[Code of Federal Regulations]
[Title 49, Volume 1]
[Revised as of October 1, 2003]
From the U.S. Government Printing Office via GPO Access
[CITE: 49CFR1.23]

[Page 10-12]
 
                        TITLE 49--TRANSPORTATION
 
          Subtitle A--Office of the Secretary of Transportation
 
PART 1_ORGANIZATION AND DELEGATION OF POWERS AND DUTIES--Table of Contents
 
                    Subpart B_Office of the Secretary
 
Sec.  1.23  Spheres of primary responsibility.

    (a) Secretary and Deputy Secretary. Overall planning, direction, and 
control of departmental affairs including civil rights, contract 
appeals, small and disadvantaged business participation in departmental 
programs, transportation research and technology, commercial space 
transportation, intelligence and security, and public affairs.
    (b) Associate Deputy Secretary and Director, Office of 
Intermodalism. Assists the Secretary and Deputy Secretary in carrying 
out a variety of executive and managerial policies, programs and 
initiatives. Focal point within the Federal Government for coordination 
of intermodal transportation policy which brings together departmental 
intermodal perspectives, advocates intermodal interests, and provides 
secretarial leadership and visibility on issues that involve or affect 
more than one operating administration.
    (c) General Counsel. Legal services as the chief legal officer of 
the Department, legal advisor to the Secretary and the Office of the 
Secretary; final authority within the Department on questions of law; 
professional supervision, including coordination and review, over the 
legal work of the legal offices of the Department; drafting of 
legislation and review of legal aspects of legislative matters; point of 
coordination for the Office of the Secretary and Department Regulations 
Council; advice on questions of international law; advice and assistance 
with respect

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to uniform time matters; ensures uniform departmental implementation of 
the Freedom of Information Act (5 U.S.C. 552); responds to requests for 
records of the Office of the Secretary including the Office of the 
Inspector General, under that statute; review and final action on 
applications for reconsideration of initial decisions not to disclose 
unclassified records of the Office of the Secretary requested under 5 
U.S.C. 552(a)(3); promotion and coordination of efficient use of 
Department legal resources; recommendation, in conjunction with the 
Assistant Secretary for Administration, of legal career development 
programs within the Department.
    (d) Assistant Secretary for Transportation Policy. Principal policy 
advisor to the Secretary and the Deputy Secretary. Public policy 
development, coordination, and evaluation for all aspects of 
transportation, with the goal of making the Nation's transportation 
resources function as an integrated national system; evaluation of 
private transportation sector operating and economic issues; evaluation 
of public transportation sector operating and economic issues; 
regulatory and legislative initiatives and review; energy, 
environmental, disability, and safety policy and program development and 
review; and transportation infrastructure assessment and review.
    (e) Assistant Secretary for Aviation and International Affairs. 
Public policy assessment and review; private sector evaluation; 
international transportation and transport-related trade policy and 
issues; regulatory and legislative initiatives and review of maritime/
shipbuilding policies and programs; transport-related trade promotion; 
coordination of land transport relations with Canada and Mexico; 
technical assistance and science and technology cooperation; 
international visitors' programs; economic regulation of the airline 
industry; and essential air service program.
    (f) Assistant Secretary for Budget and Programs. Preparation, review 
and presentation of Department budget estimates; liaison with OMB and 
Congressional Budget and Appropriations Committees; departmental 
financial plans, apportionments, reapportionments, reprogrammings, and 
allotments; program and systems evaluation and analysis; program 
evaluation criteria; program resource plans; analysis and review of 
legislative proposals and one-time reports and studies required by the 
Congress; budgetary and selected administrative matters relating to the 
Immediate Office of the Secretary.
    (g) Assistant Secretary for Governmental Affairs. Coordination of 
legislative and non-legislative relationships; congressional affairs; 
communications and coordination with Federal, State and local 
governments, industry and labor, and with citizens and organizations 
representing consumers.
    (h) Assistant Secretary for Administration. Organization; 
delegations of authority; personnel ceiling control; management studies; 
personnel management; acquisition and grant management (except for the 
responsibility listed for the Office of Small and Disadvantaged Business 
Utilization in this section); information resource management; financial 
management; development and implementation of a Departmental Accounting 
and Financial Information System (DAFIS); property management 
information; security; computer support; telecommunications; and 
administrative support services for the Office of the Secretary and 
certain other components of the Department.
    (i) Inspector General. Conduct, supervise, and coordinate audits and 
investigations, review existing and proposed legislation and make 
recommendations to the Secretary and Congress (Semiannual reports) 
concerning their impact on the economy and efficiency of program 
administration, or the prevention and detection of fraud and abuse; 
recommend policies for and conduct, supervise, or coordinate other 
activities of the Department for the purpose of promoting economy and 
efficiency in program administration, or preventing and detecting fraud 
and abuse.
    (j) Executive Secretary. Central facilitative staff for the 
Immediate Office of the Secretary and the Secretarial Officers.
    (k) Board of Contract Appeals. Conducts trials and issues final 
decisions, which are appealable to the United States Court of Appeals 
for the Federal

