Freedom of Information Act Regulations

Published date06 February 2024
Citation89 FR 8112
Pages8112-8126
FR Document2024-02115
SectionProposed rules
IssuerSelective Service System
Federal Register, Volume 89 Issue 25 (Tuesday, February 6, 2024)
[Federal Register Volume 89, Number 25 (Tuesday, February 6, 2024)]
                [Proposed Rules]
                [Pages 8112-8126]
                From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
                [FR Doc No: 2024-02115]
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                SELECTIVE SERVICE SYSTEM
                32 CFR Part 1662
                RIN 3240-AA03
                Freedom of Information Act Regulations
                AGENCY: United States Selective Service System.
                ACTION: Proposed rule.
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                SUMMARY: The Selective Service System (SSS) proposes the following
                revisions to its Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) regulations to meet
                the requirements set forth in the Electronic Freedom of Information Act
                Amendments of 1996 (E-FOIA); the Openness Promotes Effectiveness
                requirement in the National Government Act of 2007 (the OPEN Government
                Act); and the FOIA Improvement Act of 2016 (FOIA Improvement Act). This
                proposed rule comprehensively updates the Agency's FOIA regulations.
                DATES: Comments must be received 60 days from publication date.
                ADDRESSES: You may submit comments identified by docket number and/or
                Regulatory Information Number (RIN) number and title by email to
                [email protected], or by mail to: Selective Service
                System, Federal Register Liaison, 1501 Wilson Boulevard, Suite 700,
                Arlington, VA 22209.
                 Instructions: All submissions received must include the Agency name
                and docket number or RIN for this Federal Register document. The
                general policy for comments and other submissions from members of the
                public is to make these submissions available for public viewing on the
                internet at https://www.regulations.gov as they are received without
                change, including any personal identifiers or contact information.
                FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Mr. Daniel A. Lauretano, Sr., General
                Counsel, 703-605-4012, [email protected].
                SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
                I. Background & Legal Basis for This Rule
                A. The Housekeeping Statute
                 The Housekeeping Statute, 5 U.S.C. 301, authorizes agency heads to
                promulgate regulations governing ``the custody, use, and preservation
                of its records, papers, and property.'' The FOIA is a Federal statute
                that allows the public to request records from the Federal government.
                The FOIA provides
                [[Page 8113]]
                that any person has a right, enforceable in court, to obtain access to
                Federal agency records subject to the FOIA, except to the extent that
                any portions of such records are protected from public disclosure by
                one of nine exemptions or other law. Additionally, under the FOIA,
                agencies must make records specified in 5 U.S.C. 552(a)(2) (e.g.,
                instructional manuals issued to employees, general statements of
                policy, etc.) available for public inspection in an electronic format.
                The FOIA also statutorily requires Federal agencies to annually report
                on numerous and various metrics to the Department of Justice (DOJ).
                 Since the most recent update to 32 CFR part 1662, the E-FOIA, the
                OPEN Government Act, and the FOIA Improvement Act have been enacted.
                These laws provide guidance to agencies for the implementation of the
                FOIA requirements. This proposed rule updates and revises part 1662
                consistent with these laws.
                 The revisions will better streamline the process for the Agency's
                FOIA policies and procedures. These updates are consistent with the
                Plain Writing Act of 2010 which requires Federal agencies to use clear
                communications that the public can understand and use. They underscore
                the FOIA guidelines issued by Attorney General Merrick Garland in his
                March 15, 2022, Memorandum for Heads of Executive Departments and
                Agencies. The Memorandum directs the heads of all executive branch
                departments and agencies to apply a presumption of openness in
                administering the FOIA, instructs agencies to remove barriers to
                access, and asks agencies to help requesters understand the FOIA
                process.
                 In the sections that follow, SSS explains the requirements of the
                E-FOIA, the OPEN Government Act, and the FOIA Improvement Act. To
                visualize the proposed reorganization of part 1662, the Agency provides
                a table that identifies the old (existing) regulatory sections, the
                sections to which the content moved, and the names of the new sections.
                Following the table is a section-by-section summary wherein SSS
                identifies proposed changes to ensure compliance with the E-FOIA, the
                OPEN Government Act, and the FOIA Improvement Act. It also updates the
                SSS process for ease of understanding the Agency's FOIA policies and
                procedures.
                B. The E-FOIA
                 The E-FOIA requires agencies to make certain types of records,
                created by the Agency on or after November 1, 1996, available
                electronically. It requires agencies to make available for public
                inspection, via an electronic reading room, ``copies of all records,
                regardless of form or format that have been released to any person
                [under the FOIA] and which, because of the nature of their subject
                matter, the Agency determines have become or are likely to become the
                subject of subsequent requests for substantially the same records.''
                C. The OPEN Government Act
                 The OPEN Government Act amended the FOIA by providing new
                procedural and reporting requirements agencies must implement in their
                administration of the FOIA. It requires that (1) all FOIA requests that
                will take longer than ten days to process must be assigned an
                individualized tracking number and (2) agencies must provide requesters
                with a telephone line or internet service from which requesters can
                receive the status of their request(s).
                 The statute established the Office of Government Information
                Services (OGIS) within the National Archives and Records Administration
                that, among other duties, offers mediation services between FOIA
                requesters and Federal agencies as an alternative to litigation. It
                further directs agencies to designate a Chief FOIA Officer, who: (1)
                has responsibility for FOIA compliance; (2) monitors FOIA
                implementation; (3) makes recommendations to the Agency head concerning
                improvements to FOIA implementation; (4) reports to the Attorney
                General (through the Agency Head), as requested, on the Agency's FOIA
                implementation; (5) facilitates public understanding of the purposes of
                FOIA's statutory exemptions; and (6) designates one or more FOIA Public
                Liaisons. The FOIA Public Liaison serves as an official to whom a FOIA
                requester can raise concerns about service and is responsible for
                assisting in reducing delays in FOIA request processing, helping
                resolve disputes, and helping requesters understand the status of their
                requests.
                 The OPEN Government Act also revised annual reporting obligations,
                mandating reports on agency compliance with the FOIA to include
                information on: (1) FOIA denials based upon particular statutes; (2)
                response times; and (3) compliance by the agency and by each principal
                component thereof.
                 Regarding FOIA request processing, the OPEN Government Act: (1)
                modifies and specifies the time limits for an agency to determine
                whether to comply with a FOIA request; (2) establishes limitations on
                the circumstances under which the statutory time period may be
                ``tolled''; and (3) prohibits an agency from assessing search or
                duplication fees under the FOIA if it fails to comply with time limits,
                provided that no unusual or exceptional circumstances apply.
                 Lastly, the OPEN Government Act provides for the definition of
                ``representative of the news media'' and amends the definition of
                ``record'' to include any information maintained by an agency
                contractor ``for the purposes of record management.''
                 The changes to part 1662 in this proposed rule conform with the
                requirements of the OPEN Government Act as follows:
                 Sections 1662.1 and 1662.2 introduce and provide
                information on the services of the FOIA Public Liaison and OGIS;
                 Section 1662.2 defines ``representative of the news
                media'' and adds new terms such as the FOIA Public Liaison, OGIS, and
                Chief FOIA Officer; and
                 Section 1662.11 updates and clarifies the following
                business practices: (1) the Chief FOIA Officer's acknowledgment of FOIA
                requests; (2) when a request is considered perfected; (3) multi-
                tracking procedures; (4) unusual circumstances; and (5) tolling of the
                20-business-day statutory time period.
                D. The FOIA Improvement Act
                 The FOIA Improvement Act took effect on June 30, 2016, and applies
                to any FOIA request made after the date of enactment. Its intent is to
                improve Agency transparency and responsiveness in processing FOIA
                requests.
                 The statute codifies the ``foreseeable harm'' standard,
                establishing that agencies may only withhold information if the Agency
                reasonably foresees that disclosure would harm an interest protected by
                a statutory exemption, or if disclosure is prohibited by existing law.
                Unless the record is prohibited from disclosure by law, asserting a
                FOIA exemption alone is not sufficient; an agency must also determine
                that release of the record would cause foreseeable harm to others/
                interests protected under the exemption.
                 The FOIA Improvement Act also imposes numerous administrative and
                procedural requirements upon Federal agencies. It adds new elements to
                the annual reports that capture the number of record denials and the
                number of records of general interest or use to the public that are
                made available for public inspection. It also creates new duties for
                the Chief FOIA Officer, requiring the
                [[Page 8114]]
                Chief FOIA Officer to (1) serve as the primary liaison between OGIS and
                the Office of Information Policy at DOJ and (2) offer training to staff
                regarding their FOIA responsibilities. It also creates a council of
                Chief FOIA Officers whose purpose is to improve an agency's
                administration of the FOIA. Within the Agency's proposed revisions to
                part 1662, it is not addressing the additional reporting requirements
                provided in the FOIA Improvement Act, as they do not affect its day-to-
                day administration of the FOIA.
                 This law also requires agencies to offer the services of the FOIA
                Public Liaison and OGIS in all decision letters. It further increases
                the time for appeals, now allowing requesters at least 90 days to file
                an administrative appeal of an adverse determination. Additionally, it
                codifies the ``rule of three,'' which requires agencies to make
                available for public inspection, in an electronic format, records that
                are of general interest or have been requested three or more times and
                released to any person.
                 Further, it prohibits an agency from charging search and/or
                duplication fees under the FOIA for providing records if the agency
                misses a deadline for complying with a FOIA request, unless unusual
                circumstances exist, and the agency takes certain action to notify the
                requester. Additionally, it amends one of the privileges recognized
                under the FOIA Exemption 5, the deliberative process privilege, by
                providing that this privilege cannot be applied to records that are 25
                years or older at the time of the FOIA request.
                 Finally, the FOIA Improvement Act requires the head of each agency
                to (1) review agency regulations and issue regulations on procedures
                for disclosure of records in accordance with the amendments made by the
                bill and (2) include in such regulations procedures for engaging in
                dispute resolution through the FOIA Public Liaison and OGIS.
                 The changes to part 1662 in this Proposed Rule conform with the
                requirements of the FOIA Improvement Act as follows:
                 Sections 1662.1 and 1662.15 address the FOIA Public
                Liaison and OGIS;
                 Sections 1662.3(a) and 1662.11(k) add the foreseeable harm
                standard;
                 Section 1662.13 clarifies the agency's fee charging rules,
                including when unusual circumstances apply;
                 Section 1662.16 updates the appeal timeframe to 90 days
                (from 30 days);
                 Section 1662.22(a) states that the deliberative process
                privilege does not apply to records that are 25 years or older at the
                time of the FOIA request; and
                 Section 1662.26 sets forth that records requested three or
                more times will be publicly posted.
                II. The FOIA Process at SSS
                 The revised regulations at 32 CFR part 1662 ensure the SSS FOIA
                program is easier for the public to navigate.
