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 305.88-1
s 305.88-1 Presidential
Transition Workers' Code of Ethical Conduct
(Recommendation No. 88-1).
The orderly and peaceful
transfer of governmental authority following
presidential elections is a hallmark of American
government. The Presidential Transition Act of 1963
recognizes that a smooth transition is necessary to
"assure continuity in the faithful execution of the
laws and in the conduct of the affairs of the
Federal Government, both domestic and foreign," and
it directs all officers of the government to take
steps to promote the orderly transition of power
between the outgoing and incoming administrations.
[FN1]
[FN1] 78 Stat.
153, section 2; 3 U.S.C. 102 note.
Since 1933, when
Inauguration Day was moved forward from March 4 to
January 20, the length of presidential transitions
has been moved between 71 and 79 days. However, the
size and complexity of the transition task has
grown steadily over time, corresponding to the
tremendous growth in federal responsibilities. Each
new President-elect has required a larger and more
sophisticated transition organization than his
predecessor.
The President-elect's
transition organization must, in this brief period,
prepare to provide the new leadership with
comprehensive information on the organization and
responsibilities of each federal agency; on the
resources within each agency, including the budget,
legislative initiatives, personnel and grants or
contracts; and on the policy questions that will
require decision by the new administration. This
information is the basis for the President-elect's
personnel, budgetary and policy decisions during
the critical initial period of the new
administration.
A large number of private
citizens must be relied upon to accomplish these
important tasks. During the 1980-81 presidential
transition, over six hundred persons, most serving
as volunteers, had active assignments on agency
transition teams. Many of these persons were
selected because of their substantive knowledge of
the agency's mission, acquired either through past
service in the government or in private sector jobs
that brought them in contact with the agency. The
magnitude and importance of the transition tasks,
and the limited time available to complete them,
suggest that future Presidents-elect will continue
to rely upon large numbers of private citizens,
some of whom later will be offered government
appointments but many of whom will return to their
private sector jobs.
The Administrative
Conference wishes to encourage the participation of
well qualified individuals in presidential
transitions, but it recognizes that the presence of
large numbers of private transition workers dealing
with federal agencies offers the potential for
conflicts of interest or abuse of the public trust
that accompanies their special access to government
information and facilities. The Conference is not
acting upon knowledge of serious problems in this
regard in recent transitions, but rather upon the
need to prevent such problems from occurring in the
future.
In this recommendation the
Conference urges the President to issue an
executive order to the heads of all federal
agencies (including independent regulatory
agencies), conditioning special access to federal
agency records and facilities by members of the
President-elect's transition team upon their
agreement in writing to the standards of conduct
set forth in the Appendix to this recommendation.
The recommended executive order would cover the
activities only of "special transition team
members," i.e., transition workers, who are not
existing government employees, who serve with or
without compensation, and who are authorized by the
President-elect's transition organization to seek
or obtain access to non-public government
information. The Conference believes that private
citizens are not, and should not be considered,
special government employees and thereby subject to
federal conflict-of-interest laws, solely because
of their activities as special transition team
members.
Two concerns are addressed
by this recommendation. First, federal agency
officials need to know who actually represents the
President-elect before granting special access to
information. Second, the public needs assurance
that authorized transition workers will not use
such information to further their own financial
interests or the interests of their present or
future employers or other private persons.
The Conference believes
that the recommended executive order and transition
standards of conduct will alleviate these concerns
without reducing the flexibility of the
President-elect's transition effort. By urging the
President to direct federal agencies affirmatively
to cooperate with authorized transition personnel
to the extent permitted by law and consistent with
their official duties, the recommendation should
facilitate the President-elect's transition
efforts.
The Conference's
recommendation includes requirements contained in
pending legislation to amend the Presidential
Transition Act of 1963 for minimal disclosure of
personal or financial information by transition
team workers. [FN2] The Conference believes
that transition team members should supply this
limited information to agencies, whether or not the
pending legislation is enacted. The Conference also
recommends that special transition team members
agree not to use non-public government information,
or to take any action as transition team members
which could further their own financial
interests.
[FN2] H.R. 3932,
passed by the House of Representatives on March 31,
1988, and S. 2037, passed by the Senate on April
26, 1988, would require disclosure of the names of
transition team workers, their most recent
employment and the source of funding of their
transition activities as a condition of receipt of
public funds for transition activities.
