on
records that are disclosed in part or if
providing an estimate would harm an
interest protected by an applicable
exemption;
(iv) Information about the mediation
services provided by the Office of
Government Information Services of the
National Archives and Records
Administration; and
(iv) Your right to appeal our decision
under § 2004.8.
(3) Markings on released documents.
If technically feasible, we will clearly
mark records that we are disclosing in
part to indicate the location and show
the amount of information deleted and
the exemption under which the deletion
was made unless doing so would harm
an interest protected by an applicable
exemption.
calendar days after the date of our
response. Examples of adverse
determinations are provided in
§ 2004.7(d). You should specify the
records that are the subject of your
appeal and explain why the Committee
should sustain the appeal.
(2) Where do I send my appeal? To
avoid mail delivery delays caused by
heighted security, we strongly suggest
that you email any appeal to FOIA@
ustr.eop.gov. Our mailing address is:
FOIA Office, Office of the United States
Trade Representative, Anacostia Naval
Annex, Building 410/Door 123, 250
Murray Lane SW., Washington, DC
20509. To make sure that the FOIA
Office receives your appeal without
delay, you should include the notation
‘‘Freedom of Information Act Appeal’’
and the individualized tracking number
in the subject line of your email or on
the front of your envelope and also at
the beginning of your appeal.
(b) Who will decide your appeal? (1)
The FOIA Appeals Committee or
designee will act on all appeals under
this section.
(2) We ordinarily will not adjudicate
an appeal if the request becomes a
matter of FOIA litigation.
(3) On receipt of any appeal involving
classified information, the FOIA
Appeals Committee must take
appropriate action to ensure compliance
with applicable classification rules.
(c) Decisions on appeals. The FOIA
Appeals Committee will notify you of
its appeal decision in writing within
twenty days from the date it receives the
appeal. A decision that upholds the
FOIA Office’s determination in whole or
in part will identify the reasons for the
affirmance, including any FOIA
exemptions applied, and notify you of
your statutory right to seek judicial
review. The notice also will inform you
of the mediation services offered by the
Office of Government Information
Services of the National Archives and
Records Administration as a nonexclusive alternative to litigation. If the
FOIA Appeals Committee remands or
modifies the original response, the FOIA
Office will further process the request in
accordance with the appeal
determination and will respond directly
to you.
(d) When appeal is required. Before
seeking review by a court of an adverse
determination, you generally first must
submit a timely administrative appeal
under this section.
§ 2004.8 What can I do if I am dissatisfied
with USTR’s response to my FOIA request?
§ 2004.9
(a) How do I make an appeal?—(1)
What can I appeal? You can appeal any
adverse determination in writing to our
FOIA Appeals Committee within ninety
(a) In general. We will assess a fee to
process your FOIA request in
accordance with the provisions of this
section and the OMB Guidelines. For
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purposes of assessing fees, the FOIA
establishes three categories of
requesters: Commercial use requesters,
non-commercial scientific or
educational institutions or news media
requesters, and all other requesters.
Different fees are assessed depending on
the category. You can seek a fee waiver,
which we will consider in accordance
with the requirements in paragraph (h)
of this section. We will contact you to
resolve any fee issues that arise under
this section. We will conduct searches,
review and duplication in the most
efficient and least expensive manner.
We ordinarily will collect all applicable
fees before sending copies of records to
you. You must pay fees by check or
money order made payable to the
Treasury of the United States.
(b) Definitions. For purposes of this
section:
(1) Commercial use request is a
request that asks for information for a
use or a purpose that furthers a
commercial, trade or profit interest,
which can include furthering those
interests through litigation. Our
decision to place you in the commercial
use category will be made on a case-bycase basis based on your intended use
of the information. We will notify you
of your placement in this category.
(2) Direct costs are the expenses we
incur in searching for and duplicating
(and, in the case of commercial use
requests, reviewing) records in order to
respond to your FOIA request. For
example, direct costs include the salary
of the employee performing the work
(i.e., the basic rate of pay for the
employee plus 16 percent of that rate to
cover benefits) and the cost of operating
computers and other electronic
equipment, such as photocopiers and
scanners. Direct costs do not include
overhead expenses such as the costs of
space and of heating or lighting a
facility.
(3) Duplication is reproducing a copy
of a record, or the information contained
in it, necessary to respond to a FOIA
request. Copies can take the form of
paper, audiovisual materials or
electronic records, among others.
(4) Educational institution is any
school that operates a program of
scholarly research. You must show that
your FOIA request is authorized by, and
is made under the auspices of, an
educational institution and that you are
seeking the records to further scholarly
research and not for a commercial use.
To fall within this fee category, your
request must serve the scholarly
research goals of the institution rather
than an individual research goal. We
will advise you of your placement in
this category.
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Example 1. We would presume that a
request from a professor of economics
for records relating to the economic
effects of a trade agreement, written on
letterhead of the university’s
department of economics, is a request
from an educational institution.
Example 2. We would not presume
that a request from the same professor
of economics seeking drug information
from the Food and Drug Administration
in furtherance of a murder mystery he
is writing is a request from an
educational institution, regardless of
whether it was written on institutional
stationery.
Example 3. We would presume that a
request from a student in furtherance of
the completion of a course of instruction
is carrying out an individual research
goal, rather than a scholarly research
goal of the educational institution, and
would not qualify as part of this fee
category.
(5) Noncommercial scientific
institution is an institution that is
operated solely for the purpose of
conducting scientific research the
results of which are not intended to
promote any particular product or
industry and not on a commercial basis,
as defined in paragraph (b)(1) of this
section. To fall within this fee category,
you must show that the request is
authorized by and is made under the
auspices of a qualifying institution and
that the records you seek are to further
scientific research and not for a
commercial use. We will advise you of
your placement in this category.
(6) Representative of the news media
is any person or entity that gathers
information of potential interest to a
segment of the public, uses its editorial
skills to turn the raw materials into a
distinct work, and distributes that work
to an audience. The term ‘‘news’’ means
information that is about current events
or that would be of current interest to
the public. Examples of news media
entities include television or radio
stations that broadcast news to the
public at large and publishers of
periodicals that disseminate news and
make their products available through a
variety of means to the general public,
including news organizations that
disseminate solely on the Internet. We
will not consider a request for records
supporting a news-dissemination
function to be for a commercial use. We
will consider freelance journalists who
demonstrate a solid basis for expecting
publication through a news media entity
as a representative of the news media.
A publishing contract would provide
the clearest evidence that publication is
expected; however, we also may
consider your past publication record in
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making this determination. We will
advise you of your placement in this
category.
