Freedom of Information Act Regulations, 11922-11927 [2018-04993]
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1304.6 Timing of responses to requests.
1304.7 Responses to requests.
1304.8 Confidential commercial
information.
1304.9 Administrative appeals.
1304.10 Preservation of records.
1304.11 Fees.
1304.12 Other rights and services.
MILLENNIUM CHALLENGE
CORPORATION
22 CFR Part 1304
Freedom of Information Act
Regulations
Millennium Challenge
Corporation.
ACTION: Notice of proposed rulemaking.
AGENCY:
The purpose of this document
is to outline the procedures by which
the Millennium Challenge Corporation
proposes to implement the relevant
provisions of the Freedom of
Information Act as required under that
statute. This document will assist
interested parties in obtaining access to
Millennium Challenge Corporation
public records.
DATES: Send comments on or before
April 18, 2018.
ADDRESSES: Send comments to Tamiko
NW Watkins, Chief FOIA Officer, Office
of the General Counsel, Millennium
Challenge Corporation, 1099 Fourteenth
Street NW, Washington, DC 20005.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Tamiko NW Watkins, Chief FOIA
Officer, 202.521.3730.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: The
Millennium Challenge Act (MCA) of
2003 established a new federal agency
called the Millennium Challenge
Corporation. Congress enacted the
Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) in
1966 and last modified it with the FOIA
Improvement Act of 2016. This
proposed rule addresses electronically
available documents, procedures for
making requests, agency handling of
requests, records not disclosed, changes
in fees, and public reading rooms, as
well as, other related provisions.
SUMMARY:
Lists of Subjects in 22 CFR Part 1304
Freedom of Information Act
procedures.
■ For the reasons set forth in the
preamble, the Millennium Challenge
Corporation proposes to amend chapter
XIII of title 22 by revising part 1304 to
read as follows:
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PART 1304—PRODUCTION OR
DISCLOSURE OF INFORMATION
Subpart A—Procedures for Requests for
Disclosure of Records Under the Freedom
of Information Act
Sec.
1304.1 General provisions.
1304.2 Definitions.
1304.3 Proactive disclosure of MCC
records.
1304.4 Requirements for making requests.
1304.5 Responsibility for acknowledgment
and initial determinations.
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Subpart B—[Reserved]
Authority: 5 U.S.C. 552, as amended.
Subpart A—Procedures for Requests
for Disclosure of Records Under the
Freedom of Information Act
§ 1304.1
General provisions.
This part contains the rules that the
Millennium Challenge Corporation
(‘‘MCC’’) follows in processing requests
for records under the Freedom of
Information Act (‘‘FOIA’’) (5 U.S.C.
552). The rules in this part should be
read in conjunction with the text of the
FOIA and the Uniform Freedom of
Information Act Fee Schedule and
Guidelines published by the Office of
Management and Budget (‘‘OMB Fee
Guidelines’’). In addition, the MCC
FOIA web page contains information
about the specific procedures particular
to MCC with respect to making FOIA
requests. This resource is available at
www.mcc.gov/resources/foia. Requests
may be made by individuals about
themselves under the Privacy Act of
1974, 5 U.S.C. 552(a).
§ 1304.2
Definitions.
Administrative appeal. An
independent review of the initial
determination made in response to a
FOIA request.
Agency. Any executive department,
military department, government
corporation, government controlled
corporation, or other establishment in
the executive branch of the Federal
Government or any independent
regulatory agency.
Business day or work day. A day of
the week, excluding Saturday, Sunday,
or legal public holidays.
Calendar days. Every day within a
month, including Saturday, Sunday,
and legal public holidays. Unless
identified as a ‘‘business day’’ or ‘‘work
day,’’ all timeframes and days noted in
this part shall be calculated in calendar
days.
Chief FOIA Officer. The MCC
employee who is authorized to make
determinations regarding the release of
records requested under the FOIA.
Commercial requester. Any person
making a request for information for a
use or purpose that furthers a
commercial, trade, or profit interest,
which can include furthering those
interests through litigation.
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Complex request. A FOIA request that
MCC anticipates will involve a
voluminous amount of material to
review or will be time-consuming to
process.
Confidential commercial information.
Records provided to the government
that contain material exempt from
disclosure under Exemption 4 of the
FOIA and disclosure of such records
could reasonably be expected to cause
substantial competitive harm.
Consultation. When MCC locates a
record that contains information of
interest to another agency, MCC shall
ask the interested agency for their views
on disclosing the records before any
final determination is made.
Direct costs. Expenditures actually
incurred by MCC for searching,
duplicating, and in the case of
commercial use requests, reviewing
records in order to respond to a FOIA
request.
Discretionary disclosure. The release
of or portions of records to a FOIA
requester that could be withheld by
MCC under one or more of the FOIA
exemptions.
Duplication. The process of making a
copy of a record in order to respond to
a FOIA request, including but not
limited to paper copies, microfilm,
audio-video materials, and computer
diskettes or other electronic copies.
Duplication fees. The estimated direct
costs of making a copy of a record in
order to respond to a FOIA request.
Educational institution. Any school or
institution that operates a program of
scholarly research. A requester in this
category must show that the request is
made in connection with his or her role
at the educational institution.
Educational requester. Any person
making a FOIA request authorized by,
and made under the auspices of, a
qualifying institution, and that the
records are not sought to further
scholarly research. Records requested
for the intention of fulfilling credit
requirements at an educational
institution are not considered to be
sought for a scholarly purpose.
Exemptions. Certain categories of
information that are not required to be
released in response to a FOIA request
because release would be harmful to
governmental or private interests.
FOIA Appeals Officer. The MCC
employee who is responsible for
conducting an independent review of
the initial determination of the FOIA
request after the requester has requested
an administrative appeal.
FOIA Public Liaison. The MCC
employee who is responsible for
assisting in the resolution of disputes in
response to FOIA requests.
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FOIA Program Officer. The MCC
employee who receives and processes
requests within the MCC FOIA Office.
Non-commercial scientific institution.
An institution that does not operate on
a commercial basis, but operates solely
for the purpose of conducting scientific
research and the results of the scientific
research are not intended to promote
any particular product or industry.
Record. Any item, collection, or
grouping of information maintained by
MCC in any form or format, including
an electronic copy. A ‘‘record’’ can
potentially constitute an entire
document, a single page of a multipage
document, an individual paragraph of a
document, or an email within an email
chain.
Referral. When an agency locates a
record that originated with, or is of
otherwise primary interest to another
agency, it will forward that record to the
other agency to process the record and
to provide the final determination
directly to the requester.
Representative of the news media.
Any person actively gathering news for
an entity that is organized and operated
to publish or broadcast news to the
public. The term ‘‘news’’ means
information that is about current events
or that would be of interest to the
public. To qualify for this category, the
requester must not be seeking the
requested records for commercial use.
Requester. Any person, corporation,
firm, organization, or other entity who
makes a request for records pursuant to
the FOIA.
Review. The process of examining a
record to determine whether all or part
of the record may be released or
withheld, and includes redacting or
otherwise processing the record for
disclosure to a requester. The review
process does not include time spent
resolving legal or policy issues
regarding the application of exemptions
to a record. The review process also
does not include time spent reviewing
records at the administrative appeal
level unless, MCC determines that the
exemption under which it withheld
records does not apply and the records
are reviewed again to determine
whether a different exemption may
apply.
Search. The time spent locating
records that may be responsive to a
request, manually or by electronic
means, including page-by-page or lineby-line identification of responsive
material within a record.
Search fees. Estimated direct costs of
the time spent locating records by either
manual or electronic means.
Submitter. Any person or entity who
provides information directly or
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indirectly to MCC. The term includes,
but is not limited to, corporations, state
governments, and foreign governments.
§ 1304.3 Proactive disclosure of MCC
records.
Records that are required by the FOIA
to be made available for public
inspection in an electronic format may
be accessed through the MCC website.
MCC is responsible for determining
which of its records are required to be
made publicly available, identifying
additional records in the interest of the
public that are appropriate for public
disclosure, and posting such records.
MCC shall ensure that its website of
posted records is reviewed and updated
on an ongoing basis. The FOIA Program
Officer may assist individuals in
locating records on the MCC website
and FOIA reading room.
§ 1304.4 Requirements for making
requests.