                 Under current procedures, the Chief FOIA Officer conducts a
                thorough review to ensure proper disclosure. The Agency's Chief FOIA
                Officer makes the final determination on the release of records in
                response to initial requests and the Director of Selective Service is
                designated the final authority on appeal determinations. SSS also makes
                available for public inspection, in an electronic format, records that
                have been requested and released three or more times and other
                specified records described in revised Sec. 1662.26, available at
                www.sss.gov/foia.
                III. Section-by-Section Changes
                32 CFR 1662.1
                 The Agency is revising this section in its entirety, including the
                heading. The heading has been changed from ``Sec. 1662.1.
                Applicability of this part'' to ``Sec. 1662.1. Scope and purpose of
                this part.'' The current section states: ``The provisions of this part
                prescribe the procedures for requests for information under 5 U.S.C.
                552, as amended (Freedom of Information Act).'' The proposed section
                provides readers a roadmap of the contents of part 1662; sets forth
                FOIA's mandate to provide records unless exemptions apply; and the
                requirement to make certain records available for public inspection.
                This section introduces the services of the FOIA Public Liaison and
                OGIS. Proposed paragraph (c) states that nothing in part 1662
                supersedes the information located in parts 1660 and 1665 of the
                Agency's regulations.
                32 CFR 1662.2
                 The Agency is revising this section in its entirety, including the
                heading, which will change from ``Sec. 1662.2. Procedure for
                requesting information'' to ``Sec. 1662.2. Definitions.'' The
                definitions contained in this section derive from the FOIA, the E-FOIA,
                the Open Government Act, and the FOIA Improvement Act. The definitions
                explain two new positions and one new entity created by the OPEN
                Government Act: Chief FOIA Officer, FOIA Public Liaison, and OGIS. The
                OPEN Government Act also amends the definition of ``records'' and
                provides for the definition of ``representative of the news media'';
                therefore, both items are addressed within this revised section. To
                promote openness in government, SSS is including definitions of terms
                used regularly in the administration of the FOIA. In addition to the
                aforementioned definitions, the terms included in this section are
                commercial interest; component; expedited processing; exemption; fee
                category; fee waiver; FOIA request; non-commercial scientific
                institution; online FOIA portal; other requester; production; reading
                room; redact; special services; submitter; tolling; and trade secrets
                and commercial or financial information.
                32 CFR 1662.3
                 The Agency is revising this section in its entirety, including the
                heading, which will change from ``Sec. 1662.3. Identification of
                information requested'' to ``Sec. 1662.3. SSS's FOIA policy.''
                Paragraph (a) of this section provides language acknowledging the
                Agency's presumption of openness, meaning that SSS will withhold
                information only if disclosure would cause foreseeable harm, as
                codified in the FOIA Improvement Act, or if the disclosure is
                prohibited by law.
                 Paragraphs (b) and (c) advise the public where they may find
                information about the Chief FOIA Officer's authority to release and
                withhold records and records that are available for public inspection.
                However, the FOIA does not require the Agency to give opinions, conduct
                research, answer questions, nor create records in the administration of
                the FOIA, which is set forth in paragraph (d).
                32 CFR 1662.4
                 The Agency is revising this section in its entirety, including the
                heading, which will change from ``Sec. 1662.4. Consideration of
                request for information'' to ``Sec. 1662.4. Relationship between the
                FOIA and the Privacy Act of 1974.'' This revises and moves language
                from current Sec. 1662.6(b)(4), which states that requests for records
                contained within a system of records will be handled under the Privacy
                Act of 1974, and that under such search, only fees for reproduction
                costs may be charged. The proposed section adds a notification for the
                public that requests for their own records will be handled under the
                Privacy Act of 1974 and the FOIA.
                32 CFR 1662.5
                 The Agency is revising this section in its entirety, including the
                heading, which is changing from ``Sec. 1662.5. Inspection, copying,
                and obtaining copies'' to ``Sec. 1662.5. Who can file a
                [[Page 8115]]
                FOIA request?'' This section clearly identifies who can file a FOIA
                request.
                32 CFR 1662.6
                 The Agency is revising this section in its entirety, including the
                heading, which will change from ``Sec. 1662.6. Fee schedule; waiver of
                fees'' to ``Sec. 1662.6. Requirements of a FOIA request.' '' Current
                Sec. 1662.3 states that a FOIA requester ``shall provide a reasonably
                specific description of the information sought.. [and i]f the
                description is not sufficient, the records manager will notify the
                requester and, to the extent possible, indicate the additional
                information required.'' This new section provides a list of criteria
                that must be met for a request to be considered a FOIA request, and
                thus subject to the rules discussed in this part. This section will
                help requesters ``perfect'' their request on first attempt, which will
                help streamline the FOIA process.
                32 CFR 1662.7
                 This is a new section with the heading ``Sec. 1662.7. Where to
                submit a FOIA request.'' Currently Sec. 1662.2 does not provide
                information on how and where to submit a FOIA request via mail, email,
                or Agency website. This new section eliminates the title ``Records
                Manager'' and replaces it with ``FOIA Officer.'' It sets forth options
                to submit requests by mail, via email, or online.
                32 CFR 1662.8
                 This is a new section with the heading ``Sec. 1662.8. Requests not
                processed under the FOIA.'' It states that the Agency will not process
                the following FOIA requests for records that are: (a) publicly
                available; (b) distributed through a public information campaign (e.g.,
                leaflets); and (c) earnings records. Paragraph (d) states that the
                Agency will not process a FOIA request that fails to meet the
                requirements set forth in proposed Sec. 1662.21. The Chief FOIA
                Officer will provide instructions and/or request additional information
                so that the request adheres to the requirements of proposed Sec.
                1662.21.
                32 CFR 1662.9
                 This is a new section with the heading ``Sec. 1662.9. Chief FOIA
                Officer's authority.'' It states that the Chief FOIA Officer is
                authorized to make determinations about: (a) the release or withholding
                of records; (b) expedited processing; (c) charging or waiver of fees;
                and (d) other matters related to the processing of FOIA requests. It
                clarifies that the Chief FOIA Officer's determination is provided in
                writing and, if the requester disagrees with the Chief FOIA Officer's
                determination, the requester may appeal to the Director of Selective
                Service as described in proposed Sec. 1662.16.
                32 CFR 1662.10
                 This is a new section with the heading ``Sec. 1662.10.
                Responsibility for Responding to Requests.'' It describes situations
                where records subject to a FOIA request were created/provided by
                another agency. When making a referral to another Federal agency, the
                Chief FOIA Officer will ask the other agency to process the request or
                portion of the request for records that originated with that agency.
                Paragraphs (a)(2), (b), and (c) explain how SSS handles records that
                originated with another agency when that other agency is not subject to
                the FOIA (paragraph (a)(2)); when the Chief FOIA Officer will advise a
                requester to submit their request to another agency (paragraph (b));
                and the Chief FOIA Officer's consultations with another entity
                (paragraph (c)).
                32 CFR 1662.11
                 This is a new section with the heading ``Sec. 1662.11. How does
                SSS process FOIA requests?'' It is comprised of paragraphs (a) through
                (j) that capture the following: the Agency's acknowledgment of FOIA
                requests; when a request is considered ``perfected''; where to find
                information in the regulations concerning expedited processing; the
                Agency's multi-tracking procedures; what constitutes unusual
                circumstances; the Agency's ability to aggregate requests; fee
                information that is discussed in proposed Sec. 1662.13; the Chief FOIA
                Officer's ability to stop or ``toll'' the 20 business day statutory
                period; records retrieval information; unproductive searches;
                furnishing records; handling and release of records under the FOIA
                exemptions; and burdensome requests, wherein the Agency explains that
                SSS will not process a request when doing so would be unduly burdensome
                on the Agency.
                32 CFR 1662.12
                 This is a new section with the heading ``Sec. 1662.12. Expedited
                processing,'' which sets forth the ``compelling need'' criteria. The
                Chief FOIA Officer decides to grant or deny expedited processing by
                applying the criteria. Denials may be appealed to the Director of
                Selective Service under the process set forth in proposed Sec.
                1662.16.
                32 CFR 1662.13
                 This is a new section with the heading ``Sec. 1662.13. Fees
                associated with processing FOIA requests.'' This section revises
                existing (old) Sec. 1662.6 to make the processes and procedures easier
                for the public to understand. This section includes search,
                duplication, and review fees; restrictions on charging fees;
                requirement to provide notice when fees are anticipated to be in excess
                of $25.00; charges for other services; charging interest on unpaid
                bills; aggregating requests; advance payments; and requirements for a
                waiver or reduction of fees.
                32 CFR 1662.14
                 This is a new section with the heading ``Sec. 1662.14. Release of
                records.'' This section clarifies the Agency's rules concerning records
                previously released; advises the public of the Agency's FOIA electronic
                reading room; and sets forth the procedures when only poor-quality
                copies of a record are available.
                32 CFR 1662.15
                 This is a new section with the heading ``Sec. 1662.15. FOIA Public
                Liaison and Office of Government Information Services,'' which provides
                requesters with information on how to seek the services of the FOIA
                Public Liaison and OGIS.
                32 CFR 1662.16
                 This is a new section with the heading ``Sec. 1662.16. Appeals of
                the Chief FOIA Officer's determination.'' The SSS revisions update the
                information located in the existing regulation at Sec. 1662.4(b) in
                newly created paragraphs (a) through (e). Paragraph (a) sets the appeal
                period at 90 days and clarifies that the Director of Selective Service
                makes final appeal determinations. Under paragraph (b), the Agency is
                adding language concerning the SSS's acknowledgement of appeals and
                paragraph (c) provides clarifying information concerning how long the
                Agency generally takes to process appeals. Under paragraph (d), SSS
                includes additional information explaining that the Director of
                Selective Service makes final appeal determinations. Finally, paragraph
                (e) advises requesters of their right to seek review in a U.S. District
                Court if they disagree with the appeal determination.
                32 CFR 1662.17
                 This is a new section with the heading ``Sec. 1662.17. U.S.
                District Court Action.'' It states that if requesters disagree with the
                Director of Selective Service's decision, they may ask a U.S. District
                Court to review the decision.
                32 CFR 1662.18
                 This is a new section with the heading ``Sec. 1662.18. The FOIA
                Exemption 1: National defense and
                [[Page 8116]]
                foreign policy,'' which codifies the FOIA Exemption 1 in the Agency's
                regulations.
                32 CFR 1662.19
                 This is a new section with the heading ``Sec. 1662.19. The FOIA
                Exemption 2: Internal personnel rules and practices,'' which codifies
                the FOIA Exemption 2 in the Agency's regulations.
                32 CFR 1662.20
                 This is a new section with the heading ``Sec. 1662.20. The FOIA
                Exemption 3: Records exempted by other statutes,'' which codifies the
                FOIA Exemption 3 in the Agency's regulations.
