[Federal Register Volume 76, Number 85 (Tuesday, May 3, 2011)]
[Proposed Rules]
[Pages 24816-24820]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2011-10629]
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Proposed Rules
Federal Register
________________________________________________________________________
This section of the FEDERAL REGISTER contains notices to the public of
the proposed issuance of rules and regulations. The purpose of these
notices is to give interested persons an opportunity to participate in
the rule making prior to the adoption of the final rules.
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Federal Register / Vol. 76, No. 85 / Tuesday, May 3, 2011 / Proposed
Rules
[[Page 24816]]
OFFICE OF GOVERNMENT ETHICS
5 CFR Part 2640
RIN 3209-AA09
Government Employees Serving in Official Capacity in Nonprofit
Organizations; Sector Unit Investment Trusts
AGENCY: Office of Government Ethics (OGE).
ACTION: Proposed rule.
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SUMMARY: The Office of Government Ethics is issuing a proposed rule
amendment that would permit Government employees to participate in
particular matters affecting the financial interests of nonprofit
organizations in which they serve in an official capacity,
notwithstanding the employees' imputed financial interest. This
document also proposes an amendment that would clarify that the
existing exemptions for interests in the holdings of sector mutual
funds also apply to interests in the holdings of sector unit investment
trusts.
DATES: Comments are invited and must be received on or before July 5,
2011.
ADDRESSES: You may submit comments, in writing, to OGE on this proposed
rule, identified by RIN 3209-AA09, by any of the following methods:
E-Mail: [email protected]. Include the reference ``Proposed Rule
Exemption and Amendment Under 18 U.S.C. 208(b)(2)'' in the subject line
of the message.
Fax: 202-482-9237.
Mail/Hand Delivery/Courier: Office of Government Ethics, Suite 500,
1201 New York Avenue, NW., Washington, DC 20005-3917, Attention:
Richard M. Thomas, Associate General Counsel.
Instructions: All submissions must include OGE's agency name and
the Regulation Identifier Number (RIN), 3209-AA09, for this rulemaking.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Richard M. Thomas, Associate General
Counsel, Office of Government Ethics; telephone: 202-482-9300; TTY:
800-877-8339; Fax: 202-482-9237.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
I. Background
Section 208(a) of title 18 of the United States Code prohibits
Government employees from participating in an official capacity in
particular Government matters in which, to their knowledge, they or
certain other persons specified in the statute have a financial
interest, if the particular matter would have a direct and predictable
effect on that interest. Section 208(b)(2) of title 18 permits the
Office of Government Ethics to promulgate regulations describing
financial interests that are too remote or inconsequential to warrant
disqualification pursuant to section 208(a).
On August 28, 1995, the Office of Government Ethics published its
first interim rule, with request for comments, promulgating certain
miscellaneous exemptions under 18 U.S.C. 208(b)(2). 60 FR 44705 (August
28, 1995). On December 18, 1996, the Office of Government Ethics
published a comprehensive final rule, ``Interpretation, Exemptions and
Waiver Guidance Concerning 18 U.S.C. 208 (Acts Affecting a Personal
Financial Interest),'' codified at 5 CFR part 2640, which promulgated
several additional exemptions and also adopted as final, with some
modifications, the exemptions promulgated in the earlier interim rule.
61 FR 66829 (December 18, 1996) (final rule); 60 FR 47207 (September
11, 1995) (proposed rule). OGE subsequently has added and amended
exemptions by interim rule, with request for comment, 65 FR 16511
(March 29, 2000) (adopted as final, 65 FR 47830 (August 4, 2000)), by
final rule (after a proposed rule, 65 FR 53942 (September 6, 2000)), 67
FR 12443 (March 19, 2002), and by interim rule, with request for
comment, 70 FR 69041 (November 14, 2005).
The Office of Government Ethics is proposing to amend part 2640 by
adding a new regulatory exemption and clarifying the scope of an
existing exemption, as explained below. This proposed rule is being
published after obtaining the concurrence of the Department of Justice
pursuant to section 201(c) of Executive Order 12674. Also, as provided
in section 402 of the Ethics in Government Act of 1978, as amended, 5
U.S.C. appendix, section 402, OGE has consulted with both the
Department of Justice (as additionally required under 18 U.S.C.
