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 305.80-4
s 305.80-4 Decisional
Officials' Participation in Rulemaking Proceedings
(Recommendation No. 80-4).
Several recent lawsuits
have challenged the propriety of an official's
participation in rulemaking proceedings. In those
cases, efforts were made to force the
"disqualification" of persons whose judgment might
shape an agency's regulations, much as
disqualification might have been sought in an
adjudicatory proceeding allegedly tainted by the
adjudicator's bias.
The concepts of bias (real
or supposed) pertinent to the fairness of a
judicial trial or an administrative adjudicatory
hearing have limited applicability to rulemaking
proceedings. The political, legislative, and
institutional aspects of the rulemaking function
and the frequency with which persons selected for
policy-making responsibilities are selected
precisely because they have previously declared
their beliefs make direct application of a judicial
test for disqualification inappropriate. Moreover,
the determinants of a "fair hearing" that are
implicit in the due process clause are inapplicable
in proceedings of an essentially legislative
nature, whose procedures are controlled by
statutory rather than constitutional
provisions.
Nevertheless, the
acceptability of regulations and, indeed, the
repute of the administrative process may be
seriously impaired if the judgment of agency
officials who can determine the content of rules is
considered to have been tainted by a conflict of
interest, by an inflexible prejudgment of pertinent
factual propositions, or by indecorous
manifestations of hostility. Each administrative
agency that possesses power to promulgate
regulations should adopt procedures and standards
that define whether an official should abstain (or,
if need be, be barred by the agency) from
participating in a particular rulemaking
proceeding.
The recommendation that
follows proposes minimum standards of propriety.
More exacting standards may be formulated by an
agency for the conduct of its affairs or may be
self-imposed by an official who on his own motion
chooses not to participate in a particular
proceeding. The basic proposition underlying the
recommendation is that unimpaired capacity to
exercise a fully informed judgment, as well as
freedom from personal, private interest in the
outcome of particular matters, is implicitly
demanded of those to whom Congress has granted
power to formulate rules for the future.
The standards sketched
here are consonant with those embodied in statutes
that govern government employees' behavior, in
statutory procedures that have generally been
provided for rulemakings, and in the six precepts
of ethical employee behavior formulated by the
Office of Personnel Management. [FN1]
[FN1] 5 CFR
735.201a:
"An employee shall avoid
any action, whether or not specifically prohibited
by this subpart, which might result in, or create
the appearance of:
(a) Using public office
for private gain;
(b) Giving preferential
treatment to any person;
(c) Impeding Government
efficiency or economy;
(d) Losing complete
independence or impartiality;
(e) Making a Government
decision outside official channels; or
(f) Affecting adversely
the confidence of the public in the integrity of
the Government."
The following
recommendation is directed toward agencies that
conduct rulemaking proceedings under the informal
procedures of the Administrative Procedure Act, 5
U.S.C. 553, or particular statutes defining
rulemaking procedures other than formal,
on-the-record rulemaking. The recommendation
relates solely to agency personnel with decisional
responsibilities in the rulemaking process.
Definition will perforce vary from agency to agency
because of differences in internal organization and
allocation of responsibility. No suggestion is made
here that every public employee who, at one stage
or another, may contribute in one manner or another
to rulemaking proceedings is to be subjected to
interminable tests of probity and objectivity
before the ultimately responsible "decisional
personnel" can act.
Recommendation
A. Procedures. 1. Each
rulemaking agency should promulgate procedures by
means of which persons who desire to participate in
a rulemaking proceeding (or who may be affected by
its outcome) can challenge the suitability of
participation by particular decisional personnel in
that proceeding. The procedures should identify the
factors that bear on suitability and should
indicate the appropriate time, place, and means of
making challenges, along with an indication of
opportunity for intra-agency review if one be
available.
2. The procedures should
also make plain that a decisional official, whether
or not challenged, may voluntarily abstain from
participating in a particular proceeding.
B. Conflict of Interests.
1. A decisional official whose financial interests
or those of whose immediate family may be
distinctively favored by choices to be made in a
particular rulemaking proceeding should voluntarily
abstain (or be required by the agency to abstain)
from participation in that proceeding, subject to
publicly stated and applied agency exception for de
minimis holdings.