                32 CFR 1662.21
                 This is a new section with the heading ``Sec. 1662.21. The FOIA
                Exemption 4: Trade secrets and confidential commercial or financial
                information,'' which codifies the FOIA Exemption 4 in the Agency's
                regulations. It sets forth the procedures under which a submitter may
                challenge release of information they believe to be exempt from
                disclosure under this exemption. This section includes information
                regarding the submitter's notice; submitter's opportunity to object to
                disclosure; notice of intent to disclose; notice of FOIA lawsuit; and
                requester notification.
                32 CFR 1662.22
                 This is a new section with the heading ``Sec. 1662.22. The FOIA
                Exemption 5: Internal documents,'' which codifies the FOIA Exemption 5
                in the Agency's regulations. It includes the deliberative process
                privilege; attorney work product privilege; attorney-client privilege;
                and the 25-year sunset on records otherwise exempt under the
                deliberative process privilege.
                32 CFR 1662.23
                 This is a new section with the heading ``Sec. 1662.23. The FOIA
                Exemption 6: Clearly unwarranted invasion of personal privacy,'' which
                codifies the FOIA Exemption 6 in the Agency's regulations. Paragraph
                (a) sets forth the balancing test for when the Chief FOIA Officer must
                decide whether to release records that contain personal or private
                information. The Chief FOIA Officer must weigh the foreseeable harm of
                invading a person's privacy against the public interest in disclosure.
                Paragraph (b) notifies requesters that the Chief FOIA Officer will not
                disclose information regarding employee(s) contact information and/or
                duty station if the disclosure places employee(s) at risk of injury or
                other harm.
                32 CFR 1662.24
                 This is a new section with the heading ``Sec. 1662.24. The FOIA
                Exemption 7: Law enforcement,'' which codifies the FOIA Exemption 7 in
                the Agency's regulations.
                32 CFR 1662.25
                 This is a new section with the heading ``Sec. 1662.25. The FOIA
                Exemptions 8 and 9: Records on financial institutions; records on
                wells,'' which codifies the FOIA Exemptions 8 and 9 in the Agency's
                regulations.
                32 CFR 1662.26
                 This is a new section with the heading ``Sec. 1662.26. Records
                available for public inspection,'' which lists the records SSS is
                required to make available for public inspection in electronic format.
                32 CFR 1662.27
                 This is a new section with the heading ``Sec. 1662.27. Where
                records are published,'' which sets forth the acceptable methods of
                publication of records pursuant to the provisions of 5 U.S.C. 552(a)(1)
                and (a)(2).
                32 CFR 1662.28
                 This is a new section with the heading ``Sec. 1662.28.
                Publications for sale through the Government Publishing Office.'' These
                publications include, but are not limited to, the Military Selective
                Service Act, SSS regulations, Legal Aspects of the Selective Service
                System, and Federal Register issues.
                IV. Regulatory Procedures
                A. Expected Impact of the Proposed Rule
                 The Agency does not anticipate any additional costs associated with
                promulgations of the regulations contained herein.
                 The Agency anticipates qualitative benefits from the proposed
                revisions to the FOIA regulations from streamlined and codified FOIA
                policies and procedures. SSS expects the codified regulations will
                benefit both the Agency and the public because the administration of
                the FOIA will be better organized and user friendly for requesters. The
                purpose of the FOIA is to provide the public with access to government
                records, and administrative transparency is paramount to a successful
                FOIA program. Clear policies generate efficient and effective
                processing of FOIA requests.
                B. Executive Order (E.O.) 12866, ``Regulatory Planning and Review,''
                E.O. 13563, Improving Regulation and Regulatory Review,'' and
                Congressional Review Act (5 U.S.C. 801-08)
                 E.O.s 12866 and 13563 direct agencies to assess all costs and
                benefits of available regulatory alternatives and, if regulation is
                necessary, to select regulatory approaches that maximize net benefits
                (including potential economic, environmental, public health and safety
                effects, distributive impacts, and equity). E.O. 13563 emphasizes the
                importance of quantifying both costs and benefits, of reducing costs,
                of harmonizing rules, and of promoting flexibility. Following the
                requirements of these E.O.s, the Office of Management and Budget (OMB)
                has determined that this proposed rule is not a significant regulatory
                action under section 3(f) of E.O. 12866 nor a ``major rule'' as defined
                by 5 U.S.C. 804(2).
                C. Public Law 96-354, ``Regulatory Flexibility Act'' (5 U.S.C. 601)
                 SSS certifies that this proposed rule is not subject to the
                Regulatory Flexibility Act, 5 U.S.C. 601, because it would not have a
                significant economic impact on a substantial number of small entities.
                Therefore, the Regulatory Flexibility Act, as amended, does not require
                SSS to prepare a regulatory flexibility analysis.
                D. Section 202 of Public Law 104-4, ``Unfunded Mandates Reform Act'' (2
                U.S.C. 1532)
                 Section 202 of the Unfunded Mandates Reform Act of 1995, 2 U.S.C.
                1532, requires agencies to assess anticipated costs and benefits before
                issuing any rule whose mandates require the expenditure of $100 million
                or more (in 1995 dollars, adjusted annually for inflation) in any one
                year. This proposed rule will not mandate any requirements for state,
                local, or tribal governments, nor will it affect private sector costs.
                E. Public Law 96-511, ``Paperwork Reduction Act'' (44 U.S.C. Chapter
                35)
                 It has been determined that 32 CFR part 1660 does not impose
                reporting or recordkeeping requirements under the Paperwork Reduction
                Act.
                F. E.O. 13132, ``Federalism''
                 E.O. 13132 establishes certain requirements that an agency must
                meet when it promulgates a proposed rule (and subsequent final rule)
                that imposes substantial direct requirement costs on state and local
                governments, preempts state law, or otherwise has federalism
                implications. This proposed rule will
                [[Page 8117]]
                not have a substantial effect on state and local governments.
                G. E.O. 11623, Delegation of Authority & Coordination Requirements
                 In E.O. 11623, the President delegated to the Director of Selective
                Service the authority to prescribe the necessary rules and regulations
                to carry out the provisions of the Military Selective Service Act. In
                carrying out the provisions of E.O. 11623, as amended by E.O. 13286,
                the Director shall request the views of the Secretary of Defense; the
                Attorney General; the Secretary of Labor; the Secretary of Health,
                Education, and Welfare; the Secretary of Homeland Security (when the
                Coast Guard is serving under the Department of Homeland Security); the
                Director of the Office of Emergency Preparedness; and the Chairman of
                the National Selective Service Appeal Board with regard to such
                proposed rule or regulation, and shall allow not less than 10 days for
                the submission of such views before publication of the proposed rule or
                regulation. On January 24, 2024, SSS completed its coordination
                requirements, and the Director certifies that he has requested the
                views of the officials required to be consulted pursuant to subsection
                (a) of E.O. 11623, considered those views and as appropriate
                incorporated those views in these regulations, and that none of these
                officials has requested that the matter be referred to the President
                for decision.
                 These proposed regulations were reviewed and approved by Joel C.
                Spangenberg, Acting Director of Selective Service.
                List of Subjects in 32 CFR Part 1662
                 Freedom of information.
                0
                For the reasons stated in the preamble, the Selective Service System
                proposes to revise 32 CFR part 1662 to read as follows:
                PART 1662--FREEDOM OF INFORMATION ACT (FOIA) PROCEDURES
                Sec.
                1662.1 Scope and purpose of this part.
                1662.2 Definitions.
                1662.3 SSS's FOIA policy.
                1662.4 Relationship between the FOIA and the Privacy Act of 1974.
                1662.5 Who can file a FOIA request?
                1662.6 Requirements of a FOIA request.
                1662.7 Where to submit a FOIA request.
                1662.8 Requests not processed under the FOIA.
                1662.9 Chief FOIA Officer's authority.
                1662.10 Responsibility for responding to requests.
                1662.11 How does SSS process FOIA requests?
                1662.12 Expedited processing.
                1662.13 Fees associated with processing FOIA requests.
                1662.14 Release of records.
                1662.15 FOIA Public Liaison and the Office of Government Information
                Services.
                1662.16 Appeals of the Chief FOIA Officer's determination.
                1662.17 U.S. District Court action.
                1662.18 The FOIA Exemption 1: National defense and foreign policy.
                1662.19 The FOIA Exemption 2: Internal personnel rules and
                practices.
                1662.20 The FOIA Exemption 3: Records exempted by other statutes.
                1662.21 The FOIA Exemption 4: Trade secrets and confidential
                commercial or financial information.
                1662.22 The FOIA Exemption 5: Internal documents.
                1662.23 The FOIA Exemption 6: Clearly unwarranted invasion of
                personal privacy.
                1662.24 The FOIA Exemption 7: Law enforcement.
                1662.25 The FOIA Exemptions 8 and 9: Records on financial
                institutions; records on wells.
                1662.26 Records available for public inspection.
                1662.27 Where records are published.
                1662.28 Publications for sale through the Government Publishing
                Office.
                 Authority: 5 U.S.C. 301; 50 U.S.C. 3809; 5 U.S.C. 552 and 552a;
                18 U.S.C. 1905; 31 U.S.C. 9701; & E.O. 11623, as amended by E.O.
                13286, Feb 28, 2003.
                Sec. 1662.1 Scope and purpose of this part.
                 (a) The purpose of this part is to describe the Selective Service
                System's (SSS) policies and procedures for implementing the
                requirements of the Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) as set forth at 5
                U.S.C. 552. The FOIA mandates disclosure to the public of Federal
                agency records unless specific exemptions apply. The FOIA also requires
                an agency to proactively disclose records and make certain records
                available for public inspection.
                 (b) The rules in this part describe how SSS makes records available
                to the public, including:
                 (1) What constitutes a proper request for records;
                 (2) How to make a FOIA request;
                 (3) Who has the authority to release and withhold records;
                 (4) What fees may be charged to process a request for records;
                 (5) The timing of determinations regarding release;
                 (6) The exemptions that permit the withholding of records;
                 (7) A requester's right to seek assistance from the FOIA Public
                Liaison;
                 (8) A requester's right to appeal the Agency's FOIA determination;
                 (9) A requester's right to seek assistance from the Office of
                Government Information Services (OGIS) and then go to court if they
                still disagree with the Agency's release determination; and
                 (10) The records available for public inspection.
                 (c) The rules in this part do not revoke, modify, or supersede the
                SSS regulations relating to disclosure of information in parts 1660 or
                1665 of this chapter.
                Sec. 1662.2. Definitions.
                 As used in this part:
                 Agency means the Selective Service System. Agency may also refer to
                any executive department, military department, government corporation,
                government-controlled corporation, or other establishment in the
                executive branch of the Federal Government, or any independent
                regulatory agency. A private organization is not an agency even if it
                is performing work under contract with the Government or is receiving
                Federal financial assistance.
