Production or Disclosure of Material or Information, 86270-86287 [2016-28430]
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86270
Federal Register / Vol. 81, No. 230 / Wednesday, November 30, 2016 / Rules and Regulations
(b) The additive is used or intended
for use to spare arginine and as a
precursor of creatine in broiler chicken
and turkey feeds at levels not to exceed
0.12 percent of the complete feed.
(c) The additive consists of not less
than 97 percent guanidinoacetic acid
[N-(aminoiminomethyl)-glycine] (CAS
352–97–6) by weight.
(d) The additive meets the following
specifications:
(1) Dicyandiamide not to exceed 0.5
percent;
(2) Cyanamide not to exceed 0.01
percent;
(3) Melamine not to exceed 15 parts
per million (ppm);
(4) Sum of ammeline, ammelide, and
cyanuric acid not to exceed 35 ppm; and
(5) Water not to exceed 1 percent.
(e) To assure safe use of the additive
in addition to the other information
required by the Federal Food, Drug, and
Cosmetic Act:
(1) The label and labeling of the
additive, any feed premix, and complete
feed shall contain the name of the
additive.
(2) The label and labeling of the
additive and any feed premix shall also
contain:
(i) A statement to indicate that the
maximum use level of guanidinoacetic
acid must not exceed 0.12 percent of the
complete feed for broiler chickens and
turkeys; and
(ii) Adequate directions for use.
Dated: November 22, 2016.
Tracey H. Forfa,
Deputy Director, Center for Veterinary
Medicine.
[FR Doc. 2016–28754 Filed 11–29–16; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4164–01–P
POSTAL SERVICE
39 CFR Part 265
Production or Disclosure of Material or
Information
Postal Service.
ACTION: Final rule.
AGENCY:
The Postal Service is
amending its regulations concerning
compliance with the Freedom of
Information Act (FOIA) to implement
the changes to the procedures for the
disclosure of records and for engaging in
dispute resolution required by the FOIA
Improvement Act of 2016. As part of
this process, the Postal Service is also
restructuring the regulations setting
forth its FOIA procedures, without
substantive change, to make them easier
for members of the public to understand
and use.
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SUMMARY:
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These regulations are effective
December 27, 2016.
ADDRESSES: Questions or comments on
this action are welcome. Mail or deliver
written comments to: Michael Elston,
Associate General Counsel and Chief
Ethics & Compliance Officer, 475
L’Enfant Plaza SW., Room 6000,
Washington, DC 20260–1135.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Natalie A. Bonanno, Chief Counsel,
Federal Compliance,
natalie.a.bonanno@usps.gov, (202) 268–
2944.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: The Postal
Service is amending 39 CFR part 265 to
implement changes to the procedures
for the disclosure of records and for
engaging in dispute resolution under the
Freedom of Information Act (FOIA), 5
U.S.C. 552, as required by the FOIA
Improvement Act of 2016 (FOIAIA),
Public Law 114–185 (June 30, 2016),
130 Stat. 538. Under section 3 of the
FOIA Improvement Act (130 Stat. 544)
agencies are required to make such
changes not later than 180 days after its
date of enactment.
The Postal Service has accordingly
prepared a revision of 39 CFR part 265
to implement the amendments to the
FOIA contained in section 2 of the
FOIAIA. These amendments relate to
such matters as the availability of
certain records for public inspection in
an electronic format; the assessment of
fees related to voluminous record
requests; modifications to the
exemptions from disclosure for certain
records described in 5 U.S.C. 552(b);
and addressing the role of the Office of
Government Information Services
(OGIS).
In addition, the Postal Service is
restructuring its FOIA response
procedures, without substantive change
to their underlying policy, with the
objective of enhancing their usefulness
and comprehensibility. In this regard,
39 CFR part 265 has been retitled and
subdivided into three subparts, dealing
separately with (1) the generally
applicable procedures for the disclosure
of records under FOIA; (2) special rules
applicable to the disclosure of records
in compliance with subpoenas and
other court orders, in response to
requests for records or testimony in
other legal proceedings, or pursuant to
requests directed to the Postal
Inspection Service; and (3) the rules
concerning the availability of specific
categories of records that are not subject
to mandatory disclosure in whole or in
part.
As reorganized and amended, 39 CFR
part 265 is structured as follows:
DATES:
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Subpart A—Procedures for Disclosure
of Records Under the Freedom of
Information Act
This subpart sets forth the procedural
rules applicable to the submission and
processing of FOIA requests, including
how and to whom a request should be
submitted, the responsibility for and the
timing of a response, the nature and
content of the response, the treatment of
confidential commercial information
obtained from a submitter outside the
Postal Service that may be protected
from disclosure, the procedure for
making an administrative appeal of the
Postal Service’s response to a request,
and the fees that may apply to
processing a request. This subpart is
designed to carry forward the
substantive content of former §§ 265.1–
265.5 and §§ 265.7–265.9 in a more
accessible and useful format.
265.1
General Provisions
This section has been retitled and
revised to present a concise and
accessible overview of the policies and
functions implemented by this subpart.
265.2 Proactive Disclosure of Postal
Service Records
This section has been retitled and
revised to ensure the continued
availability of those records that must be
made publicly available, or are
appropriate for public disclosure, and to
provide for the posting and indexing of
records in an electronic format as
required under the FOIAIA.
265.3 Procedure for Submitting a FOIA
Request
This section has been retitled and
revised to explain the organization and
functions of the Postal Service’s FOIA
Requester Service Centers (RSCs), as
well as the procedures to be followed in
submitting a FOIA request.
265.4 Responsibility for Responding to
Requests
This section has been retitled and
revised to clarify the functional
responsibilities of the RSCs in
responding to FOIA requests.
265.5
Timing of Responses to Requests
This section has been retitled and
revised to set out the timeframe
applicable to the processing of requests,
including special provisions for the
multitrack processing of simple or
complex requests, expedited processing
where appropriate, the extension of time
in unusual circumstances, and
aggregation of requests.
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265.6 Responses to Requests
This section has been retitled and
revised to specify the procedures for
grants of requests, adverse
determinations of requests, denials of
requests, and any redaction of
documents released.
usefulness of these regulations, and add
clarity to the distinction between those
records that are available to the public
on request, and those records that are
not subject to mandatory public
disclosure, or available only with
certain restrictions.
265.7 Confidential Commercial
Information Obtained From Submitters
This section, the successor to former
§ 265.8, has been retitled and revised to
specify the procedures for processing
requests for information that may be
protected from disclosure under FOIA
Exemption 4 (5 U.S.C. 552(b)(4))
because it contains confidential
commercial or financial information
obtained by the Postal Service from a
submitter outside the Postal Service.
265.14 Rules Concerning Specific
Categories of Records
This section retitles, relocates, and
revises for clarity the rules concerning
records that are not subject to
mandatory public disclosure, as well as
those that are available with certain
restrictions, including records compiled
for law enforcement purposes, the
names and addresses of postal
customers, and records the disclosure of
which would constitute a clearly
unwarranted invasion of personal
privacy.
265.8
Administrative Appeals
This section has been retitled and
revised to set forth the requirements for
making an appeal of a FOIA decision,
and the process for its adjudication.
265.9 Fees
This section has been retitled and
revised to specify the fee structure for
processing FOIA requests, including
special provisions concerning requests
from educational institutions,
noncommercial scientific institutions,
and representatives of the news media.
Subpart B—Production or Disclosure in
Federal and State Proceedings
This subpart retains current
§§ 265.11–265.13 with no substantive
change. Where necessary, crossreferences to other postal regulations
have been updated.
265.11 Compliance With Subpoenas
Duces Tecum, Court Orders, and
Summonses
No substantive changes have been
made in this section.
265.12 Demands for Testimony or
Records in Certain Legal Proceedings
No substantive changes have been
made in this section.
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265.13 Compliance With Subpoenas,
Summonses, and Court Orders by Postal
Employees Within the Postal Inspection
Service Where the Postal Service, the
United States, or Any Other Federal
Agency Is Not a Party
No substantive changes have been
made in this section.
Subpart C—Availability of Records
The provisions of former § 265.6 have
been redesignated as § 265.14, and
relocated to a separate subpart. This
action is intended to enhance the
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List of Subjects in 39 CFR Part 265
Administrative practice and
procedure, Courts, Freedom of
Information, Government employees.
For the reasons stated in the
preamble, the Postal Service amends 39
CFR chapter I by revising part 265 to
read as follows:
PART 265—PRODUCTION OR
DISCLOSURE OF MATERIAL OR
INFORMATION
Subpart A—Procedures for Disclosure of
Records Under the Freedom of Information
Act
Sec.
265.1 General provisions.
265.2 Proactive disclosure of Postal Service
records.
265.3 Procedure for submitting a FOIA
request.
265.4 Responsibility for responding to
requests.
265.5 Timing of responses to requests.
265.6 Responses to requests.
265.7 Confidential commercial information
obtained from submitters.
265.8 Administrative appeals.
265.9 Fees.
Subpart B—Production or Disclosure in
Federal and State Proceedings
265.11 Compliance with subpoenas duces
tecum, court orders, and summonses.
265.12 Demands for testimony or records in
certain legal proceedings.
265.13 Compliance with subpoenas,
summonses, and court orders by postal
employees within the Postal Inspection
Service where the Postal Service, the
United States, or any other Federal
agency is not a party.
Subpart C—Availability of Records
265.14 Rules concerning specific categories
of records.
Authority: 5 U.S.C. 552; 5 U.S.C. App. 3;
39 U.S.C. 401, 403, 410, 1001, 2601; Pub. L.
114–185.
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§ 265.1
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General provisions.
(a) This subpart contains the
regulations that implement the Freedom
of Information Act (FOIA), 5 U.S.C. 552,
insofar as the Act applies to the Postal
Service. These rules should be read in
conjunction with the text of the FOIA
and the Uniform Freedom of
Information Fee Schedule and
Guidelines published by the Office of
Management and Budget, (OMB
Guidelines), 52 FR 10012 (Mar. 27,
1987). The Postal Service FOIA
Requester’s Guide, an easy-to-read guide
for making Postal Service FOIA
requests, is available at https://
about.usps.com/who-we-are/foia/
welcome.htm.
(b) Requests made by individuals for
records about themselves under the
Privacy Act of 1974, 5 U.S.C. 552a, are
processed under Part 266 as well as
under this subpart.
(c) It is the policy of the Postal Service
to make its official records available to
the public to the maximum extent
consistent with the public interest. This
policy requires a practice of full
disclosure of those records that are
covered by the requirements of the
FOIA, subject only to the specific
exemptions required or authorized by
law. The exemptions from mandatory
disclosure for various types of records
provided by 5 U.S.C. 552(b) and 39
U.S.C. 410(c) reflect the fact that under
some circumstances, the public interest
may be better served by leaving the
disclosure of particular records to the
discretion of the Postal Service rather
than by requiring their disclosure. This
Postal Service policy does not create
any right enforceable in court.
(d) As referenced in this subpart,
component means any department or
facility within the Postal Service that
maintains records; the Office of
Inspector General; and the Postal
Inspection Service. Postal Service refers
to all such components collectively.
(e) Nothing in this subpart shall be
construed to entitle any person, as of
right, to any service or to the disclosure
of any record to which such person is
not entitled under the FOIA.
§ 265.2 Proactive disclosure of Postal
Service records.
(a) In general. The Postal Service is
responsible for determining which of its
records must be made publicly
available, for identifying additional
records of interest to the public that are
appropriate for public disclosure, and
for posting and indexing such records.
The Postal Service’s FOIA Requester
Service Centers (RSCs) and FOIA Public
Liaisons can assist individuals in
locating Postal Service records.
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Descriptions of, and contact information
for, the various FOIA RSCs can be found
at https://about.usps.com/who-we-are/
foia/welcome.htm.
(b) Records available in an electronic
format. Records that the FOIA requires
the Postal Service to make available for
public inspection in an electronic
format pursuant to 5 U.S.C. 552(a)(2)
and that are exempt from the
requirements of 5 U.S.C. 552(a)(3), may
be accessed through the Postal Service’s
Web site at https://about.usps.com/whowe-are/foia/welcome.htm. The Postal
Service must ensure that its Web site of
posted records and indices is reviewed
and updated on an ongoing basis. Such
records available for public inspection
in an electronic format include the
following:
(1) Opinions. All final opinions and
orders made in the adjudication of cases
by the Judicial Officer and
Administrative Law Judges, all final
determinations pursuant to section
404(b) of title 39, United States Code, to
close or consolidate a post office, or to
disapprove a proposed closing or
consolidation, all advisory opinions
concerning the private express statutes
issued pursuant to 39 CFR 310.6, and all
supplier disagreement decisions are on
file and available for inspection and
copying at the Headquarters Library
and, if created on or after November 1,
1996, also at the Postal Service’s Web
site at https://about.usps.com/who-weare/foia/welcome.htm.
(2) Administrative manuals and
instructions. The manuals, instructions,
and other publications of the Postal
Service that affect members of the
public are available through the
Headquarters Library and at many post
offices and other postal facilities. Those
which are available to the public but are
not listed for sale may be inspected in
the Headquarters Library, at any postal
facility which maintains a copy, or, if
created on or after November 1, 1996,
through the Postal Service’s Web site at
https://about.usps.com/who-we-are/foia/
welcome.htm. Copies of publications
which are not listed as for sale or as
available free of charge may be
requested on an individual basis in
accordance with the procedures
provided in § 265.3.
(3) Previously released records.
Copies of all records, regardless of form
or format, that have been released to any
person pursuant to the FOIA; and that
because of the nature of their subject
matter, the Postal Service determines
have become or are likely to become the
subject of subsequent requests for
substantially the same records; or that
have been requested 3 or more times, as
well as a general index of such records.
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Records processed and disclosed after
March 31, 1997, are available for
inspection and copying at the
Headquarters Library. Any such records
created by the Postal Service on or after
November 1, 1996, also will be available
at the Postal Service’s Web site
identified at § 265.2(b). Records
described in this paragraph that were
not created by, or on behalf of, the
Postal Service generally will not be
available at the Web site. Records will
be available in the form in which they
were originally disclosed, except to the
extent that they contain information that
is not appropriate for public disclosure
and may be withheld pursuant to this
section. Any deleted material will be
marked and the applicable exemptions
indicated in accordance with § 265.6(d).
(4) Public index. (i) A public index is
maintained in the Headquarters Library
and at the Web site of all final opinions
and orders made by the Postal Service
in the adjudication of cases, Postal
Service policy statements which may be
relied on as precedents in the
disposition of cases, administrative staff
manuals and instructions that affect the
public, and other materials which the
Postal Service elects to index and make
available to the public on request in the
manner set forth in paragraph (b) of this
section.
(ii) The index contains references to
matters issued after July 4, 1967, and
may reference matters issued prior to
that date.
(iii) Any person may arrange for the
inspection of any matter in the public
index in accordance with the
procedures of § 265.3.
(iv) Copies of the public index and of
matters listed in the public index may
be requested through the procedures
described in § 265.3, with payment of
any applicable fees.
(v) Materials listed in the public index
that were created on or after November
1, 1996, will also be available in
electronic format at the Postal Service’s
Web site at https://about.usps.com/whowe-are/foia/welcome.htm.
§ 265.3 Procedure for submitting a FOIA
request.
(a) To whom submitted. A request
must be submitted to the appropriate
FOIA Requester Service Center (RSC).
Descriptions of, and contact information
for, the various FOIA RSCs can be found
at https://about.usps.com/who-we-are/
foia/welcome.htm. For assistance in
determining the appropriate FOIA RSC,
requesters may contact the USPS HQ
FOIA Requester Service Center, Privacy
and Records Office, U.S. Postal Service,
475 L’Enfant Plaza SW., Washington,
DC 20260, telephone (202) 268–2608.
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Requests for listings of postal employee
names should also be sent to the USPS
HQ FOIA Requester Service Center.
(b) Form of request. A request to
inspect or to obtain a copy of an
identifiable Postal Service record must
be in writing and bear the caption
‘‘Freedom of Information Act Request’’
or otherwise be clearly and prominently
identified as a request for records
pursuant to the Freedom of Information
Act, both on the letter and on the
envelope or other cover. Requests for
records that are labeled incorrectly may
be delayed in reaching the appropriate
FOIA RSC. A requester must provide his
or her full name and mailing address. A
requester may also provide a daytime
telephone number or email address to
facilitate communication regarding his
or her request.
(c) Content of request. Requesters
must describe the records sought in
sufficient detail to enable Postal Service
personnel to locate them with a
reasonable amount of effort. Whenever
possible, requesters should include
specific information about each record
sought, such as the type of record (e.g.,
contract, report, memorandum, etc.); the
title or case number of a specific
document or report; the topic or subject
matter; the name of the office, facility,
functional unit or employees most likely
to possess the record; the geographical
location, such as a city and state, where
the records are thought to exist; the date
or general timeframe of the record’s
creation; and any details related to the
purpose of the record. Requests for
email records should specify the likely
senders and recipients, keywords, and a
range of dates. If seeking information
about a company, requesters should
provide the exact name and address of
the company (many companies use
similar names). Before submitting
requests, requesters may contact the
relevant Postal Service FOIA Requester
Service Center to discuss the records
they are seeking and to receive
assistance in describing the records. The
request may state the maximum amount
of fees for which the requester is willing
to accept liability without prior notice.
If no amount is stated, the requester will
be deemed willing to accept liability for
fees not to exceed $25.00. See paragraph
(e)(2) of § 265.9.The request may also
specify the preferred form or format
(including electronic formats) of the
requested records.
(d) First-party requests. A requester
who is making a request for records
about himself must provide verification
of identity sufficient to satisfy the
component as to his identity prior to
release of the record. For Privacy Actprotected records, the requester must
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further comply with the procedures set
forth in 39 CFR 266.6.
(e) Third-party requests. Where a
FOIA request seeks disclosure of records
that pertain to a third party, a requester
may receive greater access by submitting
a written authorization signed by that
individual authorizing disclosure of the
records to the requester, or by
submitting proof that the individual is
deceased (e.g., a copy of a death
certificate or an obituary). As an
exercise of administrative discretion,
each component can require a requester
to supply a notarized authorization, a
declaration, or other additional
information if necessary in order to
verify that a particular individual has
consented to disclosure.
(f) Improper requests. A request that
does not reasonably describe the records
sought, or does not comply with the
published rules regarding the
procedures to be followed for
submitting a request, will be deemed to
be an improper FOIA request. If after
receiving a request, the Postal Service
determines that it is improper, the
Postal Service will inform the requester
as to why the request is improper. If the
requester fails to respond to the Postal
Service’s request for clarification or
additional information within 30
calendar days, the Postal Service will
assume the requester is no longer
interested in pursuing the request and
close its file. The FOIA Requester
Service Centers and the FOIA Public
Liaisons are available to assist
requesters in correcting a request that
does not reasonably describe the records
sought.
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§ 265.4 Responsibility for responding to
requests.
(a) In general. When a request is
received, the FOIA RSC will either
respond to the request, or refer the
request to the appropriate FOIA RSC or
records custodians. The FOIA RSC will
advise the requester of any such referral.
The Postal Service, the Office of
Inspector General of the Postal Service,
and the Postal Inspection Service,
respectively, are responsible for
responding to requests they receive for
records they maintain. Records
responsive to a request ordinarily will
include only records in the Postal
Service’s possession as of the date of the
search. If any other date is used, the
Postal Service shall inform the requester
of that date. A record that is excluded
from the requirements of the FOIA
pursuant to 5 U.S.C. 552(c) or 39 U.S.C.
410(c) is not considered responsive to
the request.
(b) Authority to grant or deny
requests. The records custodian of the
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requested record, or his designee, is
authorized to grant or to deny the
request. FOIA RSC staff may also grant
or deny requests.
(c) Receipt and tracking of requests.
FOIA RSCs are responsible for the
initial receipt and tracking of FOIA
requests.
(d) Acknowledgments of requests.
FOIA RSCs must acknowledge the
request in writing and assign it an
individualized tracking number if it will
take longer than 10 working days to
process. The acknowledgement of the
request must include a brief description
of the records sought to allow requesters
to more easily keep track of their
requests.
§ 265.5
Timing of responses to requests.
(a) In general. Requests will ordinarily
be responded to according to their order
of receipt. A request that is not initially
submitted to the appropriate FOIA RSC
will be deemed to have been received by
the Postal Service at the time that it is
actually received by the appropriate
FOIA RSC or at the time the request is
referred to the appropriate records
custodian by a FOIA RSC, but in any
case a request will be deemed to have
been received no later than 10 business
days after the request is first received by
a FOIA RSC.
(b) Multitrack processing. (1) Unless
expedited processing has been granted,
the Postal Service places each request in
simple or complex tracks based on the
amount of work and time involved in
processing the request. Factors
considered in assigning a request into
the complex track may include one or
more of the following factors:
(i) The request involves voluminous
documents;
(ii) The complexity of the material;
(iii) The request involves record
searches at multiple facilities or
locations;
(iv) The request requires consultation
among components or other agencies;
(v) The number of open requests
submitted by the same requester.
(2) Within each track, the Postal
Service processes requests in the order
in which they are received. When
appropriate, the FOIA RSC or the
component will notify the requester if it
has placed the request in the ‘‘Complex’’
track, and provide the requester with an
opportunity to limit the scope of the
request. If the requester limits the scope
of the request, it may result in faster
processing.
(c) Expedited processing. (1) Requests
and appeals shall be processed on an
expedited basis whenever it is
determined that they involve:
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(i) Circumstances in which the lack of
expedited processing could reasonably
be expected to pose an imminent threat
to the life or physical safety of an
individual;
(ii) An urgency to inform the public
about an actual or alleged Federal
Government activity, if made by a
person who is primarily engaged in
disseminating information.