Recommendation
1. The Conference
recommends that the President issue an executive
order that conditions access by special transition
team members to government facilities or non-public
information upon their agreement in writing to the
standards of conduct set forth in the Appendix to
this recommendation. The term "special transition
team member" is used herein to mean a person who is
not a government employee, who serves with or
without compensation as a member of a transition
team, and who is authorized by the President-elect
to seek or obtain access to non-public government
information or facilities.
2. The executive order
should direct the heads of all federal agencies to
require the President-elect's transition
organization to provide each agency with a list of
the special transition team members for that
agency, copies of their written agreements to
comply with the standards of conduct and copies of
information disclosure statements, as a condition
of access by such members. The agencies should be
required to maintain and make those documents
available to the public upon request.
3. The executive order
should direct all agency heads, subject to the
above conditions, to cooperate with persons named
by the President-elect or his designees as special
transition team members to the extent permitted by
law and consistent with the performance of official
duties.
4. The executive order
should direct all agency heads to take appropriate
action against any person found to have violated
the standards of conduct agreement, including,
where authorized and in accordance with applicable
procedures, barring the person from employment,
receipt of contracts, representation of others
before the agency, or referral of the matter to
appropriate professional disciplinary bodies.
Authority: 5 U.S.C.
591-596.
SOURCE: 38 FR 19782, July
23, 1973; 57 FR 61760, 61768, Dec. 29, 1992, unless
otherwise noted.
Note: For an explanation
of the publication policy regarding these
recommendations, see s 304.2(a) of this chapter.
Copies of the texts of Recommendations not
published in part 305 may be obtained from the
Office of the Chairman, Administrative Conference
of the United States, 2120 L Street, NW., suite
500, Washington, DC 20037; telephone: (202)
254-7020.
.
1 C.F.R. s 305.88-1, App.
Appendix--Transition Code
of Ethical Conduct
Each person who is not an
employee or special government employee of the
federal government and who assists in the
presidential transition, with or without
compensation, and who is designated by the
President-elect to seek or obtain access to
non-public government information or facilities
during the transition period (herein referred to as
a "special transition team member"), shall agree to
comply with the following standards of conduct as a
condition of such access.
1. Disclosure of
Information
A special transition team
member shall supply the agency with a statement as
to his or her present employment and the sources of
funding which support his or her transition
activities.
2. Misuse of Inside
Information
A special transition team
member shall not use, permit others to use, or
disclose nonpublic information except for the
public purposes of the transition.
3. Financial
Self-Dealing
During the transition
period, a special transition team member shall not
knowingly take any action on a particular matter
involving the federal agency which could have a
direct effect upon a financial interest of the
transition team member, his or her spouse, a family
member, or any individual with whom the transition
team member has a business, professional or close
personal relationship.
4. Concurrent
Representation in Agency Proceedings
During the transition
period, a special transition team member shall not
advise or represent, with or without compensation,
anyone in any particular matter involving a federal
agency to which he or she has had access to non-
public information. This restriction does not
extend to the special transition team member's firm
or organization, but the team member should advise
his or her firm or organization to establish
procedures to assure that the team member does not
participate in any way in any such agency
proceeding.
5. Misuse of
Government Property
A special transition team
member shall conserve and protect federal property
entrusted to him or her, and shall not use federal
property, including equipment and supplies, other
than for purposes directly related to transition
activities.
6. Post-Transition
Activities
For two years after the
transition, a former special transition team member
shall not represent, with or without compensation,
any person before an agency in any particular
matter involving a specific party or parties as to
which he or she obtained government information not
then available to the public and not made public
prior to the request for advice or
representation.
7. Definitions
As used in this Appendix
[Order], the terms "employee," "special
government employee," "particular matter"
[FN3] and "particular matter involving a
specific party or parties" shall have the same
meaning as in Title 18, United States Code 202-209.
The term "transition period" shall extend from the
date of the general election in which the identity
of the President-elect is established until
Inauguration Day, or if the transition organization
continues to operate after the inauguration, such
later date through which the special transition
team member continues to serve in that
capacity.
[FN3] It is noted
that the term "particular matter" has been
interpreted to include rulemaking and general
policy matters, and extends to all discrete matters
that are the subject of agency action, no matter
how general the effect.
[53 FR 26026, July 11,
1988]
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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