[Code of Federal Regulations]
[Title 40, Volume 31]
[Revised as of July 1, 2007]
From the U.S. Government Printing Office via GPO Access
[CITE: 40CFR1515.5]

[Page 901-902]
 
                   TITLE 40--PROTECTION OF ENVIRONMENT
 
               CHAPTER V--COUNCIL ON ENVIRONMENTAL QUALITY
 
PART 1515_FREEDOM OF INFORMATION ACT PROCEDURES--Table of Contents
 
Sec.  1515.5  How to make a Freedom of Information Act request.

    (a) The Chairman has appointed a Freedom of Information Officer who 
will be responsible for overseeing the Council's administration of the 
Freedom of Information Act and for receiving, routing, and overseeing 
the processing of all Freedom of Information requests. The Chairman has 
also appointed an Appeals Officer who is responsible for processing any 
appeals.
    (b) Requesting information from the Council. (1) When you make a 
Freedom of Information Act request to the Council, the Freedom of 
Information Officer shall decide how to respond to--or ``make an initial 
determination on''--your request within 10 working days from the date 
the Officer receives the request. The Freedom of Information Officer 
will then provide you with written notification of the determination.
    (2) You can make a Freedom of Information Act request by writing a 
letter which states that you are making a Freedom of Information Act 
request. Address your letter to:

Freedom of Information Officer, Council on Environmental Quality, 
Executive Office of the President, 722 Jackson Place NW., Washington, DC 
20006.

    (3) In your request you should identify the desired record or 
reasonably describe it. The request should be as specific as possible so 
that the item can be readily found. You should not make blanket 
requests, such as requests for ``the entire file of'' or ``all materials 
relating to'' a specified subject.
    (4) The Council will make a reasonable effort to assist you in 
defining the request to eliminate extraneous and unwanted materials and 
to keep search and copying fees to a minimum. If you have budgetary 
constraints and anticipate that your request might be costly you may 
wish to indicate the maximum fee you are prepared to pay for acquiring 
the information. (See Sec.  1515.15(c) also.)
    (5) The 10 day period for making a determination on a request will 
begin when the records reqested are specified or reasonably 
identifiable.
    (6) Despite its name, the Freedom of Information Act does not 
require a government agency to create or research information that you 
would like or that you may think the agency should have. The Act only 
requres that existing records be made available to the public.
    (c) Council's response to a request. (1) Upon receipt of any request 
under the Act, the Freedom of Information Officer shall direct the 
request to the appropriate staff member at the Council, who will review 
the request and advise the Freedom of Information Officer as soon as 
possible.
    (2) If it is appropriate to grant the request, the staff member will 
immediately collect the requested materials in order to accompany, 
wherever possible, the Freedom of Information Officer's letter notifying 
you of the decision.

[[Page 902]]

    (3) If your request is denied, in part or in full, the letter 
notifying you of the decision will be signed by the Freedom of 
Information Officer, and will include the names of any other individuals 
who participated in the decision. The letter will include the reasons 
for any denial and the procedure for filing an appeal.
    (d) Appeals. (1) If you are not satisfied with the response you have 
received from the Freedom of Information Officer, you may ask the 
Council to reconsider the decision. You should explain what material you 
still wish to receive, and why you believe the Council should disclose 
this to you. This is called an ``appeal.'' You must make you appeal 
within 45 days of the date on the letter which denied your request.
    (2) You can make an appeal by writing a letter to:

FOIA Appeals Officer, Council on Environmental Quality, Executive Office 
of the President, 722 Jackson Place NW., Washington, DC 20006.

    (3) Your letter should specify the records being requested and ask 
the Appeals Officer to review the determination made by the Freedom of 
Information Officer. The letter should explain the basis for the appeal.
    (4) The Appeals Officer shall decide the appeal--or ``make a final 
determination''--within 20 working days from the date the Officer 
receives the appeal. The Appeals Officer (or designee) will send you a 
letter informing you of the decision as soon as it is made. If the 
Appeals Officer denies your request, in part or in whole, the letter 
will also notify you of the provisions for judicial review and the names 
of any persons who participated in the final determination of the 
appeal.
    (e) Extending the Council's time to respond. In unusual 
circumstances, the time limits for response to your request (paragraphs 
(b) and (d) of this section) may be extended by the Council for not more 
than 10 working days. Extensions may be granted by the Freedom of 
Information Officer in the case of initial requests and by the Appeals 
Officer in the case of any appeals. The extension period may be split 
between the initial request and the appeal but may not exceed 10 working 
days overall. Any extension will be made or confirmed to you in writing 
and will set forth the reasons for the extension and the date that the 
final determination is expected. The term ``unusual circumstances'' 
means:
    (i) The need to search for and collect the requested records from * 
* * establishments that are separate from the office processing the 
request;
    (ii) The need to search for, collect, and appropriately examine a 
voluminous amount of separate and distinct records which are demanded in 
a single request; or
    (iii) The need for consultation, which shall be conducted with all 
practicable speed, with another agency having a substantial interest in 
the determination of the request or among two or more components of the 
agency having substantial subject-matter interest therein.

(5 U.S.C. 552(a)(6)(B))

                       Availability of Information