Privacy Act of 1974; System of Records, 71089-71091 [2021-26943]
Download as PDF
Federal Register / Vol. 86, No. 237 / Tuesday, December 14, 2021 / Notices
comprehensive. A complete list of laws
and regulations applicable to public
lands in Arizona may be viewed at:
https://www.azd.uscourts.gov/sites/
default/files/general-orders/19-14.pdf.
1. Environmental Resource Management
and Protection
a. No person may deface, disturb,
remove, or destroy any natural object—
43 CFR 8365.1–5(a)(1).
b. Fireworks: The use, sale, or
possession of personal fireworks is
prohibited—43 CFR 9212.1(h).
c. Black Water Discharge: The
discharge and dumping of black water
onto the ground surface is prohibited.
Black water is defined as wastewater
containing feces, urine, and/or flush
water—43 CFR 8365.1–1(b)(3).
d. Trash: The discharge of any trash
or litter onto the ground surface is
prohibited. All event participants must
pack out or properly dispose of all trash
at an appropriate disposal facility—43
CFR 8365.1–1(b)(1).
e. Hazardous Materials: The dumping
or discharge of vehicle oil, petroleum
products, or other hazardous household,
commercial, or industrial refuse or
waste onto the ground surface is
prohibited. This applies to all
recreational vehicles, trailers,
motorhomes, port-a-potties, generators,
and other camp infrastructure—43 CFR
8365.1–1(b)(3).
2. Alcohol/Prohibited Substance
a. Possession of an open container of
an alcoholic beverage by the driver or
operator of any motorized vehicle,
whether or not the vehicle is in motion,
is prohibited—43 CFR 8365.1–6.
b. Possession of alcohol by minors.
Consumption or possession of any
alcoholic beverage by a person under 21
years of age on public lands is
prohibited—43 CFR 8365.1–6
Supplementary Rule 63 FR 43716.
c. Operation of a motor vehicle while
under the influence of alcohol,
marijuana, narcotics, or dangerous drugs
is prohibited—43 CFR 8341.1(f)(3).
3. Disorderly Conduct
a. Obstructing, resisting, or attempting
to elude a law enforcement officer, or
fails to follow their orders or directions
is prohibited—43 CFR 8365.1–4(a)(4).
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4. Motor Vehicles
a. Motor vehicles must comply with
the following requirements:
i. The operator of a motor vehicle
must possess a valid driver’s license—
43 CFR 8341.1(e).
ii. Motor vehicles and trailers must
possess evidence of valid registration—
43 CFR 8341.1(d).
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18:24 Dec 13, 2021
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iii. Motor vehicles must not exceed
the posted speed limit—43 CFR
8341.1(f)(2).
5. Pets or Other Animals
a. Allowing any pet or other animal to
be unrestrained is prohibited. All pets
must be restrained by a leash of not
more than six feet in length—43 CFR
8365.2–1(c).
Enforcement: Any person who
violates these closures or restrictions
may be tried before a United States
magistrate and fined in accordance with
18 U.S.C. 3571, imprisoned no more
than 12 months under 43 U.S.C. 1733(a)
and 43 CFR 8360.0–7, or both. In
accordance with 43 CFR 8365.1–7, State
or local officials may also impose
penalties for violations of Arizona law.
(Authority: 43 CFR 8364.1)
Adam Cochran,
Acting Field Manager.
[FR Doc. 2021–26958 Filed 12–13–21; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4310–32–P
NATIONAL INDIAN GAMING
COMMISSION
Privacy Act of 1974; System of
Records
National Indian Gaming
Commission.
ACTION: Notice of a new system of
records.
AGENCY:
In accordance with the
Privacy Act of 1974, the National Indian
Gaming Commission (NIGC) proposes to
establish a new system of records
entitled, ‘‘NIGC Reasonable
Accommodations Records.’’ This system
of records will include information that
the NIGC collects and maintains on
applicants for employment and
employees who request and/or receive
reasonable accommodations from NIGC
for medical or religious reasons.
DATES: Submit comments on or before
January 13, 2022. This new system is
effective upon publication in the
Federal Register, except for the routine
uses, which are effective January 13,
2022.