(7) Review is the examination of a
record located in response to a request
in order to determine if any portion of
it is exempt from disclosure. Review
time includes processing any record for
disclosure, such as doing all that is
necessary to prepare the record for
disclosure, including redacting the
record and marking the appropriate
exemptions. Review costs are properly
charged even if we ultimately do not
disclose a record. Review time also
includes time spent both obtaining and
considering any formal objection to
disclosure a confidential commercial
information submitter makes under
§ 2004.4, but it does not include time
spent resolving general legal or policy
issues regarding the application of
exemptions.
(8) Search is the process of looking for
and retrieving records or information
responsive to a request. Search time
includes page-by-page or line-by-line
identification of information within
records and the reasonable efforts we
expend to locate and retrieve
information from electronic records.
(c) Charging fees. In responding to
FOIA requests, we will charge the
following fees unless we granted a
waiver or reduction of fees under
paragraph (h) of this section, or the total
fee to be charged is less than $25. If we
do not meet the time limits for
responding to your request, and if no
unusual circumstance described in
§ 2004.6(c) applies, we will not assess
fees.
(1) Search. (i) We will not assess any
search fees for processing requests made
by educational institutions,
noncommercial scientific institutions,
or representatives of the news media.
For all other requesters, we will charge
for time spent searching even if we do
not locate any responsive records or if
we determine that the records are
entirely exempt from disclosure. We
will provide two hours of free search
time except for requesters seeking
records for a commercial use.
(ii) For each quarter hour spent by
personnel searching for requested
records, including electronic searches
that do not require new programming,
we will charge based on the salary of the
employee(s) conducting the search
(basic hourly rate(s) of pay for the
employee(s) plus 16 percent of that rate
to cover benefits).
(iii) We will charge the direct costs if
it is necessary to create a new computer
program to locate the requested records.
We will notify you of the costs
associated with creating such a program,
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65591
and you must agree to pay the
associated costs before we build the
program.
(iv) If your request requires the
retrieval of records stored at a Federal
records center, we will charge
additional costs in accordance with the
Transactional Billing Rate Schedule
established by the National Archives
and Records Administration.
(2) Duplication. We will charge
duplication fees to all requesters. We
will honor your preference for receiving
a record in a particular form or format
if we can readily reproduce it in the
form or format requested. If we provide
photocopies, we will make one copy per
request at the cost of $.15 per page. For
copies of records produced on tapes,
disks or other media, we will charge the
direct costs of producing the copy,
including operator time. Where we must
scan paper documents in order to
comply with your preference to receive
the records in an electronic format, we
will charge you the direct costs
associated with scanning those
materials. For other forms of
duplication, we will charge the direct
costs. We will provide the first 100
pages of duplication (or the cost
equivalent for other media) without
charge except for requesters seeking
records for a commercial use.
(3) Review. We will charge review fees
to requesters who make commercial use
requests. We will assess review fees in
connection with the initial review of the
record, i.e., the review we conduct to
determine if an exemption applies to a
particular record or portion of a record.
We will not charge for review at the
administrative appeal stage of
exemptions applied at the initial review
stage. However, if a particular
exemption is deemed no longer to
apply, any costs associated with rereview of the records in order to
consider the use of other exemptions
may be assessed as review fees. We will
charge review fees at the same rates as
those charged for a search under
paragraph (c)(1)(ii) of this section.
(d) Other charges—(1) Special
services. We will charge you the direct
cost of providing any special services
you request, such as sending records by
express mail, certifying that records are
true copies, or providing multiple
copies of the same document.
(2) Interest. We may assess interest
charges on any unpaid fees starting on
the 31st day following the day on which
we sent the bill to you at the rate
prescribed in Interest and Penalty on
Claims, 31 U.S.C. 3717.
(e) Aggregating requests. We may
aggregate separate FOIA requests for the
purpose of assessing fees when we
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reasonably believe that a requester or a
group of requesters acting in concert, is
dividing a request into a series of
requests for the purpose of avoiding or
minimizing fees. For example, we may
aggregate multiple requests for similar
information filed within a short period
of time.
(f) If we anticipate fees will exceed
$25. Unless you have indicated in
advance a willingness to pay fees as
high as anticipated, we will notify you
if we estimate that charges will exceed
$25.
(1) We will not process your request
until you either commit in writing to
pay the actual or estimated total fee, or
designate some amount of fees you are
willing to pay. If you are a
noncommercial use requester and we
have not yet provided your statutory
entitlements (i.e., two hours of search
time and 100 free pages), you can tell us
to stop when we exhaust the statutory
entitlements. We will start the twentyday response clock when we receive
your written reply.
(2) If you agree to pay some
designated amount of fees, but we
estimate that the total fee will exceed
that amount, we will toll processing
when we notify you of the estimated
fees in excess of the amount you had
indicated a willingness to pay. When we
receive your written commitment to pay
the actual or estimated total fee, or
designate an additional amount of fees
you are willing to pay, we will restart
the processing clock.
(3) If you decide to reformulate your
request to reduce costs, we will consider
it to be a new request that restarts the
twenty-day response clock. You can
contact USTR’s FOIA Public Liaison at
FOIA@ustr.eop.gov for assistance.
(4) We will close your request if you
do not respond in writing within thirty
calendar days after the date we notify
you of the fee estimate.
(g) Advance payments. (1) If we
determine or estimate that the total fee
will exceed $250, we may require you
to make an advance payment up to the
amount of the entire anticipated fee
before we begin to process your request.
(2) If you previously failed to pay a
properly charged FOIA fee to any
Federal agency within thirty calendar
days of the billing date, we may require
proof that you paid the full amount due,
plus any applicable interest on that
prior request, and that you make an
advance payment to us of the full
amount of any anticipated fee before we
begin to process a new request or
continue to process a pending request or
any pending appeal. If we have a
reasonable basis to believe that you have
misrepresented your identity in order to
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avoid paying outstanding fees, we may
require you to provide proof of identity.
(3) If we require advance payment, we
will not consider your request received
and will not do any additional work
until we receive the required payment.
We will close your request if you do not
pay the advance payment within thirty
calendar days after the date of our fee
determination.
(h) Requirements for waiver or
reduction of fees. (1) You can seek a fee
waiver or reduction by explaining in
writing how disclosure of the requested
information is in the public interest
because it is likely to contribute
significantly to public understanding of
the operations or activities of the
government and is not primarily in your
commercial interest. In determining
whether to waive or reduce a fee we will
consider whether disclosure of the
requested information would:
(i) Shed light on the operations or
activities of the government. The subject
of the request must specifically concern
identifiable operations or activities of
the Federal government with a
connection that is direct and clear, not
remote or attenuated.