(2) A requester who seeks expedited
processing must submit a statement,
certified to be true and correct,
explaining in detail the basis for making
the request for expedited processing.
For example, under paragraph (e)(1)(ii)
of this section, a requester who is not a
full-time member of the news media
must establish that the requester is a
person whose primary professional
activity or occupation is information
dissemination, though it need not be the
requester’s sole occupation. Such a
requester also must establish a
particular urgency to inform the public
about the government activity involved
in the request—one that extends beyond
the public’s right to know about
government activity generally. The
existence of numerous articles
published on a given subject can be
helpful in establishing the requirement
that there be an ‘‘urgency to inform’’ the
public on the topic. As a matter of
administrative discretion, a component
may waive the formal certification
requirement.
(3) A component shall notify the
requester within 10 calendar days of the
receipt of a request for expedited
processing of its decision whether to
grant or deny expedited processing. If
expedited processing is granted, the
request shall be given priority, placed in
the processing track for expedited
requests, and shall be processed as soon
as practicable. If a request for expedited
processing is denied, any appeal of that
decision shall be acted on expeditiously
(d) Unusual circumstances. Whenever
the statutory time limit for processing a
request cannot be met because of
‘‘unusual circumstances’’, as defined in
the FOIA, and the component extends
the time limit on that basis, the
component shall, before the expiration
of the 20-day period to respond, notify
the requester in writing of the unusual
circumstances involved and of the date
by which processing of the request can
be expected to be completed. Where the
extension exceeds 10 working days, the
component shall, as described by the
FOIA, provide the requester with an
opportunity to modify the request or
arrange an alternative time period for
processing and alert the requester to the
availability of the Office of Government
Information Services to provide dispute
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resolution services. The component
shall make available its designated
FOIA contact and its FOIA Public
Liaison for this purpose.
(e) Aggregating requests. For the
purposes of satisfying unusual
circumstances under the FOIA, the
Postal Service may aggregate requests in
cases where it reasonably appears that
multiple requests, submitted either by a
single requester or by a group of
requesters acting in concert, constitute a
single request that would otherwise
involve unusual circumstances.
Multiple requests that involve unrelated
matters shall not be aggregated.
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§ 265.6
Responses to requests.
(a) Grants of requests. Once a
component makes a determination to
grant a request in whole or in part, it
shall notify the requester in writing and
include a statement alerting the
requester of his or her right to seek
assistance from the FOIA Public
Liaison. The component also shall
inform the requester of any fees charged
under § 265.9 and shall disclose the
requested records to the requester
promptly upon payment of any
applicable fees.
(b) Adverse determinations of
requests. A component making an
adverse determination denying a request
in any respect shall notify the requester
of that determination in writing.
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.
(c) Content of denial. The denial shall
include, to the extent applicable:
(1) The name and title or position of
the person responsible for the denial;
(2) A brief statement of the reasons for
the denial, including any FOIA
exemption applied by the component in
denying the request;
(3) An estimate of the volume of any
records or information 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
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protected by an applicable exemption;
and
(4) A statement that the denial may be
appealed under § 265.8, and a
description of the requirements set forth
therein.
(5) A statement notifying the requester
of his or her right to seek dispute
resolution services from the FOIA
Public Liaison or the Office of
Government Information Services.
(d) Markings on released documents.
Markings on released documents must
be clearly visible to the requester.
Records disclosed in part shall be
marked to 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.
The location of the information deleted
shall also be indicated on the record, if
technically feasible.
(e) Use of record exclusions. (1) In the
event that a component identifies
records that may be subject to exclusion
from the requirements of the FOIA
pursuant to 5 U.S.C. 552(c), the
component must confer with
Department of Justice, Office of
Information Policy (OIP), to obtain
approval to apply the exclusion.
§ 265.7 Confidential commercial
information obtained from submitters.
(a) Definitions. (1) Confidential
commercial information means
commercial or financial information
obtained by the Postal Service 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, State, or
foreign government, but not including
another Federal Government entity, that
provides information, either directly or
indirectly to the Postal Service.
(b) Designation of confidential
commercial information. A submitter of
confidential commercial information
must use good faith efforts to designate
by appropriate markings, either at the
time of submission or within a
reasonable time thereafter, any portion
of its submission that it considers to be
protected from disclosure under
Exemption 4. The Postal Service will
not determine the validity of any
request for confidential treatment until
a request for disclosure of the
information is received. These
designations shall expire 10 years after
the date of the submission unless the
submitter requests and provides
justification for a longer designation
period.
(c) When notice to submitters is
required. (1) The Postal Service shall
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promptly provide written notice to a
submitter of confidential commercial
information whenever records
containing such information are
requested under the FOIA if, after
reviewing the request, the responsive
records, and any appeal by the
requester, the Postal Service determines
that it may be required 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; or
(ii) The Postal Service has a reason to
believe that the requested information
may be protected from disclosure under
Exemption 4, but has not yet
determined whether the information is
protected from disclosure under that
exemption or any other applicable
exemption.
(2) The notice shall either 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,
notice may be made by posting or
publishing the notice in a place or
manner reasonably likely to accomplish
it.
(d) Exceptions to submitter notice
requirements. The notice requirements
of this section shall not apply if:
(1) The Postal Service determines that
the information is exempt under the
FOIA or 39 U.S.C. 410(c);
(2) The information has been lawfully
published or has been officially made
available to the public;
(3) Disclosure of the information is
required by a statute other than the
FOIA or by a Postal Service regulation;
if disclosure is required by a Postal
Service regulation and the submitter
provided written justification for
protection of the information under
Exemption 4 at the time of submission
or a reasonable time thereafter,
advanced written notice of the
disclosure must be provided to the
submitter; or
(4) The designation made by the
submitter under paragraph (b) of this
section appears obviously frivolous or
overly broad, except that, in such cases,
the component shall give the submitter
written notice of any final decision to
disclose the information and must
provide that notice within a reasonable
number of days prior to a specified
disclosure date.
(e) Opportunity to object to disclosure.
(1) The Postal Service shall specify a
reasonable time period within which
the submitter must respond to the notice
referenced above. If a submitter has any
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objections to disclosure, it should
provide the Postal Service a detailed
written statement that specifies all
grounds for withholding the particular
information under any exemption of the
FOIA. In order to rely on Exemption 4
as basis for nondisclosure, the submitter
must explain why the information
constitutes a trade secret or commercial
or financial information that is
privileged or confidential. Whenever
possible, the submitter’s claim of
confidentiality should be supported by
a statement or certification by an officer
or authorized representative of the
submitter that the information in
question is in fact confidential, has not
been disclosed to the public by the
submitter, and is not routinely available
to the public from other sources.
(2) A submitter who fails to respond
within the time period specified in the
notice shall be considered to have no
objection to disclosure of the
information. Information received by
the Postal Service after the date of any
disclosure decision shall not be
considered by the Postal Service. Any
information provided by a submitter
under this subpart may itself be subject
to disclosure under the FOIA. The
Postal Service must consider a
submitter’s objections and specific
grounds for nondisclosure in deciding
whether to disclose the requested
information.
(f) Determination that confidential
treatment is warranted. If the Postal
Service determines that confidential
treatment is warranted for any part of
the requested records and that the
records will therefore be redacted or
withheld, it must inform the requester
in writing, and must advise the
requester of the right to appeal. A copy
of the letter of denial must also be
provided to the submitter of the records
in any case in which the submitter had
been notified of the request.
(g) Notice of intent to disclose. If the
Postal Service decides to disclose
information over the objection of a
submitter, the Postal Service shall
provide the submitter written notice,
which shall include:
(1) A statement of the reasons why
each of the submitter’s disclosure
objections was not sustained;
(2) A description or copy of the
information to be disclosed; and
(3) A specified disclosure date, which
shall be a reasonable time subsequent to
the notice.
(h) Notice of FOIA lawsuit. Whenever
a requester files a lawsuit seeking to
compel the disclosure of confidential
commercial information, the component
shall promptly notify the submitter.
Whenever a submitter files a lawsuit to
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prevent disclosure of confidential
commercial information, the component
shall promptly notify the requester.
(i) Requester notification. The Postal
Service shall notify a requester
whenever it notifies the submitter of its
intent to disclose the requested
information.
§ 265.8
Administrative appeals.
(a) Requirements for making an
appeal. Requesters may appeal adverse
decisions rendered by the Postal
Inspection Service or any Postal Service
component by mail to the General
Counsel, U.S. Postal Service, 475
L’Enfant Plaza SW., Washington, DC
20260; or by email to foiaappeal@
usps.gov. The requester must make the
appeal in writing and to be considered
timely it must be postmarked, or in the
case of electronic submissions,
transmitted, within 90 calendar days
after the date of the response; or within
a reasonable time if the appeal is from
a failure of the custodian to act. The
General Counsel may, in his or her
discretion, consider late appeals. In the
event of the denial of a request or of
other action or failure to act on the part
of a custodian from which no appeal is
taken, the General Counsel may, if he or
she considers that there is doubt as to
the correctness of the custodian’s action
or failure to act, review the action or
failure to act as though an appeal
pursuant to this section had been taken.
A letter of appeal should include, as
applicable:
(1) A copy of the request, of any
notification of denial or other action,
and of any other related
correspondence;
(2) The FOIA tracking number
assigned to the request;
(3) A statement of the action, or
failure to act, from which the appeal is
taken;
(4) A statement identifying the
specific redactions to responsive records
that the requester is challenging;
(5) A statement of the relief sought;
and
(6) A statement of the reasons why the
requester believes the action or failure
to act is erroneous.
(b) Adjudication of appeals. (1) The
decision of the General Counsel or his
or her designee constitutes the final
decision of the Postal Service on the
issue being appealed. The General
Counsel will give prompt consideration
to an appeal for expedited processing of
a request. All other decisions normally
will be made within 20 working days
from the time of the receipt by the
General Counsel. The 20-day response
period may be extended by the General
Counsel, or his or her designee, for a
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period not to exceed an additional 10
working days when reasonably
necessary to permit the proper
consideration of an appeal, under one or
more of the unusual circumstances set
forth in paragraph (a)(5) of this section.
The aggregate number of additional
working days utilized, however, may
not exceed 10 working days.
(2) An appeal ordinarily will not be
adjudicated if the request becomes a
matter of FOIA litigation.
(3) On receipt of any appeal, the
General Counsel, or his or her designee,
must take appropriate action to ensure
compliance with applicable
classification rules.
(c) Decisions on appeals. A decision
on an appeal must be made in writing.
A decision that upholds a component’s
determination in whole or in part will
contain a statement that identifies the
reasons for the affirmance, including
any FOIA exemptions applied. The
decision will provide the requester with
notification of the statutory right to file
a lawsuit and will inform the requester
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 a
custodian’s decision is remanded or
modified on appeal, the requester will
be notified of that determination in
writing. The component will further
process the request in accordance with
that appeal determination and respond
directly to the requester. If not
prohibited by or under law, the General
Counsel, or his designee may direct the
disclosure of a record even though its
disclosure is not required by law or
regulation.
(d) When appeal is required. Before
seeking judicial review of a
component’s adverse determination, a
requester generally must first submit a
timely administrative appeal.
(e) Appeal procedures for the Office of
the Inspector General. The appeal
procedures for the Office of the
Inspector General are described in 39
CFR 230.5.
§ 265.9
Fees.
(a) In general. The Postal Service shall
charge for processing requests under the
FOIA in accordance with the provisions
of this section and with the OMB
Guidelines. In order to resolve any fee
issues that arise under this section, a
component may contact a requester for
additional information. The Postal
Service will conduct searches, review,
and duplication in the most efficient
and the least expensive manner. The
Postal Service ordinarily will collect all
applicable fees before sending copies of
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records to a requester. Requesters must
pay fees by check or money order made
payable to ‘‘U.S. Postal Service.’’
(b) Definitions. For purposes of this
section:
(1) Commercial-use requester is a
requester who 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. The Postal
Service’s decision to place a requester in
the commercial use category will be
made on a case-by-case basis based on
the requester’s intended use of the
information.
(2) Direct costs are those expenses that
the Postal Service incurs in searching
for and duplicating records in order to
respond to a FOIA request. In the case
of commercial-use requesters, direct
costs include reviewing and taking all
other measures needed to prepare the
records for disclosure.
(3) 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
expended to locate and retrieve
information from electronic records.
(4) Duplication is reproducing a copy
of a record, or of 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.
(5) Review is the examination of a
record located in response to a request
in order to determine whether 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 the process of
redacting the record and marking the
appropriate exemptions. Review costs
are properly charged even if a record
ultimately is not disclosed. Review time
also includes time spent both obtaining
and considering any formal objection to
disclosure made by a confidential
commercial information submitter
under § 265.6, but it does not include
time spent resolving general legal or
policy issues regarding the application
of exemptions.
(6) Educational institution is any
school that operates a program of
scholarly research. A requester in this
fee category must show that the request
is authorized by, and is made under the
auspices of, an educational institution
and that the records are not sought for
a commercial use, but rather are sought
to further scholarly research. To fall
within this fee category, the request
must serve the scholarly research goals
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of the institution rather than an
individual research goal.
(7) Noncommercial scientific
institution is an institution that is not
operated on a ‘‘commercial’’ basis, as
defined in paragraph (b)(1) of this
section and 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. A requester in this
category must show that the request is
authorized by and is made under the
auspices of a qualifying institution and
that the records are sought to further
scientific research and are not for a
commercial use.
(8) Representative of the news media
is any person or entity organized and
operated to publish or broadcast news to
the public that actively 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. A request for records
supporting the news-dissemination
function of the requester shall not be
considered to be for a commercial use.
‘‘Freelance’’ journalists who
demonstrate a solid basis for expecting
publication through a news media entity
shall be considered as a representative
of the news media. A publishing
contract would provide the clearest
evidence that publication is expected;
however, the Postal Service shall also
consider a requester’s past publication
record in making this determination.
(c) Charging fees. In responding to
FOIA requests, the Postal Service shall
charge the following fees unless a
waiver or reduction of fees has been
granted under paragraph (k) of this
section. Because the fee amounts
provided below already account for the
direct costs associated with a given fee
type, components should not add any
additional costs to charges calculated
under this section.
(1) Search. (i) Requests made by
educational institutions, noncommercial
scientific institutions, or representatives
of the news media are not subject to
search fees. Search fees shall be charged
for all other requesters, subject to the
restrictions of paragraph (d) of this
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section. The Postal Service may charge
for time spent searching even if no
responsive records are located or if it
determines that the records are entirely
exempt from disclosure.
(ii) For each half hour spent by
personnel searching for requested
records, including electronic searches
that do not require new programming,
the fee shall be $21.00.
(iii) Requesters shall be charged the
direct costs associated with conducting
any search that requires the creation of
a new computer program to locate the
requested records. Requesters shall be
notified of the costs associated with
creating such a program and must agree
to pay the associated costs before the
costs may be incurred.
(iv) For requests that require the
retrieval of records stored at a Federal
records center operated by the National
Archives and Records Administration
(NARA), or other storage facility,
additional costs may be charged for
their retrieval.
(2) Duplication. Duplication fees shall
be charged to all requesters, subject to
the restrictions of paragraph (d) of this
section. A component shall honor a
requester’s preference for receiving a
record in a particular form or format
where it is readily reproducible by the
component in the form or format
requested. Where photocopies are
supplied, the component shall provide
one copy per request at a cost of five
cents per page. For copies of records
produced on tapes, disks, or other
media, components shall charge the
direct costs of producing the copy,
including operator time. Where paper
documents must be scanned in order to
comply with a requester’s preference to
receive the records in an electronic
format, the requester shall pay the direct
costs associated with scanning those
materials. For other forms of
duplication, components shall charge
the direct costs.
(3) Review. Commercial-use
requesters shall be charged review fees.
Review fees shall be assessed in
connection with the initial review of the
record, i.e., the review conducted by a
component to determine whether an
exemption applies to a particular record
or portion of a record. No charge will be
made for review at the administrative
appeal stage of exemptions applied at
the initial review stage. However, if a
particular exemption is deemed to no
longer apply, any costs associated with
a component’s re-review of the records
in order to consider the use of other
exemptions may be assessed as review
fees. Review fees shall be charged at the
same rates as those charged for a search
under paragraph (c)(1)(ii) of this section.
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(d) Restrictions on charging fees. (1)
No search fees will be charged for
requests by educational institutions
(unless the records are sought for a
commercial use), noncommercial
scientific institutions, or representatives
of the news media.
(2)(i) If a component fails to comply
with the time limits in which to respond
to a request, it may not charge search
fees, or, in the instances of requests
from requesters described in paragraph
(d)(1) of this section, may not charge
duplication fees.
(ii) If a component has determined
that unusual circumstances as defined
by the FOIA apply and the component
provided timely written notice to the
requester in accordance with the FOIA,
the component has an additional 10
days to respond to the request.
(iii) If a component has determined
that unusual circumstances as defined
by the FOIA apply and more than 5,000
pages are necessary to respond to the
request, the component may charge
search fees, or, in the case of requesters
described in paragraph (d)(1) of this
section, may charge duplication fees if
the following steps are taken:
(A) The component provides timely
written notice of unusual circumstances
to the requester; and
(B) The component discussed or made
three good faith attempts to discuss via
mail, email, or telephone how the
requester could effectively limit the
scope of the request in accordance with
5 U.S.C. 552(a)(6)(B)(ii).
(iv) If a court has determined that
exceptional circumstances exist, a
failure to comply with the time limits
shall be excused for the length of time
provided by the court order.
(3) No search or review fees will be
charged for a quarter-hour period unless
more than half of that period is required
for search or review.
(4) Except for requesters seeking
records for a commercial use,
components shall provide without
charge:
(i) The first 100 pages of duplication
(or the cost equivalent for other media);
and
(ii) The first two hours of search.
(5) When, after first deducting the 100
free pages (or its cost equivalent) and
the first two hours of search, a total fee
calculated under paragraph (c) of this
section is $25.00 or less for any request,
no fee will be charged.
(e) Notice of anticipated fees in excess
of $25.00. (1) When a component
determines or estimates that the fees to
be assessed in accordance with this
section will exceed $25.00, the
component shall notify the requester of
the actual or estimated amount of the
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fees, including a breakdown of the fees
for search, review or duplication, unless
the requester has indicated a
willingness to pay fees as high as those
anticipated. If only a portion of the fee
can be estimated readily, the component
shall advise the requester accordingly. If
the requester is a noncommercial use
requester, the notice shall specify that
the requester is entitled to the statutory
entitlements of 100 pages of duplication
at no charge and, if the requester is
charged search fees, two hours of search
time at no charge, and shall advise the
requester whether those entitlements
have been provided.
(2) In cases in which a requester has
been notified that the actual or
estimated fees are in excess of $25.00,
the request shall not be considered
received and further work will not be
completed until the requester agrees in
writing to pay the actual or estimated
total fee, or designates some amount of
fees the requester is willing to pay, or
in the case of a noncommercial use
requester who has not yet been provided
with the requester’s statutory
entitlements, designates that the
requester seeks only that which can be
provided by the statutory entitlements.
Components are not required to accept
payments in installments.
(3) If the requester has indicated a
willingness to pay some designated
amount of fees, but the component
estimates that the total fee will exceed
that amount, the component shall toll
the processing of the request when it
notifies the requester of the estimated
fees in excess of the amount the
requester has indicated a willingness to
pay. The component shall inquire
whether the requester wishes to revise
the amount of fees the requester is
willing to pay or modify the request.
Once the requester responds, the time to
respond will resume from where it was
at the date of the notification.
(4) Components shall make available
their FOIA Public Liaison or other FOIA
contact to assist any requester in
reformulating a request to meet the
requester’s needs at a lower cost.
(f) Charges for other services.
Although not required to provide
special services, if a component chooses
to do so as a matter of administrative
discretion, the direct costs of providing
the service requested by the requester
shall be charged. Examples of such
services include providing multiple
copies of the same document, or
sending records by means other than
first class mail.
(g) Aggregating requests. In instances
where the Postal Service reasonably
believes that a requester or a group of
requesters acting in concert is
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attempting to divide a single request
into a series of requests for the purpose
of avoiding fees, or that a requester or
group of requesters acting in concert
makes multiple requests for the same
records maintained at multiple facilities
or components, the Postal Service may
aggregate those requests and charge
accordingly. Multiple FOIA requests by
a single requester related to the same
issue will be aggregated for the purpose
of assessing fees. Multiple requests
involving unrelated matters shall not be
aggregated.
(h) Advance payments. (1) For
requests other than those described in
paragraphs (h)(2) or (3) of this section,
a component shall not require the
requester to submit an advance payment
before work is commenced or continued
on a request. Payment owed for work
already completed (i.e., payment before
copies are sent to a requester) is not an
advance payment.
(2) When a component determines or
estimates that a total fee to be charged
under this section will exceed $250.00,
it may require that the requester make
an advance payment up to the amount
of the entire anticipated fee before
beginning to process the request. A
component may elect to process the
request prior to collecting fees when it
receives a satisfactory assurance of full
payment from a requester with a history
of prompt payment.
(3) Where a requester has previously
failed to pay a properly charged FOIA
fee within 30 calendar days of the
billing date, a component may require
that the requester pay the full amount
due on that prior request, and the
component may require that the
requester make an advance payment of
the full amount of any anticipated fee
before the component begins to process
a new request or continues to process a
pending request or any pending appeal.
