Freedom of Information Act, 65205-65212 [2024-17498]
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(4) No spectator shall anchor, block,
loiter, or impede the through transit of
official patrol vessels in the regulated
area during the effective dates and
times, unless cleared for entry by or
through an official patrol vessel.
(5) The Patrol Commander may forbid
and control the movement of all vessels
in the regulated area. When hailed or
signaled by an official patrol vessel, a
vessel shall come to an immediate stop
and comply with the directions given.
Failure to do so may result in expulsion
from the area, citation for failure to
comply, or both.
(6) Any spectator vessel may anchor
outside the regulated areas specified in
this chapter, but may not anchor in,
block, or loiter in a navigable channel.
(7) The Patrol Commander may
terminate the event or the operation of
any vessel at any time it is deemed
necessary.
(8) The Patrol Commander will
terminate enforcement of the special
regulations at the conclusion of the
event.
Dated: August 5, 2024.
Mark I. Kuperman,
Captain, U.S. Coast Guard, Captain of the
Port Sector Eastern Great Lakes.
[FR Doc. 2024–17714 Filed 8–8–24; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 9110–04–P
DEPARTMENT OF HOMELAND
SECURITY
Coast Guard
33 CFR Part 165
[Docket No. USCG–2024–0666]
Safety Zones; Annual Fireworks
Displays Within the Puget Sound
Coast Guard, DHS.
Notification of enforcement of
regulation.
AGENCY:
ACTION:
The Coast Guard will enforce
regulations for the Medina Days safety
zone in Medina Beach Park on Lake
Washington, Seattle, Washington to
provide for the safety of life on
navigable waters during an annual
fireworks display. This safety zone will
consist of all navigable waters within a
SUMMARY:
450-yard radius surrounding the event’s
launch site. Our regulation for safety
zones within the Captain of the Port,
Puget Sound Area of Responsibility
identifies the specific location for this
launch site and the corresponding safety
zone for the event.
DATES: The regulations in 33 CFR
165.1332 for the Medina Beach Park
location will be enforced from 5 p.m. on
August 10, 2024, through 1 a.m. on
August 11, 2024.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: If
you have questions about this
notification of enforcement, call or
email Mr. Jeffrey Zappen, Sector Puget
Sound Waterways Management, U.S.
Coast Guard; telephone 206–217–6076,
or email SectorPugetSoundWWM@
uscg.mil.
The Coast
Guard will enforce safety zone
regulations in 33 CFR 165.1332 for the
Annual Fireworks Display at Medina
Beach Park on Lake Washington from 5
p.m. on August 10, 2024, through 1 a.m.
on August 11, 2024. This action is being
taken to provide for the safety of life on
navigable waterways during this 1-day
event at the following location:
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Event name
(typically)
Event location
Medina Days ..............................................................
Medina Beach Park ...................................................
The special requirements listed in 33
CFR 165.1332(b) related to fireworks
barges and fireworks launch sites, or
both, shall apply and be implemented
during the specified enforcement period
of this safety zone.
During the specified enforcement
period, no vessel operator may enter,
transit, moor, or anchor within this
safety zone unless authorized by the
Captain of the Port or their designated
representative(s). The Coast Guard may
be assisted by other Federal, State, or
local law enforcement agencies in
enforcing this regulation.
All vessel operators who desire to
enter the safety zone must obtain
permission from the Captain of the Port
or their designated representative(s) by
contacting the on-scene patrol craft on
VHF Ch. 13 or Ch. 16, or calling Coast
Guard Sector Puget Sound’s Joint
Harbor Operations Center (JHOC);
telephone 206–217–6002.
In addition to the notification of
enforcement in the Federal Register, the
Coast Guard plans to provide
notification of this enforcement period
via the Local Notice to Mariners, marine
information broadcasts, local radio
stations and area newspapers.
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Dated: July 31, 2024.
Mark A. McDonnell,
Captain, U.S. Coast Guard, Captain of the
Port, Sector Puget Sound.
Latitude
47°36.867′ N
Longitude
122°14.500′ W
improve the efficiency of the
Commission’s FOIA administration.
DATES:
Effective September 9, 2024.
BILLING CODE 9110–04–P
For additional information,
Order No. 7331 can be accessed
electronically through the Commission’s
website at https://www.prc.gov.
POSTAL REGULATORY COMMISSION
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
39 CFR Part 3006
David A. Trissell, General Counsel, at
202–789–6820.
[Docket No. RM2024–5; Order No. 7331]
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
[FR Doc. 2024–17710 Filed 8–8–24; 8:45 am]
RIN 3211–AA38
Freedom of Information Act
The Commission adopts
amendments to its Freedom of
Information Act (FOIA) regulations. The
final rules: improve readability and
clarity for the public; better align the
Commission’s existing FOIA regulations
with the practices of other agencies
subject to the FOIA (as necessarily
adapted to the Commission’s size and
area of regulatory oversight); and
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I. Background
II. Basis and Purpose of the Final Rules
III. Final Rules
I. Background
Postal Regulatory Commission.
ACTION: Final rule.
AGENCY:
SUMMARY:
ADDRESSES:
The Commission is a micro agency
with fewer than 100 employees and is
also subject to the FOIA. Generally,
most FOIA requests received by the
Commission are intended for the Postal
Service and the requester is therefore
directed to the Postal Service, as a best
practice. On April 18, 2024, the
Commission issued Order No. 7052,
which served as a notice of proposed
rulemaking that proposed amendments
to its FOIA regulations in existing 39
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CFR part 3006.1 In response to Order
No. 7052, only the Public
Representative filed comments.2
3006.206 Submission of non-public
materials by a person other than the
Postal Service.
II. Basis and Purpose of the Final Rules
The Public Representative generally
supports the proposed amendments and
suggests some revisions. After
considering the comments, the
Commission adopts the rules as
proposed in Order No. 7052, with slight
revisions to improve typographical
consistency and to better aid readers
regarding the FOIA’s exemptions.
Subpart C—Fees for Freedom of
Information Act Requests
3006.300 Definitions applicable to this
subpart.
3006.301 Request category.
3006.302 General provisions.
3006.303 Fee schedule.
3006.304 Procedure for assessing and
collecting fees.
III. Final Rules
The Commission adopts final rules in
39 CFR part 3006 that: improve
readability and clarity for the public;
better align the Commission’s existing
FOIA regulations with the practices of
other agencies subject to the FOIA (as
necessarily adapted to the Commission’s
size and area of regulatory oversight);
and improve the efficiency of the
Commission’s FOIA administration.
Subpart A—General Provisions
List of Subjects in 39 CFR Part 3006
Administrative practice and
procedure, Freedom of information,
Reporting and recordkeeping
requirements, Sunshine Act.
■ For the reasons stated in the preamble,
the Commission revises 39 CFR part
3006 to read as follows:
PART 3006—PUBLIC RECORDS AND
FREEDOM OF INFORMATION ACT
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Subpart A—General Provisions
Sec.
3006.100 Applicability and scope.
3006.101 Commission policy.
3006.102 Proactive disclosures.
3006.103 Reading room.
3006.104 Chief Freedom of Information Act
Officer.
3006.105 Freedom of Information Act
Public Liaison.
3006.106 Commission procedure when
served a subpoena.
Subpart B—Procedures for Freedom of
Information Act Requests
3006.200 Procedures for submitting
requests.
3006.201 Timing of responses to requests.
3006.202 Responses to requests.
3006.203 Appeals.
3006.204 Relationship among the Freedom
of Information Act, the Privacy Act, and
the Commission’s procedures for
according appropriate confidentiality.
3006.205 Consultations, referrals, and
coordinations.
1 Notice of Proposed Rulemaking to Amend Rules
Regarding the Freedom of Information Act (FOIA),
April 18, 2024 (Order No. 7052). See also 89 FR
31670 (May 23, 2024).
2 Public Representative Comments on Notice of
Proposed Rulemaking to Amend Rules Regarding
The Freedom of Information Act, May 23, 2024.
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Authority: 5 U.S.C. 552; 39 U.S.C. 407,
503, 504.
§ 3006.100
Applicability and scope.
(a) The rules in this part apply to
requests for records under the Freedom
of Information Act (FOIA), 5 U.S.C. 552.
These rules should be read in
conjunction with the text of the FOIA
and the Uniform Freedom of
Information Act Fee Schedule and
Guidelines published by the Office of
Management and Budget (OMB
Guidelines).
(b) 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
appearing in part 3005 of this chapter
and § 3006.204.
§ 3006.101
Commission policy.
(a) The Commission shall be proactive
and timely in identifying and posting
public records and other frequently
requested records to its website.
(b) It is the stated policy of the
Commission that FOIA requests shall be
administered with a clear presumption
of openness. The Commission will only
withhold information if it reasonably
foresees that disclosure would harm an
interest protected by a FOIA exemption,
such as information specifically
exempted from disclosure by statute (for
example 39 U.S.C. 410(c)), or disclosure
is otherwise prohibited by law. Publicly
available information regarding
exemptions and examples of exempt
information are available at the
Department of Justice’s FOIA website,
https://www.foia.gov.
(c) This Commission policy does not
create any right enforceable in court.
§ 3006.102
Proactive disclosures.
(a) Except as provided in
§ 3006.101(b) and in part 3011 of this
chapter, Commission records, required
by the FOIA to be made available, will
be made available on the Commission’s
website, https://www.prc.gov.
(b) Descriptions of the Commission’s
organization, its methods of operation,
statements of policy and interpretations,
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and procedural and substantive rules,
are published in the Federal Register
publication system, and are available on
the Commission’s website, https://
www.prc.gov.
§ 3006.103
Reading room.
(a) The Commission maintains an
electronic reading room at https://
www.prc.gov.
(b) The records available for public
inspection include, for example,
decisions; reports; opinions; orders;
notices; findings; determinations;
statements of policy; copies of selected
records released under FOIA; indexes
required to be maintained under FOIA;
and records relating to any matter or
proceeding before the Commission.
(c) The Commission shall make
available, in an electronic form, records
previously released under FOIA and
which the Commission determines are
or are likely to become of significant
public interest.
