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 305.88-11
s 305.88-11 Encouraging
settlements by protecting mediator confidentiality
(Recommendation 88-11).
The resolution of issues
through negotiations among the affected parties has
long been recognized as an essential ingredient of
the administrative process. [FN1]
Settlements bring to bear parties' experience,
foster creative solutions, and result in faster
decisions requiring fewer resources than formal
litigation. Most settlements now occur simply
through ad hoc negotiations among the lawyers for
the parties, generally on the eve of hearing. The
Administrative Conference has recommended that
agencies adopt alternative means of dispute
resolution ("ADR") to enhance negotiations and
stimulate the possibility of reaching agreement
expeditiously within the confines of the agency's
authority and policy. [FN2]
[FN1] As the
influential Attorney General's Manual on the
Administrative Procedure Act explained in 1947,
[t]he settlement
of cases and issues by informal methods is nothing
new in Federal administrative procedure. In its
Final Report, the Attorney General's Committee on
Administrative Procedure pointed out * * * that
"even where formal proceedings are fully available,
informal procedures constitute the vast bulk of
administrative adjudication and are truly the
lifeblood of the administrative process."
[FN2] The
Conference has repeatedly recommended that agencies
employ ADR. Recommendation 86-3 calls on agencies
to make greater use of mediation, facilitation,
negotiation, minitrials, and other "ADR" methods to
reduce the delay and contentiousness that accompany
many agency decisions. E.g., Agencies' Use of
Alternative Means of Dispute Resolution, 1 CFR
305.86-3; Alternatives for Resolving Government
Contract Disputes, 1 CFR 305.87-11; Procedures for
Negotiating Proposed Regulations, 1 CFR 305.82-4,
85-5; Negotiated Cleanup of Hazardous Waste Sites
Under CERCLA, 1 CFR 305.84-4; Resolving Disputes
under Federal Grant Programs, 1 CFR 305.82-2.
This recommendation seeks
to encourage agency use of alternative means of
dispute resolution by affording appropriate
protection to communications between the parties
and the neutral in settlement negotiations. The
Conference, of course, recognizes the principle
that decisions affecting the public welfare ought
to be made in the open and subject to public and
judicial scrutiny. Nevertheless, since settlements
are essential to administrative agencies, a careful
balance must be struck between the openness
required for the legitimacy of many agency
agreements and the confidentiality that is critical
if sensitive negotiations are to yield agreements.
This recommendation attempts to strike that
balance, without thwarting open decisionmaking.
Most ADR techniques,
including mediation, non-binding arbitration,
factfinding and minitrials, [FN3] involve a
neutral third party who aids the parties in
reaching agreement that resolves the issues in
controversy. A skillful mediator can speed
negotiations and increase chances for agreement by
holding separate confidential meetings with the
parties, where each party may give the mediator a
relatively full and candid account of its own
interests (rather than its litigating position),
discuss what it would be willing to accept, and
consider alternative approaches. The mediator,
armed with this information but avoiding premature
disclosure of its details, can then help to shape
the negotiations in such a way that they will
proceed most directly to their goal. The mediator
may also carry messages between the parties, launch
"trial balloons," and act as an agent of reality to
reduce the likelihood of miscalculation. This
structure can make it safe for the parties to talk
candidly and to raise sensitive issues and creative
ideas. In non-binding arbitration, minitrials and
factfinding, the neutral may play a different role
from that of a mediator, because he may issue a
tentative decision that is then used as a basis for
negotiations, but all of these neutrals have the
common characteristic of helping the parties
negotiate an agreement.
[FN3] For brief
definitions of these terms, see the Appendix to
Conference Recommendation 86-3, supra.
With all of these
neutrals, many of the benefits of ADR can be
achieved only if the proceedings are held
confidential. Confidentiality assures the parties
that what is said in the discussions will be
limited to the negotiations alone so they can be
free to be forthcoming. This need extends to the
neutral's materials, such as notes and reports,
which are produced solely to assist the neutral in
the negotiation process and which others could
misconstrue as indicating a bias against some party
or interest. This is why many mediators routinely
destroy their personal notes and drafts and return
all other materials to the parties. Moreover, if
the neutral were to testify in a subsequent
proceeding as to what went on during the
negotiations, his neutrality might be destroyed.
The ADR process could be jeopardized because one
party or another is likely to feel disadvantaged.
Also, the parties would justifiably feel their
confidences might be threatened. All this would
certainly inhibit future participation by parties
and neutrals.
Limited protection for
settlement negotiations and work product developed
in preparation for litigation is provided by Rule
408 of the Federal Rules of Evidence and Rule
26(b)(3) of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure.
However, uncertainties as to their application--not
to mention the effects on confidentiality of the
Freedom of Information Act--may raise obstacles to
protecting communications with ADR neutrals in
federal agencies' disputes. As a result, many
statutes, rules, and guidelines have explicitly
provided for some degree of confidentiality of
mediation and similar materials.