                 Chief FOIA Officer means a senior official of SSS who has an
                Agency-wide responsibility for ensuring efficient and appropriate
                compliance with the FOIA, monitoring implementation of the FOIA
                throughout SSS, and making recommendations to the Director of Selective
                Service to improve SSS's implementation of the FOIA. The Director of
                Selective Service designates a Chief FOIA Officer for the Agency. The
                Director of Selective Service makes final decisions in response to
                appeals of the Chief FOIA Officer's determinations.
                 Commercial interest includes interests relating to business, trade,
                and profit, as well as non-profit corporations, individuals, unions,
                and other associations. The interest of a representative of the news
                media in using the information for news dissemination purposes will not
                be considered a commercial interest.
                 Component consists of the Office of the Director, National
                Headquarters Directorates and Offices, Data Management Center, Region
                Offices, and all other organizational entities within SSS that may
                maintain Agency records subject to a request under the FOIA.
                 Duplication means the process of reproducing a copy of a record, or
                of the information contained in it, to the extent necessary to respond
                to a request. Copies include paper, electronic records, audiovisual
                materials, and other formats of Agency records.
                 Educational institution means a preschool, elementary or secondary
                school, institution of undergraduate or graduate higher education, or
                institution of professional or vocational education, which operates a
                program of scholarly
                [[Page 8118]]
                research. To qualify for this category, a requester must show that the
                FOIA request is authorized by, and is made under the auspices of, a
                qualifying institution and that the records are sought to further a
                scholarly research goal of the institution, and not for a commercial
                use or purpose, or for individual use or benefit.
                 Exemption means one of the nine exemptions to the mandatory
                disclosure of records permitted under section 552(b) of the FOIA.
                 Expedited processing means the process set forth in the FOIA that
                allows requesters to request faster processing of their FOIA request if
                they meet specific criteria noted in Sec. 1662.12.
                 Fee category means one of the three categories established by the
                FOIA to determine whether a requester will be charged fees under FOIA
                for search, review, and duplication. The categories are: commercial use
                requests; non-commercial scientific or educational institutions and
                news media requests; and all other requests.
                 Fee waiver means the waiver or reduction of fees if a requester
                meets the requirements set forth in Sec. 1662.13.
                 FOIA Officer means an SSS official whom the Director of Selective
                Service has delegated the authority to assist the Chief FOIA Officer in
                releasing or withholding records; assessing, waiving, or reducing fees
                in response to FOIA requests; and all other determinations regarding
                the processing of a FOIA request. In this capacity, the FOIA Officer is
                authorized to request and receive responsive records that may be
                maintained by other Agency components. Except for records subject to
                proactive disclosure pursuant to subsection (a)(2) of the FOIA, only
                the Chief FOIA Officer has the authority to release or withhold records
                or to waive fees in response to a FOIA request.
                 FOIA Public Liaison means an Agency official who reports to the
                Agency Chief FOIA Officer and serves as a supervisory official to whom
                a requester can raise concerns about the service the requester received
                concerning the processing of the FOIA request. This individual is
                responsible for increasing transparency in the Agency's FOIA business
                process, helping requesters understand the status of requests, and
                assisting in the resolution of disputes. The FOIA Public Liaison may be
                contacted via email at [email protected].
                 FOIA request means a written request that meets the criteria in
                Sec. 1662.6.
                 Freedom of Information Act or FOIA means the law codified at 5
                U.S.C. 552 that provides the public with the right to request Agency
                records from Federal executive branch agencies.
                 News means information that is about current events or that would
                be of current interest to the public. Examples of news media entities
                include television or radio stations that broadcast news to the public
                at large and publishers of periodicals, including print and online
                publications that disseminate news and make their products available
                through a variety of means to the public. SSS does not consider FOIA
                requests for records that support the news dissemination function of
                the requester to be commercial use. SSS considers ``freelance''
                journalists who demonstrate a solid basis for expecting publication
                through a news media entity as working for that entity. A publishing
                contract provides the clearest evidence that a journalist expects
                publication; however, SSS also considers a requester's past publication
                record.
                 Non-commercial scientific institution means an institution that
                does not further the commercial, trade, or profit interests of any
                person or entity and is operated for the purpose of conducting
                scientific research whose results are not intended to promote any
                particular product or industry.
                 Online FOIA portal means the electronic application that SSS uses
                to process FOIA requests. The public may also submit requests directly
                to SSS via the online FOIA.gov--Freedom of Information Act.
                 Other requester means any individual or organization whose FOIA
                request does not qualify as a commercial-use request, representative of
                the news media request (including a request made by a freelance
                journalist), or an educational or non-commercial scientific institution
                request.
                 Production means the process of preparing the records for
                duplication, including the time spent in preparing the records for
                duplication (i.e., materials used, records/database retrieval,
                employee, and contractor time, as well as systems processing time).
                 Reading room means an electronic location(s) that SSS uses to post
                records that are made available to the public without a specific
                request. SSS makes reading room records electronically available to the
                public through the SSS website, https://www.sss.gov/, including at
                https://www.sss.gov/foia/.
                 Record(s) means any information maintained by an Agency, regardless
                of format, that is made or received in connection with official Agency
                business that is under the Agency's control at the time of the FOIA
                request. Record(s) includes any information maintained for an Agency by
                a third party. Record(s) does not include personal records of an
                employee, or other information in formally organized and officially
                designated SSS libraries and reading rooms, where such materials are
                available under the rules of the particular library.
                 Redact means delete or mark over.
                 Representative of the news media means any person or entity that
                gathers information of potential interest to a segment of the public,
                uses its editorial skills to turn raw materials into a distinct work,
                and distributes that work to an audience.
                 Request means asking for records, whether or not the requester
                refers specifically to the FOIA. Requests from federal agencies,
                subpoenas, and court orders for documents are not included within this
                definition.
                 Review, unless otherwise specifically defined in this part, means
                examining records responsive to a request to determine whether any
                portions are exempt from disclosure. Review time includes processing a
                record for disclosure (i.e., doing all that is necessary to prepare the
                record for disclosure), including redacting the record and marking the
                appropriate FOIA exemptions. It does not include the process of
                resolving general legal or policy issues regarding exemptions.
                 Search means the process of identifying, locating, and retrieving
                records responsive to a request, whether in hard copy or in electronic
                form or format, or by manual or automated/electronic means.
                 Special services mean performing additional services outside of
                those required under the FOIA to respond to a request. Examples include
                using an overnight mail service to send the Agency's response to a FOIA
                request.
                 SSS means the Selective Service System.
                 Submitter means any person or entity that provides trade secrets or
                commercial or financial information to the Agency, and includes
                individuals, corporations, other organizational entities, and state and
                foreign governments.
                 Tolling means temporarily stopping the running of a time limit. SSS
                may toll a FOIA request to seek clarification from the requester or to
                address fee issues, as further described in Sec. 1662.11.
                 Trade secrets and commercial or financial information means trade
                secrets and commercial or financial information that are confidential,
                and are obtained by the Agency from a submitter, such that it may be
                protected from disclosure under Exemption 4 of the FOIA, 5 U.S.C.
                552(b)(4).
                [[Page 8119]]
                Sec. 1662.3. SSS's FOIA policy.
                 (a) Presumption of openness. The Agency will withhold information
                only if the Chief FOIA Officer reasonably foresees that disclosure
                would harm an interest protected by a FOIA exemption or if disclosure
                is prohibited by law.
                 (b) Authority to release and withhold records. As described in
                Sec. 1662.9, the Agency's Chief FOIA Officer has the authority to:
                 (1) Release or withhold records in response to initial requests;
                 (2) Grant or deny expedited processing; and
                 (3) Reduce or waive fees.
                 (c) Records publicly available. The Agency makes available for
                public inspection, in an electronic format, records that have been
                requested and released three or more times and other specified records
                described in Sec. 1662.26.
                 (d) Required record production. The FOIA does not require an Agency
                to give opinions, conduct research, answer questions, or create
                records.
                Sec. 1662.4. Relationship between the FOIA and the Privacy Act of
                1974.
                 (a) Coverage. The FOIA and the rules in this part apply to all SSS
                records. The Privacy Act, 5 U.S.C. 552a, applies to records that are
                about individuals, but only if the records are in a system of records.
                 (b) Requesting your own records. If you have filed a FOIA request
                and are an individual requesting your own records that are maintained
                in a system of records, or if you are a parent or legal guardian
                authorized to act on behalf of a minor or custodian who is seeking the
                records about a minor or individual who has been declared incompetent,
                the Agency will handle your request under the Privacy Act.
                Sec. 1662.5. Who can file a FOIA request?
                 Any member of the public may submit a FOIA request to SSS. Under
                the FOIA, ``member of the public'' includes requests from individuals,
                corporations, state, and local agencies, as well as foreign entities.
                Requests from Federal agencies and Federal or state courts are not
                covered by the FOIA.
                Sec. 1662.6. Requirements of a FOIA request.
                 (a) To be considered a FOIA request under this part, the following
                must occur:
                 (1) The request must be written (either by hand or electronically);
                 (2) The request must be submitted in accordance with Sec. 1662.7;
                 (3) The requester must provide the following required contact
                information: requester's name, U.S. or foreign postal address,
                description of records sought, and fee willing to pay. While not
                required, the Agency encourages requesters to provide us with their
                email address and phone number; and
                 (4) The request must clearly state and reasonably describe what SSS
                records are requested. Broad, sweeping requests and vague requests are
                not reasonably described. The requester must describe the records
                sought in sufficient detail to enable the Agency to locate the records
                with a reasonable amount of effort. When known, requests should
                identify the records sought by providing the name/title of the record,
                applicable date range, subject matter, offices, or employees involved,
                and record type. If the request is for electronic communications, such
                as email records, it would assist SSS if the requestor could provide as
                much information as possible, such as the names, position titles, or
                other identifying information about the Agency employees involved, as
                well as the applicable timeframe. Absent sufficient details, the Agency
                may be unable to search for or locate the records sought. The greater
                the date range, the longer it may take to process the request and the
                greater amount of fees that may be charged.
                 (b) Requests that do not meet the required criteria above are not
                considered proper FOIA requests.
                 (c) The FOIA requires an Agency to provide the record in any form
                or format requested by the person if the record is readily reproducible
                by the Agency in that form or format. SSS will not search or produce
                records in response to a FOIA request that the FOIA Officer determines
                would be unduly burdensome to process. FOIA requests are determined to
                be unreasonably burdensome when processing the FOIA request would
                significantly interfere with the ongoing operation of the Agency's
                programs.
                Sec. 1662.7. Where to submit a FOIA request.
                 Submission of requests. Requesters must submit FOIA requests in
                writing to the Agency through one of the following options:
                 (a) Online FOIA portal: link available from the Agency's
                www.sss.gov/foia website.