(a) Requests for access to, or copies of,
MCC records other than those identified
in § 1304.3, shall be in writing and
addressed to the MCC Chief FOIA
Officer at 1099 14th St. NW,
Washington, DC 20005 or FOIA@
mcc.gov. All requests for records shall
be deemed to have been made pursuant
to the FOIA, regardless of whether the
request specifically mentions the
Freedom of Information Act. To
facilitate processing, the requester
should place the phrase ‘‘FOIA
REQUEST’’ in capital letters on the front
of the envelope or subject line of the
email.
(b) Each request shall include the
following:
(1) A description of the record(s) that
provides sufficient detail to enable MCC
to locate the record(s) with a reasonable
amount of effort; such as the date, title
or name, author, recipient, subject
matter of the record, case number, file
designation, or reference number. Before
submitting their requests, requesters
may contact the MCC FOIA Program
Officer to discuss the records the are
seeking and receive assistance in
describing the records;
(2) The preferred format of the
records;
(3) A statement that the request for
records is made pursuant to the FOIA;
(4) The requestor’s full name, mailing
address or email address, and telephone
number where the requester can be
reached during business hours; and
(5) If applicable, the maximum
amount the requester is willing to pay
or dollar limit on the fees MCC may
incur to respond to the request for
records. When this information is
specified, MCC shall not exceed such
limit.
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(c) If a request does not meet all of the
requirements of paragraph (b) of this
section, the FOIA Program Officer may
advise the requester that additional
information is needed. Requesters who
are attempting to reformulate or modify
a request may engage with the MCC
Program Officer to clarify their request.
§ 1304.5 Responsibility for
acknowledgment and initial determinations.
(a) Upon receipt of a request for
records, the FOIA Program Officer will
acknowledge receipt of the request in
writing within ten (10) business days. In
responding to a request for records,
MCC shall make reasonable efforts to
search for the records in electronic
format, except when such efforts would
significantly interfere with the operation
of the agency’s automated information
system.
(b) The Chief FOIA Officer shall make
an initial determination, within twenty
(20) business days, to either grant or
deny, in whole or in part, a request for
records. If the Chief FOIA Officer shall
notify the requester making such a
request of the following information:
(1) The determination whether grant
or deny the request and reasons for the
determination;
(2) The right of the requester to seek
assistance from the FOIA Public
Liaison; and in the case of an adverse
determination;
(3) The right of the requester to seek
dispute resolution services via the
Office of Government Information
Services of the National Archives and
Records Administration (OGIS); and
(4) The right to file an administrative
appeal to the FOIA Appeals Officer
within 90 calendar days after the date of
the adverse determination.
§ 1304.6
Timing of responses to requests.
(a) General information. The twenty
(20) business day period identified in
§ 1304.5(b) shall commence on the date
that the request is first received by the
MCC FOIA office and an
acknowledgment of the request shall be
sent no later than ten (10) business days
after receipt of the request. The twenty
(20) business day period shall not be
tolled except that MCC may make one
request to the requester for information
and toll the twenty (20) business day
period while it is awaiting receipt of the
information, or the twenty (20) business
day period may be tolled if it is
necessary to clarify issues regarding fees
with the requester.
(b) Unusual circumstances. If MCC
cannot meet the statutory time limit for
processing a request because of
‘‘unusual circumstances’’ as defined in
the FOIA and MCC extends the time
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limit on that basis, MCC will, before
expiration of the twenty (20) business
day period, notify the requester in
writing of the unusual circumstances
involved and of the date by which MCC
estimates processing of the request will
be completed. Where the extension
exceeds ten (10) business days, MCC
will provide the requester with an
opportunity to modify the request or
arrange an alternative time period for
processing the original or modified
request. MCC must make its designated
FOIA Program Officer or FOIA Public
Liaison available for this purpose. To
aid the requester, the MCC FOIA Public
Liaison shall assist in the resolution of
any disputes between the requester and
MCC, and notify the requester of the
right to seek dispute resolution services
from the Office of Government
Information Services. Refusal by the
requester to modify the request or
arrange for an alternative time frame
shall be factors in considering whether
unusual circumstances exist.
(c) Aggregating requests. MCC may
aggregate requests where it reasonably
appears that multiple requests,
submitted either by a requester or by a
group of requesters acting in concert,
constitute a single request that would
otherwise involve unusual
circumstances. Requests that involve
unrelated matters shall not be
aggregated.
(d) Multitrack processing. MCC may
use multitrack processing in responding
to requests. This process entails
separating simple requests that require
rather limited review from more lengthy
and complex requests. Requests in each
track are then processed in their
respective track. The FOIA Program
Officer may provide requesters in the
slower track an opportunity to limit the
scope of their requests in order to
decrease the processing time required.
The FOIA Program Officer may provide
the opportunity to limit the scope of the
request by contacting the requester by
letter, email, or telephone.
(e) Expedited processing of requests.
The FOIA Program Officer must
determine whether to grant a request for
expedited processing within ten (10)
calendar days of its receipt. Requests
will receive expedited processing if one
of the following criteria are met:
(1) The requester can establish that
failure to receive the records quickly
could reasonably be expected to pose an
imminent threat to the life or physical
safety of an individual;
(2) The requester is primarily engaged
in disseminating information and can
demonstrate that an urgency to inform
the public concerning actual or alleged
federal government activity exists; or
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(3) As determined by the Chief FOIA
Officer.
(f) Written expedited requests. A
requester who seeks expedited
processing must submit a written
statement explaining in detail the basis
for making the request for expedited
processing. This statement must be
certified to be true and correct. The
MCC Chief FOIA Officer may waive the
formal certification requirement.
§ 1304.7
Responses to requests.
(a) General information. MCC, to the
extent practicable, will communicate
with requesters who have access to the
internet via email or web portal.
(b) Acknowledgment of requests. MCC
shall acknowledge the request in writing
and assign a tracking number for
processing purposes.
(c) Estimated dates of completion and
interim responses. Upon request, MCC
shall provide an estimated response
date. If a request involves a voluminous
amount of material or searches in
multiple locations, MCC shall provide
interim responses by releasing the
records on a rolling basis.
(d) Granting requests. MCC will notify
the requestor in writing if it determines
that it will grant a request in full or in
part. MCC shall inform the requester of
any fees charged and shall disclose the
requested records to the requester
promptly upon payment of any
applicable fees.
(e) Partial grant of requests. MCC
shall consider whether partial
disclosure of information is possible
whenever the agency determines that a
full disclosure of a requested record is
not possible. MCC shall take reasonable
steps necessary to segregate and release
nonexempt information.
(f) Denial or adverse determination of
requests. Except as otherwise provided
in this part, MCC shall withhold
information only if—
(1) It reasonably foresees that
disclosure would harm an interest
protected by an exemption under the
FOIA or disclosure is prohibited by law;
(2) The request does not reasonably
describe the records sought;
(3) The information sought is not a
record subject to the FOIA;
(4) The information sought does not
exist, cannot be located, or has been
destroyed; or
(5) The records are not in the readily
producible form or format sought by the
requester.
(g) Markings on released documents.
Records disclosed in part shall be
marked clearly to show the amount of
information deleted and the exemption
under which the deletion was made
unless doing so would harm an interest
protected by an applicable exemption.
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§ 1304.8 Confidential commercial
information.
(a) Designation of confidential
commercial information. A submitter of
confidential commercial information
must use good faith efforts to designate
by appropriate markings, either at the
time of the submission or within a
reasonable time thereafter, any portion
of its submission that it considers to be
protected from disclosure under
Exemption 4 of the FOIA. These
designations shall expire ten (10) years
after the date of submission unless the
submitter requests and provides
justification for a longer designation
period.
(b) Required notice. Written notice
shall be provided to a submitter of
confidential commercial information
whenever records containing such
information are requested under the
FOIA if, after reviewing the request, the
responsive records, and any appeal by
the requester, it is determined that MCC
may be required to disclose the records,
provided:
(1) The requested information has
been designated in good faith by the
submitter as information considered
protected from disclosure under
Exemption 4 of the FOIA; or
(2) MCC has reason to believe that the
requested information may be protected
from disclosure under Exemption 4 of
the FOIA, but has not yet determined
whether the information is protected
from disclosure under that exemption or
any other applicable exemption.
(c) Information. The notices shall
either describe the commercial
information requested or include a copy
of the requested records or portions of
records containing information. In cases
involving a voluminous number of
submitters, notice may be made by
posting or publishing the notice in a
place or manner reasonably likely to
accomplish it.
(d) Exceptions to notice requirements.