208(d)(2)) and the Office of Personnel Management on this rule.
II. Analysis of the Proposed Changes
The proposed rule would add a new regulatory exemption, section
2640.203(m), which would permit employees to participate in particular
matters affecting the financial interests of nonprofit organizations in
which they participate, in their official Government capacity, as
officers, directors or trustees. The proposed rule also would clarify
that the existing regulatory exception for certain interests in sector
mutual funds, at section 2640.201(b), also covers interests in sector
unit investment trusts.
A. Proposed Section 2640.203(m)--Official Participation in Nonprofit
Organizations
Proposed section 2640.203(m) addresses a situation that was not
generally thought to be covered by 18 U.S.C. 208 until the mid-1990s.
Until that time, a number of agencies had a practice of assigning
employees to participate on the boards of directors of certain outside
nonprofit organizations, where such service was deemed to further the
statutory mission and/or personnel development interests of the agency.
The nonprofit organizations included such entities as professional
associations, scientific societies, and health information promotion
organizations. At the time, neither the agencies involved nor the
Office of Government Ethics viewed such official participation in
nonprofit organizations as being prohibited by 18 U.S.C. 208.
However, in 1996, the Office of Legal Counsel (OLC) at the
Department of Justice issued an opinion concluding that section 208
generally prohibits an employee from serving, in an official capacity,
as an officer, director or trustee of a private nonprofit organization.
Memorandum of Deputy Assistant Attorney General, OLC, for General
Counsel, Federal Bureau of Investigation, November 19, 1996,
http:[sol][sol]www.justice.gov/olc/fbimem.2.htm. This conclusion was
premised in large part on the fact that officers, directors and
trustees of an outside organization owe certain
[[Page 24817]]
fiduciary duties to the organization under state law, which may
conflict with the primary duty of loyalty that all Federal employees
owe to the United States. As a consequence of this interpretation,
employees are no longer permitted to serve in their official capacity
as officer, director or trustee of an outside nonprofit organization,
absent an individual waiver under 18 U.S.C. 208(b) or some specific
statutory authority permitting such service.\1\
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\1\ In rare instances, an employee also may be able to serve
pursuant to a waiver of fiduciary duties by the organization, if
such a waiver is permitted by state law. See Memorandum of Deputy
Assistant Attorney General, OLC, to General Counsel, General
Services Administration, August 7, 1998,
http:[sol][sol]www.justice.gov/olc/gsa208fn.htm.
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Since the 1996 OLC opinion, some agencies have continued to assign
employees to serve on such outside boards by granting the employees
individual waivers under 18 U.S.C. 208(b)(1). Other agencies have
declined to issue individual waivers (or have done so rarely), often
because of discomfort about waiving the application of a criminal
statute. OGE has fielded numerous inquiries and has held many meetings
with agencies and nonprofit organizations, mostly professional and
scientific societies, concerning the application of section 208 to
prevent official participation on outside boards. Several of the
agencies and nonprofit organizations have argued that the application
of section 208 has created unfortunate barriers to professional
development and meaningful exchange between Federal and non-Federal
experts in certain professions and areas of expertise. Moreover, some
of the organizations have pointed out that there is a lack of
uniformity within the Executive Branch, owing to the willingness of
some agencies to grant waivers and the unwillingness of other agencies
to do so, often with respect to participation in the same organization.
Additionally, the Office of Government Ethics has noted the
potential for confusion in some instances when employees are permitted
to serve only in a private, rather than official, capacity. Especially
where the agency has policy interests that overlap with those of the
nonprofit organization, it can be very difficult for the employee to
avoid the mistaken impression that he or she is acting in an official
capacity when participating in the organization. Employees may be
uncertain about the extent to which they are permitted to make
reference to their official position or to use official time or agency
resources. See 5 CFR 2635.702(b); 2635.704; 2635.705. Such confusion no
doubt could be reduced by clearer agency instructions concerning such
matters as excused absence and limited use of agency resources in
support of outside professional and other organizations. See 5 CFR
251.202. Nevertheless, the fact remains that sometimes there is
considerable continuity in subject matter between an employee's
official duties and the employee's activities in an outside nonprofit
organization, and some agencies believe it would be clearer to permit
the latter to occur while the employee is on official duty, without the
impediment of section 208.\2\
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\2\ Nothing in the proposed rule limits the ability of an
employee to serve as officer, director or trustee of a nonprofit
organization as a personal outside activity, where the agency has
not assigned the employee to serve in an official capacity.