                 (b) Email: [email protected].
                 (c) Mail: SSS, ATTN: Freedom of Information Act Officer, 1501
                Wilson Boulevard, Suite 700, Arlington, VA 22209.
                Sec. 1662.8. Requests not processed under the FOIA.
                 (a) The Chief FOIA Officer will not process a request under the
                FOIA and the regulations in this part to the extent it asks for records
                that are currently publicly available, either from SSS or from another
                part of the Federal Government, unless the requester does not have
                access to the internet and cannot retrieve records online. See Sec.
                1662.26.
                 (b) The Chief FOIA Officer will not process a request under the
                FOIA and the regulations in this part if the records sought are
                distributed by the Agency as part of its regular program activity, for
                example, public information leaflets distributed by SSS. See Sec. Sec.
                1662.26 through 1662.28.
                 (c) The Chief FOIA Officer will not process a request under the
                FOIA that does not meet the requirements of a FOIA request as defined
                in Sec. 1662.21. When a request under FOIA does not meet the
                requirements of Sec. 1662.21, the Chief FOIA Officer will send written
                correspondence to the requester:
                 (1) Providing instructions for how to submit a proper FOIA request;
                or
                 (2) Asking for additional information to make the request a proper
                FOIA request.
                Sec. 1662.9. Chief FOIA Officer's authority.
                 (a) Release determination. The Chief FOIA Officer is authorized to
                make determinations about:
                 (1) Release or withholding of records;
                 (2) Expedited processing;
                 (3) Charging or waiver of fees; and
                 (4) Other matters relating to processing a request for records
                under this part.
                 (b) Determination provided in writing. The Chief FOIA Officer's
                determination is provided in writing to the requester via emailed
                communication or, in the absence of the requester's email address, via
                U.S. postal mail. If the requester disagrees with the FOIA Officer's
                determination in response to items identified in paragraph (a) of this
                section, the requester may appeal the determination to the Director of
                Selective Service, as described in Sec. 1662.16.
                Sec. 1662.10. Responsibility for responding to requests
                 (a) In general. When the Chief FOIA Officer first receives a
                request for a record and SSS maintains that record, it is the
                responsibility of SSS to respond to the request. In determining which
                records are responsive to a request, SSS ordinarily will include only
                records in its possession as of the date that it begins its search. If
                any other date is used, SSS will inform the requester of that date. A
                record that is excluded from the requirements of the FOIA pursuant to 5
                U.S.C. 552(c), is not considered responsive to a request.
                 (b) Authority to grant or deny requests. The Chief FOIA Officer is
                [[Page 8120]]
                authorized to grant or to deny any requests for records that are
                maintained by SSS. Denials may be appealed to the Director of the
                Selective Service.
                 (c) Consultation, referral, and coordination. When reviewing
                records located by SSS in response to a request, the Chief FOIA Officer
                will determine whether another agency of the Federal Government is
                better able to determine whether the record is exempt from disclosure
                under the FOIA. As to any such record, the Agency must proceed in one
                of the following ways:
                 (1) Consultation. When records originated with SSS but contain
                within them information of interest to another agency or other Federal
                Government office, SSS will consult with that other entity prior to
                making a release determination.
                 (2) Referral. (i) When the Chief FOIA Officer believes that a
                different agency or component is best able to determine whether to
                disclose the record, the Chief FOIA Officer will refer the
                responsibility for responding to the request regarding that record to
                that agency. Ordinarily, the agency that originated the record is
                presumed to be the best agency to make the disclosure determination.
                However, if the Chief FOIA Officer and the originating agency jointly
                agree that SSS is in the best position to respond regarding the record,
                then the record may be handled as a consultation.
                 (ii) Whenever the Chief FOIA Officer refers any part of the
                responsibility for responding to a request to another agency, it will
                document the referral, maintain a copy of the record that it refers,
                and notify the requester of the referral, informing the requester of
                the name(s) of the agency to which the record was referred, including
                that Agency's FOIA contact information.
                 (3) Coordination. The standard referral procedure is not
                appropriate where disclosure of the identity of the agency to which the
                referral would be made could harm an interest protected by an
                applicable exemption, such as the exemptions that protect personal
                privacy or national security interests. For example, if a non-law
                enforcement agency responding to a request for records on a living
                third party locates within its file's records originating with a law
                enforcement agency, and if the existence of that law enforcement
                interest in the third party was not publicly known, then to disclose
                that law enforcement interest could cause an unwarranted invasion of
                the personal privacy of the third party. Similarly, if the Chief FOIA
                Officer locates within its files material originating from an
                Intelligence Community agency, and the involvement of that agency in
                the matter is classified and not publicly acknowledged, then to
                disclose or give attribution to the involvement of that Intelligence
                Community agency could cause national security harms. In such
                instances, in order to avoid harm to an interest protected by an
                applicable exemption, the Chief FOIA Officer will coordinate with the
                originating agency to seek its views on whether the record may be
                disclosed. The release determination for the record that is the subject
                of the coordination will then be conveyed to the requester by the Chief
                FOIA Officer.
                 (d) Classified information. On receipt of any request involving
                classified information, the Chief FOIA Officer must determine whether
                the information is currently and properly classified in accordance with
                applicable classification rules. Whenever a request involves a record
                containing information that has been classified or may be appropriate
                for classification by another agency under any applicable executive
                order concerning the classification of records, the Chief FOIA Officer
                will refer the responsibility for responding to the request regarding
                that information to the agency that classified the information, or that
                should consider the information for classification. Whenever the record
                of SSS contains information that has been derivatively classified (for
                example, when it contains information classified by another agency),
                the Chief FOIA Officer will refer the responsibility for responding to
                that portion of the request to the agency that classified the
                underlying information.
                 (e) Timing of responses to consultations and referrals. All
                consultations and referrals received by the Chief FOIA Officer will be
                handled according to the date that SSS received the perfected FOIA
                request.
                 (f) Agreements regarding consultations and referrals. The Chief
                FOIA Officer may establish agreements with other agencies to eliminate
                the need for consultations or referrals with respect to particular
                types of records.
                Sec. 1662.11. How does SSS process FOIA requests?
                 (a) Acknowledgement. (1) The Chief FOIA Officer acknowledges all
                FOIA requests in writing within ten business days after the Agency's
                receipt of the request. The acknowledgement email or letter restates
                the FOIA request and provides the requester with the request's tracking
                number.
                 (2) If the Chief FOIA Officer requires clarification to process the
                FOIA request, the Chief FOIA Officer will contact the requester either
                via email, U.S. postal mail, or phone call. The Chief FOIA Officer will
                attempt to contact requesters twice. If the Chief FOIA Officer does not
                receive a response to their clarification attempts within 30 calendar
                days from the date of the first contact to the requester, the Chief
                FOIA Officer will close the FOIA request due to insufficient
                information.
                 (b) Perfected requests. FOIA requests are considered ``perfected,''
                i.e., the 20-business day statutory time begins, when the request meets
                the requirements of the proper FOIA request listed in Sec. 1662.6.
                There may be times that the Chief FOIA Officer requires more
                information from the requester after perfecting a request. The 20-
                business day period may be extended in unusual circumstances by written
                notice to the requester. See paragraph (e) of this section.
                 (c) Expedited processing. Unless granted expedited processing, the
                Chief FOIA Officer processes FOIA requests according to a first-in,
                first-out basis. See Sec. 1662.12 for information on expedited
                processing.
                 (d) Multi-tracking procedures. FOIA requests are categorized as
                either simple or complex, depending on the nature of the request and
                the estimated processing time:
                 (1) Simple. For most non-expedited requests, the Chief FOIA Officer
                makes a determination about release of the record(s) requested within
                20 business days.
                 (2) Complex. The Chief FOIA Officer will place into a complex
                processing queue any request that cannot be completed within 20
                business days due to unusual circumstances. The Chief FOIA Officer
                notifies requesters in writing if it is necessary for SSS to take
                additional time to process a request and of the requester's right to
                seek dispute resolution services with the OGIS. See Sec. 1662.15.
                 (e) Unusual circumstances. (1) Unusual circumstances exist when
                there is a need to:
                 (i) Search for and collect records from SSS components or locations
                that are separate from National Headquarters;
                 (ii) Search for, collect, and review a voluminous number of records
                that are part of a single request; and/or
                 (iii) Consult with two or more SSS components or another agency
                having substantial interest in the request before releasing the
                records.
                 (2) Within the unusual circumstances letter to the requester, the
                Chief FOIA Officer will provide an estimated date that they will
                contact the requester with the applicable fee notice and/or further
                correspondence. The Chief FOIA Officer
                [[Page 8121]]
                will also advise the requester that they may modify or narrow the scope
                of their request.
                 (f) Fee notice. FOIA requesters are issued a fee notice from the
                Chief FOIA Officer that informs them of the estimated search and review
                time associated with processing their FOIA request. For more
                information on fees, see Sec. 1662.13.
                 (g) Tolling. (1) The Chief FOIA Officer may stop or toll the 20
                business days in two circumstances:
                 (i) The Chief FOIA Officer may stop the clock one time if they
                require additional information regarding the specifics of the request;
                and
                 (ii) The Chief FOIA Officer may stop the clock as many times as
                needed regarding fee assessments.
                 (2) The processing time will resume upon the Chief FOIA Officer's
                receipt of the requester's response. There may be instances when the
                Chief FOIA Officer requires multiple clarifications on a FOIA request.
                After the first request for clarification, any additional
                clarifications are performed without tolling the clock. Should the
                requester not respond to any correspondence wherein the Chief FOIA
                Officer requests clarification, or should the correspondence be
                returned as undeliverable, the Agency reserves the right to
                administratively close the FOIA request if the Chief FOIA Officer does
                not receive a response within 30 business days of the date of their
                correspondence requesting clarification.
                 (h) Retrieving records. The Agency is required to furnish copies of
                records only when they are in the Agency's possession or SSS can
                retrieve them from storage. The Federal government follows National
                Archives and Records Administration (NARA) rules on record retention.
                Records are retained or destroyed under the guidelines of the Federal
                Records Act.
                 (i) Unproductive searches. SSS will search for records to satisfy a
                request using methods that can be reasonably expected to produce the
                requested records. Nevertheless, the Agency may not be able to find the
                records requested using the information provided by the requester, or
                they may not exist. If the Chief FOIA Officer advises that SSS is
                unable to find the records despite a diligent search, the requester may
                appeal the no records determination to the Director of Selective
                Service, as described in Sec. 1662.16.