(d) Commission records that have
been requested three or more times will
be made available on the Commission’s
website, https://www.prc.gov.
§ 3006.104 Chief Freedom of Information
Act Officer.
The Commission designates the
General Counsel of the Commission as
the Chief FOIA Officer. The Chief FOIA
Officer shall be responsible for the
administration of and reporting on the
Commission’s Freedom of Information
Act program. The Chief FOIA Officer
(and any individual(s) designated by the
Chief FOIA Officer to communicate
with FOIA requesters) may be contacted
via email at FOIA@prc.gov or telephone
at 202–789–6800.
§ 3006.105 Freedom of Information Act
Public Liaison.
The Commission designates the
Director of the Office of Public Affairs
and Government Relations or the
individual’s designee as the FOIA
Public Liaison who shall assist in the
resolution of any dispute between a
requester and the Commission. The
FOIA Public Liaison may be contacted
via email at PRC-PAGR@prc.gov or
telephone at 202–789–6800.
§ 3006.106 Commission procedure when
served a subpoena.
If an officer or employee of the
Commission is served with a subpoena
duces tecum, material that is not part of
the public files and records of the
Commission shall be produced only as
authorized by the General Counsel.
Service of such a subpoena shall
immediately be reported to the General
Counsel with a statement of all relevant
facts. The General Counsel will
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thereupon enter such order or give such
instructions as it deems advisable.
Subpart B—Procedures for Freedom of
Information Act Requests
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§ 3006.200
requests.
Procedures for submitting
(a) Electronic submission
requirements. A request will receive the
quickest possible response if it is
submitted electronically. An electronic
request may be submitted via the
Commission’s online FOIA request form
that is accessible through the
Commission’s website (https://
www.prc.gov), emailing FOIA@prc.gov,
or the web portal at https://
www.foia.gov/. Each electronic request
must:
(1) Reasonably describe the records
sought;
(2) Identify the request category under
§ 3006.301; and
(3) Include the requester’s name,
daytime telephone number, and a valid
email or mailing address to receive
records and written communications
from the Commission regarding the
request.
(b) Hard copy submission
requirements. A requester may also
submit a request for records via hard
copy. Each hard copy request must:
(1) Be in writing;
(2) Be clearly identified as ‘‘Freedom
of Information Act Request’’ both in the
text of the request and on the envelope;
(3) Be submitted to the Commission’s
office (901 New York Avenue NW, Suite
200, Washington, DC 20268–0001);
(4) Reasonably describe the records
sought; and
(5) Include the requester’s name,
daytime telephone number, and a valid
email or mailing address to receive
records and written communications
from the Commission regarding the
request.
(c) Content of request. Each request
must describe the records sought in
sufficient detail to enable Commission
personnel to locate them with a
reasonable amount of effort. Whenever
possible, the request should include
specific information about each record
sought that might assist the Commission
in responding to the request, such as the
type of record (e.g., contract, report,
memorandum, etc.); the title or docket
number of a specific document or
report; the topic or subject matter; the
name of the office and/or employees
most likely to possess the record; the
date or general timeframe of the record’s
creation; and any details related to the
purpose of the record. Requests for
email records should specify the likely
senders and recipients, keywords, and a
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range of dates. Before submitting
requests, a requester may contact the
Chief FOIA Officer (or the individual’s
designee) or the FOIA Public Liaison to
discuss the records sought and to
receive assistance in describing the
records. The request may also specify
the requester’s preferred method of
communication (telephone, email, or
mailing address) and the preferred form
or format (including electronic formats)
of the requested records.
(d) Improper requests. A request that
does not reasonably describe the records
sought or does not comply with the
published rules regarding the
procedures to be followed for
submitting a request will be deemed to
be an improper FOIA request. If the
Commission does not receive the
additional information needed that
reasonably describes the records to
enable their location by the Commission
with a reasonable amount of effort, then
the Commission will administratively
close the file.
(1) If after receiving a request, the
Commission determines that it is
improper, the Chief FOIA Officer or the
individual’s designee will provide one
written notification to the requester
using the contact information included
in the request. The notification will
inform the requester of all the following:
(i) The reason(s) why the request is
improper;
(ii) The additional information
needed from the requester that would
reasonably describe the records to
enable their location by the Commission
with a reasonable amount of effort;
(iii) The Commission will not be able
to comply with the request unless the
Commission receives such additional
information in writing within the
specified timeframe and if the
Commission does not receive a written
response containing the additional
information needed within the specified
timeframe, then it will presume that the
requester is no longer interested in the
records and will administratively close
the file on the request;
(iv) The preferred method for the
requester to provide the additional
information is by emailing FOIA@
prc.gov;
(v) The requester may also provide the
additional information by mailing or by
hand delivery during regular business
hours (which are from 8 a.m. to 4:30
p.m. Eastern Time, except for Saturdays,
Sundays, and Federal holidays) to the
Office of Secretary and Administration,
Postal Regulatory Commission, 901 New
York Avenue NW, Suite 200,
Washington, DC 20268–0001); and
(vi) The contact information for the
Chief FOIA Officer (or the individual’s
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designee) and the FOIA Public Liaison,
each of whom is available to assist the
requester in reasonably describing the
records sought.
(2) If the requester provides the
additional information needed that
reasonably describes the records to
enable their location by the Commission
with a reasonable amount of effort by
the timeframe specified in the
notification, then the Commission will
confirm receipt of the information and
process the request.
(3) After administrative closure, if the
Commission receives the additional
information needed that reasonably
describes the records to enable their
location by the Commission with a
reasonable amount of effort, then the
Commission will notify the requester
that the request will be processed as a
new request.
(e) Expedited processing. At any time,
a requester that has satisfied all
applicable requirements of paragraphs
(a) through (c) of this section may seek
expedited processing of a request or an
administrative appeal. To seek
expedited processing, the requester
must:
(1) Include ‘‘Expedited Freedom of
Information Act Request’’ or ‘‘Expedited
Freedom of Information Act Appeal’’ in
the body of the submission;
(2) For any hard copy submission,
include ‘‘Expedited Freedom of
Information Act Request’’ or ‘‘Expedited
Freedom of Information Act Appeal’’ on
the envelope;
(3) Demonstrate a compelling need as
defined in 5 U.S.C. 552(a)(6)(E)(v); and
(4) Certify the statement of compelling
need to be true and correct to the best
of the requester’s knowledge and belief.
The Commission has discretion to waive
the certification requirement.
§ 3006.201
requests.
Timing of responses to
(a) In general. Requests will ordinarily
be responded to according to their order
of receipt.
(b) Multitrack processing. (1) Unless
expedited processing has been granted,
the Commission places each request in
simple or complex tracks based on the
amount of work and time involved in
processing the request. Factors
considered in assigning a request into
the complex track may include one or
more of the following:
(i) The request involves voluminous
documents;
(ii) The complexity of the material;
(iii) The request involves record
searches at multiple facilities or
locations;
(iv) The request requires consultation
among the Commission or other
agencies; or
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(v) The number of open requests
submitted by the same requester.
(2) Within each track, the Commission
processes requests in the order in which
they are received. When appropriate,
the Chief FOIA Officer or the
individual’s designee will notify the
requester of placing a request in the
‘‘Complex’’ track and provide the
requester with an opportunity to limit
the scope of the request. If the requester
limits the scope of the request, it may
result in faster processing.
(c) Expedited processing. (1) Requests
and appeals shall be processed on an
expedited basis whenever it is
determined that they involve the
following:
(i) Circumstances in which the lack of
expedited processing could reasonably
be expected to pose an imminent threat
to the life or physical safety of an
individual; or
(ii) An urgency to inform the public
about an actual or alleged Federal
Government activity, if made by a
person who is primarily engaged in
disseminating information.
(2) Within 10 calendar days of the
receipt of a request for expedited
processing, the Chief FOIA Officer or
the individual’s designee will notify the
requester of the decision whether to
grant or deny expedited processing. If
expedited processing is granted, the
request shall be given priority, placed in
the processing track for expedited
requests, and shall be processed as soon
as practicable. If a request for expedited
processing is denied, the Chief FOIA
Officer or the individual’s designee will
inform the requester of the denial in
writing, the right to appeal the denial to
the Commission in writing, and the
procedures for appealing the denial.
Any request for records that has been
denied expedited processing will be
processed in the same manner as a
request that did not seek expedited
processing.
(3) Where a compelling need is not
shown in an expedited request as
specified in § 3006.200(e), the
Commission may grant the request for
expedited processing at its discretion.
(d) Unusual circumstances. Whenever
the statutory time limit for processing a
request cannot be met because of
‘‘unusual circumstances’’, as defined in
5 U.S.C. 552(a)(6)(B)(iii), and the
Commission extends the time limit on
that basis, the Commission shall, before
the expiration of the 20 business day
period to respond, notify the requester
in writing of the unusual circumstances
involved and of the date by which
processing of the request can be
expected to be completed. If an
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extension will exceed 10 business days,
the Commission will:
(1) Provide the requester with an
opportunity to modify the request or
arrange an alternative timeframe for
processing; and
(2) Make its FOIA Public Liaison
available to the requester and apprise
the requester of their right to seek
dispute resolution services from the
Office of Government Information
Services.
(e) Aggregating requests. For the
purposes of satisfying unusual
circumstances under the FOIA, the
Commission may aggregate requests in
cases where it reasonably appears that
multiple requests, submitted either by a
single requester or by a group of
requesters acting in concert, constitute a
single request that would otherwise
involve unusual circumstances.
Multiple requests that involve unrelated
matters shall not be aggregated.
§ 3006.202
Responses to requests.
(a) In general. To the extent
practicable and unless the request
indicates a different preferred method of
communication, the Commission will
communicate with the requester
electronically (such as via email). In
determining which records are
responsive to a request, the Commission
will include only records in its
possession and control on the date that
it begins its search. If any other date is
used, the Commission shall inform the
requester of that date. A record that is
excluded from the requirements of the
FOIA pursuant to 5 U.S.C. 552(c) is not
considered responsive to the request.
(b) Acknowledgments of requests. The
Commission shall acknowledge the
request and assign it an individualized
tracking number if it will take longer
than 10 days (excluding Saturdays,
Sundays, and legal holidays) to process.
