CODE OF
FEDERAL REGULATIONS
TITLE 1--GENERAL
PROVISIONS
CHAPTER
III--ADMINISTRATIVE CONFERENCE OF THE UNITED
STATES
PART
305--RECOMMENDATIONS OF THE ADMINISTRATIVE
CONFERENCE OF THE UNITED STATES
1 C.F.R. s 305.69-6
s 305.69-6 Compilation of
Statistics on Administrative Proceedings by Federal
Departments and Agencies (Recommendation No.
69-6).
Government agencies which
conduct formal or informal rulemaking proceedings
or cases of adjudication which directly fix the
rights and obligations of private persons
(hereafter referred to as "proceedings")
[FN1] owe a special duty to the individuals
affected and to the general public to manage their
caseloads as efficiently as possible, to eliminate
inordinate delays in the conduct of proceedings,
and to work continuously toward improving the
fairness, effectiveness, and economy of their
procedures. The present volume of Federal
administrative proceedings is so great that much of
the basic information needed in these efforts can
be developed in intelligible and useful form only
through statistical study. The compilation and
publication of comprehensive statistics on Federal
agency proceedings, at regular intervals would:
[FN1] The agency
compilations proposed by this recommendation should
not be limited to formal proceedings, or limited to
"proceedings" as that term has been employed in
gathering statistics for past conferences or
Congressional groups. Rather, agency figures should
report all matters directly fixing the rights,
privileges, and obligations of private interests
including the routine handling of applications and
claims.
(a) Provide each agency
with information concerning its business which
would enable it to manage its caseload more
effectively,
(b) Augment generally the
information concerning its activities which each
agency must furnish to the President, the Congress,
and the public.
(c) Afford affected
parties and their counsel a better understanding of
the administrative processes which determine their
rights and obligations, and
(d) Provide a basis for
specific study of particular agency procedures by
the agency itself, by committees of Congress, the
Administrative Conference of the United States, the
organized bar, research scholars, and other
individuals and organizations, public and private,
interested in improving the Federal administrative
process.
Recommendation
1. To the extent deemed
useful to advance the purposes of this
recommendation, each Federal administrative agency
which conducts proceedings (as defined above)
affecting private persons' rights, privileges or
obligations, should prepare annual statistical data
pertaining to those proceedings, to be compiled in
such manner and presented in such publications as
the agency considers appropriate.
2. These statistical
compilations should list the kinds of proceedings
pending during the year, with a concise yet
meaningful description of the nature and purpose of
each kind of proceeding and citations for the
statutory authority under which the proceedings are
conducted, and the sections of the Code of Federal
Regulations which set forth the rules of practice
governing each kind of proceeding.
3. For the purpose of
agency efforts that may be made in cooperation with
the Chairman of the Administrative Conference of
the United States, to lessen delays in
administrative proceedings, the statistical
compilation should show the number of days which
elapsed during each significant step of the
proceedings which were concluded during the
year.
4. In designing each
agency's compilation, the following information,
together with the time-study data referred to in 3
above, should be considered minimal:
(a) The number of
proceedings of each kind pending at the beginning
of the year;
(b) The number of new
proceedings filed or otherwise commenced during the
year;
(c) The number of
proceedings concluded during the year and the
manner of their disposition (i.e., by settlement,
dismissal on procedural grounds, decision on the
merits without hearing, final decision by agency
after hearing, and an examiner's initial decision,
etc.);
(d) The number of
proceedings remaining at the end of the year;
and
(e) The number of
proceedings concluded during the year which were
appealed to the courts.
5. Each agency should
periodically analyze all of the information thus
compiled and should develop improved techniques
fitted to its particular needs to reduce delays and
expense and otherwise to improve its administrative
processes. A copy of this analysis should be
submitted to the Administrative Conference of the
United States.
6. In presenting its
statistical compilation, each agency should
summarize this analysis and describe the specific
steps it has taken toward the ends referred to in 5
above.
7. Each agency, in its
subsequent compilations, should follow a pattern
that makes possible a comparison of data with
corresponding data for earlier periods, thus
reflecting changes in backlogs, volumes, and
elapsed times and providing a measure of the
agency's experience following the specific actions
referred to in 6 above.
Authority: 5 U.S.C.
591-596.
SOURCE: 38 FR 19782, July
23, 1973; 57 FR 61760, 61768, Dec. 29, 1992, unless
otherwise noted.
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