SUMMARY:
You may submit written
comments by email to privacy@nigc.gov.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Tim
Osumi, 202–264–0676, tim.osumi@
nigc.gov.
ADDRESSES:
In
accordance with the Privacy Act of
1974, the National Indian Gaming
Commission (NIGC) proposes to
establish a new system of records titled,
‘‘NIGC Reasonable Accommodations
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
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Fmt 4703
Sfmt 4703
71089
Records.’’ This system of records covers
NIGC’s collection and maintenance of
records on applicants for employment,
employees, and other individuals who
participate in NIGC programs or
activities who request or receive
reasonable accommodations or other
appropriate modifications from NIGC
for medical or religious reasons. Title V
of the Rehabilitation Act of 1973, as
amended, prohibits discrimination in
services and employment on the basis of
disability, and Title VII of the Civil
Rights Act of 1974 prohibits
discrimination, including on the basis of
religion. These prohibitions on
discrimination require Federal agencies
to provide reasonable accommodations
to individuals with disabilities and
those with sincerely held religious
beliefs unless doing so would impose an
undue hardship on the agency. In some
instances, individuals may request
modifications to their workspace,
schedule, duties, or other requirements
for documented medical reasons that
may not qualify as a disability but may
necessitate an appropriate modification
to workplace policies and practices.
Reasonable accommodations may
include, but are not limited to: Making
existing facilities readily accessible to
individuals with disabilities;
restructuring jobs, modifying work
schedules or places of work, and
providing flexible scheduling for
medical appointments or religious
observance; acquiring or modifying
equipment or examinations or training
materials; providing qualified readers
and interpreters, personal assistants,
service animals; granting permission to
wear religious dress, hairstyles, or facial
hair or to observe a religious prohibition
against wearing certain garments;
considering requests for medical and
religious exemptions to specific
workplace requirements; and making
other modifications to workplace
policies and practices. NIGC’s Human
Resources Office processes requests for
reasonable accommodations from
employees and applicants for
employment, respectively, who require
an accommodation due to a medical or
religious reason. NIGC’s Human
Resources Office also processes requests
based on documented medical reasons
that may not qualify as a disability but
that necessitate an appropriate
modification to workplace policies and
practices. The request, documentation
provided in support of the request, any
evaluation conducted internally or by a
third party under contract to NIGC, the
decision regarding whether to grant or
deny a request, and the details and
conditions of the reasonable
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71090
Federal Register / Vol. 86, No. 237 / Tuesday, December 14, 2021 / Notices
accommodation are all included in this
system of records. NIGC has provided a
report of this system of records to the
Committee on Oversight and
Government Reform of the House of
Representatives, the Committee on
Homeland Security and Governmental
Affairs of the Senate, and the Office of
Management and Budget (OMB),
pursuant to 5 U.S.C. 552a(r) and OMB
Circular A–108, ‘‘Federal Agency
Responsibilities for Review, Reporting,
and Publication under the Privacy Act,’’
dated December 23, 2016. This system
will be included in the NIGC inventory
of record systems.
CATEGORIES OF INDIVIDUALS COVERED BY THE
SYSTEM:
NIGC Reasonable Accommodations
Records.
Applicants for Federal employment,
Federal employees, and visitors to
Federal buildings who requested and/or
received reasonable accommodations or
other appropriate modifications from
NIGC for medical or religious reasons. It
also covers individuals or
representatives (e.g., a family member or
attorney) authorized to request
reasonable accommodation on behalf of
an applicant for employment or
employee.
SECURITY CLASSIFICATION:
CATEGORIES OF RECORDS IN THE SYSTEM:
SYSTEM NAME AND NUMBER:
Unclassified.
SYSTEM LOCATION:
Records are maintained primarily by
the NIGC Human Resource Office
located at 90 K Street NE, Suite 200,
Washington, DC 20002. Records may be
located in locked cabinets and offices,
on NIGC’s local area network, or in
designated U.S. data centers for
FedRAMP-authorized cloud service
providers.
SYSTEM MANAGER(S):
Human Resources Administrator, 90
K Street NE, Suite 200, Washington, DC
20002.
AUTHORITY FOR MAINTENANCE OF THE SYSTEM:
The Rehabilitation Act of 1973, 29
U.S.C. 701, 791, 794; Title VII of the
Civil Rights Act of 1964, 42 U.S.C.