The notices requirements of this section
shall not apply if:
(1) The Chief FOIA Officer determines
that the information is exempt under the
FOIA;
(2) The information has been lawfully
published or has officially been made
available to the public;
(3) Disclosure of the information is
required by a statute other than the
FOIA or by a regulation issued in
accordance with the requirements of
Executive Order 12600 of June 23, 1987;
or
(4) The designation made by the
submitter under paragraph (b) of this
section appears obviously frivolous,
except that, in such a case, the
component shall give the submitter
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written notice of any final decision to
disclose the information and must
provide that notice within a reasonable
number of days prior to the disclosure
date.
(e) Opportunity to object to disclosure.
A submitter may provide the Chief
FOIA Officer with a detailed written
statement of any objection to disclosure
within ten (10) days of notification. The
statement shall specify all grounds for
withholding any of the information
under any exemption of the FOIA, and
if Exemption 4 applies, shall
demonstrate the reasons the submitter
believes the information to be
confidential commercial information
that is exempt from disclosure.
Whenever possible, the submitter’s
claim of confidentiality shall be
supported by a statement or certification
by an officer or authorized
representative of the submitter. In the
event a submitter fails to respond to the
notice in the time specified, the
submitter will be considered to have no
objection to the disclosure of the
information. Information provided by
the submitter that is received after the
disclosure decision has been made will
not be considered. Information provided
by a submitter pursuant to this
paragraph may itself be subject to
disclosure under the FOIA.
(f) Notice of intent to disclose. The
Chief FOIA Officer shall consider a
submitter’s objections and specific
grounds for nondisclosure prior to
determining whether to disclose the
information requested. Whenever the
Chief FOIA Officer determines that
disclosure is appropriate, the Chief
FOIA Officer shall, within a reasonable
number of days prior to disclosure,
provide the submitter with written
notice of the intent to disclose which
shall include a statement of the reasons
for which the submitter’s objections
were overruled, a description of the
information to be disclosed, and a
specific disclosure date. The Chief FOIA
Officer shall also notify the requester
that the requested records will be made
available.
(g) Notice of lawsuit. If the requester
files a lawsuit seeking to compel
disclosure of confidential commercial
information, MCC shall promptly notify
the submitter of this action. If a
submitter files a lawsuit seeking to
prevent disclosure of confidential
commercial information, MCC shall
promptly notify the requester.
§ 1304.9
Administrative appeals.
(a) Requirements for appealing an
adverse determination. A requester may
appeal any adverse determination to
MCC. The requester must submit a
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written notice of appeal and it must be
postmarked or, in the case of electronic
submissions, transmitted within ninety
(90) calendar days after the date of the
response. The appeal should clearly
identify the determination that is being
appealed and the assigned tracking
number. To facilitate handling, the
requester should mark both the appeal
letter and envelope, or subject line of
the electronic transmission, ‘‘Freedom
of Information Act Appeal.’’
(b) Appeals address. Requesters can
submit appeals by mail by addressing it
to Millennium Challenge Corporation,
Attn.: FOIA Appeals Officer, 1099 14th
St. NW, Washington, DC 20005 or
online at FOIA@mcc.gov.
(c) Adjudication of appeals. The MCC
FOIA Appeals Officer will adjudicate
the appeal within twenty (20) business
days after the receipt of such appeal. An
appeal ordinarily will not be
adjudicated if the request becomes a
matter of the subject of litigation. On
receipt of any appeal involving
classified information, the MCC FOIA
Appeals Officer must take appropriate
action to ensure compliance with
applicable classification rules.
(d) Final agency determinations. The
FOIA Appeals Officer shall issue a final
written determination, stating the basis
for the decision, within twenty (20)
business days after receipt of a notice of
appeal. Any decision that upholds
MCC’s determination in whole or in part
must contain a statement that identifies
the reason(s) for the decision, including
any FOIA exemptions applied. The
decision will provide the requester with
notification of the statutory right to file
a lawsuit and will inform the requester
of the dispute resolution services
offered by the OGIS of the National
Archives and Records Administration as
an alternative to litigation. If the Chief
FOIA Officer’s decision is remanded or
modified on appeal, the FOIA Appeals
Officer will notify the requester of the
determination in writing. MCC will then
further process the request in
accordance with the appeal
determination and will respond directly
to the requester.
(e) Engaging in dispute resolution
services provided by OGIS. Dispute
resolution is a voluntary process. If
MCC agrees to participate in the dispute
resolution services provided by OGIS,
MCC will actively engage as a partner to
the process in an attempt to resolve the
dispute.
(f) When an appeal is required. Before
seeking review by a court of MCC’s
adverse determination, a requester
generally must first submit a timely
administrative appeal.
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§ 1304.10
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Preservation of records.
MCC shall preserve all
correspondence pertaining to the
requests that it receives under this part,
as well as copies of all requested
records, until disposition or destruction
is authorized pursuant to Title 44 of the
United States Code or the General
Records Schedule 4.2 of the National
Archives and Records Administration.
MCC shall not dispose of or destroy
records while they are the subject of a
pending request, appeal, or lawsuit
under the FOIA.
§ 1304.11
Fees.
(a) General information. (1) MCC’s fee
provisions are governed by the FOIA
and by the Office of Management and
Budget’s Uniform FOIA Fee Schedule
and Guidelines. For purposes of
assessing fees, the FOIA establishes the
following categories of requesters:
(i) Commercial use;
(ii) Non-commercial scientific or
educational institutions;
(iii) Representative of the news media;
and
(iv) All other requesters.
(2) Fees will be assessed pursuant to
the category of requester and detailed in
paragraph (b) of this section. Requesters
may seek a fee waiver. To resolve any
fee issues that arise under this section,
MCC may contact a requester for
additional information. MCC will
ensure that searches, review, and
duplication are conducted in the most
efficient and the least expensive
manner. MCC ordinarily will collect all
applicable fees before sending copies of
records to a requester. Requesters must
pay fees to the Treasury of the United
States. All fee information is available at
www.mcc.gov/resources/foia.
(b) Charging fees. Because the fee
amounts provided already account for
the direct costs associated with the
given fee type, MCC will not add any
additional costs to charges calculated
under this section. In responding to
FOIA requests, MCC shall charge fees
for the following unless a waiver or
reduction of fees has been granted:
(1) Search time fees. Search time
includes page-by-page or line-by-line
identification of information within
records and the reasonable efforts
expended to locate and retrieve
information from electronic records.
(i) Requests made by education
institutions, non-commercial scientific
institutions, or representatives of the
news media are not subject to search
time fees. Search time fees shall be
charged for all other requesters, subject
to the restrictions identified in this
section. MCC may properly charge for
time spent searching even if no
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responsive records are located if it is
determined that the records are entirely
exempt from disclosure.
(ii) Requesters shall be charged the
direct costs associated with conducting
any searches that require the creation of
a new computer program to locate the
requested records. Requesters shall be
notified of the costs associated with
creating such a program and must agree
to pay the associated costs before the
costs may be incurred.
(iii) For requests that require the
retrieval of records stored by an agency
at the Federal Records Centers operated
by the National Archives and Records
Administration (NARA), additional
costs shall be charged in accordance
with the Transactional Billing Range
Schedule established by NARA.
(2) Duplication fees. Duplication fees
shall be charged to all requesters,
subject to the restrictions in this section.
MCC shall honor a requester’s
preference for receiving a record in a
particular form or format where it is
readily reproducible by MCC in the
form or format requested. Where
photocopies are supplied, MCC shall
provide one copy per request and charge
fees calculated per page. For copies of
records produced on tapes, disks, or
other media, MCC shall charge the
direct costs of producing the copy,
including operator time. Where paper
documents must be scanned in order to
comply with a requester’s preference to
receive the records in an electronic
format, the requester shall be charged
direct costs associated with scanning
those materials. For other forms of
duplication, MCC shall charge the direct
costs.
(3) Review. Review fees shall be
charged to requesters who make
commercial use requests. Review fees
shall be assessed in connection with the
initial review of the record. No charge
will be made for review at the
administrative appeal state of
exemptions applied at the initial review
stage. If a particular exemption is
deemed to no longer apply, any costs
associated with MCC’s subsequent
review following the administrative
appeal of the records in order to
consider the use of other exemptions
may be assessed as review fees.