(ii) Likely contribute significantly to
public understanding of those
operations or activities. Disclosure of
the requested records must be
meaningfully informative about
government operations or activities. The
disclosure of information that already is
in the public domain, in either the same
or a substantially identical form, would
not be meaningfully informative if
nothing new would be added to the
public’s understanding. The disclosure
must contribute to the understanding of
a reasonably broad audience—the
public-at-large as opposed to a narrow
segment of the population. We will
consider your expertise in the subject
area as well as your ability and
intention to effectively convey
information to the public.
(iii) Is to further an identified
commercial interest and whether that is
the primary interest advanced by the
request. For example, we ordinarily
presume that the public’s interest is
greater than the requester’s commercial
interest when we receive a request from
a representative of the news media. We
will not presume that disclosure to data
brokers or others who merely compile
and market government information for
direct economic return primarily serves
the public interest.
(2) We will grant a partial waiver
when only some of the records to be
released satisfy the requirements in this
section.
(3) You should include your fee
waiver or reduction request when you
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first submit your FOIA request to us.
You can submit a fee waiver or
reduction request at a later time so long
as the underlying record request is
pending or on administrative appeal. If
you already committed to pay fees and
subsequently request a waiver of those
fees that we deny, you must pay any
costs incurred up to the date the fee
waiver request was received.
Janice Kaye,
Chief Counsel for Administrative Law, Office
of the U.S. Trade Representative.
[FR Doc. 2016–22863 Filed 9–22–16; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 3290–F6–P
DEPARTMENT OF TRANSPORTATION
Federal Highway Administration
23 CFR Part 450
Federal Transit Administration
49 CFR Part 613
[Docket No. FHWA–2016–0016; FHWA RIN
2125–AF68; FTA RIN 2132–AB28]
Metropolitan Planning Organization
Coordination and Planning Area
Reform
Federal Highway
Administration (FHWA), Federal
Transit Administration (FTA); U.S.
Department of Transportation (DOT).
ACTION: Notice of proposed rulemaking
(NPRM); reopening of comment period.
AGENCY:
The FHWA and FTA are
reopening the comment period for the
NPRM that was published on June 27,
2016, at 81 FR 41473, in order to receive
additional public comment on targeted
issues. The NPRM proposes revisions to
the transportation planning regulations
to promote more effective regional
planning by States and metropolitan
planning organizations (MPO). The
original comment period closed on
August 26, 2016. The FHWA and FTA
received a number of requests to extend
the comment period. The FHWA and
FTA recognize that those interested in
commenting on this important program
may not have had the opportunity to
provide comments and that the
comment period should be reopened.
Therefore, the comment period is being
reopened.
DATES: Comments must be received on
or before October 24, 2016.
ADDRESSES: Mail or hand deliver
comments to: Docket Management
Facility, U.S. Department of
Transportation, 1200 New Jersey
Avenue SE., Washington, DC 20590, or
SUMMARY:
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Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 81, Number 185 (Friday, September 23, 2016)]
[Proposed Rules]
[Pages 65586-65592]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2016-22863]
=======================================================================
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
OFFICE OF THE UNITED STATES TRADE REPRESENTATIVE
15 CFR Part 2004
[Docket Number USTR-2016-0015]
RIN 0350-AA08
Freedom of Information Act Policies and Procedures
AGENCY: Office of the United States Trade Representative.
ACTION: Proposed rule with request for comments.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SUMMARY: As part of a comprehensive review of agency practices related
to the disclosure of records and information, the Office of the United
States Trade Representative (USTR) is updating its implementing rule
under the Freedom of Information Act (FOIA). The proposed rule, which
is modeled after a template provided by the U.S. Department of Justice,
describes how to make a FOIA request to USTR and how the FOIA Office,
which includes the USTR officials who are authorized to work on FOIA
requests, processes requests for records. We are in the process of
renaming and reorganizing part 2004 to include all of the rules
governing disclosure of USTR records and information, and with this
proposed rule, we are moving the FOIA rule into a new subpart B to part
2004.
DATES: We must receive your written comments on or before November 22,
2016.
ADDRESSES: You should submit written comments through the Federal
eRulemaking Portal: https://www.regulations.gov. The docket number for
this rulemaking is USTR-2016-0015. USTR invites comments on all aspects
of the proposed rule, and will revise the language as appropriate after
taking all timely submitted comments into consideration. Copies of all
comments will be available for public viewing at www.regulations.gov
upon completion of processing. You can view a submission by entering
the docket number USTR-2016-0015 in the search field at https://www.regulations.gov. We will post comments without change and will
include any personal information you provide, such as your name,
mailing address, email address, and telephone number.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Janice Kaye, Monique Ricker or Melissa
Keppel, Office of General Counsel, United States Trade Representative,
Anacostia Naval Annex, Building 410/Door 123, 250 Murray Lane SW.,
Washington, DC 20509, jkaye@ustr.eop.gov; mricker@ustr.eop.gov;
mkeppel@ustr.eop.gov, or the USTR FOIA Public Liaison at
FOIA@ustr.eop.gov or 202-395-3419.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
I. Background
USTR has undertaken a comprehensive review of agency practices
related to the collection, use, protection and disclosure of USTR
records and information. As a result of that review, USTR is updating
it FOIA implementing rule. The FOIA, 5 U.S.C. 552, provides a right of
access to certain records and information Federal agencies maintain and
control. The FOIA requires each Federal agency to publish regulations
describing how to submit a FOIA request and how the FOIA Office will
process these requests. USTR's current FOIA rule, codified at 15 CFR
part 2004, was last revised in in 2008. See 73 FR 35063, June 20, 2008.
Due to the passage of time and amendments to the FOIA, we are
completely rewriting and updating the rule. USTR's proposed rule is
modeled after a template provided by the U.S. Department of Justice,
and incorporates the practical experience of the FOIA staff. This
rulemaking would move the FOIA rule to a new subpart B to part 2004,
which we have proposed renaming and reorganizing to include all of the
rules governing disclosure of USTR records and information.
II. Section-by-Section Analysis
Section 2004.1--Purpose and scope: This section describes the
purpose of the regulation, which is to implement the FOIA, and explains
general policies and procedures for requesters seeking access to
records and information, and for processing requests by the USTR FOIA
Office.
Section 2004.2--Proactive disclosures: This section describes USTR
information the public can access without filing a FOIA request.
Section 2004.3--How to make a FOIA request: This section explains
what an individual must do to submit a valid FOIA request to USTR and
where a request should be sent. It also describes the information a
requester must provide so USTR can identify the records sought and
process their request.
Section 2004.4--Confidential commercial information: This section
explains when and how a person or entity that submits information to
USTR must identify confidential commercial information. It also
describes how USTR staff will handle such information.