2000e; 29 CFR 1605 (Guidelines on
Discrimination Because of Religion); 29
CFR 1614 (Federal Sector Equal
Employment Opportunity); 29 CFR 1614
(Regulations to Implement the Equal
Employment Provisions of the
Americans With Disabilities Act); 5
U.S.C. 302, 1103; Executive Order
13164, Requiring Federal Agencies to
Establish Procedures to Facilitate the
Provision of Reasonable
Accommodation (July 26, 2000); and
Executive Order 13548, Increasing
Federal Employment of Individuals
with Disabilities (July 26, 2010).
PURPOSE(S) OF THE SYSTEM:
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process, evaluate, and make decisions
on individual requests; and to track and
report the processing of such requests
agency-wide to comply with applicable
requirements in law and policy.
The purpose of this system of records
is to allow NIGC to collect and maintain
records on applicants for employment,
employees, and other individuals who
participate in NIGC programs or
activities who request or receive
reasonable accommodations or other
appropriate modifications from NIGC
for medical or religious reasons; to
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18:24 Dec 13, 2021
Jkt 256001
• Requester’s name;
• Requester’s status (applicant or
current employee);
• Date of request;
• Employee’s position title, grade,
series, step;
• Position title, grade, series, step of
the position the requester is applying
for;
• Requester’s contact information
(addresses, phone numbers, and email
addresses);
• Description of the requester’s
medical condition or disability and any
medical documentation provided in
support of the request; Requester’s
statement of a sincerely held religious
belief and any additional information
provided concerning that religious
belief and the need for an
accommodation to exercise that belief;
• Description of the accommodation
being requested;
• Description of previous requests for
accommodation;
• Whether the request was made
orally or in writing;
• Documentation by an NIGC official
concerning whether the disability is
obvious, and the accommodation is
obvious and uncomplicated, whether
medical documentation is required to
evaluate the request, whether research is
necessary regarding possible
accommodations, and any extenuating
circumstances that prevent the NIGC
official from meeting the relevant
timeframe;
• Whether the request for reasonable
accommodation was granted or denied,
and if denied the reason for the denial;
• The amount of time taken to
process the request;
• The sources of technical assistance
consulted in trying to identify a possible
reasonable accommodation;
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Fmt 4703
Sfmt 4703
• Any reports or evaluations prepared
in determining whether to grant or deny
the request; and
• Any other information collected or
developed in connection with the
request for a reasonable
accommodation.
RECORD SOURCE CATEGORIES:
Information is obtained from the
individuals who request and/or receive
a reasonable accommodation or other
appropriate modification from NIGC,
directly or indirectly from an
individual’s medical provider or
another medical professional who
evaluates the request, directly or
indirectly from an individual’s religious
or spiritual advisors or institutions, and
from management officials.
ROUTINE USES OF RECORDS MAINTAINED IN THE
SYSTEM, INCLUDING CATEGORIES OF USERS AND
PURPOSES OF SUCH USES:
In addition to those disclosures
generally permitted under 5 U.S.C.
552a(b) of the Privacy Act, all or a
portion of the records or information
contained in this system may be
disclosed outside NIGC as a routine use
pursuant to 5 U.S.C. 552a(b)(3) as
follows:
a. To the Department of Justice,
including Offices of the U.S. Attorneys;
another Federal agency conducting
litigation or in proceedings before any
court, adjudicative, or administrative
body; another party in litigation before
a court, adjudicative, or administrative
body; or to a court, adjudicative, or
administrative body. Such disclosure is
permitted only when it is relevant or
necessary to the litigation or proceeding,
and one of the following is a party to the
litigation or has an interest in such
litigation:
(1) NIGC, or any component thereof;
(2) Any employee or former employee
of NIGC in his or her official capacity;
(3) Any employee or former employee
of NIGC in his or her capacity where the
Department of Justice or NIGC has
agreed to represent the employee;
(4) The United States, a Federal
agency, or another party in litigation
before a court, adjudicative, or
administrative body, upon the NIGC
General Counsel’s approval, pursuant to
5 CFR part 295 or otherwise.
b. To the appropriate Federal, State,
or local agency responsible for
investigating, prosecuting, enforcing, or
implementing a statute, rule, regulation,
or order, when a record, either on its
face or in conjunction with other
information, indicates it is relevant to a
violation or potential violation of civil
or criminal law or regulation.