(c) Restrictions on charging fees. The
following restrictions shall apply to
MCC FOIA requests:
(1) If MCC fails to comply with the
FOIA’s time limits to respond to a
request, MCC may not charge fees,
except as described in paragraphs (c)(3)
through (5) of this section;
(2) If MCC has determined that
unusual circumstances as defined by the
FOIA apply and the agency provided
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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 ten (10)
calendar days;
(3) If MCC has determined that
unusual circumstances as defined by the
FOIA apply, and more than fivethousand (5000) pages are necessary to
respond to the request, MCC may charge
search time fees or duplication fees
where applicable, if MCC has provided
timely written notice of the unusual
circumstances to the requester in
accordance with the FOIA and has
discussed with the requester via written
mail, email, or telephone (or made a
minimum of three (3) good-faith
attempts to do so) how the requester
could 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; and
(5) No search time or review fees will
be charged for a quarter-hour period
unless more than half of that period is
required for search or review.
(d) Fee exceptions. Except for
requesters seeking records for
commercial use, MCC shall provide
without charge:
(1) The first one-hundred (100) pages
of duplication (or the cost equivalent for
other media); and
(2) The first two (2) hours of search
time. When, after deducting the first
one-hundred (100) free pages (or its cost
equivalent) and the first two (2) hours
of search time, a total fee calculated
under this section is $25.00 or less for
any request, no fee will be charged.
(e) Notice of anticipated fees in excess
of $25.00. (1) When MCC determines
that the fees to be assessed will exceed
$25.00, the requester shall be notified of
the actual or estimated amount of the
fees, including the breakdown of the
fees for search time, review or
duplication, unless the requester has
indicated a willingness to pay fees as
high as those anticipated. If only a
portion of the fee can be estimated
readily, MCC shall advise the requester
accordingly. If the requester is a not a
commercial use requester, the notice
shall specify that the requester is
entitled to the statutory requirements of
one-hundred (100) pages of duplication
at no charge and, if the requester is
charged search time fees, two (2) hours
of search time at no charge, and shall
advise the requester whether those
entitlements have been provided.
(2) In cases in which a requester has
been notified that the actual or
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estimated fees are in excess of $25.00,
the request shall not be considered
received and further work will not be
completed until the requester commits,
in writing, to pay the actual or estimated
total fee, or designates some amount of
fees the requester is willing to pay, or
in the case of a requester who is not a
commercial use requester who has not
yet been provided with the requester’s
statutory entitlements, designates that
the requester seeks only that which can
be provided by the statutory
entitlements. The requester must
provide the commitment or designation
in writing, and must, when applicable
designate an exact dollar amount the
requester is willing to pay. MCC is not
required to accept payments in
installments.
(3) If the requester has indicated a
willingness to pay some designated
amount of fees, and MCC estimates that
the total fee will exceed that amount,
MCC shall toll the processing of the
request when it notifies the requester of
the estimated fees in excess of the
amount the requester has indicated a
willingness to pay. MCC shall inquire
whether the requester wishes to revise
the amount of fees the requester is
willing to pay or modify the request.
Once the requester responds, the time to
respond will resume from where it was
at the date of the notification.
(4) The FOIA Program Officer will
assist any requester in reformulating a
request to meet the requester’s needs at
a lower cost.
(f) Waiver or reduction of fees.
Documents shall be furnished without
charge or at a charge below that listed
in this section based upon information
provided by a requester or otherwise
made known to the Chief FOIA Officer
that disclosure of the requested
information is in the public interest.
Disclosure is in the public interest if it
is likely to contribute significantly to
public understanding of government
operations and is not primarily for
commercial purposes. Requests for a
waiver or reduction of fees shall be
considered on a case by case basis.
Where only some of the records to be
released satisfy the requirements for
waiver of fees, a waiver shall be granted
to those records. In order to determine
whether the fee waiver requirement is
met, the Chief FOIA Officer shall
consider the following factors:
(1) The subject of the request.
Whether the subject of the requested
records concerns the operations or
activities of the government;
(2) The informative value of the
information to be disclosed; and
(3) The significance of the
contribution to public understanding.
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(g) Fees pending a waiver request.
Requests for a waiver or reduction of
fees should be made when the request
is first submitted to the agency and
should address the criteria referenced in
this section. A requester may submit a
fee waiver request at a later time so long
as the underlying record request is
pending or on administrative appeal.
When a requester who has committed to
pay fees subsequently asks for a waiver
of those fees and that waiver is denied,
the requester must pay any costs
incurred up to the date the fee waiver
request was received.
(h) Types of requesters. There are four
categories of FOIA requesters:
Commercial use requesters, educational
and non-commercial scientific
institutional requesters; representatives
of the news media; and all other
requesters. The following specific levels
of fees are prescribed for each of these
categories:
(1) Commercial requesters shall be
charged the full direct costs of searching
for, reviewing, and duplicating
requested records;
(2) Educational and non-commercial
scientific institution requesters shall be
charged for document duplication only
and the first one-hundred (100) pages of
paper copies shall be provided without
charge;
(3) Representative of the news media
requesters shall be charged for
document duplication costs only, except
that the first one-hundred (100) pages of
paper copies shall be provided without
charge; and
(4) All other requesters who do not
fall into any of the categories in
paragraphs (h)(1) through (3) of this
section shall be charged fees which
recover the full reasonable direct costs
incurred for searching for and
reproducing records if that total costs
exceeds $25.00, except that the first onehundred (100) pages of duplication and
the first two hours of manual search
time shall not be charged.
(i) Charges for unsuccessful searches.
If the requester has been notified of the
estimated cost of the search time and
has been advised specifically that the
requested records may not exist or may
be withheld as exempt, fees may be
charged.
(j) Charges for other services.
Although MCC is not required to
provide special services, if it chooses to
do so as a matter of administrative
discretion, the direct costs of providing
the service shall be charged. Examples
of such services include certifying that
records are true copies, providing
multiple copies of the same document,
or sending records by means other than
first class mail.
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(k) Charging interest. MCC may charge
interest on any unpaid bill starting on
the 31st day following the date of billing
the requester. Interest charges shall be
assessed at the rate provided in 31
U.S.C. 3717 and will accrue from the
billing date until payment is received.
MCC shall follow the provisions of the
Debt Collection Act of 1982, as
amended, and its administrative
procedures, including the use consumer
reporting agencies, collection agencies,
and offset.
(l) Aggregating requests. The requester
or a group of requesters may not submit
multiple requests at the same time, each
seeking portions of a document or
documents solely in order to avoid
payment of fees. When the FOIA
Program Officer reasonably believes that
a requester is attempting to divide a
request into a series of requests to evade
an assessment of fees, the FOIA Program
Officer may aggregate such requests and
charge accordingly. MCC may presume
that multiple requests of this type made
within a thirty (30) calendar day period
have been made in order to avoid fees.
For requests separated by a longer
period, MCC will aggregate them only
where there is a reasonable basis for
determining that aggregation is
warranted in view of all the
circumstances involved. Multiple
requests involving unrelated matters
cannot be aggregated.
(m) Advance payment of fees. (1)
MCC may require an advanced payment
of fees if the requestor previously failed
to pay fees or if the FOIA Program
Officer determines the total fee will
exceed $250.00. When payment is
required in advance of the processing of
a request, the time limits prescribed in
§ 1304.5 shall not be deemed to begin
until the requester has paid the assessed
fees.
(2) In cases in which MCC requires
advance payment, the request will not
be considered received and further work
will not be completed until the required
payment is received. If the requester
does not pay the advance payment
within thirty (30) calendar days after the
date of the fee determination, the
request will be closed. Where it is
anticipated that the cost of providing
the requested record will exceed $25.00
but falls below $250.00 after the free
duplication and search time has been
calculated, MCC may, in its discretion
may require either an advance deposit
of the entire estimated charges or
written confirmation of the requester’s
willingness to pay such charges.
(3) Where the requester has
previously failed to pay a properly
charged FOIA fee within thirty (30)
calendar days of the billing date, MCC
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11927
may require the requester to pay the full
amount due plus any applicable interest
on that prior request, and/or require that
the requester make an advance payment
of the full amount of the anticipated fee
before MCC begins a new request or
continues to process a pending request
or any pending appeal. If MCC has a
reasonable basis to believe that a
requester has misrepresented the
requester’s identity in order to avoid
paying outstanding fees, MCC may
require that the requester provide proof
of identity.
§ 1304.12
Other rights and services.
Nothing in this part shall be
construed to entitle any person a right
to any service or to the disclosure of any
record to which such person is not
entitled under the FOIA.
Subpart B [Reserved]
Dated: March 7, 2018.
Tamiko N.W. Watkins,
Chief FOIA Officer, Millennium Challenge
Corporation.
