Source: https://www.federalregister.gov/documents/2000/09/05/00-22612/standards-of-ethical-conduct-for-employees-of-the-executive-branch-definition-of-compensation-for
Timestamp: 2018-07-17 13:57:13
Document Index: 186968916

Matched Legal Cases: ['§\u20092635', '§\u20092635', '§\u20092635', '§\u20092635', '§\u20092635', '§\u20092635', '§\u20092635', '§\u20092635', '§\u20092635', '§\u20092635', '§\u20092635', '§\u20092635', '§\u20092636', '§\u20092635', '§\u20092636', 'art 304', '§\u20092635']

A Proposed Rule by the Government Ethics Office on 09/05/2000
This interim rule amendment is effective September 5, 2000. Comments are invited and must be received on or before November 6, 2000.
65 FR 53650
53650-53652 (3 pages)
00-22612
II. The Amendment
https://www.federalregister.gov/d/00-22612 https://www.federalregister.gov/d/00-22612
Start Preamble Start Printed Page 53650
The Office of Government Ethics is amending the prohibition on employees' receipt of compensation for outside teaching, speaking, and writing, as set forth in the Standards of Ethical Conduct for Employees of the Executive Branch, to permit acceptance of travel expenses by employees other than covered noncareer employees.
Send comments to the Office of Government Ethics, Suite 500, 1201 New York Avenue, NW., Washington, DC 20005-3917, Attention: Kay L. Richman. Comments may also be sent electronically to OGE's Internet E-mail address at usoge@oge.gov. For E-mail messages, the subject line should include the following reference—“Comments on the Interim Rule Standards Amendment to the Compensation Definition for Teaching, Speaking and Writing Activities.”
Kay L. Richman, Associate General Counsel, Office of Government Ethics; telephone: 202-208-8000; TDD: 202-208-8025; FAX: 202-208-8037.
This interim rule, which is being published by the Office of Government Ethics (OGE) after consultation with the Department of Justice and the Office of Personnel Management, amends 5 CFR 2635.807 to conform to the May 30, 1995, decision by the United States Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit in Sanjour v. Environmental Protection Agency, 56 F.3d 85 (en banc), as clarified in the April 14, 1998, decision on remand by the United States District Court for the District of Columbia, 7 F. Supp.2d 14 (D.D.C. 1998). Sanjour, in which OGE was a co-defendant, involved a First Amendment challenge to the regulatory prohibition in 5 CFR 2635.807(a) on employee acceptance of travel expense reimbursements in connection with unofficial teaching, speaking, and writing that “relates to * * * official duties” under 5 CFR 2635.807(a)(2)(i). The District Court initially rejected the plaintiffs' claims, 786 F. Supp. 1033 (D.D.C. 1992), as did the Court of Appeals on its first hearing of the case, 984 F.2d 434 (D.C. Cir. 1993). On May 30, 1995, however, the Court of Appeals, in a 5-4 en banc decision on rehearing, sustained the employees' First Amendment challenge and held invalid “the no-expenses regulations.” 56 F.3d 85, 88 (D.C. Cir. 1995). The Court of Appeals en banc reasoned that, since a regulation of the General Services Administration (GSA), 41 CFR 304-1.3(a), allows travel reimbursements from non-Government sources in connection with official speech, whereas § 2635.807(a) prohibits travel reimbursements in connection with unofficial speech, the regulatory scheme posed a risk of censorship and discrimination based on viewpoint. 7 F. Supp.2d at 18 (District Court decision on remand, explaining the Court of Appeals decision); see 56 F.3d at 87, 89, 90, 96-97. At the same time, however, the Appeals Court noted that “the balancing of interests relevant to senior executive officials might ‘present [ ] a different constitutional question.’ ” 56 F.3d at 93. The Court, therefore, explicitly reserved judgment on the constitutionality of the regulations as applied to “senior executive employees.” Id.
On remand, the District Court entered a final order that enjoined enforcement of the bar on nonofficial travel expenses in 5 CFR 2635.807(a) against “employees below the senior executive service level of employment.” As the District Court explained, the en banc Court of Appeals ruling invalidated the ban on travel expenses in connection with all types of teaching, speaking, and writing related to duties under § 2635.807(a)(2)(i), not just those related to duties under § 2635.807(a)(2)(i)(E)(2). 7 F. Supp.2d at 17-18. The District Court, however, did not enjoin enforcement of the GSA regulation, which allows travel reimbursements from outside sources in connection with official speech. Id. at 18. According to the District Court, “[o]nce the prohibition on travel expense reimbursement for unofficial speech * * * is lifted, then there can be no possible constitutional objection to allowing agencies to accept travel reimbursements from outside sources for official travel.” Id. at 19.
As presently codified, 5 CFR 2635.807(a) bars employees from accepting from non-Government sources “compensation” for teaching, speaking, or writing that “relates to * * * official duties.” “Compensation” is generally defined as including travel expenses, except when accepted pursuant to certain statutory authorities that relate primarily to official travel activities. 5 CFR 2635.807(a)(2)(iii). In the revised rule, the introductory text of paragraph (a)(2)(iii) and exclusionary paragraphs (A)-(C) thereunder remain unchanged but, in response to Sanjour, a new paragraph (a)(2)(iii)(D) excludes from the definition of “compensation” travel expenses incurred in connection with a covered teaching, speaking or writing activity, unless the employee is a covered noncareer employee as defined in 5 CFR 2636.303(a).
