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 305.76-2
s 305.76-2 Strengthening
the Informational and Notice-Giving Functions of
the "Federal Register" (Recommendation No.
76-2).
The primary role of the
Federal Register is the publication, as required by
the Federal Register Act and the Administrative
Procedure Act, of legal documents that affect
people generally, such as descriptions of agencies'
organization and functions, texts of substantive
and procedural rules, notices of proposed
rulemaking, and statements of general policy or
interpretations of general applicability formulated
and adopted by agencies. The Office of the Federal
Register serves as an official depository for the
filing of these documents, and their publication in
the Federal Register provides the public with
notice of their contents. Paragraphs A and B of the
Recommendation seek to strengthen this
informational function of the Federal Register.
The secondary role of the
Federal Register is the publication of notices
pertaining to adjudicatory matters. Statutory
requirements and agency practices with respect to
the publication of these notices conform to no
pattern but vary widely among agencies and among
different types of adjudicatory proceedings. Since
the establishment of the Federal Register, Congress
has enacted a considerable number of statutes that
specifically require agencies to publish in the
Federal Register notices of applications, hearings
or decisions in adjudicatory proceedings. In
addition, agencies have often obtained the approval
of the Director of the Federal Register to publish
in the Federal Register notices pertaining to
adjudicatory matters despite the absence of an
express publication requirement. Paragraphs C and D
of the Recommendation seek to define and strengthen
this notice-giving function of the Federal
Register.
Recommendation
A. Preservation of
Documents in the "Code of Federal Regulations." The
Administrative Committee of the Federal Register
should require each agency to the maximum extent
practicable to preserve in the "Code of Federal
Regulations" documents of general applicability
that are published in the Federal Register and are
of continuing interest to the members of the
public. Particularly, actions should be taken to
the extent practicable in the following areas:
1. The Administrative
Committee should act to preserve in the "Code of
Federal Regulations" descriptions of each agency's
organization and functions required to be published
in the Federal Register under sections 552(a)(1)(A)
and (B) of the Administrative Procedure Act. All
agencies should inform the public of their
organization and functions by publishing complete
and informative descriptions in each year's edition
of the "Code of Federal Regulations." Subsequent
changes in an agency's description of its
organization and functions should appear in the
Rules and Regulations section of the Federal
Register where the codification system adopted for
use in the Code controls the order of publication
and provides a useful finding aid for subsequent
developments.
2. The Administrative
Committee and the agencies should act to preserve
in the "Code of Federal Regulations" those
statements of basis and purpose (or portions
thereof) accompanying the publication in the
Federal Register of newly promulgated rules that
are of continuing interest to members of the
public. If the preservation of an agency's basis
and purpose statements in successive editions of
the "Code of Federal Regulations" is likely to
become cumbersome, the texts of the statements
prepared by that agency during each preceding year
should be reprinted only once in that year's
edition of the "Code of Federal Regulations,"
either at the end of the title or chapter assigned
to the agency or in a special Code volume with
statements from other agencies, so that subscribers
to the Code are at least able to preserve the
statements in composite, bound form. Additionally,
the annual editions of the "Code of Federal
Regulations" should supply the Federal Register
citations to pending rulemaking proceedings that
affect present regulations or add new
regulations.
B. Publication in the
"Federal Register" of Statements of General Policy
and Interpretations of General Applicability.
Despite the requirement of section 552(a)(1)(D) of
the Administrative Procedure Act that each agency
currently publish in the Federal Register for the
guidance of the public those "statements of general
policy or interpretations of general applicability
formulated and adopted by the agency," surprisingly
few such policy statements and interpretations are
in fact published in the Federal Register. Each
agency should review its practices and take
necessary measures to insure the publication in the
Federal Register of all agency statements of
general policy and interpretations of general
applicability. In addition, when an agency utilizes
an adjudicatory opinion or an instruction to staff
for the purpose of adopting a general policy or
interpretation of general applicability, it should
publish in the Federal Register the pertinent
portion of the opinion or of the instruction, or it
should promptly summarize the policy or
interpretation in guideline form and publish it in
the Federal Register. These policy statements and
interpretations should be published in the Rules
and Regulations section of the Federal Register and
should be preserved in the "Code of Federal
Regulations" when they are of continuing interest
to the public.
C. Standards for
Publication in the Federal Register of Notices
Pertaining to Adjudicatory Matters. Congress should
consider the following standards in determining
whether to impose new requirements for the
publication of notices pertaining to adjudicatory
matters and in reviewing existing publication
requirements. The Director of the Federal Register
should also observe these standards in exercising
his discretionary authority to allow the
publication in the Federal Register of notices
pertaining to adjudicatory matters that are not
required by law to be published. In both instances
agencies should not rely solely on the publication
of notices in the Federal Register to afford notice
to interested persons of adjudicatory matters if
other forms of public notice are practicable.
1. The Federal Register
should not routinely be used to publish the texts
of agency orders and opinions in adjudicatory
proceedings or notices of those decisions if there
is no further opportunity available for interested
persons to comment or otherwise to participate in
the proceeding, except when such publication serves
a necessary legal purpose. Statements of general
applicability adopted by an agency in an
adjudicatory opinion should be published in the
Federal Register in accordance with paragraph B of
this Recommendation. Supplementary agency
publications that contain the texts of agency
orders and opinions in adjudicatory proceedings
should be listed in the "Code of Federal
Regulations" at the head of the applicable title or
chapter assigned to the agency and should be
described in greater detail in the agency's
regulations published in the Code.
2. The Federal Register
should not be used to publish notices of
applications, hearings and other adjudicatory
matters unless the notices are public notices
intended to inform interested members of the public
who are not parties to the proceeding of the
opportunity to comment or otherwise to participate
in the proceeding. In addition, specific categories
of public notices (for example, notices of
applications or hearings under a specific statutory
provision) should not be published if there is no
substantial public interest in the proceedings or
if the publication of the notices in the Federal
Register is unlikely to inform interested persons
about pending adjudicatory proceedings of which
they would not otherwise receive notice.
3. The various categories
of public notices of each agency should be listed
and described in detail in the agency's regulations
in the "Code of Federal Regulations." The
descriptions should designate which public notices
appear in the Federal Register and which do
not.
D. Format for Publication
in the "Federal Register" of Notices Pertaining to
Adjudicatory Matters. 1. The Administrative
Committee of the Federal Register should act to
require that notices pertaining to adjudicatory
matters that are published in the Federal Register
adopt an appropriate public notice format. The
notice that appears in the Federal Register should
briefly inform interested persons of the nature of
the proceeding, the agency's legal authority, the
matters of fact and law asserted, and the
opportunities available to comment or otherwise to
participate in the proceeding and should designate
an agency official interested persons may contact
for additional information. The published notice
should not ordinarily contain the text of any
agency order or opinion or a detailed recitation of
the legal or factual contentions of the agency or
other parties to the proceeding.
2. If a notice pertaining
to an adjudicatory matter is published in the
Federal Register, it should be published as early
in the proceeding as practicable (e.g., at the time
an application is filed rather than solely when the
agency orders a hearing on the application). An
agency may also highlight specific applications or
hearings where public participation is particularly
important by publishing notices thereof in the
Federal Register even though the agency does not
publish notices of other applications or hearings
under the same statutory provision.
[41 FR 29653, July 19,
1976]
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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