[FR Doc. 2018–04993 Filed 3–16–18; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 9211–03–P
ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION
AGENCY
40 CFR Part 52
[EPA–R10–OAR–2017–0482; FRL–9975–22–
Region 10]
Air Plan Approval; Oregon; Regional
Haze Progress Report
Environmental Protection
Agency (EPA).
ACTION: Proposed rule.
AGENCY:
The Environmental Protection
Agency (EPA) is proposing to approve a
revision to the Oregon Regional Haze
State Implementation Plan (SIP),
submitted by the State of Oregon on July
18, 2017. Oregon submitted its Regional
Haze Progress Report (‘‘progress report’’
or ‘‘report’’) and a negative declaration
stating that further revision of the
existing regional haze SIP is not needed
at this time. Oregon submitted both the
progress report and the negative
declaration in the form of
implementation plan revisions as
required by federal regulations. The
progress report addresses the federal
Regional Haze Rule (RHR) requirements
under the Clean Air Act (CAA) to
submit a report describing progress in
achieving reasonable progress goals
(RPGs) established for regional haze and
a determination of the adequacy of the
SUMMARY:
E:\FR\FM\19MRP1.SGM
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Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 83, Number 53 (Monday, March 19, 2018)]
[Proposed Rules]
[Pages 11922-11927]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2018-04993]
[[Page 11922]]
=======================================================================
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MILLENNIUM CHALLENGE CORPORATION
22 CFR Part 1304
Freedom of Information Act Regulations
AGENCY: Millennium Challenge Corporation.
ACTION: Notice of proposed rulemaking.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SUMMARY: The purpose of this document is to outline the procedures by
which the Millennium Challenge Corporation proposes to implement the
relevant provisions of the Freedom of Information Act as required under
that statute. This document will assist interested parties in obtaining
access to Millennium Challenge Corporation public records.
DATES: Send comments on or before April 18, 2018.
ADDRESSES: Send comments to Tamiko NW Watkins, Chief FOIA Officer,
Office of the General Counsel, Millennium Challenge Corporation, 1099
Fourteenth Street NW, Washington, DC 20005.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Tamiko NW Watkins, Chief FOIA Officer,
202.521.3730.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: The Millennium Challenge Act (MCA) of 2003
established a new federal agency called the Millennium Challenge
Corporation. Congress enacted the Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) in
1966 and last modified it with the FOIA Improvement Act of 2016. This
proposed rule addresses electronically available documents, procedures
for making requests, agency handling of requests, records not
disclosed, changes in fees, and public reading rooms, as well as, other
related provisions.
Lists of Subjects in 22 CFR Part 1304
Freedom of Information Act procedures.
0
For the reasons set forth in the preamble, the Millennium Challenge
Corporation proposes to amend chapter XIII of title 22 by revising part
1304 to read as follows:
PART 1304--PRODUCTION OR DISCLOSURE OF INFORMATION
Subpart A--Procedures for Requests for Disclosure of Records Under the
Freedom of Information Act
Sec.
1304.1 General provisions.
1304.2 Definitions.
1304.3 Proactive disclosure of MCC records.
1304.4 Requirements for making requests.
1304.5 Responsibility for acknowledgment and initial
determinations.
1304.6 Timing of responses to requests.
1304.7 Responses to requests.
1304.8 Confidential commercial information.
1304.9 Administrative appeals.
1304.10 Preservation of records.
1304.11 Fees.
1304.12 Other rights and services.
Subpart B--[Reserved]
Authority: 5 U.S.C. 552, as amended.
Subpart A--Procedures for Requests for Disclosure of Records Under
the Freedom of Information Act
Sec. 1304.1 General provisions.
This part contains the rules that the Millennium Challenge
Corporation (``MCC'') follows in processing requests for records under
the Freedom of Information Act (``FOIA'') (5 U.S.C. 552). The rules in
this part should be read in conjunction with the text of the FOIA and
the Uniform Freedom of Information Act Fee Schedule and Guidelines
published by the Office of Management and Budget (``OMB Fee
Guidelines''). In addition, the MCC FOIA web page contains information
about the specific procedures particular to MCC with respect to making
FOIA requests. This resource is available at www.mcc.gov/resources/foia. Requests may be made by individuals about themselves under the
Privacy Act of 1974, 5 U.S.C. 552(a).
Sec. 1304.2 Definitions.
Administrative appeal. An independent review of the initial
determination made in response to a FOIA request.
Agency. Any executive department, military department, government
corporation, government controlled corporation, or other establishment
in the executive branch of the Federal Government or any independent
regulatory agency.
Business day or work day. A day of the week, excluding Saturday,
Sunday, or legal public holidays.
Calendar days. Every day within a month, including Saturday,
Sunday, and legal public holidays. Unless identified as a ``business
day'' or ``work day,'' all timeframes and days noted in this part shall
be calculated in calendar days.
Chief FOIA Officer. The MCC employee who is authorized to make
determinations regarding the release of records requested under the
FOIA.
Commercial requester. Any person making a request for information
for a use or purpose that furthers a commercial, trade, or profit
interest, which can include furthering those interests through
litigation.
Complex request. A FOIA request that MCC anticipates will involve a
voluminous amount of material to review or will be time-consuming to
process.
Confidential commercial information. Records provided to the
government that contain material exempt from disclosure under Exemption
4 of the FOIA and disclosure of such records could reasonably be
expected to cause substantial competitive harm.
Consultation. When MCC locates a record that contains information
of interest to another agency, MCC shall ask the interested agency for
their views on disclosing the records before any final determination is
made.
Direct costs. Expenditures actually incurred by MCC for searching,
duplicating, and in the case of commercial use requests, reviewing
records in order to respond to a FOIA request.
Discretionary disclosure. The release of or portions of records to
a FOIA requester that could be withheld by MCC under one or more of the
FOIA exemptions.
Duplication. The process of making a copy of a record in order to
respond to a FOIA request, including but not limited to paper copies,
microfilm, audio-video materials, and computer diskettes or other
electronic copies.
Duplication fees. The estimated direct costs of making a copy of a
record in order to respond to a FOIA request.
Educational institution. Any school or institution that operates a
program of scholarly research. A requester in this category must show
that the request is made in connection with his or her role at the
educational institution.
Educational requester. Any person making a FOIA request authorized
by, and made under the auspices of, a qualifying institution, and that
the records are not sought to further scholarly research. Records
requested for the intention of fulfilling credit requirements at an
educational institution are not considered to be sought for a scholarly
purpose.
Exemptions. Certain categories of information that are not required
to be released in response to a FOIA request because release would be
harmful to governmental or private interests.
FOIA Appeals Officer. The MCC employee who is responsible for
conducting an independent review of the initial determination of the
FOIA request after the requester has requested an administrative
appeal.
FOIA Public Liaison. The MCC employee who is responsible for
assisting in the resolution of disputes in response to FOIA requests.
[[Page 11923]]
FOIA Program Officer. The MCC employee who receives and processes
requests within the MCC FOIA Office.
Non-commercial scientific institution. An institution that does not
operate on a commercial basis, but operates solely for the purpose of
conducting scientific research and the results of the scientific
research are not intended to promote any particular product or
industry.
Record. Any item, collection, or grouping of information maintained
by MCC in any form or format, including an electronic copy. A
``record'' can potentially constitute an entire document, a single page
of a multipage document, an individual paragraph of a document, or an
email within an email chain.
Referral. When an agency locates a record that originated with, or
is of otherwise primary interest to another agency, it will forward
that record to the other agency to process the record and to provide
the final determination directly to the requester.
Representative of the news media. Any person actively gathering
news for an entity that is organized and operated to publish or
broadcast news to the public. The term ``news'' means information that
is about current events or that would be of interest to the public. To
qualify for this category, the requester must not be seeking the
requested records for commercial use.
Requester. Any person, corporation, firm, organization, or other
entity who makes a request for records pursuant to the FOIA.
Review. The process of examining a record to determine whether all
or part of the record may be released or withheld, and includes
redacting or otherwise processing the record for disclosure to a
requester. The review process does not include time spent resolving
legal or policy issues regarding the application of exemptions to a
record. The review process also does not include time spent reviewing
records at the administrative appeal level unless, MCC determines that
the exemption under which it withheld records does not apply and the
records are reviewed again to determine whether a different exemption
may apply.
Search. The time spent locating records that may be responsive to a
request, manually or by electronic means, including page-by-page or
line-by-line identification of responsive material within a record.
Search fees. Estimated direct costs of the time spent locating
records by either manual or electronic means.
