Freedom of Information Act Regulations, 44036-44044 [2017-19997]
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Federal Register / Vol. 82, No. 181 / Wednesday, September 20, 2017 / Rules and Regulations
additional parts within Chapter IV to
accommodate NCPC’s recently adopted
National Environmental Policy Act
1 CFR Part 456 and Chapter VI
(NEPA) Regulations, the Office of the
Federal Register assigned NCPC a new
Freedom of Information Act
Chapter—Chapter VI—within Title 1 for
Regulations
consolidation of all current and future
NCPC regulations. As NCPC revises its
AGENCY: National Capital Planning
existing regulations and prepares new
Commission.
ones, each revised and new regulation
ACTION: Final rule.
will be published in the next sequential
SUMMARY: The National Capital Planning Part of Chapter VI. The next sequential
Commission (NCPC or Commission)
Part available for NCPC’s revised FOIA
hereby adopts new Freedom of
regulations is Part 602. Thus, the
Information Act (FOIA) Regulations.
revised FOIA regulations are advertised
NCPC must comply with the
as Part 602.
requirements of FOIA when it process
I. Key Changes Incorporated Into
requests for Information submitted
NCPC’s Freedom of Information Act
pursuant to FOIA.
Regulations
DATES: This rule is effective October 20,
A. Time Limits
2017.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
The FOIA Improvement Act of 2016
Anne R. Schuyler, General Counsel and requires agencies to establish a
Chief FOIA Officer, 202–482–7223,
minimum of 90 days for requesters to
anne.schuyler@ncpc.gov.
file an administrative appeal. NCPC’s
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: On June
FOIA regulations incorporate this
30, 2016, President Obama signed into
requirement in § 602.12(a) (Appeals of
law the FOIA Improvement Act of 2016
Adverse Determinations). Section
(Pub. L. 114–185). The FOIA
602.12(g) enumerates the ability to
Improvement Act of 2016 addresses a
extend time limits for responding to a
range of procedural issues, including,
FOIA request (20 days) and the process
among others, the requirement that
to be followed by NCPC to extend the
agencies establish a minimum of 90
time limits.
days for requesters to file an
B. Assistance From NCPC’s FOIA Public
administrative appeal; provide dispute
Liaison and the National Archives
resolution services at various times
Record Administration’s (NARA), Office
throughout the FOIA process; refrain
of Government Information (OGIS)
from charging fees for failure to comply
The FOIA Improvement Act of 2016
with mandated time limits; engage in
requires agencies to advise Requesters of
proactive disclosure of records of
general interest or use to the public that the availability of dispute resolution
are appropriate for such disclosure; and services at various times throughout the
FOIA process. The Act provides for
apply the Department of Justice’s
‘‘foreseeable harm’’ standard as the basis these services to be offered by an
for withholding information pursuant to agency’s FOIA Public Liaison and OGIS.
NCPC’s FOIA Regulations reference
an exemption contained in FOIA.
NCPC adopted updated FOIA
these services in §§ 602.5 (FOIA Request
regulations in February 2014. As a
requirements), 602.6 (FOIA Response
result, NCPC included many of the
requirements), and 602.12 (Appeals of
Department of Justice, Office of
Adverse Determinations).
Information Policy (OIP) policies into its
C. Changes to Fee Structure
existing regulations some of which are
The FOIA Improvement Act of 2016
now incorporated as law into the FOIA
precludes the collection of fees if an
Improvement Act of 2016. This means
agency fails to meet mandated FOIA
the new FOIA Regulations (FOIA
time limits. NCPC’s FOIA regulations
Regulations) required only a few
contain this limitation in § 602.13(f)(1).
changes to comply with the
Section 602.13(f)(2) introduces a new
requirements of the FOIA Improvement
fee construct contained in the FOIA
Act of 2016.
Improvements Act of 2016 for Requests
NCPC published its existing FOIA
that generate 5000 pages of responsive
regulations under Title 1, Chapter IV,
records.
part 456 of the Code of Federal
As a general matter, the FOIA
Regulations (CFR). Historically, Title 1,
Regulations contain a reorganized fee
Chapter IV (Miscellaneous Agencies),
section. The current regulations
Parts 455, 456, and 457 of the CFR
organize the fee section based on types
contained NCPC regulations (Privacy,
of fees, e.g., Search, Review and
FOIA, and Nondiscrimination
respectively). However, as there were no Duplication. The new FOIA Regulations
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NATIONAL CAPITAL PLANNING
COMMISSION
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organize the fee section based on three
categories of Requesters, e.g.,
Commercial Use Requesters;
Noncommercial Scientific Institutions,
Educational Institutions, and News
Media Requesters; and all other
Requesters. NCPC adopted this new
organizational structure to improve the
clarity of the fee section. Other than the
reorganized structure and the two
additions necessitated by the FOIA
Improvements Act of 2016, the content
of the fee section in the FOIA
Regulations remains unchanged from
that of the existing regulations.
D. Standard for Release of Records
The FOIA Improvement Act of 2016
requires agencies to proactively disclose
in electronic format records that have
been requested three or more times. It
also requires application of the
Department of Justice’s ‘‘foreseeable
harm’’ standard as the basis for
withholding information pursuant to an
exemption contained in FOIA. The
concept of proactive disclosure is
already contained in NCPC’s current
regulations and is carried over in
NCPC’s FOIA Regulations at §§ 602.2(b)
(Policy) and 602.4(b)(10) (Information
Available without a FOIA Request). The
foreseeable harm standard is
incorporated in § 602.6(c).
E. Elimination of a Description of
NCPC’s Organizational Structure
NCPC’s existing regulations contain
an entire section devoted to a
description of the Agency’s
organizational structure and the
Commission’s composition (See, 1 CFR
456.2). As this information is now
readily available on NCPC’s Web site,
the referenced section has been removed
from the FOIA Regulations. As a
consequence, the remaining sections of
the FOIA Regulations have been
renumbered. Moreover, the Policy
section has been moved. It now follows
the Purpose section (renamed from
General Information) and proceeds the
Definition section. This appeared to be
a move logical organizational structure.
II. Summary of and Response to
Comments
NCPC published a proposed rule
addressing revisions to its current FOIA
Regulations in the Federal Register on
August 1, 2017 for a 30-day public
comment period. The public comment
period closed on August 31, 2017.
NCPC received no comments on its
proposed FOIA Regulations.
Consequently, the proposed FOIA
Regulations are now being advertised as
the final FOIA Regulations.
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III. Compliance With Laws and
Executive Orders
Executive Orders 12866 and 13563
By Memorandum dated October 12,
1993 from Sally Katzen, Administrator,
Office of Information and Regulatory
Affairs (OIRA) to Heads of Executive
Departments and Agencies, and
Independent Agencies, OMB rendered
the NCPC exempt from the requirements
of Executive Order 12866 (See,
Appendix A of cited Memorandum).
Nonetheless, NCPC endeavors to adhere
to the provisions of Executive Orders
and developed this rule in a manner
consistent with the requirements of
Executive Order 13563.
Executive Order 13771
By virtue of its exemption from the
requirements of EO 12866, NCPC is
exemption from this Executive Order.
NCPC confirmed this fact with OIRA.
Regulatory Flexibility Act
As required by the Regulatory
Flexibility Act (5 U.S.C. 601 et seq.), the
NCPC certifies that the rule will not
have a significant economic effect on a
substantial number of small entities.
Small Business Regulatory Enforcement
Fairness Act
This is not a major rule under 5 U.S.C.
804(2), the Small Business Regulatory
Enforcement Fairness Act. It does not
have an annual effect on the economy
of $100 million or more; will not cause
a major increase in costs for individuals,
various levels of governments or various
regions; and does not have a significant
adverse effect on completion,
employment, investment, productivity,
innovation or the competitiveness of US
enterprises with foreign enterprises.
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Unfunded Mandates Reform Act (2
U.S.C. 1531 et seq.)
A statement regarding the Unfunded
Mandates Reform Act is not required.
The rule neither imposes an unfunded
mandate of more than $100 million per
year nor imposes a significant or unique
effect on State, local or tribal
governments or the private sector.
Federalism (Executive Order 13132)
In accordance with Executive Order
13132, the rule does not have sufficient
federalism implications to warrant the
preparation of a Federalism Assessment.
The rule does not substantially and
directly affect the relationship between
the Federal and state governments.
Civil Justice Reform (Executive Order
12988)
The General Counsel of NCPC has
determined that the rule does not
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unduly burden the judicial system and
meets the requirements of Executive
Order 12988 3(a) and 3(b)(2).
Paperwork Reduction Act
The rule does not contain information
collection requirements, and it does not
require a submission to the Office of
Management and Budget under the
Paperwork Reduction Act.
National Environmental Policy Act
The rule is of an administrative
nature, and its adoption does not
constitute a major federal action
significantly affecting the quality of the
human environment. NCPC’s adoption
of the rule will have minimal or no
effect on the environment; impose no
significant change to existing
environmental conditions; and will
have no cumulative environmental
impacts.
Clarity of the Regulation
Public Availability of Comments
Be advised that personal information
such as name, address, phone number,
electronic address, or other identifying
personal information contained in a
comment may be made publically
available. Individuals may ask NCPC to
withhold the personal information in
their comment, but there is no guarantee
the agency can do so.
List of Subjects in 1 CFR Parts 456 and
602
Freedom of information.
For the reasons stated in the
preamble, the National Capital Planning
Commission amends 1 CFR Chapter IV
and establishes 1 CFR Chapter VI to
read as follows:
CHAPTER IV—MISCELLANEOUS
AGENCIES
PART 456 [Removed]
1. Under the authority of 40 U.S.C.
8711(a) remove part 456.
■
2. Establish Chapter VI, consisting of
part 602, to read as follows:
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CHAPTER VI—NATIONAL CAPITAL
PLANNING COMMISSION
PART 602—NATIONAL CAPITAL
PLANNING COMMISSION FREEDOM
OF INFORMATION ACT REGULATIONS
Sec.
602.1 Purpose.
602.2 Policy.
602.3 Definitions.
602.4 Information available without a FOIA
Request.
602.5 FOIA Request requirements.
602.6 FOIA response requirements.
602.7 Multi-track processing.
602.8 Expedited processing.
602.9 Consultations and referrals.
602.10 Classified and Controlled
Unclassified Information.
602.11 Confidential Commercial
Information.
602.12 Appeals of Adverse Determinations.
602.13 Fees.
602.14 Fee waiver requirements.
602.15 Preservation of FOIA records.
Authority: 5 U.S.C. 552, as amended.
Executive Order 12866, Executive
Order 12988, and the Presidential
Memorandum of June 1, 1998 requires
the NCPC to write all rules in plain
language. NCPC maintains the rule
meets this requirement. Those
individuals reviewing the rule who
believe otherwise should submit
specific comments to the addresses
noted above recommending revised
language for those provisions or
portions thereof where they believe
compliance is lacking.
■
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§ 602.1
Purpose.
This part contains the rules the
National Capital Planning Commission
(NCPC or Commission) shall follow in
processing third party Requests for
Records concerning the activities of the
NCPC under the Freedom of Information
Act (FOIA), 5 U.S.C. 552, as amended.
Requests made by a U.S. citizen or an
individual lawfully admitted for
permanent residence to access his or her
own records under the Privacy Act, 5
U.S.C. 522a are processed under this
part and in accordance with part 603 of
Title 1 of the Code of Federal
Regulations (CFR) to provide the
greatest degree of access while
safeguarding an individual’s personal
privacy. Information routinely provided
to the public as part of regular NCPC
activity shall be provided to the public
without regard to this part.
§ 602.2
Policy.
(a) It is the NCPC’s policy to facilitate
the broadest possible availability and
dissemination of information to the
public through use of the NCPC’s Web
site, www.ncpc.gov, and physical
distribution of materials not available
electronically. The NCPC staff shall be
available to assist the public in
obtaining information formally by using
the procedures herein or informally in
a manner not inconsistent with the rule
set forth in this part.
(b) To the maximum extent possible,
the NCPC shall make available agency
Records of interest to the public that are
appropriate for disclosure.
§ 602.3
Definitions.
For purposes of this part, the
following definitions shall apply:
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Act and FOIA mean the Freedom of
Information Act, 5 U.S.C. 552, as
amended.
Adverse Determination or
Determination shall include a
determination to withhold, in whole or
in part, Records requested in a FOIA
Request; the failure to respond to all
aspects of a Request; the determination
to deny a request for a Fee Waiver; or
the determination to deny a request for
expedited processing. The term shall
also encompass a challenge to NCPC’s
determination that Records have not
been described adequately, that there
are no responsive Records, or that an
adequate Search has been conducted.
Agency Record or Record means any
documentary material which is either
created or obtained by a federal agency
(Agency) in the transaction of Agency
business and under Agency control.