c. To a member of Congress for the
record of an individual in response to
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Federal Register / Vol. 86, No. 237 / Tuesday, December 14, 2021 / Notices
an inquiry made at the request of the
individual to whom the record pertains.
d. To the National Archives and
Records Administration (NARA) for
records management inspections being
conducted under the authority of 44
U.S.C. 2904 and 2906.
e. To appropriate agencies, entities,
and persons when (1) NIGC suspects or
has confirmed that there has been a
breach of the system of records; (2)
NIGC has determined that as a result of
the suspected or confirmed breach,
there is a risk of harm to individuals,
NIGC (including its information
systems, programs, and operations), the
Federal Government, or national
security; and (3) the disclosure made to
such agencies, entities, and persons is
reasonably necessary to assist in
connection with NIGC’s efforts to
respond to the suspected or confirmed
breach or to prevent, minimize, or
remedy such harm.
f. To another Federal agency or
Federal entity, when NIGC determines
that information from the system of
records is reasonably necessary to assist
the recipient agency or entity in (1)
responding to a suspected or confirmed
breach or (2) preventing, minimizing, or
remedying the risk of harm to
individuals, the recipient agency or
entity (including its information
systems, programs, and operations), the
Federal Government, or national
security, resulting from a suspected or
confirmed breach.
g. To contractors, grantees, experts,
consultants, or volunteers performing or
working on a contract, service, grant,
cooperative agreement, or other
assignment for NIGC when NIGC
determines that it is necessary to
accomplish an agency function related
to this system of records. Individuals
provided information under this routine
use are subject to the same Privacy Act
requirements and limitations on
disclosure as are applicable to NIGC
employees.
h. To another federal agency or
commission with responsibility for
labor or employment relations or other
issues, including equal employment
opportunity and reasonable
accommodation issues, when that
agency or commission has jurisdiction
over reasonable accommodation.
i. To an authorized appeal grievance
examiner, formal complaints examiner,
administrative judge, equal employment
opportunity investigator, arbitrator, or
other duly authorized official who
engages in investigation or settlement of
a grievance, complaint, or appeal filed
by an individual who requested a
reasonable accommodation or other
appropriate modification.
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18:24 Dec 13, 2021
Jkt 256001
j. To another Federal agency,
including but not limited to the Equal
Employment Opportunity Commission
and the Office of Special counsel to
obtain advice regarding statutory,
regulatory, policy, and other
requirements related to reasonable
accommodation.
k. To a Federal agency or entity
authorized to procure assistive
technologies and services in response to
a request for reasonable
accommodation.
l. To first aid and safety personnel if
the individual’s medical condition
requires emergency treatment.
m. To another Federal agency or
oversight body charged with evaluating
NIGC’s compliance with the laws,
regulations, and policies governing
reasonable accommodation requests.
n. To another Federal agency
pursuant to a written agreement with
NIGC to provide services (such as
medical evaluations), when necessary,
in support of reasonable
accommodation decisions.
POLICIES AND PRACTICES FOR STORAGE OF
RECORDS:
The records in this system of records
are stored electronically on NIGC’s local
area network or with
FedRAMPauthorized cloud service
providers segregated from nongovernment traffic and data, with access
limited to a small number of personnel.
In addition, paper records are stored in
locked file cabinets in access-restricted
offices.
POLICIES AND PRACTICES FOR RETRIEVAL OF
RECORDS:
Records may be retrieved by name or
other unique personal identifiers.
POLICIES AND PRACTICES FOR RETENTION AND
DISPOSAL OF RECORDS:
Records in this system of records are
maintained in accordance with GRS 2.3
and are destroyed three years after
separation from the agency or all
appeals are concluded, whichever is
later, but longer retention is authorized
if requested for business use.
ADMINISTRATIVE, TECHNICAL, AND PHYSICAL
SAFEGUARDS:
Strict controls have been imposed to
minimize the risk of compromising the
information that is stored. Access to the
paper and electronic records in this
system of records is limited to those
individuals who have a need to know
the information for the performance of
their official duties and who have
appropriate clearances or permissions.