The Administrative
Conference takes the view that maintaining
confidentiality of settlement discussions is
consistent with the principles underlying the FOIA,
Rule 408 of the FRE, Rule 26(b)(3) of the FRCP, and
the work product doctrine. To encourage the use of
ADR in negotiations, the recommendation contains a
model rule seeking to protect the communications
between the neutral and the parties or other
participants in the course of the negotiations as
well as the neutral's own notes and impressions. It
does so in recognition that the mediator will
virtually never have information or evidence that
is not shared by at least one other person,
excepting of course the neutral's own notes,
recollections, and judgments. The rule does not
address (1) when meetings or negotiations should be
held in public session, (2) what justification
should be prepared to support any agreement
reached, or (3) what information should be
available from a party to the negotiations. The
rule covers oral communications or actions that are
related to a settlement proceeding, as well as
documents that are created specifically for the
negotiations or other, previously existing
documents that are furnished to the neutral in
confidence by a participant in the negotiation. The
restrictions on the neutral's disclosing
information from the negotiation are not
categorically absolute, being subject to several
narrow exceptions that deal with extraordinary
cases. Finally, the model rule does not attempt to
impose its terms on all parties for all issues;
they would be free to vary the terms for their
particular negotiations.
Recommendation
1. Agencies that use the
services of neutrals in settlement proceedings:
(a) Should explicitly
indicate that as a matter of policy they will not
seek to discover or otherwise force disclosure of a
neutral's notes, memoranda or recollections or of
documents provided to the neutral in confidence in
the course of settlement negotiations;
(b) In arranging with an
individual or organization to serve as a neutral in
settlement proceedings, should include a provision
in any agreement with the neutral that
(i) the agency makes no
claim to the neutral's notes, memoranda or
recollections or to documents provided to the
neutral in confidence in the course of the
settlement negotiations and
(ii) that such material is
outside the scope of the agency's right to any data
developed pursuant to the agreement; and
(c) Should adopt a
procedural rule, consistent with the model rule
contained in the appendix below, for all cases
where the agency itself is a party to the
negotiations or where private parties are
negotiating the resolution of an issue in
controversy concerning a statute, regulation, or
policy administered by the agency.
2. The neutral, including
a neutral (as defined in the model rule) who serves
as a presiding officer, [FN4] should
carefully segregate, and identify as settlement
documents, all materials received or developed
during the course of a settlement proceeding,
including any retained following its conclusion, so
they will be used solely to assist the neutral in
working to settle the issues in controversy.
[FN4] See, e.g.,
Recommendation 88-5, Agency Use of Settlement
Judges, 1 CFR 305.88-5.
3. Agencies should
interpret the FOIA, Rule 408 of the Federal Rules
of Evidence, Rule 26(b)(3) of the Federal Rules of
Civil Procedure, and the work product doctrine to
avoid disclosure of settlement communications by
neutrals serving in administrative settlement
proceedings.
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 305.88-11, App.
Appendix
Model Rule
s xxx.1 Introduction;
Encouraging Settlement; ADR Techniques.
(a) To facilitate a
vigorous enforcement program and expeditious
administrative decisionmaking, [the agency]
encourages the resolution of issues in controversy
through negotiations among the affected parties.
Voluntary settlement processes within [the
agency's] statutory mandates and existing
policies can produce decisions more efficiently
than traditional procedures, and often yield
decisions that are more effective than those
reached without the concurrence of persons with
firsthand involvement. Settlement agreements
thereby enable the agency and the parties to
accomplish their goals with expenditure of fewer
resources.
(b) In addition to
unassisted negotiations among the affected
interests, alternative means of dispute resolution
("ADR") can aid the parties in reaching agreement
in appropriate cases. These techniques include
facilitation, mediation, minitrials, factfinding,
and non-binding arbitration. In each, a neutral
third party helps the parties reach a voluntary
agreement. [The agency] encourages the use
of these ADR processes as part of its policy
favoring settlements.
(c) The voluntary
settlement of issues in controversy through a
dispute resolution process requires integrity,
objectivity, and fairness on the part of the
neutral and of the process itself. Moreover, the
parties must feel free to discuss the dispute with
the neutral without fear of being disadvantaged by
the negotiations. [The agency] takes the
position that the public policy favoring voluntary
resolution of disputes therefore requires that the
neutral not reveal, either voluntarily or through
legal compulsion, information learned in confidence
during the negotiations. To encourage the parties
to negotiate, this rule enunciates an agency policy
seeking to protect the confidentiality of
settlement negotiations involving the neutral.
s xxx.2
Definitions.
As used in this rule:
(a) "Issue in controversy"
means a question that is material to a decision
involving a statute, regulation, or policy
administered by [the agency] about which
persons who would be substantially affected or the
agency disagree.