The acknowledgment must include a
brief description of the records sought to
allow requesters to keep track of their
requests more easily.
(c) Grants of requests. Once the
Commission makes a determination to
grant a request in full or in part, the
Chief FOIA Officer or the individual’s
designee shall notify the requester in
writing. The Commission also shall
inform the requester of any fees charged
and shall disclose the requested records
to the requester promptly upon payment
of any applicable fees. The Commission
must inform the requester of the
availability of the FOIA Public Liaison
to offer assistance.
(d) Adverse determinations of
requests. If the Commission makes an
adverse determination denying a request
in any respect, then the Chief FOIA
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Officer or the individual’s designee
shall notify the requester of that
determination in writing. Adverse
determinations, or denials of requests,
include decisions that: the requested
record is exempt, in whole or in part;
the request does not reasonably describe
the records sought; the information
requested is not a record subject to the
FOIA; the requested record does not
exist, cannot be located, or has been
destroyed; or the requested record is not
readily reproducible in the form or
format sought by the requester. Adverse
determinations also include denials
involving fees or fee waiver matters or
denials of requests for expedited
processing.
(e) Content of denials. The denial
shall be signed by the Chief FOIA
Officer or the individual’s designee and
shall include:
(1) The name and title or position of
the person responsible for the denial;
(2) A brief statement of the reasons for
the denial, including any FOIA
exemption applied by the Commission
in denying the request;
(3) An estimate of the volume of any
records or information withheld, such
as the number of pages or some other
reasonable form of estimation, although
such an estimate is not required if the
volume is otherwise indicated by
deletions marked on records that are
disclosed in part or if providing an
estimate would harm an interest
protected by an applicable exemption;
(4) A statement that the denial may be
appealed under § 3006.203, and a
description of the requirements; and
(5) A statement notifying the requester
of the assistance available from the
Commission’s FOIA Public Liaison and
the dispute resolution services offered
by the Office of Government
Information Services.
(f) Markings on released documents.
Markings on released documents must
be clearly visible to the requester.
Records disclosed in part shall be
marked to show the amount of
information deleted and the exemption
under which the deletion was made
unless doing so would harm an interest
protected by an applicable exemption.
The location of the information deleted
shall also be indicated on the record, if
technically feasible.
(g) Use of record exclusions. (1) If the
Commission identifies records that may
be subject to exclusion from the
requirements of the FOIA pursuant to 5
U.S.C. 552(c), the Commission must
confer with the Department of Justice,
Office of Information Policy (OIP), to
obtain approval to apply the exclusion.
(2) Upon invoking an exclusion, the
Commission must maintain an
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administrative record of the process of
invocation and approval of exclusion by
OIP.
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§ 3006.203
Appeals.
(a) Discretionary review. The
Commission (on its own initiative) may
review any decision of the Chief FOIA
Officer or the individual’s designee
within 90 calendar days.
(b) Requirements for making an
appeal. A requester may appeal an
adverse decision on their FOIA request
rendered by the Commission by
submitting a hard copy to the
Commission’s office (901 New York
Avenue NW, Suite 200, Washington, DC
20268–0001) or by emailing FOIA@
prc.gov. The requester must make the
appeal in writing and to be considered
timely it must be postmarked, or in the
case of electronic submissions,
transmitted, within 90 calendar days
after the date of the Commission’s
response. To facilitate handling, the
requester must mark both the appeal
letter and envelope or the subject line of
the electronic transmission ‘‘Freedom of
Information Act Appeal.’’ The appeal
must include, as applicable:
(1) A copy of the request, of any
notification of denial or other action,
and of any other related
correspondence;
(2) The FOIA tracking number
assigned to the request;
(3) A description of the action (or
failure to act) which is being challenged;
(4) If challenging specific redactions
made to responsive records, a statement
identifying the specific redactions being
challenged;
(5) A statement of the relief sought;
and
(6) A statement of the reasons why the
requester believes the action or failure
to act is erroneous.
(c) Adjudication of appeals. (1) The
decision of the Commission constitutes
the final decision on the issue being
appealed. The Commission will give
prompt consideration to an appeal for
expedited processing of a request. All
other decisions normally will be made
within 20 days (excluding Saturdays,
Sundays, and legal holidays) from the
time of the receipt by the Commission.
The 20-business day response period
may be extended by the Commission for
a period not to exceed an additional 10
business days when reasonably
necessary to permit the proper
consideration of an appeal, under one or
more of the ‘‘unusual circumstances’’, as
defined in 5 U.S.C. 552(a)(6)(B)(iii). The
aggregate number of additional business
days used, however, may not exceed 10
business days.
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(2) An appeal ordinarily will not be
adjudicated if the request becomes a
matter of FOIA litigation.
(3) On receipt of any appeal involving
classified information, the Commission
must take appropriate action to ensure
compliance with applicable
classification rules.
(d) Decisions on appeals. A decision
on an appeal must be made in writing.
A decision that upholds the adverse
determination in whole or in part will
contain a statement that identifies the
reasons for the affirmance, including
any FOIA exemptions applied. The
decision will provide the requester with
notification of the statutory right to file
a lawsuit and will inform the requester
of the mediation services offered by the
Office of Government Information
Services of the National Archives and
Records Administration as a nonexclusive alternative to litigation. If the
adverse determination is remanded or
modified on appeal, the requester will
be notified in writing and the Chief
FOIA Officer or the individual’s
designee will further process the request
in accordance with that appellate
decision and respond directly to the
requester. If not prohibited by or under
law, the Commission may direct the
disclosure of a record even though its
disclosure is not required by law or
regulation.
(e) Engaging in dispute resolution
services provided by OGIS. Dispute
resolution is a voluntary process. If the
Commission agrees to participate in the
dispute resolution services provided by
OGIS, it will actively engage as a partner
to the process in an attempt to resolve
the dispute.
(f) When an appeal is required. Before
seeking judicial review of an adverse
determination rendered by the
Commission on a FOIA request, a
requester generally must first submit a
timely administrative appeal.
§ 3006.204 Relationship among the
Freedom of Information Act, the Privacy
Act, and the Commission’s procedures for
according appropriate confidentiality.
(a) Coverage. FOIA applies to all
Commission records and provides the
public with access to government
records.
(b) Requesting records subject to the
Privacy Act. A request by an individual
for the individual’s own records
contained in a system of records is
governed by the Privacy Act. Release
will first be considered under the
Privacy Act pursuant to part 3005 of this
chapter. However, if there is any record
that the Commission need not release
under the Privacy Act, the Commission
will also consider the request under
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FOIA, and will release the record if
FOIA requires it.
(c) Requesting another individual’s
record. Request for records of
individuals which may not be granted
under the Privacy Act shall be
considered under FOIA.
(1) If the Commission makes a
disclosure in response to a request and
the disclosure is permitted by the
Privacy Act’s disclosure provision, 5
U.S.C. 552a(b), the Commission will
rely on the Privacy Act to govern the
disclosure.
(2) In some circumstances, the Privacy
Act may prohibit the Commission’s
ability to release records which may be
released under FOIA.
(d) Requesting a Postal Service record.
The Commission maintains custody of
records that are both Commission and
Postal Service records. Except when the
Postal Service submits materials to the
Commission in connection with
activities under 39 U.S.C. 407(b)(2)(A),
in all other instances that the Postal
Service submits materials to the
Commission that the Postal Service
reasonably believes to be exempt from
public disclosure, the Postal Service
shall follow the procedures described in
part 3011, subpart B of this chapter.
(1) A request made pursuant to FOIA
for Postal Service records shall be
referred to the Postal Service; and
(2) A request made pursuant to part
3011 of this chapter for records
designated as non-public by the Postal
Service shall be considered under the
applicable standards set forth in that
part.
(e) Requesting a record submitted by
a person other than the Postal Service.
The Commission maintains records of a
confidential nature submitted by
persons other than the Postal Service as
non-public materials.
(1) A request made pursuant to FOIA
for records submitted by a person other
than the Postal Service shall adhere to
the applicable procedures of § 3006.205.
If such a FOIA request is not referred to
a different Federal agency pursuant to
§ 3006.205(b), the Commission shall
consider it in light of all applicable
exemptions and in accordance with the
following procedures:
(i) If such materials are designated as
non-public, the Commission shall
follow the procedures appearing in
§ 3006.206(b) through (d) in determining
the FOIA request; or
(ii) In all other instances, the
Commission shall determine the FOIA
request after notifying the person of the
FOIA request and providing the person
with an opportunity to respond within
7 days of the date of the notice under
the following circumstances:
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(A) The records sought contain
confidential commercial information
that may be protected from disclosure
under 5 U.S.C. 552(b)(4); and
(B) The Commission determines that
it may be required to disclose the
records, provided that at least one of the
following applies:
(1) The requested information has
been designated in good faith by the
submitter as information considered
protected from disclosure under 5
U.S.C. 552(b)(4); or
(2) The Commission has a reason to
believe that the requested information
may be protected from disclosure under
5 U.S.C. 552(b)(4), but has not yet
determined whether the information is
protected from disclosure.
(2) A request made pursuant to part
3011 of this chapter for records
designated as non-public by a person
other than the Postal Service shall be
considered under the applicable
standards set forth in that part.
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§ 3006.205 Consultations, referrals, and
coordinations.
(a) Consultations. If records originated
with the Commission but contain within
them information of significance to
another Federal agency or office, the
Commission will typically consult with
that other entity prior to making a
release determination.
(b) Referrals. In addition to referring
all requests made pursuant to FOIA for
Postal Service records to the Postal
Service as specified by § 3006.204(d)(1),
if the Commission believes that a
different Federal agency is best able to
determine whether to disclose the
record, the Commission will typically
refer responsibility for responding to the
request regarding that record to that
agency. Ordinarily, the agency that
originated the record is presumed to be
the best agency to make the disclosure
determination. Whenever the
Commission refers any part of the
responsibility for responding to a
request to another agency, the
Commission will notify the requester of
the referral, including the name of the
agency and that agency’s FOIA contact
information.
