95-15514. Rules Implementing the Government in the Sunshine Act  

  • [Federal Register Volume 60, Number 122 (Monday, June 26, 1995)]
    [Proposed Rules]
    [Pages 32930-32932]
    From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
    [FR Doc No: 95-15514]
    
    
    
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    ASSASSINATION RECORDS REVIEW BOARD
    
    36 CFR Ch. 14
    
    
    Rules Implementing the Government in the Sunshine Act
    
    AGENCY: Assassination Records Review Board.
    
    ACTION: Notice of Proposed Rulemaking (NPRM).
    
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    SUMMARY: The Assassination Records Review Board (Review Board) was 
    established by the President John F. Kennedy Assassination Records 
    Collection Act of 1992 (JFK Act). This NPRM will constitute the Review 
    Board's second rulemaking. All of the Review Board's regulations will 
    eventually be codified at 36 CFR Part 1400 et seq. This rulemaking is 
    undertaken in response to the Government in the Sunshine Act (Sunshine 
    Act). The Sunshine Act relates to meetings of agencies of the United 
    States government that are headed by collegial bodies composed of two 
    or more members, a majority of whom are appointed by the President with 
    the advice and consent of the Senate. The Act provides that meetings, 
    as defined in the Sunshine Act, shall be held in public except where 
    stated exemptions apply. The Review Board invites comments from 
    interested groups and members of the public on these proposed rules 
    implementing the Sunshine Act.
    
    DATES: To be considered, comments must be mailed or delivered to the 
    address listed below by 5 p.m. on July 26, 1995.
    
    ADDRESSES: Comments on these proposed regulations should be mailed, 
    faxed, or delivered to the Assassination Records Review Board, 600 E 
    Street, N.W., 2nd Floor, Washington, D.C. 20530 (Attention: Sunshine 
    Act NPRM). All comments will be placed in the Review Board's public 
    files and will be available for inspection between 8:30 a.m. and 4:30 
    p.m., Monday through Friday, in the Review Board's Public Reading Room 
    at the same address. Comments should state prominently that they are 
    being filed in response to the Review Board's Sunshine Act NPRM.
    
    FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
    T. Jeremy Gunn, Acting General Counsel, Assassination Records Review 
    Board, 600 E Street, N.W., 2nd Floor, Washington, D.C. 20530, (202) 
    724-0088.
    
    SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: To discharge its responsibilities, the 
    Review Board gathers as a collegial body at its Washington, D.C., 
    office and at other locations as appropriate. Since the Review Board, 
    including its staff, is a small agency, Review Board Members work both 
    personally and collectively in the discharge of the Review Board's 
    responsibilities. Review Board activities include such matters as: 
    reviewing classified and restricted government records relating to the 
    assassination of President Kennedy; determining whether such classified 
    and restricted records should be opened and made available to the 
    public; identifying additional assassination records in the possession 
    of governments and individuals; holding public hearings related to 
    assassination records; and ensuring government office compliance with 
    the JFK Act.
        The Sunshine Act defines meetings and sets certain requirements for 
    advance public notice of such meetings (5 U.S.C. Sec. 552b(e)) and 
    permits agencies to close meetings to public attendance and to withhold 
    information regarding meetings where an agency finds that any of ten 
    exemptions enumerated in the Sunshine Act applies, 5 U.S.C. 
    Sec. 552b(c). The Act further sets forth the procedures that must be 
    followed by agencies in invoking one of these exemptions, 5 U.S.C. 
    Sec. 552b(d),(f). The Review Board is required to adopt, after 
    opportunity for public comment, regulations to implement the Sunshine 
    Act, 5 U.S.C. Sec. 552b(g).
        Consistent with the requirement of 5 U.S.C. Sec. 552b(g), the 
    proposed regulations implement the provisions of 5 U.S.C. Sec. 552b(b)-
    (f). This NPRM has been made following a review of the Sunshine Act, 
    regulations promulgated and implemented by other collegial bodies under 
    the Sunshine Act, and the opinion of the Supreme Court of the United 
    States in FCC v. ITT World Communications, Inc., 466 U.S. 463 (1984). 
    The proposed regulations are intended to follow the exemptions set 
    forth in the Sunshine Act and to implement fully the Sunshine Act's 
    procedural requirements regarding public notice of meetings, 
    availability of transcripts or other records of meetings, and closure 
    of meetings.
    
    Paperwork Reduction Act Statement
    
        The proposed rule is not subject to the provisions of the Paperwork 
    Reduction Act of 1980 (44 U.S.C. Sec. 3501, et seq.) because it does 
    not contain any information collection requirements with the meaning of 
    44 U.S.C. Sec. 3502(4).
    
