[Code of Federal Regulations]
[Title 36, Volume 3]
[Revised as of July 1, 2004]
From the U.S. Government Printing Office via GPO Access
[CITE: 36CFR701.3]

[Page 62-63]
 
              TITLE 36--PARKS, FORESTS, AND PUBLIC PROPERTY
 
                    CHAPTER VII--LIBRARY OF CONGRESS
 
PART 701_PROCEDURES AND SERVICES--Table of Contents
 
Sec. 701.3  Methods of disposition of surplus and/or duplicate materials.

    (a) Exchange. All libraries may make selections on an exchange basis 
from the materials available in the ``Exchange/Transfer'' category. The 
policy governing these selections is that exchange be made only when 
materials of approximately equal value are expected to be furnished in 
return within a reasonable period. Dealers also may negotiate exchanges 
of this type for items selected from available exchange materials, but 
surplus copyright deposit copies of works published after 1977 shall not 
knowingly be exchanged with dealers. Offers of exchange submitted by 
libraries shall be submitted to the Chief of the African/Asian 
Acquisitions and Overseas Operations Division, Anglo-American 
Acquisitions Division, or European/Latin American Acquisitions Division, 
or their designees, as appropriate, who shall establish the value of the 
material concerned. Offers from dealers shall be referred to the Chief 
of the Anglo-American Acquisitions Division. Exchange offers involving 
materials valued at $1,000 or more must be approved by the Acquisitions 
Division Chief; offers of $10,000 or more must be approved by the 
Director for Acquisitions and Support Services; and offers of $50,000 or 
more must be approved by the Associate Librarian for Library Services. 
The Library also explicitly reserves the right to suspend, for any 
period of time it deems appropriate, the selection privileges of any 
book dealer who fails to comply fully with any rules prescribed for the 
disposal of library materials under this section or any other pertinent 
regulations or statutes.
    (b) Transfer of materials to Government Agencies. Library materials 
no longer needed by the Library of Congress, including the exchange use 
mentioned above, shall be available for transfer to Federal agency 
libraries or to the District of Columbia Public Library, upon the 
request of appropriate officers of such entities, and may be selected 
from both the ``Exchange/Transfer'' and ``Donation'' categories. 
Existing arrangements for the transfer of materials, such as the 
automatic transfer of certain classes of books, etc., to specified 
Government libraries, shall be continued unless modified by the Library.
    (c) Donations of Library materials to educational institutions, 
public bodies, and nonprofit tax-exempt organizations in the United 
States. It is the Library's policy, in keeping with the Federal Property 
and Administrative Services Act of 1949, 40 U.S.C. 471 et seq., which

[[Page 63]]

does not cover the Library of Congress, to use materials no longer 
needed for any of the purposes mentioned above to strengthen the 
educational resources of the Nation by enriching the book collections of 
educational institutions (full-time, tax-supported or nonprofit schools, 
school systems, colleges, universities, museums, and public libraries), 
public bodies (agencies of local, State, or Federal Government), and 
nonprofit tax-exempt organizations (section 501 of the Internal Revenue 
Code of 1954, 26 U.S.C. 501, by authorizing the Anglo-American 
Acquisitions Division to donate to such groups in the United States any 
materials selected by their representatives. Eligibility to participate 
in the donation program shall be limited as defined by procedures 
established by the Anglo-American Acquisitions Division.
    (d) Disposition of residue. Library materials not needed for the 
collections of the Library, for its exchange and transfer programs, for 
sale, or for donation, and which, in the opinion of the Chief, Anglo-
American Acquisitions Division, have no commercial value, may be turned 
over to the General Services Administration (GSA) to be disposed of in 
accordance with standard Government practice.