Amendments to the Commission's Freedom of Information Act Regulations, 30322-30333 [2018-13943]
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Federal Register / Vol. 83, No. 125 / Thursday, June 28, 2018 / Rules and Regulations
Comments regarding the
aforementioned circling procedure
should be submitted via email to: AMCATO-IFP-Cancellations@faa.gov.
Comments will only be considered and
adjudicated when submitted prior to the
comment deadline associated with the
flight procedure as listed on the IFP
Coordination tab of the Instrument
Flight Procedures Information Gateway
site. Aeronautical Information Services
will adjudicate and respond to each
comment within 30 days of being
received. When a determination is made
to cancel a part 97 instrument flight
procedure or circling line of minima,
the cancellation will be published in the
Federal Register.
its existing regulations under the FOIA,
5 U.S.C. 552,1 to reflect changes
required by the Improvement Act and to
clarify, update, and streamline the
language of several procedural
provisions. The Commission received
four comment letters on the proposed
amendments. After consideration of the
comments received, the Commission is
adopting the amendments to its FOIA
regulations as proposed, other than
changes to two definitions related to the
collection of fees and a few technical
modifications for clarity. Due to the
scope of the amendments, this final rule
replaces the Commission’s existing
FOIA regulations in their entirety (17
CFR 200.80 through 200.80f).
Issued in Oklahoma City, Oklahoma, on
June 21, 2018.
Gary Powell,
Director, Aeronautical Information Services.
II. Final Amendments
[FR Doc. 2018–13875 Filed 6–27–18; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4910–13–P
SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE
COMMISSION
17 CFR Part 200
[Release Nos. 34–83506; FOIA–193; File No.
S7–09–17]
RIN 3235–AM25
Amendments to the Commission’s
Freedom of Information Act
Regulations
Securities and Exchange
Commission.
ACTION: Final rule.
AGENCY:
The Securities and Exchange
Commission (‘‘Commission’’ or ‘‘SEC’’)
is adopting amendments to the
Commission’s regulations under the
Freedom of Information Act (‘‘FOIA’’).
The Commission is amending the FOIA
regulations to reflect changes required
by the FOIA Improvement Act of 2016
(‘‘Improvement Act’’) and to clarify,
update, and streamline the regulations.
DATES: Effective July 30, 2018.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Mark Tallarico, Senior Counsel, Office
of the General Counsel, (202) 551–5132;
Securities and Exchange Commission,
100 F Street NE, Washington, DC
20549–5041.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
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SUMMARY:
I. Introduction
On December 21, 2017, the
Commission proposed amendments to
information on this process. These orders are
available on the FAA website.
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A. Changes To Conform to the
Improvement Act
The Commission is adopting four
changes to the Commission’s FOIA
regulations to conform them to the
Improvement Act. These changes are
being adopted largely as proposed.2
First, the final rule revises Section
200.80(a) to provide that records the
FOIA requires to be made available for
public inspection will be available in
electronic format on the Commission’s
website, https://www.sec.gov. Second,
the final rule revises Section 200.80(c)
to provide that a request for records may
be denied to the extent the exemptions
in 5 U.S.C. 552(b) apply to the requested
records and Commission staff
reasonably foresees that disclosure
would harm an interest protected by the
applicable exemption, the disclosure of
the requested records is prohibited by
law, or the requested records are
otherwise exempted from disclosure
under 5 U.S.C. 552(b)(3). Third, the final
rule revises the regulations to state that
FOIA requesters may seek assistance
from the Office of FOIA Services’ FOIA
Public Liaisons (Sections 200.80(b), (d),
and (e)) and to advise FOIA requesters
of their right to seek dispute resolution
services offered by the Office of
Government Information Services in the
case of a denied request (Section
200.80(e)). Fourth, the final rule
incorporates the amendments to the
FOIA requiring agencies, if they do not
comply with the time limits, to waive
fees, under certain circumstances
(Section 200.80(g)).
1 See Release No. 34–82373 (Dec. 21, 2017), 83 FR
291 (Jan. 3, 2018) (‘‘Proposing Release’’).
2 The Commission is making one technical,
clarifying modification from the proposal.
Specifically, in the first sentence of Section
200.80(a)(2)(ii), the word ‘‘Those’’ is changed to
‘‘Persons.’’
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B. Amendments to Certain Procedural
Provisions
The final amendments also revise
certain procedural provisions. Those
changes clarify, update, and streamline
the Commission’s regulations, and most
of the changes make the regulations
consistent with existing practices. These
changes are being largely adopted as
proposed.3 The amended regulations,
among other things, update the various
methods for submitting FOIA requests
and administrative appeals (Sections
200.80(b) and (f)); incorporate language
requiring requesters to include their full
names and return addresses in their
FOIA requests (Section 200.80(b));
describe certain information that is
required when submitting requests for
records about oneself or another
individual (Section 200.80(b)); explain
the situations in which the Office of
FOIA Services staff will work with other
Federal agencies that have an interest in
agency records that may be responsive
to a request (Section 200.80(c));
incorporate language that allows the
Office of FOIA Services to seek a onetime clarification of an ambiguous
request and toll the time period for
responding to the request until the
requester clarifies the request (Section
200.80(d)); clarify when the 20-day
statutory time limit for responding to
requests begins (i.e., when requests are
received by the Office of FOIA Services
and when requests are modified so that
they reasonably describe the records
sought) (Section 200.80(d)); clarify the
Office of FOIA Services’ system for
multitrack processing of requests
(Section 200.80(d)); and insert a
provision to enable the Office of FOIA
Services to aggregate requests involving
related matters where it appears that
multiple requests together constitute a
single request that would involve
unusual circumstances (Section
200.80(d)).
The final rule also clarifies, consistent
with existing practice, that the Office of
FOIA Services will close requests if
requesters do not take certain steps
within set time periods. For example,
requesters must respond to the Office of
FOIA Services’ one-time clarification
request within 30 calendar days
(Section 200.80(d)); agree to pay
3 The Commission is making one technical,
clarifying modification from the proposal.
Specifically, the third sentence of Section 200–
.80(f)(3), is changed from ‘‘Appeals should include
a statement of the requester’s arguments as to why
the records requested should be made available and
why the adverse determination was in error’’ to
‘‘Appeals should include a statement of the
requester’s arguments as to why the records
requested should be made available and the
reason(s) the FOIA requester contends the adverse
determination was in error.’’
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anticipated fees within 30 calendar days
of the Office of FOIA Services’ fee
estimate (Section 200.80(g)); and, when
required to do so, make an advance
payment within 30 calendar days of the
Office of FOIA Services’ fee notice
(Section 200.80(g)).
C. Revisions to Fee Provisions
Section 200.80(g) of the final rule
revises the Office of FOIA Services’ fee
procedures and fee schedule in two
ways. Both of these changes are being
adopted as proposed. First, the final rule
allows the Office of FOIA Services to
collect fees before sending records to a
requester instead of seeking payment
when the records are sent (Section
200.80(g)(1)). Second, the final rule
removes the set duplication fee of 24
cents per page and instead refers
requesters to the FOIA fee page on the
Commission’s website, where the
current fee will be posted (Section
200.80(g)(3)(v)).4 The duplication fee
posted on the website will reflect the
direct costs of photocopying or
producing a printout, taking into
account various factors including the
salary of the employee(s) performing the
work and the cost of materials. The
duplication fee posted on the
Commission’s website will be adjusted
as appropriate to reflect current costs.
Eliminating the set duplication fee will
allow the Office of FOIA Services to
align its photocopying and printout fees
with the actual costs of duplicating
records for production to requesters (in
paper format) without having to amend
the regulations.
As proposed, the final rule also
codifies several existing practices. For
example, it states that fees for
duplicating records onto electronic
medium (including the costs associated
with scanning materials, where
applicable) will be the direct costs of
duplicating records for requesters
(Section 200.80(g)(3)(v)); clarifies that
the Office of FOIA Services will not
process any requests once it determines
that a fee may be charged unless the
requester commits to pay any estimated
fees (Section 200.80(g)(5)(ii)); clarifies
the direct costs that can be charged by
the Office of FOIA Services as part of
search, review, and duplication fees
(Section 200.80(g)(3)); and sets forth the
various methods by which FOIA
processing fees can be paid (Section
200.80(g)(1)).
The final rule also revises existing feerelated definitions and incorporates new
fee-related definitions (Section
4 The initial posted fee will be 15 cents per page,
and the Commission is already charging this lower
cost.
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200.80(g)(2)). As discussed below, some
of these definitions have been slightly
revised in the final rule in response to
comments received on the proposed
rule.5
D. Elimination of Certain Provisions
As proposed, the final rule eliminates
certain provisions in the Commission’s
current FOIA regulations that repeat
information contained in the FOIA
statute and do not need to be in the
Commission’s regulations. Among the
provisions that the Commission is
removing are: (1) The list of information
the FOIA requires the Commission to
publish in the Federal Register (Section
200.80(a)(1) of the superseded
regulations), (2) the categories of records
the FOIA requires the Commission to
make available for public inspection
(Section 200.80(a)(2) of the superseded
regulations), and (3) the nine categories
of records that are exempt from
disclosure under 5 U.S.C. 552(b)
(Section 200.80(b) of the superseded
regulations). Finally, the final rule
eliminates Appendices A through F
from the existing FOIA regulations.
Appendices A through D and F of the
existing regulations provide general
information that is available on the
Commission’s website to the extent it is
relevant to the public. The information
in Appendix E of the existing
regulations is revised and updated and
moved to Section 200.80(g) (Fees) of the
final rule.
E. Structure of the Final Rule
The structure of the regulations is
amended accordingly: Section 200.80(a)
(General provisions); Section 200.80(b)
(Requirements for making requests);
Section 200.80(c) (Processing requests);
Section 200.80(d) (Time limits and
expedited processing); Section 200.80(e)
(Responses to requests); Section
200.80(f) (Administrative appeals); and
Section 200.80(g) (Fees).
III. Public Comments
The Commission received four
comment letters in response to the
proposed rulemaking. Two of the
comments concern definitions in the fee
5 The
Commission is also making several
technical, clarifying modifications from the
proposal in the fee provisions. In the first sentence
of Section 200.80(g)(3), the phrase ‘‘shall charge the
fees summarized in chart form . . .’’ is changed to
‘‘shall charge fees for the services summarized in
chart form . . .’’ to more accurately describe the
chart. In the first sentence of Section
200.80(g)(3)(ii)(B), the phrase ‘‘ to locate records’’ is
changed to ‘‘to locate or identify responsive
records’’ so as to more precisely describe the search.
In Section 200.80(g)(12)(ii), the phrase ‘‘shall
consider all four of the following factors’’ is
changed to ‘‘shall consider each of the following
four factors.’’
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provisions of the proposed rule and
suggest substantive changes to the
Commission’s proposed fee definitions.6
One comment suggests technical
clarifications to some of the
Commission’s FOIA procedures.7 The
final letter supports certain provisions
in the proposed rule.8 The Commission
has considered the comments received
and, as discussed below, in certain cases
has made modifications in the final
amendments in response to those
comments.
In proposing the definitions in the fee
provisions of the proposed rule, the
Commission considered the FOIA’s
directive that agencies ‘‘promulgate
regulations . . . specifying the schedule
of fees applicable to the processing of
requests . . . [and that] [s]uch schedule
shall conform to the guidelines which
shall be promulgated . . . by the
Director of the Office of Management
and Budget [(‘‘OMB’’)].’’ 9 In light of this
directive, the Commission looked to the
definitions in the OMB’s 1987 FOIA fee
guidelines except to the extent that
courts have held that the definitions are
not consistent with the FOIA.10
A. Section 200.80(g)(2)(iv) (Definition of
Educational Institution)
One commenter expressed concern
that the Commission’s definition of
‘‘educational institution’’ in proposed
Section 200.80(g)(2)(iv) is inconsistent
with the FOIA provision that addresses
fees that agencies can charge when
‘‘records are not sought for commercial
use and the request is made by an
educational or noncommercial scientific
institution, whose purpose is scholarly
or scientific research.’’ 11 The
commenter stated that the Commission’s
proposed definition of ‘‘educational
institution’’ ‘‘deviates from the statute
in two respects’’—the definition ‘‘omits
reference to ‘scientific research’ ’’ and it
‘‘requires that the purpose of the request
be ‘to further scholarly research’
whereas the statute requires only that
the educational institution have a
purpose of scholarly or scientific
research.’’ 12
6 See letter from Ryan P. Mulvey, Counsel, Cause
of Action Institute, dated January 3, 2018 (‘‘CoA
Institute letter’’); letter from Keith P. Bishop, dated
January 12, 2018 (‘‘Bishop letter’’)
7 See letter from Rachel Wood, dated April 27,
2018.
8 See letter from Lori Gayle Nuckolls, dated
January 22, 2018.
9 5 U.S.C. 552(a)(4)(A)(i).
10 Uniform Freedom of Information Act Fee
Schedule and Guidelines, 52 FR at 10,018 (March
27, 1987).
11 See Bishop letter (quoting 5 U.S.C.
552(a)(4)(A)(ii)(II)).
12 See Bishop letter.
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The FOIA does not define the term
‘‘educational institution.’’ The
Commission’s proposed definition of
‘‘educational institution’’ did not
include a reference to ‘‘scientific
research’’ because in promulgating its
fee guidelines, the OMB found that ‘‘the
statute and the legislative history recite
the formula ‘educational or scientific
institution/scholarly or scientific
research,’ and it seems clear that the
phrase was meant to be read
disjunctively so that scholarly applies to
educational institution and scientific
applies to non-commercial scientific
institution.’’ 13 In addition, ‘‘scholarly
research’’ is a broad term that would
generally include ‘‘scientific research.’’
Accordingly, the Commission does not
believe it is necessary to include
‘‘scientific research’’ as part of its
definition of ‘‘educational institution.’’
In response to the commenter’s
suggestion to remove from the definition
of ‘‘educational institution’’ the
requirement that the records are sought
to ‘‘further scholarly research,’’ the
Commission is deleting this language
from the definition and is inserting
language to clarify that the requester
must show that the request is made in
connection with the requester’s role at
the educational institution and that the
records are not sought for commercial or
personal use. The definition of
‘‘educational institution’’ in the final
rule at § 200.80(g)(2)(iv) is thus revised
to read:
Educational institution is any school
that operates a program of scholarly
research. A requester in this fee category
must show that the request is made in
connection with the requester’s role at
the educational institution and that the
records are not sought for commercial or
personal use.
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B. Section 200.80(g)(2)(v) (Definition of
Noncommercial Scientific Institution)
One commenter expressed concern
that the Commission’s proposed
definition of ‘‘noncommercial scientific
institution’’ in proposed
§ 200.80(g)(2)(v) is inconsistent with the
FOIA ‘‘because it imposes additional
limitations and conditions not found in
the statutory definition.’’ 14 This
commenter stated that the FOIA, unlike
the proposed rule, ‘‘does not require (i)
that the institution be operated solely
for the purpose of conducting scientific
research, or (ii) that the request is being
made under the auspices of a qualifying
institution.’’ 15
13 52
FR at 10,014.
Bishop letter.
14 See
15 Id.
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The Commission believes that its
proposed definition of ‘‘noncommercial
scientific institution’’ is consistent with
the FOIA. The FOIA does not define the
term ‘‘noncommercial scientific
institution’’ and the Commission has
adopted the definition from the OMB’s
FOIA fee guidelines. Those guidelines
provide that the ‘‘term ‘non-commercial
scientific institution’ refers to an
institution that is not operated on a
‘commercial’ basis . . . and which is
operated solely for the purpose of
conducting scientific research the
results of which are not intended to
promote any particular product or
industry.’’ 16 The OMB guidelines
further state that ‘‘[t]o be eligible for
inclusion [in the noncommercial
scientific institution] category,
requesters must show that the request is
being made as authorized by and under
the auspices of a qualifying institution
and that the records are not sought for
a commercial use, but are sought in
furtherance of . . . scientific . . .
research.’’ 17 Accordingly, the
Commission is adopting the proposed
definition of ‘‘noncommercial scientific
institution’’ in Section 200.80(g)(2)(v) of
the final rule without change.
C. Section 200.80(g)(2)(vi) (Definition of
Representative of the News Media or
News Media Requester)
Two commenters expressed concern
that the Commission’s proposed
definition of ‘‘representative of the news
media’’ or ‘‘news media requester’’ is
inconsistent with the statutory
definition.18 Both commenters noted
that the statutory definition does not
require a ‘‘news media requester’’ to be
‘‘organized and operated to publish or
broadcast news to the public.’’ 19 One of
the commenters specifically
recommended striking the ‘‘organized
and operated’’ standard from the
definition.20 In response to these
comments, the Commission has omitted
the ‘‘organized and operated’’ language
in the final rule.