(c) Coordinations. The standard
referral procedure is not appropriate
where disclosure of the identity of the
Federal agency to which the referral
would be made could harm an interest
protected by an applicable exemption,
such as the exemptions that protect
personal privacy or national security
interests. For example, if a non-law
enforcement agency responding to a
request for records on a living third
party locates within its files records
originating with a law enforcement
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agency, and if the existence of that law
enforcement interest in the third party
was not publicly known, then to
disclose that law enforcement interest
could cause an unwarranted invasion of
the personal privacy of the third party.
Similarly, if the Commission locates
within its files material originating with
an Intelligence Community agency, and
the involvement of that agency in the
matter is classified and not publicly
acknowledged, then to disclose or give
attribution to the involvement of that
Intelligence Community agency could
cause national security harms. In such
instances, in order to avoid harm to an
interest protected by an applicable
exemption, the Commission will
coordinate with the originating agency
to seek its views on disclosure of the
record. The Commission then will
notify the requester of the release
determination for the record that is the
subject of the coordination.
(d) Classified information. On receipt
of any request involving classified
information, the Commission will
determine whether the information is
currently and properly classified in
accordance with applicable
classification rules. Whenever a request
involves a record containing
information that has been classified or
may be appropriate for classification by
another agency under any applicable
executive order concerning the
classification of records, the
Commission must 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 an agency’s
record contains information that has
been derivatively classified (for
example, when it contains information
classified by another agency), the
Commission must refer the
responsibility for responding to that
portion of the request to the agency that
classified the underlying information.
(e) Timing of responses to
consultations and referrals. All
consultations and referrals received by
the Commission will be handled
according to the date that the first
agency received the perfected FOIA
request.
(f) Agreements regarding
consultations and referrals. The
Commission may establish agreements
with other agencies to eliminate the
need for consultations or referrals with
respect to particular types of records.
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§ 3006.206 Submission of non-public
materials by a person other than the Postal
Service.
(a) Overlap with treatment of nonpublic materials. Any person who
submits materials to the Commission
(submitter) that the submitter
reasonably believes to be exempt from
public disclosure shall follow the
procedures described in part 3011,
subpart B of this chapter, except when
the submitter submits materials to the
Commission in connection with
activities under 39 U.S.C. 407(b)(2)(A).
(b) Notice of request. Except as
provided in § 3006.204(d), if a FOIA
request seeks materials designated as
non-public materials, the Commission
will provide the submitter with notice
of the request. The Commission may
also provide notice when it has reason
to believe that materials submitted by a
person other than the Postal Service are
possibly exempt from disclosure and
may fall within the scope of any FOIA
request.
(c) Objections to disclosure. A
submitter may file written objections to
the request specifying all grounds for
withholding the information under
FOIA within 7 days of the date of the
notice. If the submitter fails to respond
to the notice, the submitter will be
considered to have no objection, beyond
those objections articulated in its
application for non-public treatment
pursuant to § 3011.201 of this chapter,
to the disclosure of the information.
(d) Notice of decision. If, after
considering the submitter’s objections to
disclosure the Commission decides to
disclose the information, it will give the
submitter written notice of the decision
and a brief explanation of the reasons
for not sustaining the submitter’s
objections. The actual disclosure will
not be made before 3 days after
publication of the Commission’s
decision.
Subpart C—Fees for Freedom of
Information Act Requests
§ 3006.300
subpart.
Definitions applicable to this
(a) Commercial use means a request
from or on behalf of a person seeking
information for a use or purpose that
furthers the commercial, trade, or profit
interests of the requester or person on
whose behalf the request is made. In
determining the applicability of this
term, the use to which a requester will
put the document is considered first;
where reasonable doubt exists as to the
use, the Commission may seek
clarification before assigning the request
to a category.
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(b) Direct costs means the
expenditures the Commission incurs in
searching for, duplicating, and, where
applicable, reviewing documents to
respond to a request. They include
(without limitation) the salary of the
employee(s) performing work (the basic
pay rate of such employee(s) plus 16
percent to cover benefits).
(c) Duplication means copying the
documents necessary to respond to a
request. Such copies may be paper,
microform, audiovisual, or machinereadable.
(d) Educational institution means a
preschool, a public or private
elementary or secondary school, an
institution of graduate or undergraduate
higher education, an institution of
professional education, and an
institution of vocational education,
which operates a program or programs
of scholarly research.
(e) Noncommercial scientific
institution means an institution, not
operated on a commercial basis (as
referenced above), which is operated
solely for the purpose of conducting
scientific research whose results are not
intended to promote any particular
product or industry.
(f) Representative of the news media
means 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. Examples of news media
entities are television or radio stations
broadcasting to the public at large and
publishers of periodicals (but only if
such entities qualify as disseminators of
‘‘news’’) who make their products
available for purchase or by
subscription or by free distribution to
the general public. These examples are
not all inclusive and may include
alternate media to disseminate news. A
freelance journalist shall be regarded as
working for a news media entity if the
journalist can demonstrate a solid basis
for expecting publication through that
entity (e.g., by a publication contract or
prior publication record), whether or
not the journalist is actually employed
by the entity.
(g) Review means examining
documents located in response to a
request to determine whether any
portion is exempt from disclosure, and
processing or preparing documents for
release, but not determination of general
legal or policy issues regarding
application of exemptions.
(h) Search includes all time spent
looking for material responsive to a
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request, including identification of
pages or lines within documents. The
term covers both manual and
computerized searching.
§ 3006.301
Request category.
(a) Fees. The level of fee charged
depends on the request category.
(1) Commercial use. A request
appearing to be for commercial use will
be charged the full direct costs of
searching for, reviewing, and
duplicating the records sought.
(2) Educational and noncommercial
scientific institutions. A request from an
educational or noncommercial scientific
institution will be charged for the cost
of duplication only (excluding charges
for the first 100 pages). To be eligible for
this category, a requester must show
that the request is made under the
auspices of a qualifying institution and
that the records are not sought for
commercial use but are in furtherance of
scholarly (in the case of educational
institutions) or scientific (in the case of
noncommercial scientific institutions)
research.
(3) News media. A request from a
representative of the news media will be
charged the cost of duplication only
(excluding charges for the first 100
pages).
(4) Other requesters. A request from
any other person will be charged the full
direct cost of searching for, reviewing,
and duplicating records responsive to
the request, except that the first 100
pages of duplication and the first 2
hours of search/review will be furnished
without charge.
(b) Privacy Act. A request by an
individual for the individual’s own
records in a system of records will be
charged fees as provided under the
Commission’s Privacy Act regulations in
part 3005 of this chapter.
§ 3006.302
General provisions.
(a) The Commission may charge
search fees even if no records are found
or if the records found are exempt from
disclosure.
(b) Except in the case of commercial
use requesters, the first 100 pages of
duplication and the first 2 hours of
search time are provided without
charge.
(1) A page for these purposes is a
letter- or legal-size sheet, or the
equivalent amount of information in a
medium other than paper copy.
(2) Search time for these purposes
refers to manual searching; if the search
is performed by computer, the 2 hours
provided without charge will be equal
to 2 hours’ salary of the person
performing the search.
(c) No requester will be charged a fee
when the Commission determines that
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65211
the cost of collecting the fee would
equal or exceed the fee itself. In
determining whether cost of collection
would equal or exceed the fee, the
allowance for 2 hours’ search or 100
pages of duplication will be made before
comparing the remaining fee and the
cost of collection.
(d) Records will be provided without
charge or at a reduced charge if
disclosure of the 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 is not
primarily in the commercial interest of
the requester.
(e) No requester will be charged a fee
after any search or response which
occurs after the applicable time limits as
described in §§ 3006.202 and 3006.203,
unless:
(1) The Commission extends the time
limit for its response due to unusual
circumstances, pursuant to
§ 3006.201(d), and the Commission
completes its response within the
extension of time provided under that
section; or
(2) The Commission extends the time
limit for its response due to unusual
circumstances and more than 5,000
pages are necessary to respond to the
request and the Commission has
discussed with the requester how they
could effectively limit the scope of the
request or made at least three good faith
attempts to do so; or
(3) A court has determined that
exceptional circumstances exist and
excused the Commission from
responding by court order.
(f) The Commission may, however,
charge fees for review, and in some
cases duplication, for a partial grant of
a request while it reviews records that
may be exempt and may be responsive
to the request, so long as the partial
grant is made within the applicable time
limits.
§ 3006.303
Fee schedule.
(a) Fees will be calculated as follows:
(1) Manual search. At the salary rate
(basic pay plus 16 percent) of the
employee(s) making the search. Search
time may be charged for even if the
Commission fails to locate records or if
records located are exempt from
disclosure.
(2) Computer search. At the direct
cost of providing the search, including
computer search time directly
attributable to searching for records
responsive to the request runs and
employee salary apportionable to the
search.
(3) Review (commercial use). At the
salary rate (basic pay plus 16 percent) of
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the employee(s) conducting the review.
Charges are imposed only for the review
necessary at the initial administrative
level to determine the applicability of
any exemption, and not for review at the
administrative appeal level of an
exemption already applied.
(4) Duplication. At 10 cents per page
for paper copy, which the Commission
has found to be the reasonable direct
cost thereof. For copies of records
prepared by computer the direct cost of
production, including employee time,
will be charged.
(5) Additional services. Postage,
insurance, and other additional services
that may be arranged for by the
requester will be charged at actually
incurred cost.
(b) In addition to the fee waiver
provisions of § 3006.302(d), fees may be
waived at the discretion of the
Commission.
§ 3006.304 Procedure for assessing and
collecting fees.
(a) Advance payment may be required
if the requester failed to pay previous
bills in a timely fashion or when the
fees are likely to exceed $250.
(1) Where the requester has
previously failed to pay within 30 days
of the billing date, the Commission may
require the requester to pay an advance
payment of the estimated fee together
with either the past due fees (plus
applicable interest) or proof that the
past fees were paid.
(2) When advance payment is
required, the administrative time limits
prescribed in 5 U.S.C. 552(a)(6)
(§ 3006.201) begin only after such
payment has been received.