Submitter. Any person or entity who provides information directly
or indirectly to MCC. The term includes, but is not limited to,
corporations, state governments, and foreign governments.
Sec. 1304.3 Proactive disclosure of MCC records.
Records that are required by the FOIA to be made available for
public inspection in an electronic format may be accessed through the
MCC website. MCC is responsible for determining which of its records
are required to be made publicly available, identifying additional
records in the interest of the public that are appropriate for public
disclosure, and posting such records. MCC shall ensure that its website
of posted records is reviewed and updated on an ongoing basis. The FOIA
Program Officer may assist individuals in locating records on the MCC
website and FOIA reading room.
Sec. 1304.4 Requirements for making requests.
(a) Requests for access to, or copies of, MCC records other than
those identified in Sec. 1304.3, shall be in writing and addressed to
the MCC Chief FOIA Officer at 1099 14th St. NW, Washington, DC 20005 or
[email protected]. All requests for records shall be deemed to have been
made pursuant to the FOIA, regardless of whether the request
specifically mentions the Freedom of Information Act. To facilitate
processing, the requester should place the phrase ``FOIA REQUEST'' in
capital letters on the front of the envelope or subject line of the
email.
(b) Each request shall include the following:
(1) A description of the record(s) that provides sufficient detail
to enable MCC to locate the record(s) with a reasonable amount of
effort; such as the date, title or name, author, recipient, subject
matter of the record, case number, file designation, or reference
number. Before submitting their requests, requesters may contact the
MCC FOIA Program Officer to discuss the records the are seeking and
receive assistance in describing the records;
(2) The preferred format of the records;
(3) A statement that the request for records is made pursuant to
the FOIA;
(4) The requestor's full name, mailing address or email address,
and telephone number where the requester can be reached during business
hours; and
(5) If applicable, the maximum amount the requester is willing to
pay or dollar limit on the fees MCC may incur to respond to the request
for records. When this information is specified, MCC shall not exceed
such limit.
(c) If a request does not meet all of the requirements of paragraph
(b) of this section, the FOIA Program Officer may advise the requester
that additional information is needed. Requesters who are attempting to
reformulate or modify a request may engage with the MCC Program Officer
to clarify their request.
Sec. 1304.5 Responsibility for acknowledgment and initial
determinations.
(a) Upon receipt of a request for records, the FOIA Program Officer
will acknowledge receipt of the request in writing within ten (10)
business days. In responding to a request for records, MCC shall make
reasonable efforts to search for the records in electronic format,
except when such efforts would significantly interfere with the
operation of the agency's automated information system.
(b) The Chief FOIA Officer shall make an initial determination,
within twenty (20) business days, to either grant or deny, in whole or
in part, a request for records. If the Chief FOIA Officer shall notify
the requester making such a request of the following information:
(1) The determination whether grant or deny the request and reasons
for the determination;
(2) The right of the requester to seek assistance from the FOIA
Public Liaison; and in the case of an adverse determination;
(3) The right of the requester to seek dispute resolution services
via the Office of Government Information Services of the National
Archives and Records Administration (OGIS); and
(4) The right to file an administrative appeal to the FOIA Appeals
Officer within 90 calendar days after the date of the adverse
determination.
Sec. 1304.6 Timing of responses to requests.
(a) General information. The twenty (20) business day period
identified in Sec. 1304.5(b) shall commence on the date that the
request is first received by the MCC FOIA office and an acknowledgment
of the request shall be sent no later than ten (10) business days after
receipt of the request. The twenty (20) business day period shall not
be tolled except that MCC may make one request to the requester for
information and toll the twenty (20) business day period while it is
awaiting receipt of the information, or the twenty (20) business day
period may be tolled if it is necessary to clarify issues regarding
fees with the requester.
(b) Unusual circumstances. If MCC cannot meet the statutory time
limit for processing a request because of ``unusual circumstances'' as
defined in the FOIA and MCC extends the time
[[Page 11924]]
limit on that basis, MCC will, before expiration of the twenty (20)
business day period, notify the requester in writing of the unusual
circumstances involved and of the date by which MCC estimates
processing of the request will be completed. Where the extension
exceeds ten (10) business days, MCC will provide the requester with an
opportunity to modify the request or arrange an alternative time period
for processing the original or modified request. MCC must make its
designated FOIA Program Officer or FOIA Public Liaison available for
this purpose. To aid the requester, the MCC FOIA Public Liaison shall
assist in the resolution of any disputes between the requester and MCC,
and notify the requester of the right to seek dispute resolution
services from the Office of Government Information Services. Refusal by
the requester to modify the request or arrange for an alternative time
frame shall be factors in considering whether unusual circumstances
exist.
(c) Aggregating requests. MCC may aggregate requests where it
reasonably appears that multiple requests, submitted either by a
requester or by a group of requesters acting in concert, constitute a
single request that would otherwise involve unusual circumstances.
Requests that involve unrelated matters shall not be aggregated.
(d) Multitrack processing. MCC may use multitrack processing in
responding to requests. This process entails separating simple requests
that require rather limited review from more lengthy and complex
requests. Requests in each track are then processed in their respective
track. The FOIA Program Officer may provide requesters in the slower
track an opportunity to limit the scope of their requests in order to
decrease the processing time required. The FOIA Program Officer may
provide the opportunity to limit the scope of the request by contacting
the requester by letter, email, or telephone.
(e) Expedited processing of requests. The FOIA Program Officer must
determine whether to grant a request for expedited processing within
ten (10) calendar days of its receipt. Requests will receive expedited
processing if one of the following criteria are met:
(1) The requester can establish that failure to receive the records
quickly could reasonably be expected to pose an imminent threat to the
life or physical safety of an individual;
(2) The requester is primarily engaged in disseminating information
and can demonstrate that an urgency to inform the public concerning
actual or alleged federal government activity exists; or
(3) As determined by the Chief FOIA Officer.
(f) Written expedited requests. A requester who seeks expedited
processing must submit a written statement explaining in detail the
basis for making the request for expedited processing. This statement
must be certified to be true and correct. The MCC Chief FOIA Officer
may waive the formal certification requirement.
Sec. 1304.7 Responses to requests.
(a) General information. MCC, to the extent practicable, will
communicate with requesters who have access to the internet via email
or web portal.
(b) Acknowledgment of requests. MCC shall acknowledge the request
in writing and assign a tracking number for processing purposes.
(c) Estimated dates of completion and interim responses. Upon
request, MCC shall provide an estimated response date. If a request
involves a voluminous amount of material or searches in multiple
locations, MCC shall provide interim responses by releasing the records
on a rolling basis.
(d) Granting requests. MCC will notify the requestor in writing if
it determines that it will grant a request in full or in part. MCC
shall inform the requester of any fees charged and shall disclose the
requested records to the requester promptly upon payment of any
applicable fees.
(e) Partial grant of requests. MCC shall consider whether partial
disclosure of information is possible whenever the agency determines
that a full disclosure of a requested record is not possible. MCC shall
take reasonable steps necessary to segregate and release nonexempt
information.
(f) Denial or adverse determination of requests. Except as
otherwise provided in this part, MCC shall withhold information only
if--
(1) It reasonably foresees that disclosure would harm an interest
protected by an exemption under the FOIA or disclosure is prohibited by
law;
(2) The request does not reasonably describe the records sought;
(3) The information sought is not a record subject to the FOIA;
(4) The information sought does not exist, cannot be located, or
has been destroyed; or
(5) The records are not in the readily producible form or format
sought by the requester.
(g) Markings on released documents. Records disclosed in part shall
be marked clearly to show the amount of information deleted and the
exemption under which the deletion was made unless doing so would harm
an interest protected by an applicable exemption.
Sec. 1304.8 Confidential commercial information.
(a) Designation of confidential commercial information. A submitter
of confidential commercial information must use good faith efforts to
designate by appropriate markings, either at the time of the submission
or within a reasonable time thereafter, any portion of its submission
that it considers to be protected from disclosure under Exemption 4 of
the FOIA. These designations shall expire ten (10) years after the date
of submission unless the submitter requests and provides justification
for a longer designation period.
(b) Required notice. Written notice shall be provided to a
submitter of confidential commercial information whenever records
containing such information are requested under the FOIA if, after
reviewing the request, the responsive records, and any appeal by the
requester, it is determined that MCC may be required to disclose the
records, provided:
(1) The requested information has been designated in good faith by
the submitter as information considered protected from disclosure under
Exemption 4 of the FOIA; or
(2) MCC has reason to believe that the requested information may be
protected from disclosure under Exemption 4 of the FOIA, but has not
yet determined whether the information is protected from disclosure
under that exemption or any other applicable exemption.