Agency Records may include without
limitation books; papers; maps; charts;
plats; plans; architectural drawings;
photographs and microfilm; machine
readable materials such as magnetic
tape, computer disks and electronic data
storage devices; electronic records
including email messages; and
audiovisual material such as still
pictures, sound, and video recordings.
This definition generally does not cover
records of Agency staff that are created
and maintained primarily for a staff
member’s convenience, exempt from
Agency creation or retention
requirements, and withheld from
distribution to other Agency employees
for their official use.
Confidential Commercial Information
means commercial or financial
information obtained by the NCPC from
a Submitter that may be protected from
disclosure under Exemption 4 of the
FOIA. Exemption 4 of the FOIA protects
trade secrets and commercial or
financial information obtained from a
person which information is privileged
or confidential.
Controlled Unclassified Information
means unclassified information that
does not meet the standards for National
Security Classification under Executive
Order 13536, as amended, but is
pertinent to the national interests of the
United States or to the important
interests of entities outside the federal
government, and under law or policy
requires protection from unauthorized
disclosure, special handling safeguards,
or prescribed limits on exchange or
dissemination.
Commercial Use Request means a
FOIA Request from or on behalf of one
who seeks information for a use or
purpose that furthers the commercial,
trade, or profit interests of the Requester
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or the person on whose behalf the
Request is made.
Direct Costs means those
expenditures that the NCPC incurs in
searching for, duplicating, and
reviewing documents to respond to a
FOIA Request. Direct Costs include, for
example, the salary of the employee
performing the work (the basic rate of
pay for the employee plus 16 percent of
the rate to cover benefits) and the cost
of operating duplicating machinery.
Direct Costs do not include overhead
expenses such as costs of space, and
heating or lighting the facility in which
the Records are stored.
Duplication means the process of
making a copy of a document necessary
to respond to a FOIA Request in a form
that is reasonably usable by a Requester.
Copies can take the form of, among
others, paper copy, audio-visual
materials, or machine readable
documents (i.e., computer disks or
electronic data storage devices).
Educational Institution means a
preschool, a public or private
elementary or secondary school, an
institution of undergraduate higher
education, an institution of graduate
higher education, an institution of
professional education, and an
institution of vocational education,
which operates a program or programs
of scholarly research. To be classified in
this category, a Requester must show
that the Request is authorized by and is
made under the auspices of a qualifying
institution and that the records are not
sought for a commercial use but are
sought to further scholarly research.
Expedited Processing means giving a
FOIA Request priority because a
Requester has shown a compelling need
for the Records.
Fee Waiver means a waiver in whole
or in part of fees if a Requester can
demonstrate that certain statutory
requirements are satisfied including that
the information is in the public interest
and is not requested primarily for
commercial purposes.
FOIA Public Liaison means an NCPC
official who is responsible for assisting
in reducing delays, increasing
transparency and understanding the
status of Requests, and assisting in the
resolution of disputes.
FOIA Request or Request means a
written Request made by an entity or
member of the public for an Agency
Record submitted via the U.S. Postal
Service mail or other delivery means to
include without limitation electronicmail (email) or facsimile.
Frequently Requested Documents
means documents that have been
Requested at least three times under the
FOIA. It also includes documents the
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NCPC anticipates would likely be the
subject of multiple Requests.
Multi-track Processing means placing
requests in multiple tracks based on the
amount of work or time (or both) needed
to process the request. Simple Requests
requiring relatively minimal work and/
or review are placed in one processing
track, more complex Requests are
placed in one or more other tracks, and
expedited Requests are placed in a
separate track. Requests in each track
are processed on a first-in/first-out
basis.
Noncommercial Scientific Institution
means an institution that is not operated
for commerce, trade or profit, but is
operated solely for the purpose of
conducting scientific research the
results of which are not intended to
promote any particular product or
industry. To be in this category, a
Requester must show that the Request is
authorized by and is made under the
auspices of a qualifying institution and
that the Records are not sought for
commercial use but are sought to further
scientific research.
Privacy Act Request means, in
accordance with NCPC’s Privacy Act
Regulations (1 CFR part 603) a written
(paper copy with an original signature)
request made by an individual for
information about himself/herself that is
contained in a Privacy Act system of
records. The Privacy Act applies only to
U.S. citizens and aliens lawfully
admitted for permanent residence such
that only individuals satisfying these
criteria may make Privacy Act Requests.
Reading Room Materials means
Records, paper or electronic, that are
required to be made available to the
public under 5.U.S.C. 552(a)(2) as well
as other Records that the NCPC, at its
discretion, makes available to the public
for inspection and copying without
requiring the filing of a FOIA Request.
Representative of the News Media
means any person or entity that gathers
information of potential interest to a
segment of the population, uses his/her/
its editorial skills to turn raw material
into a distinct work, and distributes that
work to an audience. News media
entities include television or radio
stations broadcasting to the public at
large; publishers of periodicals that
qualify as disseminators of news and
make their products available for
purchase or subscription by the general
public; and alternative media to include
electronic dissemination through
telecommunication (internet) services.
To be in this category, a Requester must
not be seeking the Requested Records
for a commercial use. A Freelance
Journalist is a Representative of the
News Media who is able to demonstrate
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a solid basis for expecting publication
through a news organization, even
though not actually employed by that
news organization. A publication
contract or past evidence of a specific
freelance assignment from a news
organization may indicate a solid basis
for expecting publication.
Requester means an entity or member
of the public submitting a FOIA
Request.
Requester Category means one of the
five categories NCPC places Requesters
in for the purpose of determining
whether the Requester will be charged
for Search, Review and Duplication, and
includes Commercial Use Requests,
Educational Institutions,
Noncommercial Scientific Institutions,
Representatives of the News Media, and
all other Requesters.
Review means the examination of
Records to determine whether any
portion of the located Record is eligible
to be withheld. It also includes
processing any Records for disclosure,
i.e., doing all that is necessary to excise
the record and otherwise prepare the
Record for release. Review does not
include time spent resolving general
legal or policy issues regarding the
application of exemptions.
Search means the process of looking
for material, by manual or electronic
means that is responsive to a FOIA
Request. The term also includes pageby-page or line-by-line identification of
material within documents.
Submitter means any person or entity
outside the federal government from
whom the NCPC directly or indirectly
obtains commercial or financial
information. The term includes, among
others, corporations, banks, state and
local governments, and agencies of
foreign governments who provide
information to the NCPC.
Unusual Circumstances means, for
purposes of § 602.7(c), and only to the
extent reasonably necessary to the
proper processing of a particular
Request:
(1) The need to Search for and collect
the Requested Agency Records from
establishments that are separate from
the Commission’s offices;
(2) The need to Search for, collect and
appropriately examine and Review a
voluminous amount of separate and
distinct Agency Records which are
demanded in a single Request; or
(3) The need for consultation with
another Agency having a substantial
interest in the determination of the
FOIA Request.
Workday means a regular Federal
workday. It does not include Saturdays,
Sundays, and legal public holidays.
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§ 602.4 Information available without a
FOIA Request.
(a) The NCPC shall maintain an
electronic library at www.ncpc.gov that
makes Reading Room Materials capable
of production in electronic form
available for public inspection and
downloading. The NCPC shall also
maintain an actual public reading room
containing Reading Room Materials
incapable of production in electronic
form at NCPC’s offices. The actual
reading room shall be available for use
on Workdays during the hours of 9:00
a.m. to 4:00 p.m. Requests for
appointments to review Reading Room
Materials in the actual public reading
room should be directed to the NCPC’s
Information Resources Specialist
identified on the NCPC Web site
(www.ncpc.gov).
(b) The following types of Records
shall be available routinely without
resort to formal FOIA Request
procedures unless such Records fall
within one of the exemptions listed at
5 U.S.C. 552(b) of the Act:
(1) Commission agendas;
(2) Plans and supporting
documentation submitted by applicants
to the Commission to include
environmental and historic preservation
reports prepared for a plan or project;
(3) Executive Director’s
Recommendations;
(4) Commission Memoranda of
Action;
(5) Transcripts of Commission
proceedings;
(6) The Comprehensive Plan for the
National Capital: Federal Elements and
other plans prepared by the NCPC;
(7) Federal Capital Improvements
Plan for the National Capital Region
following release of the President’s
Budget;
(8) Policies adopted by the
Commission;
(9) Correspondence between the
Commission and the Congress, other
federal and local government agencies,
and the public; and
(10) Frequently Requested
Documents.
§ 602.5
FOIA Request requirements.
(a) The NCPC shall designate a Chief
Freedom of Information Act Officer who
shall be authorized to grant or deny any
Request for a Record of the NCPC.
(b) Requests for a Record or Records
that is/are not available in the actual or
electronic reading rooms shall be
directed to the Chief Freedom of
Information Act Officer.
(c) All FOIA Requests shall be made
in writing. If sent by U.S. mail, Requests
should be sent to NCPC’s official
business address contained on the
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44039
NCPC Web site. If sent via email, they
should be directed to FOIA@ncpc.gov.
To expedite internal handling of FOIA
Requests, the words Freedom of
Information Act Request shall appear
prominently on the transmittal envelope
or the subject line of a Request sent via
email or facsimile.
(d) The FOIA Request shall:
(1) State that the Request is made
pursuant to the FOIA;
(2) Describe the Agency Record(s)
Requested in sufficient detail including,
without limitation, any specific
information known such as date, title or
name, author, recipient, or time frame
for which you are seeking Records, to
enable the NCPC personnel to locate the
Requested Agency Records;
(3) State, pursuant to the fee schedule
set forth in § 602.14, a willingness to
pay all fees associated with the FOIA
Request or the maximum fee the
Requester is willing to pay to obtain the
Requested Records, unless the Requester
is seeking a Fee Waiver or placement in
a certain Requester Category;
(4) State, if desired, the preferred form
or format of disclosure of Agency
Records with which the NCPC shall
endeavor to comply unless compliance
would damage or destroy an original
Agency Record or reproduction is costly
and/or requires the acquisition of new
equipment; and
(5) Provide a phone number, email
address or mailing address at which the
Requester can be reached to facilitate
the handling of the Request.
(e) If a FOIA Request is unclear,
overly broad, involves an extremely
voluminous amount of Records or a
burdensome Search, or fails to state a
willingness to pay the requisite fees or
the maximum fee which the Requester
is willing to pay, the NCPC shall
endeavor to contact the Requester to
define the subject matter, identify and
clarify the Records being sought, narrow
the scope of the Request, and obtain
assurances regarding payment of fees.
The timeframe for a response set forth
in § 602.6(a) shall be tolled (stopped
temporarily) and the NCPC will not
begin processing a Request until the
NCPC obtains the information necessary
to clarify the Request and/or clarifies
issues pertaining to the fee.
(f) NCPC shall designate a FOIA
Public Liaison to assist a Requester in
making a Request or to assist a
Requester in correcting a Request that
does not reasonably describe the
Records sought or to correct other
deficiencies described in paragraph (e)
of this section that necessitate follow-up
with the Requester.
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§ 602.6
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FOIA response requirements.
(a) The Freedom of Information Act
Officer, upon receipt of a FOIA Request
made in compliance with these rules,
shall determine whether to grant or
deny the Request. The Freedom of
Information Officer shall notify the
Requester in writing within 20
Workdays of receipt of a perfected
Request of his/her determination and
the reasons therefore and of the right to
appeal any Adverse Determination to
the head of the NCPC.
(b) In cases involving Unusual
Circumstances, the agency may extend
the 20 Workday time limit by written
notice to the Requester. The written
notice shall set forth the reasons for the
extension and the date on which a
determination is expected to be
dispatched. No such notice shall specify
a date that would result in an extension
of more than 10 Working Days unless
the agency affords the Requester an
opportunity to modify his/her Request
or arranges an alternative timeframe
with the Requester for completion of the
NCPC’s processing. The agency shall
also advise the Requester of his/her
right to seek assistance from the FOIA
Public Liaison or OGIS to resolve time
limit disputes arising under this
paragraph.
(c) NCPC shall deny a Request based
on an exemption contained in the FOIA
and withhold information from
disclosure pursuant to an exemption
only if NCPC reasonably foresees that
disclosure would harm an interest
protected by an exemption or if
disclosure is prohibited by law. If a
Request is denied based on an
exemption, NCPC’s response shall
comply with the requirements of
paragraph (d) below.
(d) If a Request is denied in whole or
in part, the Chief FOIA Officer’s written
determination shall include, if
technically feasible, the precise amount
of information withheld, and the
exemption under which it is being
withheld unless revealing the
exemption would harm an interested
protected by the exemption. NCPC shall
release any portion of a withheld Record
that reasonably can be segregated from
the exempt portion of the Record.
sradovich on DSKBBY8HB2PROD with RULES2
§ 602.7
Multi-track processing.