    Regulatory Flexibility Act Certification
    
        As required by the Regulatory Flexibility Act of 1980, 5 U.S.C. 
    Sec. 601-12, the Review Board certifies that this rule, if adopted, 
    will not have a significant economic impact upon a substantial number 
    of small entities and that a regulatory flexibility analysis need not 
    be prepared. 5 U.S.C. Sec. 605(b). The proposed rule would not impose 
    any obligations, including any obligations on ``small entities,'' as 
    set forth in 5 U.S.C. Sec. 601(3) of the Regulatory Flexibility Act, or 
    within the definition of ``small business,'' as found in 15 U.S.C. 
    Sec. 632, or within the Small Business Size Standards in regulations 
    issued by the Small Business Administration and codified in 13 CFR part 
    121. Since the impact of the proposed rule is confined to the Review 
    Board, the proposed rule does not fall within the purview of the 
    Regulatory Flexibility Act.
    
    List of the Subjects in 36 CFR Part 1405
    
        Sunshine Act.
    
    The Proposed Regulations
    
        Chapter XIV of Title 36 of the Code of Federal Regulations (as 
    proposed to be established at 60 FR 7507, February 8, 1995), is 
    proposed to be amended by adding part 1405 to read as 
    follows: [[Page 32931]] 
    
    CHAPTER 14--ASSASSINATION RECORDS REVIEW BOARD
    
    PART 1405--RULES IMPLEMENTING THE GOVERNMENT IN THE SUNSHINE ACT
    
    Sec.
    1405.1  Applicability.
    1405.2  Definitions.
    1405.3  Open meetings requirement.
    1405.4  Grounds on which meetings may be closed or information be 
    withheld.
    1405.5  Procedures for closing meetings, or withholding information, 
    and requests by affected persons to close a meeting.
    1405.6  Procedures for public announcement of meetings.
    1405.7  Changes affecting a meeting following the public 
    announcement of a meeting.
    1405.8  Availability and retention of transcripts, recordings, and 
    minutes and applicable fees.
    1405.9  Severability.
    
        Authority: 5 U.S.C. 552b; 44 U.S.C. 2107.
    
    
    Sec. 1405.1  Applicability.
    
        (a) This part implements the provisions of the Government in the 
    Sunshine Act (5 U.S.C. 552b). These procedures apply to meetings of the 
    Review Board. The Review Board may waive the provisions set forth in 
    this Part to the extent authorized by law.
        (b) Requests for all documents other than the transcripts, 
    recordings, and minutes described in Sec. 1405.8 shall be governed by 
    Review Board regulations pursuant to the Freedom of Information Act (5 
    U.S.C. 552).
    
    
    Sec. 1405.2  Definitions.
    
        As used in this part:
        Chairperson means the Member elected by the Board to serve in said 
    position pursuant to 44 U.S.C. 2107.7(f).
        General Counsel means the Review Board's principal legal officer, 
    or an attorney serving as Acting General Counsel.
        Government office means any office of the Federal Government that 
    has possession or control of assassination records as set forth in 44 
    U.S.C. 2107.3(5).
        Meeting means the deliberations of three or more Members where such 
    deliberations determine or result in the joint conduct or disposition 
    of official Review Board business. A meeting does not include:
        (1) Notation voting or similar consideration of business, whether 
    by circulation of material to the Members individually in writing or by 
    a polling of the Members individually by telephone.
        (2) Action by three or more Members to:
        (i) Open or to close a meeting or to release or to withhold 
    information pursuant to Sec. 1405.5;
        (ii) Set an agenda for a proposed meeting;
        (iii) Call a meeting on less than seven days' notice as permitted 
    by Sec. 1405.6(b); or
        (iv) Change the subject matter or the determinations to open or to 
    close a publicly announced meeting under Sec. 1405.7(b).
        (3) A session attended by three or more Members for which the 
    purpose is to receive briefings from the Review Board's staff or expert 
    consultants, provided that members of the Review Board do not engage in 
    deliberations at such sessions that determine or result in the joint 
    conduct of disposition of official Review Board business on such 
    matters.
        (4) A session attended by three or more Members for which the 
    purpose is to receive informational briefings from representatives of 
    government offices discussing classified or otherwise restricted 
    information in accordance with the provisions of the JFK Act, provided 
    that Members of the Review Board do not engage in deliberations at such 
    sessions that determine or result in the joint conduct of disposition 
    of official Review Board business on such matters.
        (5) A gathering of three or more Members for the purpose of holding 
    informal preliminary discussions or exchanges of views, but that does 
    not effectively predetermine official Review Board action.
        Member means a current member of the Review Board as provided by 
    law.
        Presiding Officer means the Chairperson or any other Member 
    authorized by the Review Board to preside at a meeting.
        Review Board means the Assassination Records Review Board created 
    pursuant to 44 U.S.C. 2107.7.
    