(b) Interest at the rate published by
the Secretary of the Treasury as
prescribed in 31 U.S.C. 3717 will be
charged on unpaid fee bills starting on
the 31st day after the bill was sent.
Receipt of a fee by the Commission,
whether processed or not, will stay the
accrual of interest.
By the Commission.
Jennie L. Jbara,
Primary Certifying Official.
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[FR Doc. 2024–17498 Filed 8–8–24; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 7710–FW–P
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ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION
AGENCY
40 CFR Part 49
[EPA–R08–OAR–2024–0194; FRL–11993–
01–R8]
Announcement of the Delegation of
Partial Administrative Authority for the
Southern Ute Indian Reservation to the
Southern Ute Indian Tribe for
Implementation of the Clean Air Act
Federal Minor New Source Review
Program in Indian Country and the
Indian Country Minor Source Oil and
Gas Federal Implementation Plan
Environmental Protection
Agency (EPA).
ACTION: Final rule; notice of delegation
of authority; technical amendment.
AGENCY:
The Environmental Protection
Agency (EPA) is taking action to
announce that on June 11, 2024, EPA
Region 8 and the Southern Ute Indian
Tribe (SUIT) entered into an Agreement
for Delegation of Partial Administrative
Authority to assist the EPA in
administering the following two federal
Clean Air Act (CAA) programs within
the SUIT Reservation: the Federal Minor
New Source Review Program in Indian
country (EPA Indian country MNSR
Program) and the Federal
Implementation Plan for Managing Air
Emissions from True Minor Sources in
Indian Country in the Oil and Natural
Gas Production and Oil and Natural Gas
Processing Segments of the Oil and
Natural Gas Sector (EPA Indian country
Minor Source Oil and Gas FIP). Notice
of this partial delegation is being added
to the Code of Federal Regulations
(CFR). The EPA is taking this action
pursuant to the CAA.
DATES: The delegation was effective on
June 11, 2024. The amendments to the
CFR made by this rulemaking are
effective on September 9, 2024.
ADDRESSES: The EPA has established a
docket for this action under Docket ID
No. EPA–R08–OAR–2024–0194. All
documents in the docket are listed on
the https://www.regulations.gov
website. Although listed in the index,
some information is not publicly
available, e.g., Confidential Business
Information (CBI) or other information
whose disclosure is restricted by statute.
Certain other material, such as
copyrighted material, is not placed on
the internet and will be publicly
available only in hard copy form.
Publicly available docket materials are
available through https://
www.regulations.gov, or please contact
the person identified in the FOR FURTHER
SUMMARY:
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section for
additional availability information.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Kyle
Olson, Air and Radiation Division, EPA,
Region 8, Mailcode 8ARD–IO, 1595
Wynkoop Street, Denver, Colorado
80202–1129, telephone number: (303)
312–6002, email address: olson.kyle@
epa.gov. Additional information may
also be obtained from the SUIT by
contacting Danny Powers, Southern Ute
Indian Tribe Air Quality Division Head,
P.O. Box 737 MS#84, Ignacio, Colorado
81137.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Throughout this document ‘‘we,’’ ‘‘us,’’
and ‘‘our’’ means the EPA.
The purpose of this action is to
announce, pursuant to 40 CFR 49.161
and 40 CFR 49.103, that on June 11,
2024, EPA Region 8 delegated partial
administrative authority to the SUIT,
limited to the area of the SUIT
Reservation, to assist the EPA in
administering the following two federal
CAA programs: (1) the EPA Indian
country MNSR Program, and (2) the
EPA Indian country Minor Source Oil
and Gas FIP.
INFORMATION CONTACT
I. Authority To Delegate
Pursuant to 40 CFR 49.161, the EPA
may partially delegate to a Tribe the
authority to assist the EPA in
administering the EPA Indian country
MNSR Program. Pursuant to 40 CFR
49.103, the EPA may delegate to a Tribe
the authority to assist the EPA in
administering the EPA Indian country
Minor Source Oil and Gas FIP. To
obtain delegation, a Tribe must submit
a request to the relevant EPA Regional
Administrator that meets the
requirements of 40 CFR 49.161(b)(1)(i)
through (iv) and 40 CFR 49.103(b)(1)
through (3). EPA Region 8 determined
that the SUIT’s request for delegation
satisfied those requirements.
II. Partial Delegation of Administrative
Authority
On June 11th, 2024, EPA entered into
an ‘‘Agreement for Delegation of Partial
Administrative Authority of Certain
Federal Clean Air Act Indian Country
Programs to the Southern Ute Indian
Tribe by the United States
Environmental Protection Agency.’’ The
Delegation Agreement provides
authority for the SUIT to assist EPA in
administering the following rules that
are part of the EPA Indian country
MNSR Program and the EPA Indian
country Minor Source Oil and Gas FIP,
with the exception of enforcement of
those rules. For the EPA Indian country
MNSR Program: 40 CFR 49.151
(Program Overview, including serving
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Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 89, Number 154 (Friday, August 9, 2024)]
[Rules and Regulations]
[Pages 65205-65212]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2024-17498]
=======================================================================
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POSTAL REGULATORY COMMISSION
39 CFR Part 3006
[Docket No. RM2024-5; Order No. 7331]
RIN 3211-AA38
Freedom of Information Act
AGENCY: Postal Regulatory Commission.
ACTION: Final rule.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SUMMARY: The Commission adopts amendments to its Freedom of Information
Act (FOIA) regulations. The final rules: improve readability and
clarity for the public; better align the Commission's existing FOIA
regulations with the practices of other agencies subject to the FOIA
(as necessarily adapted to the Commission's size and area of regulatory
oversight); and improve the efficiency of the Commission's FOIA
administration.
DATES: Effective September 9, 2024.
ADDRESSES: For additional information, Order No. 7331 can be accessed
electronically through the Commission's website at https://www.prc.gov.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: David A. Trissell, General Counsel, at
202-789-6820.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
I. Background
II. Basis and Purpose of the Final Rules
III. Final Rules
I. Background
The Commission is a micro agency with fewer than 100 employees and
is also subject to the FOIA. Generally, most FOIA requests received by
the Commission are intended for the Postal Service and the requester is
therefore directed to the Postal Service, as a best practice. On April
18, 2024, the Commission issued Order No. 7052, which served as a
notice of proposed rulemaking that proposed amendments to its FOIA
regulations in existing 39
[[Page 65206]]
CFR part 3006.\1\ In response to Order No. 7052, only the Public
Representative filed comments.\2\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\1\ Notice of Proposed Rulemaking to Amend Rules Regarding the
Freedom of Information Act (FOIA), April 18, 2024 (Order No. 7052).
See also 89 FR 31670 (May 23, 2024).
\2\ Public Representative Comments on Notice of Proposed
Rulemaking to Amend Rules Regarding The Freedom of Information Act,
May 23, 2024.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
II. Basis and Purpose of the Final Rules
The Public Representative generally supports the proposed
amendments and suggests some revisions. After considering the comments,
the Commission adopts the rules as proposed in Order No. 7052, with
slight revisions to improve typographical consistency and to better aid
readers regarding the FOIA's exemptions.
III. Final Rules
The Commission adopts final rules in 39 CFR part 3006 that: improve
readability and clarity for the public; better align the Commission's
existing FOIA regulations with the practices of other agencies subject
to the FOIA (as necessarily adapted to the Commission's size and area
of regulatory oversight); and improve the efficiency of the
Commission's FOIA administration.
List of Subjects in 39 CFR Part 3006
Administrative practice and procedure, Freedom of information,
Reporting and recordkeeping requirements, Sunshine Act.
0
For the reasons stated in the preamble, the Commission revises 39 CFR
part 3006 to read as follows:
PART 3006--PUBLIC RECORDS AND FREEDOM OF INFORMATION ACT
Subpart A--General Provisions
Sec.
3006.100 Applicability and scope.
3006.101 Commission policy.
3006.102 Proactive disclosures.
3006.103 Reading room.
3006.104 Chief Freedom of Information Act Officer.
3006.105 Freedom of Information Act Public Liaison.
3006.106 Commission procedure when served a subpoena.
Subpart B--Procedures for Freedom of Information Act Requests
3006.200 Procedures for submitting requests.
3006.201 Timing of responses to requests.
3006.202 Responses to requests.
3006.203 Appeals.
3006.204 Relationship among the Freedom of Information Act, the
Privacy Act, and the Commission's procedures for according
appropriate confidentiality.
3006.205 Consultations, referrals, and coordinations.
3006.206 Submission of non-public materials by a person other than
the Postal Service.
Subpart C--Fees for Freedom of Information Act Requests
3006.300 Definitions applicable to this subpart.
3006.301 Request category.
3006.302 General provisions.
3006.303 Fee schedule.
3006.304 Procedure for assessing and collecting fees.
Authority: 5 U.S.C. 552; 39 U.S.C. 407, 503, 504.
Subpart A--General Provisions
Sec. 3006.100 Applicability and scope.
(a) The rules in this part apply to requests for records under the
Freedom of Information Act (FOIA), 5 U.S.C. 552. These rules should be
read in conjunction with the text of the FOIA and the Uniform Freedom
of Information Act Fee Schedule and Guidelines published by the Office
of Management and Budget (OMB Guidelines).
(b) 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 appearing in part 3005 of
this chapter and Sec. 3006.204.
Sec. 3006.101 Commission policy.
(a) The Commission shall be proactive and timely in identifying and
posting public records and other frequently requested records to its
website.
(b) It is the stated policy of the Commission that FOIA requests
shall be administered with a clear presumption of openness. The
Commission will only withhold information if it reasonably foresees
that disclosure would harm an interest protected by a FOIA exemption,
such as information specifically exempted from disclosure by statute
(for example 39 U.S.C. 410(c)), or disclosure is otherwise prohibited
by law. Publicly available information regarding exemptions and
examples of exempt information are available at the Department of
Justice's FOIA website, https://www.foia.gov.
(c) This Commission policy does not create any right enforceable in
court.
Sec. 3006.102 Proactive disclosures.
(a) Except as provided in Sec. 3006.101(b) and in part 3011 of
this chapter, Commission records, required by the FOIA to be made
available, will be made available on the Commission's website, https://www.prc.gov.