This amendment affects only travel expenses. The ban on acceptance of other forms of compensation remains applicable to all employees to the extent the compensation is given for or in connection with teaching, speaking, or writing related to duties.
Under § 2635.807(a) as amended, employees who are not “covered noncareer employees” will be able to accept travel expenses incurred in connection with teaching, speaking, or writing activities that are related to duties. “Covered noncareer employees,” on the other hand, will remain subject to the travel expenses ban. This approach continues and formalizes the Start Printed Page 53651enforcement advice OGE provided pending amendment of § 2635.807(a). See OGE Memorandum of November 25, 1998, to Designated Agency Ethics Officials (DO-98-034), which is available in the Ethics Resource Library section of the OGE Web site, address: http://www.usoge.gov.
As defined in 5 CFR 2636.303(a), as amended at 64 FR 2421-2422 (January 14, 1999), the term “covered noncareer employee” includes certain Presidential appointees, noncareer members of the Senior Executive Service (SES) or other SES-type systems, and Schedule C or comparable appointees, provided such appointees hold positions “above GS-15 of the General Schedule or, in the case of positions not under the General Schedule, for which the rate of basic pay is equal to or greater than 120 percent of the minimum rate of basic pay payable for GS-15 of the General Schedule.” The term excludes special Government employees, Presidential appointees to positions within the uniformed services, and Presidential appointees within the foreign service below the level of Assistant Secretary or Chief of Mission.
Relying on the definition of “covered noncareer employee” as a means of distinguishing those employees to whom the travel expenses ban continues to apply from those employees who are exempt from it makes sense for a variety of reasons. By definition, a covered noncareer employee is a senior employee at or above the Senior Executive Service level of employment. Excluding such employees from the relaxation of the teaching, speaking and writing rule thus comports with the statement by the en banc Court of Appeals in Sanjour that “the balancing of interests relevant to senior executive officials might ‘present[ ] a different constitutional question than the one we decide today' ” and the Court's determination, accordingly, to “express no view on whether the challenged regulations may be applied to senior executive employees.” 56 F.3d at 93, citing United States v. National Treasury Employees Union, 513 U.S. 454 (1995). Conversely, exempting employees other than covered noncareer employees from the ban is consistent with the District Court's clarification, in its decision on remand, that the travel expenses ban may not be enforced against “federal employees below the senior executive service level of employment.” 7 F. Supp.2d at 17, n.1.
Insofar as the District Court enjoined enforcement of the travel expenses ban only against federal employees below the senior executive service level of employment, 7 F. Supp.2d at 17, n. 1, OGE, consistent with the court ruling, could have continued the ban against all senior employees, career as well as noncareer. The decision to continue the ban only against senior noncareer employees, by employing the “covered noncareer employee” definition in this way, however, accords with the higher standards to which the Ethics Reform Act, related regulations, and other regulations hold senior officials who are “covered noncareer employees,” particularly with regard to their outside activities. See 5 U.S.C. appendix, sections 501(a) and 502; 5 CFR 2635.804 and accompanying note; 5 CFR 2635.807(a)(2)(i)(E)(3) and example 6; 5 CFR 2636.301-2636.307. As a practical matter, moreover, the definition of covered noncareer employee has been in use for some time and is familiar to agency ethics officials.
Under amended § 2635.807, therefore, insofar as employees other than “senior,” i.e. “covered noncareer,” employees are concerned, the burden, for First Amendment purposes, on unofficial speech that relates to duties under 5 CFR 2635.807(a)(2)(i) will no longer be greater than the burden on official speech under 31 U.S.C. 1353 and GSA's implementing regulation.
As revised, § 2635.807(a)(2)(iii) includes four new examples that illustrate how applicability of the compensation prohibition may depend on such circumstances as—whether the payment covers travel expenses incurred in connection with a teaching, speaking, or writing activity, or constitutes a fee or other form of consideration; whether the travel expenses are incurred by a covered noncareer employee or by another employee; whether the payment concerns travel that is unrelated to the covered teaching, speaking, or writing activity and is, in effect, a fee for services; and whether the payment is made in connection with a teaching, speaking, or writing activity that is officially assigned and for which travel expense payments are authorized under specific statutory authority, such as 31 U.S.C. 1353, 5 U.S.C. 4111 or 7342, or an agency gift acceptance statute.
As amended, § 2635.807(a)(2)(iii) also includes a note intended to alert employees that, independent of § 2635.807, other authorities, such as 18 U.S.C. 209, Salary of Government Officials and Employees Payable Only by United States, in some circumstances may limit or entirely preclude an employee's acceptance of travel expenses.