RECORD ACCESS PROCEDURES:
Individuals seeking notification of
and access to their records in this
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Fmt 4703
Sfmt 9990
71091
system of records may submit a request
in writing to the National Indian
Gaming Commission, FOIA Office, 1849
C Street NW, Mail Stop # 1621
Washington, DC 20240, ATTN: NIGC
Privacy Officer; or by emailing foia_
requests@NIGC.gov. Individuals must
furnish the following information for
their records to be located: 1. Full name.
2. Signature. 3. The reason why the
individual believes this system contains
information about him/her. 4. The
address to which the information
should be sent. Individuals requesting
access must also comply with NIGC’s
Privacy Act regulations regarding
verification of identity and access to
records (25 CFR 515).
CONTESTING RECORD PROCEDURES:
Individuals wishing to request
amendment of records about them
contained in this system of records may
do so by writing to the National Indian
Gaming Commission, FOIA Office, 1849
C Street NW, Mail Stop # 1621
Washington, DC 20240, ATTN: NIGC
Privacy Officer; or by emailing foia_
request@nigc.gov. Requests for
amendment of records should include
the words ‘‘PRIVACY ACT
AMENDMENT REQUEST’’ in capital
letters at the top of the request letter or
in the subject line of the email.
Individuals must furnish the following
information for their records to be
located:
1. Full name.
2. Signature.
3. Precise identification of the
information to be amended.
Individuals requesting amendment
must also comply with NIGC’s Privacy
Act regulations regarding verification of
identity and access to records (25 CFR
515). The agency procedures whereby
an individual can be notified at his or
her request how he or she can contest
the content of any record pertaining to
him or her in the system.
NOTIFICATION PROCEDURES:
See ‘‘Record Access Procedures.’’.
EXEMPTIONS PROMULGATED FOR THE SYSTEM:
Any Privacy Act exemptions
promulgated for the system.
HISTORY:
None.
Dated: December 7, 2021.
E. Sequoyah Simermeyer,
Chairman.
[FR Doc. 2021–26943 Filed 12–13–21; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 7565–01–P
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Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 86, Number 237 (Tuesday, December 14, 2021)]
[Notices]
[Pages 71089-71091]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2021-26943]
=======================================================================
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
NATIONAL INDIAN GAMING COMMISSION
Privacy Act of 1974; System of Records
AGENCY: National Indian Gaming Commission.
ACTION: Notice of a new system of records.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SUMMARY: In accordance with the Privacy Act of 1974, the National
Indian Gaming Commission (NIGC) proposes to establish a new system of
records entitled, ``NIGC Reasonable Accommodations Records.'' This
system of records will include information that the NIGC collects and
maintains on applicants for employment and employees who request and/or
receive reasonable accommodations from NIGC for medical or religious
reasons.
DATES: Submit comments on or before January 13, 2022. This new system
is effective upon publication in the Federal Register, except for the
routine uses, which are effective January 13, 2022.
ADDRESSES: You may submit written comments by email to
[email protected].
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Tim Osumi, 202-264-0676,
[email protected].
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: In accordance with the Privacy Act of 1974,
the National Indian Gaming Commission (NIGC) proposes to establish a
new system of records titled, ``NIGC Reasonable Accommodations
Records.'' This system of records covers NIGC's collection and
maintenance of records on applicants for employment, employees, and
other individuals who participate in NIGC programs or activities who
request or receive reasonable accommodations or other appropriate
modifications from NIGC for medical or religious reasons. Title V of
the Rehabilitation Act of 1973, as amended, prohibits discrimination in
services and employment on the basis of disability, and Title VII of
the Civil Rights Act of 1974 prohibits discrimination, including on the
basis of religion. These prohibitions on discrimination require Federal
agencies to provide reasonable accommodations to individuals with
disabilities and those with sincerely held religious beliefs unless
doing so would impose an undue hardship on the agency. In some
instances, individuals may request modifications to their workspace,
schedule, duties, or other requirements for documented medical reasons
that may not qualify as a disability but may necessitate an appropriate
modification to workplace policies and practices. Reasonable
accommodations may include, but are not limited to: Making existing
facilities readily accessible to individuals with disabilities;
restructuring jobs, modifying work schedules or places of work, and
providing flexible scheduling for medical appointments or religious
observance; acquiring or modifying equipment or examinations or
training materials; providing qualified readers and interpreters,
personal assistants, service animals; granting permission to wear
religious dress, hairstyles, or facial hair or to observe a religious
prohibition against wearing certain garments; considering requests for
medical and religious exemptions to specific workplace requirements;
and making other modifications to workplace policies and practices.