(b) Descriptions of the Commission's organization, its methods of
operation, statements of policy and interpretations, and procedural and
substantive rules, are published in the Federal Register publication
system, and are available on the Commission's website, https://www.prc.gov.
Sec. 3006.103 Reading room.
(a) The Commission maintains an electronic reading room at https://www.prc.gov.
(b) The records available for public inspection include, for
example, decisions; reports; opinions; orders; notices; findings;
determinations; statements of policy; copies of selected records
released under FOIA; indexes required to be maintained under FOIA; and
records relating to any matter or proceeding before the Commission.
(c) The Commission shall make available, in an electronic form,
records previously released under FOIA and which the Commission
determines are or are likely to become of significant public interest.
(d) Commission records that have been requested three or more times
will be made available on the Commission's website, https://www.prc.gov.
Sec. 3006.104 Chief Freedom of Information Act Officer.
The Commission designates the General Counsel of the Commission as
the Chief FOIA Officer. The Chief FOIA Officer shall be responsible for
the administration of and reporting on the Commission's Freedom of
Information Act program. The Chief FOIA Officer (and any individual(s)
designated by the Chief FOIA Officer to communicate with FOIA
requesters) may be contacted via email at [email protected] or telephone at
202-789-6800.
Sec. 3006.105 Freedom of Information Act Public Liaison.
The Commission designates the Director of the Office of Public
Affairs and Government Relations or the individual's designee as the
FOIA Public Liaison who shall assist in the resolution of any dispute
between a requester and the Commission. The FOIA Public Liaison may be
contacted via email at [email protected] or telephone at 202-789-6800.
Sec. 3006.106 Commission procedure when served a subpoena.
If an officer or employee of the Commission is served with a
subpoena duces tecum, material that is not part of the public files and
records of the Commission shall be produced only as authorized by the
General Counsel. Service of such a subpoena shall immediately be
reported to the General Counsel with a statement of all relevant facts.
The General Counsel will
[[Page 65207]]
thereupon enter such order or give such instructions as it deems
advisable.
Subpart B--Procedures for Freedom of Information Act Requests
Sec. 3006.200 Procedures for submitting requests.
(a) Electronic submission requirements. A request will receive the
quickest possible response if it is submitted electronically. An
electronic request may be submitted via the Commission's online FOIA
request form that is accessible through the Commission's website
(https://www.prc.gov), emailing [email protected], or the web portal at
https://www.foia.gov/. Each electronic request must:
(1) Reasonably describe the records sought;
(2) Identify the request category under Sec. 3006.301; and
(3) Include the requester's name, daytime telephone number, and a
valid email or mailing address to receive records and written
communications from the Commission regarding the request.
(b) Hard copy submission requirements. A requester may also submit
a request for records via hard copy. Each hard copy request must:
(1) Be in writing;
(2) Be clearly identified as ``Freedom of Information Act Request''
both in the text of the request and on the envelope;
(3) Be submitted to the Commission's office (901 New York Avenue
NW, Suite 200, Washington, DC 20268-0001);
(4) Reasonably describe the records sought; and
(5) Include the requester's name, daytime telephone number, and a
valid email or mailing address to receive records and written
communications from the Commission regarding the request.
(c) Content of request. Each request must describe the records
sought in sufficient detail to enable Commission personnel to locate
them with a reasonable amount of effort. Whenever possible, the request
should include specific information about each record sought that might
assist the Commission in responding to the request, such as the type of
record (e.g., contract, report, memorandum, etc.); the title or docket
number of a specific document or report; the topic or subject matter;
the name of the office and/or employees most likely to possess the
record; the date or general timeframe of the record's creation; and any
details related to the purpose of the record. Requests for email
records should specify the likely senders and recipients, keywords, and
a range of dates. Before submitting requests, a requester may contact
the Chief FOIA Officer (or the individual's designee) or the FOIA
Public Liaison to discuss the records sought and to receive assistance
in describing the records. The request may also specify the requester's
preferred method of communication (telephone, email, or mailing
address) and the preferred form or format (including electronic
formats) of the requested records.
(d) Improper requests. A request that does not reasonably describe
the records sought or does not comply with the published rules
regarding the procedures to be followed for submitting a request will
be deemed to be an improper FOIA request. If the Commission does not
receive the additional information needed that reasonably describes the
records to enable their location by the Commission with a reasonable
amount of effort, then the Commission will administratively close the
file.
(1) If after receiving a request, the Commission determines that it
is improper, the Chief FOIA Officer or the individual's designee will
provide one written notification to the requester using the contact
information included in the request. The notification will inform the
requester of all the following:
(i) The reason(s) why the request is improper;
(ii) The additional information needed from the requester that
would reasonably describe the records to enable their location by the
Commission with a reasonable amount of effort;
(iii) The Commission will not be able to comply with the request
unless the Commission receives such additional information in writing
within the specified timeframe and if the Commission does not receive a
written response containing the additional information needed within
the specified timeframe, then it will presume that the requester is no
longer interested in the records and will administratively close the
file on the request;
(iv) The preferred method for the requester to provide the
additional information is by emailing [email protected];
(v) The requester may also provide the additional information by
mailing or by hand delivery during regular business hours (which are
from 8 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. Eastern Time, except for Saturdays, Sundays,
and Federal holidays) to the Office of Secretary and Administration,
Postal Regulatory Commission, 901 New York Avenue NW, Suite 200,
Washington, DC 20268-0001); and
(vi) The contact information for the Chief FOIA Officer (or the
individual's designee) and the FOIA Public Liaison, each of whom is
available to assist the requester in reasonably describing the records
sought.
(2) If the requester provides the additional information needed
that reasonably describes the records to enable their location by the
Commission with a reasonable amount of effort by the timeframe
specified in the notification, then the Commission will confirm receipt
of the information and process the request.
(3) After administrative closure, if the Commission receives the
additional information needed that reasonably describes the records to
enable their location by the Commission with a reasonable amount of
effort, then the Commission will notify the requester that the request
will be processed as a new request.
(e) Expedited processing. At any time, a requester that has
satisfied all applicable requirements of paragraphs (a) through (c) of
this section may seek expedited processing of a request or an
administrative appeal. To seek expedited processing, the requester
must:
(1) Include ``Expedited Freedom of Information Act Request'' or
``Expedited Freedom of Information Act Appeal'' in the body of the
submission;
(2) For any hard copy submission, include ``Expedited Freedom of
Information Act Request'' or ``Expedited Freedom of Information Act
Appeal'' on the envelope;
(3) Demonstrate a compelling need as defined in 5 U.S.C.
552(a)(6)(E)(v); and
(4) Certify the statement of compelling need to be true and correct
to the best of the requester's knowledge and belief. The Commission has
discretion to waive the certification requirement.
Sec. 3006.201 Timing of responses to requests.
(a) In general. Requests will ordinarily be responded to according
to their order of receipt.
(b) Multitrack processing. (1) Unless expedited processing has been
granted, the Commission places each request in simple or complex tracks
based on the amount of work and time involved in processing the
request. Factors considered in assigning a request into the complex
track may include one or more of the following:
(i) The request involves voluminous documents;
(ii) The complexity of the material;
(iii) The request involves record searches at multiple facilities
or locations;
(iv) The request requires consultation among the Commission or
other agencies; or
[[Page 65208]]
(v) The number of open requests submitted by the same requester.
(2) Within each track, the Commission processes requests in the
order in which they are received. When appropriate, the Chief FOIA
Officer or the individual's designee will notify the requester of
placing a request in the ``Complex'' track and provide the requester
with an opportunity to limit the scope of the request. If the requester
limits the scope of the request, it may result in faster processing.
(c) Expedited processing. (1) Requests and appeals shall be
processed on an expedited basis whenever it is determined that they
involve the following:
(i) Circumstances in which the lack of expedited processing could
reasonably be expected to pose an imminent threat to the life or
physical safety of an individual; or
(ii) An urgency to inform the public about an actual or alleged
Federal Government activity, if made by a person who is primarily
engaged in disseminating information.
(2) Within 10 calendar days of the receipt of a request for
expedited processing, the Chief FOIA Officer or the individual's
designee will notify the requester of the decision whether to grant or
deny expedited processing. If expedited processing is granted, the
request shall be given priority, placed in the processing track for
expedited requests, and shall be processed as soon as practicable. If a
request for expedited processing is denied, the Chief FOIA Officer or
the individual's designee will inform the requester of the denial in
writing, the right to appeal the denial to the Commission in writing,
and the procedures for appealing the denial. Any request for records
that has been denied expedited processing will be processed in the same
manner as a request that did not seek expedited processing.
(3) Where a compelling need is not shown in an expedited request as
specified in Sec. 3006.200(e), the Commission may grant the request
for expedited processing at its discretion.
(d) Unusual circumstances. Whenever the statutory time limit for
processing a request cannot be met because of ``unusual
circumstances'', as defined in 5 U.S.C. 552(a)(6)(B)(iii), and the
Commission extends the time limit on that basis, the Commission shall,
before the expiration of the 20 business day period to respond, notify
the requester in writing of the unusual circumstances involved and of
the date by which processing of the request can be expected to be
completed. If an extension will exceed 10 business days, the Commission
will:
(1) Provide the requester with an opportunity to modify the request
or arrange an alternative timeframe for processing; and
(2) Make its FOIA Public Liaison available to the requester and
apprise the requester of their right to seek dispute resolution
services from the Office of Government Information Services.
(e) Aggregating requests. For the purposes of satisfying unusual
circumstances under the FOIA, the Commission may aggregate requests in
cases where it reasonably appears that multiple requests, submitted
either by a single requester or by a group of requesters acting in
concert, constitute a single request that would otherwise involve
unusual circumstances. Multiple requests that involve unrelated matters
shall not be aggregated.
Sec. 3006.202 Responses to requests.
(a) In general. To the extent practicable and unless the request
indicates a different preferred method of communication, the Commission
will communicate with the requester electronically (such as via email).