Pursuant to 5 U.S.C. 553(b) and (d), as Director of the Office of Government Ethics, I find that good cause exists for waiving the general requirements of notice of proposed rulemaking, opportunity for public comment and 30-day delayed effective date for this interim rule amendment. These requirements are being waived because it is in the public interest that this regulation take effect as soon as possible in order to clarify when Government employees may accept travel expenses in connection with teaching, speaking and writing activities that are related to official duties. Interested persons are invited to submit written comments on this interim rule amendment, to be received by OGE on or before November 6, 2000. Before adopting this amendatory interim rule as a final rule, OGE will consider all comments received.
In promulgating this interim rule amendment, the Office of Government Ethics has adhered to the regulatory philosophy and the applicable principles of regulation set forth in section 1 of Executive Order 12866, Regulatory Review and Planning. The amendment has also been reviewed by the Office of Management and Budget under that Executive order.
As Director of the Office of Government Ethics, I have reviewed this interim amendatory regulation in light of section 3 of Executive Order 12988, Civil Justice Reform, and certify that it meets the applicable standards provided therein.
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Approved: July 24, 2000.
2. Section 2635.807 is amended by:
a. Removing the word “or” at the end of paragraph (a)(2)(iii)(B);
b. Removing the period at the end of paragraph (a)(2)(iii)(C) and adding in its place a semicolon followed by the word “or”;
c. Adding a new paragraph (a)(2)(iii)(D); and
d. Adding a Note and four Examples following new paragraph (a)(2)(iii)(D).
Independent of § 2635.807(a), other authorities, such as 18 U.S.C. 209, in some circumstances may limit or entirely preclude an employee's acceptance of travel expenses.
Example 1 to paragraph (a)(2)(iii): A GS-15 employee of the Forest Service has developed and marketed, in her private capacity, a speed reading technique for which popular demand is growing. She is invited to speak about the technique by a representative of an organization that will be substantially affected by a regulation on land management which the employee is in the process of drafting for the Forest Service. The representative offers to pay the employee a $200 speaker's fee and to reimburse all her travel expenses. She may accept the travel reimbursements, but not the speaker's fee. The speech is related to her duties under § 2635.807(a)(2)(i)(C) and the fee is prohibited compensation for such speech; travel expenses incurred in connection with the speaking engagement, on the other hand, are not prohibited compensation for a career GS-15 employee.
Example 2 to paragraph (a)(2)(iii): Solely because of her recent appointment to a Cabinet-level position, a Government official is invited by the Chief Executive Officer of a major international corporation to attend firm meetings to be held in Aspen for the purpose of addressing senior corporate managers on the importance of recreational activities to a balanced lifestyle. The firm offers to reimburse the official's travel expenses. The official may not accept the offer. The speaking activity is related to duties under § 2635.807(a)(2)(i)(B) and, because she is a covered noncareer employee as defined in § 2636.303(a) of this chapter, the travel expenses are prohibited compensation as to her.
Example 3 to paragraph (a)(2)(iii): A GS-14 attorney at the Federal Trade Commission (FTC) who played a lead role in a recently concluded merger case is invited to speak about the case, in his private capacity, at a conference in New York. The attorney has no public speaking responsibilities on behalf of the FTC apart from the judicial and administrative proceedings to which he is assigned. The sponsors of the conference offer to reimburse the attorney for expenses incurred in connection with his travel to New York. They also offer him, as compensation for his time and effort, a free trip to San Francisco. The attorney may accept the travel expenses to New York, but not the expenses to San Francisco. The lecture relates to his official duties under paragraphs (a)(2)(i)(E)(1) and (a)(2)(i)(E)(2) of § 2635.807, but because he is not a covered noncareer employee as defined in § 2636.303(a) of this chapter, the expenses associated with his travel to New York are not a prohibited form of compensation as to him. The travel expenses to San Francisco, on the other hand, not incurred in connection with the speaking activity, are a prohibited form of compensation. If the attorney were a covered noncareer employee he would be barred from accepting the travel expenses to New York as well as the travel expenses to San Francisco.
Example 4 to paragraph (a)(2)(iii): An advocacy group dedicated to improving treatments for severe pain asks the National Institutes of Health (NIH) to provide a conference speaker who can discuss recent advances in the agency's research on pain. The group also offers to pay the employee's travel expenses to attend the conference. After performing the required conflict of interest analysis, NIH authorizes acceptance of the travel expenses under 31 U.S.C. 1353 and the implementing General Services Administration regulation, 41 CFR part 304-1, and authorizes an employee to undertake the travel. At the conference the advocacy group, as agreed, pays the employee's hotel bill and provides several of his meals. Subsequently the group reimburses the agency for the cost of the employee's airfare and some additional meals. All of the payments by the advocacy group are permissible. Since the employee is speaking officially and the expense payments are accepted under 31 U.S.C. 1353, they are not prohibited compensation under § 2635.807(a)(2)(iii). The same result would obtain with respect to expense payments made by non-Government sources properly authorized under an agency gift acceptance statute, the Government Employees Training Act, 5 U.S.C. 4111, or the foreign gifts law, 5 U.S.C. 7342.
[FR Doc. 00-22612 Filed 9-1-00; 8:45 am]