The NCPC may use multiple tracks for
processing FOIA Requests based on the
complexity of Requests and those for
which expedited processing is
Requested. Complexity shall be
determined based on the amount of
work and/or time needed to process a
Request and/or the number of pages of
responsive Records. If the NCPC utilizes
Multi-track Processing, it shall advise a
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Requester when a Request is placed in
a slower track of the limits associated
with a faster track and afford the
Requester the opportunity to limit the
scope of its Request to qualify for faster
processing.
priority and shall be processed in the
expedited processing track as fast as
practicable. If a Request for Expedited
Processing is denied, any appeal of that
decision shall be acted on
expeditiously.
§ 602.8
§ 602.9
Expedited processing.
(a) The NCPC shall provide Expedited
Processing of a FOIA Request if the
person making the Request
demonstrates that the Request involves:
(1) Circumstances in which the lack of
expedited treatment could reasonably be
expected to pose an imminent threat to
the life or physical safety of an
individual;
(2) An urgency to inform the public
about an actual or alleged federal
government activity, if made by a
person primarily engaged in
disseminating information;
(3) The loss of substantial due process
rights; or
(4) A matter of widespread and
exceptional media interest in which
there exists possible questions about the
government’s integrity which affect
public confidence.
(b) A Request for Expedited
Processing may be made at the time of
the initial FOIA Request or at a later
time.
(c) A Requester seeking Expedited
Processing must submit a detailed
statement setting forth the basis for the
Expedited Processing Request. The
Requester must certify in the statement
that the need for Expedited Processing
is true and correct to the best of his/her
knowledge. To qualify for Expedited
Processing, a Requester relying upon the
category in paragraph (a)(2) of this
section must establish:
(1) He/She is a full time
Representative of the News Media or
primarily engaged in the occupation of
information dissemination, though it
need not be his/her sole occupation;
(2) A particular urgency to inform the
public about the information sought by
the FOIA Request beyond the public’s
right to know about the government
activity generally; and
(3) The information is of the type that
has value that will be lost if not
disseminated quickly such as a breaking
news story. Information of historical
interest only or information sought for
litigation or commercial activities will
not qualify nor would a news media
deadline unrelated to breaking news.
(d) Within 10 calendar days of receipt
of a Request for expedited processing,
the NCPC shall decide whether to grant
or deny the Request and notify the
Requester of the decision in writing. If
a Request for Expedited Processing is
granted, the Request shall be given
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Consultations and referrals.
(a) If a Requester seeks a Record in
which another agency of the Federal
Government is better able to determine
whether the record is exempt from
disclosure under the FOIA, NCPC shall
either respond to the FOIA Request after
consultation with the Agency best able
to determine if the Requested Record(s)
is/are subject to disclosure or refer the
responsibility for responding to the
FOIA Request to the Agency responsible
for originating the Record(s). Generally,
the Agency originating a Record will be
presumed by the NCPC to be the Agency
best qualified to render a decision
regarding disclosure or exemption
except for Agency Records submitted to
the NCPC pursuant to its authority to
review Agency plans and/or projects.
(b) Upon referral of Records to
another Agency, the NCPC shall notify
the Requester in writing of the referral,
inform the Requester of the name of the
Agency to which all or part of the
responsive records have been referred,
provide the Requester a description of
the part of the Request referred, and
advise the Requester of a point of
contact within the receiving Agency.
(c) The timeframe for a response to a
FOIA Request requiring consultation or
referral shall be based on the date the
FOIA Request was initially received by
the NCPC and not any later date.
§ 602.10 Classified and Controlled
Unclassified Information.
(a) For Requests for an Agency Record
that has been classified or may be
appropriate for classification by another
Agency pursuant to an Executive Order
concerning the classification of Records,
the NCPC shall refer the responsibility
for responding to the FOIA Request to
the Agency that either classified the
Record, should consider classifying the
Record, or has primary interest in the
Record, as appropriate.
(b) Whenever a Request is made for a
Record that is designated Controlled
Unclassified Information by another
Agency, the NCPC shall refer the FOIA
Request to the Agency that designated
the Record as Controlled Unclassified
Information. Decisions to disclose or
withhold information designated as
Controlled Unclassified Information
shall be made based on the applicability
of the statutory exemptions contained in
the FOIA, not on a Controlled
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Unclassified Information marking or
designation.
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§ 602.11 Confidential Commercial
Information.
(a) Confidential Commercial
Information obtained by the NCPC from
a Submitter shall be disclosed under the
FOIA only in accordance with the
requirements of this section.
(b) A Submitter of Confidential
Commercial Information shall use goodfaith efforts to designate, by appropriate
markings, either at the time of
submission or at a reasonable time
thereafter, any portions of its
submission that it considers to be
protected from disclosure under
Exemption 4 of the FOIA. These
designations will expire ten years after
the date of the submission unless the
Submitter requests, and provides
justification for, a longer designation
period.
(c) Notice shall be given to a
Submitter of a FOIA Request for
potential Confidential Commercial
Information if:
(1) The requested information has
been designated in good faith by the
Submitter as Confidential Commercial
Information eligible for protection from
disclosure under Exemption 4 of the
FOIA; or
(2) The NCPC has reason to believe
the requested information is
Confidential Commercial Information
protected from disclosure under
Exemption 4 of the FOIA.
(d) Subject to the requirements of
paragraphs (c) and (g) of this section, the
NCPC shall provide a Submitter with
prompt written notice of a FOIA
Request or administrative appeal that
seeks the Submitter’s Confidential
Commercial Information. The notice
shall give the Submitter an opportunity
to object to disclosure of any specified
portion of that Confidential Commercial
Information pursuant to paragraph (e) of
this section. The notice shall either
describe the Confidential Commercial
Information Requested or include copies
of the Requested Records or portions
thereof containing the Confidential
Commercial Information. When notice
to a large number of Submitters is
required, NCPC may provide
notification by posting or publishing the
notice in a place reasonably likely to
accomplish the intent of the notice
requirement such as a newspaper,
newsletter, the NCPC Web site, or the
Federal Register.
(e) The NCPC shall allow a Submitter
a reasonable time to respond to the
notice described in paragraph (d) of this
section and shall specify within the
notice the time period for response. If a
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Submitter has any objection to
disclosure, it shall submit a detailed
written statement. The statement must
specify all grounds for withholding any
portion of the Confidential Commercial
Information under any exemption of the
FOIA and, in the case of Exemption 4,
it must show why the Confidential
Commercial Information is a trade secret
or commercial or financial information
that is privileged or confidential. If the
Submitter fails to respond to the notice
within the specified time, the NCPC
shall consider this failure to respond as
no objection to disclosure of the
Confidential Commercial Information
on the part of the Submitter, and NCPC
shall proceed to release the requested
information. A statement provided by
the Submitter that is not received by
NCPC until after the NCPC’s disclosure
decision has been made shall not be
considered by the NCPC. Information
provided by a Submitter under this
paragraph may itself be subject to
disclosure under the FOIA.
(f) The NCPC shall consider a
Submitter’s objections and specific
grounds for nondisclosure in deciding
whether to disclose Confidential
Commercial Information. Whenever the
NCPC decides to disclose Confidential
Commercial Information over the
objection of a Submitter, the NCPC shall
give the Submitter written notice, which
shall include:
(1) A statement of the reason(s) why
each of the Submitter’s disclosure
objections was not sustained;
(2) A description of the Confidential
Commercial Information to be disclosed;
and
(3) A specified disclosure date, which
shall be a reasonable time subsequent to
the notice.
(g) The notice requirements of
paragraphs (c) and (d) of this section
shall not apply if:
(1) The NCPC determines that the
Confidential Commercial Information is
exempt under FOIA;
(2) The Confidential Commercial
Information has been published
lawfully or has been officially made
available to the public;
(3) The Confidential Commercial
Information’s disclosure is required by
statute (other than the FOIA) or by a
regulation issued in accordance with the
requirements of Executive Order 12600
(Predisclosure Notification Procedures
for Confidential Commercial
Information); or
(4) The designation made by the
Submitter under paragraph (b) of this
section appears obviously frivolous in
which case the NCPC shall, within a
reasonable time prior to a specified
disclosure date, give the Submitter
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written notice of any final decision to
disclose the Confidential Commercial
Information.
(h) Whenever a Requester files a
lawsuit seeking to compel the disclosure
of Confidential Commercial
Information, the NCPC shall promptly
notify the Submitter.
(i) Whenever the NCPC provides a
Submitter with notice and an
opportunity to object to disclosure
under paragraph (d) of this section, the
NCPC shall also notify the Requester.
Whenever the NCPC notifies a
Submitter of its intent to disclose
Requested Information under paragraph
(f) of this section, the NCPC shall also
notify the Requester. Whenever a
Submitter files a lawsuit seeking to
prevent the disclosure of Confidential
Commercial Information, the NCPC
shall notify the Requester.
§ 602.12 Appeals of Adverse
Determinations.
(a) An appeal of an Adverse
Determination shall be made in writing
to the Chairman of the Commission
(Chairman). An appeal may be
submitted via U.S. mail or other type of
manual delivery service or via email or
facsimile within 90 Workdays of the
date of a notice of an Adverse
Determination. To facilitate handling of
an appeal, the words Freedom of
Information Act Appeal shall appear
prominently on the transmittal envelope
or the subject line of a Request sent via
electronic-mail or facsimile.
(b) An appeal of an Adverse
Determination shall include a detailed
statement of the legal, factual or other
basis for the Requester’s objections to an
Adverse Determination; a daytime
phone number or email address where
the Requester can be reached if the
NCPC requires additional information or
clarification regarding the appeal;
copies of the initial Request and the
NCPC’s written response; and for an
Adverse Determination of a Request for
Expedited Processing or a Fee Waiver, a
demonstration of compliance with the
requirements of §§ 602.8(a) and (c) or
602.15(a) through (c) respectively.
(c) The Chairman shall respond to an
appeal of an Adverse Determination in
writing within 20 Workdays of receipt.
(1) If the Chairman grants the appeal,
the Chairman shall notify the Requester,
and the NCPC shall make available
copies of the Requested Records
promptly thereafter upon receipt of the
appropriate fee determined in
accordance with § 602.13.
(2) If the Chairman denies the appeal
in whole or in part, the letter to the
Requester shall state
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(i) The reason(s) for the denial,
including the FOIA exemptions(s)
applied;
(ii) A statement that the decision is
final;
(iii) A notice of the Requester’s right
to seek judicial review of the denial in
the District Court of the United States in
either the locale in which the Requester
resides, the locale in which the
Requester has his/her principal place of
business, or in the District of Columbia;
and
(iv) A notice that the Requester may
seek dispute resolution services from
either the NCPC FOIA Public Liaison or
the Office of Government Information
Services (OGIS) to resolve disputes
between a Requester and the NCPC as a
non-exclusive alternative to litigation.
Contact information for OGIS can be
obtained from the OGIS Web site at
ogis@nara.gov.
(d) The NCPC shall not act on an
appeal of an Adverse Determination if
the underlying FOIA Request becomes
the subject of FOIA litigation.
(e) A party seeking court review of an
Adverse Determination must first appeal
the decision under this section to NCPC.
sradovich on DSKBBY8HB2PROD with RULES2
§ 602.13
Fees.
(a) NCPC shall charge fees for
processing FOIA requests in accordance
with the provisions of this section and
OMB Guidelines.
(b) For purposes of assessing fees,
NCPC shall categorize Requesters into
three categories: Commercial Use
Requesters; Noncommercial Scientific
Institutions, Educational Institutions,
and News Media Requesters; and all
other Requesters. Different fees shall be
charged depending upon the category
into which a Requester falls. If fees
apply, a Requesters may seek a fee
waiver in accordance with the
requirements of § 602.15.
(c) Search Fees shall be charged as
follows:
(1) NCPC shall not charge Search fees
to Requests made by Educational
Institutions, Noncommercial Scientific
Institutions, or Representatives of the
New Media. NCPC shall charge Search
fees to all other Requesters subject to the
restrictions of paragraph (f)(5) of this
section even if NCPC fails to locate any
responsive Records or if the NCPC
withholds Records located based on a
FOIA exemption.
(2) For each quarter hour spent by
personnel searching for Requested
Records, including electronic searches
that do not require new programming,
the Search fees shall be calculated based
on the average hourly General Schedule
(GS) base salary, plus the District of
Columbia locality payment, plus 16
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percent for benefits of employees in the
following three categories: Staff
Assistant (assigned at the GS 9–11
grades); Professional Personnel
(assigned at the GS 11–13 grades); and
Managerial Staff (assigned at the 14–15
grades). For a Staff Assistant the quarter
hour fee to Search for and retrieve a
Requested Record shall be $9.00. If a
Search and retrieval cannot be
performed entirely by a Staff Assistant,
and the identification of Records within
the scope of a Request requires the use
of Professional Personnel, the fee shall
be $12.00 for each quarter hour of
Search time spent by Professional
Personnel. If the time of Managerial
Personnel is required, the fee shall be
$18.00 for each quarter hour of Search
time spent by Managerial Personnel.
