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 305.87-4
s 305.87-4 User fees
(Recommendation 87-4).
There is widespread
interest in Congress and the Executive Branch in
instituting user fees in certain government
programs. Although a general user fee statute (31
U.S.C. 9701) dates to 1952, recent studies,
including a report of the President's Private
Sector Survey on Cost Control, have urged expanded
application of such fees. In light of these
developments, the Administrative Conference has
undertaken a study of the user fee concept in
cooperation with the Office of Management and
Budget and other federal agencies.
The decision to institute
a user fee for a particular service or good is a
policy decision for Congress and the Executive
Branch to determine, and the Conference does not
address this subject. Nevertheless, when Congress
or an agency establishes a user fee, that action
should be based upon general principles that guide
the setting and implementation of fees. The
Conference, therefore, in this recommendation seeks
to provide a set of such basic principles.
In this recommendation
"user fee" means a price charged identifiable
individuals or entities by the federal government
for a service or good which the government
controls. The recommendation addresses only the
institution and implementation of user fees to
promote the efficient and fair allocation of
government services and goods. Accordingly, the
Conference does not address the imposition of
charges intended primarily to enhance federal
revenues or primarily to encourage or discourage
behavior unrelated to resource allocation.
Recommendation
A. Benefits
A government service for
which a user fee is charged should directly benefit
fee payers. A service provided by the government as
a condition to the pursuit of commercial or other
activity (e.g., inspections) may properly be
regarded as a benefit to the fee payer where it
confers an advantage on the fee payer or lessens
the fee payer's imposition of costs or risks on
others or on society as a whole.
B. Basic
Considerations for Establishing Fee Levels
1. Market and Cost
Considerations
When Congress or an agency
establishes a user fee for a service or good
provided by an agency, the fee should rest on
market factors where possible. In the absence of a
reliable market price, the fee normally should
cover the agency's costs, including all related
processing costs and that portion of other agency
costs properly allocable to the service or good
provided (such as anticipated capital replacement
or repair costs).
2. Other
Considerations
a. When criteria other
than those set forth in paragraph 1 above (e.g.,
national policy objectives, program goals or
fairness) influence the decision to establish fees,
the costs to be recovered, or the granting of
waivers or reductions, agencies should explain the
criteria used and the rationale for their
selection.
b. Where third parties or
the general public benefit significantly from a
governmental service, user fees need not be set to
recover fully the cost of providing that service.
Agencies should consider the practicability to
allocating costs between fee payers and others when
determining the proportion of service costs to be
recovered by user fees (as opposed to alternative
financing mechanisms).
c. The fee level may be
set without regard to the distribution of benefits
among the customers, employees and owners of the
fee payers. However, selection of the point of
collection should take into account the costs of
administration.
C. Disposition of Fee
Receipts
The Conference takes no
position on whether fee receipts should be
deposited in the Treasury general fund or earmarked
to a specific fund. In either event, agencies
administering programs that collect fees should be
provided with funds sufficient to provide adequate
service. In enacting a user fee, Congress should
specifically address the issue of how the proceeds
are to be used.
D. Implementation of
Principles
Congress in revising or
enacting user fee legislation, and the Office of
Management and Budget in providing implementation
guidance and other information on user fees to
agencies, should incorporate the principles set out
in this recommendation. Agencies should review
their user fee statutes and existing programs to
determine whether changes are necessary to
implement these principles.
[52 FR 23634, June 24,
1987]
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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