NIGC's Human Resources Office processes requests for reasonable
accommodations from employees and applicants for employment,
respectively, who require an accommodation due to a medical or
religious reason. NIGC's Human Resources Office also processes requests
based on documented medical reasons that may not qualify as a
disability but that necessitate an appropriate modification to
workplace policies and practices. The request, documentation provided
in support of the request, any evaluation conducted internally or by a
third party under contract to NIGC, the decision regarding whether to
grant or deny a request, and the details and conditions of the
reasonable
[[Page 71090]]
accommodation are all included in this system of records. NIGC has
provided a report of this system of records to the Committee on
Oversight and Government Reform of the House of Representatives, the
Committee on Homeland Security and Governmental Affairs of the Senate,
and the Office of Management and Budget (OMB), pursuant to 5 U.S.C.
552a(r) and OMB Circular A-108, ``Federal Agency Responsibilities for
Review, Reporting, and Publication under the Privacy Act,'' dated
December 23, 2016. This system will be included in the NIGC inventory
of record systems.
SYSTEM NAME AND NUMBER:
NIGC Reasonable Accommodations Records.
SECURITY CLASSIFICATION:
Unclassified.
SYSTEM LOCATION:
Records are maintained primarily by the NIGC Human Resource Office
located at 90 K Street NE, Suite 200, Washington, DC 20002. Records may
be located in locked cabinets and offices, on NIGC's local area
network, or in designated U.S. data centers for FedRAMP-authorized
cloud service providers.
SYSTEM MANAGER(S):
Human Resources Administrator, 90 K Street NE, Suite 200,
Washington, DC 20002.
AUTHORITY FOR MAINTENANCE OF THE SYSTEM:
The Rehabilitation Act of 1973, 29 U.S.C. 701, 791, 794; Title VII
of the Civil Rights Act of 1964, 42 U.S.C. 2000e; 29 CFR 1605
(Guidelines on Discrimination Because of Religion); 29 CFR 1614
(Federal Sector Equal Employment Opportunity); 29 CFR 1614 (Regulations
to Implement the Equal Employment Provisions of the Americans With
Disabilities Act); 5 U.S.C. 302, 1103; Executive Order 13164, Requiring
Federal Agencies to Establish Procedures to Facilitate the Provision of
Reasonable Accommodation (July 26, 2000); and Executive Order 13548,
Increasing Federal Employment of Individuals with Disabilities (July
26, 2010).
PURPOSE(S) OF THE SYSTEM:
The purpose of this system of records is to allow NIGC to collect
and maintain records on applicants for employment, employees, and other
individuals who participate in NIGC programs or activities who request
or receive reasonable accommodations or other appropriate modifications
from NIGC for medical or religious reasons; to process, evaluate, and
make decisions on individual requests; and to track and report the
processing of such requests agency-wide to comply with applicable
requirements in law and policy.
CATEGORIES OF INDIVIDUALS COVERED BY THE SYSTEM:
Applicants for Federal employment, Federal employees, and visitors
to Federal buildings who requested and/or received reasonable
accommodations or other appropriate modifications from NIGC for medical
or religious reasons. It also covers individuals or representatives
(e.g., a family member or attorney) authorized to request reasonable
accommodation on behalf of an applicant for employment or employee.