In determining which records are responsive to a request, the
Commission will include only records in its possession and control on
the date that it begins its search. If any other date is used, the
Commission shall inform the requester of that date. A record that is
excluded from the requirements of the FOIA pursuant to 5 U.S.C. 552(c)
is not considered responsive to the request.
(b) Acknowledgments of requests. The Commission shall acknowledge
the request and assign it an individualized tracking number if it will
take longer than 10 days (excluding Saturdays, Sundays, and legal
holidays) to process. The acknowledgment must include a brief
description of the records sought to allow requesters to keep track of
their requests more easily.
(c) Grants of requests. Once the Commission makes a determination
to grant a request in full or in part, the Chief FOIA Officer or the
individual's designee shall notify the requester in writing. The
Commission also shall inform the requester of any fees charged and
shall disclose the requested records to the requester promptly upon
payment of any applicable fees. The Commission must inform the
requester of the availability of the FOIA Public Liaison to offer
assistance.
(d) Adverse determinations of requests. If the Commission makes an
adverse determination denying a request in any respect, then the Chief
FOIA Officer or the individual's designee shall notify the requester of
that determination in writing. Adverse determinations, or denials of
requests, include decisions that: the requested record is exempt, in
whole or in part; the request does not reasonably describe the records
sought; the information requested is not a record subject to the FOIA;
the requested record does not exist, cannot be located, or has been
destroyed; or the requested record is not readily reproducible in the
form or format sought by the requester. Adverse determinations also
include denials involving fees or fee waiver matters or denials of
requests for expedited processing.
(e) Content of denials. The denial shall be signed by the Chief
FOIA Officer or the individual's designee and shall include:
(1) The name and title or position of the person responsible for
the denial;
(2) A brief statement of the reasons for the denial, including any
FOIA exemption applied by the Commission in denying the request;
(3) An estimate of the volume of any records or information
withheld, such as the number of pages or some other reasonable form of
estimation, although such an estimate is not required if the volume is
otherwise indicated by deletions marked on records that are disclosed
in part or if providing an estimate would harm an interest protected by
an applicable exemption;
(4) A statement that the denial may be appealed under Sec.
3006.203, and a description of the requirements; and
(5) A statement notifying the requester of the assistance available
from the Commission's FOIA Public Liaison and the dispute resolution
services offered by the Office of Government Information Services.
(f) Markings on released documents. Markings on released documents
must be clearly visible to the requester. Records disclosed in part
shall be marked to show the amount of information deleted and the
exemption under which the deletion was made unless doing so would harm
an interest protected by an applicable exemption. The location of the
information deleted shall also be indicated on the record, if
technically feasible.
(g) Use of record exclusions. (1) If the Commission identifies
records that may be subject to exclusion from the requirements of the
FOIA pursuant to 5 U.S.C. 552(c), the Commission must confer with the
Department of Justice, Office of Information Policy (OIP), to obtain
approval to apply the exclusion.
(2) Upon invoking an exclusion, the Commission must maintain an
[[Page 65209]]
administrative record of the process of invocation and approval of
exclusion by OIP.
Sec. 3006.203 Appeals.
(a) Discretionary review. The Commission (on its own initiative)
may review any decision of the Chief FOIA Officer or the individual's
designee within 90 calendar days.
(b) Requirements for making an appeal. A requester may appeal an
adverse decision on their FOIA request rendered by the Commission by
submitting a hard copy to the Commission's office (901 New York Avenue
NW, Suite 200, Washington, DC 20268-0001) or by emailing [email protected].
The requester must make the appeal in writing and to be considered
timely it must be postmarked, or in the case of electronic submissions,
transmitted, within 90 calendar days after the date of the Commission's
response. To facilitate handling, the requester must mark both the
appeal letter and envelope or the subject line of the electronic
transmission ``Freedom of Information Act Appeal.'' The appeal must
include, as applicable:
(1) A copy of the request, of any notification of denial or other
action, and of any other related correspondence;
(2) The FOIA tracking number assigned to the request;
(3) A description of the action (or failure to act) which is being
challenged;
(4) If challenging specific redactions made to responsive records,
a statement identifying the specific redactions being challenged;
(5) A statement of the relief sought; and
(6) A statement of the reasons why the requester believes the
action or failure to act is erroneous.
(c) Adjudication of appeals. (1) The decision of the Commission
constitutes the final decision on the issue being appealed. The
Commission will give prompt consideration to an appeal for expedited
processing of a request. All other decisions normally will be made
within 20 days (excluding Saturdays, Sundays, and legal holidays) from
the time of the receipt by the Commission. The 20-business day response
period may be extended by the Commission for a period not to exceed an
additional 10 business days when reasonably necessary to permit the
proper consideration of an appeal, under one or more of the ``unusual
circumstances'', as defined in 5 U.S.C. 552(a)(6)(B)(iii). The
aggregate number of additional business days used, however, may not
exceed 10 business days.
(2) An appeal ordinarily will not be adjudicated if the request
becomes a matter of FOIA litigation.
(3) On receipt of any appeal involving classified information, the
Commission must take appropriate action to ensure compliance with
applicable classification rules.
(d) Decisions on appeals. A decision on an appeal must be made in
writing. A decision that upholds the adverse determination in whole or
in part will contain a statement that identifies the reasons for the
affirmance, including any FOIA exemptions applied. The decision will
provide the requester with notification of the statutory right to file
a lawsuit and will inform the requester of the mediation services
offered by the Office of Government Information Services of the
National Archives and Records Administration as a non-exclusive
alternative to litigation. If the adverse determination is remanded or
modified on appeal, the requester will be notified in writing and the
Chief FOIA Officer or the individual's designee will further process
the request in accordance with that appellate decision and respond
directly to the requester. If not prohibited by or under law, the
Commission may direct the disclosure of a record even though its
disclosure is not required by law or regulation.
(e) Engaging in dispute resolution services provided by OGIS.
Dispute resolution is a voluntary process. If the Commission agrees to
participate in the dispute resolution services provided by OGIS, it
will actively engage as a partner to the process in an attempt to
resolve the dispute.
(f) When an appeal is required. Before seeking judicial review of
an adverse determination rendered by the Commission on a FOIA request,
a requester generally must first submit a timely administrative appeal.
Sec. 3006.204 Relationship among the Freedom of Information Act, the
Privacy Act, and the Commission's procedures for according appropriate
confidentiality.
(a) Coverage. FOIA applies to all Commission records and provides
the public with access to government records.
(b) Requesting records subject to the Privacy Act. A request by an
individual for the individual's own records contained in a system of
records is governed by the Privacy Act. Release will first be
considered under the Privacy Act pursuant to part 3005 of this chapter.
However, if there is any record that the Commission need not release
under the Privacy Act, the Commission will also consider the request
under FOIA, and will release the record if FOIA requires it.
(c) Requesting another individual's record. Request for records of
individuals which may not be granted under the Privacy Act shall be
considered under FOIA.
(1) If the Commission makes a disclosure in response to a request
and the disclosure is permitted by the Privacy Act's disclosure
provision, 5 U.S.C. 552a(b), the Commission will rely on the Privacy
Act to govern the disclosure.
(2) In some circumstances, the Privacy Act may prohibit the
Commission's ability to release records which may be released under
FOIA.
(d) Requesting a Postal Service record. The Commission maintains
custody of records that are both Commission and Postal Service records.
Except when the Postal Service submits materials to the Commission in
connection with activities under 39 U.S.C. 407(b)(2)(A), in all other
instances that the Postal Service submits materials to the Commission
that the Postal Service reasonably believes to be exempt from public
disclosure, the Postal Service shall follow the procedures described in
part 3011, subpart B of this chapter.
(1) A request made pursuant to FOIA for Postal Service records
shall be referred to the Postal Service; and
(2) A request made pursuant to part 3011 of this chapter for
records designated as non-public by the Postal Service shall be
considered under the applicable standards set forth in that part.
(e) Requesting a record submitted by a person other than the Postal
Service. The Commission maintains records of a confidential nature
submitted by persons other than the Postal Service as non-public
materials.
(1) A request made pursuant to FOIA for records submitted by a
person other than the Postal Service shall adhere to the applicable
procedures of Sec. 3006.205. If such a FOIA request is not referred to
a different Federal agency pursuant to Sec. 3006.205(b), the
Commission shall consider it in light of all applicable exemptions and
in accordance with the following procedures:
(i) If such materials are designated as non-public, the Commission
shall follow the procedures appearing in Sec. 3006.206(b) through (d)
in determining the FOIA request; or
(ii) In all other instances, the Commission shall determine the
FOIA request after notifying the person of the FOIA request and
providing the person with an opportunity to respond within 7 days of
the date of the notice under the following circumstances:
[[Page 65210]]
(A) The records sought contain confidential commercial information
that may be protected from disclosure under 5 U.S.C. 552(b)(4); and
(B) The Commission determines that it may be required to disclose
the records, provided that at least one of the following applies:
(1) The requested information has been designated in good faith by
the submitter as information considered protected from disclosure under
5 U.S.C. 552(b)(4); or
(2) The Commission has a reason to believe that the requested
information may be protected from disclosure under 5 U.S.C. 552(b)(4),
but has not yet determined whether the information is protected from
disclosure.
(2) A request made pursuant to part 3011 of this chapter for
records designated as non-public by a person other than the Postal
Service shall be considered under the applicable standards set forth in
that part.
Sec. 3006.205 Consultations, referrals, and coordinations.
(a) Consultations. If records originated with the Commission but
contain within them information of significance to another Federal
agency or office, the Commission will typically consult with that other
entity prior to making a release determination.
(b) Referrals. In addition to referring all requests made pursuant
to FOIA for Postal Service records to the Postal Service as specified
by Sec. 3006.204(d)(1), if the Commission believes that a different
Federal agency is best able to determine whether to disclose the
record, the Commission will typically refer responsibility for
responding to the request regarding that record to that agency.
Ordinarily, the agency that originated the record is presumed to be the
best agency to make the disclosure determination. Whenever the
Commission refers any part of the responsibility for responding to a
request to another agency, the Commission will notify the requester of
the referral, including the name of the agency and that agency's FOIA
contact information.