(c) Information. The notices shall either describe the commercial
information requested or include a copy of the requested records or
portions of records containing information. In cases involving a
voluminous number of submitters, notice may be made by posting or
publishing the notice in a place or manner reasonably likely to
accomplish it.
(d) Exceptions to notice requirements. The notices requirements of
this section shall not apply if:
(1) The Chief FOIA Officer determines that the information is
exempt under the FOIA;
(2) The information has been lawfully published or has officially
been made available to the public;
(3) Disclosure of the information is required by a statute other
than the FOIA or by a regulation issued in accordance with the
requirements of Executive Order 12600 of June 23, 1987; or
(4) The designation made by the submitter under paragraph (b) of
this section appears obviously frivolous, except that, in such a case,
the component shall give the submitter
[[Page 11925]]
written notice of any final decision to disclose the information and
must provide that notice within a reasonable number of days prior to
the disclosure date.
(e) Opportunity to object to disclosure. A submitter may provide
the Chief FOIA Officer with a detailed written statement of any
objection to disclosure within ten (10) days of notification. The
statement shall specify all grounds for withholding any of the
information under any exemption of the FOIA, and if Exemption 4
applies, shall demonstrate the reasons the submitter believes the
information to be confidential commercial information that is exempt
from disclosure. Whenever possible, the submitter's claim of
confidentiality shall be supported by a statement or certification by
an officer or authorized representative of the submitter. In the event
a submitter fails to respond to the notice in the time specified, the
submitter will be considered to have no objection to the disclosure of
the information. Information provided by the submitter that is received
after the disclosure decision has been made will not be considered.
Information provided by a submitter pursuant to this paragraph may
itself be subject to disclosure under the FOIA.
(f) Notice of intent to disclose. The Chief FOIA Officer shall
consider a submitter's objections and specific grounds for
nondisclosure prior to determining whether to disclose the information
requested. Whenever the Chief FOIA Officer determines that disclosure
is appropriate, the Chief FOIA Officer shall, within a reasonable
number of days prior to disclosure, provide the submitter with written
notice of the intent to disclose which shall include a statement of the
reasons for which the submitter's objections were overruled, a
description of the information to be disclosed, and a specific
disclosure date. The Chief FOIA Officer shall also notify the requester
that the requested records will be made available.
(g) Notice of lawsuit. If the requester files a lawsuit seeking to
compel disclosure of confidential commercial information, MCC shall
promptly notify the submitter of this action. If a submitter files a
lawsuit seeking to prevent disclosure of confidential commercial
information, MCC shall promptly notify the requester.
Sec. 1304.9 Administrative appeals.
(a) Requirements for appealing an adverse determination. A
requester may appeal any adverse determination to MCC. The requester
must submit a written notice of appeal and it must be postmarked or, in
the case of electronic submissions, transmitted within ninety (90)
calendar days after the date of the response. The appeal should clearly
identify the determination that is being appealed and the assigned
tracking number. To facilitate handling, the requester should mark both
the appeal letter and envelope, or subject line of the electronic
transmission, ``Freedom of Information Act Appeal.''
(b) Appeals address. Requesters can submit appeals by mail by
addressing it to Millennium Challenge Corporation, Attn.: FOIA Appeals
Officer, 1099 14th St. NW, Washington, DC 20005 or online at
[email protected].
(c) Adjudication of appeals. The MCC FOIA Appeals Officer will
adjudicate the appeal within twenty (20) business days after the
receipt of such appeal. An appeal ordinarily will not be adjudicated if
the request becomes a matter of the subject of litigation. On receipt
of any appeal involving classified information, the MCC FOIA Appeals
Officer must take appropriate action to ensure compliance with
applicable classification rules.
(d) Final agency determinations. The FOIA Appeals Officer shall
issue a final written determination, stating the basis for the
decision, within twenty (20) business days after receipt of a notice of
appeal. Any decision that upholds MCC's determination in whole or in
part must contain a statement that identifies the reason(s) for the
decision, including any FOIA exemptions applied. The decision will
provide the requester with notification of the statutory right to file
a lawsuit and will inform the requester of the dispute resolution
services offered by the OGIS of the National Archives and Records
Administration as an alternative to litigation. If the Chief FOIA
Officer's decision is remanded or modified on appeal, the FOIA Appeals
Officer will notify the requester of the determination in writing. MCC
will then further process the request in accordance with the appeal
determination and will respond directly to the requester.
(e) Engaging in dispute resolution services provided by OGIS.
Dispute resolution is a voluntary process. If MCC agrees to participate
in the dispute resolution services provided by OGIS, MCC will actively
engage as a partner to the process in an attempt to resolve the
dispute.
(f) When an appeal is required. Before seeking review by a court of
MCC's adverse determination, a requester generally must first submit a
timely administrative appeal.
Sec. 1304.10 Preservation of records.
MCC shall preserve all correspondence pertaining to the requests
that it receives under this part, as well as copies of all requested
records, until disposition or destruction is authorized pursuant to
Title 44 of the United States Code or the General Records Schedule 4.2
of the National Archives and Records Administration. MCC shall not
dispose of or destroy records while they are the subject of a pending
request, appeal, or lawsuit under the FOIA.
Sec. 1304.11 Fees.
(a) General information. (1) MCC's fee provisions are governed by
the FOIA and by the Office of Management and Budget's Uniform FOIA Fee
Schedule and Guidelines. For purposes of assessing fees, the FOIA
establishes the following categories of requesters:
(i) Commercial use;
(ii) Non-commercial scientific or educational institutions;
(iii) Representative of the news media; and
(iv) All other requesters.
(2) Fees will be assessed pursuant to the category of requester and
detailed in paragraph (b) of this section. Requesters may seek a fee
waiver. To resolve any fee issues that arise under this section, MCC
may contact a requester for additional information. MCC will ensure
that searches, review, and duplication are conducted in the most
efficient and the least expensive manner. MCC ordinarily will collect
all applicable fees before sending copies of records to a requester.
Requesters must pay fees to the Treasury of the United States. All fee
information is available at www.mcc.gov/resources/foia.
(b) Charging fees. Because the fee amounts provided already account
for the direct costs associated with the given fee type, MCC will not
add any additional costs to charges calculated under this section. In
responding to FOIA requests, MCC shall charge fees for the following
unless a waiver or reduction of fees has been granted:
(1) Search time fees. Search time includes page-by-page or line-by-
line identification of information within records and the reasonable
efforts expended to locate and retrieve information from electronic
records.
(i) Requests made by education institutions, non-commercial
scientific institutions, or representatives of the news media are not
subject to search time fees. Search time fees shall be charged for all
other requesters, subject to the restrictions identified in this
section. MCC may properly charge for time spent searching even if no
[[Page 11926]]
responsive records are located if it is determined that the records are
entirely exempt from disclosure.
(ii) Requesters shall be charged the direct costs associated with
conducting any searches that require the creation of a new computer
program to locate the requested records. Requesters shall be notified
of the costs associated with creating such a program and must agree to
pay the associated costs before the costs may be incurred.
(iii) For requests that require the retrieval of records stored by
an agency at the Federal Records Centers operated by the National
Archives and Records Administration (NARA), additional costs shall be
charged in accordance with the Transactional Billing Range Schedule
established by NARA.
(2) Duplication fees. Duplication fees shall be charged to all
requesters, subject to the restrictions in this section. MCC shall
honor a requester's preference for receiving a record in a particular
form or format where it is readily reproducible by MCC in the form or
format requested. Where photocopies are supplied, MCC shall provide one
copy per request and charge fees calculated per page. For copies of
records produced on tapes, disks, or other media, MCC shall charge the
direct costs of producing the copy, including operator time. Where
paper documents must be scanned in order to comply with a requester's
preference to receive the records in an electronic format, the
requester shall be charged direct costs associated with scanning those
materials. For other forms of duplication, MCC shall charge the direct
costs.
(3) Review. Review fees shall be charged to requesters who make
commercial use requests. Review fees shall be assessed in connection
with the initial review of the record. No charge will be made for
review at the administrative appeal state of exemptions applied at the
initial review stage. If a particular exemption is deemed to no longer
apply, any costs associated with MCC's subsequent review following the
administrative appeal of the records in order to consider the use of
other exemptions may be assessed as review fees.