One commenter addressed three
additional considerations related to the
Commission’s proposed definition of
‘‘news media requester.’’ 21 This
commenter first recommended further
revising the proposed definition of
‘‘news media requester’’ by deleting the
last sentence of the proposed definition
(‘‘The Office of FOIA Services will
determine whether to grant a requester
16 52
FR at 10,018.
FR at 10,019.
18 See Bishop letter; CoA Institute letter.
19 Id.
20 See CoA Institute letter.
21 Id.
17 52
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news media status on a case-by-case
basis based upon the requester’s
intended use of the requested
material.’’) because ‘‘the statute’s focus
[is] on requesters, rather than [their]
requests.’’ 22 In response to this
recommendation, the Commission has
removed the final sentence from the
definition of ‘‘news media requester’’ in
the final rule.
This commenter also recommended
that the Commission recognize that a
news media requester may use
‘‘editorial skills’’ to turn ‘‘raw materials
into a distinct work’’ when writing
documents such as press releases and
editorial comments, as the U.S. Court of
Appeals for the District of Columbia
stated in Cause of Action v. Federal
Trade Commission.23 The commenter
did not recommend any changes to the
rule to address this issue, and the
Commission believes none are
necessary.24 The Commission, as
appropriate, will consider Cause of
Action and any other relevant
precedents in applying the fee
provisions in its regulations.
Finally, this commenter
recommended that the Commission
‘‘should indicate [in its definition of
‘‘news media requester’’] that any
examples of news media entities it may
include in its regulations are nonexhaustive.’’ 25 The Commission is not
making any changes in response to this
comment because the definition in the
final rule does not contain any examples
of news media entities.
IV. Other Matters
If any of the provisions of these
amendments, or the application thereof
to any person or circumstance, is held
to be invalid, such invalidity shall not
affect other provisions or application of
such provisions to other persons or
circumstances that can be given effect
without the invalid provision or
application.
V. Economic Analysis
The Commission is sensitive to the
economic effects, including the costs
and benefits, that result from its rules.
Section 23(a)(2) of the Securities
Exchange Act of 1934 (‘‘Exchange Act’’)
requires the Commission, in making
rules pursuant to any provision of the
Exchange Act, to consider among other
matters the impact any such rule would
have on competition and prohibits any
rule that would impose a burden on
22 Id. (citing Cause of Action v. Federal Trade
Commission 799 F.3d 1108, 1121 (DC Cir. 2015)).
23 Id. (citing Cause of Action, 799 F.3d at 1122–
25).
24 Id.
25 Id.
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competition that is not necessary or
appropriate in furtherance of the
purposes of the Exchange Act.26
Further, Section 3(f) of the Exchange
Act requires the Commission, when
engaging in rulemaking where it is
required to consider or determine
whether an action is necessary or
appropriate in the public interest, to
consider, in addition to the protection of
investors, whether the action will
promote efficiency, competition, and
capital formation.27
As explained in the proposal and
discussed further below, the
Commission believes that the economic
effects of the final rule will be limited.
The Commission notes that, where
possible, it has attempted to quantify
the costs, benefits, and effects on
efficiency, competition, and capital
formation expected to result from the
proposed amendments. In some cases,
however, the Commission is unable to
quantify the economic effects because it
lacks the information necessary to
provide a reasonable estimate.
Additionally, some of the potential
benefits of the amendments are
inherently difficult to quantify.
The amendments to the Commission’s
FOIA regulations fall into four
categories. First, as discussed in more
detail above, the Commission is
amending its regulations to conform the
regulations to the Improvement Act.
Consistent with the Improvement Act,
the amended rule provides: (1) Records
required to be made available pursuant
to the FOIA will be made available in
electronic format; (2) records will be
withheld under the exemptions in 5
U.S.C. 552(b) only if Commission staff
reasonably foresees that disclosure
would harm an interest protected by the
applicable exemption or disclosure is
prohibited by law; (3) FOIA requesters
may seek assistance from the Office of
FOIA Services’ FOIA Public Liaisons
and will be advised that they have the
right to seek dispute resolution services
from the Office of Government
Information Services if their request is
denied; and (4) the Office of FOIA
Services is required to waive fees, in
certain circumstances, if it does not
comply with the time limits under the
FOIA. The Commission believes that
these changes will have minimal impact
on FOIA requesters because they largely
codify the Commission’s existing
practices. To the extent the amendments
result in these practices being followed
more consistently, they could benefit
the public by increasing the amount of
information available, making more
26 15
27 15
U.S.C. 78w(a).
U.S.C. 78c(f).
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information available in an electronic
format, and ensuring that requesters
know of their right to seek alternative
dispute resolution. The Commission
also believes that the public could
benefit from the increased transparency
regarding these practices. The
Commission does not expect these
amendments to result in additional
costs to any member of the public.
Second, the final rule will amend
several procedural provisions within the
Commission’s FOIA regulations, which
will better reflect and improve existing
practice. Most of these changes codify
existing Office of FOIA Services
practice, including: (1) Adding to the
regulation additional methods for
submitting FOIA requests and
administrative appeals; (2) clarifying the
existing procedures for submitting
requests for records about oneself or
another individual; (3) clarifying the
existing procedures for submitting a
proper FOIA request and seeking
clarification of a request; (4) clarifying
existing procedures for submitting an
administrative appeal; and (5) clarifying
the existing practice that limits
administrative appeals to written filings
(i.e., there is no opportunity for personal
appearance, oral argument, or hearing
on appeal). The Commission does not
expect these changes to result in
additional costs to any member of the
public. The Commission also expects
that there would be some benefit to
FOIA requesters from the increased
transparency regarding these practices.
Two procedural changes could
impose limited costs on members of the
public. First, FOIA requesters will be
required to include their full names and
addresses in their requests. Providing a
full name and address is not itself
burdensome, but some requesters may
prefer to remain anonymous and could
be deterred from submitting FOIA
requests by this requirement. However,
because nearly all FOIA requesters
provide this information already, the
Commission expects that the economic
impact of the amendment will be
minimal. Second, the Office of FOIA
Services will be able to aggregate related
requests from one requester (or a group
of requesters). The Office of FOIA
Services can aggregate requests that on
their own do not involve ‘‘unusual
circumstances,’’ as defined in the
amended regulations, or warrant
placement in a track for complex
requests (i.e., requests that require more
work and/or time to process than most
requests), so aggregation may lead to
extended deadlines for processing a
request or cause a request to be handled
after other complex requests. Based on
past experience, the Commission
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expects that few requests will be
aggregated. In addition, if the
aggregation of requests results in the
requests being placed in a track for
complex requests that could extend the
processing time, the requester can
modify the request so that it can be
processed more quickly. Thus, the
Commission expects that the impact of
this amendment also will be minimal.
Third, the Commission is revising the
Office of FOIA Services’ fee procedures
and fee schedule in several ways,
including: (1) Eliminating from the rule
the per page duplication fee for copying
or printing requested records, and
instead referring requesters to the FOIA
fee page on the Commission’s website;
(2) allowing the Office of FOIA Services
to collect fees before sending records to
a requester instead of seeking payment
when the records are sent; (3) clarifying
the direct costs that can be charged by
the Office of FOIA Services as part of its
search, review, and duplication fees;
and (4) codifying the existing Office of
FOIA Services practice of charging
requesters the actual cost of production
for materials produced in an electronic
format. In general, lowering fees
associated with FOIA requests could
encourage additional FOIA submissions,
while raising fees could deter them.
However, as discussed below, the
Commission does not anticipate that
any of its changes to the Office of FOIA
Services’ fee procedures will impose
significant new costs on FOIA
requesters.
With respect to the elimination of the
set per page duplication fee, the Office
of FOIA Services has already lowered its
per page duplication fee from 24 cents
to 15 cents to reflect its actual
duplication costs. Even if the Office of
FOIA Services were to increase the per
page duplication fee in the future, the
impact of any increase would likely be
minimal. Information about the fees the
Commission has collected for FOIA
requests for the past seven years allows
the Commission to estimate the
economic effects of this proposed
change. Table 1 shows the number of
requests received and processed by the
Commission during fiscal years 2011
through 2017 and the fees the
Commission collected. The fees
collected by the Commission for
processing FOIA requests include
charges for staff time associated with
locating, reviewing, and copying
responsive documents, as well as
duplication fees for paper copies and
production costs for other types of
media. The fee schedule for FOIA
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requests is available on the
Commission’s website.
TABLE 1—FOIA REQUESTS IN FISCAL YEARS 2011 TO 2017
Requests
received
Fiscal year
2011
2012
2013
2014
2015
2016
2017
.............................................................................................................................................
.............................................................................................................................................
.............................................................................................................................................
.............................................................................................................................................
.............................................................................................................................................
.............................................................................................................................................
.............................................................................................................................................
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As shown in Table 1, from fiscal years
2011–2017, the Office of FOIA Services
collected an average of $37,164.71 per
year in fees for processing an average of
13,466 requests. These amounts
correspond to an average fee of $2.76
collected per request processed.28 Even
if all of those fees were for duplication
(which they were not), a one cent per
page increase in duplication fees would
result in an increase in total fees
collected of approximately $1,548.53,29
corresponding to an average fee of $2.87
collected per request processed.30
With respect to the amendment
providing that the FOIA Office can
collect fees before sending records to a
requester (instead of seeking payment
when the records are sent), the
Commission expects that any additional
cost will be limited to a slight delay in
receiving documents. The timing of the
collection will not itself impose any
additional costs on FOIA requesters
because the timing would not alter the
amount of fees charged. Any delay in
receiving the documents will not be
significant because a FOIA requester
could make an electronic payment upon
receipt of the request for payment, and
the Office of FOIA Services would then
provide the documents. The
Commission notes that some requesters
may choose to forgo receiving the
records in question if the fees are
substantial, though even this impact
may be muted because requesters will
have been advised of and approved
potential charges before requests are
processed by the FOIA Office.
The clarification regarding direct
costs and codification of existing
28 Calculated
as $37,164.71/13,466 = $2.76.
arrive at this estimated increase, we divide
$37,164.71 in duplication fees by a cost of $0.24 per
page to derive an estimate of approximately 154,853
pages of copies on average per fiscal year. 154,853
pages × $0.01 increase in per-page duplication fees
= $1,548.53 in additional total processing fees.
30 Calculated as ($37,164.71 + $1,548.53)/13,466
= $2.87.
29 To
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practices with respect to fees for
materials produced in an electronic
format are consistent with existing
practices, and the Commission therefore
does not expect these amendments to
impose any additional burden on the
public. The other changes to the Office
of FOIA Services’ fee procedures also
codify existing processes and will
therefore not impose any additional
burden on requesters. These changes
include: (1) Clarifying that the Office of
FOIA Services will not process any
requests once it determines that a fee
may be charged unless the requester
commits to pay the estimated fees; and
(2) adding and clarifying certain feerelated definitions. The Commission
does not expect these amendments to
result in additional costs to any member
of the public. To the contrary, the
Commission believes that the public
could benefit from the increased
transparency regarding these practices.
As discussed above, some of the feerelated definitions have been revised in
the final rule in response to comments
on the proposed rule. Specifically, the
Commission has revised the definitions
of ‘‘educational institution’’ and
‘‘representative of the news media’’ or
‘‘news media requester.’’ The revisions
serve to clarify and broaden the scope
of existing definitions, which may
benefit some requesters. The
Commission does not expect these
revisions to result in additional costs to
any member of the public.
Finally, the final rule will eliminate
certain provisions in the SEC’s FOIA
regulations that are restatements of
provisions in the FOIA statute. The
Commission does not expect these
amendments to result in any economic
effects, as the elimination of these
redundant provisions will not have any
substantive consequence.
The Commission requested comments
on all aspects of the benefits and costs
of the proposal. No commenter
addressed the economic analysis
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Frm 00042
Fmt 4700
Sfmt 4700
11,555
11,292
12,275
14,862
16,898
14,458
13,063
Requests
processed
Fees
collected for
processing
requests
11,562
11,302
12,167
14,757
16,207
15,196
13,069
$78,005.94
27,577.00
35,954.30
22,670.81
19,890.07
41,029.68
35,025.15
contained in the proposal. The
Commission continues to believe that
the amendments to the Commission’s
FOIA regulations will not have any
significant impact on efficiency,
competition, or capital formation.
VI. Regulatory Flexibility Act
Certification
Pursuant to Section 605(b) of the
Regulatory Flexibility Act of 1980,31 the
Commission certified that, when
adopted, the amendments to 17 CFR
200.80 would not have a significant
economic impact on a substantial
number of small entities. This
certification, including our basis for the
certification, was included in the
proposing release. The Commission
solicited comments on the
appropriateness of its certification, but
received none. The Commission is
adopting the final rules as modified and
discussed above. These modifications to
the proposal would not alter the basis
upon which the certification was made.
VII. Paperwork Reduction Act
The Commission stated in the
proposed release that the proposed
amendments to the FOIA regulations do
not contain any collection of
information as defined by the
Paperwork Reduction Act of 1995
(‘‘PRA’’).32 The Commission also
determined that the proposed
amendments would not create any new
filing, reporting, recordkeeping, or
disclosure reporting requirements.
Accordingly, the Commission did not
submit the proposed amendments to the
Office of Management and Budget for
review under the PRA.33 The
Commission solicited comments on
whether its conclusion that there are no
new collections of information is
31 5
U.S.C. 605(b).
U.S.C. 3501 et seq.
33 44 U.S.C. 3507(d) and 5 CFR 1320.11.
32 44
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correct, and it did not receive any
comments.
VIII. Statutory Authority and Text of
Rule Amendments
The amendments contained herein are
being proposed under the authority set
forth in Public Law 114–185 § 3(a), 130
Stat. 538; 5 U.S.C. 552; 15 U.S.C. 77f(d),
77s, 77ggg(a), 78d–1, 78w(a), 80a–37(a),
80a–44(b), 80b–10(a), and 80b–11(a).
List of Subjects in 17 CFR Part 200
Administrative practice and
procedure; Freedom of information.
Text of Amendments
For the reasons stated in the
preamble, the Commission amends 17
CFR part 200 as follows:
PART 200—ORGANIZATION;
CONDUCT AND ETHICS; AND
INFORMATION AND REQUESTS
Subpart D—Information and Requests
1. The authority citation for subpart D
is revised to read as follows:
■
Authority: 5 U.S.C. 552, as amended, 15
U.S.C. 77f(d), 77s, 77ggg(a), 77sss, 78m(F)(3),
78w, 80a–37, 80a–44(a), 80a–44(b), 80b–
10(a), and 80b–11, unless otherwise noted.
Section 200.80 also issued under Public
Law 114–185 sec. 3(a), 130 Stat. 538; 5 U.S.C.
552; 15 U.S.C. 77f(d), 77s, 77ggg(a), 78d–1,
78w(a), 80a–37(a), 80a–44(b), 80b–10(a), and
80b–11(a), unless otherwise noted.
Section 200.82 also issued under 15 U.S.C.
78n.
Section 200.83 also issued under E.O.
12600, 3 CFR, 1987 Comp., p. 235.
2. Section 200.80 is revised to read as
follows:
■
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§ 200.80 Securities and Exchange
Commission records and information.
(a) General provisions. (1) This
section contains the rules that the U.S.
Securities and Exchange Commission
follows in processing requests for
records under the Freedom of
Information Act (‘‘FOIA’’), 5 U.S.C. 552,
as amended. These rules should be read
in conjunction with the text of the FOIA
and the Uniform Freedom of
Information Fee Schedule and
Guidelines published by the Office of
Management and Budget (‘‘OMB
Guidelines’’). Requests made by
individuals for records about
themselves under the Privacy Act of
1974, 5 U.S.C. 552a, are processed in
accordance with the Commission’s
Privacy Act regulations at subpart H, as
well as this section.
(2)(i) Records that the FOIA requires
to be made available for public
inspection in an electronic format
(pursuant to 5 U.S.C. 552(a)(2)) are
accessible through the Commission’s
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website, https://www.sec.gov. Each
division and office of the Commission is
responsible for determining which of its
records are required to be made publicly
available in an electronic format, as well
as identifying additional records of
interest to the public that are
appropriate for public disclosure, and
for posting and indexing such records.
Each division and office shall ensure
that its posted records and indexes are
reviewed and updated on an ongoing
basis.
(ii) Persons who do not have access to
the internet may obtain these records by
contacting the Commission’s Office of
FOIA Services by telephone at 202–551–
7900, by email at foiapa@sec.gov, or by
visiting the Commission’s Public
Reference Room, 100 F Street NE,
Washington, DC 20549–2736, on official
working days between the hours of
10:00 a.m. and 3:00 p.m.