(3) For a computer Search of Records,
Requesters shall be charged the Direct
Costs of creating a computer program, if
necessary, and/or conducting the
Search. Direct Costs for a computer
Search shall include the cost that is
directly attributable to the Search for
responsive Records and the costs of the
operator’s salary for the time
attributable to the Search.
(d) Duplication fees shall be charged
to all Requesters, subject to the
limitations of paragraph (f)(5) of this
section. For a paper photocopy of a
Record (no more than one copy of
which shall be supplied), the fee shall
be 10 cents per page for single or double
sided copies, 90 cents per page for 81⁄2
by 11 inch color copies, and $1.50 per
page for color copies up to 11 x 17
inches per page. For copies produced by
computer, and placed on an electronic
data saving device or provided as a
printout, the NCPC shall charge the
Direct Costs, including operator time, of
producing the copy. For other forms of
Duplication, the NCPC shall charge the
Direct Costs of that Duplication.
(e) Review fees shall be charged to
only those Requesters who make a
Commercial Use Request. Review fees
will be charged only for the NCPC
initial Review of a Record to determine
whether an exemption applies to a
particular Record or portion thereof. No
charge will be made for Review at the
administrative appeal level for an
exemption already applied. However,
Records or portions thereof withheld
under an exemption that is
subsequently determined not applicable
upon appeal may be reviewed again to
determine whether any other exemption
not previously considered applies. If the
NCPC determines a different exemption
applies, the costs of that Review are
chargeable. Review fees will be charged
at the same rates as those charged for a
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Search under paragraph (c)(2) of this
section.
(f) The following limitations on fees
shall apply:
(1) If NCPC fails to comply with the
time limits in which to respond to a
request, NCPC shall not charge Search
fees or, in the case of Educational
Institutions, Noncommercial Scientific
Institutions, or Representatives of the
News Media, duplication fees, except as
described in paragraphs (f)(2)–(4) of this
section.
(2) If NCPC has determined that
unusual circumstances as defined by the
FOIA apply, and the agency provided
timely written notice to the Requester in
accordance with the FOIA, a failure to
comply with the time limit shall be
excused for an additional 10 days.
(3) If NCPC determines that Unusual
Circumstances exist, and more than
5000 pages of responsive records are
necessary to respond to the Request,
NCPC may charge Search fees. NCPC
may also charge duplication fees in the
case of Educational Institutions,
Noncommercial Scientific Institutions,
or Representatives of the News Media.
The provisions of this paragraph shall
only apply if NCPC provides timely
written notice of the Unusual
Circumstances to the Requester and
discusses with the Requester via mail, email or phone (or made at least three
good faith efforts to do so) how to
effectively limit the scope of the
Request.
(4) If a court has determined that
exceptional circumstances exist, as
defined by the FOIA, a failure to comply
with the time limits shall be excused for
the length of time provided by the court
order.
(5) No Search or Review fees shall be
charged for a quarter-hour period unless
more than half of that period is required
for Search or Review.
(6) Except for Requesters of a
Commercial Use Request, the NCPC
shall provide without charge the first
two hours of Search (or the cost
equivalent) and the first 100 pages of
Duplication (or the cost equivalent);
(7) Except for Requesters of a
Commercial Use Request, no fee shall be
charged for a Request if the total fee
calculated under this section equals
$50.00 or less.
(8) Requesters other than those
making a Commercial Use Request shall
not be charged a fee unless the total cost
of a Search in excess of two hours plus
the cost of Duplication in excess of 100
pages totals more than $50.00.
(g) If the NCPC determines or
estimates fees in excess of $50.00, the
NCPC shall notify the Requester of the
actual or estimated amount of total fees,
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unless in its initial Request the
Requester has indicated a willingness to
pay fees as high as those determined or
estimated. If only a portion of the fee
can be estimated, the NCPC shall advise
the Requester that the estimated fee
constitutes only a portion of the total
fee. If the NCPC notifies a Requester that
actual or estimated fees amount to more
than $50.00, the Request shall not be
considered received for purposes of
calculating the timeframe for a
Response, and no further work shall be
undertaken on the Request until the
Requester agrees to pay the anticipated
total fee. Any such agreement shall be
memorialized in writing. A notice under
this paragraph shall offer the Requester
an opportunity to work with the NCPC
to reformulate the Request to meet the
Requester’s needs at a lower cost.
(h) Apart from other provisions of this
section, if the Requester asks for, or the
NCPC chooses as a matter of
administrative discretion to provide a
special service—such as certifying that
Records are true copies or sending them
by other than ordinary mail, the actual
costs of special service shall be charged.
(i) The NCPC shall charge interest on
any unpaid fee starting on the 31st day
following the date of billing the
Requester. Interest charges will be
assessed at the rate provided in 31
U.S.C. 3717 (Interest and Penalty on
Claims) and will accrue from the date of
the billing until payment is received by
the NCPC. The NCPC shall follow the
provisions of the Debt Collection Act of
1982 (Pub. L. 97–365, 96 Stat. 1749), as
amended, and its administrative
procedures, including the use of
consumer reporting agencies, collection
agencies, and offset.
(j) Where the NCPC reasonably
believes that one or more Requesters are
acting in concert to subdivide a Request
into a series of Requests to avoid fees,
the NCPC may aggregate the Requests
and charge accordingly. The NCPC shall
presume that multiple Requests of this
type made within a 30-day period have
been made to avoid fees. Where
Requests are separated by a time period
in excess of 30 days, the NCPC shall
aggregate the multiple Requests if a
solid basis exists for determining
aggregation is warranted under all
circumstances involved.
(k) Advance payments shall be treated
as follows:
(1) For Requests other than those
described in paragraphs (k)(2) and (3) of
this section, the NCPC shall not require
an advance payment. An advance
payment refers to a payment made
before work on a Request is begun or
continued after being stopped for any
reason but does not extend to payment
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owed for work already completed but
not sent to a Requester.
(2) If the NCPC determines or
estimates a total fee under this section
of more than $250.00, it shall require an
advance payment of all or part of the
anticipated fee before beginning to
process a Request, unless the Requester
provides satisfactory assurance of full
payment or has a history of prompt
payment.
(3) If a Requester previously failed to
pay a properly charged FOIA fee to the
NCPC within 30 days of the date of
billing, the NCPC shall require the
Requester to pay the full amount due,
plus any applicable interest, and to
make an advance payment of the full
amount of any anticipated fee, before
the NCPC begins to process a new
Request or continues processing a
pending Request from that Requester.
(4) If the NCPC requires advance
payment or payment due under
paragraphs (k)(2) or (3) of this section,
the Request shall not be considered
received and no further work will be
undertaken on the Request until the
required payment is received.
(l) Where Records responsive to
Requests are maintained for distribution
by Agencies operating statutorily based
fee schedule programs, the NCPC shall
inform Requesters of the steps for
obtaining Records from those sources so
that they may do so most economically.
(m) All fees shall be paid by personal
check, money order or bank draft drawn
on a bank of the United States, made
payable to the order of the Treasurer of
the United States.
§ 602.15
Fee waiver requirements.
(a) Records responsive to a Request
shall be furnished without charge or at
a charge reduced below that established
under § 602.14 if the Requester
demonstrates to the NCPC, and the
NCPC determines, based on all available
information, that Disclosure of the
Requested information is in the public
interest because it is likely to contribute
significantly to public understanding of
the operations or activities of the
government, and disclosure of the
information is not primarily in the
commercial interest of the Requester.
(b) To determine if disclosure of the
Requested information is in the public
interest because it is likely to contribute
significantly to public understanding of
the operations or activities of the
government, the Requester shall
demonstrate, and NCPC shall consider,
the following factors:
(1) Whether the subject of the
Requested Records concerns the
operations or activities of the
government. The subject of the
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Requested Records must concern
identifiable operations or activities of
the federal government, with a
connection that is direct and clear, not
remote or attenuated.
(2) Whether the disclosure is likely to
contribute to an understanding of
government operations or activities. The
portions of the Requested Records
eligible for disclosure must be
meaningfully informative about
government operations or activities. The
disclosure of information that already is
in the public domain, in either a
duplicative or a substantially identical
form, is not likely to contribute to an
understanding of government operations
and activities because this information
is already known.
(3) Whether disclosure of the
Requested information will contribute
to public understanding. 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 and ability and
intention to effectively convey
information to the public shall be
considered. It shall be presumed that a
Representative of the News Media
satisfies this consideration.
(4) Whether the disclosure is likely to
contribute significantly to public
understanding of government operations
or activities. The public’s understanding
of the subject in question must be
enhanced by the disclosure to a
significant extent, as compared to the
level of public understanding existing
prior to the disclosure. The NCPC shall
not make value judgments about
whether information that would
contribute significantly to public
understanding of the operations or
activities of the government is important
enough to be made public.
(c) To determine whether disclosure
of the information is not primarily in
the commercial interest of the
Requester, the Requester shall
demonstrate, and NCPC shall consider,
the following factors:
(1) Whether the Requester has a
commercial interest that would be
furthered by the Requested disclosure.
The NCPC shall consider any
commercial interest of the Requester
(with reference to the definition of
Commercial Use Request in § 602.3(f)),
or of any person on whose behalf the
Requester may be acting, that would be
furthered by the Requested disclosure.
Requesters shall be given an
opportunity in the administrative
process to provide explanatory
information regarding this
consideration.
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(2) Whether any identified
commercial interest of the Requester is
sufficiently large in comparison with
the public interest in disclosure that
disclosure is primarily in the
commercial interest of the Requester. A
Fee Waiver is justified where the public
interest standard of paragraph (b) of this
section is satisfied and that public
interest is greater in magnitude than that
of any identified commercial interest in
disclosure. The NCPC ordinarily shall
presume that a Representative of the
News Media satisfies the public interest
standard, and the public interest will be
the interest primarily served by
disclosure to that Requester. 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.
(d) Where only some of the Records
to be released satisfy the requirements
for a Fee Waiver, a Fee Waiver shall be
granted for those Records.
(e) Requests for a Fee Waiver should
address the factors listed in paragraphs
(a) through (c) of this section, insofar as
they apply to each Request. The NCPC
shall exercise its discretion to consider
the cost-effectiveness of its investment
of administrative resources in this
decision-making process in deciding to
grant Fee Waivers.
§ 602.15
Preservation of FOIA records.
sradovich on DSKBBY8HB2PROD with RULES2
(a) The NCPC shall preserve all
correspondence pertaining to FOIA
Requests received and copies or Records
provided until disposition or
destruction is authorized by the NCPC’s
General Records schedule established in
accordance with the National Archives
and Records Administration (NARA)
approved schedule.
(b) Materials that are responsive to a
FOIA Request shall not be disposed of
or destroyed while the Request or a
related lawsuit is pending even if the
Records would otherwise be authorized
for disposition under the NCPC’s
General Records Schedule or NARA or
other NARA-approved records schedule.
Dated: September 14, 2017.
Anne R. Schuyler,
General Counsel.
[FR Doc. 2017–19997 Filed 9–19–17; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 7502–20–P
VerDate Sep<11>2014
18:44 Sep 19, 2017
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accounting of disclosures of those
Records by the NCPC; the procedures by
which an Individual may appeal an
1 CFR Parts 455 and 603
Adverse Determination, and the conduct
of a Privacy Impact Assessment.
Privacy Act Regulations
§ 603.2 Definitions. This section
defines terms frequently used in the
AGENCY: National Capital Planning
regulations. The section includes the
Commission.
five terms defined in the existing
ACTION: Final rule.
regulations—Individual, Maintain,
SUMMARY: The National Capital Planning Record, Routine Use and System of
Records. It adds the definitions for the
Commission (NCPC or Commission)
following terms: Adverse
hereby adopts new regulations
Determination, E-Government Act of
governing NCPC’s implementation of
2002, Information in Identifiable Form
the Privacy Act, as amended and the
privacy provisions of the E-Government (IIF), Information Technology, Privacy
Act Officer (PAO), Privacy Act, Privacy
Act of 2002. NCPC must comply with
the requirements of the Privacy Act and Impact Assessment (PIA), Record,
Requester, Request for Access to a
the privacy provisions of the ERecord, Request for Amendment or
Government Act of 2002 for records
maintained on individuals and personal Correction of a Record, Senior Agency
Official for Privacy (SAOP), System of
information stored as a hard copy or
Records Notice (SORN), and Workday.
electronically.
§ 603.3 Privacy Act program
DATES: This rule is effective October 20,
responsibilities. This section requires
2017.