(b) "Settlement
proceeding" means any process, such as
facilitation, mediation, minitrial, factfinding, or
non-binding arbitration, that is used to resolve
issues in controversy by agreement of the parties
in which a neutral serves, whether or not
administrative or judicial proceedings have been
instituted.
(c) "Neutral" means an
individual who with respect to the issues in
controversy--
(1) Is not a party;
(2) Does not have any
official, financial, or personal conflict of
interest unless such interest has been fully
disclosed in writing and all parties agree that the
individual may nevertheless serve as a neutral;
and
(3) Works to aid the
parties in arriving at settlement of the issues in
controversy through agreement.
(d) "Settlement
communication" means any oral or written
communication or conduct made in confidence and in
connection with a settlement proceeding by any
party, neutral, non-party participant, or other
source of information relevant to the
proceeding.
(e) "Settlement document"
means any written material that is--
(1) Prepared for the
purpose of, in the course of, or pursuant to a
settlement proceeding, including memoranda, notes,
and work product of the neutral and the parties,
or
(2) Provided to the
neutral in confidence for purposes of the
settlement proceeding.
An agreement reached as a
result of a settlement proceeding is not a
settlement document unless the parties agree in
writing, and the law allows, that it shall be
regarded as such.
(f) "In confidence" means
with the expressed desire of the source that the
information be kept confidential or provided under
circumstances that would create the reasonable
expectation that it will not be disclosed.
(g) "Party" means a person
or entity whose dispute is the subject of the
settlement proceeding, including representatives of
such a party.
(h) "Non-party
participant" means a person or entity who is not a
party to the dispute but who participates in the
settlement proceeding, such as by providing
information, analysis, advice, or views.
s xxx.3 Applicability
of the Rule.
(a) This rule applies to
any settlement proceeding whether or not [the
agency] is a party if the parties communicate
with the neutral under circumstances that
reasonably imply that the parties expect that the
communications will be held confidential. Prior to
beginning substantive negotiations, the parties
may
(1) agree that this rule
does not apply to their negotiations or
(2) modify the terms of
this rule by agreement in which case that agreement
will prevail to the extent it is authorized by law
or is otherwise consistent with this rule.
So that the neutral can
decide whether he wishes to serve under those
conditions, the parties shall so inform the neutral
otherwise prior to commencing settlement
proceedings. If they fail to do so, this rule shall
apply.
(b) The provisions of the
rule take effect when--
(1) A person has been
specifically requested or accepted by at least one
party to
(i) serve as the neutral
in the settlement proceeding, or
(ii) discuss the potential
of conducting a settlement proceeding, or
(iii) contact other
potential parties to determine whether it would be
appropriate to convene a settlement proceeding to
resolve the issues in controversy;
(2) The other parties with
whom the neutral has contact knows that he or she
is occupying the role of a neutral; and
(3) They communicate with
the neutral in that capacity.
(c) The rule does not
address--
(1) The extent to which a
party may disclose settlement documents and
communications either voluntarily or in response to
discovery or legal process; or,
(2) The information that
is required to support a decision or agreement
reached in a settlement proceeding.
s xxx.4 Neutral
Impartiality and Confidentiality of Settlement
Negotiations.
(a) A neutral shall not
voluntarily or through compulsory process disclose
or testify concerning settlement communications or
settlement documents, unless--
(1) All parties to the
settlement proceeding and the neutral consent in
writing, and if the settlement communication or
document was provided by a non- party participant,
that participant also consents in writing;
(2) The request is for a
settlement document that was provided to the
neutral in a public meeting or is otherwise already
in the public domain;
(3) The settlement
document is required by law to be made public, but
only if it is not available from the person who
prepared it or from any other source;
(4) A court determines
that there is a need for such testimony or
disclosure. The agency takes the position that any
such determination should be pursuant to a finding
that the need for disclosure to--
(i) prevent a manifest
injustice,
(ii) reveal a violation of
law, or
(iii) protect the public
health or safety is of sufficient magnitude in the
particular case to outweigh the integrity of
settlement proceedings in general by reducing the
confidence of parties in future cases that their
communications will remain confidential; or
(5) The settlement
document or communication is relevant to the
resolution of a dispute between the neutral and a
party or participant, but only to the extent that
the document or communication is used for purposes
of resolving that dispute and not any issue in
controversy in the settlement proceeding.
(b) If a demand, by way of
discovery request or other legal process, is made
for disclosure by the neutral of a settlement
document or communication, the neutral shall make
reasonable efforts to notify the parties and any
affected non-party participant so that
countermeasures may be taken if desired.
s xxx.5 Agency
Records.
(a) The agency makes no
claim of control or ownership over the notes,
memoranda, and other work product prepared by a
neutral or by his or her staff in connection with a
settlement proceeding.
(b) The agency takes the
position that settlement documents and
communications are not agency records solely on
account of their having been received by the
neutral during a settlement proceeding; a document
or other material that is otherwise an agency
record remains as such.
[54 FR 5212, Feb. 2,
1989]
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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