(b) Requirements for making requests
for records—(1) How made and
addressed. The Commission has a
centralized system for responding to
FOIA requests, with all requests
processed by the Office of FOIA
Services. Requests for agency records
must be in writing and include the
requester’s full name and a legible
return address. Requesters may also
include other contact information, such
as an email address and a telephone
number. Requests may be submitted by
U.S. mail or delivery service and
addressed to the Freedom of
Information Act Officer, SEC, 100 F
Street NE, Washington, DC 20549.
Requests may also be made by facsimile
(202–772–9337), email (foiapa@sec.gov),
or online at the Commission’s website
(https://www.sec.gov). The request (and
envelope, if the request is mailed or
hand-delivered) should be marked
‘‘Freedom of Information Act Request.’’
(2) Requests for records about oneself
or another individual. (i) A requester
who is making a request for records
about himself or herself must comply
with the verification of identity
provisions set forth in subpart H of this
part to obtain any documents that
would not be available to the public
under the FOIA.
(ii) For requests for records about
another individual, a requester may
receive greater access by submitting
either a notarized authorization signed
by the individual permitting disclosure
of his or her records or proof that the
individual is deceased (e.g., a copy of a
death certificate or an obituary). The
Office of FOIA Services can require a
requester to supply additional
information if necessary to verify that a
particular individual has consented to
disclosure.
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(3) Description of records sought. A
FOIA request must reasonably describe
the agency records sought with
sufficient specificity with respect to
names, dates, and subject matter to
enable personnel within the divisions
and offices of the Commission to locate
them with a reasonable effort. Before
submitting a request, a requester may
contact the Office of FOIA Services’
FOIA Public Liaisons to discuss the
records they are seeking and to receive
assistance in describing the records
(contact information for these
individuals is on the Commission’s
website, https://www.sec.gov). If the
Office of FOIA Services determines that
a request does not reasonably describe
the records sought, it shall inform the
requester what additional information is
needed or how the request is
insufficient. A requester who is
attempting to reformulate or modify
such a request may discuss the request
with the Office of FOIA Services’
designated FOIA contact, its FOIA
Public Liaisons, or a representative of
the Office of FOIA Services, each of
whom is available to assist the requester
in reasonably describing the records
sought. When a requester fails to
provide sufficient information within 30
calendar days after having been asked to
reasonably describe the records sought,
the Office of FOIA Services shall notify
the requester in writing that the request
has not been properly made, that no
further action will be taken, and that the
FOIA request is closed. Such a notice
constitutes an adverse determination
under paragraph (e)(2) of this section for
which the Office of FOIA Services shall
follow the procedures for a denial letter
under paragraph (e)(2) of this section. In
cases where a requester has modified
his or her request so that it reasonably
describes the requested records, the date
of receipt for purposes of the 20-day
time limit of paragraph (d) of this
section shall be the date of receipt of the
modified request.
(c) Processing requests—(1) In
general. (i) A request for records may be
denied to the extent the exemptions in
5 U.S.C. 552(b) apply to the requested
records and:
(A) Commission staff reasonably
foresees that disclosure would harm an
interest protected by the applicable
exemption; or
(B) The disclosure of the requested
records is prohibited by law or is
exempt from disclosure under 5 U.S.C.
552(b)(3).
(ii) In determining which records are
responsive to a request, the Office of
FOIA Services ordinarily will include
only records in the agency’s possession
as of the date that it begins its search.
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(2) Re-routing of misdirected requests.
Any division or office within the
Commission that receives a written
request for records should promptly
forward the request to the Office of
FOIA Services for processing.
(3) Consultation, referral, and
coordination. When reviewing records
located in response to a request, the
Office of FOIA Services will determine
whether another Federal agency is better
able to determine if the record is exempt
from disclosure under the FOIA. As to
any such record, the Office of FOIA
Services will proceed in one of the
following ways:
(i) Consultation. In instances where a
record is requested that originated
within a division or office within the
Commission and another Federal agency
has a significant interest in the record
(or a portion thereof), the Office of FOIA
Services will consult with that Federal
agency before responding to a requester.
When the Office of FOIA Services
receives a request for a record (or a
portion thereof) in its possession that
originated with another entity within
the Federal Government that is not
subject to the FOIA, the Office of FOIA
Services will typically consult with that
entity prior to making a release
determination.
(ii) Referral. When the Office of FOIA
Services receives a request for a record
(or a portion thereof) in its possession
that originated with another Federal
agency subject to the FOIA, the Office
of FOIA Services will typically refer the
record to that agency for direct response
to the requester. Ordinarily, the agency
that originated the record will be
presumed to be best able to make the
disclosure determination. However, if
the Office of FOIA Services and the
originating agency jointly agree that the
Office of FOIA Services is in the best
position to make a disclosure
determination regarding the record, then
the record may be handled as a
consultation and processed by the
Office of FOIA Services. Whenever the
Office of FOIA Services refers a record
to another Federal agency for direct
response to the requester, the Office of
FOIA Services shall notify the requester
in writing of the referral and inform the
requester of the name of the agency to
which the record was referred.
(iii) Coordination. If disclosure of the
identity of the agency to which the
referral would be made could harm an
interest protected by an exemption, the
Office of FOIA Services generally will
coordinate with the originating agency
to seek its views as to disclosure of the
record and then advise the requester of
the release determination for the record
that is the subject of the coordination.
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(iv) Classified information. On receipt
of any request involving classified
information, the Commission staff in
possession of the information shall
determine whether the information is
currently and properly classified and
take appropriate action to ensure
compliance with subpart J of this part.
Whenever a request involves a record
containing information that has been
classified or may be appropriate for
classification by another Federal agency
under an executive order concerning the
classification of records, the Office of
FOIA Services shall refer the
responsibility for responding to the
request regarding that information to the
agency that classified the information,
or that should consider the information
for classification. Whenever agency
records contain information that has
been classified by another Federal
agency, the Office of FOIA Services
shall refer the responsibility for
responding to that portion of the request
to the agency that classified the
underlying information except in
circumstances that come within
paragraph (c)(3)(iii) of this section.
(d) Time limits and expedited
processing—(1) In general. The Office of
FOIA Services will seek to respond to
requests according to their order of
receipt within each track of the Office
of FOIA Services’ multitrack processing
system as described in paragraph (d)(4)
of this section.
(2) Initial response. A determination
whether to comply with a FOIA request
shall be made within 20 days (excepting
Saturdays, Sundays, and legal public
holidays) from the date the Office of
FOIA Services receives a request for a
record under this part, except when the
circumstances described in paragraph
(d)(3), (5), or (7) of this section are
applicable. In instances where a FOIA
requester has misdirected a request that
is re-routed pursuant to paragraph (c)(2)
of this section, the response time shall
commence on the date that the request
is first received by the Office of FOIA
Services, but in any event not later than
10 working days after the request is first
received by any division or office of the
Commission.
(3) Clarification of request. The Office
of FOIA Services may seek clarification
of a request (or a portion of a request)
for records. The request for clarification
generally should be in writing. The first
time the Office of FOIA Services seeks
clarification, the time for responding to
the entire request (set forth in paragraph
(d)(2) of this section) is tolled until the
requester responds to the clarification
request. The tolled period will end
when the Office of FOIA Services
receives a response from the requester
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that reasonably describes the requested
records. If the Office of FOIA Services
asks for clarification and does not
receive a written response from the
requester within 30 calendar days from
the date of the clarification request, the
Office of FOIA Services will presume
that the requester is no longer interested
in the record(s) sought and notify the
requester that any portion of the request
as to which clarification was sought has
been closed.
(4) Multitrack processing. The Office
of FOIA Services shall use a multitrack
system for processing FOIA requests.
The Office of FOIA Services shall
designate one track for requests that are
granted expedited processing, in
accordance with the standards set forth
in paragraph (d)(7) of this section. The
Office of FOIA Services shall use two or
more additional processing tracks that
distinguish between simple and more
complex requests based on the
estimated amount of work and/or time
needed to process the request. Among
the factors the Office of FOIA Services
may consider are the time to perform a
search, the number of pages that must
be reviewed in processing the request,
and the need for consultations or
referrals. The Office of FOIA Services
shall advise requesters of the track into
which their request falls and, when
appropriate, shall offer the requesters an
opportunity to narrow the scope of their
request so that it can be placed in a
different processing track.
(5) Unusual circumstances. The Office
of FOIA Services may extend the time
period for processing a FOIA request in
‘‘unusual circumstances.’’ To extend the
time, the Office of FOIA Services shall
notify the requester in writing of the
unusual circumstances involved and of
the date by which processing of the
request is expected to be completed. If
the extension exceeds 10 working days,
the Office of FOIA Services shall
provide the requester, in writing, with
an opportunity to modify the request or
arrange an alternative time frame for
processing the request or a modified
request. The Office of FOIA Services
shall also make available its FOIA
Public Liaisons to assist in the
resolution of any disputes and notify the
requester of the right to seek dispute
resolution services from the Office of
Government Information Services. For
purposes of this section, ‘‘unusual
circumstances’’ include:
(i) The need to search for and collect
the requested records from field
facilities or other establishments that are
separate from the office processing the
request.
(ii) The need to search for, collect,
and appropriately examine a
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voluminous amount of separate and
distinct records that are the subject of a
single request.
(iii) The need to consult with another
Federal agency having a substantial
interest in the determination of the
FOIA request or among two or more
divisions or offices within the
Commission having substantial subjectmatter interest therein.
(6) Aggregating requests. The Office of
FOIA Services may aggregate requests in
cases where it reasonably believes that
multiple requests, submitted either by a
requester or by a group of requesters
acting in concert, together constitute a
single request that would involve
unusual circumstances, as defined in
paragraph (d)(5) of this section. Multiple
requests involving unrelated matters
shall not be aggregated. The Office of
FOIA Services shall advise requesters,
in writing, when it determines to
aggregate multiple requests and comply
with paragraph (d)(5) of this section.
Aggregation of requests for this purpose
will be conducted independent of
aggregation requests for fee purposes
under paragraph (g)(8) of this section.
(7) Expedited processing. The Office
of FOIA Services shall grant a request
for expedited processing if the requester
demonstrates a ‘‘compelling need’’ for
the records. ‘‘Compelling need’’ means
that a failure to obtain the requested
records on an expedited basis could
reasonably be expected to pose an
imminent threat to an individual’s life
or physical safety or, if the requester is
primarily engaged in disseminating
information, an urgency to inform the
public about an actual or alleged
Federal Government activity.
(i) A request for expedited processing
may be made at the time of the initial
request for records or at any later time.
(ii) A requester who seeks expedited
processing must submit a statement,
certified to be true and correct to the
best of that person’s knowledge and
belief, explaining why there is a
‘‘compelling need’’ for the records.
(iii) The Office of FOIA Services shall
determine whether to grant or deny a
request for expedited processing and
provide notice of that determination
within 10 calendar days of receipt of the
request by the Office of FOIA Services.
A request for records that has been
granted expedited processing shall be
processed as soon as practicable. If a
request for expedited processing is
denied, any appeal of that
determination shall be decided
expeditiously.
(8) Appeals. An administrative appeal
shall be decided within 20 days
(excepting Saturdays, Sundays, and
legal public holidays) from the date the
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Office of FOIA Services receives such
appeal except in the unusual
circumstances specified in paragraph
(d)(5) of this section. In those unusual
circumstances, the 20-day time limit
may be extended by written notice to
the person making the appeal setting
forth the unusual circumstances for
such 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.
(e) Responses to requests for records—
(1) Acknowledgment of requests. Upon
receipt of a request for records, the
Office of FOIA Services ordinarily will
send the requester an acknowledgment
letter that provides an assigned request
number for further reference and, if
necessary, confirms whether the
requester is willing to pay fees.
(2) Responses to requests. (i) Any
letter determining whether to comply
with a request will inform the requester
of the right to seek assistance from the
Office of FOIA Services’ FOIA Public
Liaisons.
(ii) If the Office of FOIA Services
makes a determination to grant a request
in whole or in part, it shall notify the
requester in writing of such
determination, disclose records to the
requester, and collect any applicable
fees.
(iii) If the Office of FOIA Services
makes an adverse determination
regarding a request, it shall notify the
requester of that determination in
writing. Adverse determinations, or
denials of requests, include decisions
that: the requested record is exempt, in
whole or in part; the request does not
reasonably describe the records sought;
the requested record does not exist (or
is not subject to the FOIA), cannot be
located, or has previously been
destroyed; or the requested record is not
readily producible in the form or format
sought by the requester. Adverse
determinations also include
designations of requesters’ fee category,
denials of fee waiver requests, or denials
of requests for expedited processing.
(iv) An adverse determination letter
shall be signed and include:
(A) The names and titles or positions
of each person responsible for the
adverse determination;
(B) A brief statement of the reasons for
the adverse determination, including
any FOIA exemption applied by the
official denying the request;
(C) For records disclosed in part,
markings or annotations to show the
applicable FOIA exemption(s) and the
amount of information deleted, unless
doing so would harm an interest
protected by an applicable exemption.
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The location of the information deleted
shall also be indicated on the record, if
feasible;
(D) An estimate of the volume of any
records or information withheld by
providing the number of pages withheld
in their entirety or some other
reasonable form of estimation. This
estimate is not required if the volume is
otherwise indicated by deletions
marked on the records that are disclosed
in part or if providing an estimate
would harm an interest protected by an
applicable FOIA exemption;
(E) A statement that the adverse
determination may be appealed under
paragraph (f) of this section, and a
description of the requirements for
filing an administrative appeal set forth
in that paragraph; and
(F) A statement of the right of the
requester to seek dispute resolution
services from the Office of FOIA
Services’ FOIA Public Liaisons or the
Office of Government Information
Services (‘‘OGIS’’).
(3) Mediation services. OGIS offers
mediation services to resolve disputes
between requesters and the Office of
FOIA Services as a non-exclusive
alternative to litigation. Requesters with
concerns about the handling of their
requests may contact OGIS.
(f) Administrative appeals—(1)
Administrative review. If a requester
receives an adverse determination as
described in paragraph (e)(2)(iii) of this
section, or the request has not been
timely determined within the time
period prescribed in paragraph (d)(2) of
this section or within an extended
period permitted under paragraph (d)(5)
of this section, the requester may file an
appeal to the Office of the General
Counsel consistent with the procedures
described in paragraphs (f)(2) through
(4) of this section. A requester must
generally submit a timely administrative
appeal before seeking review by a court
of an adverse determination.
(2) Time limits. Appeals can be
submitted in writing or electronically,
as described in paragraph (f)(3) of this
section. The appeal must be received
within 90 calendar days of the date of
the written denial of the adverse
determination and must be received no
later than 11:59 p.m., Eastern Time, on
the 90th day. If the Office of FOIA
Services has not issued a determination
on a request, an appeal may be
submitted any time after the statutory
time period for responding to a request
ends.
(3) Contents of appeal. Appeals
should be clearly and prominently
identified at the top of the first page as
‘‘Freedom of Information Act Appeal’’
and should provide the assigned FOIA
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request number. The appeal should
include a copy of the original request
and adverse determination. Appeals
should include a statement of the
requester’s arguments as to why the
records requested should be made
available and the reason(s) the FOIA
requester contends the adverse
determination was in error. If only a
portion of the adverse determination is
appealed, the requester must specify
which part is being appealed.
(4) How to file and address an appeal.
If submitted by U.S. mail or delivery
service, the appeal must be sent to the
Office of FOIA Services at 100 F Street
NE, Washington, DC 20549. Appeals
may also be made by facsimile at 202–
772–9337, email (foiapa@sec.gov), or
online at the Commission’s website
(https://www.sec.gov). A legible return
address must be included with the FOIA
appeal. The requester may also include
other contact information, such as a
telephone number and/or email address.
(5) Adjudication of appeals. The
Office of the General Counsel has the
authority to grant or deny all appeals, in
whole or in part. In appropriate cases
the Office of the General Counsel may
refer appeals to the Commission for
determination. No opportunity for
personal appearance, oral argument, or
hearing on appeal is provided. Upon
receipt of an appeal, the Office of FOIA
Services ordinarily will send the
requester an acknowledgment letter that
confirms receipt of the requester’s
appeal.
(6) Determinations on appeals. A
determination on an appeal must be
made in writing. A determination that
denies an appeal, in whole or in part,
shall include a brief explanation of the
basis for the denial, identify the
applicable FOIA exemptions asserted,
and describe why the exemptions apply.
As applicable, the determination will
provide the requester with notification
of the statutory right to file a lawsuit in
accordance with 5 U.S.C. 552(a)(4), and
will inform the requester of the
mediation services offered by the Office
of Government Information Services as
a non-exclusive alternative to litigation.
If the Office of FOIA Services’
determination is remanded or modified
on appeal, the Office of the General
Counsel will notify the requester of that
determination in writing.