Where a component has a reasonable
basis to believe that a requester has
misrepresented the requester’s identity
in order to avoid paying outstanding
fees, it may require that the requester
provide proof of identity.
(4) In cases in which a component
requires advance payment, the request
shall not be considered received and
further work will not be completed until
the required payment is received. If the
requester does not pay the advance
payment within 30 calendar days after
the date of the component’s fee
determination, the request will be
administratively closed.
(i) Other statutes specifically
providing for fees. The fee schedule of
this section does not apply to fees
charged under any statute that
specifically requires the Postal Service
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to set and collect fees for particular
types of records. In instances where
records responsive to a request are
subject to a statutorily-based fee
schedule program, the component shall
inform the requester of the contact
information for that program.
(j) Requirements for waiver or
reduction of fees. (1) Records responsive
to a request shall be furnished without
charge or at a reduced rate below the
rate established under paragraph (c) of
this section, where a component
determines, based on all available
information, that the requester has
demonstrated that:
(i) 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 Postal
Service, and
(ii) Disclosure of the information is
not primarily in the commercial interest
of the requester.
(2) In deciding whether disclosure of
the requested information is in the
public interest because it is likely to
contribute significantly to public
understanding of operations or activities
of the Postal Service, components shall
consider all four of the following
factors:
(i) The subject of the request must
concern identifiable operations or
activities of the Postal Service, with a
connection that is direct and clear, not
remote or attenuated.
(ii) Disclosure of the requested
records must be meaningfully
informative about government
operations or activities in order to be
‘‘likely to contribute’’ to an increased
public understanding of those
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
contribute to such understanding where
nothing new would be added to the
public’s understanding.
(iii) The disclosure must contribute to
the understanding of a reasonably broad
audience of persons interested in the
subject, as opposed to the individual
understanding of the requester. A
requester’s expertise in the subject area
as well as the requester’s ability and
intention to effectively convey
information to the public shall be
considered. A representative of the
news media does not automatically
satisfy this consideration.
(iv) The public’s understanding of the
subject in question must be enhanced by
the disclosure to a significant extent.
(3) To determine whether disclosure
of the requested information is
primarily in the commercial interest of
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the requester, components shall
consider the following factors:
(i) Components shall identify any
commercial interest of the requester, as
defined in paragraph (b)(1) of this
section, that would be furthered by the
requested disclosure. Requesters shall
be given an opportunity to provide
explanatory information regarding this
consideration.
(ii) Disclosure to data brokers or
others who merely compile and market
government information for direct
economic return shall not be presumed
to primarily serve the public interest.
(4) Where only some of the records to
be released satisfy the requirements for
a waiver of fees, a waiver shall be
granted for those records.
(5) Requests for a waiver or reduction
of fees should be made when the request
is first submitted to the component and
should address the criteria referenced
above. A requester may submit a fee
waiver request at a later time so long as
the underlying record request is
pending or on administrative appeal.
When a requester who has committed to
pay fees subsequently asks for a waiver
of those fees and that waiver is denied,
the requester shall be required to pay
any costs incurred up to the date the fee
waiver request was received.
Subpart B—Production or Disclosure
in Federal and State Proceedings
§ 265.11 Compliance with subpoena
duces tecum, court orders, and
summonses.
(a) Compliance with subpoena duces
tecum. (1) Except as required by Part
262, produce other records of the Postal
Service only in compliance with a
subpoena duces tecum or appropriate
court order.
(2) Time, leave, and payroll records of
postal employees are subject to
production when a subpoena duces
tecum or appropriate court order has
been properly served. The custodian of
the records may designate a postal
employee to present the records. The
presentation by a designee rather than
the employee named in the subpoena or
court order must meet with the approval
of the attorneys for each side. In
addition, such records may be released
if authorized in writing by the
employee.
(3) If the subpoena involves a jobconnected injury, the records are under
the exclusive jurisdiction of the Office
of Workers’ Compensation Programs,
Department of Labor. Requests for
authorization to produce these records
shall be addressed to: Office of Workers’
Compensation Programs, U.S.
Department of Labor, Washington, DC
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20210–0001. Also notify the attorney
responsible for the issuance of the
subpoena or court order.
(4) Employee medical records are
primarily under the exclusive
jurisdiction of the U.S. Civil Service
Commission. The Commission has
delegated authority to the Postal Service
and to the Commission’s Regional
Directors to release medical
information, in response to proper
requests and upon competent medical
advice, in accordance with the
following criteria:
(i) Except in response to a subpoena
or court order, do not release any
medical information about an employee
to any non-Federal entity or individual
without authorization from the
employee.
(ii) With authorization from the
employee, the Area, Information
Systems Service Center, or Chief Field
Counsel will respond as follows to a
request from a non-Federal source for
medical information:
(A) If, in the opinion of a Federal
medical officer, the medical information
indicates the existence of a malignancy,
a mental condition, or other condition
about which a prudent physician would
hesitate to inform a person suffering
from such a condition as to its exact
nature and probable outcome, do not
release the medical information to the
employee or to any individual
designated by him, except to a
physician, designated by the employee
in writing. If a subpoena or court order
was issued, the responding official shall
caution the moving party as to the
possible dangers involved if the medical
information is divulged.
(B) If, in the opinion of a Federal
medical officer, the medical information
does not indicate the presence of any
condition which would cause a prudent
physician to hesitate to inform a person
of the exact nature and probable
outcome of his condition, release it in
response to a subpoena or court order,
or to the employee or to any person,
firm, or organization he authorizes in
writing.
(C) If a Federal medical officer is not
available, refer the request to the Civil
Service Commission regional office with
the medical certificates or other medical
reports concerned.
(5) Do not release any records
containing information as to the
employee’s security or loyalty.
(6) Honor subpoenas or court orders
only when disclosure is authorized.
(7) When authorized to comply with
a subpoena duces tecum, do not leave
the original records with the court.
(b) [Reserved]
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§ 265.12 Demands for testimony or
records in certain legal proceedings.
(a) Scope and applicability of this
section. (1) This section establishes
procedures to be followed if the Postal
Service or any Postal Service employee
receives a demand for testimony
concerning or disclosure of:
(i) Records contained in the files of
the Postal Service;
(ii) Information relating to records
contained in the files of the Postal
Service; or
(iii) Information or records acquired
or produced by the employee in the
course of his or her official duties or
because of the employee’s official status.
(2) This section does not create any
right or benefit, substantive or
procedural, enforceable by any person
against the Postal Service.
(3) This section does not apply to any
of the following:
(i) Any legal proceeding in which the
United States is a party;
(ii) A demand for testimony or records
made by either House of Congress or, to
the extent of matter within its
jurisdiction, any committee or
subcommittee of Congress;
(iii) An appearance by an employee in
his or her private capacity in a legal
proceeding in which the employee’s
testimony does not relate to the
employee’s official duties or the
functions of the Postal Service; or
(iv) A demand for testimony or
records submitted to the Postal
Inspection Service (a demand for
Inspection Service records or testimony
will be handled in accordance with
rules in § 265.13).
(4) This section does not exempt a
request from applicable confidentiality
requirements, including the
requirements of the Privacy Act, 5
U.S.C. 552a.
(b) Definitions. The following
definitions apply to this section:
(1) Adjudicative authority includes,
but is not limited to, the following:
(i) A court of law or other judicial
forums, whether local, state, or federal;
and
(ii) Mediation, arbitration, or other
forums for dispute resolution.
(2) Demand includes a subpoena,
subpoena duces tecum, request, order,
or other notice for testimony or records
arising in a legal proceeding.
(3) Employee means a current
employee or official of the Postal
Service.
(4) General Counsel means the
General Counsel of the United States
Postal Service, the Chief Field Counsels,
or an employee of the Postal Service
acting for the General Counsel under a
delegation of authority.
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(5) Legal proceeding means:
(i) A proceeding before an
adjudicative authority;
(ii) A legislative proceeding, except
for a proceeding before either House of
Congress or before any committee or
subcommittee of Congress; or
(iii) An administrative proceeding.
(6) Private litigation means a legal
proceeding to which the United States
is not a party.
(7) Records custodian means the
employee who maintains a requested
record. For assistance in identifying the
custodian of a specific record, contact
the Manager, Records Office, U.S. Postal
Service, 475 L’Enfant Plaza SW.,
Washington, DC 20260, telephone (202)
268–2608.
(8) Testimony means statements made
in connection with a legal proceeding,
including but not limited to statements
in court or other forums, depositions,
declarations, affidavits, or responses to
interrogatories.
(9) United States means the federal
government of the United States and
any of its agencies, establishments, or
instrumentalities, including the United
States Postal Service.
(c) Requirements for submitting a
demand for testimony or records. (1)
Ordinarily, a party seeking to obtain
records from the Postal Service should
submit a request in accordance with the
provisions of the Freedom of
Information Act (FOIA), 5 U.S.C. 552,
and the Postal Service’s regulations
implementing the FOIA at 39 CFR 265.1
through 265.9, 265.14; or the Privacy
Act, 5 U.S.C. 552a and the Postal
Service’s regulations implementing the
Privacy Act at 39 CFR 266.1 through
266.10.
(2) A demand for testimony or records
issued pursuant to the rules governing
the legal proceeding in which the
demand arises must:
(i) Be in writing;
(ii) Identify the requested record and/
or state the nature of the requested
testimony, describe the relevance of the
record or testimony to the proceeding,
and why the information sought is
unavailable by any other means; and
(iii) If testimony is requested, contain
a summary of the requested testimony
and a showing that no document could
be provided and used in lieu of
testimony.
(3) Procedures for service of demand
are made as follows:
(i) Service of a demand for testimony
or records (including, but not limited to,
personnel or payroll information)
relating to a current or former employee
must be made in accordance with the
applicable rules of civil procedure on
the employee whose testimony is
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requested or the records custodian. The
requester also shall deliver a copy of the
demand to the District Manager,
Customer Services and Sales, for all
current employees whose work location
is within the geographic boundaries of
the manager’s district, and any former
employee whose last position was
within the geographic boundaries of the
manager’s district. A demand for
testimony or records must be received
by the employee whose testimony is
requested and the appropriate District
Manager, Customer Services and Sales,
at least ten (10) working days before the
date the testimony or records are
needed.
(ii) Service of a demand for testimony
or records other than those described in
paragraph (c)(3)(i) of this section must
be made in accordance with the
applicable rules of civil procedure on
the employee whose testimony is
requested or the records custodian. The
requester also shall deliver a copy of the
demand to the General Counsel, United
States Postal Service, 475 L’Enfant Plaza
SW., Washington DC 20260–1100, or the
Chief Field Counsel. A demand for
testimony or records must be received
by the employee and the General
Counsel or Chief Field Counsel at least
ten (10) working days before the date
testimony or records are needed.
(d) Procedures followed in response to
a demand for testimony or records. (1)
After an employee receives a demand
for testimony or records, the employee
shall immediately notify the General
Counsel or Chief Field Counsel and
request instructions.
(2) An employee may not give
testimony or produce records without
the prior authorization of the General
Counsel.
(3)(i) The General Counsel may allow
an employee to testify or produce
records if the General Counsel
determines that granting permission:
(A) Would be appropriate under the
rules of procedure governing the matter
in which the demand arises and other
applicable laws, privileges, rules,
authority, and regulations; and
(B) Would not be contrary to the
interest of the United States. The
interest of the United States includes,
but is not limited to, furthering a public
interest of the Postal Service and
protecting the human and financial
resources of the United States.
(ii) An employee’s testimony shall be
limited to the information set forth in
the statement described at paragraph
(c)(2) of this section or to such portions
thereof as the General Counsel
determines are not subject to objection.
An employee’s testimony shall be
limited to facts within the personal
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knowledge of the employee. A Postal
Service employee authorized to give
testimony under this rule is prohibited
from giving expert or opinion testimony,
answering hypothetical or speculative
questions, or giving testimony with
respect to privileged subject matter. The
General Counsel may waive the
prohibition of expert testimony under
this paragraph only upon application
and showing of exceptional
circumstances and the request
substantially meets the requirements of
this section.
(4) The General Counsel may establish
conditions under which the employee
may testify. If the General Counsel
authorizes the testimony of an
employee, the party seeking testimony
shall make arrangements for the taking
of testimony by those methods that, in
the General Counsel’s view, will least
disrupt the employee’s official duties.
For example, at the General Counsel’s
discretion, testimony may be provided
by affidavits, answers to interrogatories,
written depositions, or depositions
transcribed, recorded, or preserved by
any other means allowable by law.
(5) If a response to a demand for
testimony or records is required before
the General Counsel determines
whether to allow an employee to testify,
the employee or counsel for the
employee shall do the following:
(i) Inform the court or other authority
of the regulations in this section; and
(ii) Request that the demand be stayed
pending the employee’s receipt of the
General Counsel’s instructions.
(6) If the court or other authority
declines the request for a stay, or rules
that the employee must comply with the
demand regardless of the General
Counsel’s instructions, the employee or
counsel for the employee shall
respectfully decline to comply with the
demand, citing United States ex rel.
Touhy v. Ragen, 340 U.S. 462 (1951),
and the regulations in this section.
(7) The General Counsel may request
the assistance of the Department of
Justice or a U.S. Attorney where
necessary to represent the interests of
the Postal Service and the employee.
(8) At his or her discretion, the
General Counsel may grant a waiver of
any procedure described by this section,
where waiver is considered necessary to
promote a significant interest of the
United States or for other good cause.
(9) If it otherwise is permissible, the
records custodian may authenticate,
upon the request of the party seeking
disclosure, copies of the records. No
employee of the Postal Service shall
respond in strict compliance with the
terms of a subpoena duces tecum unless
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specifically authorized by the General
Counsel.
(e) Postal Service employees as expert
witnesses. No Postal Service employee
may testify as an expert or opinion
witness, with regard to any matter
arising out of the employee’s official
duties or the functions of the Postal
Service, for any party other than the
United States, except that in
extraordinary circumstances, the
General Counsel may approve such
expert testimony in private litigation. A
Postal Service employee may not testify
as such an expert witness without the
express authorization of the General
Counsel. A litigant must obtain
authorization of the General Counsel
before designating a Postal Service
employee as an expert witness.
(f) Substitution of Postal Service
employees. Although a demand for
testimony may be directed to a named
Postal Service employee, the General
Counsel, where appropriate, may
designate another Postal Service
employee to give testimony. Upon
request and for good cause shown (for
example, when a particular Postal
Service employee has direct knowledge
of a material fact not known to the
substitute employee designated by the
Postal Service), the General Counsel
may permit testimony by a named
Postal Service employee.
(g) Fees and costs. (1) The Postal
Service may charge fees, not to exceed
actual costs, to private litigants seeking
testimony or records by request or
demand. The fees, which are to be
calculated to reimburse fully the Postal
Service for processing the demand and
providing the witness or records, may
include, among others:
(i) Costs of time spent by employees,
including attorneys, of the Postal
Service to process and respond to the
demand;
(ii) Costs of attendance of the
employee and agency attorney at any
deposition, hearing, or trial;
(iii) Travel costs of the employee and
agency attorney;
(iv) Costs of materials and equipment
used to search for, process, and make
available information.
(2) All costs for employee time shall
be calculated on the hourly pay of the
employee (including all pay, allowance,
and benefits) and shall include the
hourly fee for each hour, or portion of
each hour, when the employee is in
travel, in attendance at a deposition,
hearing, or trial, or is processing or
responding to a request or demand.
(3) At the discretion of the Postal
Service, where appropriate, costs may
be estimated and collected before
testimony is given.
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(h) Acceptance of service. This
section does not in any way abrogate or
modify the requirements of the Federal
Rules of Civil Procedure (28 U.S.C.
Appendix) regarding service of process.
§ 265.13 Compliance with subpoenas,
summonses, and court orders by postal
employees within the Postal Inspection
Service where the Postal Service, the
United States, or any other Federal agency
is not a party.
(a) Applicability of this section. The
rules in this section apply to all federal,
state, and local court proceedings, as
well as administrative and legislative
proceedings, other than:
(1) Proceedings where the United
States, the Postal Service, or any other
Federal agency is a party;
(2) Congressional requests or
subpoenas for testimony or documents;
(3) Consultative services and
technical assistance rendered by the
Inspection Service in executing its
normal functions;
(4) Employees serving as expert
witnesses in connection with
professional and consultative services
under 5 CFR part 7001, provided that
employees acting in this capacity must
state for the record that their testimony
reflects their personal opinions and
should not be viewed as the official
position of the Postal Service;
(5) Employees making appearances in
their private capacities in proceedings
that do not relate to the Postal Service
(e.g., cases arising from traffic accidents,
domestic relations) and do not involve
professional or consultative services;
and
(6) When in the opinion of the
Counsel or the Counsel’s designee,
Office of the Chief Postal Inspector, it
has been determined that it is in the best
interest of the Inspection Service or in
the public interest.
(b) Purpose and scope. The provisions
in this section limit the participation of
postal employees within or assigned to
the Inspection Service, in private
litigation, and other proceedings in
which the Postal Service, the United
States, or any other federal agency is not
a party. The rules are intended to
promote the careful supervision of
Inspection Service resources and to
reduce the risk of inappropriate
disclosures that might affect postal
operations.
(c) Definitions. For the purposes of
this section:
(1) Authorizing official is the person
responsible for giving the authorization
for release of documents or permission
to testify.
(2) Case or matter means any civil
proceeding before a court of law,
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administrative board, hearing officer, or
other body conducting a judicial or
administrative proceeding in which the
United States, the Postal Service, or
another federal agency is not a named
party.
(3) Demand includes any request,
order, or subpoena for testimony or the
production of documents.
(4) Document means all records,
papers, or official files, including, but
not limited to, official letters, telegrams,
memoranda, reports, studies, calendar
and diary entries, graphs, notes, charts,
tabulations, data analyses, statistical or
information accumulations, records of
meetings and conversations, film
impressions, magnetic tapes, computer
discs, and sound or mechanical
reproductions;
(5) Employee or Inspection Service
employee, for the purpose of this section
only, refers to a Postal Service employee
currently or formerly assigned to the
Postal Inspection Service, student
interns, contractors and employees of
contractors who have access to
Inspection Service information and
records.
(6) Inspection Service means the
organizational unit within the Postal
Service that performs the functions
specified in part 233 of this chapter.
(7) Inspection Service Legal Counsel is
an attorney authorized by the Chief
Postal Inspector to give legal advice to
members of the Inspection Service.
(8) Inspection Service Manual is the
directive containing the standard
operating procedures for Postal
Inspectors and certain Inspection
Service employees.
(9) Nonpublic includes any material
or information not subject to mandatory
public disclosure under § 265.14(b).
(10) Official case file means official
documents that relate to a particular
case or investigation. These documents
may be kept at any location and do not
necessarily have to be in the same
location in order to constitute the file.
(11) Postal Inspector reports include
all written reports, letters, recordings, or
other memorializations made in
conjunction with the duties of a Postal
Inspector.
(12) Testify or testimony includes
both in-person oral statements before
any body conducting a judicial or
administrative proceeding and
statements made in depositions,
answers to interrogatories, declarations,
affidavits, or other similar documents.
(13) Third-party action means an
action, judicial or administrative, in
which the United States, the Postal
Service, or any other federal agency is
not a named party.
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(d) Policy. (1) No current or former
employee within the Inspection Service
may testify or produce documents
concerning information acquired in the
course of employment or as a result of
his or her relationship with the Postal
Service in any proceeding to which this
section applies (see paragraph (a) of this
section), unless authorized to do so.
Authorization will be provided by:
(i) The Postal Inspector in Charge of
the affected field Division, or designee,
for Division personnel and records, after
that official has determined through
consultation with Inspection Service
legal counsel that no legal objection,
privilege, or exemption applies to such
testimony or production of documents.
(ii) The Chief Postal Inspector or
designee for Headquarters employees
and records, after that official has
determined through consultation with
Inspection Service legal counsel, that no
legal objection, privilege, or exemption
applies to such testimony or production
of documents.
(2) Consideration shall be given to:
(i) Statutory restrictions, as well as
any legal objection, exemption, or
privilege that may apply;
(ii) Relevant legal standards for
disclosure of nonpublic information and
documents;
(iii) Inspection Service rules and
regulations and the public interest;
(iv) Conservation of employee time;
and
(v) Prevention of the expenditure of
Postal Service resources for private
purposes.
(3) If additional information is
necessary before a determination can be
made, the authorizing official may, in
coordination with Inspection Service
legal counsel, request assistance from
the Department of Justice.
(e) Compliance with subpoena duces
tecum. (1) Except as required by part
262 of this chapter, produce any other
record of the Postal Service only in
compliance with a subpoena duces
tecum or appropriate court order.
(2) Do not release any record
containing information relating to an
employee’s security or loyalty.
(3) Honor subpoenas and court orders
only when disclosure is authorized.
(4) When authorized to comply with
a subpoena duces tecum or court order,
do not leave the originals with the court.
(5) Postal Inspector reports are
considered to be confidential internal
documents and shall not be released
unless there is specific authorization by
the Chief Postal Inspector or the
Inspector in Charge of the affected field
Division, after consulting with
Inspection Service legal counsel.
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(6) The Inspection Service Manual
and other operating instructions issued
to Inspection Service employees are
considered to be confidential and shall
not be released unless there is specific
authorization, after consultation with
Inspection Service legal counsel. If the
requested information relates to
confidential investigative techniques, or
release of the information would
adversely affect the law enforcement
mission of the Inspection Service, the
subpoenaed official, through Inspection
Service legal counsel, may request an in
camera, ex parte conference to
determine the necessity for the release
of the information. The entire Manual
should not be given to any party.