2. New agency officials
should be subjected to "cooling off" periods of
variable duration, during which their participation
in a rulemaking proceeding would presumably be
inappropriate if
(i) The proceeding
specifically affects the financial interests of an
immediately prior employer or client; or
(ii) The official's
immediately prior employer or client is a
participant in the proceeding; or
(iii) The official has
participated in the proceeding before becoming a
public employee.
An agency's application of
a "cooling off" requirement should not, however,
reflect absolutes. It should take into account the
following factors, singly or in combination:
(a) The extent of the
official's participation in a prior private
capacity in the pending rulemaking proceeding;
(b) The elapse of time
between the prior involvement and the official's
present activity as a public employee;
(c) The nature and
magnitude of the rulemaking's possible impact on
the interests of the prior employer;
(d) The generality or
specificity of the rulemaking's scope;
(e) The extent of the
prior employer's participation;
(f) Applicable
professional standards;
(g) Senatorial
consideration, during the confirmation process, of
the official's prior relationships and
activities.
3. An official's
non-financial interests, associations, or
activities (whether or not related to past
employment) may in some instances suggest the
desirability of recusal or, if need be, a direction
to the official to abstain from participating in a
particular proceeding. If the official's
appointment has been confirmed by the Senate with
knowledge of the appointee's past interests and
activities, a required cooling off period would
ordinarily be inappropriate. As to officials of
lesser prominence, however, agencies may suitably
utilize in respect of nonfinancial interests the
procedures sketched above, related to financial
conflict of interests or to cooling off periods.
The question of precluding participation should
arise only when an identifiable interest is
significant in relation to the proceeding and is
likely to be substantially affected by its outcome.
Mere membership in an association would not
ordinarily be a ground for disqualification or
recusal.
4. Finally, agency
conflict of interests rules should make
emphatically plain that they are in aid of the
agency's self-management; that they are measures in
furtherance of its own quality control rather than
in amplification of judicial control; and that they
are agency declarations for guidance of its own
staff concerning decorum. An agency that is
insensitive or lax in fulfilling its declared
expectations will no doubt be of concern to the
Congress or to the Executive, but an agency's
heightened attentiveness to the qualities of
decisional personnel should plainly not expand the
occasions for or the scope of review of rulemaking
proceedings.
C. Prejudgment of Fact. 1.
Disqualification for prejudgment in rulemaking
should be limited to prejudgments of particular
"adjudicative" or "specific" facts, where it may be
inferred from the particular statutory framework,
agency procedural choices, or other special
circumstances that the agency's determination of
those facts is to be based on the evidentiary
record developed in the proceeding. Cause for
disqualification can appropriately be decided by
the agency only after it is established in the
proceeding that such facts will be materially at
issue in the proceeding. Such disqualification is
inappropriate for factual judgments that are the
consequence of earlier stages of the proceeding, or
for prejudgments of policy.
2. To avoid undue
interference with the legislative, policymaking
aspect of the rulemaking process and other agency
functions, disqualification for prejudgment of fact
should be considered by the agency only after it
has determined that critical "adjudicative" or
"specific" facts require resolution on the
evidentiary record developed in the proceeding, and
should require at least a preponderant showing that
an agency member or decisional employee has a
closed mind regarding those facts.
D. Decorum and Expression
of Views. A rulemaking proceeding should be
conducted with decorum and respect for the
interests of all concerned. Agency officials should
therefore conscientiously avoid intemperate
expression or other behavior suggestive of an
irrevocable commitment to a predetermined outcome
of the proceeding. This does not mean, however,
that agency officials may not express factual
judgments based on previous experience or on
information received during a proceeding; nor does
it suggest that officials may not act upon or voice
opinions concerning underlying issues of policy.
Expressing those opinions in interchanges with
committees of the Congress, other administrative
bodies, the public, and regulated groups is a
desirable normality of administration, rather than
an abnormality to be shunned, and is not a basis on
which exclusion from a proceeding may appropriately
be suggested.
[45 FR 46776, July 11,
1980]
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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