[Code of Federal Regulations]
[Title 21, Volume 1]
[Revised as of April 1, 2007]
From the U.S. Government Printing Office via GPO Access
[CITE: 21CFR10.204]

[Page 106-108]
 
                        TITLE 21--FOOD AND DRUGS
 
CHAPTER I--FOOD AND DRUG ADMINISTRATION, DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH AND HUMAN 
                                SERVICES
 
PART 10_ADMINISTRATIVE PRACTICES AND PROCEDURES--Table of Contents
 
      Subpart C_Electronic Media Coverage of Public Administrative 
             Proceedings; Guideline on Policy and Procedures
 
Sec.  10.204  General.

    (a) FDA has for many years willingly committed itself to a policy of 
openness. In many instances FDA has sought to make the open portions of

[[Page 107]]

agency public administrative proceedings more accessible to public 
participation. Similarly, FDA has sought, wherever possible, to allow 
full written media access to its proceedings, so that members of the 
press would have the opportunity to provide first-hand reports. However, 
because electronic media coverage presents certain difficulties that are 
easier to resolve with advance notice to the agency and all 
participants, FDA believes that codification of its policy will 
facilitate and further increase media access to its public 
administrative proceedings. The agency intends to refer to this 
guideline when notices of hearing, or individual advisory committee 
meetings, are published in the Federal Register. Thus, all parties to a 
proceeding will be on notice that the proceeding may be recorded 
electronically and any person interested in videotaping or otherwise 
recording the proceeding will be notified that there are established 
procedures to be followed.
    (b) The designated presiding officer of a public administrative 
proceeding retains the existing discretionary authority set forth in 
specific regulations pertaining to each type of administrative 
proceeding to regulate the conduct of the proceeding over which he or 
she presides. The responsibilities of the presiding officer, established 
elsewhere in parts 10 through 16, include an obligation to be concerned 
with the timely conduct of a hearing, the limited availability of 
certain witnesses, and reducing disruptions to the proceeding which may 
occur. Each proceeding varies, and the presiding officer cannot 
anticipate all that might occur. Discretionary authority to regulate 
conduct at a proceeding has traditionally been granted to presiding 
officers to enable them to fulfill their responsibility to maintain a 
fair and orderly hearing conducted in an expeditious manner.
    (c) This guideline provides the presiding officer with a degree of 
flexibility in that it sets forth the agency's policy as well as the 
procedures that presiding officers should ordinarily follow, but from 
which they may depart in particular situations if necessary, subject to 
the presumption of openness of public proceedings to electronic media 
coverage. The presiding officer's discretion to establish additional 
procedures or to limit electronic coverage is to be exercised only in 
the unusual circumstances defined in this guideline. Even though a 
presiding officer may establish additional procedures or limits as may 
be required in a particular situation, he or she will be guided by the 
policy expressed in this guideline in establishing these conditions. The 
presiding officer may also be less restrictive, taking into account such 
factors as the duration of a hearing and the design of the room.
    (d) If a portion or all of a proceeding is closed to the public 
because material is to be discussed that is not disclosable to the 
public under applicable laws, the proceeding also will be closed to 
electronic media coverage.
    (e) The agency requests advance notice of intent to record a 
proceeding electronically to facilitate the orderly conduct of the 
proceeding. Knowledge of anticipated media coverage will allow the 
presiding officer to make any special arrangements required by the 
circumstances of the proceeding. The agency believes that this guideline 
establishes sufficiently specific criteria to promote uniformity.
    (f) The agency would like to allow all interested media 
representatives to videotape a proceeding in which they have an 
interest. However, should space limitations preclude a multitude of 
cameras, the presiding officer may require pool sharing. In such a case, 
pool sharing arrangements of the resulting videotape should be made 
between those allowed to film and those who were excluded. Arrangements 
for who is designated to present the pool and a method of distributing 
the resulting film or tape may be determined by the established 
networks' pooling system. However, the agency has a strong commitment to 
ensuring that media representatives other than the major networks also 
be able to obtain a copy of the tape at cost. FDA is concerned that if 
the network pool representative wishes to record only a short portion of 
a proceeding, but an excluded party wishes to record the entire 
proceeding, confusion will result. The agency expects the interested 
media representatives to negotiate a suitable agreement among themselves

[[Page 108]]

before commencement of the proceeding. For example, the network pool 
representatives might agree to record a portion of the proceeding up to 
a break in the proceeding, at which time, while the network 
representative is disassembling equipment, another media representative 
might set up to continue recording. If an agreement cannot be reached 
before the proceeding, the agency will use the time of receipt of any 
advance notice to determine the representation for each category of 
media, e.g., one network reporter, one independent reporter. The agency 
recommends that parties intending to videotape provide as much advance 
notice as possible, so that the agency may best respond to the needs of 
the electronic media.
    (g) To ensure the timely conduct of agency hearings and to prevent 
disruptions, equipment is to be stationary during a proceeding and 
should be set up and taken down when the proceeding is not in progress. 
As noted previously, the presiding officer may, at his or her 
discretion, be less restrictive if appropriate.
    (h) The agency recognizes that electronic media representatives may 
desire only short footage of a proceeding, a facsimile of the 
proceeding, and/or interview opportunities and may be unnecessarily 
restricted by requirements for setting up before a proceeding and then 
waiting until a break in the proceeding before being permitted to take 
down their equipment. To accommodate this possibility, FDA's Press 
Relations Staff will attempt to make arrangements to respond to such 
needs by, for example, requesting that the presiding officer provide a 
break shortly after commencement of the proceeding to permit take down 
of equipment.
    (i) The agency is making a full commitment to allowing, whenever 
possible, electronic coverage of its public administrative proceedings 
subject to the limited restrictions established in this guideline.