CATEGORIES OF RECORDS IN THE SYSTEM:
Requester's name;
Requester's status (applicant or current employee);
Date of request;
Employee's position title, grade, series, step;
Position title, grade, series, step of the position the
requester is applying for;
Requester's contact information (addresses, phone numbers,
and email addresses);
Description of the requester's medical condition or
disability and any medical documentation provided in support of the
request; Requester's statement of a sincerely held religious belief and
any additional information provided concerning that religious belief
and the need for an accommodation to exercise that belief;
Description of the accommodation being requested;
Description of previous requests for accommodation;
Whether the request was made orally or in writing;
Documentation by an NIGC official concerning whether the
disability is obvious, and the accommodation is obvious and
uncomplicated, whether medical documentation is required to evaluate
the request, whether research is necessary regarding possible
accommodations, and any extenuating circumstances that prevent the NIGC
official from meeting the relevant timeframe;
Whether the request for reasonable accommodation was
granted or denied, and if denied the reason for the denial;
The amount of time taken to process the request;
The sources of technical assistance consulted in trying to
identify a possible reasonable accommodation;
Any reports or evaluations prepared in determining whether
to grant or deny the request; and
Any other information collected or developed in connection
with the request for a reasonable accommodation.
RECORD SOURCE CATEGORIES:
Information is obtained from the individuals who request and/or
receive a reasonable accommodation or other appropriate modification
from NIGC, directly or indirectly from an individual's medical provider
or another medical professional who evaluates the request, directly or
indirectly from an individual's religious or spiritual advisors or
institutions, and from management officials.
ROUTINE USES OF RECORDS MAINTAINED IN THE SYSTEM, INCLUDING CATEGORIES
OF USERS AND PURPOSES OF SUCH USES:
In addition to those disclosures generally permitted under 5 U.S.C.
552a(b) of the Privacy Act, all or a portion of the records or
information contained in this system may be disclosed outside NIGC as a
routine use pursuant to 5 U.S.C. 552a(b)(3) as follows:
a. To the Department of Justice, including Offices of the U.S.
Attorneys; another Federal agency conducting litigation or in
proceedings before any court, adjudicative, or administrative body;
another party in litigation before a court, adjudicative, or
administrative body; or to a court, adjudicative, or administrative
body. Such disclosure is permitted only when it is relevant or
necessary to the litigation or proceeding, and one of the following is
a party to the litigation or has an interest in such litigation:
(1) NIGC, or any component thereof;
(2) Any employee or former employee of NIGC in his or her official
capacity;
(3) Any employee or former employee of NIGC in his or her capacity
where the Department of Justice or NIGC has agreed to represent the
employee;
(4) The United States, a Federal agency, or another party in
litigation before a court, adjudicative, or administrative body, upon
the NIGC General Counsel's approval, pursuant to 5 CFR part 295 or
otherwise.
b. To the appropriate Federal, State, or local agency responsible
for investigating, prosecuting, enforcing, or implementing a statute,
rule, regulation, or order, when a record, either on its face or in
conjunction with other information, indicates it is relevant to a
violation or potential violation of civil or criminal law or
regulation.
c. To a member of Congress for the record of an individual in
response to
[[Page 71091]]
an inquiry made at the request of the individual to whom the record
pertains.
d. To the National Archives and Records Administration (NARA) for
records management inspections being conducted under the authority of
44 U.S.C. 2904 and 2906.
e. To appropriate agencies, entities, and persons when (1) NIGC
suspects or has confirmed that there has been a breach of the system of
records; (2) NIGC has determined that as a result of the suspected or
confirmed breach, there is a risk of harm to individuals, NIGC
(including its information systems, programs, and operations), the
Federal Government, or national security; and (3) the disclosure made
to such agencies, entities, and persons is reasonably necessary to
assist in connection with NIGC's efforts to respond to the suspected or
confirmed breach or to prevent, minimize, or remedy such harm.
f. To another Federal agency or Federal entity, when NIGC
determines that information from the system of records is reasonably
necessary to assist the recipient agency or entity in (1) responding to
a suspected or confirmed breach or (2) preventing, minimizing, or
remedying the risk of harm to individuals, the recipient agency or
entity (including its information systems, programs, and operations),
the Federal Government, or national security, resulting from a
suspected or confirmed breach.
g. To contractors, grantees, experts, consultants, or volunteers
performing or working on a contract, service, grant, cooperative
agreement, or other assignment for NIGC when NIGC determines that it is
necessary to accomplish an agency function related to this system of
records. Individuals provided information under this routine use are
subject to the same Privacy Act requirements and limitations on
disclosure as are applicable to NIGC employees.
