[Code of Federal Regulations]
[Title 5, Volume 3]
[Revised as of January 1, 2008]
From the U.S. Government Printing Office via GPO Access
[CITE: 5CFR2634.904]

[Page 545-547]
 
                    TITLE 5--ADMINISTRATIVE PERSONNEL
 
                CHAPTER XVI--OFFICE OF GOVERNMENT ETHICS
 
PART 2634_EXECUTIVE BRANCH FINANCIAL DISCLOSURE, QUALIFIED TRUSTS, AND 
 
           Subpart I_Confidential Financial Disclosure Reports
 
Sec. 2634.904  Confidential filer defined.

    (a) The term confidential filer includes:
    (1) Each officer or employee in the executive branch whose position 
is classified at GS-15 or below of the General Schedule prescribed by 5 
U.S.C. 5332, or the rate of basic pay for which is fixed, other than 
under the General Schedule, at a rate which is less than 120% of the 
minimum rate of basic pay for GS-15 of the General Schedule; each 
officer or employee of the United States Postal Service or Postal Rate 
Commission whose basic rate of pay is less than 120% of the minimum rate 
of basic pay for GS-15 of the General Schedule; each member of a 
uniformed service whose pay grade is less than 0-7 under 37 U.S.C. 201; 
and each officer or employee in any other position determined by the 
designated agency ethics official to be of equal classification; if:
    (i) The agency concludes that the duties and responsibilities of the 
employee's position require that employee to participate personally and 
substantially (as defined in Sec. Sec. 2635.402(b)(4) and 
2640.103(a)(2) of this chapter) through decision or the exercise of 
significant judgment, and without substantial supervision and review, in 
taking a Government action regarding:
    (A) Contracting or procurement;
    (B) Administering or monitoring grants, subsidies, licenses, or 
other federally conferred financial or operational benefits;
    (C) Regulating or auditing any non-Federal entity; or
    (D) Other activities in which the final decision or action will have 
a direct and substantial economic effect on the interests of any non-
Federal entity; or
    (ii) The agency concludes that the duties and responsibilities of 
the employee's position require the employee to file such a report to 
avoid involvement in a real or apparent conflict of interest, and to 
carry out the purposes behind any statute, Executive order, rule, or 
regulation applicable to or administered by the employee. Positions 
which might be subject to a reporting requirement under this 
subparagraph include those with duties which involve investigating or 
prosecuting violations of criminal or civil law.

    Example 1 to paragraph (a)(1). A contracting officer develops the 
requests for proposals for

[[Page 546]]

data processing equipment of significant value which is to be purchased 
by his agency. He works with substantial independence of action and 
exercises significant judgment in developing the requests. By engaging 
in this activity, he is participating personally and substantially in 
the contracting process. The contracting officer should be required to 
file a confidential financial disclosure report.
    Example 2 to paragraph (a)(1). An agency environmental engineer 
inspects a manufacturing plant to ascertain whether the plant complies 
with permits to release a certain effluent into a nearby stream. Any 
violation of the permit standards may result in civil penalties for the 
plant, and in criminal penalties for the plant's management based upon 
any action which they took to create the violation. If the agency 
engineer determines that the plant does not meet the permit 
requirements, he can require the plant to terminate release of the 
effluent until the plant satisfies the permit standards. Because the 
engineer exercises substantial discretion in regulating the plant's 
activities, and because his final decisions will have a substantial 
economic effect on the plant's interests, the engineer should be 
required to file a confidential financial disclosure report.
    Example 3 to paragraph (a)(1). A GS-13 employee at an independent 
grant making agency conducts the initial agency review of grant 
applications from nonprofit organizations and advises the Deputy 
Assistant Chairman for Grants and Awards about the merits of each 
application. Although the process of reviewing the grant applications 
entails significant judgment, the employee's analysis and 
recommendations are reviewed by the Deputy Assistant Chairman, and the 
Assistant Chairman, before the Chairman decides what grants to award. 
Because his work is subject to ``substantial supervision and review,'' 
the employee is not required to file a confidential financial disclosure 
report unless the agency determines that filing is necessary under Sec. 
2634.904(a)(1)(ii).
    Example 4 to paragraph (a)(1). As a senior investigator for a 
criminal law enforcement agency, an employee often leads investigations, 
with substantial independence, of suspected felonies. The investigator 
usually decides what information will be contained in the agency's 
report of the suspected misconduct. Because he participates personally 
and substantially through the exercise of significant judgment in 
investigating violations of criminal law, and because his work is not 
substantially supervised, the investigator should be required to file a 
confidential financial disclosure report.
    Example 5 to paragraph (a)(1). An investigator is principally 
assigned as the field agent to investigate alleged violations of 
conflict of interest laws. The investigator works under the direct 
supervision of an agent-in-charge. The agent-in-charge reviews all of 
the investigator's work product and then uses those materials to prepare 
the agency's report which is submitted under his own name. Because of 
the degree of supervision involved in the investigator's duties, the 
investigator is not required to file a confidential disclosure report 
unless the agency determines that filing is necessary under Sec. 
2634.904(a)(1)(ii).

    (2) Unless required to file public financial disclosure reports by 
subpart B of this part, all executive branch special Government 
employees.

    Example 1 to paragraph (a)(2). A consultant to an agency 
periodically advises the agency regarding important foreign policy 
matters. The consultant must file a confidential report if he is 
retained as a special Government employee and not an independent 
contractor.
    Example 2 to paragraph (a)(2). A special Government employee serving 
as a member of an advisory committee (who is not a private group 
representative) attends four committee meetings every year to provide 
advice to an agency about pharmaceutical matters. No compensation is 
received by the committee member, other than travel expenses. The 
advisory committee member must file a confidential disclosure report 
because she is a special Government employee.

    (3) Each public filer referred to in Sec. 2634.202 on public 
disclosure who is required by agency regulations and forms issued in 
accordance with Sec. Sec. 2634.103 and 2634.601(b) to file a 
supplemental confidential financial disclosure report which contains 
information that is more extensive than the information required in the 
reporting individual's public financial disclosure report under this 
part.
    (4) Any employee who, notwithstanding his exclusion from the public 
financial reporting requirements of this part by virtue of a 
determination under Sec. 2634.203, is covered by the criteria of 
paragraph (a)(1) of this section.
    (b) Any individual or class of individuals described in paragraph 
(a) of this section, including special Government employees unless 
otherwise noted, may be excluded from all or a portion of the 
confidential reporting requirements of this subpart, when the agency 
head or designee determines that the duties of a position make remote 
the possibility that the incumbent will be involved in a real or 
apparent conflict of interest.


[[Page 547]]


    Example 1 to paragraph (b). A special Government employee who is a 
draftsman prepares the drawings to be used by an agency in soliciting 
bids for construction work on a bridge. Because he is not involved in 
the contracting process associated with the construction, the likelihood 
that this action will create a conflict of interest is remote. As a 
result, the special Government employee is not required to file a 
confidential financial disclosure report.
    Example 2 to paragraph (b). An agency has just hired a GS-5 
Procurement Assistant who is responsible for typing and processing 
procurement documents, answering status inquiries from the public, 
performing office support duties such as filing and copying, and 
maintaining an on-line contract database. The Assistant is not involved 
in contracting and has no other actual procurement responsibilities. 
Thus, the possibility that the Assistant will be involved in a real or 
apparent conflict of interest is remote, and the Assistant is not 
required to file.

[71 FR 28234, May 16, 2006]