(g) Fees—(1) In general. The Office of
FOIA Services shall charge fees for
processing requests under the FOIA in
accordance with the provisions of this
section and with the OMB Guidelines,
except where fees are limited under
paragraph (g)(4) of this section or when
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a waiver or reduction is granted under
paragraph (g)(12) of this section. To
resolve any fee issues that arise under
this section, the Office of FOIA Services
may contact a requester for additional
information. The Office of FOIA
Services shall ensure that searches,
review, and duplication are conducted
in an efficient manner. The Office of
FOIA Services ordinarily will collect all
applicable fees before sending copies of
records to a requester. Requesters must
pay fees by check, certified check, or
money order, or where possible, by
electronic payment.
(2) Definitions. For purposes of this
section:
(i) Commercial use request is a
request from or on behalf of a person
who seeks information for a use or
purpose that furthers his or her
commercial, trade, or profit interests,
which can include furthering those
interests through litigation. The Office
of FOIA Services will determine
whether to place a requester in the
commercial use category on a case-bycase basis based on the requester’s
intended use of the information.
(ii) Direct costs are those expenses the
Office of FOIA Services and any staff
within the divisions and offices of the
Commission incur in searching for and
duplicating (and, in the case of
commercial use requests, reviewing)
records to respond to a FOIA request.
Direct costs include the salary of the
employee(s) performing the work (i.e.,
the basic rate of pay for the employee(s),
plus 16% of that rate to cover benefits),
the cost of materials, and the cost of
operating computers and other
electronic equipment, such as
photocopiers and scanners. Direct costs
do not include overhead expenses such
as the costs of space and of heating or
lighting a facility in which the service
is performed.
(iii) Duplication is reproducing a
record, or the information contained in
it, to respond to a FOIA request. Copies
can take the form of paper, audiovisual
materials, or electronic records, among
others. The Office of FOIA Services
shall honor a requester’s specified
preference of form or format of
disclosure if the record is readily
reproducible with reasonable efforts in
the requested form or format.
(iv) Educational institution is any
school that operates a program of
scholarly research. A requester in this
fee category must show that the request
is made in connection with the
requester’s role at the educational
institution and that the records are not
sought for commercial or personal use.
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(v) Noncommercial scientific
institution is an institution that is not
operated to further a commercial, trade,
or profit interest and that is operated
solely for the purpose of conducting
scientific research, the results of which
are not intended to promote any
particular product or industry. A
requester in this category must show
that the request is authorized by and is
made under the auspices of a qualifying
institution and that the records are
sought to further scientific research and
are not for a commercial use.
(vi) Representative of the news media
or news media requester is any person
or entity that gathers information of
potential interest to a segment of the
public, uses its editorial skills to turn
the raw materials into a distinct work,
and distributes that work to an
audience. The term ‘‘news’’ means
information that is about current events
or that would be of current interest to
the public.
(vii) Review is the examination of a
record located in response to a request
to determine whether any portion of it
is exempt from disclosure. Review time
includes doing all that is necessary to
prepare the record for disclosure, such
as redacting the record and marking any
applicable exemptions. Review time
also includes time spent obtaining and
considering formal objections to
disclosure made by a submitter under
§ 200.83, but it does not include time
spent resolving legal or policy issues
regarding the application of exemptions.
(viii) Search is the review, manually
or by automated means, of agency
records for the purpose of locating those
records that are responsive to a request.
Search time includes page-by-page or
line-by-line identification of
information within records and the
reasonable efforts expended to locate
and retrieve information from electronic
records.
(3) Charging fees. In responding to
FOIA requests, the Office of FOIA
Services shall charge fees for the
services summarized in chart form in
paragraph (g)(3)(i) of this section and
explained in paragraphs (g)(3)(ii)
through (v) of this section, unless fees
are limited under paragraph (g)(4) of
this section or a waiver or reduction of
fees has been granted under paragraph
(g)(12) of this section.
(i) The four categories of requesters
and the chargeable fees for each are:
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Search fees
Review fees
Duplication fees
(A) Commercial use requesters .......................
(B) Educational and noncommercial scientific
institutions.
(C) Representatives of the news media ..........
Yes .............................
No ...............................
Yes .............................
No ...............................
No ...............................
No ...............................
(D) All other requesters ....................................
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Requester category
Yes (first 2 hours free)
No ...............................
Yes.
Yes (first 100 pages, or equivalent volume,
free).
Yes (first 100 pages, or equivalent volume,
free).
Yes (first 100 pages, or equivalent volume,
free).
(ii) Search fees. (A) Search fees shall
be charged for all requests—other than
requests made by educational
institutions, noncommercial scientific
institutions, or representatives of the
news media—subject to the limitations
of paragraph (g)(4) of this section. The
Office of FOIA Services may charge for
time spent searching even if no
responsive records are located or it is
determined that the records are entirely
exempt from disclosure. Search fees
shall be the direct costs of conducting
the search by agency employees.
(B) Requesters shall be charged the
direct costs associated with conducting
any search that requires the creation of
a new computer program to locate or
identify responsive records. Requesters
shall be notified of the costs associated
with creating and implementing such a
program and must agree to pay the
associated costs before the costs may be
incurred.
(C) For requests that require the
retrieval of agency records stored at a
Federal records center operated by the
National Archives and Records
Administration (‘‘NARA’’), additional
costs shall be charged in accordance
with the Transactional Billing Rate
Schedule established by NARA.
(iii) Review fees. 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, i.e., the
review agency employees conduct to
determine whether an exemption
applies to a particular record or portion
of a record. Also, if an exemption
asserted to withhold a record (or a
portion thereof) is deemed to no longer
apply, any costs associated with the rereview of the records to consider the use
of other exemptions may be assessed as
review fees. Review fees shall be the
direct costs of conducting the review by
the involved employees. Review fees
can be charged even if the records
reviewed ultimately are not disclosed.
(iv) Search and review services
(review applies to commercial-use
requesters only). (A) The Office of FOIA
Services will establish and charge
average rates for the groups of
employees’ salary grades typically
involved in the search and review of
records. Those groups will consist of
employees at:
(1) Grades SK–8 or below;
(2) Grades SK–9 to SK–13; and
(3) Grades SK–14 or above.
(B) The average rates will be based on
the hourly salary (i.e., basic salary plus
locality payment), plus 16 percent for
benefits, of employees who routinely
perform search and review services. The
average hourly rates are listed on the
FOIA web page of the Commission’s
website at https://www.sec.gov and will
be updated as salaries change. Fees will
be charged in quarter-hour increments.
No search fee or review fee will be
charged for a quarter-hour period unless
more than half of that period is required
for search or review.
(v) Duplication fees. Duplication fees
shall be charged to all requesters,
subject to the limitations of paragraph
(g)(4) of this section. Fees for either a
photocopy or printout of a record (no
more than one copy of which need be
supplied) are identified on the FOIA
web page of the Commission’s website
at www.sec.gov. For copies of records
produced on tapes, disks, or other
media, the Office of FOIA Services shall
charge the direct costs of producing the
copy, including operator time. Where
paper documents must be scanned to
comply with a requester’s preference to
receive the records in an electronic
format, the requester shall pay the direct
costs associated with scanning those
materials. For all other forms of
duplication, the Office of FOIA Services
shall also charge the direct costs.
(4) Limitations on charging fees. (i) No
search or review fees will be charged for
requests by educational institutions
(unless the requests are sought for a
commercial use), noncommercial
scientific institutions, or representatives
of the news media.
(ii) Except for requesters seeking
records for a commercial use, the Office
of FOIA Services shall provide without
charge the first 100 pages of duplication
(or the cost equivalent for other media)
and the first two hours of search.
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(iii) Fees will not be charged where
the costs of collecting and processing
the fee are likely to equal or exceed the
amount of the fee.
(iv) The Office of FOIA Services will
not assess search fees (or, in the case of
requests from representatives of the
news media or educational or
noncommercial scientific institutions,
duplication fees) when 5 U.S.C.
552(a)(4)(A)(viii) prohibits the
assessment of those fees.
(5) Notice of anticipated fees. (i)
When the Office of FOIA Services
determines or estimates that the fees to
be assessed in accordance with this
section will exceed the amount it would
cost the Office of FOIA Services to
collect and process the fees, the Office
of FOIA Services shall notify the
requester of the actual or estimated
amount of fees, unless the requester has
indicated a willingness to pay fees as
high as the estimated fees. If only a
portion of the fee can be estimated
readily, the Office of FOIA Services
shall advise the requester accordingly. If
the requester is not a commercial use
requester, the notice shall specify that
the requester is entitled to the statutory
entitlements of 100 pages of duplication
at no charge and, if the requester is
charged search fees, two hours of search
time at no charge.
(ii) In cases in which a requester has
been notified that the actual or
estimated fees will amount to more than
it would cost the Office of FOIA
Services to collect and process the fees,
or amount to more than the amount the
requester indicated a willingness to pay,
the Office of FOIA Services will do no
further work on the request 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, designates that the
requester seeks only that which can be
provided by the statutory entitlements.
The Office of FOIA Services will toll the
response period while it notifies the
requester of the actual or estimated
amount of fees and this time will be
excluded from the 20 working day time
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limit (as specified in paragraph (d)(2) of
this section). The requester’s agreement
to pay fees must be made in writing,
must designate an exact dollar amount
the requester is willing to pay, and must
be received within 30 calendar days
from the date of the notification of the
fee estimate. If the requester fails to
submit an agreement to pay the
anticipated fees within 30 calendar days
from the date of the Office of FOIA
Services’ fee notice, the Office of FOIA
Services will presume that the requester
is no longer interested in the records
and notify the requester that the request
has been closed.
(iii) The Office of FOIA Services shall
make available their FOIA Public
Liaisons or other FOIA professionals to
assist any requester in reformulating a
request to meet the requester’s needs at
a lower cost.
(6) Charges for other services.
Although not required to provide
special services, if the Office of FOIA
Services chooses to do so as a matter of
administrative discretion, the direct
costs of providing the service shall be
charged. Examples of such special
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. The cost for the
attestation of records with the
Commission seal (i.e., certifying records
as true copies) is $4.00 per record,
which may be waived for records
certified electronically. Requests for
certified copies of records or documents
shall ordinarily be serviced within 20
working days. Requests will be
processed in the order in which they are
received.
(7) Charging interest. The Office of
FOIA Services may begin to charge
interest on any unpaid bill starting on
the 31st calendar day following the date
of billing the requester. Interest charges
shall be assessed at the rate provided in
31 U.S.C. 3717 and accrue from the date
of the billing until the payment is
received. The Office of FOIA Services
shall take all steps authorized by the
Debt Collection Act of 1982, as
amended, and the Commission’s Rules
Relating to Debt Collection to effect
payment, including offset, disclosure to
consumer reporting agencies, and use of
collection agencies.
(8) Aggregating requests. If the Office
of FOIA Services reasonably believes
that a requester or a group of requesters
acting in concert is attempting to divide
a request into a series of requests for the
purpose of avoiding fees, the Office of
FOIA Services may aggregate those
requests and charge accordingly. Among
the factors the Office of FOIA Services
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shall consider in deciding whether to
aggregate are whether the requests were
submitted close in time and whether the
requests seek documents about related
matters. The Office of FOIA Services
may presume that multiple requests that
involve related matters made by the
same requester or a group of requesters
within a 30 calendar day period have
been made to avoid fees. For requests
separated by a longer period, the Office
of FOIA Services will aggregate them
only where it determines that
aggregation is warranted in view of all
the circumstances involved.
(9) Advance payments. (i) For
requests other than those described in
paragraphs (g)(9)(ii) and (iii) of this
section, the Office of FOIA Services
shall not require a requester to make
advance payment (i.e., payment made
before the Office of FOIA Services
begins to process or continues to work
on a request). Payment owed for work
already completed (i.e., payment before
copies are sent to a requester) is not an
advance payment.
(ii) When the Office of FOIA Services
determines or estimates that a total fee
to be charged under this section will
exceed $250.00, it shall notify the
requester of the actual or estimated fee
and may require the requester to make
an advance payment of the entire
anticipated fee before beginning to
process the request. A notice under this
paragraph shall offer the requester an
opportunity to discuss the matter with
the Office of FOIA Services’ FOIA
Public Liaisons or other FOIA
professionals to modify the request in
an effort to meet the requester’s needs
at a lower cost.
(iii) When a requester has previously
failed to pay a properly charged FOIA
fee to the Office of FOIA Services or
other Federal agency within 30 calendar
days of the date of billing, the Office of
FOIA Services shall notify the requester
that he or she is required 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 Office of
FOIA Services begins to process a new
request or continues processing a
pending request from that requester.
Where the Office of FOIA Services has
a reasonable basis to believe that a
requester has misrepresented the
requester’s identity to avoid paying
outstanding fees, it may require that the
requester provide proof of identity and
pay in advance.
(iv) When the Office of FOIA Services
requires advance payment or payment
due under paragraphs (g)(9)(ii) and (iii)
of this section, the Office of FOIA
Services will not further process the
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request until the required payment is
made. The Office of FOIA Services will
toll the processing of the request while
it notifies the requester of the advanced
payment due and this time will be
excluded from the 20 working day time
limit (as specified in paragraph (d)(2) of
this section). If the requester does not
pay the advance payment within 30
calendar days from the date of the Office
of FOIA Services’ fee notice, the Office
of FOIA Services will presume that the
requester is no longer interested in the
records and notify the requester that the
request has been closed.
(10) Tolling. When necessary for the
Office of FOIA Services to clarify issues
regarding fee assessment with the
requester, the time limit for responding
to a FOIA request is tolled until the
Office of FOIA Services resolves such
issues with the requester.
(11) Other statutes specifically
providing for fees. The fee schedule of
this section does not apply to fees
charged under any statute (except the
FOIA) that specifically requires an
agency to set and collect fees for
particular types of records. In instances
where records responsive to a request
are subject to a statutorily-based fee
schedule program, the Office of FOIA
Services shall inform the requester how
to obtain records from that program.
Provision of such records is not handled
under the FOIA.
(12) Requirements for waiver or
reduction of fees. (i) Records responsive
to a request will be furnished without
charge, or at a charge reduced below
that established under paragraph (g)(3)
of this section, if the requester asks for
such a waiver in writing and the Office
of FOIA Services determines, after
consideration of information provided
by the requester, that the requester has
demonstrated that:
(A) 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
(B) Disclosure of the information is
not primarily in the commercial interest
of the requester.
(ii) In deciding whether disclosure of
the requested information is likely to
contribute significantly to public
understanding of the operations or
activities of the government, the Office
of FOIA Services shall consider each of
the following four factors:
(A) The subject of the request:
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
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the Federal Government, with a
connection that is direct and clear, not
remote or attenuated.
(B) The informative value of the
information to be disclosed: whether the
disclosure is likely to contribute to an
understanding of government operations
or activities. The disclosable portions of
the requested records must be
meaningfully informative about
government operations or activities to
be likely to contribute to an increased
public understanding of those
operations or activities. The disclosure
of information that already is in the
public domain, in either a duplicative or
a substantially identical form, would
not be likely to contribute to such
understanding.
(C) The contribution to an
understanding of the subject by the
public likely to result from disclosure:
whether disclosure of the requested
information will 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.
(D) The significance of the
contribution to public understanding:
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 prior to the
disclosure must be significantly
enhanced by the disclosure.
(iii) In deciding whether disclosure of
the requested information is primarily
in the commercial interest of the
requester, the Office of FOIA Services
shall consider the following factors:
(A) The existence and magnitude of a
commercial interest: whether the
requester has a commercial interest that
would be furthered by the requested
disclosure. The Office of FOIA Services
shall consider any commercial interest
of the requester (with reference to the
definition of ‘‘commercial use
requester’’ in paragraph (g)(2)(i) of this
section), 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 to provide explanatory
information regarding this
consideration.
(B) The primary interest in disclosure:
whether the public interest is greater
than any identified commercial interest
in disclosure. The Office of FOIA
Services ordinarily shall presume that
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where a news media requester has
satisfied the public interest standard,
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.
(iv) If only a portion of the requested
records satisfies both the requirements
for a waiver or reduction of fees, a
waiver or reduction of fees will be
granted for only that portion.
(v) Requests for a waiver or reduction
of fees should address all the factors
identified in paragraphs (g)(12)(ii) and
(iii) of this section.
(vi) Denials of requests for a waiver or
reduction of fees are adverse
determinations (as defined in paragraph
(e)(2)(iii) of this section) and may be
appealed to the General Counsel in
accordance with the procedures set
forth in paragraph (f) of this section.