h. To another federal agency or commission with responsibility for
labor or employment relations or other issues, including equal
employment opportunity and reasonable accommodation issues, when that
agency or commission has jurisdiction over reasonable accommodation.
i. To an authorized appeal grievance examiner, formal complaints
examiner, administrative judge, equal employment opportunity
investigator, arbitrator, or other duly authorized official who engages
in investigation or settlement of a grievance, complaint, or appeal
filed by an individual who requested a reasonable accommodation or
other appropriate modification.
j. To another Federal agency, including but not limited to the
Equal Employment Opportunity Commission and the Office of Special
counsel to obtain advice regarding statutory, regulatory, policy, and
other requirements related to reasonable accommodation.
k. To a Federal agency or entity authorized to procure assistive
technologies and services in response to a request for reasonable
accommodation.
l. To first aid and safety personnel if the individual's medical
condition requires emergency treatment.
m. To another Federal agency or oversight body charged with
evaluating NIGC's compliance with the laws, regulations, and policies
governing reasonable accommodation requests.
n. To another Federal agency pursuant to a written agreement with
NIGC to provide services (such as medical evaluations), when necessary,
in support of reasonable accommodation decisions.
POLICIES AND PRACTICES FOR STORAGE OF RECORDS:
The records in this system of records are stored electronically on
NIGC's local area network or with FedRAMPauthorized cloud service
providers segregated from non-government traffic and data, with access
limited to a small number of personnel. In addition, paper records are
stored in locked file cabinets in access-restricted offices.
POLICIES AND PRACTICES FOR RETRIEVAL OF RECORDS:
Records may be retrieved by name or other unique personal
identifiers.
POLICIES AND PRACTICES FOR RETENTION AND DISPOSAL OF RECORDS:
Records in this system of records are maintained in accordance with
GRS 2.3 and are destroyed three years after separation from the agency
or all appeals are concluded, whichever is later, but longer retention
is authorized if requested for business use.
ADMINISTRATIVE, TECHNICAL, AND PHYSICAL SAFEGUARDS:
Strict controls have been imposed to minimize the risk of
compromising the information that is stored. Access to the paper and
electronic records in this system of records is limited to those
individuals who have a need to know the information for the performance
of their official duties and who have appropriate clearances or
permissions.
RECORD ACCESS PROCEDURES:
Individuals seeking notification of and access to their records in
this system of records may submit a request in writing to the National
Indian Gaming Commission, FOIA Office, 1849 C Street NW, Mail Stop #
1621 Washington, DC 20240, ATTN: NIGC Privacy Officer; or by emailing
[email protected]. Individuals must furnish the following
information for their records to be located: 1. Full name. 2.
Signature. 3. The reason why the individual believes this system
contains information about him/her. 4. The address to which the
information should be sent. Individuals requesting access must also
comply with NIGC's Privacy Act regulations regarding verification of
identity and access to records (25 CFR 515).
CONTESTING RECORD PROCEDURES:
Individuals wishing to request amendment of records about them
contained in this system of records may do so by writing to the
National Indian Gaming Commission, FOIA Office, 1849 C Street NW, Mail
Stop # 1621 Washington, DC 20240, ATTN: NIGC Privacy Officer; or by
emailing [email protected]. Requests for amendment of records
should include the words ``PRIVACY ACT AMENDMENT REQUEST'' in capital
letters at the top of the request letter or in the subject line of the
email. Individuals must furnish the following information for their
records to be located:
1. Full name.
2. Signature.
3. Precise identification of the information to be amended.
Individuals requesting amendment must also comply with NIGC's
Privacy Act regulations regarding verification of identity and access
to records (25 CFR 515). The agency procedures whereby an individual
can be notified at his or her request how he or she can contest the
content of any record pertaining to him or her in the system.
NOTIFICATION PROCEDURES:
See ``Record Access Procedures.''.
EXEMPTIONS PROMULGATED FOR THE SYSTEM:
Any Privacy Act exemptions promulgated for the system.
HISTORY:
None.
Dated: December 7, 2021.
E. Sequoyah Simermeyer,
Chairman.
[FR Doc. 2021-26943 Filed 12-13-21; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 7565-01-P