                 (j) Furnishing records. The Chief FOIA Officer will provide the
                requester with the record(s) requested unless disclosure would harm an
                interest protected by a FOIA exemption or disclosure is prohibited by
                law. When information within a responsive record(s) is exempt from
                disclosure, the information is redacted and the applicable FOIA
                exemption(s) are noted within the redacted cell. The Chief FOIA Officer
                will make reasonable efforts to provide the records in the form or
                format requested if the record is readily reproducible in that form or
                format. The Chief FOIA Officer may provide individual records as the
                Agency processes them on a rolling basis, or the Chief FOIA Officer may
                release all responsive records once the request is completed. See Sec.
                1662.14 for more information on the release of records by SSS.
                Sec. 1662.12. Expedited processing.
                 (a) Expedited processing must be requested at the same time as the
                FOIA request. The Chief FOIA Officer provides expedited processing when
                the requester can demonstrate a ``compelling need'' for the requested
                information, such as:
                 (1) When there is an imminent threat to the life or safety of a
                person;
                 (2) When the request is from the media, or others primarily engaged
                in disseminating information, and shows an immediate urgency to inform
                the public about actual or alleged government activities; or
                 (3) When the requester can show, in detail and to the Chief FOIA
                Officer's satisfaction, that a prompt response is needed because the
                requester may be denied a legal right, benefit, or remedy without the
                requested information, and that it cannot be obtained elsewhere in a
                reasonable amount of time.
                 (b) Only the Chief FOIA Officer may make the decision to grant or
                deny expedited processing. Requests that do not meet the ``compelling
                need'' criteria will be processed normally. If the Chief FOIA Officer
                does not grant the request for expedited processing, the requester may
                appeal the denial to the Director of Selective Service. In the appeal
                letter, the requester should explain why they believe their request
                demonstrates a ``compelling need,'' such as describing how the request
                meets the criteria in paragraphs (a)(1) through (3) of this section.
                The process described in Sec. 1662.16 will apply to these appeals.
                Sec. 1662.13. Fees associated with processing FOIA requests.
                 (a) Charging fees. In responding to FOIA requests, the Chief FOIA
                Officer shall charge the following fees unless a waiver or reduction of
                fees has been granted under paragraph (i) of this section. Because the
                fee amounts provided below already account for the direct costs
                associated with a given fee type, the Chief FOIA Officer should not add
                any additional costs to charges calculated under this section.
                 (1) Search. (i) Requests made by educational institutions, non-
                commercial scientific institutions, or representatives of the news
                media are not subject to search fees. Search fees shall be charged for
                all other requesters, subject to the restrictions of paragraph (b) of
                this section. The Chief FOIA Officer may properly charge for time spent
                searching even if the Agency does not locate any responsive records or
                if the Chief FOIA Officer determines that the records are entirely
                exempt from disclosure.
                 (ii) For each quarter hour spent by personnel searching for
                requested records, including electronic searches that do not require
                new programming, the fees shall be as follows: professional--$10.00;
                and clerical/administrative--$4.75.
                 (iii) Requesters shall be charged the direct costs associated with
                conducting any search that requires the creation of a new computer
                program to locate the requested records. Requesters shall be notified
                by the Chief FOIA Officer of the costs associated with creating such a
                program and must agree to pay the associated costs before the costs may
                be incurred.
                 (iv) For requests that require the retrieval of records stored by
                the Agency at a Federal records center operated by NARA, additional
                costs shall be charged in accordance with the Transactional Billing
                Rate Schedule established by NARA.
                 (2) Duplication. Duplication fees shall be charged to all
                requesters, subject to the restrictions of paragraph (b) of this
                section. The Chief FOIA Officer shall honor a requester's preference
                for receiving a record in a particular form or format where it is
                readily reproducible in the form or format requested. Where photocopies
                are supplied, the Chief FOIA Officer shall provide one copy per request
                at a cost of five cents per page. For copies of records produced on
                tapes, disks, or other media, components shall charge the direct costs
                of producing the copy, including operator time. Where paper documents
                must be scanned to comply with a requester's preference to receive the
                records in an electronic format, the requester shall pay the direct
                costs associated with scanning those materials. For other forms of
                duplication, the Chief FOIA Officer shall charge the direct costs.
                 (3) Review. Review fees shall be charged to requesters who make
                commercial use requests. Review fees shall be assessed in connection
                with the
                [[Page 8122]]
                initial review of the record, i.e., the review conducted by the Chief
                FOIA Officer to determine whether an exemption applies to a particular
                record or portion of a record. No charge will be made for review at the
                administrative appeal stage of exemptions applied at the initial review
                stage. However, if a particular exemption is deemed to no longer apply,
                any costs associated with the Agency's re-review of the records in
                order to consider the use of other exemptions may be assessed as review
                fees. Review fees shall be charged at the same rates as those charged
                for a search under paragraph (a)(1)(ii) of this section.
                 (b) Restrictions on charging fees. (1) No search fees will be
                charged for requests by educational institutions (unless the records
                are sought for commercial use), non-commercial scientific institutions,
                or representatives of the news media.
                 (2) If the Agency fails to comply with the FOIA's time limits in
                which to respond to a request, the Chief FOIA Officer may not charge
                search fees, or, in the instances of requests from requesters described
                in paragraph (b)(1) of this section, may not charge duplication fees,
                except as described in paragraphs (b)(2)(i) through (iii) of this
                section.
                 (i) If the Chief FOIA Officer has determined that unusual
                circumstances as defined by the FOIA apply and they provided timely
                written notice to the requester in accordance with the FOIA, a failure
                to comply with the time limit shall be excused for an additional 10
                days.
                 (ii) If the Chief FOIA Officer has determined that unusual
                circumstances as defined by the FOIA apply, and more than 5,000 pages
                are necessary to respond to the request, the Chief FOIA Officer may
                charge search fees, or, in the case of requesters described in
                paragraph (b)(1) of this section, may charge duplication fees if the
                following steps are taken. The Chief FOIA Officer must have provided
                timely written notice of unusual circumstances to the requester in
                accordance with the FOIA and the Chief FOIA Officer must have discussed
                with the requester via written mail, email, or telephone (or made not
                less than three good faith attempts to do so) how the requester could
                effectively limit the scope of the request in accordance with 5 U.S.C.
                552(a)(6)(B)(ii). If this exception is satisfied, the Chief FOIA
                Officer may charge all applicable fees incurred in the processing of
                the request.
                 (iii) If a court has determined that exceptional circumstances
                exist as defined by the FOIA, a failure to comply with the time limits
                shall be excused for the length of time provided by the court order.
                 (3) No search or review fees will be charged for a quarter-hour
                period unless more than half of that period is required for search or
                review.
                 (4) Except for requesters seeking records for a commercial use, the
                Chief FOIA Officer shall provide without charge:
                 (i) The first 100 pages of duplication (or the cost equivalent for
                other media); and
                 (ii) The first two hours of search.
                 (5) When, after first deducting the 100 free pages (or its cost
                equivalent) and the first two hours of search, a total fee calculated
                under paragraph (a) of this section is $25.00 or less for any request,
                no fee will be charged.
                 (c) Notice of anticipated fees in excess of $25.00. (1) When the
                Chief FOIA Officer determines or estimates that the fees to be assessed
                in accordance with this section will exceed $25.00, the Chief FOIA
                Officer shall notify the requester of the actual or estimated amount of
                the fees, including a breakdown of the fees for search, review, or
                duplication, unless the requester has indicated a willingness to pay
                fees as high as those anticipated. If only a portion of the fee can be
                estimated readily, the Chief FOIA Officer shall advise the requester
                accordingly. If the requester is a non-commercial use requester, the
                notice shall specify that the requester is entitled to the statutory
                entitlements of 100 pages of duplication at no charge and, if the
                requester is charged search fees, two hours of search time at no
                charge, and shall advise the requester whether those entitlements have
                been provided.
                 (2) In cases in which a requester has been notified that the actual
                or estimated fees are in excess of $25.00, the request shall not be
                considered received and further work will not be completed until the
                requester commits in writing to pay the actual or estimated total fee,
                or designates some amount of fees the requester is willing to pay, or
                in the case of a non-commercial use requester who has not yet been
                provided with the requester's statutory entitlements, designates that
                the requester seeks only that which can be provided by the statutory
                entitlements. The requester must provide the commitment or designation
                in writing to the Chief FOIA Officer, and must, when applicable,
                designate an exact dollar amount the requester is willing to pay. The
                Agency is not required to accept payments in installments.
                 (3) If the requester has indicated a willingness to pay some
                designated amount of fees, but the Chief FOIA Officer estimates that
                the total fee will exceed that amount, they shall toll the processing
                of the request when they notify the requester of the estimated fees
                more than the amount the requester has indicated a willingness to pay.
                The Chief FOIA Officer shall inquire whether the requester wishes to
                revise the amount of fees the requester is willing to pay or modify the
                request. Once the requester responds, the time to respond will resume
                from where it was at the date of the notification.
                 (4) The Agency shall make available the FOIA Public Liaison or
                other FOIA professional to assist any requester in reformulating a
                request to meet the requester's needs at a lower cost.
                 (d) Charges for other services. Although not required to provide
                special services, if the Chief FOIA Officer chooses to do so as a
                matter of administrative discretion, the direct costs of providing the
                service shall be charged. Examples of such services include certifying
                that records are true copies, providing multiple copies of the same
                document, or sending records by means other than first class mail.
                 (e) Charging interest. The Chief FOIA Officer may charge interest
                on any unpaid bill starting on the 31st day following the date of
                billing the requester. Interest charges shall be assessed at the rate
                provided in 31 U.S.C. 3717 and will accrue from the billing date until
                payment is received by the Chief FOIA Officer. The Chief FOIA Officer
                shall follow the provisions of the Debt Collection Act of 1982 (Pub. L.
                97-365, 96 Stat. 1749), as amended, and its administrative procedures,
                including the use of consumer reporting agencies, collection agencies,
                and offset.
                 (f) Aggregating requests. When the Chief FOIA Officer reasonably
                believes that a requester or a group of requesters acting in concert is
                attempting to divide a single request into a series of requests for the
                purpose of avoiding fees, the Chief FOIA Officer may aggregate those
                requests and charge accordingly. The Chief FOIA Officer may presume
                that multiple requests of this type made within a 30-day period have
                been made to avoid fees. For requests separated by a longer period, the
                Chief FOIA Officer will aggregate them only where there is a reasonable
                basis for determining that aggregation is warranted in view of all the
                circumstances involved. Multiple requests involving unrelated matters
                shall not be aggregated.
                 (g) Advance payments. (1) For requests other than those described
                in paragraph (g)(2) or (g)(3) of this section, the Chief FOIA Officer
                shall not require the requester to make an advance
                [[Page 8123]]
                payment before work on a request is commenced or continued. Payment
                owed for work already completed (i.e., payment before copies are sent
                to a requester) is not an advance payment.
                 (2) When the Chief FOIA Officer determines or estimates that a
                total fee to be charged under this section will exceed $250.00, they
                may require that the requester make an advance payment up to the amount
                of the entire anticipated fee before beginning to process the request.