Moreover, nothing in the proposed rule is intended to affect the
current ability of agencies to assign employees to serve as official
liaisons or to serve in similar nonfiduciary positions that do not
implicate 18 U.S.C. 208. See OGE Informal Advisory Letter 95 x 8.
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For all of the above reasons, the Office of Government Ethics in
2006 recommended to the President and Congress that section 208 be
amended ``to specify that the financial interests of an organization
are not imputed to an employee who serves as an officer or director of
such organization in his or her official capacity.'' OGE, Report to the
President and to Congressional Committees on the Conflict of Interest
Laws Relating to Executive Branch Employment 33 (2006) (2006 Report),
http:[sol][sol]www.usoge.gov/ethics_docs/publications/reports_
plans.aspx.\3\ In the 2006 Report, OGE recognized that it had
``regulatory authority to exempt financial interests arising from
official service on boards of directors,'' but OGE opted at that time
to place the issue before Congress first. No legislative changes to
section 208 were enacted in response to the report, however, and OGE
has continued to receive expressions of concern about this matter, both
from agencies and from nonprofit organizations.
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\3\ OGE was required to issue this report, in consultation with
the Department of Justice, by section 8403(d) of the Intelligence
Reform and Terrorism Prevention Act of 2004, Public Law 108-458
(December 17, 2004).
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Then, on March 9, 2009 President Obama issued a Memorandum for the
Heads of Executive Departments and Agencies on the topic of scientific
integrity. 74 FR 10671, 3 CFR, 2009 Comp., p. 354. In this memorandum,
he specifically requested that the Office of Science and Technology
Policy (OSTP) provide recommendations to address, among other things,
the retention of staff in scientific and technical positions within the
Executive branch. In response, the Director of OSTP issued a memorandum
urging all agencies to establish policies that promote and facilitate
the professional development of Government scientists and engineers.
John P. Holdren, Director, OSTP, ``Scientific Integrity,'' Memorandum
for the Heads of Executive Departments and Agencies, at 3, December 17,
2010. The OSTP memorandum specifically calls for policies to ``[a]llow
full participation in professional or scholarly societies, committees,
task forces and other specialized bodies of professional societies,
including removing barriers for serving as officers or on governing
boards of such societies.'' Id. at 4 (emphasis added).
In response to parallel initiatives, in August of 2010, the
Director of the Office of Personnel Management (OPM) wrote to OGE to
express several concerns about the application of section 208 to
employees serving in their official capacity as officers and directors
of scientific and professional organizations. Letter of John Berry,
Director, OPM, to Robert I. Cusick, Director, Office of Government
Ethics, August 16, 2010 (OPM Letter). Among other things, the Director
of OPM wrote:
Policies restricting Federal scientists' and professionals'
involvement in professional organizations negatively impact the
agencies employing such individuals. Restrictions act as a barrier
to employees achieving professional stature in their respective
fields, which may discourage scientists and professionals from
considering Federal employment. Restrictions also serve to isolate
scientists and professionals from the full exchange of knowledge and
ideas necessary to stay current and participate fully as members of
the greater scientific community. As a result, Federal scientists
and professionals are hampered in their ability to provide the best
possible advice and service to their respective agencies. These
restrictions are particularly burdensome for the ``research-grade''
scientists whose retention and promotion evaluations depend in part
on the recognition of stature by one's scientific peers. U. S.
Office of Personnel Management's Research Grade Evaluation Guide,
Factor 4; Contributions, Impact, and Stature, September, 2006;
http:[sol][sol]www.opm.gov/Fedclass/gsresch.pdf.
OPM Letter at 2. The Director of OPM asked OGE to consider exercising
its authority under 18 U.S.C. 208(b)(2) to exempt the financial
interests of organizations in which employees serve in their official
capacity, on the ground that such interests are ``too remote and
inconsequential to warrant disqualification pursuant to section 208.''