§ 200.80a
■
§ 200.80b
■
■
[Removed]
[Removed]
7. Remove § 200.80e.
§ 200.80f
■
[Removed]
6. Remove § 200.80d.
§ 200.80e
[Removed]
8. Remove § 200.80f.
By the Commission.
Dated: June 25, 2018.
Brent J. Fields,
Secretary.
[FR Doc. 2018–13943 Filed 6–27–18; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 8011–01–P
DEPARTMENT OF TRANSPORTATION
Federal Highway Administration
23 CFR Part 658
[FHWA Docket No. FHWA–2018–0016]
RIN 2125–AF82
Addition to the National Network
Federal Highway
Administration (FHWA), U.S.
Department of Transportation (DOT).
ACTION: Final rule.
AGENCY:
The FHWA is approving the
addition of Sheridan Boulevard (NY
SUMMARY:
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895) to the National Network (NN) and
revising its regulations to reflect the
addition. The facility currently known
as ‘‘Interstate-895 Sheridan
Expressway’’ in New York City, located
in Bronx County, will be reconstructed,
removed from the National System of
Interstate and Defense Highways
(Interstate System) to accommodate new
design features, and classified as an
‘‘Urban Principal Arterial—Other.’’ This
facility will be identified as the
‘‘Sheridan Boulevard (NY 895).’’
DATES: This rule is effective July 30,
2018.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: For
technical information, contact Ms.
Caitlin Hughes, FHWA Office of Freight
Management and Operations, (202) 493–
0457. For legal information, contact Mr.
William Winne, Office of Chief Counsel,
(202) 366–1397. Federal Highway
Administration, 1200 New Jersey
Avenue SE., Washington, DC 20590.
Office hours are from 7:45 a.m. to 4:15
p.m., e.t., Monday through Friday,
except Federal holidays.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Electronic Access and Filing
This document and all comments
received may be viewed online through
the Federal eRulemaking portal at
www.regulations.gov. It is available 24
hours each day, 365 days each year.
Please follow the instructions online for
more information and help.
An electronic copy of this document
may also be downloaded by accessing
the Office of the Federal Register’s
home page at: https://www.archives.gov
and the Government Publishing Office’s
web page at: https://www.access.gpo.gov/
nara.
5. Remove § 200.80c.
§ 200.80d
■
[Removed]
4. Remove § 200.80b.
§ 200.80c
■
[Removed]
3. Remove § 200.80a.
30333
Background
The NN consists of Interstate System
routes (except exempted routes) and
those non-Interstate System routes
added through the rulemaking process.
See 49 U.S.C. 31111(e)–(f) and 31113(e);
23 CFR part 658 Appendix A; see also
49 FR 23302 (June, 5, 1984). To ensure
that the NN remains substantially intact,
FHWA retains the authority to rule
upon all requests for additions to, and
deletions from, the NN as well as
requests for the imposition of certain
restrictions. Pursuant to 23 CFR 658.11,
requests for additions to the NN must be
submitted in writing to the appropriate
FHWA Division Office and endorsed by
the Governor or the Governor’s
authorized representative. Proposals for
addition of routes to the NN must also
be accompanied by an analysis of
suitability based on the criteria in 23
CFR 658.9. Once a non-Interstate
E:\FR\FM\28JNR1.SGM
28JNR1
Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 83, Number 125 (Thursday, June 28, 2018)]
[Rules and Regulations]
[Pages 30322-30333]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2018-13943]
=======================================================================
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SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE COMMISSION
17 CFR Part 200
[Release Nos. 34-83506; FOIA-193; File No. S7-09-17]
RIN 3235-AM25
Amendments to the Commission's Freedom of Information Act
Regulations
AGENCY: Securities and Exchange Commission.
ACTION: Final rule.
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SUMMARY: The Securities and Exchange Commission (``Commission'' or
``SEC'') is adopting amendments to the Commission's regulations under
the Freedom of Information Act (``FOIA''). The Commission is amending
the FOIA regulations to reflect changes required by the FOIA
Improvement Act of 2016 (``Improvement Act'') and to clarify, update,
and streamline the regulations.
DATES: Effective July 30, 2018.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Mark Tallarico, Senior Counsel, Office
of the General Counsel, (202) 551-5132; Securities and Exchange
Commission, 100 F Street NE, Washington, DC 20549-5041.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
I. Introduction
On December 21, 2017, the Commission proposed amendments to its
existing regulations under the FOIA, 5 U.S.C. 552,\1\ to reflect
changes required by the Improvement Act and to clarify, update, and
streamline the language of several procedural provisions. The
Commission received four comment letters on the proposed amendments.
After consideration of the comments received, the Commission is
adopting the amendments to its FOIA regulations as proposed, other than
changes to two definitions related to the collection of fees and a few
technical modifications for clarity. Due to the scope of the
amendments, this final rule replaces the Commission's existing FOIA
regulations in their entirety (17 CFR 200.80 through 200.80f).
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\1\ See Release No. 34-82373 (Dec. 21, 2017), 83 FR 291 (Jan. 3,
2018) (``Proposing Release'').
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II. Final Amendments
A. Changes To Conform to the Improvement Act
The Commission is adopting four changes to the Commission's FOIA
regulations to conform them to the Improvement Act. These changes are
being adopted largely as proposed.\2\ First, the final rule revises
Section 200.80(a) to provide that records the FOIA requires to be made
available for public inspection will be available in electronic format
on the Commission's website, https://www.sec.gov. Second, the final rule
revises Section 200.80(c) to provide that a request for records may be
denied to the extent the exemptions in 5 U.S.C. 552(b) apply to the
requested records and Commission staff reasonably foresees that
disclosure would harm an interest protected by the applicable
exemption, the disclosure of the requested records is prohibited by
law, or the requested records are otherwise exempted from disclosure
under 5 U.S.C. 552(b)(3). Third, the final rule revises the regulations
to state that FOIA requesters may seek assistance from the Office of
FOIA Services' FOIA Public Liaisons (Sections 200.80(b), (d), and (e))
and to advise FOIA requesters of their right to seek dispute resolution
services offered by the Office of Government Information Services in
the case of a denied request (Section 200.80(e)). Fourth, the final
rule incorporates the amendments to the FOIA requiring agencies, if
they do not comply with the time limits, to waive fees, under certain
circumstances (Section 200.80(g)).
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\2\ The Commission is making one technical, clarifying
modification from the proposal. Specifically, in the first sentence
of Section 200.80(a)(2)(ii), the word ``Those'' is changed to
``Persons.''
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B. Amendments to Certain Procedural Provisions
The final amendments also revise certain procedural provisions.
Those changes clarify, update, and streamline the Commission's
regulations, and most of the changes make the regulations consistent
with existing practices. These changes are being largely adopted as
proposed.\3\ The amended regulations, among other things, update the
various methods for submitting FOIA requests and administrative appeals
(Sections 200.80(b) and (f)); incorporate language requiring requesters
to include their full names and return addresses in their FOIA requests
(Section 200.80(b)); describe certain information that is required when
submitting requests for records about oneself or another individual
(Section 200.80(b)); explain the situations in which the Office of FOIA
Services staff will work with other Federal agencies that have an
interest in agency records that may be responsive to a request (Section
200.80(c)); incorporate language that allows the Office of FOIA
Services to seek a one-time clarification of an ambiguous request and
toll the time period for responding to the request until the requester
clarifies the request (Section 200.80(d)); clarify when the 20-day
statutory time limit for responding to requests begins (i.e., when
requests are received by the Office of FOIA Services and when requests
are modified so that they reasonably describe the records sought)
(Section 200.80(d)); clarify the Office of FOIA Services' system for
multitrack processing of requests (Section 200.80(d)); and insert a
provision to enable the Office of FOIA Services to aggregate requests
involving related matters where it appears that multiple requests
together constitute a single request that would involve unusual
circumstances (Section 200.80(d)).
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\3\ The Commission is making one technical, clarifying
modification from the proposal. Specifically, the third sentence of
Section 200-.80(f)(3), is changed from ``Appeals should include a
statement of the requester's arguments as to why the records
requested should be made available and why the adverse determination
was in error'' to ``Appeals should include a statement of the
requester's arguments as to why the records requested should be made
available and the reason(s) the FOIA requester contends the adverse
determination was in error.''
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The final rule also clarifies, consistent with existing practice,
that the Office of FOIA Services will close requests if requesters do
not take certain steps within set time periods. For example, requesters
must respond to the Office of FOIA Services' one-time clarification
request within 30 calendar days (Section 200.80(d)); agree to pay
[[Page 30323]]
anticipated fees within 30 calendar days of the Office of FOIA
Services' fee estimate (Section 200.80(g)); and, when required to do
so, make an advance payment within 30 calendar days of the Office of
FOIA Services' fee notice (Section 200.80(g)).
C. Revisions to Fee Provisions
Section 200.80(g) of the final rule revises the Office of FOIA
Services' fee procedures and fee schedule in two ways. Both of these
changes are being adopted as proposed. First, the final rule allows the
Office of FOIA Services to collect fees before sending records to a
requester instead of seeking payment when the records are sent (Section
200.80(g)(1)). Second, the final rule removes the set duplication fee
of 24 cents per page and instead refers requesters to the FOIA fee page
on the Commission's website, where the current fee will be posted
(Section 200.80(g)(3)(v)).\4\ The duplication fee posted on the website
will reflect the direct costs of photocopying or producing a printout,
taking into account various factors including the salary of the
employee(s) performing the work and the cost of materials. The
duplication fee posted on the Commission's website will be adjusted as
appropriate to reflect current costs. Eliminating the set duplication
fee will allow the Office of FOIA Services to align its photocopying
and printout fees with the actual costs of duplicating records for
production to requesters (in paper format) without having to amend the
regulations.
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\4\ The initial posted fee will be 15 cents per page, and the
Commission is already charging this lower cost.
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As proposed, the final rule also codifies several existing
practices. For example, it states that fees for duplicating records
onto electronic medium (including the costs associated with scanning
materials, where applicable) will be the direct costs of duplicating
records for requesters (Section 200.80(g)(3)(v)); clarifies that the
Office of FOIA Services will not process any requests once it
determines that a fee may be charged unless the requester commits to
pay any estimated fees (Section 200.80(g)(5)(ii)); clarifies the direct
costs that can be charged by the Office of FOIA Services as part of
search, review, and duplication fees (Section 200.80(g)(3)); and sets
forth the various methods by which FOIA processing fees can be paid
(Section 200.80(g)(1)).
The final rule also revises existing fee-related definitions and
incorporates new fee-related definitions (Section 200.80(g)(2)). As
discussed below, some of these definitions have been slightly revised
in the final rule in response to comments received on the proposed
rule.\5\
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\5\ The Commission is also making several technical, clarifying
modifications from the proposal in the fee provisions. In the first
sentence of Section 200.80(g)(3), the phrase ``shall charge the fees
summarized in chart form . . .'' is changed to ``shall charge fees
for the services summarized in chart form . . .'' to more accurately
describe the chart. In the first sentence of Section
200.80(g)(3)(ii)(B), the phrase `` to locate records'' is changed to
``to locate or identify responsive records'' so as to more precisely
describe the search. In Section 200.80(g)(12)(ii), the phrase
``shall consider all four of the following factors'' is changed to
``shall consider each of the following four factors.''
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D. Elimination of Certain Provisions
As proposed, the final rule eliminates certain provisions in the
Commission's current FOIA regulations that repeat information contained
in the FOIA statute and do not need to be in the Commission's
regulations. Among the provisions that the Commission is removing are:
(1) The list of information the FOIA requires the Commission to publish
in the Federal Register (Section 200.80(a)(1) of the superseded
regulations), (2) the categories of records the FOIA requires the
Commission to make available for public inspection (Section
200.80(a)(2) of the superseded regulations), and (3) the nine
categories of records that are exempt from disclosure under 5 U.S.C.
552(b) (Section 200.80(b) of the superseded regulations). Finally, the
final rule eliminates Appendices A through F from the existing FOIA
regulations. Appendices A through D and F of the existing regulations
provide general information that is available on the Commission's
website to the extent it is relevant to the public. The information in
Appendix E of the existing regulations is revised and updated and moved
to Section 200.80(g) (Fees) of the final rule.
E. Structure of the Final Rule
The structure of the regulations is amended accordingly: Section
200.80(a) (General provisions); Section 200.80(b) (Requirements for
making requests); Section 200.80(c) (Processing requests); Section
200.80(d) (Time limits and expedited processing); Section 200.80(e)
(Responses to requests); Section 200.80(f) (Administrative appeals);
and Section 200.80(g) (Fees).
III. Public Comments
The Commission received four comment letters in response to the
proposed rulemaking. Two of the comments concern definitions in the fee
provisions of the proposed rule and suggest substantive changes to the
Commission's proposed fee definitions.\6\ One comment suggests
technical clarifications to some of the Commission's FOIA
procedures.\7\ The final letter supports certain provisions in the
proposed rule.\8\ The Commission has considered the comments received
and, as discussed below, in certain cases has made modifications in the
final amendments in response to those comments.
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\6\ See letter from Ryan P. Mulvey, Counsel, Cause of Action
Institute, dated January 3, 2018 (``CoA Institute letter''); letter
from Keith P. Bishop, dated January 12, 2018 (``Bishop letter'')
\7\ See letter from Rachel Wood, dated April 27, 2018.
\8\ See letter from Lori Gayle Nuckolls, dated January 22, 2018.
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In proposing the definitions in the fee provisions of the proposed
rule, the Commission considered the FOIA's directive that agencies
``promulgate regulations . . . specifying the schedule of fees
applicable to the processing of requests . . . [and that] [s]uch
schedule shall conform to the guidelines which shall be promulgated . .
. by the Director of the Office of Management and Budget [(``OMB'')].''
\9\ In light of this directive, the Commission looked to the
definitions in the OMB's 1987 FOIA fee guidelines except to the extent
that courts have held that the definitions are not consistent with the
FOIA.\10\
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\9\ 5 U.S.C. 552(a)(4)(A)(i).
\10\ Uniform Freedom of Information Act Fee Schedule and
Guidelines, 52 FR at 10,018 (March 27, 1987).
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A. Section 200.80(g)(2)(iv) (Definition of Educational Institution)
One commenter expressed concern that the Commission's definition of
``educational institution'' in proposed Section 200.80(g)(2)(iv) is
inconsistent with the FOIA provision that addresses fees that agencies
can charge when ``records are not sought for commercial use and the
request is made by an educational or noncommercial scientific
institution, whose purpose is scholarly or scientific research.'' \11\
The commenter stated that the Commission's proposed definition of
``educational institution'' ``deviates from the statute in two
respects''--the definition ``omits reference to `scientific research'
'' and it ``requires that the purpose of the request be `to further
scholarly research' whereas the statute requires only that the
educational institution have a purpose of scholarly or scientific
research.'' \12\
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\11\ See Bishop letter (quoting 5 U.S.C. 552(a)(4)(A)(ii)(II)).
\12\ See Bishop letter.
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[[Page 30324]]
The FOIA does not define the term ``educational institution.'' The
Commission's proposed definition of ``educational institution'' did not
include a reference to ``scientific research'' because in promulgating
its fee guidelines, the OMB found that ``the statute and the
legislative history recite the formula `educational or scientific
institution/scholarly or scientific research,' and it seems clear that
the phrase was meant to be read disjunctively so that scholarly applies
to educational institution and scientific applies to non-commercial
scientific institution.'' \13\ In addition, ``scholarly research'' is a
broad term that would generally include ``scientific research.''
Accordingly, the Commission does not believe it is necessary to include
``scientific research'' as part of its definition of ``educational
institution.''
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\13\ 52 FR at 10,014.
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In response to the commenter's suggestion to remove from the
definition of ``educational institution'' the requirement that the
records are sought to ``further scholarly research,'' the Commission is
deleting this language from the definition and is inserting language to
clarify that the requester must show that the request is made in
connection with the requester's role at the educational institution and
that the records are not sought for commercial or personal use. The
definition of ``educational institution'' in the final rule at Sec.
200.80(g)(2)(iv) is thus revised to read:
Educational institution is any school that operates a program of
scholarly research. A requester in this fee category must show that the
request is made in connection with the requester's role at the
educational institution and that the records are not sought for
commercial or personal use.
B. Section 200.80(g)(2)(v) (Definition of Noncommercial Scientific
Institution)
One commenter expressed concern that the Commission's proposed
definition of ``noncommercial scientific institution'' in proposed
Sec. 200.80(g)(2)(v) is inconsistent with the FOIA ``because it
imposes additional limitations and conditions not found in the
statutory definition.'' \14\ This commenter stated that the FOIA,
unlike the proposed rule, ``does not require (i) that the institution
be operated solely for the purpose of conducting scientific research,
or (ii) that the request is being made under the auspices of a
qualifying institution.'' \15\
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\14\ See Bishop letter.