(c) Restrictions on charging fees. The following restrictions shall
apply to MCC FOIA requests:
(1) If MCC fails to comply with the FOIA's time limits to respond
to a request, MCC may not charge fees, except as described in
paragraphs (c)(3) through (5) of this section;
(2) If MCC 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 ten (10) calendar days;
(3) If MCC has determined that unusual circumstances as defined by
the FOIA apply, and more than five-thousand (5000) pages are necessary
to respond to the request, MCC may charge search time fees or
duplication fees where applicable, if MCC has provided timely written
notice of the unusual circumstances to the requester in accordance with
the FOIA and has discussed with the requester via written mail, email,
or telephone (or made a minimum of three (3) good-faith attempts to do
so) how the requester could 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; and
(5) No search time or review fees will be charged for a quarter-
hour period unless more than half of that period is required for search
or review.
(d) Fee exceptions. Except for requesters seeking records for
commercial use, MCC shall provide without charge:
(1) The first one-hundred (100) pages of duplication (or the cost
equivalent for other media); and
(2) The first two (2) hours of search time. When, after deducting
the first one-hundred (100) free pages (or its cost equivalent) and the
first two (2) hours of search time, a total fee calculated under this
section is $25.00 or less for any request, no fee will be charged.
(e) Notice of anticipated fees in excess of $25.00. (1) When MCC
determines that the fees to be assessed will exceed $25.00, the
requester shall be notified of the actual or estimated amount of the
fees, including the breakdown of the fees for search time, review or
duplication, unless the requester has indicated a willingness to pay
fees as high as those anticipated. If only a portion of the fee can be
estimated readily, MCC shall advise the requester accordingly. If the
requester is a not a commercial use requester, the notice shall specify
that the requester is entitled to the statutory requirements of one-
hundred (100) pages of duplication at no charge and, if the requester
is charged search time fees, two (2) hours of search time at no charge,
and shall advise the requester whether those entitlements have been
provided.
(2) In cases in which a requester has been notified that the actual
or estimated fees are in excess of $25.00, the request shall not be
considered received and further work will not be completed until the
requester commits, in writing, to pay the actual or estimated total
fee, or designates some amount of fees the requester is willing to pay,
or in the case of a requester who is not a commercial use requester who
has not yet been provided with the requester's statutory entitlements,
designates that the requester seeks only that which can be provided by
the statutory entitlements. The requester must provide the commitment
or designation in writing, and must, when applicable designate an exact
dollar amount the requester is willing to pay. MCC is not required to
accept payments in installments.
(3) If the requester has indicated a willingness to pay some
designated amount of fees, and MCC estimates that the total fee will
exceed that amount, MCC shall toll the processing of the request when
it notifies the requester of the estimated fees in excess of the amount
the requester has indicated a willingness to pay. MCC shall inquire
whether the requester wishes to revise the amount of fees the requester
is willing to pay or modify the request. Once the requester responds,
the time to respond will resume from where it was at the date of the
notification.
(4) The FOIA Program Officer will assist any requester in
reformulating a request to meet the requester's needs at a lower cost.
(f) Waiver or reduction of fees. Documents shall be furnished
without charge or at a charge below that listed in this section based
upon information provided by a requester or otherwise made known to the
Chief FOIA Officer that disclosure of the requested information is in
the public interest. Disclosure is in the public interest if it is
likely to contribute significantly to public understanding of
government operations and is not primarily for commercial purposes.
Requests for a waiver or reduction of fees shall be considered on a
case by case basis. Where only some of the records to be released
satisfy the requirements for waiver of fees, a waiver shall be granted
to those records. In order to determine whether the fee waiver
requirement is met, the Chief FOIA Officer shall consider the following
factors:
(1) The subject of the request. Whether the subject of the
requested records concerns the operations or activities of the
government;
(2) The informative value of the information to be disclosed; and
(3) The significance of the contribution to public understanding.
[[Page 11927]]
(g) Fees pending a waiver request. Requests for a waiver or
reduction of fees should be made when the request is first submitted to
the agency and should address the criteria referenced in this section.
A requester may submit a fee waiver request at a later time so long as
the underlying record request is pending or on administrative appeal.
When a requester who has committed to pay fees subsequently asks for a
waiver of those fees and that waiver is denied, the requester must pay
any costs incurred up to the date the fee waiver request was received.
(h) Types of requesters. There are four categories of FOIA
requesters: Commercial use requesters, educational and non-commercial
scientific institutional requesters; representatives of the news media;
and all other requesters. The following specific levels of fees are
prescribed for each of these categories:
(1) Commercial requesters shall be charged the full direct costs of
searching for, reviewing, and duplicating requested records;
(2) Educational and non-commercial scientific institution
requesters shall be charged for document duplication only and the first
one-hundred (100) pages of paper copies shall be provided without
charge;
(3) Representative of the news media requesters shall be charged
for document duplication costs only, except that the first one-hundred
(100) pages of paper copies shall be provided without charge; and
(4) All other requesters who do not fall into any of the categories
in paragraphs (h)(1) through (3) of this section shall be charged fees
which recover the full reasonable direct costs incurred for searching
for and reproducing records if that total costs exceeds $25.00, except
that the first one-hundred (100) pages of duplication and the first two
hours of manual search time shall not be charged.
(i) Charges for unsuccessful searches. If the requester has been
notified of the estimated cost of the search time and has been advised
specifically that the requested records may not exist or may be
withheld as exempt, fees may be charged.
(j) Charges for other services. Although MCC is not required to
provide special services, if it chooses to do so as a matter of
administrative discretion, the direct costs of providing the service
shall be charged. Examples of such services include certifying that
records are true copies, providing multiple copies of the same
document, or sending records by means other than first class mail.
(k) Charging interest. MCC may charge interest on any unpaid bill
starting on the 31st day following the date of billing the requester.
Interest charges shall be assessed at the rate provided in 31 U.S.C.
3717 and will accrue from the billing date until payment is received.
MCC shall follow the provisions of the Debt Collection Act of 1982, as
amended, and its administrative procedures, including the use consumer
reporting agencies, collection agencies, and offset.
(l) Aggregating requests. The requester or a group of requesters
may not submit multiple requests at the same time, each seeking
portions of a document or documents solely in order to avoid payment of
fees. When the FOIA Program Officer reasonably believes that a
requester is attempting to divide a request into a series of requests
to evade an assessment of fees, the FOIA Program Officer may aggregate
such requests and charge accordingly. MCC may presume that multiple
requests of this type made within a thirty (30) calendar day period
have been made in order to avoid fees. For requests separated by a
longer period, MCC will aggregate them only where there is a reasonable
basis for determining that aggregation is warranted in view of all the
circumstances involved. Multiple requests involving unrelated matters
cannot be aggregated.
(m) Advance payment of fees. (1) MCC may require an advanced
payment of fees if the requestor previously failed to pay fees or if
the FOIA Program Officer determines the total fee will exceed $250.00.
When payment is required in advance of the processing of a request, the
time limits prescribed in Sec. 1304.5 shall not be deemed to begin
until the requester has paid the assessed fees.
(2) In cases in which MCC requires advance payment, the request
will not be considered received and further work will not be completed
until the required payment is received. If the requester does not pay
the advance payment within thirty (30) calendar days after the date of
the fee determination, the request will be closed. Where it is
anticipated that the cost of providing the requested record will exceed
$25.00 but falls below $250.00 after the free duplication and search
time has been calculated, MCC may, in its discretion may require either
an advance deposit of the entire estimated charges or written
confirmation of the requester's willingness to pay such charges.
(3) Where the requester has previously failed to pay a properly
charged FOIA fee within thirty (30) calendar days of the billing date,
MCC may require the requester to pay the full amount due plus any
applicable interest on that prior request, and/or require that the
requester make an advance payment of the full amount of the anticipated
fee before MCC begins a new request or continues to process a pending
request or any pending appeal. If MCC has a reasonable basis to believe
that a requester has misrepresented the requester's identity in order
to avoid paying outstanding fees, MCC may require that the requester
provide proof of identity.
Sec. 1304.12 Other rights and services.
Nothing in this part shall be construed to entitle any person a
right to any service or to the disclosure of any record to which such
person is not entitled under the FOIA.
Subpart B [Reserved]
Dated: March 7, 2018.
Tamiko N.W. Watkins,
Chief FOIA Officer, Millennium Challenge Corporation.
[FR Doc. 2018-04993 Filed 3-16-18; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 9211-03-P