Id. at 3. In response, the Director of OGE wrote that OGE takes ``very
seriously'' OPM's ``concerns about the impact that the current bar has
on the
[[Page 24818]]
professional development of employees.'' Letter of Robert I. Cusick,
Director, OGE, to John Berry, Director, OPM, September 23, 2010.
To address OPM's concerns, as well as the concerns raised by other
agencies and outside organizations since 1996, and consistent with
Administration efforts designed to ensure scientific integrity, OGE has
concluded that it is now appropriate to exercise its authority under 18
U.S.C. 208(b)(2) to exempt the imputed financial interests of nonprofit
organizations in which employees serve as officers, directors or
trustees in their official capacity. OGE has determined that such
financial interests are too remote or inconsequential to affect the
integrity of employees' services, for several reasons. As explained in
OGE's 2006 Report, which was issued after consultation with the
Department of Justice:
OGE believes that the conflict identified by OLC [between the
employee's duty of loyalty to the Government and the employee's
fiduciary duties to the outside organization] may be more
theoretical than real, particularly because employees assigned to
serve on outside boards remain subject to important Federal
controls, such as the authority to review and approve (or deny) the
official activity in the first place, and the authority to order the
individual to limit the activity, or even resign the position, in
the event of a true conflict with Federal interests. In addition, an
agency generally approves such activities only where the
organization's interests are in consonance with the agency's own
interests. In an era when `public/private partnerships' are promoted
as a positive way for Government to achieve its objectives more
efficiently, ethics officials find it difficult to explain and
justify to agency employees why a waiver is required for official
board services that have been determined by the agency to be proper.
2006 Report at 33.
In short, the potential for a real conflict of interest is too
remote or inconsequential to affect the integrity of an employee's
services under these circumstances.
That is not to say, however, that agencies would be precluded from
imposing meaningful controls and limits on employees serving in
nonprofit organizations. As made clear in the Note following proposed
section 2640.203(m), agencies must satisfy themselves that they have
authority to assign employees to serve in such organizations in the
first place; the proposed exemption does not itself constitute such
authority, but simply removes the bar of the conflict of interest law.
Moreover, agency decisions to permit (or not permit) official
participation in any particular outside organization will be informed
by numerous legal, policy, and managerial considerations, such as: the
degree to which the activity will further the agency's statutory
mission; the availability of agency funds and other resources to
support such activities; the degree to which the agency is able and
willing to assign employees to serve in other, similar organizations
without appearing to single out one organization unreasonably; and the
demands of the agency's workload and the particular employee's other
assignments.\4\ Even where an agency does permit an employee to serve
as officer, director or trustee of a nonprofit organization, the agency
has discretion to limit or condition the official duty activity in a
manner consistent with the needs and interests of the agency. This may
include limits on participation in lobbying, fundraising, regulatory,
investigational, or representational activities, as determined by the
agency. For example, where agencies have granted individual waivers in
the past, under section 208(b)(1), some agencies have required
employees to refrain from participating in the fundraising activities
of the outside organization or from participating in agency decisions
to award grants or contracts to the organization; agencies will remain
free to impose similar limits as they deem appropriate in the
future.\5\ See OGE Memorandum DO-07-006, http://www.usoge.gov/ethics_guidance/daeograms/dgr_files/2007/do07006.html In other words, nothing
in the proposed regulatory exemption is intended to interfere with the
discretion of agencies to assign duties and describe the limits of
official assignments, including assignments that involve outside
nonprofit organizations.
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\4\ Even prior to the 1996 OLC opinion, some agencies rarely if
ever permitted employees to serve as officers, directors or trustees
of outside organizations in an official capacity, because of fiscal,
policy or managerial concerns. Notwithstanding the proposed
regulatory exemption, some agencies may continue to decline to
assign employees to serve in an official capacity for similar
reasons.
\5\ In any event, agency decisions to permit an employee to
engage in official fundraising for a nonprofit organization must
take into account the requirements of 5 CFR 2635.808(b) and 5 CFR
part 950.