\15\ Id.
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The Commission believes that its proposed definition of
``noncommercial scientific institution'' is consistent with the FOIA.
The FOIA does not define the term ``noncommercial scientific
institution'' and the Commission has adopted the definition from the
OMB's FOIA fee guidelines. Those guidelines provide that the ``term
`non-commercial scientific institution' refers to an institution that
is not operated on a `commercial' basis . . . and which is operated
solely for the purpose of conducting scientific research the results of
which are not intended to promote any particular product or industry.''
\16\ The OMB guidelines further state that ``[t]o be eligible for
inclusion [in the noncommercial scientific institution] category,
requesters must show that the request is being made as authorized by
and under the auspices of a qualifying institution and that the records
are not sought for a commercial use, but are sought in furtherance of .
. . scientific . . . research.'' \17\ Accordingly, the Commission is
adopting the proposed definition of ``noncommercial scientific
institution'' in Section 200.80(g)(2)(v) of the final rule without
change.
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\16\ 52 FR at 10,018.
\17\ 52 FR at 10,019.
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C. Section 200.80(g)(2)(vi) (Definition of Representative of the News
Media or News Media Requester)
Two commenters expressed concern that the Commission's proposed
definition of ``representative of the news media'' or ``news media
requester'' is inconsistent with the statutory definition.\18\ Both
commenters noted that the statutory definition does not require a
``news media requester'' to be ``organized and operated to publish or
broadcast news to the public.'' \19\ One of the commenters specifically
recommended striking the ``organized and operated'' standard from the
definition.\20\ In response to these comments, the Commission has
omitted the ``organized and operated'' language in the final rule.
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\18\ See Bishop letter; CoA Institute letter.
\19\ Id.
\20\ See CoA Institute letter.
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One commenter addressed three additional considerations related to
the Commission's proposed definition of ``news media requester.'' \21\
This commenter first recommended further revising the proposed
definition of ``news media requester'' by deleting the last sentence of
the proposed definition (``The Office of FOIA Services will determine
whether to grant a requester news media status on a case-by-case basis
based upon the requester's intended use of the requested material.'')
because ``the statute's focus [is] on requesters, rather than [their]
requests.'' \22\ In response to this recommendation, the Commission has
removed the final sentence from the definition of ``news media
requester'' in the final rule.
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\21\ Id.
\22\ Id. (citing Cause of Action v. Federal Trade Commission 799
F.3d 1108, 1121 (DC Cir. 2015)).
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This commenter also recommended that the Commission recognize that
a news media requester may use ``editorial skills'' to turn ``raw
materials into a distinct work'' when writing documents such as press
releases and editorial comments, as the U.S. Court of Appeals for the
District of Columbia stated in Cause of Action v. Federal Trade
Commission.\23\ The commenter did not recommend any changes to the rule
to address this issue, and the Commission believes none are
necessary.\24\ The Commission, as appropriate, will consider Cause of
Action and any other relevant precedents in applying the fee provisions
in its regulations.
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\23\ Id. (citing Cause of Action, 799 F.3d at 1122-25).
\24\ Id.
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Finally, this commenter recommended that the Commission ``should
indicate [in its definition of ``news media requester''] that any
examples of news media entities it may include in its regulations are
non-exhaustive.'' \25\ The Commission is not making any changes in
response to this comment because the definition in the final rule does
not contain any examples of news media entities.
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\25\ Id.
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IV. Other Matters
If any of the provisions of these amendments, or the application
thereof to any person or circumstance, is held to be invalid, such
invalidity shall not affect other provisions or application of such
provisions to other persons or circumstances that can be given effect
without the invalid provision or application.
V. Economic Analysis
The Commission is sensitive to the economic effects, including the
costs and benefits, that result from its rules. Section 23(a)(2) of the
Securities Exchange Act of 1934 (``Exchange Act'') requires the
Commission, in making rules pursuant to any provision of the Exchange
Act, to consider among other matters the impact any such rule would
have on competition and prohibits any rule that would impose a burden
on
[[Page 30325]]
competition that is not necessary or appropriate in furtherance of the
purposes of the Exchange Act.\26\ Further, Section 3(f) of the Exchange
Act requires the Commission, when engaging in rulemaking where it is
required to consider or determine whether an action is necessary or
appropriate in the public interest, to consider, in addition to the
protection of investors, whether the action will promote efficiency,
competition, and capital formation.\27\
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\26\ 15 U.S.C. 78w(a).
\27\ 15 U.S.C. 78c(f).
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As explained in the proposal and discussed further below, the
Commission believes that the economic effects of the final rule will be
limited. The Commission notes that, where possible, it has attempted to
quantify the costs, benefits, and effects on efficiency, competition,
and capital formation expected to result from the proposed amendments.
In some cases, however, the Commission is unable to quantify the
economic effects because it lacks the information necessary to provide
a reasonable estimate. Additionally, some of the potential benefits of
the amendments are inherently difficult to quantify.
The amendments to the Commission's FOIA regulations fall into four
categories. First, as discussed in more detail above, the Commission is
amending its regulations to conform the regulations to the Improvement
Act. Consistent with the Improvement Act, the amended rule provides:
(1) Records required to be made available pursuant to the FOIA will be
made available in electronic format; (2) records will be withheld under
the exemptions in 5 U.S.C. 552(b) only if Commission staff reasonably
foresees that disclosure would harm an interest protected by the
applicable exemption or disclosure is prohibited by law; (3) FOIA
requesters may seek assistance from the Office of FOIA Services' FOIA
Public Liaisons and will be advised that they have the right to seek
dispute resolution services from the Office of Government Information
Services if their request is denied; and (4) the Office of FOIA
Services is required to waive fees, in certain circumstances, if it
does not comply with the time limits under the FOIA. The Commission
believes that these changes will have minimal impact on FOIA requesters
because they largely codify the Commission's existing practices. To the
extent the amendments result in these practices being followed more
consistently, they could benefit the public by increasing the amount of
information available, making more information available in an
electronic format, and ensuring that requesters know of their right to
seek alternative dispute resolution. The Commission also believes that
the public could benefit from the increased transparency regarding
these practices. The Commission does not expect these amendments to
result in additional costs to any member of the public.
Second, the final rule will amend several procedural provisions
within the Commission's FOIA regulations, which will better reflect and
improve existing practice. Most of these changes codify existing Office
of FOIA Services practice, including: (1) Adding to the regulation
additional methods for submitting FOIA requests and administrative
appeals; (2) clarifying the existing procedures for submitting requests
for records about oneself or another individual; (3) clarifying the
existing procedures for submitting a proper FOIA request and seeking
clarification of a request; (4) clarifying existing procedures for
submitting an administrative appeal; and (5) clarifying the existing
practice that limits administrative appeals to written filings (i.e.,
there is no opportunity for personal appearance, oral argument, or
hearing on appeal). The Commission does not expect these changes to
result in additional costs to any member of the public. The Commission
also expects that there would be some benefit to FOIA requesters from
the increased transparency regarding these practices.
Two procedural changes could impose limited costs on members of the
public. First, FOIA requesters will be required to include their full
names and addresses in their requests. Providing a full name and
address is not itself burdensome, but some requesters may prefer to
remain anonymous and could be deterred from submitting FOIA requests by
this requirement. However, because nearly all FOIA requesters provide
this information already, the Commission expects that the economic
impact of the amendment will be minimal. Second, the Office of FOIA
Services will be able to aggregate related requests from one requester
(or a group of requesters). The Office of FOIA Services can aggregate
requests that on their own do not involve ``unusual circumstances,'' as
defined in the amended regulations, or warrant placement in a track for
complex requests (i.e., requests that require more work and/or time to
process than most requests), so aggregation may lead to extended
deadlines for processing a request or cause a request to be handled
after other complex requests. Based on past experience, the Commission
expects that few requests will be aggregated. In addition, if the
aggregation of requests results in the requests being placed in a track
for complex requests that could extend the processing time, the
requester can modify the request so that it can be processed more
quickly. Thus, the Commission expects that the impact of this amendment
also will be minimal.
Third, the Commission is revising the Office of FOIA Services' fee
procedures and fee schedule in several ways, including: (1) Eliminating
from the rule the per page duplication fee for copying or printing
requested records, and instead referring requesters to the FOIA fee
page on the Commission's website; (2) allowing the Office of FOIA
Services to collect fees before sending records to a requester instead
of seeking payment when the records are sent; (3) clarifying the direct
costs that can be charged by the Office of FOIA Services as part of its
search, review, and duplication fees; and (4) codifying the existing
Office of FOIA Services practice of charging requesters the actual cost
of production for materials produced in an electronic format. In
general, lowering fees associated with FOIA requests could encourage
additional FOIA submissions, while raising fees could deter them.
However, as discussed below, the Commission does not anticipate that
any of its changes to the Office of FOIA Services' fee procedures will
impose significant new costs on FOIA requesters.
With respect to the elimination of the set per page duplication
fee, the Office of FOIA Services has already lowered its per page
duplication fee from 24 cents to 15 cents to reflect its actual
duplication costs. Even if the Office of FOIA Services were to increase
the per page duplication fee in the future, the impact of any increase
would likely be minimal. Information about the fees the Commission has
collected for FOIA requests for the past seven years allows the
Commission to estimate the economic effects of this proposed change.
Table 1 shows the number of requests received and processed by the
Commission during fiscal years 2011 through 2017 and the fees the
Commission collected. The fees collected by the Commission for
processing FOIA requests include charges for staff time associated with
locating, reviewing, and copying responsive documents, as well as
duplication fees for paper copies and production costs for other types
of media. The fee schedule for FOIA
[[Page 30326]]
requests is available on the Commission's website.
Table 1--FOIA Requests in Fiscal Years 2011 to 2017
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Fees
Requests Requests collected for
Fiscal year received processed processing
requests
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
2011............................................................ 11,555 11,562 $78,005.94
2012............................................................ 11,292 11,302 27,577.00
2013............................................................ 12,275 12,167 35,954.30
2014............................................................ 14,862 14,757 22,670.81
2015............................................................ 16,898 16,207 19,890.07
2016............................................................ 14,458 15,196 41,029.68
2017............................................................ 13,063 13,069 35,025.15
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
As shown in Table 1, from fiscal years 2011-2017, the Office of
FOIA Services collected an average of $37,164.71 per year in fees for
processing an average of 13,466 requests. These amounts correspond to
an average fee of $2.76 collected per request processed.\28\ Even if
all of those fees were for duplication (which they were not), a one
cent per page increase in duplication fees would result in an increase
in total fees collected of approximately $1,548.53,\29\ corresponding
to an average fee of $2.87 collected per request processed.\30\
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\28\ Calculated as $37,164.71/13,466 = $2.76.
\29\ To arrive at this estimated increase, we divide $37,164.71
in duplication fees by a cost of $0.24 per page to derive an
estimate of approximately 154,853 pages of copies on average per
fiscal year. 154,853 pages x $0.01 increase in per-page duplication
fees = $1,548.53 in additional total processing fees.
\30\ Calculated as ($37,164.71 + $1,548.53)/13,466 = $2.87.
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With respect to the amendment providing that the FOIA Office can
collect fees before sending records to a requester (instead of seeking
payment when the records are sent), the Commission expects that any
additional cost will be limited to a slight delay in receiving
documents. The timing of the collection will not itself impose any
additional costs on FOIA requesters because the timing would not alter
the amount of fees charged. Any delay in receiving the documents will
not be significant because a FOIA requester could make an electronic
payment upon receipt of the request for payment, and the Office of FOIA
Services would then provide the documents. The Commission notes that
some requesters may choose to forgo receiving the records in question
if the fees are substantial, though even this impact may be muted
because requesters will have been advised of and approved potential
charges before requests are processed by the FOIA Office.
The clarification regarding direct costs and codification of
existing practices with respect to fees for materials produced in an
electronic format are consistent with existing practices, and the
Commission therefore does not expect these amendments to impose any
additional burden on the public. The other changes to the Office of
FOIA Services' fee procedures also codify existing processes and will
therefore not impose any additional burden on requesters. These changes
include: (1) Clarifying that the Office of FOIA Services will not
process any requests once it determines that a fee may be charged
unless the requester commits to pay the estimated fees; and (2) adding
and clarifying certain fee-related definitions. The Commission does not
expect these amendments to result in additional costs to any member of
the public. To the contrary, the Commission believes that the public
could benefit from the increased transparency regarding these
practices. As discussed above, some of the fee-related definitions have
been revised in the final rule in response to comments on the proposed
rule. Specifically, the Commission has revised the definitions of
``educational institution'' and ``representative of the news media'' or
``news media requester.'' The revisions serve to clarify and broaden
the scope of existing definitions, which may benefit some requesters.
The Commission does not expect these revisions to result in additional
costs to any member of the public.
Finally, the final rule will eliminate certain provisions in the
SEC's FOIA regulations that are restatements of provisions in the FOIA
statute. The Commission does not expect these amendments to result in
any economic effects, as the elimination of these redundant provisions
will not have any substantive consequence.
The Commission requested comments on all aspects of the benefits
and costs of the proposal. No commenter addressed the economic analysis
contained in the proposal. The Commission continues to believe that the
amendments to the Commission's FOIA regulations will not have any
significant impact on efficiency, competition, or capital formation.
VI. Regulatory Flexibility Act Certification
Pursuant to Section 605(b) of the Regulatory Flexibility Act of
1980,\31\ the Commission certified that, when adopted, the amendments
to 17 CFR 200.80 would not have a significant economic impact on a
substantial number of small entities. This certification, including our
basis for the certification, was included in the proposing release. The
Commission solicited comments on the appropriateness of its
certification, but received none. The Commission is adopting the final
rules as modified and discussed above. These modifications to the
proposal would not alter the basis upon which the certification was
made.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\31\ 5 U.S.C. 605(b).
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VII. Paperwork Reduction Act
The Commission stated in the proposed release that the proposed
amendments to the FOIA regulations do not contain any collection of
information as defined by the Paperwork Reduction Act of 1995
(``PRA'').\32\ The Commission also determined that the proposed
amendments would not create any new filing, reporting, recordkeeping,
or disclosure reporting requirements. Accordingly, the Commission did
not submit the proposed amendments to the Office of Management and
Budget for review under the PRA.\33\ The Commission solicited comments
on whether its conclusion that there are no new collections of
information is
[[Page 30327]]
correct, and it did not receive any comments.
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\32\ 44 U.S.C. 3501 et seq.
\33\ 44 U.S.C. 3507(d) and 5 CFR 1320.11.
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VIII. Statutory Authority and Text of Rule Amendments
The amendments contained herein are being proposed under the
authority set forth in Public Law 114-185 Sec. 3(a), 130 Stat. 538; 5
U.S.C. 552; 15 U.S.C. 77f(d), 77s, 77ggg(a), 78d-1, 78w(a), 80a-37(a),
80a-44(b), 80b-10(a), and 80b-11(a).
List of Subjects in 17 CFR Part 200
Administrative practice and procedure; Freedom of information.
Text of Amendments
For the reasons stated in the preamble, the Commission amends 17
CFR part 200 as follows:
PART 200--ORGANIZATION; CONDUCT AND ETHICS; AND INFORMATION AND
REQUESTS
Subpart D--Information and Requests
0
1. The authority citation for subpart D is revised to read as follows:
Authority: 5 U.S.C. 552, as amended, 15 U.S.C. 77f(d), 77s,
77ggg(a), 77sss, 78m(F)(3), 78w, 80a-37, 80a-44(a), 80a-44(b), 80b-
10(a), and 80b-11, unless otherwise noted.
Section 200.80 also issued under Public Law 114-185 sec. 3(a),
130 Stat. 538; 5 U.S.C. 552; 15 U.S.C. 77f(d), 77s, 77ggg(a), 78d-1,
78w(a), 80a-37(a), 80a-44(b), 80b-10(a), and 80b-11(a), unless
otherwise noted.
Section 200.82 also issued under 15 U.S.C. 78n.
Section 200.83 also issued under E.O. 12600, 3 CFR, 1987 Comp.,
p. 235.
0
2. Section 200.80 is revised to read as follows:
Sec. 200.80 Securities and Exchange Commission records and
information.
(a) General provisions. (1) This section contains the rules that
the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission follows in processing
requests for records under the Freedom of Information Act (``FOIA''), 5
U.S.C. 552, as amended. These rules should be read in conjunction with
the text of the FOIA and the Uniform Freedom of Information Fee
Schedule and Guidelines published by the Office of Management and
Budget (``OMB Guidelines''). Requests made by individuals for records
about themselves under the Privacy Act of 1974, 5 U.S.C. 552a, are
processed in accordance with the Commission's Privacy Act regulations
at subpart H, as well as this section.
(2)(i) Records that the FOIA requires to be made available for
public inspection in an electronic format (pursuant to 5 U.S.C.
