[Code of Federal Regulations]

[Title 14, Volume 5]

[Revised as of January 1, 2006]

From the U.S. Government Printing Office via GPO Access

[CITE: 14CFR1204.1600]



[Page 49]

 

                     TITLE 14--AERONAUTICS AND SPACE

 

                          SPACE ADMINISTRATION

 

PART 1204_ADMINISTRATIVE AUTHORITY AND POLICY--Table of Contents

 

 Subpart 16_Temporary Duty Travel_Issuance of Motor Vehicle for Home-to-

                           Work Transportation

 

Sec. 1204.1600  Issuance of motor vehicle for home-to-work.



    Authority: 31 U.S.C. 1344 note, 40 U.S.C. 486(c).





    When a NASA employee on temporary duty travel is authorized to 

travel by Government motor vehicle and the official authorizing the 

travel determines that there will be a significant savings in time, a 

Government motor vehicle may be issued at the close of the preceding 

working day and taken to the employee's residence prior to the 

commencement of official travel. Similarly, when a NASA employee is 

scheduled to return from temporary duty travel after the close of 

working hours and the official authorizing the travel determines that 

there will be a significant savings in time, the motor vehicle may be 

taken to the employee's residence and returned the next regular working 

day.



[68 FR 60847, Oct. 24, 2003]



    Appendix A to Part 1204--Items to Cover in Memoranda of Agreement



    The items to be covered in Memoranda of Agreement between NASA 

Installations and state and areawide OMB Circular A-95 clearinghouses 

for coordinating NASA and civilian planning:

    1. Clearinghouses will be contacted at the earliest practicable 

point in project planning. Generally, this will be during the 

preparation of Preliminary Engineering Reports, or possibly earlier if 

meaningful information is available that could practically serve as an 

input in the decision-making process. It should be noted that 

clearinghouses are generally comprehensive planning agencies. As such, 

they are often the best repositories of information required for 

development planning and constitute a resource that can often save 

Federal planners substantial time and effort, if consulted early enough. 

In addition to providing information necessary for preliminary 

engineering, clearinghouses can make useful inputs to the development of 

environmental impact statements, as well as in reviewing draft 

statements. Thus, consultation at the earliest stage in planning can 

have substantial payoffs in installation development.

    2. Clearinghouses will be afforded a minimum time of 30 days in 

which to review and comment on a proposed project and a maximum time of 

45 days in which to complete such review.

    3. The minimum information to be provided to the clearinghouse will 

consist of project description, scope and purpose, summary technical 

data, maps and diagrams where relevant, and any data which would show 

the relationship of the proposed project or action to applicable land 

use plans, policies, and controls for the affected area.

    4. Establish procedures for notifying clearinghouses of the actions 

taken on projects, such as implementation, timing, postponement, 

abandonment, and explaining, where appropriate, actions taken contrary 

to clearinghouse recommendations.



                          PART 1205 [RESERVED]