    
    Sec. 1405.3  Open meetings requirement.
    
        Any meetings of the Review Board, as defined in Sec. 1405.2, shall 
    be conducted in accordance with this part. Except as provided in 
    Sec. 1405.4, the Review Board's meetings, or portions thereof, shall be 
    open to public observation.
    
    
    Sec. 1405.4  Grounds on which meetings may be closed or information may 
    be withheld.
    
        A meeting may be closed when the Review Board properly determines 
    that an open meeting would disclose information that may be withheld 
    under the criteria enumerated below. Similarly, information that 
    otherwise would be required to be disclosed under Secs. 1405.5, 1405.6, 
    and 1405.7 may also be withheld under these criteria. All records of 
    closed meetings shall, however, be disclosed at a future date 
    consistent with the terms and requirements of the JFK act. The criteria 
    for closing meetings are whether information disclosed at such meetings 
    is likely to:
        (a) Disclose matters that are:
        (1) specifically authorized under criteria established by an 
    Executive Order to be kept secret in the interests of national defense 
    or foreign policy; and
        (2) in fact properly classified pursuant to such Executive order;
        (b) Relate solely to the internal personnel rules and practices of 
    the Review Board;
        (c) Disclose matters specifically exempted from disclosure by 
    statute (other than 5 U.S.C. 552), provided that such statute:
        (1) requires that the matters be withheld from the public in such a 
    manner as to leave no discretion on the issue; or
        (2) establishes particular criteria for withholding or refers to 
    particular types of matters to be withheld.
        (d) Disclose trade secrets and commercial or financial information 
    obtained from a person and is privileged or confidential;
        (e) Involve accusing any person of a crime, or formally censuring 
    any person;
        (f) Disclose information of a personal nature where disclosure 
    would constitute a clearly unwarranted invasion of personal privacy;
        (g) Disclosure investigatory records compiled for law enforcement 
    purposes, or information which, if written, would be contained in such 
    records, but only to the extent that the production of such records or 
    information would:
        (1) interfere with enforcement proceedings;
        (2) deprive a person of a right to a fair trial or an impartial 
    adjudication;
        (3) constitute an unwarranted invasion to personal privacy;
        (4) disclose the identity of a confidential source and, in the case 
    of a record compiled by a criminal law enforcement authority in the 
    course of a criminal investigation, or by an agency conducting a lawful 
    national security intelligence investigation, confidential information 
    furnished only by the confidential source;
        (5) disclose investigative techniques and procedures; or
        (6) endanger the life or physical safety of law enforcement 
    personnel;
        (h) Specifically concern the Review Board's issuance of a subpoena, 
    or the Review Board's participation in a civil action or proceeding, an 
    action in a [[Page 32932]] foreign court or international tribunal, or 
    an arbitration, or the initiation, conduct, or disposition by the 
    Review Board of a particular case of formal agency adjudication 
    pursuant to the procedures in 5 U.S.C. 554 or otherwise involving a 
    determination on the record after opportunity for a hearing; or
        (i) Disclose other information for which the Sunshine Act provides 
    an exemption to the open meeting requirements of the Act.
    Sec. 1405.5  Procedures for closing meetings, or withholding 
    information, and requests by affected persons to close a meeting.
    
        (a) A majority of all Members may vote to close a meeting or 
    withhold information pertaining to that meeting. A separate vote shall 
    be taken with respect to each action under Sec. 1405.4. A majority of 
    the Review Board may act by taking a single vote with respect to a 
    series of meetings, a portion or portions of which are proposed to be 
    closed to the public, or with respect to any information concerning 
    such series of meetings, so long as each meeting in such series 
    involves the same particular matters and is scheduled to be held no 
    more than thirty days after the initial meeting in such series. Each 
    Member's vote under the paragraph shall be recorded and no proxies 
    shall be permitted.
        (b) Any person whose interests may be directly affected if a 
    portion of a meeting is open may request the Review Board to close the 
    portion of the meeting on the grounds referred to in Sec. 1405.4(e), 
    (f), or (g). Requests, with reasons in support thereof, should be 
    submitted to the Office of the General counsel, Assassination Records 
    Review Board, 600 E Street, NW., 2nd Floor, Washington, DC 20530. On 
    the motion of any Member, the Review Board shall determine by recorded 
    vote whether to grant the request.
        (c) Within one working day of any vote taken pursuant to this 
    section, the Review Board shall make publicly available a written copy 
    of such vote reflecting the vote of each Member on the question. If a 
    portion of a meeting is to be closed to the public, the Review Board 
    shall make available a full written explanation of its action closing 
    the meeting (or portion thereof) and a list of all persons expected to 
    attend the meeting and their affiliation.
        (d) For each closed meeting, the General Counsel shall publicly 
    certify that, in his or her opinion, the meeting may be closed to the 
    public and shall state each relevant exemptive provision. A copy of 
    such certification shall be available for public inspection.
        (e) For each closed meeting, the Presiding Officer shall issue a 
    statement setting forth the time, place, and persons present. A copy of 
    such statement shall be available for public inspection.
        (f) For each closed meeting, with the exception of a meeting closed 
    pursuant to 1405.4(h), the Review Board shall maintain a complete 
    transcript or electronic recording adequate to record fully the 
    proceedings of each meeting. For meetings or portions thereof that are 
    closed pursuant to Sec. 1405.4(h), the Review Board may maintain a set 
    of minutes in lieu of such transcript or recording. Such minutes shall 
    fully and clearly describe all matters discussed and shall provide a 
    full and accurate summary of any actions taken, and the reasons 
    therefor, including a description of each of the views expressed on any 
    item and the record of any rollcall vote. The records of closed 
    meetings, in addition to all other records of the Review Board, shall 
    be included as permanent records in the JFK Collection at the National 
    Archives as provided by the JFK Act.
    