(7) Notes, memoranda, reports,
transcriptions, whether written or
recorded and made pursuant to an
official investigation conducted by a
member of the Inspection Service, are
the property of the Inspection Service
and are part of the official case file,
whether stored with the official file.
(f) Compliance with summonses and
subpoenas ad testificandum. (1) If an
Inspection Service employee is served
with a third-party summons or a
subpoena requiring an appearance in
court, contact should be made with
Inspection Service legal counsel to
determine whether and which
exemptions or restrictions apply to
proposed testimony. Inspection Service
employees are directed to comply with
summonses, subpoenas, and court
orders, as to appearance, but may not
testify without authorization.
(2) Postal Inspector reports or records
will not be presented during testimony,
in either state or federal courts in which
the United States, the Postal Service, or
another federal agency is not a party in
interest, unless authorized by the Chief
Postal Inspector or the Postal Inspector
in Charge of the affected field Division,
who will make the decision after
consulting with Inspection Service legal
counsel. If an attempt is made to compel
production, through testimony, the
employee is directed to decline to
produce the information or matter and
to state that it may be exempted and
may not be disclosed or produced
without the specific approval of the
Chief Postal Inspector or the Postal
Inspector in Charge of the affected field
Division. The Postal Service will offer
all possible assistance to the courts, but
the question of disclosing information
for which an exemption may be claimed
is a matter of discretion that rests with
the appropriate official. Paragraph (e) of
this section covers the release of
Inspection Service documents in cases
where the Postal Service or the United
States is not a party.
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(g) General procedures for obtaining
Inspection Service documents and
testimony from Inspection Service
employees. (1) To facilitate the orderly
response to demands for the testimony
of Inspection Service employees and
production of documents in cases where
the United States, the Postal Service, or
another federal agency is not a party, all
demands for the production of
nonpublic documents or testimony of
Inspection Service employees
concerning matters relating to their
official duties and not subject to the
exemptions set forth in paragraph (a) of
this section shall be in writing and
conform to the requirements outlined in
paragraphs (g)(2) and (g)(3) of this
section.
(2) Before or simultaneously with
service of a demand described in
paragraph (g)(1) of this section, the
requesting party shall serve on the
Counsel, Office of the Chief Postal
Inspector, 475 L’Enfant Plaza SW.,
Washington, DC 20260–2101, an
affidavit or declaration containing the
following information:
(i) The title of the case and the forum
where it will be heard;
(ii) The party’s interest in the case;
(iii) The reasons for the demand;
(iv) A showing that the requested
information is available, by law, to a
party outside the Postal Service;
(v) If testimony is sought, a summary
of the anticipated testimony;
(vi) If testimony is sought, a showing
that Inspection Service records could
not be provided and used in place of the
requested testimony;
(vii) The intended use of the
documents or testimony; and
(viii) An affirmative statement that the
documents or testimony is necessary for
defending or prosecuting the case at
issue.
(3) The Counsel, Office of the Chief
Postal Inspector, shall act as agent for
the receipt of legal process for demands
for production of records or testimony
of Inspection Service employees where
the United States, the Postal Service, or
any other federal agency is not a party.
A subpoena for testimony or for the
production of documents from an
Inspection Service employee concerning
official matters shall be served in
accordance with the applicable rules of
civil procedure. A copy of the subpoena
and affidavit or declaration, if not
previously furnished, shall also be sent
to the Chief Postal Inspector or the
appropriate Postal Inspector in Charge.
(4) Any Inspection Service employee
who is served with a demand shall
promptly inform the Chief Postal
Inspector, or the appropriate Postal
Inspector in Charge, of the nature of the
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16:13 Nov 29, 2016
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documents or testimony sought and all
relevant facts and circumstances.
(h) Authorization of testimony or
production of documents. (1) The Chief
Postal Inspector or the Postal Inspector
in Charge of the affected field Division,
after consulting with Inspection Service
legal counsel, shall determine whether
testimony or the production of
documents will be authorized.
(2) Before authorizing the requested
testimony or the production of
documents, the Chief Postal Inspector or
the Postal Inspector in Charge of the
affected field Division shall consider the
following factors:
(i) Statutory restrictions, as well as
any legal objection, exemption, or
privilege that may apply;
(ii) Relevant legal standards for
disclosure of nonpublic information and
documents;
(iii) Inspection Service rules and
regulations and the public interest;
(iv) Conservation of employee time;
and
(v) Prevention of expenditures of
government time and resources solely
for private purposes.
(3) If, in the opinion of the
authorizing official, the documents
should not be released or testimony
should not be furnished, that official’s
decision is final.
(4) Inspection Service legal counsel
may consult or negotiate with the party
or the party’s counsel seeking testimony
or documents to refine and limit the
demand, so that compliance is less
burdensome, or obtain information
necessary to make the determination
whether the documents or testimony
will be authorized. If the party or party’s
counsel seeking the documents or
testimony fails to cooperate in good
faith, preventing Inspection Service
legal counsel from making an informed
recommendation to the authorizing
official, that failure may be presented to
the court or other body conducting the
proceeding as a basis for objection.
(5) Permission to testify or to release
documents in all cases will be limited
to matters outlined in the affidavit or
declaration described in paragraph (g)(2)
of this section or to such parts as
deemed appropriate by the authorizing
official.
(6) If the authorizing official allows
the release of documents or testimony to
be given by an employee, arrangements
shall be made for the taking of
testimony or receipt of documents by
the least disruptive methods to the
employee’s official duties. Testimony
may, for example, be provided by
affidavits, answers to interrogatories,
written depositions, or depositions
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transcribed, recorded, or preserved by
any other means allowable by law.
(i) While giving a deposition, the
employee may, at the option of the
authorizing official, be represented by
Inspection Service legal counsel.
(ii) While completing affidavits, or
other written reports or at any time
during the process of preparing for
testimony or releasing documents, the
employee may seek the assistance of
Inspection Service legal counsel.
(7) Absent written authorization from
the authorizing official, the employee
shall respectfully decline to produce the
requested documents, testify, or,
otherwise, disclose the requested
information.
(8) If the authorization is denied or
not received by the return date, the
employee, together with counsel, where
appropriate, shall appear at the stated
time and place, produce a copy of this
section, and respectfully decline to
testify or produce any document on the
basis of the regulations in this section.
(9) The employee shall appear as
ordered by the subpoena, summons, or
other appropriate court order, unless:
(i) Legal counsel has advised the
employee that an appearance is
inappropriate, as in cases where the
subpoena, summons, or other court
order was not properly issued or served,
has been withdrawn, discovery has been
stayed; or
(ii) Where the Postal Service will
present a legal objection to furnishing
the requested information or testimony.
(i) Inspection Service employees as
expert or opinion witnesses. No
Inspection Service employee may testify
as an expert or opinion witness, with
regard to any matter arising out of the
employee’s duties or functions at the
Postal Service, for any party other than
the United States, except that in
extraordinary circumstances, the
Counsel, Office of the Chief Postal
Inspector, may approve such testimony
in private litigation. An Inspection
Service employee may not testify as
such an expert or opinion witness
without the express authorization of the
Counsel, Office of the Chief Postal
Inspector. A litigant must first obtain
authorization of the Counsel, Office of
the Chief Postal Inspector, before
designating an Inspection Service
employee as an expert or opinion
witness.
(j) Postal liability. This section is
intended to provide instructions to
Inspection Service employees and does
not create any right or benefit,
substantive or procedural, enforceable
by any party against the Postal Service.
(k) Fees. (1) Unless determined by 28
U.S.C. 1821 or other applicable statute,
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the costs of providing testimony,
including transcripts, shall be borne by
the requesting party.
(2) Unless limited by statute, such
costs shall also include reimbursement
to the Postal Service for the usual and
ordinary expenses attendant upon the
employee’s absence from his or her
official duties in connection with the
case or matter, including the employee’s
salary and applicable overhead charges,
and any necessary travel expenses as
follows:
(i) The Inspection Service is
authorized to charge reasonable fees to
parties demanding documents or
information. Such fees, calculated to
reimburse the Postal Service for the cost
of responding to a demand, may include
the costs of time expended by
Inspection Service employees, including
attorneys, to process and respond to the
demand; attorney time for reviewing the
demand and for legal work in
connection with the demand; expenses
generated by equipment used to search
for, produce, and copy the requested
information; travel costs of the
employee and the agency attorney,
including lodging and per diem where
appropriate. Such fees shall be assessed
at the rates and in the manner specified
in § 265.9.
(ii) At the discretion of the Inspection
Service where appropriate, fees and
costs may be estimated and collected
before testimony is given.
(iii) The provisions in this section do
not affect rights and procedures
governing public access to official
documents pursuant to the Freedom of
Information Act, 5 U.S.C 552.
(l) Acceptance of service. The rules in
this section in no way modify the
requirements of the Federal Rules of
Civil Procedure (28 U.S.C. Appendix)
regarding service of process.
Subpart C—Availability of Records
sradovich on DSK3GMQ082PROD with RULES
§ 265.14 Rules concerning specific
categories of records.
(a) Records available to the public on
request. Except as otherwise proscribed
by law or regulations, including but not
limited to paragraphs (b) and (c) of this
section, § 265.2 and § 265.11–§ 265.13,
Postal Service records will be made
available to any person in accordance
with the procedures provided in § 265.3.
(b) Records not subject to mandatory
public disclosure. Certain classes of
records are exempt from mandatory
disclosure under exemptions contained
in the Freedom of Information Act and
in 39 U.S.C. 410(c). The Postal Service
will exercise its discretion, in
accordance with the policy stated in
§ 265.1(c), as implemented by
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Jkt 241001
instructions issued by the Records
Office with the approval of the General
Counsel in determining whether the
public interest is served by the
inspection or copying of records that
are:
(1) Related solely to the internal
personnel rules and practices of the
Postal Service.
(2) Trade secrets, or privileged or
confidential commercial or financial
information, obtained from any person.
(3) Information of a commercial
nature, including trade secrets, whether
or not obtained from a person outside
the Postal Service, which under good
business practice would not be publicly
disclosed. This class includes, but is not
limited to:
(i) Information pertaining to methods
of handling valuable registered mail.
(ii) Records of money orders, except
as provided in R900 of the Domestic
Mail Manual (DMM).
(iii) Technical information concerning
postage meters and prototypes
submitted for Postal Service approval
prior to leasing to mailers.
(iv) Reports of market surveys
conducted by or under contract in
behalf of the Postal Service.
(v) Records indicating rural carrier
lines of travel.
(vi) Records compiled within the
Postal Service which would be of
potential benefit to persons or firms in
economic competition with the Postal
Service.
(vii) Information which, if publicly
disclosed, could materially increase
procurement costs.
(viii) Information which, if publicly
disclosed, could compromise testing or
examination materials.
(4) Interagency or internal memoranda
or letters that would not be available by
law to a private party in litigation with
the Postal Service.
(5) Reports and memoranda of
consultants or independent contractors,
except to the extent they would be
required to be disclosed if prepared
within the Postal Service.
(6) Files personal in nature, including
medical and personnel files, the
disclosure of which would constitute a
clearly unwarranted invasion of
personal privacy.
(7) Information prepared for use in
connection with proceedings under
chapter 36 of title 39, U.S. Code, relating
to rate, classification, and service
changes.
(8) Information prepared for use in
connection with the negotiation of
collective bargaining agreements under
chapter 12 of title 39, U.S. Code, or
minutes of, or notes kept during,
negotiating sessions conducted under
such chapter.
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86283
(9) Other matter specifically exempted
from disclosure by statute.
(c) Records or information compiled
for law enforcement purposes. (1)
Investigatory files compiled for law
enforcement purposes, whether or not
considered closed, are exempt by statute
from mandatory disclosure except to the
extent otherwise available by law to a
party other than the Postal Service, 39
U.S.C. 410(c)(6). As a matter of policy,
however, the Postal Service will
normally make records or information
compiled for law enforcement purposes
available upon request unless the
production of these records:
(i) Could reasonably be expected to
interfere with enforcement proceedings;
(ii) Would deprive a person of a right
to a fair trial or an impartial
adjudication;
(iii) Could reasonably be expected to
constitute an unwarranted invasion of
personal privacy;
(iv) Could reasonably be expected to
disclose the identity of a confidential
source, including a State, local, or
foreign agency or authority or any
private institution which furnished
information on a confidential basis, and,
in the case of a record or information
compiled by a criminal law enforcement
authority (such as the Postal Inspection
Service) in the course of a criminal
investigation, or by an agency
conducting a lawful national security
intelligence investigation, information
furnished by a confidential source;
(v) Would disclose techniques and
procedures for law enforcement
investigations or prosecutions, or would
disclose guidelines for law enforcement
investigations or prosecutions if such
disclosure could reasonably be expected
to risk circumvention of the law; or
(vi) Could reasonably be expected to
endanger the life or physical safety of
any individual.
(2) Whenever a request is made which
involves access to records that could
reasonably be expected to interfere with
law enforcement proceedings, and
(i) The investigation or proceeding
involves a possible violation of criminal
law; and
(ii) There is reason to believe that,
(A) The subject of the investigation or
proceeding is not aware of its pendency,
and
(B) Disclosure of the existence of the
records could reasonably be expected to
interfere with enforcement proceedings,
the Postal Service may, during only
such time as that circumstance
continues, treat the records as not
subject to the requirements of the
Freedom of Information Act.
(3) Whenever informant records
maintained by a criminal law
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enforcement agency (such as the Postal
Inspection Service) under an
informant’s name or personal identifier
are requested by a third party according
to the informant’s name or personal
identifier, the records may be treated as
not subject to the requirements of the
Freedom of Information Act unless the
informant’s status as an informant has
been officially confirmed.
(4) Authority to disclose records or
information compiled for law
enforcement purposes to persons
outside the Postal Service must be
obtained from the Chief Postal
Inspector, U.S. Postal Service,
Washington, DC 20260–2100, or
designee.
(d) Disclosure of names and addresses
of customers. Upon request, the names
and addresses of specifically identified
Postal Service customers will be made
available only as follows:
(1) Change of address. The new
address of any specific customer who
has filed a permanent or temporary
change of address order (by submitting
PS Form 3575, a hand-written order, or
an electronically communicated order)
will be furnished to any person, except
that the new address of a specific
customer who has indicated on the
order that the address change is for an
individual or an entire family will be
furnished only in those circumstances
stated at paragraph (d)(5) of this section.
Disclosure will be limited to the address
of the specifically identified individual
about whom the information is
requested (not other family members or
individuals whose names may also
appear on the change of address order).
The Postal Service reserves the right not
to disclose the address of an individual
for the protection of the individual’s
personal safety. Other information on
PS Form 3575 or copies of the form will
not be furnished except in those
circumstances stated at paragraphs
(d)(5)(i), (d)(5)(iii), or (d)(5)(iv) of this
section.
(2) Name and address of permit
holder. The name and address of the
holder of a particular bulk mail permit,
permit imprint or similar permit (but
not including postage meter licenses),
and the name of any person applying for
a permit in behalf of a holder will be
furnished to any person upon the filing
of a proper FOIA request and payment
of any applicable fees. For the name and
address of a postage meter license
holder, see paragraph (d)(3) of this
section. (Lists of permit holders may not
be disclosed to members of the public.
See paragraph (e)(1) of this section.)
(3) Name and address of postage
evidencing user. The name and address
of an authorized user of a postage meter
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16:13 Nov 29, 2016
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or PC Postage product (postage
evidencing systems) printing a specified
indicium will be furnished to any
person upon the payment of any fees
authorized by § 265.9(b), provided the
user is using the postage meter or PC
Postage product for business purposes.
The request for this information must be
sent to the manager of Postage
Technology Management, Postal Service
Headquarters. The request must include
the original or a photocopy of the
envelope or wrapper on which the
postage meter or PC postage indicium in
question is printed, and a copy or
description of the contents to support
that the sender is a business or firm and
not an individual. (Lists of authorized
users of postage meters or PC Postage
products may not be disclosed to
members of the public.)
(4) Post Office boxholder information.
Information from PS Form 1093,
Application for Post Office Box or Caller
Service, will be provided as follows:
(i) Except as provided in paragraph
(d)(4)(iii) of this section, the boxholder
applicant name and address from PS
Form 1093 will be provided only in
those circumstances stated in
paragraphs (d)(5)(i) through (iii) of this
section.
(ii) Except as provided in paragraph
(d)(4)(iii) of this section, the names of
persons listed as receiving mail, other
than the boxholder applicant, will be
furnished from PS Form 1093 only in
those circumstances stated in
paragraphs (d)(5)(i) and (iii) of this
section.
(iii) When a copy of a protective order
has been filed with the postmaster,
information from PS Form 1093 will not
be disclosed except pursuant to the
order of a court of competent
jurisdiction.
(5) Exceptions. Except as otherwise
provided in these regulations, names or
addresses of Postal Service customers
will be furnished only as follows:
(i) To a Federal, State or local
government agency upon prior written
certification that the information is
required for the performance of its
duties. The Postal Service requires
government agencies to use the format
appearing at the end of this section
when requesting the verification of a
customer’s current address or a
customer’s new mailing address. If the
request lacks any of the required
information or a proper signature, the
postmaster will return the request to the
agency, specifying the deficiency in the
space marked ‘OTHER’. A copy of PS
Form 1093 may be provided.
(ii)(A) To a person empowered by law
to serve legal process, or the attorney for
a party in whose behalf service will be
PO 00000
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made, or a party who is acting pro se,1
upon receipt of written information that
specifically includes all of the
following:
(1) A certification that the name or
address is needed and will be used
solely for service of legal process in
connection with actual or prospective
litigation;
(2) A citation to the statute or
regulation that empowers the requester
to serve process, if the requester is other
than the attorney for a party in whose
behalf service will be made, or a party
who is acting pro se;
(3) The names of all known parties to
the litigation;
(4) The court in which the case has
been or will be commenced;
(5) The docket or other identifying
number, if one has been issued; and
(6) The capacity in which the
boxholder is to be served, e.g.,
defendant or witness.
(B) By submitting such information,
the requester certifies that it is true. The
address of an individual who files with
the postmaster a copy of a protective
court order will not be disclosed except
as provided under paragraphs (d)(5)(i),
(iii), or (iv) of this section. A copy of
Form 1093 will not be provided. The
Postal Service suggests use of the
standard format appearing at the end of
this section when requesting
information under this paragraph. When
using the standard format on the
submitter’s own letterhead, the standard
format must be used in its entirety. The
warning statement and certification
specifically must be included
immediately before the signature block.
If the request lacks any of the required
information or a proper signature, the
postmaster will return it to the requester
specifying the deficiency.
(iii) In compliance with a subpoena or
court order, except that change of
address or boxholder information which
is not otherwise subject to disclosure
under these regulations may be
disclosed only pursuant to a court order.
(iv) To a law enforcement agency, for
oral requests made through the
Inspection Service, but only after the
Inspection Service has confirmed that
the information is needed in the course
of a criminal investigation. (All other
requests from law enforcement agencies
should be submitted in writing to the
postmaster as in paragraph (d)(5)(i) of
this section.)
(6) Jury service. The mailing address
of any customer sought in connection
with jury service, if known, will be
furnished without charge upon prior
1 The term pro se means that a party is not
represented by an attorney but by himself or herself.
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sradovich on DSK3GMQ082PROD with RULES
written request to a court official, such
as a judge, court clerk or jury
commissioner.
(7) Address verification. The address
of a postal customer will be verified at
the request of a Federal, State, or local
government agency upon written
certification that the information is
required for the performance of the
agency’s duties. ‘‘Verification’’ means
advising such an agency whether or not
its address for a postal customer is one
at which mail for that customer is
currently being delivered.
‘‘Verification’’ neither means nor
implies knowledge on the part of the
Postal Service as to the actual residence
of the customer or as to the actual
receipt by the customer of mail
delivered to that address. The Postal
Service requires government agencies to
use the format appearing at the end of
this section when requesting the
verification of a customer’s current
address or a customer’s new mailing
address. If the request lacks any of the
required information or a proper
signature, the postmaster will return the
request to the agency, specifying the
deficiency in the space marked
‘‘OTHER’’.
(8) Business/Residence location. If the
location of a residence or a place of
business is known to a Postal Service
employee, whether as a result of official
duties or otherwise, the employee may,
but need not, disclose the location or
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16:13 Nov 29, 2016
Jkt 241001
give directions to it. No fee is charged
for such information.
(9) Private mailbox information.
Information from PS Form 1583,
Application for Delivery of Mail
Through Agent, will be provided as
follows:
(i) Except as provided in paragraph
(d)(9)(iii) of this section, information
from PS Form 1583 will be provided
only in the circumstance stated in
paragraph (d)(5)(iii) of this section.
(ii) To the public only for the purpose
of identifying a particular address as an
address of an agent to whom mail is
delivered on behalf of other persons. No
other information, including, but not
limited to, the identities of persons on
whose behalf agents receive mail, may
be disclosed to the public from PS Form
1583.
(iii) Information concerning an
individual who has filed a protective
court order with the postmaster will not
be disclosed except pursuant to the
order of a court of competent
jurisdiction.
(e) Information not available for
public disclosure. (1) Except as
provided by paragraph (a)(6) of this
section, the Postal Service and its
officers and employees shall not make
available to the public by any means or
for any purpose any mailing list or other
list of names or addresses (past or
present) of postal patrons or other
persons.
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86285
(2) Records or other documents which
are classified or otherwise specifically
authorized by Executive Order 12356
and implementing regulations to be kept
secret in the interest of the national
defense or foreign policy are not subject
to disclosure pursuant to this part.