Section 2004.5--The USTR staff that processes FOIA requests: The
USTR FOIA Office handles all FOIA requests. The section explains when
the FOIA staff will consult with or refer a request to another Federal
agency.
Section 2004.6--When we will respond to your request: This section
describes the period of time within which USTR will respond to
requests, i.e., ordinarily within twenty working days after the date
the request is perfected. It provides for an extension if there are
unusual circumstances and explains the requirements for expedited
processing. The section also describes our multitrack processing
system.
Section 2004.7--What our response will include: This section
explains that we will respond to your request in writing either with
the requested records or a detailed explanation of the reasons why all
of the requested records were not disclosed. We also will provide
information about the right of appeal and the mediation services
offered by the Office of Government Information Services of the
National Archives and Records Administration.
Section 2004.8--What you can do if you are dissatisfied with our
response: This section describes when and how a requester may appeal a
determination on a FOIA request and how and within what period of time
USTR will make a determination on an appeal.
Section 2004.9--Fees: This section describes the different
categories of requesters and the types and amounts of fees we may
assess to process and respond to a FOIA request.
III. Regulatory Flexibility Act
USTR has considered the impact of the proposed rule and determined
that if adopted as a final rule it is not likely to have a significant
economic impact on a substantial number of small business entities
because it is applicable only to USTR's internal operations and legal
obligations. See 5 U.S.C. 601 et seq.
IV. Paperwork Reduction Act
The proposed rule does not contain any information collection
requirement that requires the approval of the Office of Management and
Budget under the Paperwork Reduction Act (44 U.S.C. 3501 et seq.).
[[Page 65587]]
List of Subjects in 15 CFR Part 2004
Administrative practice and procedure, Courts, Disclosure,
Exemptions, Freedom of information, Government employees, Privacy,
Records, Subpoenas, Testimony.
For the reasons stated in the preamble, the Office of the United
States Trade Representative is proposing to amend chapter XX of title
15 of the Code of Federal Regulations as follows:
PART 2004--DISCLOSURE OF RECORDS AND INFORMATION
0
1. Add the subpart B authority citation to read as follows:
Authority: 5 U.S.C. 552; 19 U.S.C. 2171(e)(3); Uniform Freedom
of Information Act Fee Schedule and Guidelines, 52 FR 10012, Mar.
27, 1987.
Subpart B--Freedom of Information Act Policies and Procedures
0
2. Add Sec. Sec. 2004.1 through 2004.9 to subpart B to read as
follows:
Sec.
2004.1 Purpose and scope.
2004.2 Proactive disclosures.
2004.3 How do I make a request for records under the FOIA?
2004.4 How will we handle confidential commercial information?
2004.5 Who is responsible for responding to your FOIA request?
2004.6 When will we respond to your FOIA request?
2004.7 What will our response to your FOIA request include?
2004.8 What can I do if I am dissatisfied with USTR's response to my
FOIA request?
2004.9 Fees.
Sec. 2004.1 Purpose and scope.
(a) This subpart contains the rules we follow when processing
requests for records under the FOIA, a Federal law that provides a
right of access to certain records and information Federal agencies
maintain and control. You should read this subpart in conjunction with
the text of the FOIA and the Uniform Freedom of Information Act Fee
Schedule and Guidelines published by the Office of Management and
Budget (OMB Guidelines). Additionally, our FOIA Reference Guide, which
is available on our Web site at https://www.ustr.gov, contains
information about the specific procedures for making FOIA requests and
descriptions of the types of records we maintain.
(b) To maximize the amount of information we can provide to you, we
may process requests you make for records about yourself under both
this subpart and subpart C to part 2004, our rules implementing the
Privacy Act.
(c) We administer the FOIA with a presumption of openness. This
means that as a matter of policy, we make discretionary disclosures of
records or information exempt from disclosure under the FOIA whenever
disclosure would not foreseeably harm an interest protected by a FOIA
exemption. This policy does not create any right enforceable in court
and you should not construe anything in this subpart as an entitlement
to any service or to the disclosure of any record you are not entitled
to under the FOIA.
Sec. 2004.2 Proactive disclosures.
You can access records that the FOIA requires us to make available
for public inspection and copying through our Web site: https://www.ustr.gov. You also can find press releases, links to Federal
Register notices and comments, fact sheets, speeches and remarks,
reports, information about current initiatives, and historical
information about U.S. trade issues. If you need assistance to locate a
particular record, you can contact the Office of Public and Media
Affairs at MEDIA@ustr.eop.gov or the FOIA Office at FOIA@ustr.eop.gov.
Sec. 2004.3 How do I make a request for records under the FOIA?
(a) General information--(1) Where do I send my written request? To
make a request for records, you should write directly to the FOIA
Office. Heightened security delays mail delivery. To avoid mail
delivery delays, we strongly suggest that you email your request to
FOIA@ustr.eop.gov. Our mailing address is: FOIA Office, Office of the
United States Trade Representative, Anacostia Naval Annex, Building
410/Door 123, 250 Murray Lane SW., Washington, DC 20509. To ensure that
the FOIA Office receives your request without delay, you should include
the notation ``FOIA Request'' in the subject line of your email or on
the front of your envelope and also at the beginning of your request.
(2) Security concerns. To protect our computer systems, we will not
open attachments to emailed requests--you must include your request
within the body of the email. We will not process email attachments.
(3) Verifying your identity. (i) If you are making a request for
records about yourself or about another individual, you may receive
greater access by submitting a notarized signature--yours if the
records are about you, or the other individual's if the records are
about them. You can fulfill this requirement by having the signature on
your request letter witnessed by a notary.
(ii) Alternatively, you can provide an unsworn declaration under 28
U.S.C. 1746, a law that permits statements to be made under penalty of
perjury. You can fulfill this requirement by including the following
statement just before the signature on your request letter:
I declare under penalty of perjury that the foregoing is true
and correct. Executed on [date].
(iii) If the other individual is deceased, you should submit proof
of death such as a copy of a death certificate or an obituary. As an
exercise of administrative discretion, we may require that you provide
additional information if necessary in order to verify that a
particular individual has consented to disclosure.
(b) How do I describe the records I want? (1) You must describe the
records you seek in sufficient detail to enable USTR personnel to
locate them with a reasonable amount of effort. To satisfy this
requirement, you should be as detailed as possible when describing the
records you seek. To the extent possible, you should include specific
information that may help us identify the requested records, such as
the date, title or name, author, recipient, subject matter of the
record, case number, file designation, or reference number. For
example, we cannot process a request for all records related to a
particular trade negotiation or agreement or a request for all
communications between USTR and a particular third party. Your request
must include a date limitation, particular topics, and if asking for
correspondence, the subject matter and the relevant parties with
contact information such as their email addresses.