552(a)(2)) are accessible through the Commission's website, https://www.sec.gov. Each division and office of the Commission is responsible
for determining which of its records are required to be made publicly
available in an electronic format, as well as identifying additional
records of interest to the public that are appropriate for public
disclosure, and for posting and indexing such records. Each division
and office shall ensure that its posted records and indexes are
reviewed and updated on an ongoing basis.
(ii) Persons who do not have access to the internet may obtain
these records by contacting the Commission's Office of FOIA Services by
telephone at 202-551-7900, by email at [email protected], or by visiting
the Commission's Public Reference Room, 100 F Street NE, Washington, DC
20549-2736, on official working days between the hours of 10:00 a.m.
and 3:00 p.m.
(b) Requirements for making requests for records--(1) How made and
addressed. The Commission has a centralized system for responding to
FOIA requests, with all requests processed by the Office of FOIA
Services. Requests for agency records must be in writing and include
the requester's full name and a legible return address. Requesters may
also include other contact information, such as an email address and a
telephone number. Requests may be submitted by U.S. mail or delivery
service and addressed to the Freedom of Information Act Officer, SEC,
100 F Street NE, Washington, DC 20549. Requests may also be made by
facsimile (202-772-9337), email ([email protected]), or online at the
Commission's website (https://www.sec.gov). The request (and envelope,
if the request is mailed or hand-delivered) should be marked ``Freedom
of Information Act Request.''
(2) Requests for records about oneself or another individual. (i) A
requester who is making a request for records about himself or herself
must comply with the verification of identity provisions set forth in
subpart H of this part to obtain any documents that would not be
available to the public under the FOIA.
(ii) For requests for records about another individual, a requester
may receive greater access by submitting either a notarized
authorization signed by the individual permitting disclosure of his or
her records or proof that the individual is deceased (e.g., a copy of a
death certificate or an obituary). The Office of FOIA Services can
require a requester to supply additional information if necessary to
verify that a particular individual has consented to disclosure.
(3) Description of records sought. A FOIA request must reasonably
describe the agency records sought with sufficient specificity with
respect to names, dates, and subject matter to enable personnel within
the divisions and offices of the Commission to locate them with a
reasonable effort. Before submitting a request, a requester may contact
the Office of FOIA Services' FOIA Public Liaisons to discuss the
records they are seeking and to receive assistance in describing the
records (contact information for these individuals is on the
Commission's website, https://www.sec.gov). If the Office of FOIA
Services determines that a request does not reasonably describe the
records sought, it shall inform the requester what additional
information is needed or how the request is insufficient. A requester
who is attempting to reformulate or modify such a request may discuss
the request with the Office of FOIA Services' designated FOIA contact,
its FOIA Public Liaisons, or a representative of the Office of FOIA
Services, each of whom is available to assist the requester in
reasonably describing the records sought. When a requester fails to
provide sufficient information within 30 calendar days after having
been asked to reasonably describe the records sought, the Office of
FOIA Services shall notify the requester in writing that the request
has not been properly made, that no further action will be taken, and
that the FOIA request is closed. Such a notice constitutes an adverse
determination under paragraph (e)(2) of this section for which the
Office of FOIA Services shall follow the procedures for a denial letter
under paragraph (e)(2) of this section. In cases where a requester has
modified his or her request so that it reasonably describes the
requested records, the date of receipt for purposes of the 20-day time
limit of paragraph (d) of this section shall be the date of receipt of
the modified request.
(c) Processing requests--(1) In general. (i) A request for records
may be denied to the extent the exemptions in 5 U.S.C. 552(b) apply to
the requested records and:
(A) Commission staff reasonably foresees that disclosure would harm
an interest protected by the applicable exemption; or
(B) The disclosure of the requested records is prohibited by law or
is exempt from disclosure under 5 U.S.C. 552(b)(3).
(ii) In determining which records are responsive to a request, the
Office of FOIA Services ordinarily will include only records in the
agency's possession as of the date that it begins its search.
[[Page 30328]]
(2) Re-routing of misdirected requests. Any division or office
within the Commission that receives a written request for records
should promptly forward the request to the Office of FOIA Services for
processing.
(3) Consultation, referral, and coordination. When reviewing
records located in response to a request, the Office of FOIA Services
will determine whether another Federal agency is better able to
determine if the record is exempt from disclosure under the FOIA. As to
any such record, the Office of FOIA Services will proceed in one of the
following ways:
(i) Consultation. In instances where a record is requested that
originated within a division or office within the Commission and
another Federal agency has a significant interest in the record (or a
portion thereof), the Office of FOIA Services will consult with that
Federal agency before responding to a requester. When the Office of
FOIA Services receives a request for a record (or a portion thereof) in
its possession that originated with another entity within the Federal
Government that is not subject to the FOIA, the Office of FOIA Services
will typically consult with that entity prior to making a release
determination.
(ii) Referral. When the Office of FOIA Services receives a request
for a record (or a portion thereof) in its possession that originated
with another Federal agency subject to the FOIA, the Office of FOIA
Services will typically refer the record to that agency for direct
response to the requester. Ordinarily, the agency that originated the
record will be presumed to be best able to make the disclosure
determination. However, if the Office of FOIA Services and the
originating agency jointly agree that the Office of FOIA Services is in
the best position to make a disclosure determination regarding the
record, then the record may be handled as a consultation and processed
by the Office of FOIA Services. Whenever the Office of FOIA Services
refers a record to another Federal agency for direct response to the
requester, the Office of FOIA Services shall notify the requester in
writing of the referral and inform the requester of the name of the
agency to which the record was referred.
(iii) Coordination. If disclosure of the identity of the agency to
which the referral would be made could harm an interest protected by an
exemption, the Office of FOIA Services generally will coordinate with
the originating agency to seek its views as to disclosure of the record
and then advise the requester of the release determination for the
record that is the subject of the coordination.
(iv) Classified information. On receipt of any request involving
classified information, the Commission staff in possession of the
information shall determine whether the information is currently and
properly classified and take appropriate action to ensure compliance
with subpart J of this part. Whenever a request involves a record
containing information that has been classified or may be appropriate
for classification by another Federal agency under an executive order
concerning the classification of records, the Office of FOIA Services
shall refer the responsibility for responding to the request regarding
that information to the agency that classified the information, or that
should consider the information for classification. Whenever agency
records contain information that has been classified by another Federal
agency, the Office of FOIA Services shall refer the responsibility for
responding to that portion of the request to the agency that classified
the underlying information except in circumstances that come within
paragraph (c)(3)(iii) of this section.
(d) Time limits and expedited processing--(1) In general. The
Office of FOIA Services will seek to respond to requests according to
their order of receipt within each track of the Office of FOIA
Services' multitrack processing system as described in paragraph (d)(4)
of this section.
(2) Initial response. A determination whether to comply with a FOIA
request shall be made within 20 days (excepting Saturdays, Sundays, and
legal public holidays) from the date the Office of FOIA Services
receives a request for a record under this part, except when the
circumstances described in paragraph (d)(3), (5), or (7) of this
section are applicable. In instances where a FOIA requester has
misdirected a request that is re-routed pursuant to paragraph (c)(2) of
this section, the response time shall commence on the date that the
request is first received by the Office of FOIA Services, but in any
event not later than 10 working days after the request is first
received by any division or office of the Commission.
(3) Clarification of request. The Office of FOIA Services may seek
clarification of a request (or a portion of a request) for records. The
request for clarification generally should be in writing. The first
time the Office of FOIA Services seeks clarification, the time for
responding to the entire request (set forth in paragraph (d)(2) of this
section) is tolled until the requester responds to the clarification
request. The tolled period will end when the Office of FOIA Services
receives a response from the requester that reasonably describes the
requested records. If the Office of FOIA Services asks for
clarification and does not receive a written response from the
requester within 30 calendar days from the date of the clarification
request, the Office of FOIA Services will presume that the requester is
no longer interested in the record(s) sought and notify the requester
that any portion of the request as to which clarification was sought
has been closed.
(4) Multitrack processing. The Office of FOIA Services shall use a
multitrack system for processing FOIA requests. The Office of FOIA
Services shall designate one track for requests that are granted
expedited processing, in accordance with the standards set forth in
paragraph (d)(7) of this section. The Office of FOIA Services shall use
two or more additional processing tracks that distinguish between
simple and more complex requests based on the estimated amount of work
and/or time needed to process the request. Among the factors the Office
of FOIA Services may consider are the time to perform a search, the
number of pages that must be reviewed in processing the request, and
the need for consultations or referrals. The Office of FOIA Services
shall advise requesters of the track into which their request falls
and, when appropriate, shall offer the requesters an opportunity to
narrow the scope of their request so that it can be placed in a
different processing track.
(5) Unusual circumstances. The Office of FOIA Services may extend
the time period for processing a FOIA request in ``unusual
circumstances.'' To extend the time, the Office of FOIA Services shall
notify the requester in writing of the unusual circumstances involved
and of the date by which processing of the request is expected to be
completed. If the extension exceeds 10 working days, the Office of FOIA
Services shall provide the requester, in writing, with an opportunity
to modify the request or arrange an alternative time frame for
processing the request or a modified request. The Office of FOIA
Services shall also make available its FOIA Public Liaisons to assist
in the resolution of any disputes and notify the requester of the right
to seek dispute resolution services from the Office of Government
Information Services. For purposes of this section, ``unusual
circumstances'' include:
(i) The need to search for and collect the requested records from
field facilities or other establishments that are separate from the
office processing the request.
(ii) The need to search for, collect, and appropriately examine a
[[Page 30329]]
voluminous amount of separate and distinct records that are the subject
of a single request.
(iii) The need to consult with another Federal agency having a
substantial interest in the determination of the FOIA request or among
two or more divisions or offices within the Commission having
substantial subject-matter interest therein.
(6) Aggregating requests. The Office of FOIA Services may aggregate
requests in cases where it reasonably believes that multiple requests,
submitted either by a requester or by a group of requesters acting in
concert, together constitute a single request that would involve
unusual circumstances, as defined in paragraph (d)(5) of this section.
Multiple requests involving unrelated matters shall not be aggregated.
The Office of FOIA Services shall advise requesters, in writing, when
it determines to aggregate multiple requests and comply with paragraph
(d)(5) of this section. Aggregation of requests for this purpose will
be conducted independent of aggregation requests for fee purposes under
paragraph (g)(8) of this section.
(7) Expedited processing. The Office of FOIA Services shall grant a
request for expedited processing if the requester demonstrates a
``compelling need'' for the records. ``Compelling need'' means that a
failure to obtain the requested records on an expedited basis could
reasonably be expected to pose an imminent threat to an individual's
life or physical safety or, if the requester is primarily engaged in
disseminating information, an urgency to inform the public about an
actual or alleged Federal Government activity.
(i) A request for expedited processing may be made at the time of
the initial request for records or at any later time.
(ii) A requester who seeks expedited processing must submit a
statement, certified to be true and correct to the best of that
person's knowledge and belief, explaining why there is a ``compelling
need'' for the records.
(iii) The Office of FOIA Services shall determine whether to grant
or deny a request for expedited processing and provide notice of that
determination within 10 calendar days of receipt of the request by the
Office of FOIA Services. A request for records that has been granted
expedited processing shall be processed as soon as practicable. If a
request for expedited processing is denied, any appeal of that
determination shall be decided expeditiously.
(8) Appeals. An administrative appeal shall be decided within 20
days (excepting Saturdays, Sundays, and legal public holidays) from the
date the Office of FOIA Services receives such appeal except in the
unusual circumstances specified in paragraph (d)(5) of this section. In
those unusual circumstances, the 20-day time limit may be extended by
written notice to the person making the appeal setting forth the
unusual circumstances for such 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.
(e) Responses to requests for records--(1) Acknowledgment of
requests. Upon receipt of a request for records, the Office of FOIA
Services ordinarily will send the requester an acknowledgment letter
that provides an assigned request number for further reference and, if
necessary, confirms whether the requester is willing to pay fees.
(2) Responses to requests. (i) Any letter determining whether to
comply with a request will inform the requester of the right to seek
assistance from the Office of FOIA Services' FOIA Public Liaisons.
(ii) If the Office of FOIA Services makes a determination to grant
a request in whole or in part, it shall notify the requester in writing
of such determination, disclose records to the requester, and collect
any applicable fees.
(iii) If the Office of FOIA Services makes an adverse determination
regarding a request, it shall notify the requester of that
determination in writing. Adverse determinations, or denials of
requests, include decisions that: the requested record is exempt, in
whole or in part; the request does not reasonably describe the records
sought; the requested record does not exist (or is not subject to the
FOIA), cannot be located, or has previously been destroyed; or the
requested record is not readily producible in the form or format sought
by the requester. Adverse determinations also include designations of
requesters' fee category, denials of fee waiver requests, or denials of
requests for expedited processing.
(iv) An adverse determination letter shall be signed and include:
(A) The names and titles or positions of each person responsible
for the adverse determination;
(B) A brief statement of the reasons for the adverse determination,
including any FOIA exemption applied by the official denying the
request;
(C) For records disclosed in part, markings or annotations to show
the applicable FOIA exemption(s) and the amount of information deleted,
unless doing so would harm an interest protected by an applicable
exemption. The location of the information deleted shall also be
indicated on the record, if feasible;
(D) An estimate of the volume of any records or information
withheld by providing the number of pages withheld in their entirety or
some other reasonable form of estimation. This estimate is not required
if the volume is otherwise indicated by deletions marked on the records
that are disclosed in part or if providing an estimate would harm an
interest protected by an applicable FOIA exemption;
(E) A statement that the adverse determination may be appealed
under paragraph (f) of this section, and a description of the
requirements for filing an administrative appeal set forth in that
paragraph; and
(F) A statement of the right of the requester to seek dispute
resolution services from the Office of FOIA Services' FOIA Public
Liaisons or the Office of Government Information Services (``OGIS'').
(3) Mediation services. OGIS offers mediation services to resolve
disputes between requesters and the Office of FOIA Services as a non-
exclusive alternative to litigation. Requesters with concerns about the
handling of their requests may contact OGIS.
(f) Administrative appeals--(1) Administrative review. If a
requester receives an adverse determination as described in paragraph
(e)(2)(iii) of this section, or the request has not been timely
determined within the time period prescribed in paragraph (d)(2) of
this section or within an extended period permitted under paragraph
(d)(5) of this section, the requester may file an appeal to the Office
of the General Counsel consistent with the procedures described in
paragraphs (f)(2) through (4) of this section. A requester must
generally submit a timely administrative appeal before seeking review
by a court of an adverse determination.
(2) Time limits. Appeals can be submitted in writing or
electronically, as described in paragraph (f)(3) of this section. The
appeal must be received within 90 calendar days of the date of the
written denial of the adverse determination and must be received no
later than 11:59 p.m., Eastern Time, on the 90th day. If the Office of
FOIA Services has not issued a determination on a request, an appeal
may be submitted any time after the statutory time period for
responding to a request ends.
(3) Contents of appeal. Appeals should be clearly and prominently
identified at the top of the first page as ``Freedom of Information Act
Appeal'' and should provide the assigned FOIA
[[Page 30330]]
request number. The appeal should include a copy of the original
request and adverse determination. Appeals should include a statement
of the requester's arguments as to why the records requested should be
made available and the reason(s) the FOIA requester contends the
adverse determination was in error. If only a portion of the adverse
determination is appealed, the requester must specify which part is
being appealed.
(4) How to file and address an appeal. If submitted by U.S. mail or
delivery service, the appeal must be sent to the Office of FOIA
Services at 100 F Street NE, Washington, DC 20549. Appeals may also be
made by facsimile at 202-772-9337, email ([email protected]), or online at
the Commission's website (https://www.sec.gov). A legible return address
must be included with the FOIA appeal. The requester may also include
other contact information, such as a telephone number and/or email
address.
(5) Adjudication of appeals. The Office of the General Counsel has
the authority to grant or deny all appeals, in whole or in part. In
appropriate cases the Office of the General Counsel may refer appeals
to the Commission for determination. No opportunity for personal
appearance, oral argument, or hearing on appeal is provided. Upon
receipt of an appeal, the Office of FOIA Services ordinarily will send
the requester an acknowledgment letter that confirms receipt of the
requester's appeal.
(6) Determinations on appeals. A determination on an appeal must be
made in writing. A determination that denies an appeal, in whole or in
part, shall include a brief explanation of the basis for the denial,
identify the applicable FOIA exemptions asserted, and describe why the
exemptions apply. As applicable, the determination will provide the
requester with notification of the statutory right to file a lawsuit in
accordance with 5 U.S.C. 552(a)(4), and will inform the requester of
the mediation services offered by the Office of Government Information
Services as a non-exclusive alternative to litigation. If the Office of
FOIA Services' determination is remanded or modified on appeal, the
Office of the General Counsel will notify the requester of that
determination in writing.