NCPC to designate a SAOP and a PAO
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
and outlines the responsibilities
Anne R. Schuyler, General Counsel at
associated with both positions. It also
202–482–7223, anne.schuyler@
enumerates the Privacy Act
ncpc.gov.
responsibilities of other NCPC
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: NCPC
personnel.
§ 603.4 Standards used to Maintain
adopted its current Privacy Regulations
Records. This section establishes the
(1 CFR part 455) in 1977 pursuant to 5
standards NCPC must follow regarding
U.S.C. 552a. Since that time, Congress
amended the Privacy Act multiple times privacy information. The section
including the E-Government Act of 2002 requires NCPC to limit private
information to only that necessary to
which addressed requirements for
achieve the purposes for which it is
maintaining electronic privacy records.
The regulations update NCPC’s existing collected and stored; to ensure all
information collected is accurate,
Privacy Regulations to reflect
relevant, timely, and complete; and to
amendments over time. The Office of
collect privacy information regarding an
the Federal Register recently assigned
NCPC a new chapter of 1 CFR—Chapter Individual’s rights, benefits and
privileges under federal programs from
VI—to allow NCPC to group all its
the Individual to the maximum extent
regulations together in one chapter.
possible subject to collection from third
NCPC eliminates its Privacy
parties in certain circumstances.
Regulations at 1 CFR part 455 and
§ 603.5 Notice to Individuals
codifies the new Privacy Regulations at
supplying information. This section
1 CFR part 603.
enumerates the information NCPC must
I. Section by Section Analysis of
provide Individuals who are asked to
NCPC’s Privacy Act Regulations
supply information about themselves.
§ 603.1 Purpose and scope. This
The required information enumerated
section advises the purpose of the
includes the purpose for which NCPC
regulations is to implement a privacy
intends to use the information; the
program consistent with the
effects upon an Individual for not
requirements of the Privacy Act and the providing the information; and the form
privacy related provision of the Eof notice NCPC must supply in response
Government Act of 2002. As stated in
to an Individual’s provision of
the section, NCPC’s privacy program
information.
§ 603.6 System of Records (SOR)
extends to all Records maintained by
Notice (SORN). This section requires
NCPC in a System of Records; the
NCPC to publish a notice in the Federal
responsibilities of NCPC to safeguard
Register describing each SOR 40-days
this information; the procedures by
before establishing a new or revising an
which Individuals may request
notification of the existence of a Record existing SOR. The section requires the
SORN to include the purpose of the
about them, access to Records about
them, an amendment to or correction of Records and their location; the types of
Individuals contained in the SOR; the
the Records about them, and an
NATIONAL CAPITAL PLANNING
COMMISSION
PO 00000
Frm 00010
Fmt 4701
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E:\FR\FM\20SER2.SGM
20SER2
Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 82, Number 181 (Wednesday, September 20, 2017)]
[Rules and Regulations]
[Pages 44036-44044]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2017-19997]
[[Page 44035]]
Vol. 82
Wednesday,
No. 181
September 20, 2017
Part II
National Capital Planning Commission
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
1 CFR Parts 455, 456, et al.
Freedom of Information Act Regulations; Privacy Act Regulation; Final
Rules
Federal Register / Vol. 82 , No. 181 / Wednesday, September 20, 2017
/ Rules and Regulations
[[Page 44036]]
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
NATIONAL CAPITAL PLANNING COMMISSION
1 CFR Part 456 and Chapter VI
Freedom of Information Act Regulations
AGENCY: National Capital Planning Commission.
ACTION: Final rule.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SUMMARY: The National Capital Planning Commission (NCPC or Commission)
hereby adopts new Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) Regulations. NCPC
must comply with the requirements of FOIA when it process requests for
Information submitted pursuant to FOIA.
DATES: This rule is effective October 20, 2017.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Anne R. Schuyler, General Counsel and
Chief FOIA Officer, 202-482-7223, anne.schuyler@ncpc.gov.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: On June 30, 2016, President Obama signed
into law the FOIA Improvement Act of 2016 (Pub. L. 114-185). The FOIA
Improvement Act of 2016 addresses a range of procedural issues,
including, among others, the requirement that agencies establish a
minimum of 90 days for requesters to file an administrative appeal;
provide dispute resolution services at various times throughout the
FOIA process; refrain from charging fees for failure to comply with
mandated time limits; engage in proactive disclosure of records of
general interest or use to the public that are appropriate for such
disclosure; and apply the Department of Justice's ``foreseeable harm''
standard as the basis for withholding information pursuant to an
exemption contained in FOIA.
NCPC adopted updated FOIA regulations in February 2014. As a
result, NCPC included many of the Department of Justice, Office of
Information Policy (OIP) policies into its existing regulations some of
which are now incorporated as law into the FOIA Improvement Act of
2016. This means the new FOIA Regulations (FOIA Regulations) required
only a few changes to comply with the requirements of the FOIA
Improvement Act of 2016.
NCPC published its existing FOIA regulations under Title 1, Chapter
IV, part 456 of the Code of Federal Regulations (CFR). Historically,
Title 1, Chapter IV (Miscellaneous Agencies), Parts 455, 456, and 457
of the CFR contained NCPC regulations (Privacy, FOIA, and
Nondiscrimination respectively). However, as there were no additional
parts within Chapter IV to accommodate NCPC's recently adopted National
Environmental Policy Act (NEPA) Regulations, the Office of the Federal
Register assigned NCPC a new Chapter--Chapter VI--within Title 1 for
consolidation of all current and future NCPC regulations. As NCPC
revises its existing regulations and prepares new ones, each revised
and new regulation will be published in the next sequential Part of
Chapter VI. The next sequential Part available for NCPC's revised FOIA
regulations is Part 602. Thus, the revised FOIA regulations are
advertised as Part 602.
I. Key Changes Incorporated Into NCPC's Freedom of Information Act
Regulations
A. Time Limits
The FOIA Improvement Act of 2016 requires agencies to establish a
minimum of 90 days for requesters to file an administrative appeal.
NCPC's FOIA regulations incorporate this requirement in Sec. 602.12(a)
(Appeals of Adverse Determinations). Section 602.12(g) enumerates the
ability to extend time limits for responding to a FOIA request (20
days) and the process to be followed by NCPC to extend the time limits.
B. Assistance From NCPC's FOIA Public Liaison and the National Archives
Record Administration's (NARA), Office of Government Information (OGIS)
The FOIA Improvement Act of 2016 requires agencies to advise
Requesters of the availability of dispute resolution services at
various times throughout the FOIA process. The Act provides for these
services to be offered by an agency's FOIA Public Liaison and OGIS.
NCPC's FOIA Regulations reference these services in Sec. Sec. 602.5
(FOIA Request requirements), 602.6 (FOIA Response requirements), and
602.12 (Appeals of Adverse Determinations).
C. Changes to Fee Structure
The FOIA Improvement Act of 2016 precludes the collection of fees
if an agency fails to meet mandated FOIA time limits. NCPC's FOIA
regulations contain this limitation in Sec. 602.13(f)(1). Section
602.13(f)(2) introduces a new fee construct contained in the FOIA
Improvements Act of 2016 for Requests that generate 5000 pages of
responsive records.
As a general matter, the FOIA Regulations contain a reorganized fee
section. The current regulations organize the fee section based on
types of fees, e.g., Search, Review and Duplication. The new FOIA
Regulations organize the fee section based on three categories of
Requesters, e.g., Commercial Use Requesters; Noncommercial Scientific
Institutions, Educational Institutions, and News Media Requesters; and
all other Requesters. NCPC adopted this new organizational structure to
improve the clarity of the fee section. Other than the reorganized
structure and the two additions necessitated by the FOIA Improvements
Act of 2016, the content of the fee section in the FOIA Regulations
remains unchanged from that of the existing regulations.
D. Standard for Release of Records
The FOIA Improvement Act of 2016 requires agencies to proactively
disclose in electronic format records that have been requested three or
more times. It also requires application of the Department of Justice's
``foreseeable harm'' standard as the basis for withholding information
pursuant to an exemption contained in FOIA. The concept of proactive
disclosure is already contained in NCPC's current regulations and is
carried over in NCPC's FOIA Regulations at Sec. Sec. 602.2(b) (Policy)
and 602.4(b)(10) (Information Available without a FOIA Request). The
foreseeable harm standard is incorporated in Sec. 602.6(c).
E. Elimination of a Description of NCPC's Organizational Structure
NCPC's existing regulations contain an entire section devoted to a
description of the Agency's organizational structure and the
Commission's composition (See, 1 CFR 456.2). As this information is now
readily available on NCPC's Web site, the referenced section has been
removed from the FOIA Regulations. As a consequence, the remaining
sections of the FOIA Regulations have been renumbered. Moreover, the
Policy section has been moved. It now follows the Purpose section
(renamed from General Information) and proceeds the Definition section.
This appeared to be a move logical organizational structure.
II. Summary of and Response to Comments
NCPC published a proposed rule addressing revisions to its current
FOIA Regulations in the Federal Register on August 1, 2017 for a 30-day
public comment period. The public comment period closed on August 31,
2017.
NCPC received no comments on its proposed FOIA Regulations.
Consequently, the proposed FOIA Regulations are now being advertised as
the final FOIA Regulations.
[[Page 44037]]
III. Compliance With Laws and Executive Orders
Executive Orders 12866 and 13563
By Memorandum dated October 12, 1993 from Sally Katzen,
Administrator, Office of Information and Regulatory Affairs (OIRA) to
Heads of Executive Departments and Agencies, and Independent Agencies,
OMB rendered the NCPC exempt from the requirements of Executive Order
12866 (See, Appendix A of cited Memorandum). Nonetheless, NCPC
endeavors to adhere to the provisions of Executive Orders and developed
this rule in a manner consistent with the requirements of Executive
Order 13563.
Executive Order 13771
By virtue of its exemption from the requirements of EO 12866, NCPC
is exemption from this Executive Order. NCPC confirmed this fact with
OIRA.
Regulatory Flexibility Act
As required by the Regulatory Flexibility Act (5 U.S.C. 601 et
seq.), the NCPC certifies that the rule will not have a significant
economic effect on a substantial number of small entities.
Small Business Regulatory Enforcement Fairness Act
This is not a major rule under 5 U.S.C. 804(2), the Small Business
Regulatory Enforcement Fairness Act. It does not have an annual effect
on the economy of $100 million or more; will not cause a major increase
in costs for individuals, various levels of governments or various
regions; and does not have a significant adverse effect on completion,
employment, investment, productivity, innovation or the competitiveness
of US enterprises with foreign enterprises.
Unfunded Mandates Reform Act (2 U.S.C. 1531 et seq.)
A statement regarding the Unfunded Mandates Reform Act is not
required. The rule neither imposes an unfunded mandate of more than
$100 million per year nor imposes a significant or unique effect on
State, local or tribal governments or the private sector.
Federalism (Executive Order 13132)
In accordance with Executive Order 13132, the rule does not have
sufficient federalism implications to warrant the preparation of a
Federalism Assessment. The rule does not substantially and directly
affect the relationship between the Federal and state governments.
Civil Justice Reform (Executive Order 12988)
The General Counsel of NCPC has determined that the rule does not
unduly burden the judicial system and meets the requirements of
Executive Order 12988 3(a) and 3(b)(2).
Paperwork Reduction Act
The rule does not contain information collection requirements, and
it does not require a submission to the Office of Management and Budget
under the Paperwork Reduction Act.
National Environmental Policy Act
The rule is of an administrative nature, and its adoption does not
constitute a major federal action significantly affecting the quality
of the human environment. NCPC's adoption of the rule will have minimal
or no effect on the environment; impose no significant change to
existing environmental conditions; and will have no cumulative
environmental impacts.
Clarity of the Regulation
Executive Order 12866, Executive Order 12988, and the Presidential
Memorandum of June 1, 1998 requires the NCPC to write all rules in
plain language. NCPC maintains the rule meets this requirement. Those
individuals reviewing the rule who believe otherwise should submit
specific comments to the addresses noted above recommending revised
language for those provisions or portions thereof where they believe
compliance is lacking.
Public Availability of Comments
Be advised that personal information such as name, address, phone
number, electronic address, or other identifying personal information
contained in a comment may be made publically available. Individuals
may ask NCPC to withhold the personal information in their comment, but
there is no guarantee the agency can do so.
List of Subjects in 1 CFR Parts 456 and 602
Freedom of information.
For the reasons stated in the preamble, the National Capital
Planning Commission amends 1 CFR Chapter IV and establishes 1 CFR
Chapter VI to read as follows:
CHAPTER IV--MISCELLANEOUS AGENCIES
PART 456 [Removed]
0
1. Under the authority of 40 U.S.C. 8711(a) remove part 456.
0
2. Establish Chapter VI, consisting of part 602, to read as follows:
CHAPTER VI--NATIONAL CAPITAL PLANNING COMMISSION
PART 602--NATIONAL CAPITAL PLANNING COMMISSION FREEDOM OF
INFORMATION ACT REGULATIONS
Sec.