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Finally, OGE notes that the proposed rule refers generally to
``nonprofit'' organizations. See, e.g. ``Black's Law Dictionary'' 1080
(1999) (``group organized for a purpose other than to generate income
or profit''). The exemption thus is not limited to scientific
organizations, but rather is intended to provide agencies with
discretion to determine which nonprofit entities would further agency
interests and would be appropriate for employee participation,
including professional and other nonprofit groups focused on issues
pertaining to legal practice, law enforcement, various social sciences,
and other disciplines and public policy areas.
B. Proposed Clarifying Amendment to Section 2640.201(b)--Sector Unit
Investment Trusts
Among the regulatory exemptions currently found in subpart B of
part 2640 are several that exempt certain financial interests in mutual
funds and unit investment trusts. The Office of Government Ethics has
promulgated exemptions for interests in the holdings of diversified
mutual funds and diversified unit investment trusts (5 CFR
2640.201(a)), in the non-sector holdings of sector mutual funds (5 CFR
2640.201(b)(1)), and in the sector holdings of sector mutual funds when
the aggregate market value of the employee's interest in the sector
fund or funds does not exceed $50,000 (5 CFR 2640.201(b)(2)). Most
recently, the Office of Government Ethics has promulgated one for
interests in mutual funds and unit investment trusts other than
interests arising from the holdings of such vehicles (5 CFR
2640.201(d)). This exemption is limited to particular matters of
general applicability, as defined in 5 CFR 2640.102(m).
In promulgating these exemptions, the Office of Government Ethics
recognized that pooled investment vehicles such as mutual funds and
unit investment trusts generally pose fewer concerns that the financial
interests will affect the integrity of the services of Government
employees. The Office of Government Ethics has noted that usually
``only a limited portion of the fund's assets [are] placed in the
securities of any single issuer'' and that ``an employee's interest in
any one fund is only a small portion of the fund's total assets.'' 60
FR 47211 (September 11, 1995) (preamble to proposed rule).
The Office of Government Ethics is proposing to amend the language
of the exemptions for the interests in sector mutual funds to include
explicitly the interests of sector unit investment trusts. The current
regulation, 5 CFR 2640.201(b), does not include the language ``sector
unit investment trusts.'' At the time that the sector fund exemptions
were promulgated, the Office of Government Ethics contemplated that the
exemptions would also extend to those investment vehicles organized as
sector unit investment trusts. In practice, the Office of Government
Ethics has permitted executive branch employees to apply the exemptions
for interests in sector
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mutual funds to interests in sector unit investment trusts.
Therefore, OGE is proposing to add specific references to sector
unit investment trusts to 5 CFR 2640.201(b) in order to clarify that
the exemptions for interests in the holdings of sector mutual funds
also apply to the interests in the holdings of sector unit investment
trusts. OGE also is proposing conforming amendments to the definition
in Sec. 2640.102(q), which would define both sector mutual fund and
sector unit investment trust.
III. Matters of Regulatory Procedure
Regulatory Flexibility Act
As Director of the Office of Government Ethics, I certify under the
Regulatory Flexibility Act (5 U.S.C. chapter 6) that this proposed rule
would not have a significant economic impact on a substantial number of
small entities because it primarily affects Federal executive branch
employees.
Paperwork Reduction Act
The Paperwork Reduction Act (44 U.S.C. chapter 35) does not apply
because this proposed regulation would not contain information
collection requirements that require approval of the Office of
Management and Budget.
Unfunded Mandates Reform Act
For purposes of the Unfunded Mandates Reform Act of 1995 (2 U.S.C.
chapter 25, subchapter II), this proposed rule would not significantly
or uniquely affect small governments and will not result in increased
expenditures by State, local, and tribal governments, in the aggregate,
or by the private sector, of $100 million or more (as adjusted for
inflation) in any one year.
Congressional Review Act
The Office of Government Ethics has determined that this proposed
involves rulemaking involves a nonmajor rule under the Congressional
Review Act (5 U.S.C. chapter 8) and will, before the future final rule
takes effect, submit a report thereon to the U.S. Senate, House of
Representatives and General Accounting Office in accordance with that.