    
    Sec. 1405.6  Procedures for public announcement of meetings.
    
        (a) For each meeting, the Review Board shall make public 
    announcement, at least one week before the meeting, of the:
        (1) Time of the meeting;
        (2) Place of the meeting;
        (3) Subject matter of the meeting;
        (4) Whether the meeting is to be open or closed; and
        (5) The name and business telephone number of the official 
    designated by the Review Board to respond to requests for information 
    about the meeting.
        (b) The one week advance notice required by paragraph (a) of this 
    section may be reduced only if:
        (1) A majority of all Members determines by recorded vote that 
    Review Board business requires that such meeting be scheduled in less 
    than seven days; and
        (2) The public announcement required by paragraph (a) of this 
    section is made at the earliest practicable time.
    
    
    Sec. 1405.7  Changes affecting a meeting following the public 
    announcement of a meeting.
    
        (a) After there has been a public announcement of a meeting, the 
    time or place of such meeting may be changed only if the Review Board 
    publicly announces such change at the earliest practicable time. 
    Members need not approve such change by recorded vote.
        (b) After there has been a public announcement of a meeting, the 
    subject matter of such meeting, or the determination of the Review 
    Board to open or to close a meeting or a portion thereof to the public 
    may be changed only when:
        (1) A majority of all Members determines, by recorded vote, that 
    Review Board business so requires and that no earlier announcement of 
    the change was possible; and
        (2) The Review Board publicly announces such change and the vote of 
    each Member thereof at the earliest practicable time.
        (c) The deletion of any subject matter announced for a meeting is 
    not a change requiring the approval of the Review Board under paragraph 
    (b) of this section.
    
    
    Sec. 1405.8  Availability and retention of transcripts, recordings, and 
    minutes, and applicable fees.
    
        In accordance with the provisions of the JFK Act, the Review Board 
    shall retain the transcript, electronic recording, or minutes of the 
    discussion of any item on the agenda or of any testimony received at a 
    closed meeting for inclusion as a permanent record in the JFK 
    Collection at the National Archives. the public shall have access to 
    such records consistent with the terms of the JFK Act. Copies of any 
    nonexempt transcript or minutes, or transaction of such recordings 
    disclosing the identity of each speaker, shall be furnished to any 
    person at the actual cost of transcription or duplication unless 
    otherwise provided by the terms of the JFK Act. If at some later time 
    the Review Board determines that there is no further justification for 
    withholding a portion of a transcript, electronic recording, or minutes 
    or other item of information from the public which had been previously 
    withheld, such portion or information shall be made publicly available.
    
    
    Sec. 1405.9  Severability.
    
        If any provision of this part or the application of such provision 
    to any person or circumstance, is held invalid, the remainder of this 
    part of the application of such provision to persons or circumstances 
    other than those as to which it is held invalid, shall not be affected 
    thereby.
    
        Dated: June 20, 1995.
    David G. Marwell,
    Executive Director.
    [FR Doc. 95-15514 Filed 6-23-95; 8:45 am]
    BILLING CODE 6820-TD-M
    
    

Document Information

Published:
06/26/1995
Department:
Assassination Records Review Board
Entry Type:
Proposed Rule
Action:
Notice of Proposed Rulemaking (NPRM).
Document Number:
95-15514
Dates:
To be considered, comments must be mailed or delivered to the
Pages:
32930-32932 (3 pages)
PDF File:
95-15514.pdf