[Code of Federal Regulations]
[Title 32, Volume 1]
[Revised as of January 1, 2008]
From the U.S. Government Printing Office via GPO Access
[CITE: 32CFR44.3]

[Page 255-256]
 
                       TITLE 32--NATIONAL DEFENSE
 
              CHAPTER I--OFFICE OF THE SECRETARY OF DEFENSE
 
PART 44_SCREENING THE READY RESERVE--Table of Contents
 
Sec.  44.3  Definitions.

    For purposes of this part, the following definitions apply:
    Extreme community hardship. A situation that, because of a 
Reservist's mobilization, may have a substantially adverse effect on the 
health, safety, or welfare of the community. Any request for a 
determination of such hardship shall be made by the Reservist and must 
be supported by documentation, as required by the Secretary concerned.
    Extreme personal hardship. An adverse impact on a Reservist's 
dependents resulting from his or her mobilization. Any request for a 
determination of such hardship shall be made by the Reservist and must 
be supported by documentation, as required by the Secretary concerned.
    Individual Ready Reserve. Within the Ready Reserve of each of the 
Reserve Components there is an Individual Ready Reserve. The Individual 
Ready Reserve consists of members of the Ready Reserve who are not in 
the Selected Reserve or the Inactive National Guard.
    Key employee. Any Federal employee occupying a key position.
    Key position. A Federal position that shall not be vacated during a 
national emergency or mobilization without SERIOUSLY impairing the 
capability of the parent Federal Agency or office to function 
effectively. The four categories of Federal key positions are set out in 
this paragraph. The first three categories are, by definition, key 
positions. However, the third category, Article III Judges, provides for 
exceptions on a case-by-case basis. The fourth category requires a case-
by-case determination and designation as described in the following:
    (1) The Vice President of the United States or any official 
specified in the order of presidential succession as in 3 U.S.C. 19.
    (2) The members of the Congress and the heads of the Federal 
Agencies appointed by the President with the consent of the Senate. For 
this part, the term ``the heads of the Federal Agencies'' does not-
include any person appointed by the President with the consent of the 
Senate to a Federal Agency as a member of a multimember board or 
commission. Such positions may be designated as key positions only in 
accordance with paragraph (4) of this definition.
    (3) Article III Judges. However, each Article III Judge, who is a 
member of the Ready Reserve and desires to remain in the Ready Reserve, 
must have his or her position reviewed by the

[[Page 256]]

Chief Judge of the affected Judge's Circuit. If the Chief Judge 
determines that mobilization of the Article III Judge concerned will not 
seriously impair the capability of the Judge's court to function 
effectively, the Chief Judge will provide a certification to that effect 
to the Secretary of the Military Department concerned. Concurrently, the 
affected Judge will provide a statement to the Secretary concerned 
requesting continued service in the Ready Reserve and acknowledging that 
he or she may be involuntarily called to active duty (AD) under the laws 
of the United States and the Directives and Regulations of the 
Department of Defense and pledging not to seek to be excused from such 
orders based upon his or her judicial duties.
    (4) Other Federal positions determined by the Federal Agency heads, 
or their designees, to be key positions in accordance with the 
guidelines in the appendix to this part.
    Mobilization. Involuntary call-up of Reserve component members in 
accordance with 10 U.S.C. 12301, 12302, or 12304. That includes full 
mobilization, partial mobilization and, selective mobilization 
(Presidential Reserve Call-Up Authority).
    Ready reserve. Reserve unit members or individual Reserve and 
National Guard members, or both, liable for AD, as provided in 10 U.S.C. 
12301, 12302, and, for some members, 10 U.S.C. 12304. It consists of the 
Selected Reserve, the Individual Ready Reserve, and the Inactive 
National Guard.
    Selected reserve. A category of the Ready Reserve in each of the 
Reserve components. The Selected Reserve consists of units, and, as 
designated by the Secretary concerned, of individual Reserve members, 
trained as prescribed in 10 U.S.C. 10147(a)(1) or 32 U.S.C. 502(a), as 
appropriate.
    Standby reserve. The Standby Reserve consists of those units or 
members, or both, of the Reserve components, other than those in the 
Ready Reserve or the Retired Reserve, who are liable for active duty 
only as provided for in 10 U.S.C. 12301 and 12306. The Standby Reserve 
consists of personnel who are maintaining their military affiliation 
without being in the Ready Reserve, but have been designated ``key 
civilian employees,'' or have a temporary hardship or disability. Those 
individuals are not required to perform training and are not part of the 
Ready Reserve. The Standby Reserve is a pool of trained individuals who 
may be mobilized as needed to fill manpower needs in specific skills. 
The Standby Reserve consists of the active status list and the inactive 
status list categories.