[[Page 12]]

Circuit, on appeals from contracting officer decisions under contracts 
awarded by the Department and its constituent administrations in 
accordance with the Contract Disputes Act of l978, 41 U.S.C. 601 et 
seq.; sits as the Contract Adjustment Board with plenary authority to 
grant extraordinary contractual relief in accordance with 50 U.S.C. 
1431-1435 and Executive Order 10789 (3 CFR, 1954-1958 comp., p. 426), as 
amended; hears and decides all contractor and subcontractor debarment, 
suspension, or ineligibility cases pursuant to the Federal Acquisition 
Regulation, 48 CFR 9.402; judges serve as ``neutrals'' under the 
Administrative Dispute Resolution Act, 5 U.S.C. 581 et seq., in 
contract-related matters; and performs such other adjudicatory functions 
assigned by the Secretary as are consistent with the duties and 
responsibilities of the Board as set forth in 41 U.S.C. 601 et seq.
    (l) Departmental Office of Civil Rights. The Director of the 
Departmental Office of Civil Rights serves as the Department's Equal 
Employment Opportunity (EEO) Officer and Title VI Coordinator. The 
Director also serves as principal advisor to the Secretary and the 
Deputy Secretary on the civil rights and nondiscrimination statutes, 
regulations, and executive orders applicable to the Department, 
including titles VI and VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964, as amended, 
the Age Discrimination in Employment Act of 1967, as amended, the Age 
Discrimination Act of 1975, as amended, section 504 of the 
Rehabilitation Act of 1973, as amended, the Americans with Disabilities 
Act of 1990, and the Equal Pay Act of 1963. The Office of Civil Rights 
also provides policy guidance to the operating administrations and 
Secretarial officers on these matters. Also, the Office periodically 
reviews and evaluates the civil rights programs of the operating 
administrations to ensure that recipients of DOT funds meet applicable 
Federal civil rights requirements.
    (m) Office of Small and Disadvantaged Business Utilization. 
Responsible for the Department's implementation and execution of the 
functions and duties under sections 8 and 15 of the Small Business Act, 
as amended, (15 U.S.C. 637 and 644), and for other departmental small 
and disadvantaged business policy direction.
    (n) [Reserved]
    (o) Office of Intelligence and Security. Focal point within the 
Department of Transportation for intelligence and security matters which 
affect the safety of the traveling public.
    (p) Office of Public Affairs. Focal point for public information and 
departmental relations with the news media, the general public, and 
selected special publics.
    (q) Office of the Chief Information Officer. Serves as principal 
advisor to the Secretary on matters involving information resources and 
information systems management.

[Amdt. 1-261, 59 FR 10062, Mar. 3, 1994, as amended by Amdt. 265, 60 FR 
2891, Jan. 12, 1995; Amdt. 1-274, 60 FR 62762, Dec. 7, 1995; Amdt. 1-
290, 62 FR 51804, Oct. 3, 1997; 68 FR 34549, June 10, 2003]