                The Chief FOIA Officer may elect to process the request prior to
                collecting fees when they receive a satisfactory assurance of full
                payment from a requester with a history of prompt payment.
                 (3) Where a requester has previously failed to pay a properly
                charged FOIA fee to the Agency within 30 calendar days of the billing
                date, the Chief FOIA Officer may require that the requester pay the
                full amount due, plus any applicable interest on that prior request,
                and the Chief FOIA Officer may require that the requester make an
                advance payment of the full amount of any anticipated fee before the
                FOIA Officer begins to process a new request or continues to process a
                pending request or any pending appeal. Where the Chief FOIA Officer has
                a reasonable basis to believe that a requester has misrepresented the
                requester's identity to avoid paying outstanding fees, it may require
                that the requester provide proof of identity.
                 (4) In cases in which the Chief FOIA Officer requires advance
                payment, the request shall not be considered received and further work
                will not be completed until the required payment is received. If the
                requester does not pay the advance payment within 30 calendar days
                after the date of the Chief FOIA Officer's fee determination, the
                request will be closed.
                 (h) Other statutes specifically providing for fees. The fee
                schedule of this section does not apply to fees charged under any
                statute that specifically requires an agency to set and collect fees
                for particular types of records. In instances where records responsive
                to a request are subject to a statutorily based fee schedule program,
                the Chief FOIA Officer shall inform the requester of the contact
                information for that program.
                 (i) Requirements for waiver or reduction of fees. (1) Requesters
                may seek a waiver of fees by submitting a written application
                demonstrating how disclosure of the requested information is in the
                public interest because it is likely to contribute significantly to
                public understanding of the operations or activities of the government
                and is not primarily in the commercial interest of the requester.
                 (2) The Chief FOIA Officer must furnish records responsive to a
                request without charge or at a reduced rate when they determine, based
                on all available information, that disclosure of the requested
                information is in the public interest because it is likely to
                contribute significantly to public understanding of the operations or
                activities of the government and is not primarily in the commercial
                interest of the requester. In deciding whether this standard is
                satisfied the component must consider the factors described in
                paragraphs (i)(2)(i) through (iii) of this section:
                 (i) Disclosure of the requested information would shed light on the
                operations or activities of the government. The subject of the request
                must concern identifiable operations or activities of the Federal
                government with a connection that is direct and clear, not remote or
                attenuated.
                 (ii) Disclosure of the requested information would be likely to
                contribute significantly to public understanding of those operations or
                activities. This factor is satisfied when the following criteria are
                met:
                 (A) Disclosure of the requested records must be meaningfully
                informative about government operations or activities. The disclosure
                of information that already is in the public domain, in either the same
                or a substantially identical form, would not be meaningfully
                informative if nothing new would be added to the public's
                understanding.
                 (B) The disclosure must contribute to the understanding of a
                reasonably broad audience of persons interested in the subject, as
                opposed to the individual understanding of the requester. A requester's
                expertise in the subject area as well as the requester's ability and
                intention to effectively convey information to the public must be
                considered. The Chief FOIA Officer will presume that a representative
                of the news media will satisfy this consideration.
                 (iii) The disclosure must not be primarily in the commercial
                interest of the requester. To determine whether disclosure of the
                requested information is primarily in the commercial interest of the
                requester, the Chief FOIA Officer will consider the following criteria:
                 (A) Whether the requester has any commercial interest that would be
                furthered by the requested disclosure. A commercial interest includes
                any commercial, trade, or profit interest. Requesters must be given an
                opportunity to provide explanatory information regarding this
                consideration.
                 (B) If there is an identified commercial interest, the Chief FOIA
                Officer must determine whether that is the primary interest furthered
                by the request. A waiver or reduction of fees is justified when the
                requirements of paragraphs (i)(2)(i) and (ii) of this section are
                satisfied and any commercial interest is not the primary interest
                furthered by the request. The Chief FOIA Officer ordinarily will
                presume that when a news media requester has satisfied the requirements
                of paragraphs (i)(2)(i) and (ii) of this section, the request is not
                primarily in the commercial interest of the requester. Disclosure to
                data brokers or others who merely compile and market government
                information for direct economic return will not be presumed to
                primarily serve the public interest.
                 (3) Where only some of the records to be released satisfy the
                requirements for a waiver of fees, a waiver shall be granted for those
                records.
                 (4) Requests for a waiver or reduction of fees should be made when
                the request is first submitted to the Chief FOIA Officer and should
                address the criteria referenced above. A requester may submit a fee
                waiver request later so long as the underlying record request is
                pending or on administrative appeal. When a requester who has committed
                to pay fees subsequently asks for a waiver of those fees and that
                waiver is denied, the requester shall be required to pay any costs
                incurred up to the date the fee waiver request was received.
                Sec. 1662.14. Release of records.
                 (a) Records previously released. If the Agency has released a
                record, or a part of a record, to others in the past, the Chief FOIA
                Officer will ordinarily release it to the requester, as well. However,
                the Chief FOIA Officer will not release it to a requester if a statute
                forbids this disclosure; an exemption applies that was not previously
                applicable; or if the previous release was unauthorized.
                 (b) Withholding records. Section 552(b) of the FOIA explains the
                nine exemptions under which the Chief FOIA Officer may withhold records
                requested under the FOIA. Within Sec. Sec. 1662.18 through 1662.25,
                the Agency describes the FOIA exemptions and explain how the Chief FOIA
                Officer applies them to disclosure determinations. In some cases, more
                than one exemption may apply to the same document. Section 552(b) of
                the FOIA, while providing nine exemptions from mandatory disclosure,
                does not
                [[Page 8124]]
                itself provide any assurance of confidentiality by the Agency.
                 (c) Reading room. If the record(s) requested are already publicly
                available, either in the SSS electronic reading room or elsewhere
                online, such as at www.sss.gov, SSS will direct the requester to the
                publicly available record(s), unless the requester does not have access
                to the internet.
                 (d) Poor copy. If the Chief FOIA Officer cannot make a legible copy
                of a record to be released, they do not attempt to reconstruct it.
                Instead, the Chief FOIA Officer will furnish the best copy possible and
                note its poor quality in their reply.
                Sec. 1662.15. FOIA Public Liaison and the Office of Government
                Information Services.
                 The Chief FOIA Officer notifies requesters of their right to seek
                dispute resolution from the FOIA Public Liaison or OGIS within the SSS
                fee notices, responses to determinations identified in Sec. 1662.9(a),
                and responses to appeals.
                 (a) FOIA Public Liaison. If requesters have questions about the
                response to their request or wish to seek dispute resolutions services
                within SSS, the requester may contact the FOIA Public Liaison via email
                to [email protected].
                 (b) OGIS. OGIS is an entity outside of SSS that offers mediation
                services to resolve disputes between FOIA requesters and Federal
                agencies as a non-exclusive alternative to litigation. OGIS' contact
                information will be provided in any decision letter issued by the Chief
                FOIA Officer and Director of Selective Service.
                Sec. 1662.16. Appeals of the Chief FOIA Officer's determination.
                 (a) Appeal requirements. If a requester disagrees with the Chief
                FOIA Officer's determination in response to items specified in Sec.
                1662.9, the requester may appeal the decision to the Director of
                Selective Service. The appeal must meet the following requirements:
                 (1) Be submitted in writing via the avenues identified in Sec.
                1662.7;
                 (2) Be received within 90 days from the date of the determination
                the requester is appealing; and
                 (3) Explain what the requester is appealing and include additional
                information to support the appeal.
                 (b) Acknowledgement. The Director of Selective Service acknowledges
                all appeals in writing within 10 business days after their receipt of
                the appeal. The acknowledgement is provided via email or, when the
                requester does not provide an email address, via U.S. postal mail. The
                acknowledgement email or letter restates the FOIA appeal and provides
                the requester with the appeal's tracking number.
                 (c) Processing timeframe. FOIA appeals are categorized as either
                simple or complex, based on the designation of the initial request.
                 (1) Simple. Generally, the Director of Selective Service makes a
                determination about release of the requested record(s) within 20
                business days.
                 (2) Complex. Appeals of complex requests cannot be completed within
                20 business days due to unusual circumstances. During the Director of
                Selective Service's processing of the appeal, they will need to consult
                with appropriate SSS component(s), including legal counsel; therefore,
                the Director of Selective Service generally requires more than 20
                business days to issue a final decision on the appeal.
                 (d) Final decision. The Director of Selective Service makes
                decisions on appeals of the Chief FOIA Officer's determinations.
                 (1) The Director of Selective Service's final decision is provided
                in writing to the requester via email or, in the absence of the
                requester's email address, via U.S. postal mail.
                 (2) The final decision letter will explain the basis of the
                decision (for example, the reasons why an exemption applies).
                 (e) Disagreement with final decision. If a requester disagrees with
                the final decision issued by the Director of Selective Service, they
                may seek assistance from OGIS, as described in Sec. 1662.15.
                Requesters may also ask a U.S. District Court to review the Director of
                Selective Service's final decision. See 5 U.S.C. 552(a)(4)(B).
                Sec. 1662.17. U.S. District Court action.
                 If the Director of Selective Service, upon review, affirms the
                denial of the Chief FOIA Officer's determination of items specified in
                Sec. 1662.9(a), requesters may ask a U.S. District Court to review
                that denial. See 5 U.S.C. 552(a)(4)(B).
                Sec. 1662.18. The FOIA Exemption 1: National defense and foreign
                policy.
                 The FOIA exempts from disclosure records that are specifically
                authorized under criteria established by an executive order to be kept
                secret in the interest of national defense or foreign policy and are in
                fact properly classified pursuant to such executive order.
                Sec. 1662.19. The FOIA Exemption 2: Internal personnel rules and
                practices.
                 The FOIA exempts from disclosure records that are related solely to
                the internal personnel rules and practices of an agency.
                Sec. 1662.20. The FOIA Exemption 3: Records exempted by other
                statutes.
                 The FOIA exempts from disclosure records if another statute
                specifically allows or requires the agency to withhold them. The Chief
                FOIA Officer may use another statute to justify withholding only if it
                prohibits disclosure; it sets forth criteria to guide the Chief FOIA
                Officer's decision on releasing; or identifies types of material to be
                withheld.
                Sec. 1662.21. The FOIA Exemption 4: Trade secrets and confidential
                commercial or financial information.
                 The FOIA exempts from disclosure trade secrets as well as
                commercial or financial information that is obtained from a person that
                is either privileged or confidential. SSS will allow submitters to
                designate information as trade secrets and confidential commercial or
                financial information at the time of submission or within a reasonable
                time thereafter. Submitters must use good faith efforts to designate,
                by appropriate markings, any portion of its submission that it
                considers to be protected from disclosure under the FOIA exemptions.
                These designations expire ten years after the due date of the
                submission unless the submitter requests a longer designation period.