Executive Order 12866
In proposing this 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 Planning and Review. This proposed rule has also been
reviewed by the Office of Management and Budget under that Executive
order. Moreover, in accordance with section 6(a)(3)(B) of E.O. 12866,
the preamble to this proposed amendment notes the legal basis and
benefits of, as well as the need for, the regulatory action. There
should be no appreciable increase in costs to OGE or the executive
branch of the Federal Government in administering this proposed
regulation, since it only adds to OGE's financial interests regulation
a new regulatory exemption and a clarification of an existing
exemption. Finally, this rulemaking is not economically significant
under the Executive order and would not interfere with State, local or
tribal governments.
Executive Order 12988
As Director of the Office of Government Ethics, I have reviewed
this proposed amendatory regulation in light of section 3 of Executive
Order 12988, Civil Justice Reform, and certify that it meets the
applicable standards provided therein.
List of Subjects in 5 CFR Part 2640
Conflict of interests, Government employees.
Approved: April 21, 2011.
Robert I. Cusick,
Director, Office of Government Ethics.
Accordingly, for the reasons set forth in the preamble, the Office
of Government Ethics proposes to amend 5 CFR part 2640 as follows:
PART 2640--INTERPRETATION, EXEMPTIONS AND WAIVER GUIDANCE
CONCERNING 18 U.S.C. 208 (ACTS AFFECTING A PERSONAL FINANCIAL
INTEREST)
1. The authority citation for part 2640 continues to read as
follows:
Authority: 5 U.S.C. App. (Ethics in Government Act of 1978); 18
U.S.C. 208; E.O. 12674, 54 FR 15159, 3 CFR, 1989 Comp., p. 215, as
modified by E.O. 12731, 55 FR 42547, 3 CFR, 1990 Comp., p. 306.
Subpart A--General Provisions
2. In Sec. 2640.102, paragraph (q) is revised to read as follows:
Sec. 2640.102 Definitions.
* * * * *
(q) Sector mutual fund or sector unit investment trust means a
mutual fund or unit investment trust that concentrates its investments
in an industry, business, single country other than the United States,
or bonds of a single State within the United States.
* * * * *
Subpart B--Exemptions Pursuant to 18 U.S.C. 208(b)(2)
3. In Sec. 2640.201, paragraphs (b)(1) and (2) are revised to read
as follows:
Sec. 2640.201 Exemptions for interests in mutual funds, unit
investments trusts, and employee benefit plans.
* * * * *
(b) Sector mutual funds and sector unit investment trusts. (1) An
employee may participate in any particular matter affecting one or more
holdings of a sector mutual fund or a sector unit investment trust
where the affected holding is not invested in the sector in which the
fund or trust concentrates, and where the disqualifying financial
interest in the matter arises because of ownership of an interest in
the fund or unit investment trust.
(2)(i) An employee may participate in a particular matter affecting
one or more holdings of a sector mutual fund or a sector unit
investment trust where the disqualifying financial interest in the
matter arises because of ownership of an interest in the fund or the
unit investment trust and the aggregate market value of interests in
any sector fund or funds and any sector unit investment trust or trusts
does not exceed $50,000.
(ii) For purposes of calculating the $50,000 de minimis amount in
paragraph (b)(2)(i) of this section, an employee must aggregate the
market value of all sector mutual funds and sector unit investment
trusts in which he has a disqualifying financial interest and that
concentrate in the same sector and have one or more holdings that may
be affected by the particular matter.
* * * * *
4. Section 2640.203 is amended by adding paragraph (m) to read as
follows:
Sec. 2640.203 Miscellaneous exemptions.
* * * * *
(m) Official participation in nonprofit organizations. An employee
may participate in any particular matter where the disqualifying
financial interest is that of a nonprofit organization in which the
employee serves, solely in an official capacity, as an officer,
director or trustee.
Note to paragraph (m): Nothing in this paragraph shall be
deemed independent authority for an agency to assign an employee to
serve in an official capacity with a particular nonprofit
organization. Agencies will make such determinations based on an
evaluation of their own statutory authorities and missions.
Individual agency decisions to permit (or not permit) an employee to
serve in an official capacity necessarily involve a range of legal,
policy, and managerial considerations, and nothing in this paragraph
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is intended to interfere with an agency's discretion to assign
official duties and limit such assignments as the agency deems
appropriate.
[FR Doc. 2011-10629 Filed 5-2-11; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 6345-03-P