602.1 Purpose.
602.2 Policy.
602.3 Definitions.
602.4 Information available without a FOIA Request.
602.5 FOIA Request requirements.
602.6 FOIA response requirements.
602.7 Multi-track processing.
602.8 Expedited processing.
602.9 Consultations and referrals.
602.10 Classified and Controlled Unclassified Information.
602.11 Confidential Commercial Information.
602.12 Appeals of Adverse Determinations.
602.13 Fees.
602.14 Fee waiver requirements.
602.15 Preservation of FOIA records.
Authority: 5 U.S.C. 552, as amended.
Sec. 602.1 Purpose.
This part contains the rules the National Capital Planning
Commission (NCPC or Commission) shall follow in processing third party
Requests for Records concerning the activities of the NCPC under the
Freedom of Information Act (FOIA), 5 U.S.C. 552, as amended. Requests
made by a U.S. citizen or an individual lawfully admitted for permanent
residence to access his or her own records under the Privacy Act, 5
U.S.C. 522a are processed under this part and in accordance with part
603 of Title 1 of the Code of Federal Regulations (CFR) to provide the
greatest degree of access while safeguarding an individual's personal
privacy. Information routinely provided to the public as part of
regular NCPC activity shall be provided to the public without regard to
this part.
Sec. 602.2 Policy.
(a) It is the NCPC's policy to facilitate the broadest possible
availability and dissemination of information to the public through use
of the NCPC's Web site, www.ncpc.gov, and physical distribution of
materials not available electronically. The NCPC staff shall be
available to assist the public in obtaining information formally by
using the procedures herein or informally in a manner not inconsistent
with the rule set forth in this part.
(b) To the maximum extent possible, the NCPC shall make available
agency Records of interest to the public that are appropriate for
disclosure.
Sec. 602.3 Definitions.
For purposes of this part, the following definitions shall apply:
[[Page 44038]]
Act and FOIA mean the Freedom of Information Act, 5 U.S.C. 552, as
amended.
Adverse Determination or Determination shall include a
determination to withhold, in whole or in part, Records requested in a
FOIA Request; the failure to respond to all aspects of a Request; the
determination to deny a request for a Fee Waiver; or the determination
to deny a request for expedited processing. The term shall also
encompass a challenge to NCPC's determination that Records have not
been described adequately, that there are no responsive Records, or
that an adequate Search has been conducted.
Agency Record or Record means any documentary material which is
either created or obtained by a federal agency (Agency) in the
transaction of Agency business and under Agency control. Agency Records
may include without limitation books; papers; maps; charts; plats;
plans; architectural drawings; photographs and microfilm; machine
readable materials such as magnetic tape, computer disks and electronic
data storage devices; electronic records including email messages; and
audiovisual material such as still pictures, sound, and video
recordings. This definition generally does not cover records of Agency
staff that are created and maintained primarily for a staff member's
convenience, exempt from Agency creation or retention requirements, and
withheld from distribution to other Agency employees for their official
use.
Confidential Commercial Information means commercial or financial
information obtained by the NCPC from a Submitter that may be protected
from disclosure under Exemption 4 of the FOIA. Exemption 4 of the FOIA
protects trade secrets and commercial or financial information obtained
from a person which information is privileged or confidential.
Controlled Unclassified Information means unclassified information
that does not meet the standards for National Security Classification
under Executive Order 13536, as amended, but is pertinent to the
national interests of the United States or to the important interests
of entities outside the federal government, and under law or policy
requires protection from unauthorized disclosure, special handling
safeguards, or prescribed limits on exchange or dissemination.
Commercial Use Request means a FOIA Request from or on behalf of
one who seeks information for a use or purpose that furthers the
commercial, trade, or profit interests of the Requester or the person
on whose behalf the Request is made.
Direct Costs means those expenditures that the NCPC incurs in
searching for, duplicating, and reviewing documents to respond to a
FOIA Request. Direct Costs include, for example, the salary of the
employee performing the work (the basic rate of pay for the employee
plus 16 percent of the rate to cover benefits) and the cost of
operating duplicating machinery. Direct Costs do not include overhead
expenses such as costs of space, and heating or lighting the facility
in which the Records are stored.
Duplication means the process of making a copy of a document
necessary to respond to a FOIA Request in a form that is reasonably
usable by a Requester. Copies can take the form of, among others, paper
copy, audio-visual materials, or machine readable documents (i.e.,
computer disks or electronic data storage devices).
Educational Institution means a preschool, a public or private
elementary or secondary school, an institution of undergraduate higher
education, an institution of graduate higher education, an institution
of professional education, and an institution of vocational education,
which operates a program or programs of scholarly research. To be
classified in this category, a Requester must show that the Request is
authorized by and is made under the auspices of a qualifying
institution and that the records are not sought for a commercial use
but are sought to further scholarly research.
Expedited Processing means giving a FOIA Request priority because a
Requester has shown a compelling need for the Records.
Fee Waiver means a waiver in whole or in part of fees if a
Requester can demonstrate that certain statutory requirements are
satisfied including that the information is in the public interest and
is not requested primarily for commercial purposes.
FOIA Public Liaison means an NCPC official who is responsible for
assisting in reducing delays, increasing transparency and understanding
the status of Requests, and assisting in the resolution of disputes.
FOIA Request or Request means a written Request made by an entity
or member of the public for an Agency Record submitted via the U.S.
Postal Service mail or other delivery means to include without
limitation electronic-mail (email) or facsimile.
Frequently Requested Documents means documents that have been
Requested at least three times under the FOIA. It also includes
documents the NCPC anticipates would likely be the subject of multiple
Requests.
Multi-track Processing means placing requests in multiple tracks
based on the amount of work or time (or both) needed to process the
request. Simple Requests requiring relatively minimal work and/or
review are placed in one processing track, more complex Requests are
placed in one or more other tracks, and expedited Requests are placed
in a separate track. Requests in each track are processed on a first-
in/first-out basis.
Noncommercial Scientific Institution means an institution that is
not operated for commerce, trade or profit, but is operated solely for
the purpose of conducting scientific research the results of which are
not intended to promote any particular product or industry. To be in
this category, a Requester must show that the Request is authorized by
and is made under the auspices of a qualifying institution and that the
Records are not sought for commercial use but are sought to further
scientific research.
Privacy Act Request means, in accordance with NCPC's Privacy Act
Regulations (1 CFR part 603) a written (paper copy with an original
signature) request made by an individual for information about himself/
herself that is contained in a Privacy Act system of records. The
Privacy Act applies only to U.S. citizens and aliens lawfully admitted
for permanent residence such that only individuals satisfying these
criteria may make Privacy Act Requests.
Reading Room Materials means Records, paper or electronic, that are
required to be made available to the public under 5.U.S.C. 552(a)(2) as
well as other Records that the NCPC, at its discretion, makes available
to the public for inspection and copying without requiring the filing
of a FOIA Request.
Representative of the News Media means any person or entity that
gathers information of potential interest to a segment of the
population, uses his/her/its editorial skills to turn raw material into
a distinct work, and distributes that work to an audience. News media
entities include television or radio stations broadcasting to the
public at large; publishers of periodicals that qualify as
disseminators of news and make their products available for purchase or
subscription by the general public; and alternative media to include
electronic dissemination through telecommunication (internet) services.
To be in this category, a Requester must not be seeking the Requested
Records for a commercial use. A Freelance Journalist is a
Representative of the News Media who is able to demonstrate
[[Page 44039]]
a solid basis for expecting publication through a news organization,
even though not actually employed by that news organization. A
publication contract or past evidence of a specific freelance
assignment from a news organization may indicate a solid basis for
expecting publication.
Requester means an entity or member of the public submitting a FOIA
Request.
Requester Category means one of the five categories NCPC places
Requesters in for the purpose of determining whether the Requester will
be charged for Search, Review and Duplication, and includes Commercial
Use Requests, Educational Institutions, Noncommercial Scientific
Institutions, Representatives of the News Media, and all other
Requesters.
Review means the examination of Records to determine whether any
portion of the located Record is eligible to be withheld. It also
includes processing any Records for disclosure, i.e., doing all that is
necessary to excise the record and otherwise prepare the Record for
release. Review does not include time spent resolving general legal or
policy issues regarding the application of exemptions.
Search means the process of looking for material, by manual or
electronic means that is responsive to a FOIA Request. The term also
includes page-by-page or line-by-line identification of material within
documents.
Submitter means any person or entity outside the federal government
from whom the NCPC directly or indirectly obtains commercial or
financial information. The term includes, among others, corporations,
banks, state and local governments, and agencies of foreign governments
who provide information to the NCPC.
Unusual Circumstances means, for purposes of Sec. 602.7(c), and
only to the extent reasonably necessary to the proper processing of a
particular Request:
(1) The need to Search for and collect the Requested Agency Records
from establishments that are separate from the Commission's offices;
(2) The need to Search for, collect and appropriately examine and
Review a voluminous amount of separate and distinct Agency Records
which are demanded in a single Request; or
(3) The need for consultation with another Agency having a
substantial interest in the determination of the FOIA Request.
Workday means a regular Federal workday. It does not include
Saturdays, Sundays, and legal public holidays.
Sec. 602.4 Information available without a FOIA Request.
(a) The NCPC shall maintain an electronic library at www.ncpc.gov
that makes Reading Room Materials capable of production in electronic
form available for public inspection and downloading. The NCPC shall
also maintain an actual public reading room containing Reading Room
Materials incapable of production in electronic form at NCPC's offices.
The actual reading room shall be available for use on Workdays during
the hours of 9:00 a.m. to 4:00 p.m. Requests for appointments to review
Reading Room Materials in the actual public reading room should be
directed to the NCPC's Information Resources Specialist identified on
the NCPC Web site (www.ncpc.gov).
(b) The following types of Records shall be available routinely
without resort to formal FOIA Request procedures unless such Records
fall within one of the exemptions listed at 5 U.S.C. 552(b) of the Act:
(1) Commission agendas;
(2) Plans and supporting documentation submitted by applicants to
the Commission to include environmental and historic preservation
reports prepared for a plan or project;
(3) Executive Director's Recommendations;
(4) Commission Memoranda of Action;
(5) Transcripts of Commission proceedings;
(6) The Comprehensive Plan for the National Capital: Federal
Elements and other plans prepared by the NCPC;
(7) Federal Capital Improvements Plan for the National Capital
Region following release of the President's Budget;
(8) Policies adopted by the Commission;
(9) Correspondence between the Commission and the Congress, other
federal and local government agencies, and the public; and
(10) Frequently Requested Documents.
Sec. 602.5 FOIA Request requirements.
(a) The NCPC shall designate a Chief Freedom of Information Act
Officer who shall be authorized to grant or deny any Request for a
Record of the NCPC.
(b) Requests for a Record or Records that is/are not available in
the actual or electronic reading rooms shall be directed to the Chief
Freedom of Information Act Officer.
(c) All FOIA Requests shall be made in writing. If sent by U.S.
mail, Requests should be sent to NCPC's official business address
contained on the NCPC Web site. If sent via email, they should be
directed to FOIA@ncpc.gov. To expedite internal handling of FOIA
Requests, the words Freedom of Information Act Request shall appear
prominently on the transmittal envelope or the subject line of a
Request sent via email or facsimile.
(d) The FOIA Request shall:
(1) State that the Request is made pursuant to the FOIA;
(2) Describe the Agency Record(s) Requested in sufficient detail
including, without limitation, any specific information known such as
date, title or name, author, recipient, or time frame for which you are
seeking Records, to enable the NCPC personnel to locate the Requested
Agency Records;
(3) State, pursuant to the fee schedule set forth in Sec. 602.14,
a willingness to pay all fees associated with the FOIA Request or the
maximum fee the Requester is willing to pay to obtain the Requested
Records, unless the Requester is seeking a Fee Waiver or placement in a
certain Requester Category;
(4) State, if desired, the preferred form or format of disclosure
of Agency Records with which the NCPC shall endeavor to comply unless
compliance would damage or destroy an original Agency Record or
reproduction is costly and/or requires the acquisition of new
equipment; and
(5) Provide a phone number, email address or mailing address at
which the Requester can be reached to facilitate the handling of the
Request.
(e) If a FOIA Request is unclear, overly broad, involves an
extremely voluminous amount of Records or a burdensome Search, or fails
to state a willingness to pay the requisite fees or the maximum fee
which the Requester is willing to pay, the NCPC shall endeavor to
contact the Requester to define the subject matter, identify and
clarify the Records being sought, narrow the scope of the Request, and
obtain assurances regarding payment of fees. The timeframe for a
response set forth in Sec. 602.6(a) shall be tolled (stopped
temporarily) and the NCPC will not begin processing a Request until the
NCPC obtains the information necessary to clarify the Request and/or
clarifies issues pertaining to the fee.
