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 305.73-1
s 305.73-1 Adverse Agency
Publicity (Recommendation No. 73-1).
(a) Adverse agency
publicity--that is, statements made by an agency or
its personnel which invite public attention to an
agency's action or policy and which may adversely
affect persons identified therein [FN1]
--can cause serious and sometimes unfair injury.
Where a reasonable and equally effective
alternative is not available, adverse agency
publicity is often necessary to warn of a danger to
public health or safety or a threat of significant
economic harm, or to serve other legitimate public
purposes. However, adverse agency publicity is
undesirable when it is erroneous, misleading or
excessive or it serves no authorized agency
purpose.
[FN1] Publicity as
used here is distinguished from the mere decision
to make records available to the public rather than
preserve their confidentiality. That decision is
governed by separate criteria set forth in the
Freedom of Information Act (5 U.S.C. 552) and is
not within the scope of this recommendation.
(b) Agency practices
regarding adverse publicity vary widely. Some
agencies use adverse publicity as the primary
method of enforcement; for some others it is merely
action incidental to formal sanctions. Agency rules
seldom establish procedures or standards for the
use of adverse agency publicity, and it is almost
never subject to effective judicial review.
(c) In meeting these
concerns, this recommendation addresses agency use
of adverse publicity in connection with
investigatory, rulemaking and agency adjudicatory
processes as well as informal agency actions. It
recommends the adoption of agency rules containing
minimum standards and structured practices
governing the issuance of publicity.
Recommendation
Each agency should state
in its published rules the procedures and policies
to be followed in publicizing agency action or
policy, and internal operating practices should
assure compliance. In the adoption of such
procedures and policies, each agency should balance
the need for adequately serving the public interest
and the need for adequately protecting persons
affected by adverse agency publicity in accordance
with the following standards:
1. All adverse agency
publicity should be factual in content and accurate
in description. Disparaging terminology should be
avoided.
2. Adverse agency
publicity relating to regulatory investigations of
specifically identified persons or pending agency
trial-type proceedings should issue only in limited
circumstances in accordance with the criteria
outlined below.
a. Where an agency
determines that there is a significant risk the
public health or safety may be impaired or
substantial economic harm may occur unless the
public is immediately notified, it may use
publicity as one of the means of speedily and
accurately notifying the affected public. However,
where public harm can be avoided by immediate
discontinuance of an offending practice, a
respondent should be allowed an opportunity, where
feasible, to cease the practice (pending a legal
test) in lieu of adverse agency publicity.
b. Where it is required in
order to bring notice of pending agency
adjudication to persons likely to be desirous of
participating therein or likely to be affected by
that or a related adjudication, the agency should
rely on publicity to the extent necessary to
provide such notice even though it may be adverse
to a respondent.
c. Where information
concerning adverse agency action is available to
the public regardless of agency publicity measures
and is likely to result in media publicity, adverse
agency publicity should be issued only to the
extent necessary to foster agency efficiency,
public understanding, or the accuracy of news
coverage.
3. Adverse agency
publicity not included in paragraph 2 above should
issue only after the agency has taken reasonable
precautions to assure that the information stated
is accurate and that the publicity fulfills an
authorized purpose.
4. Where information in
adverse agency publicity has a limited basis--for
example, allegations subject to subsequent agency
adjudication--that fact should be prominently
disclosed. Any respondent or prospective respondent
in an agency proceeding should, if practicable and
consistent with the nature of the proceeding, be
given advance notice of adverse agency publicity
relating to the proceeding and a reasonable
opportunity to prepare in advance a response to
such publicity.
5. Where adverse agency
publicity is shown to be erroneous or misleading
and any person named therein requests a retraction
or correction, the agency should issue the
retraction or correction in the same manner (or as
close thereto as feasible) as that by which the
original publicity was disseminated.
[38 FR 16839, June 27,
1973]
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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