(2) If a request does not provide sufficient specific descriptive
information for the FOIA Office reasonably to ascertain exactly which
records you are requesting and to locate them, our response may be
delayed or we may not be able to respond. Please note that in response
to a FOIA request, we are not required to create records, conduct
research for you, analyze data, answer written questions, or parse your
narrative to try and determine the specific records you are seeking.
You can contact the FOIA Office before you submit your request for
assistance in describing the records you are seeking. If we determine
that your request does not reasonably describe the records sought, we
will explain why we cannot process your request and ask for additional
information. For example, we might ask you to narrow your request if
you ask for all documents in a certain date range but do not include a
specific
[[Page 65588]]
subject matter, topic or personnel. We can help you reformulate or
modify your request.
(3) We generally withhold predecisional, deliberative documents and
classified trade negotiating and policy documents under 5 U.S.C.
552(b)(1) and (5).
(c) Form or format of responsive records. You can specify the
preferred form or format (including electronic formats) for the records
you seek. We will try to accommodate your request if the record is
readily reproducible in that form or format.
(d) Contact information. You must provide contact information, such
as your phone number, email address, and mailing address, so we will be
able to communicate with you about your request and provide released
records. If we cannot contact you, or you do not respond within thirty
calendar days to our requests for clarification, we will close your
request.
Sec. 2004.4 How will we handle confidential commercial information?
(a) Definitions. For purposes of this section:
(1) Confidential commercial information means commercial or
financial information that we obtain from a submitter that may be
protected from disclosure under exemption 4 of the FOIA, 5 U.S.C.
552(b)(4).
(2) Submitter means any person or entity, including a corporation
or a State or foreign government, but not including another Federal
Government entity, which provides information, either directly or
indirectly to the Federal Government.
(b) How does a submitter designate confidential commercial
information? At the time of submission, the submitter of confidential
commercial information must use good faith efforts to designate by
appropriate markings any portion of its submission that it considers to
be protected from disclosure under exemption 4 of the FOIA, 5 U.S.C.
552(b)(4). These designations expire ten years after the date of the
submission unless the submitter requests and provides justification for
a longer designation period.
(c) When will we notify a submitter? (1) We promptly will notify
the submitter of confidential commercial information in writing
whenever we receive a FOIA request or appeal for records containing
such information if we determine that we may have to disclose the
records, provided:
(i) The requested information has been designated in good faith by
the submitter as information considered protected from disclosure under
exemption 4 of the FOIA, 5 U.S.C. 552(b)(4); or
(ii) We have reason to believe that the requested information may
be protected from disclosure exemption 4 of the FOIA, 5 U.S.C.
552(b)(4), but have not yet determined whether the information is
protected from disclosure under that exemption or any other applicable
FOIA exemption.
(2) Our notice either will describe the commercial information
requested or include a copy of the requested records or portions of
records containing the information. In cases involving a voluminous
number of submitters, we may post or publish a notice in a place or
manner reasonably likely to inform the submitters of the proposed
disclosure without publicly disclosing the records, instead of sending
individual notifications.
(3) We promptly will notify the submitter whenever a requester
files a lawsuit seeking to compel the disclosure of the submitter's
confidential commercial information.
(d) Exceptions to submitter notice requirements. The notice
requirements of this section do not apply if:
(1) We determine that the information is exempt under the FOIA, and
therefore will not be disclosed;
(2) The information has been lawfully published or has officially
been made available to the public;
(3) Disclosure of the information is required by a statute other
than the FOIA or by a regulation issued in accordance with the
requirements of Executive Order 12600 of June 23, 1987, Predisclosure
notification procedures for confidential commercial information; or
(4) The designation made by the submitter under paragraph (b) of
this section appears obviously frivolous. In such case, we will give
the submitter written notice of any final decision to disclose the
information and a reasonable time period within which to object to
disclosure under paragraph (e) of this section.
(e) How can a submitter object to disclosure? (1) If a submitter
has any objections to disclosure, it should provide to us within the
period listed in the notice a detailed written statement that specifies
all grounds for withholding the particular information under any FOIA
exemption. In order to rely on exemption 4 as a basis for
nondisclosure, the submitter must explain why the information
constitutes a trade secret or commercial or financial information that
is confidential.
(2) A submitter who does not respond within the time period
specified in the notice will be considered to have no objection to
disclosure of the information. We will not consider any information we
receive after the date of any disclosure decision. Any information
provided by the submitter under this section may itself be subject to
disclosure under the FOIA.
(f) Analysis of objections. We will consider the submitter's
objections and specific grounds for nondisclosure in deciding whether
to disclose the requested information.
(g) Notice of intent to disclose. We will notify the submitter
whenever we decide to disclose information over the submitter's
objection. Our written notice will include:
(1) A statement of the reasons why we did not sustain each of the
submitter's disclosure objections;
(2) A description of the information to be disclosed or copies of
the records as we intend to release them; and
(3) A specified disclosure date, which will be a reasonable time
after the notice.
(h) When will we notify a requester? We will notify the requester
whenever we provide the submitter with notice and an opportunity to
object to disclosure; whenever we notify the submitter of our intent to
disclose the requested information; and whenever the submitter files a
lawsuit to prevent the disclosure of the information.
Sec. 2004.5 Who is responsible for responding to your FOIA request?
(a) In general. The FOIA Office is authorized to grant or to deny
any requests for records that USTR maintains and controls. In
determining which records are responsive to a request, we ordinarily
will include only records in our possession and control as of the date
that we begin our search. We will notify you if we use any other date.
(b) Consultation, referral and coordination. If we believe that
another Federal agency is better able to determine whether a record we
locate in response to your request is exempt from disclosure under the
FOIA and, if so, whether it should be released as a matter of
discretion, then we will proceed in one of the following ways:
(1) Consultation. When records originated with USTR but contain
within them information of significance to another Federal agency or
office, we typically consult with that other entity prior to making a
release determination.
(2) Referral. If we believe that a different Federal agency is best
able to determine whether to disclose the record, we typically refer
responsibility for responding to the request regarding that record to
that agency. Ordinarily, the agency that originated the record is
[[Page 65589]]
presumed to be the best agency to make the disclosure determination.
Whenever we refer any part of the responsibility for responding to a
request to another agency, we will notify you of the referral,
including the name of the agency and that agency's FOIA contact
information.