(c) Coordinations. The standard referral procedure is not
appropriate where disclosure of the identity of the Federal agency to
which the referral would be made could harm an interest protected by an
applicable exemption, such as the exemptions that protect personal
privacy or national security interests. For example, if a non-law
enforcement agency responding to a request for records on a living
third party locates within its files records originating with a law
enforcement agency, and if the existence of that law enforcement
interest in the third party was not publicly known, then to disclose
that law enforcement interest could cause an unwarranted invasion of
the personal privacy of the third party. Similarly, if the Commission
locates within its files material originating with an Intelligence
Community agency, and the involvement of that agency in the matter is
classified and not publicly acknowledged, then to disclose or give
attribution to the involvement of that Intelligence Community agency
could cause national security harms. In such instances, in order to
avoid harm to an interest protected by an applicable exemption, the
Commission will coordinate with the originating agency to seek its
views on disclosure of the record. The Commission then will notify the
requester of the release determination for the record that is the
subject of the coordination.
(d) Classified information. On receipt of any request involving
classified information, the Commission will determine whether the
information is currently and properly classified in accordance with
applicable classification rules. Whenever a request involves a record
containing information that has been classified or may be appropriate
for classification by another agency under any applicable executive
order concerning the classification of records, the Commission must
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 an
agency's record contains information that has been derivatively
classified (for example, when it contains information classified by
another agency), the Commission must refer the responsibility for
responding to that portion of the request to the agency that classified
the underlying information.
(e) Timing of responses to consultations and referrals. All
consultations and referrals received by the Commission will be handled
according to the date that the first agency received the perfected FOIA
request.
(f) Agreements regarding consultations and referrals. The
Commission may establish agreements with other agencies to eliminate
the need for consultations or referrals with respect to particular
types of records.
Sec. 3006.206 Submission of non-public materials by a person other
than the Postal Service.
(a) Overlap with treatment of non-public materials. Any person who
submits materials to the Commission (submitter) that the submitter
reasonably believes to be exempt from public disclosure shall follow
the procedures described in part 3011, subpart B of this chapter,
except when the submitter submits materials to the Commission in
connection with activities under 39 U.S.C. 407(b)(2)(A).
(b) Notice of request. Except as provided in Sec. 3006.204(d), if
a FOIA request seeks materials designated as non-public materials, the
Commission will provide the submitter with notice of the request. The
Commission may also provide notice when it has reason to believe that
materials submitted by a person other than the Postal Service are
possibly exempt from disclosure and may fall within the scope of any
FOIA request.
(c) Objections to disclosure. A submitter may file written
objections to the request specifying all grounds for withholding the
information under FOIA within 7 days of the date of the notice. If the
submitter fails to respond to the notice, the submitter will be
considered to have no objection, beyond those objections articulated in
its application for non-public treatment pursuant to Sec. 3011.201 of
this chapter, to the disclosure of the information.
(d) Notice of decision. If, after considering the submitter's
objections to disclosure the Commission decides to disclose the
information, it will give the submitter written notice of the decision
and a brief explanation of the reasons for not sustaining the
submitter's objections. The actual disclosure will not be made before 3
days after publication of the Commission's decision.
Subpart C--Fees for Freedom of Information Act Requests
Sec. 3006.300 Definitions applicable to this subpart.
(a) Commercial use means a request from or on behalf of a person
seeking information for a use or purpose that furthers the commercial,
trade, or profit interests of the requester or person on whose behalf
the request is made. In determining the applicability of this term, the
use to which a requester will put the document is considered first;
where reasonable doubt exists as to the use, the Commission may seek
clarification before assigning the request to a category.
[[Page 65211]]
(b) Direct costs means the expenditures the Commission incurs in
searching for, duplicating, and, where applicable, reviewing documents
to respond to a request. They include (without limitation) the salary
of the employee(s) performing work (the basic pay rate of such
employee(s) plus 16 percent to cover benefits).
(c) Duplication means copying the documents necessary to respond to
a request. Such copies may be paper, microform, audiovisual, or
machine-readable.
(d) Educational institution means a preschool, a public or private
elementary or secondary school, an institution of graduate or
undergraduate higher education, an institution of professional
education, and an institution of vocational education, which operates a
program or programs of scholarly research.
(e) Noncommercial scientific institution means an institution, not
operated on a commercial basis (as referenced above), which is operated
solely for the purpose of conducting scientific research whose results
are not intended to promote any particular product or industry.
(f) Representative of the news media means 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. Examples of news media entities
are television or radio stations broadcasting to the public at large
and publishers of periodicals (but only if such entities qualify as
disseminators of ``news'') who make their products available for
purchase or by subscription or by free distribution to the general
public. These examples are not all inclusive and may include alternate
media to disseminate news. A freelance journalist shall be regarded as
working for a news media entity if the journalist can demonstrate a
solid basis for expecting publication through that entity (e.g., by a
publication contract or prior publication record), whether or not the
journalist is actually employed by the entity.
(g) Review means examining documents located in response to a
request to determine whether any portion is exempt from disclosure, and
processing or preparing documents for release, but not determination of
general legal or policy issues regarding application of exemptions.
(h) Search includes all time spent looking for material responsive
to a request, including identification of pages or lines within
documents. The term covers both manual and computerized searching.
Sec. 3006.301 Request category.
(a) Fees. The level of fee charged depends on the request category.
(1) Commercial use. A request appearing to be for commercial use
will be charged the full direct costs of searching for, reviewing, and
duplicating the records sought.
(2) Educational and noncommercial scientific institutions. A
request from an educational or noncommercial scientific institution
will be charged for the cost of duplication only (excluding charges for
the first 100 pages). To be eligible for this category, a requester
must show that the request is made under the auspices of a qualifying
institution and that the records are not sought for commercial use but
are in furtherance of scholarly (in the case of educational
institutions) or scientific (in the case of noncommercial scientific
institutions) research.
(3) News media. A request from a representative of the news media
will be charged the cost of duplication only (excluding charges for the
first 100 pages).
(4) Other requesters. A request from any other person will be
charged the full direct cost of searching for, reviewing, and
duplicating records responsive to the request, except that the first
100 pages of duplication and the first 2 hours of search/review will be
furnished without charge.
(b) Privacy Act. A request by an individual for the individual's
own records in a system of records will be charged fees as provided
under the Commission's Privacy Act regulations in part 3005 of this
chapter.
Sec. 3006.302 General provisions.
(a) The Commission may charge search fees even if no records are
found or if the records found are exempt from disclosure.
(b) Except in the case of commercial use requesters, the first 100
pages of duplication and the first 2 hours of search time are provided
without charge.
(1) A page for these purposes is a letter- or legal-size sheet, or
the equivalent amount of information in a medium other than paper copy.
(2) Search time for these purposes refers to manual searching; if
the search is performed by computer, the 2 hours provided without
charge will be equal to 2 hours' salary of the person performing the
search.
(c) No requester will be charged a fee when the Commission
determines that the cost of collecting the fee would equal or exceed
the fee itself. In determining whether cost of collection would equal
or exceed the fee, the allowance for 2 hours' search or 100 pages of
duplication will be made before comparing the remaining fee and the
cost of collection.
(d) Records will be provided without charge or at a reduced charge
if disclosure of the 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 is not primarily in the
commercial interest of the requester.
(e) No requester will be charged a fee after any search or response
which occurs after the applicable time limits as described in
Sec. Sec. 3006.202 and 3006.203, unless:
(1) The Commission extends the time limit for its response due to
unusual circumstances, pursuant to Sec. 3006.201(d), and the
Commission completes its response within the extension of time provided
under that section; or
(2) The Commission extends the time limit for its response due to
unusual circumstances and more than 5,000 pages are necessary to
respond to the request and the Commission has discussed with the
requester how they could effectively limit the scope of the request or
made at least three good faith attempts to do so; or
(3) A court has determined that exceptional circumstances exist and
excused the Commission from responding by court order.
(f) The Commission may, however, charge fees for review, and in
some cases duplication, for a partial grant of a request while it
reviews records that may be exempt and may be responsive to the
request, so long as the partial grant is made within the applicable
time limits.
Sec. 3006.303 Fee schedule.
(a) Fees will be calculated as follows:
(1) Manual search. At the salary rate (basic pay plus 16 percent)
of the employee(s) making the search. Search time may be charged for
even if the Commission fails to locate records or if records located
are exempt from disclosure.
(2) Computer search. At the direct cost of providing the search,
including computer search time directly attributable to searching for
records responsive to the request runs and employee salary
apportionable to the search.
(3) Review (commercial use). At the salary rate (basic pay plus 16
percent) of
[[Page 65212]]
the employee(s) conducting the review. Charges are imposed only for the
review necessary at the initial administrative level to determine the
applicability of any exemption, and not for review at the
administrative appeal level of an exemption already applied.
(4) Duplication. At 10 cents per page for paper copy, which the
Commission has found to be the reasonable direct cost thereof. For
copies of records prepared by computer the direct cost of production,
including employee time, will be charged.
(5) Additional services. Postage, insurance, and other additional
services that may be arranged for by the requester will be charged at
actually incurred cost.
(b) In addition to the fee waiver provisions of Sec. 3006.302(d),
fees may be waived at the discretion of the Commission.
Sec. 3006.304 Procedure for assessing and collecting fees.
(a) Advance payment may be required if the requester failed to pay
previous bills in a timely fashion or when the fees are likely to
exceed $250.
(1) Where the requester has previously failed to pay within 30 days
of the billing date, the Commission may require the requester to pay an
advance payment of the estimated fee together with either the past due
fees (plus applicable interest) or proof that the past fees were paid.
(2) When advance payment is required, the administrative time
limits prescribed in 5 U.S.C. 552(a)(6) (Sec. 3006.201) begin only
after such payment has been received.
(b) Interest at the rate published by the Secretary of the Treasury
as prescribed in 31 U.S.C. 3717 will be charged on unpaid fee bills
starting on the 31st day after the bill was sent. Receipt of a fee by
the Commission, whether processed or not, will stay the accrual of
interest.
By the Commission.
Jennie L. Jbara,
Primary Certifying Official.
[FR Doc. 2024-17498 Filed 8-8-24; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 7710-FW-P