(3) Records consisting of trade secrets
or confidential financial data, the
disclosure of which is prohibited by 18
U.S.C. 1905, are not subject to
disclosure pursuant to this part.
(4) Other records, the disclosure of
which is prohibited by statute, are not
subject to disclosure pursuant to this
part.
(f) Protection of the right of privacy.
If any record required or permitted by
this part to be disclosed contains the
name of, or other identifying details
concerning, any person, including an
employee of the Postal Service, the
disclosure of which would constitute a
clearly unwarranted invasion of
personal privacy, the name or other
identifying details shall be deleted
before the record is disclosed and the
requester so informed.
(g) Disclosure in part of otherwise
exempt record. Any reasonably
segregable portion of a record shall be
provided after deleting the information
which is neither subject to mandatory
disclosure nor available as a matter of
discretion.
BILLING CODE 7710–12–P
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Federal Register / Vol. 81, No. 230 / Wednesday, November 30, 2016 / Rules and Regulations
Change of Address or Boxholder Request Format- Process Servers
Date: _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __
Mail To:
Postmaster
City, State, ZIP Code
REQUEST FOR CHANGE OF ADDRESS OR BOXHOLDER INFORMATION NEEDED FOR SERVICE OF LEGAL PROCESS
Please furnish the new address or the name and street address (if a boxholder) for the following:
Name: _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ ____
Last Known Address: _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __
Note: Only one request may be made per completed form. The name and last known address are required for change of address
information. The name, if known, and Post Office box address are required for boxholder information. You must enclose a copy of
the statute or regulation that empowers you to serve process. (Not required for attorneys or individuals acting pro se.) If you are
a corporation proceeding prose in state court, you must enclose a copy of the state statute or regulation permitting corporations to
proceed prose.
The following information is provided in accordance with 39 CFR 265.14(d)(4)(ii). There is no fee charged for change of address or
boxholder information.
1.
2.
3.
4.
5.
Capacity of requester (process server, attorney, party representing self): - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - The names of all known parties to the l i t i g a t i o n : - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - The court in which the case has been or will be heard
The docket or other identifying number if one has been issued: - - - : : - - - - : - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - The capacity in which this individual is to be served (defendant or witness): - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -
WARNING: THE SUBMISSION OF FALSE INFORMATION TO OBTAIN AND USE CHANGE OF ADDRESS INFORMATION OR
BOXHOLDER INFORMATION FOR ANY PURPOSE OTHER THAN THE SERVICE OF LEGAL PROCESS IN CONNECTION
WITH ACTUAL OR PROSPECTIVE LITIGATION COULD RESULT IN CRIMINAL PENAL TIES INCLUDING A FINE OF UP TO
$10,000 OR IMPRISONMENT OF NOT MORE THAN 5 YEARS, OR BOTH (TITLE 18 U.S.C. SECTION 1001).
I certify that the above information is true and that the address information is needed and will be used solely for service of legal
process in conjunction with actual or prospective litigation.
Signature
Address
Printed Name
City, State, ZIP Code
FOR POST OFFICE USE ONLY
__ No change of address on file
NEW ADDRESS OR BOXHOLDER NAME POSTMARK
__ Moved and left no forwarding address
AND STREET ADDRESS
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No such address
Federal Register / Vol. 81, No. 230 / Wednesday, November 30, 2016 / Rules and Regulations
86287
Stanley F. Mires,
Attorney, Federal Compliance.
[FR Doc. 2016–28430 Filed 11–29–16; 8:45 am]
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BILLING CODE 7710–12–C
Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 81, Number 230 (Wednesday, November 30, 2016)]
[Rules and Regulations]
[Pages 86270-86287]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2016-28430]
=======================================================================
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
POSTAL SERVICE
39 CFR Part 265
Production or Disclosure of Material or Information
AGENCY: Postal Service.
ACTION: Final rule.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SUMMARY: The Postal Service is amending its regulations concerning
compliance with the Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) to implement the
changes to the procedures for the disclosure of records and for
engaging in dispute resolution required by the FOIA Improvement Act of
2016. As part of this process, the Postal Service is also restructuring
the regulations setting forth its FOIA procedures, without substantive
change, to make them easier for members of the public to understand and
use.
DATES: These regulations are effective December 27, 2016.
ADDRESSES: Questions or comments on this action are welcome. Mail or
deliver written comments to: Michael Elston, Associate General Counsel
and Chief Ethics & Compliance Officer, 475 L'Enfant Plaza SW., Room
6000, Washington, DC 20260-1135.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Natalie A. Bonanno, Chief Counsel,
Federal Compliance, natalie.a.bonanno@usps.gov, (202) 268-2944.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: The Postal Service is amending 39 CFR part
265 to implement changes to the procedures for the disclosure of
records and for engaging in dispute resolution under the Freedom of
Information Act (FOIA), 5 U.S.C. 552, as required by the FOIA
Improvement Act of 2016 (FOIAIA), Public Law 114-185 (June 30, 2016),
130 Stat. 538. Under section 3 of the FOIA Improvement Act (130 Stat.
544) agencies are required to make such changes not later than 180 days
after its date of enactment.
The Postal Service has accordingly prepared a revision of 39 CFR
part 265 to implement the amendments to the FOIA contained in section 2
of the FOIAIA. These amendments relate to such matters as the
availability of certain records for public inspection in an electronic
format; the assessment of fees related to voluminous record requests;
modifications to the exemptions from disclosure for certain records
described in 5 U.S.C. 552(b); and addressing the role of the Office of
Government Information Services (OGIS).
In addition, the Postal Service is restructuring its FOIA response
procedures, without substantive change to their underlying policy, with
the objective of enhancing their usefulness and comprehensibility. In
this regard, 39 CFR part 265 has been retitled and subdivided into
three subparts, dealing separately with (1) the generally applicable
procedures for the disclosure of records under FOIA; (2) special rules
applicable to the disclosure of records in compliance with subpoenas
and other court orders, in response to requests for records or
testimony in other legal proceedings, or pursuant to requests directed
to the Postal Inspection Service; and (3) the rules concerning the
availability of specific categories of records that are not subject to
mandatory disclosure in whole or in part.
As reorganized and amended, 39 CFR part 265 is structured as
follows:
Subpart A--Procedures for Disclosure of Records Under the Freedom of
Information Act
This subpart sets forth the procedural rules applicable to the
submission and processing of FOIA requests, including how and to whom a
request should be submitted, the responsibility for and the timing of a
response, the nature and content of the response, the treatment of
confidential commercial information obtained from a submitter outside
the Postal Service that may be protected from disclosure, the procedure
for making an administrative appeal of the Postal Service's response to
a request, and the fees that may apply to processing a request. This
subpart is designed to carry forward the substantive content of former
Sec. Sec. 265.1-265.5 and Sec. Sec. 265.7-265.9 in a more accessible
and useful format.
265.1 General Provisions
This section has been retitled and revised to present a concise and
accessible overview of the policies and functions implemented by this
subpart.
265.2 Proactive Disclosure of Postal Service Records
This section has been retitled and revised to ensure the continued
availability of those records that must be made publicly available, or
are appropriate for public disclosure, and to provide for the posting
and indexing of records in an electronic format as required under the
FOIAIA.
265.3 Procedure for Submitting a FOIA Request
This section has been retitled and revised to explain the
organization and functions of the Postal Service's FOIA Requester
Service Centers (RSCs), as well as the procedures to be followed in
submitting a FOIA request.
265.4 Responsibility for Responding to Requests
This section has been retitled and revised to clarify the
functional responsibilities of the RSCs in responding to FOIA requests.
265.5 Timing of Responses to Requests
This section has been retitled and revised to set out the timeframe
applicable to the processing of requests, including special provisions
for the multitrack processing of simple or complex requests, expedited
processing where appropriate, the extension of time in unusual
circumstances, and aggregation of requests.
[[Page 86271]]
265.6 Responses to Requests
This section has been retitled and revised to specify the
procedures for grants of requests, adverse determinations of requests,
denials of requests, and any redaction of documents released.
265.7 Confidential Commercial Information Obtained From Submitters
This section, the successor to former Sec. 265.8, has been
retitled and revised to specify the procedures for processing requests
for information that may be protected from disclosure under FOIA
Exemption 4 (5 U.S.C. 552(b)(4)) because it contains confidential
commercial or financial information obtained by the Postal Service from
a submitter outside the Postal Service.
265.8 Administrative Appeals
This section has been retitled and revised to set forth the
requirements for making an appeal of a FOIA decision, and the process
for its adjudication.
265.9 Fees
This section has been retitled and revised to specify the fee
structure for processing FOIA requests, including special provisions
concerning requests from educational institutions, noncommercial
scientific institutions, and representatives of the news media.
Subpart B--Production or Disclosure in Federal and State Proceedings
This subpart retains current Sec. Sec. 265.11-265.13 with no
substantive change. Where necessary, cross-references to other postal
regulations have been updated.
265.11 Compliance With Subpoenas Duces Tecum, Court Orders, and
Summonses
No substantive changes have been made in this section.
265.12 Demands for Testimony or Records in Certain Legal Proceedings
No substantive changes have been made in this section.
265.13 Compliance With Subpoenas, Summonses, and Court Orders by Postal
Employees Within the Postal Inspection Service Where the Postal
Service, the United States, or Any Other Federal Agency Is Not a Party
No substantive changes have been made in this section.
Subpart C--Availability of Records
The provisions of former Sec. 265.6 have been redesignated as
Sec. 265.14, and relocated to a separate subpart. This action is
intended to enhance the usefulness of these regulations, and add
clarity to the distinction between those records that are available to
the public on request, and those records that are not subject to
mandatory public disclosure, or available only with certain
restrictions.
265.14 Rules Concerning Specific Categories of Records
This section retitles, relocates, and revises for clarity the rules
concerning records that are not subject to mandatory public disclosure,
as well as those that are available with certain restrictions,
including records compiled for law enforcement purposes, the names and
addresses of postal customers, and records the disclosure of which
would constitute a clearly unwarranted invasion of personal privacy.
List of Subjects in 39 CFR Part 265
Administrative practice and procedure, Courts, Freedom of
Information, Government employees.
For the reasons stated in the preamble, the Postal Service amends
39 CFR chapter I by revising part 265 to read as follows:
PART 265--PRODUCTION OR DISCLOSURE OF MATERIAL OR INFORMATION
Subpart A--Procedures for Disclosure of Records Under the Freedom of
Information Act
Sec.
265.1 General provisions.
265.2 Proactive disclosure of Postal Service records.
265.3 Procedure for submitting a FOIA request.
265.4 Responsibility for responding to requests.
265.5 Timing of responses to requests.
265.6 Responses to requests.
265.7 Confidential commercial information obtained from submitters.
265.8 Administrative appeals.
265.9 Fees.
Subpart B--Production or Disclosure in Federal and State Proceedings
265.11 Compliance with subpoenas duces tecum, court orders, and
summonses.
265.12 Demands for testimony or records in certain legal
proceedings.
265.13 Compliance with subpoenas, summonses, and court orders by
postal employees within the Postal Inspection Service where the
Postal Service, the United States, or any other Federal agency is
not a party.
Subpart C--Availability of Records
265.14 Rules concerning specific categories of records.
Authority: 5 U.S.C. 552; 5 U.S.C. App. 3; 39 U.S.C. 401, 403,
410, 1001, 2601; Pub. L. 114-185.
Sec. 265.1 General provisions.
(a) This subpart contains the regulations that implement the
Freedom of Information Act (FOIA), 5 U.S.C. 552, insofar as the Act
applies to the Postal Service. These rules should be read in
conjunction with the text of the FOIA and the Uniform Freedom of
Information Fee Schedule and Guidelines published by the Office of
Management and Budget, (OMB Guidelines), 52 FR 10012 (Mar. 27, 1987).
The Postal Service FOIA Requester's Guide, an easy-to-read guide for
making Postal Service FOIA requests, is available at https://about.usps.com/who-we-are/foia/welcome.htm.
(b) Requests made by individuals for records about themselves under
the Privacy Act of 1974, 5 U.S.C. 552a, are processed under Part 266 as
well as under this subpart.
(c) It is the policy of the Postal Service to make its official
records available to the public to the maximum extent consistent with
the public interest. This policy requires a practice of full disclosure
of those records that are covered by the requirements of the FOIA,
subject only to the specific exemptions required or authorized by law.
The exemptions from mandatory disclosure for various types of records
provided by 5 U.S.C. 552(b) and 39 U.S.C. 410(c) reflect the fact that
under some circumstances, the public interest may be better served by
leaving the disclosure of particular records to the discretion of the
Postal Service rather than by requiring their disclosure. This Postal
Service policy does not create any right enforceable in court.
(d) As referenced in this subpart, component means any department
or facility within the Postal Service that maintains records; the
Office of Inspector General; and the Postal Inspection Service. Postal
Service refers to all such components collectively.
(e) Nothing in this subpart shall be construed to entitle any
person, as of right, to any service or to the disclosure of any record
to which such person is not entitled under the FOIA.
Sec. 265.2 Proactive disclosure of Postal Service records.
(a) In general. The Postal Service is responsible for determining
which of its records must be made publicly available, for identifying
additional records of interest to the public that are appropriate for
public disclosure, and for posting and indexing such records. The
Postal Service's FOIA Requester Service Centers (RSCs) and FOIA Public
Liaisons can assist individuals in locating Postal Service records.
[[Page 86272]]
Descriptions of, and contact information for, the various FOIA RSCs can
be found at https://about.usps.com/who-we-are/foia/welcome.htm.
(b) Records available in an electronic format. Records that the
FOIA requires the Postal Service to make available for public
inspection in an electronic format pursuant to 5 U.S.C. 552(a)(2) and
that are exempt from the requirements of 5 U.S.C. 552(a)(3), may be
accessed through the Postal Service's Web site at https://about.usps.com/who-we-are/foia/welcome.htm. The Postal Service must
ensure that its Web site of posted records and indices is reviewed and
updated on an ongoing basis. Such records available for public
inspection in an electronic format include the following:
(1) Opinions. All final opinions and orders made in the
adjudication of cases by the Judicial Officer and Administrative Law
Judges, all final determinations pursuant to section 404(b) of title
39, United States Code, to close or consolidate a post office, or to
disapprove a proposed closing or consolidation, all advisory opinions
concerning the private express statutes issued pursuant to 39 CFR
310.6, and all supplier disagreement decisions are on file and
available for inspection and copying at the Headquarters Library and,
if created on or after November 1, 1996, also at the Postal Service's
Web site at https://about.usps.com/who-we-are/foia/welcome.htm.
(2) Administrative manuals and instructions. The manuals,
instructions, and other publications of the Postal Service that affect
members of the public are available through the Headquarters Library
and at many post offices and other postal facilities. Those which are
available to the public but are not listed for sale may be inspected in
the Headquarters Library, at any postal facility which maintains a
copy, or, if created on or after November 1, 1996, through the Postal
Service's Web site at https://about.usps.com/who-we-are/foia/welcome.htm. Copies of publications which are not listed as for sale or
as available free of charge may be requested on an individual basis in
accordance with the procedures provided in Sec. 265.3.
(3) Previously released records. Copies of all records, regardless
of form or format, that have been released to any person pursuant to
the FOIA; and that because of the nature of their subject matter, the
Postal Service determines have become or are likely to become the
subject of subsequent requests for substantially the same records; or
that have been requested 3 or more times, as well as a general index of
such records. Records processed and disclosed after March 31, 1997, are
available for inspection and copying at the Headquarters Library. Any
such records created by the Postal Service on or after November 1,
1996, also will be available at the Postal Service's Web site
identified at Sec. 265.2(b). Records described in this paragraph that
were not created by, or on behalf of, the Postal Service generally will
not be available at the Web site. Records will be available in the form
in which they were originally disclosed, except to the extent that they
contain information that is not appropriate for public disclosure and
may be withheld pursuant to this section. Any deleted material will be
marked and the applicable exemptions indicated in accordance with Sec.
265.6(d).
(4) Public index. (i) A public index is maintained in the
Headquarters Library and at the Web site of all final opinions and
orders made by the Postal Service in the adjudication of cases, Postal
Service policy statements which may be relied on as precedents in the
disposition of cases, administrative staff manuals and instructions
that affect the public, and other materials which the Postal Service
elects to index and make available to the public on request in the
manner set forth in paragraph (b) of this section.
(ii) The index contains references to matters issued after July 4,
1967, and may reference matters issued prior to that date.
(iii) Any person may arrange for the inspection of any matter in
the public index in accordance with the procedures of Sec. 265.3.
(iv) Copies of the public index and of matters listed in the public
index may be requested through the procedures described in Sec. 265.3,
with payment of any applicable fees.
(v) Materials listed in the public index that were created on or
after November 1, 1996, will also be available in electronic format at
the Postal Service's Web site at https://about.usps.com/who-we-are/foia/welcome.htm.
Sec. 265.3 Procedure for submitting a FOIA request.
(a) To whom submitted. A request must be submitted to the
appropriate FOIA Requester Service Center (RSC). Descriptions of, and
contact information for, the various FOIA RSCs can be found at https://about.usps.com/who-we-are/foia/welcome.htm. For assistance in
determining the appropriate FOIA RSC, requesters may contact the USPS
HQ FOIA Requester Service Center, Privacy and Records Office, U.S.
Postal Service, 475 L'Enfant Plaza SW., Washington, DC 20260, telephone
(202) 268-2608. Requests for listings of postal employee names should
also be sent to the USPS HQ FOIA Requester Service Center.
(b) Form of request. A request to inspect or to obtain a copy of an
identifiable Postal Service record must be in writing and bear the
caption ``Freedom of Information Act Request'' or otherwise be clearly
and prominently identified as a request for records pursuant to the
Freedom of Information Act, both on the letter and on the envelope or
other cover. Requests for records that are labeled incorrectly may be
delayed in reaching the appropriate FOIA RSC. A requester must provide
his or her full name and mailing address. A requester may also provide
a daytime telephone number or email address to facilitate communication
regarding his or her request.
(c) Content of request. Requesters must describe the records sought
in sufficient detail to enable Postal Service personnel to locate them
with a reasonable amount of effort. Whenever possible, requesters
should include specific information about each record sought, such as
the type of record (e.g., contract, report, memorandum, etc.); the
title or case number of a specific document or report; the topic or
subject matter; the name of the office, facility, functional unit or
employees most likely to possess the record; the geographical location,
such as a city and state, where the records are thought to exist; the
date or general timeframe of the record's creation; and any details
related to the purpose of the record. Requests for email records should
specify the likely senders and recipients, keywords, and a range of
dates. If seeking information about a company, requesters should
provide the exact name and address of the company (many companies use
similar names). Before submitting requests, requesters may contact the
relevant Postal Service FOIA Requester Service Center to discuss the
records they are seeking and to receive assistance in describing the
records. The request may state the maximum amount of fees for which the
requester is willing to accept liability without prior notice. If no
amount is stated, the requester will be deemed willing to accept
liability for fees not to exceed $25.00. See paragraph (e)(2) of Sec.
265.9.The request may also specify the preferred form or format
(including electronic formats) of the requested records.
(d) First-party requests. A requester who is making a request for
records about himself must provide verification of identity sufficient
to satisfy the component as to his identity prior to release of the
record. For Privacy Act-protected records, the requester must
[[Page 86273]]
further comply with the procedures set forth in 39 CFR 266.6.
(e) Third-party requests. Where a FOIA request seeks disclosure of
records that pertain to a third party, a requester may receive greater
access by submitting a written authorization signed by that individual
authorizing disclosure of the records to the requester, or by
submitting proof that the individual is deceased (e.g., a copy of a
death certificate or an obituary). As an exercise of administrative
discretion, each component can require a requester to supply a
notarized authorization, a declaration, or other additional information
if necessary in order to verify that a particular individual has
consented to disclosure.
(f) Improper requests. A request that does not reasonably describe
the records sought, or does not comply with the published rules
regarding the procedures to be followed for submitting a request, will
be deemed to be an improper FOIA request. If after receiving a request,
the Postal Service determines that it is improper, the Postal Service
will inform the requester as to why the request is improper. If the
requester fails to respond to the Postal Service's request for
clarification or additional information within 30 calendar days, the
Postal Service will assume the requester is no longer interested in
pursuing the request and close its file. The FOIA Requester Service
Centers and the FOIA Public Liaisons are available to assist requesters
in correcting a request that does not reasonably describe the records
sought.
Sec. 265.4 Responsibility for responding to requests.
(a) In general. When a request is received, the FOIA RSC will
either respond to the request, or refer the request to the appropriate
FOIA RSC or records custodians. The FOIA RSC will advise the requester
of any such referral. The Postal Service, the Office of Inspector
General of the Postal Service, and the Postal Inspection Service,
respectively, are responsible for responding to requests they receive
for records they maintain. Records responsive to a request ordinarily
will include only records in the Postal Service's possession as of the
date of the search. If any other date is used, the Postal Service shall
inform the requester of that date. A record that is excluded from the
requirements of the FOIA pursuant to 5 U.S.C. 552(c) or 39 U.S.C.
410(c) is not considered responsive to the request.
(b) Authority to grant or deny requests. The records custodian of
the requested record, or his designee, is authorized to grant or to
deny the request. FOIA RSC staff may also grant or deny requests.
(c) Receipt and tracking of requests. FOIA RSCs are responsible for
the initial receipt and tracking of FOIA requests.
(d) Acknowledgments of requests. FOIA RSCs must acknowledge the
request in writing and assign it an individualized tracking number if
it will take longer than 10 working days to process. The
acknowledgement of the request must include a brief description of the
records sought to allow requesters to more easily keep track of their
requests.