(3) Coordination. The standard referral procedure is not
appropriate where disclosure of the identity of the Federal agency to
which the referral would be made could harm an interest protected by an
applicable exemption, such as the exemptions that protect personal
privacy or national security interests. For example, if a non-law
enforcement agency responding to a request for records on a living
third party locates within its files records originating with a law
enforcement agency, and if the existence of that law enforcement
interest in the third party was not publicly known, then to disclose
that law enforcement interest could cause an unwarranted invasion of
the personal privacy of the third party. Similarly, if an agency
locates within its files material originating with an Intelligence
Community agency, and the involvement of that agency in the matter is
classified and not publicly acknowledged, then to disclose or give
attribution to the involvement of that Intelligence Community agency
could cause national security harms. In such instances, in order to
avoid harm to an interest protected by an applicable exemption, we will
coordinate with the originating agency to seek its views on disclosure
of the record. We then will notify you of the release determination for
the record that is the subject of the coordination.
(c) Classified information. On receipt of any request involving
classified information, we will determine whether the information is
currently and properly classified. Whenever a request involves a record
containing information that has been classified or may be appropriate
for classification by another Federal agency, we will refer
responsibility for responding to the request regarding that information
to the agency that classified the information, or that should consider
the information for classification. Whenever an agency's record
contains information that has been derivatively classified (for
example, when it contains information classified by another agency), we
will refer responsibility for responding to that portion of the request
to the agency that classified the underlying information.
(d) Timing of responses to consultations and referrals. We will
handle all consultations and referrals we receive according to the date
that the first agency received the perfected FOIA request.
(e) Agreements regarding consultations and referrals. We may
establish agreements with other agencies to eliminate the need for
consultations or referrals with respect to particular types of records.
Sec. 2004.6 When will we respond to your FOIA request?
(a) In general. We ordinarily will respond to a request within
twenty days based on the order in which we receive the request. We may
toll the twenty-day period if we need additional information from you
in order to process the request or need to clarify fee assessment
issues.
(b) Multitrack processing. We use a multitrack processing system
that distinguishes between simple and more complex requests based on
the estimated amount of work or time we need to process the request.
Among the factors we consider are the number of records requested, the
number of pages involved in processing the request, and the need for
consultations or referrals. We will tell you if we place your request
into other than the simple track, and if appropriate, we will offer you
an opportunity to narrow or modify your request so that it can be
placed in a different processing track.
(c) Unusual circumstances--(1) What is an unusual circumstance? We
will notify you if we extend the twenty-day period for processing your
request. The notice will include the unusual circumstances, such as the
need to search for and collect the requested records from separate
offices or facilities, a request that involves a voluminous amount of
separate and distinct records, or the need for consultation, and the
date by which we estimate we will complete processing your request. If
the extension exceeds ten days, we will give you the opportunity to
modify your request or arrange an alternative time period for
processing the original or modified request.
(2) Aggregating requests. We may aggregate requests if it
reasonably appears that multiple requests submitted either by a single
requester or by a group of requesters acting in concert, involve
related matters and constitute a single request that otherwise would
involve unusual circumstances. For example, we may aggregate multiple
requests for similar information filed within a short period of time.
(d) Expedited processing--(1) How do I request expedited
processing? When you submit your request or appeal, you can ask us to
expedite processing. If you seek expedited processing, you must submit
a statement, certified to be true and correct, explaining in detail the
basis for your expedited processing request.
(2) When will we grant expedited processing? We will process
requests and appeals on an expedited basis if we determine that:
(i) Failure to obtain the records on an expedited basis could
reasonably be expected to pose an imminent threat to the life or
physical safety of an individual;
(ii) With respect to a request made by a person primarily engaged
in disseminating information, there is an urgency to inform the public
about the specific government activity that is the subject of the
request or appeal that extends beyond the public's right to know about
government activity generally;
(iii) An individual will suffer the loss of substantial due process
rights; or
(iv) the subject is of widespread and exceptional media interest
and the information sought involves possible questions about the
government's integrity that affect public confidence.
(3) When will we respond to your request for expedited processing?
We will notify you within ten calendar days of the receipt of a request
for expedited processing of our decision whether to grant or deny
expedited processing. If we grant your request, we will give your
request or appeal priority, place it in the processing track for
expedited requests, and process it as soon as practicable. If we deny
your request, we will process any appeal of that decision
expeditiously.
Sec. 2004.7 What will our response to your FOIA request include?
(a) In general. We will notify you in writing of our determination
regarding your request. To the extent practicable, we will communicate
with you electronically.
(b) Acknowledgement of requests. We will acknowledge your request
in writing, including a brief description of the records you are
seeking, and assign an individualized tracking number. If we think that
we will be unable to make a determination on your request within twenty
days, we will send an acknowledgment within ten days and we may ask you
to limit the scope of your request or arrange for a longer period for
processing.
(c) Granting requests. If we decide to grant your request in full
or in part, our response will include the records we are disclosing
unless we have assessed fees
[[Page 65590]]
under Sec. 2004.9. If your request involves a voluminous amount of
material or searches in multiple locations, we may provide interim
responses, releasing the records on a rolling basis. If we assessed
fees, we will disclose the records promptly upon payment.
(d) Adverse determinations of requests--(1) What is an adverse
determination? Adverse determinations, or denials of requests, include
decisions that: The requested record is exempt in whole or in part; the
request does not reasonably describe the records sought; the
information requested is not a record subject to the FOIA; the
requested record does not exist, cannot be located, or has been
destroyed; or the requested record is not readily reproducible in the
form or format sought by the requester. Adverse determinations also
include denials involving fees or fee waiver matters or denials of
requests for expedited processing.
(2) Our response. If we make an adverse determination denying your
request in any respect, our response will include:
(i) The name and title or position of the person responsible for
the determination;
(ii) A brief statement of the reasons for the denial, including any
FOIA exemption(s) we applied;
(iii) An estimate of the volume of any records or information we
withheld, such as the number of pages or some other reasonable form of
estimation, although such an estimate is not required if the volume is
otherwise indicated by deletions marked on records that are disclosed
in part or if providing an estimate would harm an interest protected by
an applicable exemption;
(iv) Information about the mediation services provided by the
Office of Government Information Services of the National Archives and
Records Administration; and
(iv) Your right to appeal our decision under Sec. 2004.8.
(3) Markings on released documents. If technically feasible, we
will clearly mark records that we are disclosing in part to indicate
the location and show the amount of information deleted and the
exemption under which the deletion was made unless doing so would harm
an interest protected by an applicable exemption.
Sec. 2004.8 What can I do if I am dissatisfied with USTR's response
to my FOIA request?
(a) How do I make an appeal?--(1) What can I appeal? You can appeal
any adverse determination in writing to our FOIA Appeals Committee
within ninety calendar days after the date of our response. Examples of
adverse determinations are provided in Sec. 2004.7(d). You should
specify the records that are the subject of your appeal and explain why
the Committee should sustain the appeal.