(g) Fees--(1) In general. The Office of FOIA Services shall charge
fees for processing requests under the FOIA in accordance with the
provisions of this section and with the OMB Guidelines, except where
fees are limited under paragraph (g)(4) of this section or when a
waiver or reduction is granted under paragraph (g)(12) of this section.
To resolve any fee issues that arise under this section, the Office of
FOIA Services may contact a requester for additional information. The
Office of FOIA Services shall ensure that searches, review, and
duplication are conducted in an efficient manner. The Office of FOIA
Services ordinarily will collect all applicable fees before sending
copies of records to a requester. Requesters must pay fees by check,
certified check, or money order, or where possible, by electronic
payment.
(2) Definitions. For purposes of this section:
(i) Commercial use request is a request from or on behalf of a
person who seeks information for a use or purpose that furthers his or
her commercial, trade, or profit interests, which can include
furthering those interests through litigation. The Office of FOIA
Services will determine whether to place a requester in the commercial
use category on a case-by-case basis based on the requester's intended
use of the information.
(ii) Direct costs are those expenses the Office of FOIA Services
and any staff within the divisions and offices of the Commission incur
in searching for and duplicating (and, in the case of commercial use
requests, reviewing) records to respond to a FOIA request. Direct costs
include the salary of the employee(s) performing the work (i.e., the
basic rate of pay for the employee(s), plus 16% of that rate to cover
benefits), the cost of materials, and the cost of operating computers
and other electronic equipment, such as photocopiers and scanners.
Direct costs do not include overhead expenses such as the costs of
space and of heating or lighting a facility in which the service is
performed.
(iii) Duplication is reproducing a record, or the information
contained in it, to respond to a FOIA request. Copies can take the form
of paper, audiovisual materials, or electronic records, among others.
The Office of FOIA Services shall honor a requester's specified
preference of form or format of disclosure if the record is readily
reproducible with reasonable efforts in the requested form or format.
(iv) Educational institution is any school that operates a program
of scholarly research. A requester in this fee category must show that
the request is made in connection with the requester's role at the
educational institution and that the records are not sought for
commercial or personal use.
(v) Noncommercial scientific institution is an institution that is
not operated to further a commercial, trade, or profit interest and
that is operated solely for the purpose of conducting scientific
research, the results of which are not intended to promote any
particular product or industry. A requester in this category must show
that the request is authorized by and is made under the auspices of a
qualifying institution and that the records are sought to further
scientific research and are not for a commercial use.
(vi) Representative of the news media or news media requester is
any person or entity that gathers information of potential interest to
a segment of the public, uses its editorial skills to turn the raw
materials into a distinct work, and distributes that work to an
audience. The term ``news'' means information that is about current
events or that would be of current interest to the public.
(vii) Review is the examination of a record located in response to
a request to determine whether any portion of it is exempt from
disclosure. Review time includes doing all that is necessary to prepare
the record for disclosure, such as redacting the record and marking any
applicable exemptions. Review time also includes time spent obtaining
and considering formal objections to disclosure made by a submitter
under Sec. 200.83, but it does not include time spent resolving legal
or policy issues regarding the application of exemptions.
(viii) Search is the review, manually or by automated means, of
agency records for the purpose of locating those records that are
responsive to a request. Search time includes page-by-page or line-by-
line identification of information within records and the reasonable
efforts expended to locate and retrieve information from electronic
records.
(3) Charging fees. In responding to FOIA requests, the Office of
FOIA Services shall charge fees for the services summarized in chart
form in paragraph (g)(3)(i) of this section and explained in paragraphs
(g)(3)(ii) through (v) of this section, unless fees are limited under
paragraph (g)(4) of this section or a waiver or reduction of fees has
been granted under paragraph (g)(12) of this section.
(i) The four categories of requesters and the chargeable fees for
each are:
[[Page 30331]]
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Requester category Search fees Review fees Duplication fees
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
(A) Commercial use requesters...... Yes................... Yes................... Yes.
(B) Educational and noncommercial No.................... No.................... Yes (first 100 pages, or
scientific institutions. equivalent volume, free).
(C) Representatives of the news No.................... No.................... Yes (first 100 pages, or
media. equivalent volume, free).
(D) All other requesters........... Yes (first 2 hours No.................... Yes (first 100 pages, or
free). equivalent volume, free).
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
(ii) Search fees. (A) Search fees shall be charged for all
requests--other than requests made by educational institutions,
noncommercial scientific institutions, or representatives of the news
media--subject to the limitations of paragraph (g)(4) of this section.
The Office of FOIA Services may charge for time spent searching even if
no responsive records are located or it is determined that the records
are entirely exempt from disclosure. Search fees shall be the direct
costs of conducting the search by agency employees.
(B) Requesters shall be charged the direct costs associated with
conducting any search that requires the creation of a new computer
program to locate or identify responsive records. Requesters shall be
notified of the costs associated with creating and implementing such a
program and must agree to pay the associated costs before the costs may
be incurred.
(C) For requests that require the retrieval of agency records
stored at a Federal records center operated by the National Archives
and Records Administration (``NARA''), additional costs shall be
charged in accordance with the Transactional Billing Rate Schedule
established by NARA.
(iii) Review fees. 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, i.e., the review
agency employees conduct to determine whether an exemption applies to a
particular record or portion of a record. Also, if an exemption
asserted to withhold a record (or a portion thereof) is deemed to no
longer apply, any costs associated with the re-review of the records to
consider the use of other exemptions may be assessed as review fees.
Review fees shall be the direct costs of conducting the review by the
involved employees. Review fees can be charged even if the records
reviewed ultimately are not disclosed.
(iv) Search and review services (review applies to commercial-use
requesters only). (A) The Office of FOIA Services will establish and
charge average rates for the groups of employees' salary grades
typically involved in the search and review of records. Those groups
will consist of employees at:
(1) Grades SK-8 or below;
(2) Grades SK-9 to SK-13; and
(3) Grades SK-14 or above.
(B) The average rates will be based on the hourly salary (i.e.,
basic salary plus locality payment), plus 16 percent for benefits, of
employees who routinely perform search and review services. The average
hourly rates are listed on the FOIA web page of the Commission's
website at https://www.sec.gov and will be updated as salaries change.
Fees will be charged in quarter-hour increments. No search fee or
review fee will be charged for a quarter-hour period unless more than
half of that period is required for search or review.
(v) Duplication fees. Duplication fees shall be charged to all
requesters, subject to the limitations of paragraph (g)(4) of this
section. Fees for either a photocopy or printout of a record (no more
than one copy of which need be supplied) are identified on the FOIA web
page of the Commission's website at www.sec.gov. For copies of records
produced on tapes, disks, or other media, the Office of FOIA Services
shall charge the direct costs of producing the copy, including operator
time. Where paper documents must be scanned to comply with a
requester's preference to receive the records in an electronic format,
the requester shall pay the direct costs associated with scanning those
materials. For all other forms of duplication, the Office of FOIA
Services shall also charge the direct costs.
(4) Limitations on charging fees. (i) No search or review fees will
be charged for requests by educational institutions (unless the
requests are sought for a commercial use), noncommercial scientific
institutions, or representatives of the news media.
(ii) Except for requesters seeking records for a commercial use,
the Office of FOIA Services shall provide without charge the first 100
pages of duplication (or the cost equivalent for other media) and the
first two hours of search.
(iii) Fees will not be charged where the costs of collecting and
processing the fee are likely to equal or exceed the amount of the fee.
(iv) The Office of FOIA Services will not assess search fees (or,
in the case of requests from representatives of the news media or
educational or noncommercial scientific institutions, duplication fees)
when 5 U.S.C. 552(a)(4)(A)(viii) prohibits the assessment of those
fees.
(5) Notice of anticipated fees. (i) When the Office of FOIA
Services determines or estimates that the fees to be assessed in
accordance with this section will exceed the amount it would cost the
Office of FOIA Services to collect and process the fees, the Office of
FOIA Services shall notify the requester of the actual or estimated
amount of fees, unless the requester has indicated a willingness to pay
fees as high as the estimated fees. If only a portion of the fee can be
estimated readily, the Office of FOIA Services shall advise the
requester accordingly. If the requester is not a commercial use
requester, the notice shall specify that the requester is entitled to
the statutory entitlements of 100 pages of duplication at no charge
and, if the requester is charged search fees, two hours of search time
at no charge.
(ii) In cases in which a requester has been notified that the
actual or estimated fees will amount to more than it would cost the
Office of FOIA Services to collect and process the fees, or amount to
more than the amount the requester indicated a willingness to pay, the
Office of FOIA Services will do no further work on the request 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,
designates that the requester seeks only that which can be provided by
the statutory entitlements. The Office of FOIA Services will toll the
response period while it notifies the requester of the actual or
estimated amount of fees and this time will be excluded from the 20
working day time
[[Page 30332]]
limit (as specified in paragraph (d)(2) of this section). The
requester's agreement to pay fees must be made in writing, must
designate an exact dollar amount the requester is willing to pay, and
must be received within 30 calendar days from the date of the
notification of the fee estimate. If the requester fails to submit an
agreement to pay the anticipated fees within 30 calendar days from the
date of the Office of FOIA Services' fee notice, the Office of FOIA
Services will presume that the requester is no longer interested in the
records and notify the requester that the request has been closed.
(iii) The Office of FOIA Services shall make available their FOIA
Public Liaisons or other FOIA professionals to assist any requester in
reformulating a request to meet the requester's needs at a lower cost.
(6) Charges for other services. Although not required to provide
special services, if the Office of FOIA Services chooses to do so as a
matter of administrative discretion, the direct costs of providing the
service shall be charged. Examples of such special 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. The cost for the attestation of records with the Commission seal
(i.e., certifying records as true copies) is $4.00 per record, which
may be waived for records certified electronically. Requests for
certified copies of records or documents shall ordinarily be serviced
within 20 working days. Requests will be processed in the order in
which they are received.
(7) Charging interest. The Office of FOIA Services may begin to
charge interest on any unpaid bill starting on the 31st calendar day
following the date of billing the requester. Interest charges shall be
assessed at the rate provided in 31 U.S.C. 3717 and accrue from the
date of the billing until the payment is received. The Office of FOIA
Services shall take all steps authorized by the Debt Collection Act of
1982, as amended, and the Commission's Rules Relating to Debt
Collection to effect payment, including offset, disclosure to consumer
reporting agencies, and use of collection agencies.
(8) Aggregating requests. If the Office of FOIA Services reasonably
believes that a requester or a group of requesters acting in concert is
attempting to divide a request into a series of requests for the
purpose of avoiding fees, the Office of FOIA Services may aggregate
those requests and charge accordingly. Among the factors the Office of
FOIA Services shall consider in deciding whether to aggregate are
whether the requests were submitted close in time and whether the
requests seek documents about related matters. The Office of FOIA
Services may presume that multiple requests that involve related
matters made by the same requester or a group of requesters within a 30
calendar day period have been made to avoid fees. For requests
separated by a longer period, the Office of FOIA Services will
aggregate them only where it determines that aggregation is warranted
in view of all the circumstances involved.
(9) Advance payments. (i) For requests other than those described
in paragraphs (g)(9)(ii) and (iii) of this section, the Office of FOIA
Services shall not require a requester to make advance payment (i.e.,
payment made before the Office of FOIA Services begins to process or
continues to work on a request). Payment owed for work already
completed (i.e., payment before copies are sent to a requester) is not
an advance payment.
(ii) When the Office of FOIA Services determines or estimates that
a total fee to be charged under this section will exceed $250.00, it
shall notify the requester of the actual or estimated fee and may
require the requester to make an advance payment of the entire
anticipated fee before beginning to process the request. A notice under
this paragraph shall offer the requester an opportunity to discuss the
matter with the Office of FOIA Services' FOIA Public Liaisons or other
FOIA professionals to modify the request in an effort to meet the
requester's needs at a lower cost.
(iii) When a requester has previously failed to pay a properly
charged FOIA fee to the Office of FOIA Services or other Federal agency
within 30 calendar days of the date of billing, the Office of FOIA
Services shall notify the requester that he or she is required 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
Office of FOIA Services begins to process a new request or continues
processing a pending request from that requester. Where the Office of
FOIA Services has a reasonable basis to believe that a requester has
misrepresented the requester's identity to avoid paying outstanding
fees, it may require that the requester provide proof of identity and
pay in advance.
(iv) When the Office of FOIA Services requires advance payment or
payment due under paragraphs (g)(9)(ii) and (iii) of this section, the
Office of FOIA Services will not further process the request until the
required payment is made. The Office of FOIA Services will toll the
processing of the request while it notifies the requester of the
advanced payment due and this time will be excluded from the 20 working
day time limit (as specified in paragraph (d)(2) of this section). If
the requester does not pay the advance payment within 30 calendar days
from the date of the Office of FOIA Services' fee notice, the Office of
FOIA Services will presume that the requester is no longer interested
in the records and notify the requester that the request has been
closed.
(10) Tolling. When necessary for the Office of FOIA Services to
clarify issues regarding fee assessment with the requester, the time
limit for responding to a FOIA request is tolled until the Office of
FOIA Services resolves such issues with the requester.
(11) Other statutes specifically providing for fees. The fee
schedule of this section does not apply to fees charged under any
statute (except the FOIA) that specifically requires an agency to set
and collect fees for particular types of records. In instances where
records responsive to a request are subject to a statutorily-based fee
schedule program, the Office of FOIA Services shall inform the
requester how to obtain records from that program. Provision of such
records is not handled under the FOIA.
(12) Requirements for waiver or reduction of fees. (i) Records
responsive to a request will be furnished without charge, or at a
charge reduced below that established under paragraph (g)(3) of this
section, if the requester asks for such a waiver in writing and the
Office of FOIA Services determines, after consideration of information
provided by the requester, that the requester has demonstrated that:
(A) 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
(B) Disclosure of the information is not primarily in the
commercial interest of the requester.
(ii) In deciding whether disclosure of the requested information is
likely to contribute significantly to public understanding of the
operations or activities of the government, the Office of FOIA Services
shall consider each of the following four factors:
(A) The subject of the request: 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
[[Page 30333]]
the Federal Government, with a connection that is direct and clear, not
remote or attenuated.
(B) The informative value of the information to be disclosed:
whether the disclosure is likely to contribute to an understanding of
government operations or activities. The disclosable portions of the
requested records must be meaningfully informative about government
operations or activities to be likely to contribute to an increased
public understanding of those operations or activities. The disclosure
of information that already is in the public domain, in either a
duplicative or a substantially identical form, would not be likely to
contribute to such understanding.
(C) The contribution to an understanding of the subject by the
public likely to result from disclosure: whether disclosure of the
requested information will 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.
(D) The significance of the contribution to public understanding:
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 prior to the disclosure must
be significantly enhanced by the disclosure.
(iii) In deciding whether disclosure of the requested information
is primarily in the commercial interest of the requester, the Office of
FOIA Services shall consider the following factors:
(A) The existence and magnitude of a commercial interest: whether
the requester has a commercial interest that would be furthered by the
requested disclosure. The Office of FOIA Services shall consider any
commercial interest of the requester (with reference to the definition
of ``commercial use requester'' in paragraph (g)(2)(i) of this
section), 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 to provide explanatory information regarding
this consideration.
(B) The primary interest in disclosure: whether the public interest
is greater than any identified commercial interest in disclosure. The
Office of FOIA Services ordinarily shall presume that where a news
media requester has satisfied the public interest standard, 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.
(iv) If only a portion of the requested records satisfies both the
requirements for a waiver or reduction of fees, a waiver or reduction
of fees will be granted for only that portion.
(v) Requests for a waiver or reduction of fees should address all
the factors identified in paragraphs (g)(12)(ii) and (iii) of this
section.
(vi) Denials of requests for a waiver or reduction of fees are
adverse determinations (as defined in paragraph (e)(2)(iii) of this
section) and may be appealed to the General Counsel in accordance with
the procedures set forth in paragraph (f) of this section.
Sec. 200.80a [Removed]
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3. Remove Sec. 200.80a.
Sec. 200.80b [Removed]
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4. Remove Sec. 200.80b.
Sec. 200.80c [Removed]
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5. Remove Sec. 200.80c.
Sec. 200.80d [Removed]
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6. Remove Sec. 200.80d.
Sec. 200.80e [Removed]
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7. Remove Sec. 200.80e.
Sec. 200.80f [Removed]
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8. Remove Sec. 200.80f.
By the Commission.
Dated: June 25, 2018.
Brent J. Fields,
Secretary.
[FR Doc. 2018-13943 Filed 6-27-18; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 8011-01-P