[Code of Federal Regulations]
[Title 5, Volume 1]
[Revised as of January 1, 2008]
From the U.S. Government Printing Office via GPO Access
[CITE: 5CFR175.102]

[Page 19]
 
                    TITLE 5--ADMINISTRATIVE PERSONNEL
 
                CHAPTER I--OFFICE OF PERSONNEL MANAGEMENT
 
PART 175_OPM MANDATORY REVIEW OF CLASSIFIED DOCUMENTS--
Table of Contents
 
Sec. 175.102  Requests for the declassification of documents.

    Any Federal agency, Government employee or member of the public has 
the right to request a mandatory review of any classified document, held 
by the Office of Personnel Management, which was classified for national 
security purposes by the Civil Service Commission. The Office of 
Personnel Management does not have the authority to classify documents.
    (a) Requests for mandatory declassification review should be 
addressed to the Director, Office of Management, or the designee of the 
Director, who will act on requests within 60 days. Requests need not be 
made in any special form but shall, as specified in section 3-501 of the 
Executive order, reasonably describe the information.
    (b) Based upon the review, the document, or any reasonably 
segregable portion thereof that no longer requires protection under the 
Executive order, shall be declassified and released unless withholding 
is otherwise warranted under applicable law.
    (c) No OPM official will refuse to confirm the existence or non-
existence of any document requested under the Freedom of Information Act 
or the mandatory review provisions of the Executive order, unless the 
fact of its existence or non-existence would itself be classifiable 
under the Executive order. OPM Administrative Manual chapter 22, 
covering OPM policies and procedures relating to classified information 
or material is available for inspection by the public in the OPM 
Library, room 5H27, 1900 E. St., NW., Washington, DC, or in one of the 
10 OPM regional offices in the following cities: Atlanta, Boston, 
Chicago, Dallas, Denver, New York, Philadelphia, St. Louis, San 
Francisco and Seattle.

[45 FR 995, Jan. 4, 1980]