(2) Where do I send my appeal? To avoid mail delivery delays caused
by heighted security, we strongly suggest that you email any appeal to
FOIA@ustr.eop.gov. Our mailing address is: FOIA Office, Office of the
United States Trade Representative, Anacostia Naval Annex, Building
410/Door 123, 250 Murray Lane SW., Washington, DC 20509. To make sure
that the FOIA Office receives your appeal without delay, you should
include the notation ``Freedom of Information Act Appeal'' and the
individualized tracking number in the subject line of your email or on
the front of your envelope and also at the beginning of your appeal.
(b) Who will decide your appeal? (1) The FOIA Appeals Committee or
designee will act on all appeals under this section.
(2) We ordinarily will not adjudicate an appeal if the request
becomes a matter of FOIA litigation.
(3) On receipt of any appeal involving classified information, the
FOIA Appeals Committee must take appropriate action to ensure
compliance with applicable classification rules.
(c) Decisions on appeals. The FOIA Appeals Committee will notify
you of its appeal decision in writing within twenty days from the date
it receives the appeal. A decision that upholds the FOIA Office's
determination in whole or in part will identify the reasons for the
affirmance, including any FOIA exemptions applied, and notify you of
your statutory right to seek judicial review. The notice also will
inform you of the mediation services offered by the Office of
Government Information Services of the National Archives and Records
Administration as a non-exclusive alternative to litigation. If the
FOIA Appeals Committee remands or modifies the original response, the
FOIA Office will further process the request in accordance with the
appeal determination and will respond directly to you.
(d) When appeal is required. Before seeking review by a court of an
adverse determination, you generally first must submit a timely
administrative appeal under this section.
Sec. 2004.9 Fees.
(a) In general. We will assess a fee to process your FOIA request
in accordance with the provisions of this section and the OMB
Guidelines. For purposes of assessing fees, the FOIA establishes three
categories of requesters: Commercial use requesters, non-commercial
scientific or educational institutions or news media requesters, and
all other requesters. Different fees are assessed depending on the
category. You can seek a fee waiver, which we will consider in
accordance with the requirements in paragraph (h) of this section. We
will contact you to resolve any fee issues that arise under this
section. We will conduct searches, review and duplication in the most
efficient and least expensive manner. We ordinarily will collect all
applicable fees before sending copies of records to you. You must pay
fees by check or money order made payable to the Treasury of the United
States.
(b) Definitions. For purposes of this section:
(1) Commercial use request is a request that asks for information
for a use or a purpose that furthers a commercial, trade or profit
interest, which can include furthering those interests through
litigation. Our decision to place you in the commercial use category
will be made on a case-by-case basis based on your intended use of the
information. We will notify you of your placement in this category.
(2) Direct costs are the expenses we incur in searching for and
duplicating (and, in the case of commercial use requests, reviewing)
records in order to respond to your FOIA request. For example, direct
costs include the salary of the employee performing the work (i.e., the
basic rate of pay for the employee plus 16 percent of that rate to
cover benefits) and the cost of operating computers and other
electronic equipment, such as photocopiers and scanners. Direct costs
do not include overhead expenses such as the costs of space and of
heating or lighting a facility.
(3) Duplication is reproducing a copy of a record, or the
information contained in it, necessary to respond to a FOIA request.
Copies can take the form of paper, audiovisual materials or electronic
records, among others.
(4) Educational institution is any school that operates a program
of scholarly research. You must show that your FOIA request is
authorized by, and is made under the auspices of, an educational
institution and that you are seeking the records to further scholarly
research and not for a commercial use. To fall within this fee
category, your request must serve the scholarly research goals of the
institution rather than an individual research goal. We will advise you
of your placement in this category.
[[Page 65591]]
Example 1. We would presume that a request from a professor of
economics for records relating to the economic effects of a trade
agreement, written on letterhead of the university's department of
economics, is a request from an educational institution.
Example 2. We would not presume that a request from the same
professor of economics seeking drug information from the Food and Drug
Administration in furtherance of a murder mystery he is writing is a
request from an educational institution, regardless of whether it was
written on institutional stationery.
Example 3. We would presume that a request from a student in
furtherance of the completion of a course of instruction is carrying
out an individual research goal, rather than a scholarly research goal
of the educational institution, and would not qualify as part of this
fee category.
(5) Noncommercial scientific institution is an institution that is
operated solely for the purpose of conducting scientific research the
results of which are not intended to promote any particular product or
industry and not on a commercial basis, as defined in paragraph (b)(1)
of this section. To fall within this fee category, you must show that
the request is authorized by and is made under the auspices of a
qualifying institution and that the records you seek are to further
scientific research and not for a commercial use. We will advise you of
your placement in this category.
(6) Representative of the news media is any person or entity that
gathers information of potential interest to a segment of the public,
uses its editorial skills to turn the raw materials into a distinct
work, and distributes that work to an audience. The term ``news'' means
information that is about current events or that would be of current
interest to the public. Examples of news media entities include
television or radio stations that broadcast news to the public at large
and publishers of periodicals that disseminate news and make their
products available through a variety of means to the general public,
including news organizations that disseminate solely on the Internet.
We will not consider a request for records supporting a news-
dissemination function to be for a commercial use. We will consider
freelance journalists who demonstrate a solid basis for expecting
publication through a news media entity as a representative of the news
media. A publishing contract would provide the clearest evidence that
publication is expected; however, we also may consider your past
publication record in making this determination. We will advise you of
your placement in this category.
(7) Review is the examination of a record located in response to a
request in order to determine if any portion of it is exempt from
disclosure. Review time includes processing any record for disclosure,
such as doing all that is necessary to prepare the record for
disclosure, including redacting the record and marking the appropriate
exemptions. Review costs are properly charged even if we ultimately do
not disclose a record. Review time also includes time spent both
obtaining and considering any formal objection to disclosure a
confidential commercial information submitter makes under Sec. 2004.4,
but it does not include time spent resolving general legal or policy
issues regarding the application of exemptions.
(8) Search is the process of looking for and retrieving records or
information responsive to a request. Search time includes page-by-page
or line-by-line identification of information within records and the
reasonable efforts we expend to locate and retrieve information from
electronic records.
(c) Charging fees. In responding to FOIA requests, we will charge
the following fees unless we granted a waiver or reduction of fees
under paragraph (h) of this section, or the total fee to be charged is
less than $25. If we do not meet the time limits for responding to your
request, and if no unusual circumstance described in Sec. 2004.6(c)
applies, we will not assess fees.