Sec. 265.5 Timing of responses to requests.
(a) In general. Requests will ordinarily be responded to according
to their order of receipt. A request that is not initially submitted to
the appropriate FOIA RSC will be deemed to have been received by the
Postal Service at the time that it is actually received by the
appropriate FOIA RSC or at the time the request is referred to the
appropriate records custodian by a FOIA RSC, but in any case a request
will be deemed to have been received no later than 10 business days
after the request is first received by a FOIA RSC.
(b) Multitrack processing. (1) Unless expedited processing has been
granted, the Postal Service places each request in simple or complex
tracks based on the amount of work and time involved in processing the
request. Factors considered in assigning a request into the complex
track may include one or more of the following factors:
(i) The request involves voluminous documents;
(ii) The complexity of the material;
(iii) The request involves record searches at multiple facilities
or locations;
(iv) The request requires consultation among components or other
agencies;
(v) The number of open requests submitted by the same requester.
(2) Within each track, the Postal Service processes requests in the
order in which they are received. When appropriate, the FOIA RSC or the
component will notify the requester if it has placed the request in the
``Complex'' track, and provide the requester with an opportunity to
limit the scope of the request. If the requester limits the scope of
the request, it may result in faster processing.
(c) Expedited processing. (1) Requests and appeals shall be
processed on an expedited basis whenever it is determined that they
involve:
(i) Circumstances in which the lack of expedited processing could
reasonably be expected to pose an imminent threat to the life or
physical safety of an individual;
(ii) An urgency to inform the public about an actual or alleged
Federal Government activity, if made by a person who is primarily
engaged in disseminating information.
(2) A requester who seeks expedited processing must submit a
statement, certified to be true and correct, explaining in detail the
basis for making the request for expedited processing. For example,
under paragraph (e)(1)(ii) of this section, a requester who is not a
full-time member of the news media must establish that the requester is
a person whose primary professional activity or occupation is
information dissemination, though it need not be the requester's sole
occupation. Such a requester also must establish a particular urgency
to inform the public about the government activity involved in the
request--one that extends beyond the public's right to know about
government activity generally. The existence of numerous articles
published on a given subject can be helpful in establishing the
requirement that there be an ``urgency to inform'' the public on the
topic. As a matter of administrative discretion, a component may waive
the formal certification requirement.
(3) A component shall notify the requester within 10 calendar days
of the receipt of a request for expedited processing of its decision
whether to grant or deny expedited processing. If expedited processing
is granted, the request shall be given priority, placed in the
processing track for expedited requests, and shall be processed as soon
as practicable. If a request for expedited processing is denied, any
appeal of that decision shall be acted on expeditiously
(d) Unusual circumstances. Whenever the statutory time limit for
processing a request cannot be met because of ``unusual
circumstances'', as defined in the FOIA, and the component extends the
time limit on that basis, the component shall, before the expiration of
the 20-day period to respond, notify the requester in writing of the
unusual circumstances involved and of the date by which processing of
the request can be expected to be completed. Where the extension
exceeds 10 working days, the component shall, as described by the FOIA,
provide the requester with an opportunity to modify the request or
arrange an alternative time period for processing and alert the
requester to the availability of the Office of Government Information
Services to provide dispute
[[Page 86274]]
resolution services. The component shall make available its designated
FOIA contact and its FOIA Public Liaison for this purpose.
(e) Aggregating requests. For the purposes of satisfying unusual
circumstances under the FOIA, the Postal Service may aggregate requests
in cases where it reasonably appears that multiple requests, submitted
either by a single requester or by a group of requesters acting in
concert, constitute a single request that would otherwise involve
unusual circumstances. Multiple requests that involve unrelated matters
shall not be aggregated.
Sec. 265.6 Responses to requests.
(a) Grants of requests. Once a component makes a determination to
grant a request in whole or in part, it shall notify the requester in
writing and include a statement alerting the requester of his or her
right to seek assistance from the FOIA Public Liaison. The component
also shall inform the requester of any fees charged under Sec. 265.9
and shall disclose the requested records to the requester promptly upon
payment of any applicable fees.
(b) Adverse determinations of requests. A component making an
adverse determination denying a request in any respect shall notify the
requester of that determination in writing. 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.
(c) Content of denial. The denial shall include, to the extent
applicable:
(1) The name and title or position of the person responsible for
the denial;
(2) A brief statement of the reasons for the denial, including any
FOIA exemption applied by the component in denying the request;
(3) An estimate of the volume of any records or information
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; and
(4) A statement that the denial may be appealed under Sec. 265.8,
and a description of the requirements set forth therein.
(5) A statement notifying the requester of his or her right to seek
dispute resolution services from the FOIA Public Liaison or the Office
of Government Information Services.
(d) Markings on released documents. Markings on released documents
must be clearly visible to the requester. Records disclosed in part
shall be marked to 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. The location of the
information deleted shall also be indicated on the record, if
technically feasible.
(e) Use of record exclusions. (1) In the event that a component
identifies records that may be subject to exclusion from the
requirements of the FOIA pursuant to 5 U.S.C. 552(c), the component
must confer with Department of Justice, Office of Information Policy
(OIP), to obtain approval to apply the exclusion.
Sec. 265.7 Confidential commercial information obtained from
submitters.
(a) Definitions. (1) Confidential commercial information means
commercial or financial information obtained by the Postal Service 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,
State, or foreign government, but not including another Federal
Government entity, that provides information, either directly or
indirectly to the Postal Service.
(b) Designation of confidential commercial information. A submitter
of confidential commercial information must use good faith efforts to
designate by appropriate markings, either at the time of submission or
within a reasonable time thereafter, any portion of its submission that
it considers to be protected from disclosure under Exemption 4. The
Postal Service will not determine the validity of any request for
confidential treatment until a request for disclosure of the
information is received. These designations shall expire 10 years after
the date of the submission unless the submitter requests and provides
justification for a longer designation period.
(c) When notice to submitters is required. (1) The Postal Service
shall promptly provide written notice to a submitter of confidential
commercial information whenever records containing such information are
requested under the FOIA if, after reviewing the request, the
responsive records, and any appeal by the requester, the Postal Service
determines that it may be required 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; or
(ii) The Postal Service has a reason to believe that the requested
information may be protected from disclosure under Exemption 4, but has
not yet determined whether the information is protected from disclosure
under that exemption or any other applicable exemption.
(2) The notice shall either 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, notice may be made by posting or publishing the
notice in a place or manner reasonably likely to accomplish it.
(d) Exceptions to submitter notice requirements. The notice
requirements of this section shall not apply if:
(1) The Postal Service determines that the information is exempt
under the FOIA or 39 U.S.C. 410(c);
(2) The information has been lawfully published or has been
officially made available to the public;
(3) Disclosure of the information is required by a statute other
than the FOIA or by a Postal Service regulation; if disclosure is
required by a Postal Service regulation and the submitter provided
written justification for protection of the information under Exemption
4 at the time of submission or a reasonable time thereafter, advanced
written notice of the disclosure must be provided to the submitter; or
(4) The designation made by the submitter under paragraph (b) of
this section appears obviously frivolous or overly broad, except that,
in such cases, the component shall give the submitter written notice of
any final decision to disclose the information and must provide that
notice within a reasonable number of days prior to a specified
disclosure date.
(e) Opportunity to object to disclosure. (1) The Postal Service
shall specify a reasonable time period within which the submitter must
respond to the notice referenced above. If a submitter has any
[[Page 86275]]
objections to disclosure, it should provide the Postal Service a
detailed written statement that specifies all grounds for withholding
the particular information under any exemption of the FOIA. In order to
rely on Exemption 4 as basis for nondisclosure, the submitter must
explain why the information constitutes a trade secret or commercial or
financial information that is privileged or confidential. Whenever
possible, the submitter's claim of confidentiality should be supported
by a statement or certification by an officer or authorized
representative of the submitter that the information in question is in
fact confidential, has not been disclosed to the public by the
submitter, and is not routinely available to the public from other
sources.
(2) A submitter who fails to respond within the time period
specified in the notice shall be considered to have no objection to
disclosure of the information. Information received by the Postal
Service after the date of any disclosure decision shall not be
considered by the Postal Service. Any information provided by a
submitter under this subpart may itself be subject to disclosure under
the FOIA. The Postal Service must consider a submitter's objections and
specific grounds for nondisclosure in deciding whether to disclose the
requested information.
(f) Determination that confidential treatment is warranted. If the
Postal Service determines that confidential treatment is warranted for
any part of the requested records and that the records will therefore
be redacted or withheld, it must inform the requester in writing, and
must advise the requester of the right to appeal. A copy of the letter
of denial must also be provided to the submitter of the records in any
case in which the submitter had been notified of the request.
(g) Notice of intent to disclose. If the Postal Service decides to
disclose information over the objection of a submitter, the Postal
Service shall provide the submitter written notice, which shall
include:
(1) A statement of the reasons why each of the submitter's
disclosure objections was not sustained;
(2) A description or copy of the information to be disclosed; and
(3) A specified disclosure date, which shall be a reasonable time
subsequent to the notice.
(h) Notice of FOIA lawsuit. Whenever a requester files a lawsuit
seeking to compel the disclosure of confidential commercial
information, the component shall promptly notify the submitter.
Whenever a submitter files a lawsuit to prevent disclosure of
confidential commercial information, the component shall promptly
notify the requester.
(i) Requester notification. The Postal Service shall notify a
requester whenever it notifies the submitter of its intent to disclose
the requested information.
Sec. 265.8 Administrative appeals.
(a) Requirements for making an appeal. Requesters may appeal
adverse decisions rendered by the Postal Inspection Service or any
Postal Service component by mail to the General Counsel, U.S. Postal
Service, 475 L'Enfant Plaza SW., Washington, DC 20260; or by email to
foiaappeal@usps.gov. The requester must make the appeal in writing and
to be considered timely it must be postmarked, or in the case of
electronic submissions, transmitted, within 90 calendar days after the
date of the response; or within a reasonable time if the appeal is from
a failure of the custodian to act. The General Counsel may, in his or
her discretion, consider late appeals. In the event of the denial of a
request or of other action or failure to act on the part of a custodian
from which no appeal is taken, the General Counsel may, if he or she
considers that there is doubt as to the correctness of the custodian's
action or failure to act, review the action or failure to act as though
an appeal pursuant to this section had been taken. A letter of appeal
should include, as applicable:
(1) A copy of the request, of any notification of denial or other
action, and of any other related correspondence;
(2) The FOIA tracking number assigned to the request;
(3) A statement of the action, or failure to act, from which the
appeal is taken;
(4) A statement identifying the specific redactions to responsive
records that the requester is challenging;
(5) A statement of the relief sought; and
(6) A statement of the reasons why the requester believes the
action or failure to act is erroneous.
(b) Adjudication of appeals. (1) The decision of the General
Counsel or his or her designee constitutes the final decision of the
Postal Service on the issue being appealed. The General Counsel will
give prompt consideration to an appeal for expedited processing of a
request. All other decisions normally will be made within 20 working
days from the time of the receipt by the General Counsel. The 20-day
response period may be extended by the General Counsel, or his or her
designee, for a period not to exceed an additional 10 working days when
reasonably necessary to permit the proper consideration of an appeal,
under one or more of the unusual circumstances set forth in paragraph
(a)(5) of this section. The aggregate number of additional working days
utilized, however, may not exceed 10 working days.
(2) An appeal ordinarily will not be adjudicated if the request
becomes a matter of FOIA litigation.
(3) On receipt of any appeal, the General Counsel, or his or her
designee, must take appropriate action to ensure compliance with
applicable classification rules.
(c) Decisions on appeals. A decision on an appeal must be made in
writing. A decision that upholds a component's determination in whole
or in part will contain a statement that identifies the reasons for the
affirmance, including any FOIA exemptions applied. The decision will
provide the requester with notification of the statutory right to file
a lawsuit and will inform the requester 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 a custodian's decision is remanded or
modified on appeal, the requester will be notified of that
determination in writing. The component will further process the
request in accordance with that appeal determination and respond
directly to the requester. If not prohibited by or under law, the
General Counsel, or his designee may direct the disclosure of a record
even though its disclosure is not required by law or regulation.
(d) When appeal is required. Before seeking judicial review of a
component's adverse determination, a requester generally must first
submit a timely administrative appeal.
(e) Appeal procedures for the Office of the Inspector General. The
appeal procedures for the Office of the Inspector General are described
in 39 CFR 230.5.
Sec. 265.9 Fees.
(a) In general. The Postal Service shall charge for processing
requests under the FOIA in accordance with the provisions of this
section and with the OMB Guidelines. In order to resolve any fee issues
that arise under this section, a component may contact a requester for
additional information. The Postal Service will conduct searches,
review, and duplication in the most efficient and the least expensive
manner. The Postal Service ordinarily will collect all applicable fees
before sending copies of
[[Page 86276]]
records to a requester. Requesters must pay fees by check or money
order made payable to ``U.S. Postal Service.''
(b) Definitions. For purposes of this section:
(1) Commercial-use requester is a requester who 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. The Postal Service's decision to place a requester
in the commercial use category will be made on a case-by-case basis
based on the requester's intended use of the information.
(2) Direct costs are those expenses that the Postal Service incurs
in searching for and duplicating records in order to respond to a FOIA
request. In the case of commercial-use requesters, direct costs include
reviewing and taking all other measures needed to prepare the records
for disclosure.
(3) 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 expended to locate and retrieve information from
electronic records.
(4) Duplication is reproducing a copy of a record, or of 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.
(5) Review is the examination of a record located in response to a
request in order to determine whether 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 the process of redacting the record and marking
the appropriate exemptions. Review costs are properly charged even if a
record ultimately is not disclosed. Review time also includes time
spent both obtaining and considering any formal objection to disclosure
made by a confidential commercial information submitter under Sec.
265.6, but it does not include time spent resolving general legal or
policy issues regarding the application of exemptions.
(6) Educational institution is any school that operates a program
of scholarly research. A requester in this fee category must show that
the request is authorized by, and is made under the auspices of, an
educational institution and that the records are not sought for a
commercial use, but rather are sought to further scholarly research. To
fall within this fee category, the request must serve the scholarly
research goals of the institution rather than an individual research
goal.
(7) Noncommercial scientific institution is an institution that is
not operated on a ``commercial'' basis, as defined in paragraph (b)(1)
of this section and 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. A requester in this
category must show that the request is authorized by and is made under
the auspices of a qualifying institution and that the records are
sought to further scientific research and are not for a commercial use.
(8) Representative of the news media is any person or entity
organized and operated to publish or broadcast news to the public that
actively 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. A request for records supporting the news-dissemination
function of the requester shall not be considered to be for a
commercial use. ``Freelance'' journalists who demonstrate a solid basis
for expecting publication through a news media entity shall be
considered as a representative of the news media. A publishing contract
would provide the clearest evidence that publication is expected;
however, the Postal Service shall also consider a requester's past
publication record in making this determination.
(c) Charging fees. In responding to FOIA requests, the Postal
Service shall charge the following fees unless a waiver or reduction of
fees has been granted under paragraph (k) of this section. Because the
fee amounts provided below already account for the direct costs
associated with a given fee type, components should not add any
additional costs to charges calculated under this section.
(1) Search. (i) Requests made by educational institutions,
noncommercial scientific institutions, or representatives of the news
media are not subject to search fees. Search fees shall be charged for
all other requesters, subject to the restrictions of paragraph (d) of
this section. The Postal Service may charge for time spent searching
even if no responsive records are located or if it determines that the
records are entirely exempt from disclosure.
(ii) For each half hour spent by personnel searching for requested
records, including electronic searches that do not require new
programming, the fee shall be $21.00.
(iii) Requesters shall be charged the direct costs associated with
conducting any search that requires the creation of a new computer
program to locate the requested records. Requesters shall be notified
of the costs associated with creating such a program and must agree to
pay the associated costs before the costs may be incurred.
(iv) For requests that require the retrieval of records stored at a
Federal records center operated by the National Archives and Records
Administration (NARA), or other storage facility, additional costs may
be charged for their retrieval.
(2) Duplication. Duplication fees shall be charged to all
requesters, subject to the restrictions of paragraph (d) of this
section. A component shall honor a requester's preference for receiving
a record in a particular form or format where it is readily
reproducible by the component in the form or format requested. Where
photocopies are supplied, the component shall provide one copy per
request at a cost of five cents per page. For copies of records
produced on tapes, disks, or other media, components shall charge the
direct costs of producing the copy, including operator time. Where
paper documents must be scanned in order to comply with a requester's
preference to receive the records in an electronic format, the
requester shall pay the direct costs associated with scanning those
materials. For other forms of duplication, components shall charge the
direct costs.
(3) Review. Commercial-use requesters shall be charged review fees.
Review fees shall be assessed in connection with the initial review of
the record, i.e., the review conducted by a component to determine
whether an exemption applies to a particular record or portion of a
record. No charge will be made for review at the administrative appeal
stage of exemptions applied at the initial review stage. However, if a
particular exemption is deemed to no longer apply, any costs associated
with a component's re-review of the records in order to consider the
use of other exemptions may be assessed as review fees. Review fees
shall be charged at the same rates as those charged for a search under
paragraph (c)(1)(ii) of this section.
[[Page 86277]]
(d) Restrictions on charging fees. (1) No search fees will be
charged for requests by educational institutions (unless the records
are sought for a commercial use), noncommercial scientific
institutions, or representatives of the news media.
(2)(i) If a component fails to comply with the time limits in which
to respond to a request, it may not charge search fees, or, in the
instances of requests from requesters described in paragraph (d)(1) of
this section, may not charge duplication fees.
(ii) If a component has determined that unusual circumstances as
defined by the FOIA apply and the component provided timely written
notice to the requester in accordance with the FOIA, the component has
an additional 10 days to respond to the request.
(iii) If a component has determined that unusual circumstances as
defined by the FOIA apply and more than 5,000 pages are necessary to
respond to the request, the component may charge search fees, or, in
the case of requesters described in paragraph (d)(1) of this section,
may charge duplication fees if the following steps are taken:
(A) The component provides timely written notice of unusual
circumstances to the requester; and
(B) The component discussed or made three good faith attempts to
discuss via mail, email, or telephone how the requester could
effectively limit the scope of the request in accordance with 5 U.S.C.
552(a)(6)(B)(ii).
(iv) If a court has determined that exceptional circumstances
exist, a failure to comply with the time limits shall be excused for
the length of time provided by the court order.
(3) No search or review fees will be charged for a quarter-hour
period unless more than half of that period is required for search or
review.
(4) Except for requesters seeking records for a commercial use,
components shall provide without charge:
(i) The first 100 pages of duplication (or the cost equivalent for
other media); and
(ii) The first two hours of search.
(5) When, after first deducting the 100 free pages (or its cost
equivalent) and the first two hours of search, a total fee calculated
under paragraph (c) of this section is $25.00 or less for any request,
no fee will be charged.
(e) Notice of anticipated fees in excess of $25.00. (1) When a
component determines or estimates that the fees to be assessed in
accordance with this section will exceed $25.00, the component shall
notify the requester of the actual or estimated amount of the fees,
including a breakdown of the fees for search, review or duplication,
unless the requester has indicated a willingness to pay fees as high as
those anticipated. If only a portion of the fee can be estimated
readily, the component shall advise the requester accordingly. If the
requester is a noncommercial use requester, the notice shall specify
that the requester is entitled to the statutory entitlements of 100
pages of duplication at no charge and, if the requester is charged
search fees, two hours of search time at no charge, and shall advise
the requester whether those entitlements have been provided.
(2) In cases in which a requester has been notified that the actual
or estimated fees are in excess of $25.00, the request shall not be
considered received and further work will not be completed until the
requester agrees in writing to pay the actual or estimated total fee,
or designates some amount of fees the requester is willing to pay, or
in the case of a noncommercial use requester who has not yet been
provided with the requester's statutory entitlements, designates that
the requester seeks only that which can be provided by the statutory
entitlements. Components are not required to accept payments in
installments.
(3) If the requester has indicated a willingness to pay some
designated amount of fees, but the component estimates that the total
fee will exceed that amount, the component shall toll the processing of
the request when it notifies the requester of the estimated fees in
excess of the amount the requester has indicated a willingness to pay.
The component shall inquire whether the requester wishes to revise the
amount of fees the requester is willing to pay or modify the request.
Once the requester responds, the time to respond will resume from where
it was at the date of the notification.
(4) Components shall make available their FOIA Public Liaison or
other FOIA contact to assist any requester in reformulating a request
to meet the requester's needs at a lower cost.
(f) Charges for other services. Although not required to provide
special services, if a component chooses to do so as a matter of
administrative discretion, the direct costs of providing the service
requested by the requester shall be charged. Examples of such services
include providing multiple copies of the same document, or sending
records by means other than first class mail.
(g) Aggregating requests. In instances where the Postal Service
reasonably believes that a requester or a group of requesters acting in
concert is attempting to divide a single request into a series of
requests for the purpose of avoiding fees, or that a requester or group
of requesters acting in concert makes multiple requests for the same
records maintained at multiple facilities or components, the Postal
Service may aggregate those requests and charge accordingly. Multiple
FOIA requests by a single requester related to the same issue will be
aggregated for the purpose of assessing fees. Multiple requests
involving unrelated matters shall not be aggregated.
(h) Advance payments. (1) For requests other than those described
in paragraphs (h)(2) or (3) of this section, a component shall not
require the requester to submit an advance payment before work is
commenced or continued on a request. Payment owed for work already
completed (i.e., payment before copies are sent to a requester) is not
an advance payment.