(f) NCPC shall designate a FOIA Public Liaison to assist a
Requester in making a Request or to assist a Requester in correcting a
Request that does not reasonably describe the Records sought or to
correct other deficiencies described in paragraph (e) of this section
that necessitate follow-up with the Requester.
[[Page 44040]]
Sec. 602.6 FOIA response requirements.
(a) The Freedom of Information Act Officer, upon receipt of a FOIA
Request made in compliance with these rules, shall determine whether to
grant or deny the Request. The Freedom of Information Officer shall
notify the Requester in writing within 20 Workdays of receipt of a
perfected Request of his/her determination and the reasons therefore
and of the right to appeal any Adverse Determination to the head of the
NCPC.
(b) In cases involving Unusual Circumstances, the agency may extend
the 20 Workday time limit by written notice to the Requester. The
written notice shall set forth the reasons for the extension and the
date on which a determination is expected to be dispatched. No such
notice shall specify a date that would result in an extension of more
than 10 Working Days unless the agency affords the Requester an
opportunity to modify his/her Request or arranges an alternative
timeframe with the Requester for completion of the NCPC's processing.
The agency shall also advise the Requester of his/her right to seek
assistance from the FOIA Public Liaison or OGIS to resolve time limit
disputes arising under this paragraph.
(c) NCPC shall deny a Request based on an exemption contained in
the FOIA and withhold information from disclosure pursuant to an
exemption only if NCPC reasonably foresees that disclosure would harm
an interest protected by an exemption or if disclosure is prohibited by
law. If a Request is denied based on an exemption, NCPC's response
shall comply with the requirements of paragraph (d) below.
(d) If a Request is denied in whole or in part, the Chief FOIA
Officer's written determination shall include, if technically feasible,
the precise amount of information withheld, and the exemption under
which it is being withheld unless revealing the exemption would harm an
interested protected by the exemption. NCPC shall release any portion
of a withheld Record that reasonably can be segregated from the exempt
portion of the Record.
Sec. 602.7 Multi-track processing.
The NCPC may use multiple tracks for processing FOIA Requests based
on the complexity of Requests and those for which expedited processing
is Requested. Complexity shall be determined based on the amount of
work and/or time needed to process a Request and/or the number of pages
of responsive Records. If the NCPC utilizes Multi-track Processing, it
shall advise a Requester when a Request is placed in a slower track of
the limits associated with a faster track and afford the Requester the
opportunity to limit the scope of its Request to qualify for faster
processing.
Sec. 602.8 Expedited processing.
(a) The NCPC shall provide Expedited Processing of a FOIA Request
if the person making the Request demonstrates that the Request
involves:
(1) Circumstances in which the lack of expedited treatment could
reasonably be expected to pose an imminent threat to the life or
physical safety of an individual;
(2) An urgency to inform the public about an actual or alleged
federal government activity, if made by a person primarily engaged in
disseminating information;
(3) The loss of substantial due process rights; or
(4) A matter of widespread and exceptional media interest in which
there exists possible questions about the government's integrity which
affect public confidence.
(b) A Request for Expedited Processing may be made at the time of
the initial FOIA Request or at a later time.
(c) A Requester seeking Expedited Processing must submit a detailed
statement setting forth the basis for the Expedited Processing Request.
The Requester must certify in the statement that the need for Expedited
Processing is true and correct to the best of his/her knowledge. To
qualify for Expedited Processing, a Requester relying upon the category
in paragraph (a)(2) of this section must establish:
(1) He/She is a full time Representative of the News Media or
primarily engaged in the occupation of information dissemination,
though it need not be his/her sole occupation;
(2) A particular urgency to inform the public about the information
sought by the FOIA Request beyond the public's right to know about the
government activity generally; and
(3) The information is of the type that has value that will be lost
if not disseminated quickly such as a breaking news story. Information
of historical interest only or information sought for litigation or
commercial activities will not qualify nor would a news media deadline
unrelated to breaking news.
(d) Within 10 calendar days of receipt of a Request for expedited
processing, the NCPC shall decide whether to grant or deny the Request
and notify the Requester of the decision in writing. If a Request for
Expedited Processing is granted, the Request shall be given priority
and shall be processed in the expedited processing track as fast as
practicable. If a Request for Expedited Processing is denied, any
appeal of that decision shall be acted on expeditiously.
Sec. 602.9 Consultations and referrals.
(a) If a Requester seeks a Record in which another agency of the
Federal Government is better able to determine whether the record is
exempt from disclosure under the FOIA, NCPC shall either respond to the
FOIA Request after consultation with the Agency best able to determine
if the Requested Record(s) is/are subject to disclosure or refer the
responsibility for responding to the FOIA Request to the Agency
responsible for originating the Record(s). Generally, the Agency
originating a Record will be presumed by the NCPC to be the Agency best
qualified to render a decision regarding disclosure or exemption except
for Agency Records submitted to the NCPC pursuant to its authority to
review Agency plans and/or projects.
(b) Upon referral of Records to another Agency, the NCPC shall
notify the Requester in writing of the referral, inform the Requester
of the name of the Agency to which all or part of the responsive
records have been referred, provide the Requester a description of the
part of the Request referred, and advise the Requester of a point of
contact within the receiving Agency.
(c) The timeframe for a response to a FOIA Request requiring
consultation or referral shall be based on the date the FOIA Request
was initially received by the NCPC and not any later date.
Sec. 602.10 Classified and Controlled Unclassified Information.
(a) For Requests for an Agency Record that has been classified or
may be appropriate for classification by another Agency pursuant to an
Executive Order concerning the classification of Records, the NCPC
shall refer the responsibility for responding to the FOIA Request to
the Agency that either classified the Record, should consider
classifying the Record, or has primary interest in the Record, as
appropriate.
(b) Whenever a Request is made for a Record that is designated
Controlled Unclassified Information by another Agency, the NCPC shall
refer the FOIA Request to the Agency that designated the Record as
Controlled Unclassified Information. Decisions to disclose or withhold
information designated as Controlled Unclassified Information shall be
made based on the applicability of the statutory exemptions contained
in the FOIA, not on a Controlled
[[Page 44041]]
Unclassified Information marking or designation.
Sec. 602.11 Confidential Commercial Information.
(a) Confidential Commercial Information obtained by the NCPC from a
Submitter shall be disclosed under the FOIA only in accordance with the
requirements of this section.
(b) A Submitter of Confidential Commercial Information shall use
good-faith efforts to designate, by appropriate markings, either at the
time of submission or at a reasonable time thereafter, any portions of
its submission that it considers to be protected from disclosure under
Exemption 4 of the FOIA. These designations will expire ten years after
the date of the submission unless the Submitter requests, and provides
justification for, a longer designation period.
(c) Notice shall be given to a Submitter of a FOIA Request for
potential Confidential Commercial Information if:
(1) The requested information has been designated in good faith by
the Submitter as Confidential Commercial Information eligible for
protection from disclosure under Exemption 4 of the FOIA; or
(2) The NCPC has reason to believe the requested information is
Confidential Commercial Information protected from disclosure under
Exemption 4 of the FOIA.
(d) Subject to the requirements of paragraphs (c) and (g) of this
section, the NCPC shall provide a Submitter with prompt written notice
of a FOIA Request or administrative appeal that seeks the Submitter's
Confidential Commercial Information. The notice shall give the
Submitter an opportunity to object to disclosure of any specified
portion of that Confidential Commercial Information pursuant to
paragraph (e) of this section. The notice shall either describe the
Confidential Commercial Information Requested or include copies of the
Requested Records or portions thereof containing the Confidential
Commercial Information. When notice to a large number of Submitters is
required, NCPC may provide notification by posting or publishing the
notice in a place reasonably likely to accomplish the intent of the
notice requirement such as a newspaper, newsletter, the NCPC Web site,
or the Federal Register.
(e) The NCPC shall allow a Submitter a reasonable time to respond
to the notice described in paragraph (d) of this section and shall
specify within the notice the time period for response. If a Submitter
has any objection to disclosure, it shall submit a detailed written
statement. The statement must specify all grounds for withholding any
portion of the Confidential Commercial Information under any exemption
of the FOIA and, in the case of Exemption 4, it must show why the
Confidential Commercial Information is a trade secret or commercial or
financial information that is privileged or confidential. If the
Submitter fails to respond to the notice within the specified time, the
NCPC shall consider this failure to respond as no objection to
disclosure of the Confidential Commercial Information on the part of
the Submitter, and NCPC shall proceed to release the requested
information. A statement provided by the Submitter that is not received
by NCPC until after the NCPC's disclosure decision has been made shall
not be considered by the NCPC. Information provided by a Submitter
under this paragraph may itself be subject to disclosure under the
FOIA.
(f) The NCPC shall consider a Submitter's objections and specific
grounds for nondisclosure in deciding whether to disclose Confidential
Commercial Information. Whenever the NCPC decides to disclose
Confidential Commercial Information over the objection of a Submitter,
the NCPC shall give the Submitter written notice, which shall include:
(1) A statement of the reason(s) why each of the Submitter's
disclosure objections was not sustained;
(2) A description of the Confidential Commercial Information to be
disclosed; and
(3) A specified disclosure date, which shall be a reasonable time
subsequent to the notice.
(g) The notice requirements of paragraphs (c) and (d) of this
section shall not apply if:
(1) The NCPC determines that the Confidential Commercial
Information is exempt under FOIA;
(2) The Confidential Commercial Information has been published
lawfully or has been officially made available to the public;
(3) The Confidential Commercial Information's disclosure is
required by statute (other than the FOIA) or by a regulation issued in
accordance with the requirements of Executive Order 12600
(Predisclosure Notification Procedures for Confidential Commercial
Information); or
(4) The designation made by the Submitter under paragraph (b) of
this section appears obviously frivolous in which case the NCPC shall,
within a reasonable time prior to a specified disclosure date, give the
Submitter written notice of any final decision to disclose the
Confidential Commercial Information.
(h) Whenever a Requester files a lawsuit seeking to compel the
disclosure of Confidential Commercial Information, the NCPC shall
promptly notify the Submitter.
(i) Whenever the NCPC provides a Submitter with notice and an
opportunity to object to disclosure under paragraph (d) of this
section, the NCPC shall also notify the Requester. Whenever the NCPC
notifies a Submitter of its intent to disclose Requested Information
under paragraph (f) of this section, the NCPC shall also notify the
Requester. Whenever a Submitter files a lawsuit seeking to prevent the
disclosure of Confidential Commercial Information, the NCPC shall
notify the Requester.
Sec. 602.12 Appeals of Adverse Determinations.
(a) An appeal of an Adverse Determination shall be made in writing
to the Chairman of the Commission (Chairman). An appeal may be
submitted via U.S. mail or other type of manual delivery service or via
email or facsimile within 90 Workdays of the date of a notice of an
Adverse Determination. To facilitate handling of an appeal, the words
Freedom of Information Act Appeal shall appear prominently on the
transmittal envelope or the subject line of a Request sent via
electronic-mail or facsimile.
(b) An appeal of an Adverse Determination shall include a detailed
statement of the legal, factual or other basis for the Requester's
objections to an Adverse Determination; a daytime phone number or email
address where the Requester can be reached if the NCPC requires
additional information or clarification regarding the appeal; copies of
the initial Request and the NCPC's written response; and for an Adverse
Determination of a Request for Expedited Processing or a Fee Waiver, a
demonstration of compliance with the requirements of Sec. Sec.
602.8(a) and (c) or 602.15(a) through (c) respectively.
(c) The Chairman shall respond to an appeal of an Adverse
Determination in writing within 20 Workdays of receipt.
(1) If the Chairman grants the appeal, the Chairman shall notify
the Requester, and the NCPC shall make available copies of the
Requested Records promptly thereafter upon receipt of the appropriate
fee determined in accordance with Sec. 602.13.
(2) If the Chairman denies the appeal in whole or in part, the
letter to the Requester shall state
[[Page 44042]]
(i) The reason(s) for the denial, including the FOIA exemptions(s)
applied;
(ii) A statement that the decision is final;
(iii) A notice of the Requester's right to seek judicial review of
the denial in the District Court of the United States in either the
locale in which the Requester resides, the locale in which the
Requester has his/her principal place of business, or in the District
of Columbia; and
(iv) A notice that the Requester may seek dispute resolution
services from either the NCPC FOIA Public Liaison or the Office of
Government Information Services (OGIS) to resolve disputes between a
Requester and the NCPC as a non-exclusive alternative to litigation.