(1) Search. (i) We will not assess any search fees for processing
requests made by educational institutions, noncommercial scientific
institutions, or representatives of the news media. For all other
requesters, we will charge for time spent searching even if we do not
locate any responsive records or if we determine that the records are
entirely exempt from disclosure. We will provide two hours of free
search time except for requesters seeking records for a commercial use.
(ii) For each quarter hour spent by personnel searching for
requested records, including electronic searches that do not require
new programming, we will charge based on the salary of the employee(s)
conducting the search (basic hourly rate(s) of pay for the employee(s)
plus 16 percent of that rate to cover benefits).
(iii) We will charge the direct costs if it is necessary to create
a new computer program to locate the requested records. We will notify
you of the costs associated with creating such a program, and you must
agree to pay the associated costs before we build the program.
(iv) If your request requires the retrieval of records stored at a
Federal records center, we will charge additional costs in accordance
with the Transactional Billing Rate Schedule established by the
National Archives and Records Administration.
(2) Duplication. We will charge duplication fees to all requesters.
We will honor your preference for receiving a record in a particular
form or format if we can readily reproduce it in the form or format
requested. If we provide photocopies, we will make one copy per request
at the cost of $.15 per page. For copies of records produced on tapes,
disks or other media, we will charge the direct costs of producing the
copy, including operator time. Where we must scan paper documents in
order to comply with your preference to receive the records in an
electronic format, we will charge you the direct costs associated with
scanning those materials. For other forms of duplication, we will
charge the direct costs. We will provide the first 100 pages of
duplication (or the cost equivalent for other media) without charge
except for requesters seeking records for a commercial use.
(3) Review. We will charge review fees to requesters who make
commercial use requests. We will assess review fees in connection with
the initial review of the record, i.e., the review we conduct to
determine if an exemption applies to a particular record or portion of
a record. We will not charge for review at the administrative appeal
stage of exemptions applied at the initial review stage. However, if a
particular exemption is deemed no longer to apply, any costs associated
with re-review of the records in order to consider the use of other
exemptions may be assessed as review fees. We will charge review fees
at the same rates as those charged for a search under paragraph
(c)(1)(ii) of this section.
(d) Other charges--(1) Special services. We will charge you the
direct cost of providing any special services you request, such as
sending records by express mail, certifying that records are true
copies, or providing multiple copies of the same document.
(2) Interest. We may assess interest charges on any unpaid fees
starting on the 31st day following the day on which we sent the bill to
you at the rate prescribed in Interest and Penalty on Claims, 31 U.S.C.
3717.
(e) Aggregating requests. We may aggregate separate FOIA requests
for the purpose of assessing fees when we
[[Page 65592]]
reasonably believe that a requester or a group of requesters acting in
concert, is dividing a request into a series of requests for the
purpose of avoiding or minimizing fees. For example, we may aggregate
multiple requests for similar information filed within a short period
of time.
(f) If we anticipate fees will exceed $25. Unless you have
indicated in advance a willingness to pay fees as high as anticipated,
we will notify you if we estimate that charges will exceed $25.
(1) We will not process your request until you either commit in
writing to pay the actual or estimated total fee, or designate some
amount of fees you are willing to pay. If you are a noncommercial use
requester and we have not yet provided your statutory entitlements
(i.e., two hours of search time and 100 free pages), you can tell us to
stop when we exhaust the statutory entitlements. We will start the
twenty-day response clock when we receive your written reply.
(2) If you agree to pay some designated amount of fees, but we
estimate that the total fee will exceed that amount, we will toll
processing when we notify you of the estimated fees in excess of the
amount you had indicated a willingness to pay. When we receive your
written commitment to pay the actual or estimated total fee, or
designate an additional amount of fees you are willing to pay, we will
restart the processing clock.
(3) If you decide to reformulate your request to reduce costs, we
will consider it to be a new request that restarts the twenty-day
response clock. You can contact USTR's FOIA Public Liaison at
FOIA@ustr.eop.gov for assistance.
(4) We will close your request if you do not respond in writing
within thirty calendar days after the date we notify you of the fee
estimate.
(g) Advance payments. (1) If we determine or estimate that the
total fee will exceed $250, we may require you to make an advance
payment up to the amount of the entire anticipated fee before we begin
to process your request.
(2) If you previously failed to pay a properly charged FOIA fee to
any Federal agency within thirty calendar days of the billing date, we
may require proof that you paid the full amount due, plus any
applicable interest on that prior request, and that you make an advance
payment to us of the full amount of any anticipated fee before we begin
to process a new request or continue to process a pending request or
any pending appeal. If we have a reasonable basis to believe that you
have misrepresented your identity in order to avoid paying outstanding
fees, we may require you to provide proof of identity.
(3) If we require advance payment, we will not consider your
request received and will not do any additional work until we receive
the required payment. We will close your request if you do not pay the
advance payment within thirty calendar days after the date of our fee
determination.
(h) Requirements for waiver or reduction of fees. (1) You can seek
a fee waiver or reduction by explaining in writing how disclosure of
the requested information is in the public interest because it is
likely to contribute significantly to public understanding of the
operations or activities of the government and is not primarily in your
commercial interest. In determining whether to waive or reduce a fee we
will consider whether disclosure of the requested information would:
(i) Shed light on the operations or activities of the government.
The subject of the request must specifically concern identifiable
operations or activities of the Federal government with a connection
that is direct and clear, not remote or attenuated.
(ii) Likely contribute significantly to public understanding of
those operations or activities. Disclosure of the requested records
must be meaningfully informative about government operations or
activities. The disclosure of information that already is in the public
domain, in either the same or a substantially identical form, would not
be meaningfully informative if nothing new would be added to the
public's understanding. The disclosure must contribute to the
understanding of a reasonably broad audience--the public-at-large as
opposed to a narrow segment of the population. We will consider your
expertise in the subject area as well as your ability and intention to
effectively convey information to the public.
(iii) Is to further an identified commercial interest and whether
that is the primary interest advanced by the request. For example, we
ordinarily presume that the public's interest is greater than the
requester's commercial interest when we receive a request from a
representative of the news media. We will not presume that disclosure
to data brokers or others who merely compile and market government
information for direct economic return primarily serves the public
interest.
(2) We will grant a partial waiver when only some of the records to
be released satisfy the requirements in this section.
(3) You should include your fee waiver or reduction request when
you first submit your FOIA request to us. You can submit a fee waiver
or reduction request at a later time so long as the underlying record
request is pending or on administrative appeal. If you already
committed to pay fees and subsequently request a waiver of those fees
that we deny, you must pay any costs incurred up to the date the fee
waiver request was received.
Janice Kaye,
Chief Counsel for Administrative Law, Office of the U.S. Trade
Representative.
[FR Doc. 2016-22863 Filed 9-22-16; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 3290-F6-P