(2) When a component determines or estimates that a total fee to be
charged under this section will exceed $250.00, it may require that the
requester make an advance payment up to the amount of the entire
anticipated fee before beginning to process the request. A component
may elect to process the request prior to collecting fees when it
receives a satisfactory assurance of full payment from a requester with
a history of prompt payment.
(3) Where a requester has previously failed to pay a properly
charged FOIA fee within 30 calendar days of the billing date, a
component may require that the requester pay the full amount due on
that prior request, and the component may require that the requester
make an advance payment of the full amount of any anticipated fee
before the component begins to process a new request or continues to
process a pending request or any pending appeal. Where a component has
a reasonable basis to believe that a requester has misrepresented the
requester's identity in order to avoid paying outstanding fees, it may
require that the requester provide proof of identity.
(4) In cases in which a component requires advance payment, the
request shall not be considered received and further work will not be
completed until the required payment is received. If the requester does
not pay the advance payment within 30 calendar days after the date of
the component's fee determination, the request will be administratively
closed.
(i) Other statutes specifically providing for fees. The fee
schedule of this section does not apply to fees charged under any
statute that specifically requires the Postal Service
[[Page 86278]]
to set and collect fees for particular types of records. In instances
where records responsive to a request are subject to a statutorily-
based fee schedule program, the component shall inform the requester of
the contact information for that program.
(j) Requirements for waiver or reduction of fees. (1) Records
responsive to a request shall be furnished without charge or at a
reduced rate below the rate established under paragraph (c) of this
section, where a component determines, based on all available
information, that the requester has demonstrated that:
(i) 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 Postal Service,
and
(ii) Disclosure of the information is not primarily in the
commercial interest of the requester.
(2) In deciding whether disclosure of the requested information is
in the public interest because it is likely to contribute significantly
to public understanding of operations or activities of the Postal
Service, components shall consider all four of the following factors:
(i) The subject of the request must concern identifiable operations
or activities of the Postal Service, with a connection that is direct
and clear, not remote or attenuated.
(ii) Disclosure of the requested records must be meaningfully
informative about government operations or activities in order to be
``likely to contribute'' to an increased public understanding of those
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 contribute to such understanding where nothing new
would be added to the public's understanding.
(iii) The disclosure must contribute to the understanding of a
reasonably broad audience of persons interested in the subject, as
opposed to the individual understanding of the requester. A requester's
expertise in the subject area as well as the requester's ability and
intention to effectively convey information to the public shall be
considered. A representative of the news media does not automatically
satisfy this consideration.
(iv) The public's understanding of the subject in question must be
enhanced by the disclosure to a significant extent.
(3) To determine whether disclosure of the requested information is
primarily in the commercial interest of the requester, components shall
consider the following factors:
(i) Components shall identify any commercial interest of the
requester, as defined in paragraph (b)(1) of this section, that would
be furthered by the requested disclosure. Requesters shall be given an
opportunity to provide explanatory information regarding this
consideration.
(ii) Disclosure to data brokers or others who merely compile and
market government information for direct economic return shall not be
presumed to primarily serve the public interest.
(4) Where only some of the records to be released satisfy the
requirements for a waiver of fees, a waiver shall be granted for those
records.
(5) Requests for a waiver or reduction of fees should be made when
the request is first submitted to the component and should address the
criteria referenced above. A requester may submit a fee waiver request
at a later time so long as the underlying record request is pending or
on administrative appeal. When a requester who has committed to pay
fees subsequently asks for a waiver of those fees and that waiver is
denied, the requester shall be required to pay any costs incurred up to
the date the fee waiver request was received.
Subpart B--Production or Disclosure in Federal and State
Proceedings
Sec. [thinsp]265.11 Compliance with subpoena duces tecum, court
orders, and summonses.
(a) Compliance with subpoena duces tecum. (1) Except as required by
Part 262, produce other records of the Postal Service only in
compliance with a subpoena duces tecum or appropriate court order.
(2) Time, leave, and payroll records of postal employees are
subject to production when a subpoena duces tecum or appropriate court
order has been properly served. The custodian of the records may
designate a postal employee to present the records. The presentation by
a designee rather than the employee named in the subpoena or court
order must meet with the approval of the attorneys for each side. In
addition, such records may be released if authorized in writing by the
employee.
(3) If the subpoena involves a job-connected injury, the records
are under the exclusive jurisdiction of the Office of Workers'
Compensation Programs, Department of Labor. Requests for authorization
to produce these records shall be addressed to: Office of Workers'
Compensation Programs, U.S. Department of Labor, Washington, DC 20210-
0001. Also notify the attorney responsible for the issuance of the
subpoena or court order.
(4) Employee medical records are primarily under the exclusive
jurisdiction of the U.S. Civil Service Commission. The Commission has
delegated authority to the Postal Service and to the Commission's
Regional Directors to release medical information, in response to
proper requests and upon competent medical advice, in accordance with
the following criteria:
(i) Except in response to a subpoena or court order, do not release
any medical information about an employee to any non-Federal entity or
individual without authorization from the employee.
(ii) With authorization from the employee, the Area, Information
Systems Service Center, or Chief Field Counsel will respond as follows
to a request from a non-Federal source for medical information:
(A) If, in the opinion of a Federal medical officer, the medical
information indicates the existence of a malignancy, a mental
condition, or other condition about which a prudent physician would
hesitate to inform a person suffering from such a condition as to its
exact nature and probable outcome, do not release the medical
information to the employee or to any individual designated by him,
except to a physician, designated by the employee in writing. If a
subpoena or court order was issued, the responding official shall
caution the moving party as to the possible dangers involved if the
medical information is divulged.
(B) If, in the opinion of a Federal medical officer, the medical
information does not indicate the presence of any condition which would
cause a prudent physician to hesitate to inform a person of the exact
nature and probable outcome of his condition, release it in response to
a subpoena or court order, or to the employee or to any person, firm,
or organization he authorizes in writing.
(C) If a Federal medical officer is not available, refer the
request to the Civil Service Commission regional office with the
medical certificates or other medical reports concerned.
(5) Do not release any records containing information as to the
employee's security or loyalty.
(6) Honor subpoenas or court orders only when disclosure is
authorized.
(7) When authorized to comply with a subpoena duces tecum, do not
leave the original records with the court.
(b) [Reserved]
[[Page 86279]]
Sec. [thinsp]265.12 Demands for testimony or records in certain
legal proceedings.
(a) Scope and applicability of this section. (1) This section
establishes procedures to be followed if the Postal Service or any
Postal Service employee receives a demand for testimony concerning or
disclosure of:
(i) Records contained in the files of the Postal Service;
(ii) Information relating to records contained in the files of the
Postal Service; or
(iii) Information or records acquired or produced by the employee
in the course of his or her official duties or because of the
employee's official status.
(2) This section does not create any right or benefit, substantive
or procedural, enforceable by any person against the Postal Service.
(3) This section does not apply to any of the following:
(i) Any legal proceeding in which the United States is a party;
(ii) A demand for testimony or records made by either House of
Congress or, to the extent of matter within its jurisdiction, any
committee or subcommittee of Congress;
(iii) An appearance by an employee in his or her private capacity
in a legal proceeding in which the employee's testimony does not relate
to the employee's official duties or the functions of the Postal
Service; or
(iv) A demand for testimony or records submitted to the Postal
Inspection Service (a demand for Inspection Service records or
testimony will be handled in accordance with rules in Sec. 265.13).
(4) This section does not exempt a request from applicable
confidentiality requirements, including the requirements of the Privacy
Act, 5 U.S.C. 552a.
(b) Definitions. The following definitions apply to this section:
(1) Adjudicative authority includes, but is not limited to, the
following:
(i) A court of law or other judicial forums, whether local, state,
or federal; and
(ii) Mediation, arbitration, or other forums for dispute
resolution.
(2) Demand includes a subpoena, subpoena duces tecum, request,
order, or other notice for testimony or records arising in a legal
proceeding.
(3) Employee means a current employee or official of the Postal
Service.
(4) General Counsel means the General Counsel of the United States
Postal Service, the Chief Field Counsels, or an employee of the Postal
Service acting for the General Counsel under a delegation of authority.
(5) Legal proceeding means:
(i) A proceeding before an adjudicative authority;
(ii) A legislative proceeding, except for a proceeding before
either House of Congress or before any committee or subcommittee of
Congress; or
(iii) An administrative proceeding.
(6) Private litigation means a legal proceeding to which the United
States is not a party.
(7) Records custodian means the employee who maintains a requested
record. For assistance in identifying the custodian of a specific
record, contact the Manager, Records Office, U.S. Postal Service, 475
L'Enfant Plaza SW., Washington, DC 20260, telephone (202) 268-2608.
(8) Testimony means statements made in connection with a legal
proceeding, including but not limited to statements in court or other
forums, depositions, declarations, affidavits, or responses to
interrogatories.
(9) United States means the federal government of the United States
and any of its agencies, establishments, or instrumentalities,
including the United States Postal Service.
(c) Requirements for submitting a demand for testimony or records.
(1) Ordinarily, a party seeking to obtain records from the Postal
Service should submit a request in accordance with the provisions of
the Freedom of Information Act (FOIA), 5 U.S.C. 552, and the Postal
Service's regulations implementing the FOIA at 39 CFR 265.1 through
265.9, 265.14; or the Privacy Act, 5 U.S.C. 552a and the Postal
Service's regulations implementing the Privacy Act at 39 CFR 266.1
through 266.10.
(2) A demand for testimony or records issued pursuant to the rules
governing the legal proceeding in which the demand arises must:
(i) Be in writing;
(ii) Identify the requested record and/or state the nature of the
requested testimony, describe the relevance of the record or testimony
to the proceeding, and why the information sought is unavailable by any
other means; and
(iii) If testimony is requested, contain a summary of the requested
testimony and a showing that no document could be provided and used in
lieu of testimony.
(3) Procedures for service of demand are made as follows:
(i) Service of a demand for testimony or records (including, but
not limited to, personnel or payroll information) relating to a current
or former employee must be made in accordance with the applicable rules
of civil procedure on the employee whose testimony is requested or the
records custodian. The requester also shall deliver a copy of the
demand to the District Manager, Customer Services and Sales, for all
current employees whose work location is within the geographic
boundaries of the manager's district, and any former employee whose
last position was within the geographic boundaries of the manager's
district. A demand for testimony or records must be received by the
employee whose testimony is requested and the appropriate District
Manager, Customer Services and Sales, at least ten (10) working days
before the date the testimony or records are needed.
(ii) Service of a demand for testimony or records other than those
described in paragraph (c)(3)(i) of this section must be made in
accordance with the applicable rules of civil procedure on the employee
whose testimony is requested or the records custodian. The requester
also shall deliver a copy of the demand to the General Counsel, United
States Postal Service, 475 L'Enfant Plaza SW., Washington DC 20260-
1100, or the Chief Field Counsel. A demand for testimony or records
must be received by the employee and the General Counsel or Chief Field
Counsel at least ten (10) working days before the date testimony or
records are needed.
(d) Procedures followed in response to a demand for testimony or
records. (1) After an employee receives a demand for testimony or
records, the employee shall immediately notify the General Counsel or
Chief Field Counsel and request instructions.
(2) An employee may not give testimony or produce records without
the prior authorization of the General Counsel.
(3)(i) The General Counsel may allow an employee to testify or
produce records if the General Counsel determines that granting
permission:
(A) Would be appropriate under the rules of procedure governing the
matter in which the demand arises and other applicable laws,
privileges, rules, authority, and regulations; and
(B) Would not be contrary to the interest of the United States. The
interest of the United States includes, but is not limited to,
furthering a public interest of the Postal Service and protecting the
human and financial resources of the United States.
(ii) An employee's testimony shall be limited to the information
set forth in the statement described at paragraph (c)(2) of this
section or to such portions thereof as the General Counsel determines
are not subject to objection. An employee's testimony shall be limited
to facts within the personal
[[Page 86280]]
knowledge of the employee. A Postal Service employee authorized to give
testimony under this rule is prohibited from giving expert or opinion
testimony, answering hypothetical or speculative questions, or giving
testimony with respect to privileged subject matter. The General
Counsel may waive the prohibition of expert testimony under this
paragraph only upon application and showing of exceptional
circumstances and the request substantially meets the requirements of
this section.
(4) The General Counsel may establish conditions under which the
employee may testify. If the General Counsel authorizes the testimony
of an employee, the party seeking testimony shall make arrangements for
the taking of testimony by those methods that, in the General Counsel's
view, will least disrupt the employee's official duties. For example,
at the General Counsel's discretion, testimony may be provided by
affidavits, answers to interrogatories, written depositions, or
depositions transcribed, recorded, or preserved by any other means
allowable by law.
(5) If a response to a demand for testimony or records is required
before the General Counsel determines whether to allow an employee to
testify, the employee or counsel for the employee shall do the
following:
(i) Inform the court or other authority of the regulations in this
section; and
(ii) Request that the demand be stayed pending the employee's
receipt of the General Counsel's instructions.
(6) If the court or other authority declines the request for a
stay, or rules that the employee must comply with the demand regardless
of the General Counsel's instructions, the employee or counsel for the
employee shall respectfully decline to comply with the demand, citing
United States ex rel. Touhy v. Ragen, 340 U.S. 462 (1951), and the
regulations in this section.
(7) The General Counsel may request the assistance of the
Department of Justice or a U.S. Attorney where necessary to represent
the interests of the Postal Service and the employee.
(8) At his or her discretion, the General Counsel may grant a
waiver of any procedure described by this section, where waiver is
considered necessary to promote a significant interest of the United
States or for other good cause.
(9) If it otherwise is permissible, the records custodian may
authenticate, upon the request of the party seeking disclosure, copies
of the records. No employee of the Postal Service shall respond in
strict compliance with the terms of a subpoena duces tecum unless
specifically authorized by the General Counsel.
(e) Postal Service employees as expert witnesses. No Postal Service
employee may testify as an expert or opinion witness, with regard to
any matter arising out of the employee's official duties or the
functions of the Postal Service, for any party other than the United
States, except that in extraordinary circumstances, the General Counsel
may approve such expert testimony in private litigation. A Postal
Service employee may not testify as such an expert witness without the
express authorization of the General Counsel. A litigant must obtain
authorization of the General Counsel before designating a Postal
Service employee as an expert witness.
(f) Substitution of Postal Service employees. Although a demand for
testimony may be directed to a named Postal Service employee, the
General Counsel, where appropriate, may designate another Postal
Service employee to give testimony. Upon request and for good cause
shown (for example, when a particular Postal Service employee has
direct knowledge of a material fact not known to the substitute
employee designated by the Postal Service), the General Counsel may
permit testimony by a named Postal Service employee.
(g) Fees and costs. (1) The Postal Service may charge fees, not to
exceed actual costs, to private litigants seeking testimony or records
by request or demand. The fees, which are to be calculated to reimburse
fully the Postal Service for processing the demand and providing the
witness or records, may include, among others:
(i) Costs of time spent by employees, including attorneys, of the
Postal Service to process and respond to the demand;
(ii) Costs of attendance of the employee and agency attorney at any
deposition, hearing, or trial;
(iii) Travel costs of the employee and agency attorney;
(iv) Costs of materials and equipment used to search for, process,
and make available information.
(2) All costs for employee time shall be calculated on the hourly
pay of the employee (including all pay, allowance, and benefits) and
shall include the hourly fee for each hour, or portion of each hour,
when the employee is in travel, in attendance at a deposition, hearing,
or trial, or is processing or responding to a request or demand.
(3) At the discretion of the Postal Service, where appropriate,
costs may be estimated and collected before testimony is given.
(h) Acceptance of service. This section does not in any way
abrogate or modify the requirements of the Federal Rules of Civil
Procedure (28 U.S.C. Appendix) regarding service of process.
Sec. 265.13 Compliance with subpoenas, summonses, and court orders
by postal employees within the Postal Inspection Service where the
Postal Service, the United States, or any other Federal agency is not a
party.
(a) Applicability of this section. The rules in this section apply
to all federal, state, and local court proceedings, as well as
administrative and legislative proceedings, other than:
(1) Proceedings where the United States, the Postal Service, or any
other Federal agency is a party;
(2) Congressional requests or subpoenas for testimony or documents;
(3) Consultative services and technical assistance rendered by the
Inspection Service in executing its normal functions;
(4) Employees serving as expert witnesses in connection with
professional and consultative services under 5 CFR part 7001, provided
that employees acting in this capacity must state for the record that
their testimony reflects their personal opinions and should not be
viewed as the official position of the Postal Service;
(5) Employees making appearances in their private capacities in
proceedings that do not relate to the Postal Service (e.g., cases
arising from traffic accidents, domestic relations) and do not involve
professional or consultative services; and
(6) When in the opinion of the Counsel or the Counsel's designee,
Office of the Chief Postal Inspector, it has been determined that it is
in the best interest of the Inspection Service or in the public
interest.
(b) Purpose and scope. The provisions in this section limit the
participation of postal employees within or assigned to the Inspection
Service, in private litigation, and other proceedings in which the
Postal Service, the United States, or any other federal agency is not a
party. The rules are intended to promote the careful supervision of
Inspection Service resources and to reduce the risk of inappropriate
disclosures that might affect postal operations.
(c) Definitions. For the purposes of this section:
(1) Authorizing official is the person responsible for giving the
authorization for release of documents or permission to testify.
(2) Case or matter means any civil proceeding before a court of
law,
[[Page 86281]]
administrative board, hearing officer, or other body conducting a
judicial or administrative proceeding in which the United States, the
Postal Service, or another federal agency is not a named party.
(3) Demand includes any request, order, or subpoena for testimony
or the production of documents.
(4) Document means all records, papers, or official files,
including, but not limited to, official letters, telegrams, memoranda,
reports, studies, calendar and diary entries, graphs, notes, charts,
tabulations, data analyses, statistical or information accumulations,
records of meetings and conversations, film impressions, magnetic
tapes, computer discs, and sound or mechanical reproductions;
(5) Employee or Inspection Service employee, for the purpose of
this section only, refers to a Postal Service employee currently or
formerly assigned to the Postal Inspection Service, student interns,
contractors and employees of contractors who have access to Inspection
Service information and records.
(6) Inspection Service means the organizational unit within the
Postal Service that performs the functions specified in part 233 of
this chapter.
(7) Inspection Service Legal Counsel is an attorney authorized by
the Chief Postal Inspector to give legal advice to members of the
Inspection Service.
(8) Inspection Service Manual is the directive containing the
standard operating procedures for Postal Inspectors and certain
Inspection Service employees.
(9) Nonpublic includes any material or information not subject to
mandatory public disclosure under Sec. [thinsp]265.14(b).
(10) Official case file means official documents that relate to a
particular case or investigation. These documents may be kept at any
location and do not necessarily have to be in the same location in
order to constitute the file.
(11) Postal Inspector reports include all written reports, letters,
recordings, or other memorializations made in conjunction with the
duties of a Postal Inspector.
(12) Testify or testimony includes both in-person oral statements
before any body conducting a judicial or administrative proceeding and
statements made in depositions, answers to interrogatories,
declarations, affidavits, or other similar documents.
(13) Third-party action means an action, judicial or
administrative, in which the United States, the Postal Service, or any
other federal agency is not a named party.
(d) Policy. (1) No current or former employee within the Inspection
Service may testify or produce documents concerning information
acquired in the course of employment or as a result of his or her
relationship with the Postal Service in any proceeding to which this
section applies (see paragraph (a) of this section), unless authorized
to do so. Authorization will be provided by:
(i) The Postal Inspector in Charge of the affected field Division,
or designee, for Division personnel and records, after that official
has determined through consultation with Inspection Service legal
counsel that no legal objection, privilege, or exemption applies to
such testimony or production of documents.
(ii) The Chief Postal Inspector or designee for Headquarters
employees and records, after that official has determined through
consultation with Inspection Service legal counsel, that no legal
objection, privilege, or exemption applies to such testimony or
production of documents.
(2) Consideration shall be given to:
(i) Statutory restrictions, as well as any legal objection,
exemption, or privilege that may apply;
(ii) Relevant legal standards for disclosure of nonpublic
information and documents;
(iii) Inspection Service rules and regulations and the public
interest;
(iv) Conservation of employee time; and
(v) Prevention of the expenditure of Postal Service resources for
private purposes.
(3) If additional information is necessary before a determination
can be made, the authorizing official may, in coordination with
Inspection Service legal counsel, request assistance from the
Department of Justice.
(e) Compliance with subpoena duces tecum. (1) Except as required by
part 262 of this chapter, produce any other record of the Postal
Service only in compliance with a subpoena duces tecum or appropriate
court order.
(2) Do not release any record containing information relating to an
employee's security or loyalty.
(3) Honor subpoenas and court orders only when disclosure is
authorized.
(4) When authorized to comply with a subpoena duces tecum or court
order, do not leave the originals with the court.
(5) Postal Inspector reports are considered to be confidential
internal documents and shall not be released unless there is specific
authorization by the Chief Postal Inspector or the Inspector in Charge
of the affected field Division, after consulting with Inspection
Service legal counsel.
(6) The Inspection Service Manual and other operating instructions
issued to Inspection Service employees are considered to be
confidential and shall not be released unless there is specific
authorization, after consultation with Inspection Service legal
counsel. If the requested information relates to confidential
investigative techniques, or release of the information would adversely
affect the law enforcement mission of the Inspection Service, the
subpoenaed official, through Inspection Service legal counsel, may
request an in camera, ex parte conference to determine the necessity
for the release of the information. The entire Manual should not be
given to any party.
(7) Notes, memoranda, reports, transcriptions, whether written or
recorded and made pursuant to an official investigation conducted by a
member of the Inspection Service, are the property of the Inspection
Service and are part of the official case file, whether stored with the
official file.