Contact information for OGIS can be obtained from the OGIS Web site at
ogis@nara.gov.
(d) The NCPC shall not act on an appeal of an Adverse Determination
if the underlying FOIA Request becomes the subject of FOIA litigation.
(e) A party seeking court review of an Adverse Determination must
first appeal the decision under this section to NCPC.
Sec. 602.13 Fees.
(a) NCPC shall charge fees for processing FOIA requests in
accordance with the provisions of this section and OMB Guidelines.
(b) For purposes of assessing fees, NCPC shall categorize
Requesters into three categories: Commercial Use Requesters;
Noncommercial Scientific Institutions, Educational Institutions, and
News Media Requesters; and all other Requesters. Different fees shall
be charged depending upon the category into which a Requester falls. If
fees apply, a Requesters may seek a fee waiver in accordance with the
requirements of Sec. 602.15.
(c) Search Fees shall be charged as follows:
(1) NCPC shall not charge Search fees to Requests made by
Educational Institutions, Noncommercial Scientific Institutions, or
Representatives of the New Media. NCPC shall charge Search fees to all
other Requesters subject to the restrictions of paragraph (f)(5) of
this section even if NCPC fails to locate any responsive Records or if
the NCPC withholds Records located based on a FOIA exemption.
(2) For each quarter hour spent by personnel searching for
Requested Records, including electronic searches that do not require
new programming, the Search fees shall be calculated based on the
average hourly General Schedule (GS) base salary, plus the District of
Columbia locality payment, plus 16 percent for benefits of employees in
the following three categories: Staff Assistant (assigned at the GS 9-
11 grades); Professional Personnel (assigned at the GS 11-13 grades);
and Managerial Staff (assigned at the 14-15 grades). For a Staff
Assistant the quarter hour fee to Search for and retrieve a Requested
Record shall be $9.00. If a Search and retrieval cannot be performed
entirely by a Staff Assistant, and the identification of Records within
the scope of a Request requires the use of Professional Personnel, the
fee shall be $12.00 for each quarter hour of Search time spent by
Professional Personnel. If the time of Managerial Personnel is
required, the fee shall be $18.00 for each quarter hour of Search time
spent by Managerial Personnel.
(3) For a computer Search of Records, Requesters shall be charged
the Direct Costs of creating a computer program, if necessary, and/or
conducting the Search. Direct Costs for a computer Search shall include
the cost that is directly attributable to the Search for responsive
Records and the costs of the operator's salary for the time
attributable to the Search.
(d) Duplication fees shall be charged to all Requesters, subject to
the limitations of paragraph (f)(5) of this section. For a paper
photocopy of a Record (no more than one copy of which shall be
supplied), the fee shall be 10 cents per page for single or double
sided copies, 90 cents per page for 8\1/2\ by 11 inch color copies, and
$1.50 per page for color copies up to 11 x 17 inches per page. For
copies produced by computer, and placed on an electronic data saving
device or provided as a printout, the NCPC shall charge the Direct
Costs, including operator time, of producing the copy. For other forms
of Duplication, the NCPC shall charge the Direct Costs of that
Duplication.
(e) Review fees shall be charged to only those Requesters who make
a Commercial Use Request. Review fees will be charged only for the NCPC
initial Review of a Record to determine whether an exemption applies to
a particular Record or portion thereof. No charge will be made for
Review at the administrative appeal level for an exemption already
applied. However, Records or portions thereof withheld under an
exemption that is subsequently determined not applicable upon appeal
may be reviewed again to determine whether any other exemption not
previously considered applies. If the NCPC determines a different
exemption applies, the costs of that Review are chargeable. Review fees
will be charged at the same rates as those charged for a Search under
paragraph (c)(2) of this section.
(f) The following limitations on fees shall apply:
(1) If NCPC fails to comply with the time limits in which to
respond to a request, NCPC shall not charge Search fees or, in the case
of Educational Institutions, Noncommercial Scientific Institutions, or
Representatives of the News Media, duplication fees, except as
described in paragraphs (f)(2)-(4) of this section.
(2) If NCPC has determined that unusual circumstances as defined by
the FOIA apply, and the agency provided timely written notice to the
Requester in accordance with the FOIA, a failure to comply with the
time limit shall be excused for an additional 10 days.
(3) If NCPC determines that Unusual Circumstances exist, and more
than 5000 pages of responsive records are necessary to respond to the
Request, NCPC may charge Search fees. NCPC may also charge duplication
fees in the case of Educational Institutions, Noncommercial Scientific
Institutions, or Representatives of the News Media. The provisions of
this paragraph shall only apply if NCPC provides timely written notice
of the Unusual Circumstances to the Requester and discusses with the
Requester via mail, e-mail or phone (or made at least three good faith
efforts to do so) how to effectively limit the scope of the Request.
(4) If a court has determined that exceptional circumstances exist,
as defined by the FOIA, a failure to comply with the time limits shall
be excused for the length of time provided by the court order.
(5) No Search or Review fees shall be charged for a quarter-hour
period unless more than half of that period is required for Search or
Review.
(6) Except for Requesters of a Commercial Use Request, the NCPC
shall provide without charge the first two hours of Search (or the cost
equivalent) and the first 100 pages of Duplication (or the cost
equivalent);
(7) Except for Requesters of a Commercial Use Request, no fee shall
be charged for a Request if the total fee calculated under this section
equals $50.00 or less.
(8) Requesters other than those making a Commercial Use Request
shall not be charged a fee unless the total cost of a Search in excess
of two hours plus the cost of Duplication in excess of 100 pages totals
more than $50.00.
(g) If the NCPC determines or estimates fees in excess of $50.00,
the NCPC shall notify the Requester of the actual or estimated amount
of total fees,
[[Page 44043]]
unless in its initial Request the Requester has indicated a willingness
to pay fees as high as those determined or estimated. If only a portion
of the fee can be estimated, the NCPC shall advise the Requester that
the estimated fee constitutes only a portion of the total fee. If the
NCPC notifies a Requester that actual or estimated fees amount to more
than $50.00, the Request shall not be considered received for purposes
of calculating the timeframe for a Response, and no further work shall
be undertaken on the Request until the Requester agrees to pay the
anticipated total fee. Any such agreement shall be memorialized in
writing. A notice under this paragraph shall offer the Requester an
opportunity to work with the NCPC to reformulate the Request to meet
the Requester's needs at a lower cost.
(h) Apart from other provisions of this section, if the Requester
asks for, or the NCPC chooses as a matter of administrative discretion
to provide a special service--such as certifying that Records are true
copies or sending them by other than ordinary mail, the actual costs of
special service shall be charged.
(i) The NCPC shall charge interest on any unpaid fee starting on
the 31st day following the date of billing the Requester. Interest
charges will be assessed at the rate provided in 31 U.S.C. 3717
(Interest and Penalty on Claims) and will accrue from the date of the
billing until payment is received by the NCPC. The NCPC shall follow
the provisions of the Debt Collection Act of 1982 (Pub. L. 97-365, 96
Stat. 1749), as amended, and its administrative procedures, including
the use of consumer reporting agencies, collection agencies, and
offset.
(j) Where the NCPC reasonably believes that one or more Requesters
are acting in concert to subdivide a Request into a series of Requests
to avoid fees, the NCPC may aggregate the Requests and charge
accordingly. The NCPC shall presume that multiple Requests of this type
made within a 30-day period have been made to avoid fees. Where
Requests are separated by a time period in excess of 30 days, the NCPC
shall aggregate the multiple Requests if a solid basis exists for
determining aggregation is warranted under all circumstances involved.
(k) Advance payments shall be treated as follows:
(1) For Requests other than those described in paragraphs (k)(2)
and (3) of this section, the NCPC shall not require an advance payment.
An advance payment refers to a payment made before work on a Request is
begun or continued after being stopped for any reason but does not
extend to payment owed for work already completed but not sent to a
Requester.
(2) If the NCPC determines or estimates a total fee under this
section of more than $250.00, it shall require an advance payment of
all or part of the anticipated fee before beginning to process a
Request, unless the Requester provides satisfactory assurance of full
payment or has a history of prompt payment.
(3) If a Requester previously failed to pay a properly charged FOIA
fee to the NCPC within 30 days of the date of billing, the NCPC shall
require the Requester to pay the full amount due, plus any applicable
interest, and to make an advance payment of the full amount of any
anticipated fee, before the NCPC begins to process a new Request or
continues processing a pending Request from that Requester.
(4) If the NCPC requires advance payment or payment due under
paragraphs (k)(2) or (3) of this section, the Request shall not be
considered received and no further work will be undertaken on the
Request until the required payment is received.
(l) Where Records responsive to Requests are maintained for
distribution by Agencies operating statutorily based fee schedule
programs, the NCPC shall inform Requesters of the steps for obtaining
Records from those sources so that they may do so most economically.
(m) All fees shall be paid by personal check, money order or bank
draft drawn on a bank of the United States, made payable to the order
of the Treasurer of the United States.
Sec. 602.15 Fee waiver requirements.
(a) Records responsive to a Request shall be furnished without
charge or at a charge reduced below that established under Sec. 602.14
if the Requester demonstrates to the NCPC, and the NCPC determines,
based on all available information, that Disclosure of the Requested
information is in the public interest because it is likely to
contribute significantly to public understanding of the operations or
activities of the government, and disclosure of the information is not
primarily in the commercial interest of the Requester.
(b) To determine if disclosure of the Requested information is in
the public interest because it is likely to contribute significantly to
public understanding of the operations or activities of the government,
the Requester shall demonstrate, and NCPC shall consider, the following
factors:
(1) Whether the subject of the Requested Records concerns the
operations or activities of the government. The subject of the
Requested Records must concern identifiable operations or activities of
the federal government, with a connection that is direct and clear, not
remote or attenuated.
(2) Whether the disclosure is likely to contribute to an
understanding of government operations or activities. The portions of
the Requested Records eligible for disclosure must be meaningfully
informative about government operations or activities. The disclosure
of information that already is in the public domain, in either a
duplicative or a substantially identical form, is not likely to
contribute to an understanding of government operations and activities
because this information is already known.
(3) Whether disclosure of the Requested information will contribute
to public understanding. 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 and ability and
intention to effectively convey information to the public shall be
considered. It shall be presumed that a Representative of the News
Media satisfies this consideration.
(4) Whether the disclosure is likely to contribute significantly to
public understanding of government operations or activities. The
public's understanding of the subject in question must be enhanced by
the disclosure to a significant extent, as compared to the level of
public understanding existing prior to the disclosure. The NCPC shall
not make value judgments about whether information that would
contribute significantly to public understanding of the operations or
activities of the government is important enough to be made public.
(c) To determine whether disclosure of the information is not
primarily in the commercial interest of the Requester, the Requester
shall demonstrate, and NCPC shall consider, the following factors:
(1) Whether the Requester has a commercial interest that would be
furthered by the Requested disclosure. The NCPC shall consider any
commercial interest of the Requester (with reference to the definition
of Commercial Use Request in Sec. 602.3(f)), or of any person on whose
behalf the Requester may be acting, that would be furthered by the
Requested disclosure. Requesters shall be given an opportunity in the
administrative process to provide explanatory information regarding
this consideration.
[[Page 44044]]
(2) Whether any identified commercial interest of the Requester is
sufficiently large in comparison with the public interest in disclosure
that disclosure is primarily in the commercial interest of the
Requester. A Fee Waiver is justified where the public interest standard
of paragraph (b) of this section is satisfied and that public interest
is greater in magnitude than that of any identified commercial interest
in disclosure. The NCPC ordinarily shall presume that a Representative
of the News Media satisfies the public interest standard, and the
public interest will be the interest primarily served by disclosure to
that Requester. 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.
(d) Where only some of the Records to be released satisfy the
requirements for a Fee Waiver, a Fee Waiver shall be granted for those
Records.
(e) Requests for a Fee Waiver should address the factors listed in
paragraphs (a) through (c) of this section, insofar as they apply to
each Request. The NCPC shall exercise its discretion to consider the
cost-effectiveness of its investment of administrative resources in
this decision-making process in deciding to grant Fee Waivers.
Sec. 602.15 Preservation of FOIA records.
(a) The NCPC shall preserve all correspondence pertaining to FOIA
Requests received and copies or Records provided until disposition or
destruction is authorized by the NCPC's General Records schedule
established in accordance with the National Archives and Records
Administration (NARA) approved schedule.
(b) Materials that are responsive to a FOIA Request shall not be
disposed of or destroyed while the Request or a related lawsuit is
pending even if the Records would otherwise be authorized for
disposition under the NCPC's General Records Schedule or NARA or other
NARA-approved records schedule.
Dated: September 14, 2017.
Anne R. Schuyler,
General Counsel.
[FR Doc. 2017-19997 Filed 9-19-17; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 7502-20-P