                 (a) Steps of submitters notice--(1) The submitter's notice. When
                trade secrets or confidential commercial or financial information is
                requested under the FOIA, the Chief FOIA Officer will provide written
                submitter's notice if they have substantial reason to believe that
                information in the records could reasonably be considered exempt under
                the FOIA Exemption 4. The submitter's notice will describe and include
                a copy of the trade secret, or commercial or financial information
                requested. In cases involving many submitters, SSS may publish a
                submitter's notice to inform the submitters of the proposed disclosure
                instead of sending individual notifications. The submitter's notice
                requirements of this section do not apply if:
                 (i) The Chief FOIA Officer determines the information is fully
                exempt under the FOIA, and therefore will not be disclosed;
                 (ii) The information has been previously published or made
                generally available; or
                 (iii) Disclosure of the information is required by statute other
                than the FOIA.
                 (2) Submitter's opportunity to object to disclosure. (i) The
                submitter must respond to the notice within five business days of the
                Chief FOIA Officer issuing the submitter's notice or the information
                may be released in
                [[Page 8125]]
                accordance with these regulations and the FOIA. A submitter who fails
                to respond within five business days will be considered to have no
                objection to the disclosure of the information. The Chief FOIA Officer
                is not required to consider any information received after the date of
                any disclosure decision. Any information provided by a submitter under
                this subpart may itself be subject to disclosure under the FOIA.
                 (ii) If a submitter objects to disclosure, the submitter should
                provide the Chief FOIA Officer with a detailed written statement that
                specifies all grounds for withholding the particular information under
                any exemption of the FOIA. To rely on Exemption 4 as basis for
                nondisclosure, the submitter must explain why the information
                constitutes a trade secret or commercial or financial information that
                is confidential.
                 (iii) The Chief FOIA Officer will consider a submitter's timely
                made objections and specific grounds for nondisclosure in deciding
                whether to disclose the requested information.
                 (3) Notice of intent to disclose. Whenever the Chief FOIA Officer
                decides to disclose information over the objection of a submitter, they
                must provide the following to the submitter:
                 (i) A Release Over Objection letter explaining the reasons why each
                of the submitter's disclosure objections did not meet the requirements
                for withholding under the FOIA;
                 (ii) A copy of the information as SSS intends to release it; and
                 (iii) A statement of the Chief FOIA Officer's intent to disclose
                the information five business days from the date on the Release Over
                Objection letter unless the submitter files an action in a U.S.
                District Court to prevent the release.
                 (b) Notice of FOIA lawsuit. When a submitter's notice is issued for
                a request that is the subject of a lawsuit, the Chief FOIA Officer
                shall notify the submitter of the lawsuit within the notice.
                 (c) Requester notification. To the extent the Chief FOIA Officer
                expects substantial delays in the processing of FOIA requests due to
                the Agency's communications with the submitter, they will notify the
                requester in writing via email, or when the requester's email is not
                provided, via U.S. postal mail.
                Sec. 1662.22. The FOIA Exemption 5: Internal documents.
                 This exemption covers inter-agency or intra-agency government
                documents that fall within an evidentiary privilege recognized in civil
                discovery. Such internal government communications include an agency's
                communications with an outside consultant or other outside person, with
                a court, or with Congress, when those communications are for a purpose
                similar to the purpose of privileged intra-agency communications. Some
                of the most commonly applicable privileges are described in the
                following paragraphs:
                 (a) Deliberative process privilege. This privilege protects the
                decision-making processes of government agencies. Information is
                protected under this privilege if it is pre-decisional and
                deliberative. The purpose of the privilege is to prevent injury to the
                quality of the agency decision-making process by encouraging open and
                frank internal discussions, by avoiding premature disclosure of
                decisions not yet adopted, and by avoiding the public confusion that
                might result from disclosing reasons that were not in fact the ultimate
                grounds for an agency's decision. Purely factual material in a
                deliberative document is within this privilege only if it is
                inextricably intertwined with the deliberative portions so that it
                cannot reasonably be segregated, if it would reveal the nature of the
                deliberative portions, or if its disclosure would in some other way
                make possible an intrusion into the decision-making process. The
                privilege continues to protect pre-decisional documents even after a
                decision is made; however, the Chief FOIA Officer will release pre-
                decisional deliberative communications that were created 25 years or
                more before the date on which the records are requested, unless
                disclosure is otherwise prohibited by law.
                 (b) Attorney work product privilege. This privilege protects
                records prepared by or for an attorney in anticipation of or for
                litigation. It includes documents prepared for purposes of
                administrative and court proceedings. This privilege extends to
                information directly prepared by an attorney, as well as materials
                prepared by non-attorneys working for an attorney.
                 (c) Attorney-client communication privilege. This privilege
                protects confidential communications between an attorney and the
                attorney's client where legal advice is sought or provided.
                Sec. 1662.23. The FOIA Exemption 6: Clearly unwarranted invasion of
                personal privacy.
                 The FOIA exempts from disclosure records about individuals if
                disclosure would constitute a clearly unwarranted invasion of their
                personal privacy.
                 (a) Balancing test. When the Chief FOIA Officer decides whether to
                release records that contain personal or private information about
                someone else, they weigh the foreseeable harm of invading a person's
                privacy against the public interest in disclosure. When the Chief FOIA
                Officer determines whether disclosure would be in the public interest,
                they will consider whether disclosure of the requested information
                would shed light on how a government agency performs its statutory
                duties.
                 (b) Agency employees. To protect the safety of Agency employees,
                the Chief FOIA Officer will not disclose information when the
                information sought is contact information and/or duty stations of one
                or more Federal employees if the disclosure would place employee(s) at
                risk of injury or other harm.
                Sec. 1662.24. The FOIA Exemption 7: Law enforcement.
                 The FOIA exempts from disclosure information or records that the
                government has compiled for law enforcement purposes. The records may
                apply to actual or potential violations of either criminal or civil
                laws or regulations. The Agency can withhold these records only to the
                extent that releasing them would cause harm in at least one of the
                following situations:
                 (a) Enforcement proceedings. Pursuant to the FOIA Exemption 7(A) (5
                U.S.C. 552(b)(7)(a)), the Chief FOIA Officer may withhold information
                whose release could reasonably be expected to interfere with
                prospective or ongoing law enforcement proceedings. Investigations of
                fraud and mismanagement, employee misconduct, and civil rights
                violations may fall into this category.
                 (b) Fair trial or impartial adjudication. Under the FOIA Exemption
                7(B) (5 U.S.C. 552(b)(7)(b)), the FOIA exempts from disclosure records
                whose release would deprive a person of a fair trial or an impartial
                adjudication because of prejudicial publicity.
                 (c) Personal privacy. Under the FOIA Exemption 7(C) (5 U.S.C.
                552(b)(7)(c)), the FOIA exempts from disclosure personally identifiable
                information of individuals when the disclosure could reasonably be
                expected to constitute an unwarranted invasion of personal privacy.
                 (d) Confidential sources and information. Pursuant to the FOIA
                Exemption 7(D) (5 U.S.C. 552(b)(7)(d)), the FOIA exempts from
                disclosure the identity of confidential sources, as well as the records
                obtained from the confidential sources in criminal investigations or by
                an agency conducting a lawful national security investigation. A
                confidential source may be an individual; a state, local, or foreign
                government agency; or any
                [[Page 8126]]
                private organization. The exemption applies whether the source provides
                information under an express promise of confidentiality or under
                circumstances from which such an assurance could be reasonably
                inferred; however, inferred confidentiality is determined in a case-by-
                case analysis. Also protected from mandatory disclosure is any
                information which, if disclosed, could reasonably be expected to
                jeopardize the system of confidentiality that assures a flow of
                information from sources to investigatory agencies.
                 (e) Techniques and procedures. Under the FOIA Exemption 7(E) (5
                U.S.C. 552(b)(7)(e)), the FOIA exempts from disclosure records
                reflecting special techniques or procedures of investigation or
                prosecution, not otherwise generally known to the public. In some
                cases, it is not possible to describe even in general terms those
                techniques without disclosing the very material to be withheld. The
                Chief FOIA Officer may also withhold records whose release would
                disclose guidelines for law enforcement investigations or prosecutions
                if this disclosure could reasonably be expected to create a risk that
                someone could circumvent requirements of law or of regulation.
                 (f) Life and physical safety. Under the FOIA Exemption 7(F) (5
                U.S.C. 552(b)(7)(f)), the Chief FOIA Officer may withhold records whose
                disclosure could reasonably be expected to endanger the life or
                physical safety of any individual. This protection extends to threats
                and harassment, as well as to physical violence.
                Sec. 1662.25. The FOIA Exemptions 8 and 9: Records on financial
                institutions; records on wells.
                 Exemption 8 exempts from disclosure records about regulation or
                supervision of financial institutions. Exemption 9 exempts from
                disclosure geological and geophysical information and data, including
                maps, concerning wells.
                Sec. 1662.26. Records available for public inspection.
                 Under the FOIA, SSS is required to make available for public
                inspection in an electronic format:
                 (a) Final opinions, including concurring and dissenting opinions,
                as well as orders, made in the adjudication of cases;
                 (b) The Agency's statements and interpretations of policy that have
                been adopted but are not published in the Federal Register;
                 (c) Administrative staff manuals and instructions that affect the
                public; and
                 (d) Copies of records, regardless of form or format, that an agency
                determines will likely become the subject of subsequent requests, as
                well as records that have been requested and released three or more
                times, unless said materials are published and copies are offered to
                sale.
                Sec. 1662.27. Where records are published.
                 Materials SSS is required to publish pursuant to the provisions of
                5 U.S.C. 552(a)(1) and (a)(2) are published in one of the following
                ways:
                 (a) By publication in the Federal Register of Selective Service
                System regulations, and by their subsequent inclusion in the Code of
                Federal Regulations;
                 (b) By publication in the Federal Register of appropriate general
                notices; and/or
                 (c) By other forms of publication, when incorporated by reference
                in the Federal Register with the approval of the Director of the
                Federal Register.
                Sec. 1662.28. Publications for sale through the Government Publishing
                Office.
                 The public may purchase publications containing information
                pertaining to the program, organization, functions, and procedures of
                SSS from the electronic U.S. Government Bookstore maintained by the
                Government Publishing Office. The publications for sale include but are
                not limited to:
                 (a) Title 50, Chapter 49, of the United States Code (the Military
                Selective Service Act);
                 (b) Title 32, Subtitle B, Chapter XVI, of the Code of Federal
                Regulations (Selective Service System Regulations);
                 (c) Federal Register issues; and
                 (d) Legal Aspects of the Selective Service System.
                Daniel A. Lauretano, Sr.,
                General Counsel.
                [FR Doc. 2024-02115 Filed 2-5-24; 8:45 am]
                BILLING CODE 8015-01-P
                

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