(f) Compliance with summonses and subpoenas ad testificandum. (1)
If an Inspection Service employee is served with a third-party summons
or a subpoena requiring an appearance in court, contact should be made
with Inspection Service legal counsel to determine whether and which
exemptions or restrictions apply to proposed testimony. Inspection
Service employees are directed to comply with summonses, subpoenas, and
court orders, as to appearance, but may not testify without
authorization.
(2) Postal Inspector reports or records will not be presented
during testimony, in either state or federal courts in which the United
States, the Postal Service, or another federal agency is not a party in
interest, unless authorized by the Chief Postal Inspector or the Postal
Inspector in Charge of the affected field Division, who will make the
decision after consulting with Inspection Service legal counsel. If an
attempt is made to compel production, through testimony, the employee
is directed to decline to produce the information or matter and to
state that it may be exempted and may not be disclosed or produced
without the specific approval of the Chief Postal Inspector or the
Postal Inspector in Charge of the affected field Division. The Postal
Service will offer all possible assistance to the courts, but the
question of disclosing information for which an exemption may be
claimed is a matter of discretion that rests with the appropriate
official. Paragraph (e) of this section covers the release of
Inspection Service documents in cases where the Postal Service or the
United States is not a party.
[[Page 86282]]
(g) General procedures for obtaining Inspection Service documents
and testimony from Inspection Service employees. (1) To facilitate the
orderly response to demands for the testimony of Inspection Service
employees and production of documents in cases where the United States,
the Postal Service, or another federal agency is not a party, all
demands for the production of nonpublic documents or testimony of
Inspection Service employees concerning matters relating to their
official duties and not subject to the exemptions set forth in
paragraph (a) of this section shall be in writing and conform to the
requirements outlined in paragraphs (g)(2) and (g)(3) of this section.
(2) Before or simultaneously with service of a demand described in
paragraph (g)(1) of this section, the requesting party shall serve on
the Counsel, Office of the Chief Postal Inspector, 475 L'Enfant Plaza
SW., Washington, DC 20260-2101, an affidavit or declaration containing
the following information:
(i) The title of the case and the forum where it will be heard;
(ii) The party's interest in the case;
(iii) The reasons for the demand;
(iv) A showing that the requested information is available, by law,
to a party outside the Postal Service;
(v) If testimony is sought, a summary of the anticipated testimony;
(vi) If testimony is sought, a showing that Inspection Service
records could not be provided and used in place of the requested
testimony;
(vii) The intended use of the documents or testimony; and
(viii) An affirmative statement that the documents or testimony is
necessary for defending or prosecuting the case at issue.
(3) The Counsel, Office of the Chief Postal Inspector, shall act as
agent for the receipt of legal process for demands for production of
records or testimony of Inspection Service employees where the United
States, the Postal Service, or any other federal agency is not a party.
A subpoena for testimony or for the production of documents from an
Inspection Service employee concerning official matters shall be served
in accordance with the applicable rules of civil procedure. A copy of
the subpoena and affidavit or declaration, if not previously furnished,
shall also be sent to the Chief Postal Inspector or the appropriate
Postal Inspector in Charge.
(4) Any Inspection Service employee who is served with a demand
shall promptly inform the Chief Postal Inspector, or the appropriate
Postal Inspector in Charge, of the nature of the documents or testimony
sought and all relevant facts and circumstances.
(h) Authorization of testimony or production of documents. (1) The
Chief Postal Inspector or the Postal Inspector in Charge of the
affected field Division, after consulting with Inspection Service legal
counsel, shall determine whether testimony or the production of
documents will be authorized.
(2) Before authorizing the requested testimony or the production of
documents, the Chief Postal Inspector or the Postal Inspector in Charge
of the affected field Division shall consider the following factors:
(i) Statutory restrictions, as well as any legal objection,
exemption, or privilege that may apply;
(ii) Relevant legal standards for disclosure of nonpublic
information and documents;
(iii) Inspection Service rules and regulations and the public
interest;
(iv) Conservation of employee time; and
(v) Prevention of expenditures of government time and resources
solely for private purposes.
(3) If, in the opinion of the authorizing official, the documents
should not be released or testimony should not be furnished, that
official's decision is final.
(4) Inspection Service legal counsel may consult or negotiate with
the party or the party's counsel seeking testimony or documents to
refine and limit the demand, so that compliance is less burdensome, or
obtain information necessary to make the determination whether the
documents or testimony will be authorized. If the party or party's
counsel seeking the documents or testimony fails to cooperate in good
faith, preventing Inspection Service legal counsel from making an
informed recommendation to the authorizing official, that failure may
be presented to the court or other body conducting the proceeding as a
basis for objection.
(5) Permission to testify or to release documents in all cases will
be limited to matters outlined in the affidavit or declaration
described in paragraph (g)(2) of this section or to such parts as
deemed appropriate by the authorizing official.
(6) If the authorizing official allows the release of documents or
testimony to be given by an employee, arrangements shall be made for
the taking of testimony or receipt of documents by the least disruptive
methods to the employee's official duties. Testimony may, for example,
be provided by affidavits, answers to interrogatories, written
depositions, or depositions transcribed, recorded, or preserved by any
other means allowable by law.
(i) While giving a deposition, the employee may, at the option of
the authorizing official, be represented by Inspection Service legal
counsel.
(ii) While completing affidavits, or other written reports or at
any time during the process of preparing for testimony or releasing
documents, the employee may seek the assistance of Inspection Service
legal counsel.
(7) Absent written authorization from the authorizing official, the
employee shall respectfully decline to produce the requested documents,
testify, or, otherwise, disclose the requested information.
(8) If the authorization is denied or not received by the return
date, the employee, together with counsel, where appropriate, shall
appear at the stated time and place, produce a copy of this section,
and respectfully decline to testify or produce any document on the
basis of the regulations in this section.
(9) The employee shall appear as ordered by the subpoena, summons,
or other appropriate court order, unless:
(i) Legal counsel has advised the employee that an appearance is
inappropriate, as in cases where the subpoena, summons, or other court
order was not properly issued or served, has been withdrawn, discovery
has been stayed; or
(ii) Where the Postal Service will present a legal objection to
furnishing the requested information or testimony.
(i) Inspection Service employees as expert or opinion witnesses. No
Inspection Service employee may testify as an expert or opinion
witness, with regard to any matter arising out of the employee's duties
or functions at the Postal Service, for any party other than the United
States, except that in extraordinary circumstances, the Counsel, Office
of the Chief Postal Inspector, may approve such testimony in private
litigation. An Inspection Service employee may not testify as such an
expert or opinion witness without the express authorization of the
Counsel, Office of the Chief Postal Inspector. A litigant must first
obtain authorization of the Counsel, Office of the Chief Postal
Inspector, before designating an Inspection Service employee as an
expert or opinion witness.
(j) Postal liability. This section is intended to provide
instructions to Inspection Service employees and does not create any
right or benefit, substantive or procedural, enforceable by any party
against the Postal Service.
(k) Fees. (1) Unless determined by 28 U.S.C. 1821 or other
applicable statute,
[[Page 86283]]
the costs of providing testimony, including transcripts, shall be borne
by the requesting party.
(2) Unless limited by statute, such costs shall also include
reimbursement to the Postal Service for the usual and ordinary expenses
attendant upon the employee's absence from his or her official duties
in connection with the case or matter, including the employee's salary
and applicable overhead charges, and any necessary travel expenses as
follows:
(i) The Inspection Service is authorized to charge reasonable fees
to parties demanding documents or information. Such fees, calculated to
reimburse the Postal Service for the cost of responding to a demand,
may include the costs of time expended by Inspection Service employees,
including attorneys, to process and respond to the demand; attorney
time for reviewing the demand and for legal work in connection with the
demand; expenses generated by equipment used to search for, produce,
and copy the requested information; travel costs of the employee and
the agency attorney, including lodging and per diem where appropriate.
Such fees shall be assessed at the rates and in the manner specified in
Sec. [thinsp]265.9.
(ii) At the discretion of the Inspection Service where appropriate,
fees and costs may be estimated and collected before testimony is
given.
(iii) The provisions in this section do not affect rights and
procedures governing public access to official documents pursuant to
the Freedom of Information Act, 5 U.S.C 552.
(l) Acceptance of service. The rules in this section in no way
modify the requirements of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure (28
U.S.C. Appendix) regarding service of process.
Subpart C--Availability of Records
Sec. 265.14 Rules concerning specific categories of records.
(a) Records available to the public on request. Except as otherwise
proscribed by law or regulations, including but not limited to
paragraphs (b) and (c) of this section, Sec. 265.2 and Sec. 265.11-
Sec. 265.13, Postal Service records will be made available to any
person in accordance with the procedures provided in Sec. 265.3.
(b) Records not subject to mandatory public disclosure. Certain
classes of records are exempt from mandatory disclosure under
exemptions contained in the Freedom of Information Act and in 39 U.S.C.
410(c). The Postal Service will exercise its discretion, in accordance
with the policy stated in Sec. 265.1(c), as implemented by
instructions issued by the Records Office with the approval of the
General Counsel in determining whether the public interest is served by
the inspection or copying of records that are:
(1) Related solely to the internal personnel rules and practices of
the Postal Service.
(2) Trade secrets, or privileged or confidential commercial or
financial information, obtained from any person.
(3) Information of a commercial nature, including trade secrets,
whether or not obtained from a person outside the Postal Service, which
under good business practice would not be publicly disclosed. This
class includes, but is not limited to:
(i) Information pertaining to methods of handling valuable
registered mail.
(ii) Records of money orders, except as provided in R900 of the
Domestic Mail Manual (DMM).
(iii) Technical information concerning postage meters and
prototypes submitted for Postal Service approval prior to leasing to
mailers.
(iv) Reports of market surveys conducted by or under contract in
behalf of the Postal Service.
(v) Records indicating rural carrier lines of travel.
(vi) Records compiled within the Postal Service which would be of
potential benefit to persons or firms in economic competition with the
Postal Service.
(vii) Information which, if publicly disclosed, could materially
increase procurement costs.
(viii) Information which, if publicly disclosed, could compromise
testing or examination materials.
(4) Interagency or internal memoranda or letters that would not be
available by law to a private party in litigation with the Postal
Service.
(5) Reports and memoranda of consultants or independent
contractors, except to the extent they would be required to be
disclosed if prepared within the Postal Service.
(6) Files personal in nature, including medical and personnel
files, the disclosure of which would constitute a clearly unwarranted
invasion of personal privacy.
(7) Information prepared for use in connection with proceedings
under chapter 36 of title 39, U.S. Code, relating to rate,
classification, and service changes.
(8) Information prepared for use in connection with the negotiation
of collective bargaining agreements under chapter 12 of title 39, U.S.
Code, or minutes of, or notes kept during, negotiating sessions
conducted under such chapter.
(9) Other matter specifically exempted from disclosure by statute.
(c) Records or information compiled for law enforcement purposes.
(1) Investigatory files compiled for law enforcement purposes, whether
or not considered closed, are exempt by statute from mandatory
disclosure except to the extent otherwise available by law to a party
other than the Postal Service, 39 U.S.C. 410(c)(6). As a matter of
policy, however, the Postal Service will normally make records or
information compiled for law enforcement purposes available upon
request unless the production of these records:
(i) Could reasonably be expected to interfere with enforcement
proceedings;
(ii) Would deprive a person of a right to a fair trial or an
impartial adjudication;
(iii) Could reasonably be expected to constitute an unwarranted
invasion of personal privacy;
(iv) Could reasonably be expected to disclose the identity of a
confidential source, including a State, local, or foreign agency or
authority or any private institution which furnished information on a
confidential basis, and, in the case of a record or information
compiled by a criminal law enforcement authority (such as the Postal
Inspection Service) in the course of a criminal investigation, or by an
agency conducting a lawful national security intelligence
investigation, information furnished by a confidential source;
(v) Would disclose techniques and procedures for law enforcement
investigations or prosecutions, or would disclose guidelines for law
enforcement investigations or prosecutions if such disclosure could
reasonably be expected to risk circumvention of the law; or
(vi) Could reasonably be expected to endanger the life or physical
safety of any individual.
(2) Whenever a request is made which involves access to records
that could reasonably be expected to interfere with law enforcement
proceedings, and
(i) The investigation or proceeding involves a possible violation
of criminal law; and
(ii) There is reason to believe that,
(A) The subject of the investigation or proceeding is not aware of
its pendency, and
(B) Disclosure of the existence of the records could reasonably be
expected to interfere with enforcement proceedings, the Postal Service
may, during only such time as that circumstance continues, treat the
records as not subject to the requirements of the Freedom of
Information Act.
(3) Whenever informant records maintained by a criminal law
[[Page 86284]]
enforcement agency (such as the Postal Inspection Service) under an
informant's name or personal identifier are requested by a third party
according to the informant's name or personal identifier, the records
may be treated as not subject to the requirements of the Freedom of
Information Act unless the informant's status as an informant has been
officially confirmed.
(4) Authority to disclose records or information compiled for law
enforcement purposes to persons outside the Postal Service must be
obtained from the Chief Postal Inspector, U.S. Postal Service,
Washington, DC 20260-2100, or designee.
(d) Disclosure of names and addresses of customers. Upon request,
the names and addresses of specifically identified Postal Service
customers will be made available only as follows:
(1) Change of address. The new address of any specific customer who
has filed a permanent or temporary change of address order (by
submitting PS Form 3575, a hand-written order, or an electronically
communicated order) will be furnished to any person, except that the
new address of a specific customer who has indicated on the order that
the address change is for an individual or an entire family will be
furnished only in those circumstances stated at paragraph (d)(5) of
this section. Disclosure will be limited to the address of the
specifically identified individual about whom the information is
requested (not other family members or individuals whose names may also
appear on the change of address order). The Postal Service reserves the
right not to disclose the address of an individual for the protection
of the individual's personal safety. Other information on PS Form 3575
or copies of the form will not be furnished except in those
circumstances stated at paragraphs (d)(5)(i), (d)(5)(iii), or
(d)(5)(iv) of this section.
(2) Name and address of permit holder. The name and address of the
holder of a particular bulk mail permit, permit imprint or similar
permit (but not including postage meter licenses), and the name of any
person applying for a permit in behalf of a holder will be furnished to
any person upon the filing of a proper FOIA request and payment of any
applicable fees. For the name and address of a postage meter license
holder, see paragraph (d)(3) of this section. (Lists of permit holders
may not be disclosed to members of the public. See paragraph (e)(1) of
this section.)
(3) Name and address of postage evidencing user. The name and
address of an authorized user of a postage meter or PC Postage product
(postage evidencing systems) printing a specified indicium will be
furnished to any person upon the payment of any fees authorized by
Sec. 265.9(b), provided the user is using the postage meter or PC
Postage product for business purposes. The request for this information
must be sent to the manager of Postage Technology Management, Postal
Service Headquarters. The request must include the original or a
photocopy of the envelope or wrapper on which the postage meter or PC
postage indicium in question is printed, and a copy or description of
the contents to support that the sender is a business or firm and not
an individual. (Lists of authorized users of postage meters or PC
Postage products may not be disclosed to members of the public.)
(4) Post Office boxholder information. Information from PS Form
1093, Application for Post Office Box or Caller Service, will be
provided as follows:
(i) Except as provided in paragraph (d)(4)(iii) of this section,
the boxholder applicant name and address from PS Form 1093 will be
provided only in those circumstances stated in paragraphs (d)(5)(i)
through (iii) of this section.
(ii) Except as provided in paragraph (d)(4)(iii) of this section,
the names of persons listed as receiving mail, other than the boxholder
applicant, will be furnished from PS Form 1093 only in those
circumstances stated in paragraphs (d)(5)(i) and (iii) of this section.
(iii) When a copy of a protective order has been filed with the
postmaster, information from PS Form 1093 will not be disclosed except
pursuant to the order of a court of competent jurisdiction.
(5) Exceptions. Except as otherwise provided in these regulations,
names or addresses of Postal Service customers will be furnished only
as follows:
(i) To a Federal, State or local government agency upon prior
written certification that the information is required for the
performance of its duties. The Postal Service requires government
agencies to use the format appearing at the end of this section when
requesting the verification of a customer's current address or a
customer's new mailing address. If the request lacks any of the
required information or a proper signature, the postmaster will return
the request to the agency, specifying the deficiency in the space
marked `OTHER'. A copy of PS Form 1093 may be provided.
(ii)(A) To a person empowered by law to serve legal process, or the
attorney for a party in whose behalf service will be made, or a party
who is acting pro se,\1\ upon receipt of written information that
specifically includes all of the following:
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\1\ The term pro se means that a party is not represented by an
attorney but by himself or herself.
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(1) A certification that the name or address is needed and will be
used solely for service of legal process in connection with actual or
prospective litigation;
(2) A citation to the statute or regulation that empowers the
requester to serve process, if the requester is other than the attorney
for a party in whose behalf service will be made, or a party who is
acting pro se;
(3) The names of all known parties to the litigation;
(4) The court in which the case has been or will be commenced;
(5) The docket or other identifying number, if one has been issued;
and
(6) The capacity in which the boxholder is to be served, e.g.,
defendant or witness.
(B) By submitting such information, the requester certifies that it
is true. The address of an individual who files with the postmaster a
copy of a protective court order will not be disclosed except as
provided under paragraphs (d)(5)(i), (iii), or (iv) of this section. A
copy of Form 1093 will not be provided. The Postal Service suggests use
of the standard format appearing at the end of this section when
requesting information under this paragraph. When using the standard
format on the submitter's own letterhead, the standard format must be
used in its entirety. The warning statement and certification
specifically must be included immediately before the signature block.
If the request lacks any of the required information or a proper
signature, the postmaster will return it to the requester specifying
the deficiency.
(iii) In compliance with a subpoena or court order, except that
change of address or boxholder information which is not otherwise
subject to disclosure under these regulations may be disclosed only
pursuant to a court order.
(iv) To a law enforcement agency, for oral requests made through
the Inspection Service, but only after the Inspection Service has
confirmed that the information is needed in the course of a criminal
investigation. (All other requests from law enforcement agencies should
be submitted in writing to the postmaster as in paragraph (d)(5)(i) of
this section.)
(6) Jury service. The mailing address of any customer sought in
connection with jury service, if known, will be furnished without
charge upon prior
[[Page 86285]]
written request to a court official, such as a judge, court clerk or
jury commissioner.
(7) Address verification. The address of a postal customer will be
verified at the request of a Federal, State, or local government agency
upon written certification that the information is required for the
performance of the agency's duties. ``Verification'' means advising
such an agency whether or not its address for a postal customer is one
at which mail for that customer is currently being delivered.
``Verification'' neither means nor implies knowledge on the part of the
Postal Service as to the actual residence of the customer or as to the
actual receipt by the customer of mail delivered to that address. The
Postal Service requires government agencies to use the format appearing
at the end of this section when requesting the verification of a
customer's current address or a customer's new mailing address. If the
request lacks any of the required information or a proper signature,
the postmaster will return the request to the agency, specifying the
deficiency in the space marked ``OTHER''.
(8) Business/Residence location. If the location of a residence or
a place of business is known to a Postal Service employee, whether as a
result of official duties or otherwise, the employee may, but need not,
disclose the location or give directions to it. No fee is charged for
such information.
(9) Private mailbox information. Information from PS Form 1583,
Application for Delivery of Mail Through Agent, will be provided as
follows:
(i) Except as provided in paragraph (d)(9)(iii) of this section,
information from PS Form 1583 will be provided only in the circumstance
stated in paragraph (d)(5)(iii) of this section.
(ii) To the public only for the purpose of identifying a particular
address as an address of an agent to whom mail is delivered on behalf
of other persons. No other information, including, but not limited to,
the identities of persons on whose behalf agents receive mail, may be
disclosed to the public from PS Form 1583.
(iii) Information concerning an individual who has filed a
protective court order with the postmaster will not be disclosed except
pursuant to the order of a court of competent jurisdiction.
(e) Information not available for public disclosure. (1) Except as
provided by paragraph (a)(6) of this section, the Postal Service and
its officers and employees shall not make available to the public by
any means or for any purpose any mailing list or other list of names or
addresses (past or present) of postal patrons or other persons.
(2) Records or other documents which are classified or otherwise
specifically authorized by Executive Order 12356 and implementing
regulations to be kept secret in the interest of the national defense
or foreign policy are not subject to disclosure pursuant to this part.
(3) Records consisting of trade secrets or confidential financial
data, the disclosure of which is prohibited by 18 U.S.C. 1905, are not
subject to disclosure pursuant to this part.
(4) Other records, the disclosure of which is prohibited by
statute, are not subject to disclosure pursuant to this part.
(f) Protection of the right of privacy. If any record required or
permitted by this part to be disclosed contains the name of, or other
identifying details concerning, any person, including an employee of
the Postal Service, the disclosure of which would constitute a clearly
unwarranted invasion of personal privacy, the name or other identifying
details shall be deleted before the record is disclosed and the
requester so informed.
(g) Disclosure in part of otherwise exempt record. Any reasonably
segregable portion of a record shall be provided after deleting the
information which is neither subject to mandatory disclosure nor
available as a matter of discretion.
BILLING CODE 7710-12-P
[[Page 86286]]
[GRAPHIC] [TIFF OMITTED] TR30NO16.002
[[Page 86287]]
[GRAPHIC] [TIFF OMITTED] TR30NO16.003
Stanley F. Mires,
Attorney, Federal Compliance.
[FR Doc. 2016-28430 Filed 11-29-16; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 7710-12-C